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Page AC10 • 1M Dlllly Sentinel

"

Pomeroy, Mlddlepol1, Ohio

Monday, January 24, 2000

Tuesday

.

·J_.u_,. 28, 2000

Public Nodot
Public Nalloe'
Contr..t Ne. oe.-a.
•Toledo, Ohio (4~31 , · Unl••• ucepllona .,.
ITAft 01' OHIO
~fromPIIget
IUD .......... Court, P.O. 111111 ! ........, IIIII II I I Jilt
OliO ICHOOL FM:ILmH ll'l It•til: ..... . I II'
unlllltl 0.. of~ 3, lollwill be Ill tor ....,...
build a late lead as rookie the 1979 NFC Championship, their quick lead.
COP$IEICW
a1
4:0D
,....
~
oCIIIIIi.Ort;.;,;..
...........
'+1fllollll
llllofe
Hid Court on t1W
Grammatica kicked field goals on only other !rip this far. The Rams·.. But that WI!S all they would get in
NOTICI10 IIJDIJII
alan
tlnlel.
ttoer
C2'!1'1),
ca,tlol24th
day
of .-...ru.ry. 21101;
1.
lldll
Will
be
I'M
......
llr
the first series of csch half for Tampa then lost to the Stcclers in'the Super the fi rst half.
and• lotto•~• ••W'lioal etwlllcfltlmellille 1.urlt
11M
loolltwn . . _ lollool wll.l!l'qrllll'"nad.
Bay, whi~h brought a 132-246-1 all- Bowl.
King was sacked and fumbled, Dletrlot Soard, et 47721
time record int() its second' confer~~ 1010
c=::'to ':;
The slt!Uneh defenses tumcd it losing 12 yards, on poe Tampa Bay 8tll1l lloutt 1:14, P.O. lox
ence title game.
into a game of punting and turnovers. drive. That ru i n~ an opportunity for 171, IIMIM, .OIIIo 41771 , Co ub ci4IINI llltnagar by Yale - e . Cincinnati, until tlully •r 1• al.
••••,. Gilly. upon OhioAny ...,... lnterealed
. "No one gave us a chance, but 'we
'llrnpa Bay Jot a takeaway on the another field goal. And with II sec- Attn: De11nle IIIII lor tile l'r1rrle
rr
11t.r
1
.
Wlllcoh
Ia
·~n.
lin~
One
1111 ~
~
came here to win and thought' we first .play when defensive end Steve onds to go in the second quarter, his 'al ak"-'' I at:
,.. lllr,lrr11Me-.ntal autldlne, 3rd floor, 1211 ..,d ._ n t or t o ·
Mew
11.
•
I
'Ill'
a
IIIIICI
were going to win," Tampa Bay White tipped and intercepted an pass from the St. Louis 41 went
tao • Clllakl, tlillll be l!uolld, CleVIIand, Ohio pertaining to 11M -.t1ap1
''MCM.,.I'Iaa I a
coach Tony Dungy said. "lbey attempted screen pus. A drop in the directly to cornerback Todd Lyght.
-de payallle to the 44111
of llil 1r111t. no1 1111 t1111o
loutlil'll
Loul
lchaol
•The
eulld«a
lxcliange,
live
...Y• prior lo 1111 made the plays .in the fourth quar- end w ne by Jacquez Gnoen made the
St. Louis was more effective
8oulhem &amp;..oo.llollool
oratrtot IIICI forwanlad to Suite One Conetructlon Ill lor hlarlng.
·
Dlllrlct . . . .
ter."
Bucs sctde for Grammllica's
moving the ball, but no better at
11M CaMINIIIOn Manager. c-, M1 Keynote Clrete,
Robert E. Buolt
1be Bucs lost to the Rams 9·0 in yard field goal and a· surprisingly reaching the end w ne.
. In eccordence With ttq Upon r~nlpt of a rwqueat, ~and,Ohlo44131
Judge
After Grammalica's kick, the Drewlnge
aocoonpenlacl
by
a
...
poan
•The
Bulldere
Exchenge
Common
PINI
Court
and
P - Dlvllkln
Rams pul together one of their typi- 8p1ctt1 tMne pt p uwd by: 11 namacl a&amp;o~the of Clnlral Ohio, 1175 Dublin
Conetruotlon Ma
WIH R-, Ohio 43215
lhlp County, 01110
cal drives, but it yielded only three
aa.rr KMpp Caawtll
forwercl ooplea of ·
lng
•Dayton
Bul!dere (1)24,1 tc
~Inc.
points. They marched 74 yards in 16
docu-ta11Mblclder.
Exchange, 1077 Embury 1.:..:..________.,.
11M
...
IrA-NE
plays and ate up nearly eight minutes
4. thlpplng olillrgee lor Park Roed, Davton, Ohio 1__.:.P.:u::b:::II.:C..:Notlc~::.;l;_....;.
P.O. lox 1002
before a fumbled exchange between
all llldcllng cloGunrante are 41414
1·
Mlw Pll•adilp,..,
Warner Blld Faulk made them seule
non·Nfundabla end are to
•Bulldera Exchange of
IN THE COMMON PU!M ;·
Ohio_,
be
peld
via
a
eeparate
l!aat
Central
..Ohio,
2121
for
Jeff
Wilkins'
24-yarder
1
0
tie
ii.
COURT,
PROBATE DMSION
Phane:
(814)
t4t
:zeea
1
check In th1 amount of 34th Street NE, Centon,
MI!IOII COUNTY, OHIO :
Fax: (114) M8 330t
Wilkins, kicking with a sore knee,
IN THE MATTER 01'
The Conatruellon Manager ~... ... -out to tire · Ohio 447011
also missed a 44-yarder.
·
Southern Looal School
Central Dhlo Mino.rlly BI!TTLEMI!NT
01'
lor
t1o1
Pro)Mtla:
· St. Lo'uis had a 159-75 yardage
Dletrtct and forwlrdtd to Admtnletratlon, 115 Eaet ACCOUNT.I, PROBA'ft
Till Outondel Oroup, Inc.
edge through 30 minutes .. Yet it led
the Conatructlon Manager llclund Street, Columbua, COURT MEIOS COUNTY,
31518 Rlvwllcle Drtw
_ .... ...,.a-·
ohio- . •
OHIO
.
,
only S-3, thanks to a high snap by
Bulle 101
5.
lntar
..
ted
blddiOre
•Ohio Val.., ConltnlCtlon · Accoun.. and ·vouchera
Columbull, Ololo ~1
Pro Bowl center Tony Mayberry
ehould contact Tammy Employara Council, 21 of the following name..·
PhOne: {740) 442-GSOO
with King in the shotgun.
Bmlth 11 {e14) 442-D800. or · Armory Drive, Wheeling, fiduciary hal bHn ftllcl In
Fax;
(740)
442-ot1111.
· But Kinjl. who finished 13-of-29
Hnd dlpollt Cheek dlrlctiY WV 2t003
the Probate Court, Melga,
-.quandll.oom
for 126 yards, scrambled back to
7. A pre-bid milling wtll County, Ohio lor approve!
2. Alrf propoeed .EQual lor to the ouan...l Oroup Inc.,
knock the ball out ·of the end zone for a Stendard ahall be 31511 Rlveraldl Drive, Suite be held on January 20, andMII*Mnl.
ESTATE NO. 21002•14th
the safety.
.
.
. eubrioltted to the Architect 101, Columbua; OH 4:j221. 2000, at 4:00 p.m. at the
Accaunt ftlad by Rlclwd E.;
Just as lhey did 10 open the game, no la1tr than ten (10) .daya No more than 111111 (3) Hie .following location: ·
be provided on a
llouthern.'--1 BehoOI
JonH, TrultH of 1111 Trull.
the Bucs scored on their first posses- prior to. the bkl opening. If will
refundable baala tlo a . .
Dlttrlct Ofllcl
c..by 111m v of till Wll
no
.
Addtnde
II
IIIUIMI
In
sion of "'e second half. Grammatica aaaoclatlon with 11:11 elrlclw. Depoall will be
Racine, OhiO· Mtlgl .
of Manning D. W-,
miiled a . 23-yarder, set up wh en Bidder'• requ11t, the relundacl to Prime Bldcllre . ' a. Thi.Owner ..-vee the DtcNHCI.
Green made a 32-yard reception and propoaacl ~ual ahall . be only who return ihelr rlghfto'ra)Mt any or all bide
Unlell exctptlone are
drawlnga -In flftHn (1S) and to wal¥1 any or all flied therrifo, aald aocourit
Taje Allep was hil wilh i facemask ·
conllderacl
S11l1d b de ·will be dap olllil bid openlrra and lrregularlllee, mlate~ea , will be 11t fo; haerlng
penalty.
aubmlt a bonafide blc1 '~r omiHiona or lnformallllee befora aald Court on the
Tlie 6-5 lead stood far longer than recetvad lor:
24th day of Flliruary, 2000,
Article 1.10 of the relortlve•tloerllo.
P-1
.
UNDER PRESSURE - St. Louis quarterb.ck Kurt Warner (13) ' anyone co~ld have expected. In the
lnatructloni
Ia
Bldcllrw.
.
All
queetlone
p-!nlng
·
11 which tim' Aid account:
Cantrect No. 01·00111·
flnc:!s himself under pressure from several Tampa Bay defenders end, tho'u!l,h, St. Louis found its 9008801·01,
1.
The
Contract to IICu•lng Contract will be conaldartd an·d·
Sltework,
during Sundly's NFC championship game In St. Louis, whare the touch. JUst · once, but Ihat was Alrudy Undtr Contrlcl
Document•
m1y be Documante, 81dder'a Lilt, continued from day to day
reviewed
lor
bidding etc. ehall be directed to Until finally dliiPDI .. of, ' '
Rams .came froin behind to win 11-6 and earn their first trip to the enough.
Conlrlcl No. No. 011-0018Any peraon lnterlltl.d
Super Bowlin 21 years. (AP)
11001801·13,
Brick purpoee without cherge Tammy Smith, The Quan~el
may
fill written axcapllorr II!
dur\:L!,~elneaa
haure
at
Oroup,
Inc.
3Stl
Rlvertldl
Proc.urement,
Already
llil
ng loceUona: . Drtw, Bune 101 , Columbua, eald account or to nralllra,
Unclar Controct
pertaining .to the e-utlon
Archlttcl'l Ofllol:
.
01:143221 (814) 442-0500.
PliiiMII
Marr · Knapp Crawfla Owner: Soutbern Local of the trull, not llaa than'
Contract No. tii·OOIII·
fiVe days prior to tlil dahl of.
Alloalet.. ,- Inc. New 8chaol Dlllrict
90011801-112: Bile UUI!tlee
Phllaclllpllla,
Ohio
(1)
8,
10l
11,
12,
16,
17,
18,
HI for hlartng.
Contract
No.
01·00118·
Cent. ConnecticUt St. 73; Robert Monis '2
Sunday'' action
18; 23, 2., liS, 21 t2TC
Robtrt·Buck, Judge
Colgate 60, Dartmouth 53
"
Basketball
8001110t ~: e~
Trade• OWner omca: .
EoM
Columbia 69, Comeii66-0T
Common
Plea• . Court,
Fairfield 85, Niapra 78 '
Contract
No.
·oe-00118·
Bouthem Locel Bohool
Public Notice
Connecticut 92, GeorJ:etown 71
Hartford 76, Nonheastc:rn 11
Probate
Dlvlelon
~ lloanl, Racine, Ohio
90011801-04:
Maaonry
Delaware 82, Towson 10
NBA standings
Hofs tra 83, New Hampshi ~ 45
Melge County, Ohio
Contract No. 01·00118- CQnatruc1lon Manager'• . IN THE COMMON PLEAS
Fairleigh Dickinson 62. Long Island U. 61
Maine 100, Drexel 83
(1)
24 lTC
·
Ofllott:
if
80011101-011:
Roofing
· · Fordham 66, St. Bonaventure 60
·
Manhattan 78, Rider 56
PROBA'I'E DMSION
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Lafayette 77, Army 5~
The Oir8nclal Oroup, Inc., COURT,
Contract
No.
08·00118· Maris! 79, St. Peter's 64
MEIOS COUNTY, OHIO
Atltinllc DiYJsion
Massachusetts 89, lUKtde Island 30
Navy 81, Holy Cross 49
9001801·01: Aluminum 'Columbull, Ol)lo
fum
.1!' L 1'&lt;1.
Ohio St. 65, St. Jobn 's 64
.'
Rutgers
73,
Vdlanovo
60
':.Me'~"TTER
.l!ntra-•, Wlndowe, QI- F.W. Dqcleli Plan Ropme In, S
Miami ...
............ ,.25 ]·4 .641
. Quinnipiac 80. St. Francis, Pa. 63
ENTOfOF
V
ermont
86,
Boston
U.
8.5
the
flilloWing
clllla:
&amp;OiuJng
New York .. .......... .... .'... , ......24 IS .6tl
I
St. Frauds: NY 73, Monmoulh, NJ. 67
ACCOUNTS,.PAOBATE
West VitJinia 82. Provi de'nce 69
Philacklphia.
..............24 17 :=i8S
2
oCinclnnatl, Ohio (41202, COURT
· Contract No. 01·00118St. Joseph 's 62, Duquesne 59
Bos10n ...................... .. .19 2 1 .475
6'h
1001)
The
Orand
Baldwin
Temple: 66,_Virginia Tech 46
9001801.07: Food Service
Saulh
COUNTY, OHIO
Orla ndo ................................ 18 24 .429 . 8~~
UMBC 77, S.cred Hean 69
Building, ISS Eden Pa.!k MEIOS
TulaDt 7l..UAB 62 .
Equipment ..
New Jersey .. .... . ... .... ..... .. 17 23 .425
8~
Account•
and voucher•
Wagner 109, MouDt St. Mary-'s, Md. 99
Contract No. 01·0018· Drtvt, Suite SIS
Washington.. ..... ,... ................ l3 29 .3 10
13~
.of
the
following
named
Midwest
•Independence, Ohio fiduciary haa bta~ Iliaci
9008101 -08: &lt;;aaiwork
South
In
Cincinnati
12.
Marquette
60
Cl'ntral Db·llio!l
(44131), 8200 Rockelde the Probate Court, Melge
(Ubllry and Scltnel)
Alabama A&amp;M 103, Prairie: View 85
Evansville:
88,
Creighton
83
l,d;m ....... ..... ,...., ............... .26 . 14 .~ lO
Appi lachian St. 7'3, FUrman 63
Contract No. 08.0011· Woodtl Blvd. (Cleveland)
La Salle 80, Xavi~ 49
·
'
Charlotte .................. ....: .... 22 17 .564
31
Belmont 96, Tc:xas A&amp;M·COJpus Christi 81
•Ci&gt;lumbua, Ohio·(43218- County, Ohio for approval
9001801-0t:
Plumbing ed
Milwaukee ....................... 21 19 .537
4~
Bethune-Cookrnan 9~ . Howard 70
Far
Well
1073),
1175
Dublin
Road
Fire Prottctlon
Dettuil ........... ., .....................11 19 . .525
l
Cenlc:nary 89, Te~as · Pan Americllll SO:OT
ESTATE NO. 28165- The IL- ...,...;_-=::::::::....J ,
. Orea:on St. 74, Washina:ton .57
•Dayton, Ohio (451,8), , Sacond
Toronto ... . ........... .... ....... 2"1 19 .525
Contract No. 01·0018·
l
' Coastal Carolina 83, L.ibetty 71
Account ol JennHw· fo!ow Is 11it rlmf
St Mary 's, Cal. 80, Portland 78-0T
CLE VELAND ................ ...... I6 2l . .390
10~
3077
.
Kettering
Boulevard,
9001180t-10: HVAC
Coli: of Cbarlenon 73, UNC-Greensboro ~9 ·
L.
BhHIS,
Con11rv1tor of
buys io rho dtlssl(le&lt;IJ
•
Atlanta .................-................. 14 2S .3.59
II ~
Coppin St. 81, Hampton 80.0T
· Contract No. 011·0018· Point Weal Office Perlt, Opal Jean Tyrat.
Chicago ....
................7 30 . 189
17~
Davidson 80, VMJ 69 ·
Bulle 301
90011801·11: 1!1~11
. .. ..,. .:.--

RAMS...

Public Nolle•

d.,..

may

Wednesday: Cloudy
High: 20a; Low: 10.

•nr•••

Meigs County's
Vuhonit· ~o. Numlwr lhl

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Umh .. :

Mktwtst DlvUion

.1!' L 1'&lt;1.

_____ ...... ...... ..... 26

12

Sml"A ntonio..
.:....... 26
Min n~ot a ..... .................... 22
Den\ler ................................ 17
Houston
........ 16·
Dall as . .-.
....... 14
Vancouver.... ..
.. ...... 10
LA, Lnkets ..........._............. J3
Ponl nnd __ ,_
.... J O
Sm:ramcnto ......................... :25
Seattl e
................. ....... 27
Ph oc nilt .....
....... .. .... B
L. A. Clip per ~ .......... ............. 10
Goldi.•n Stme ...
................8

.684

IS .634
16
~I

.579
.447

24

.400
2(l .)lO
29 .2l6
8

.805

10

.750

I l .658
15 .64J
15 .60~ '
30

.250

) 1 .205

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Hi'~

2'·,
6 1~

1
·1

6
8\

22'·:
14

Saturday's scores
New Jersey 98. Dallas 9~
Orlando 85. Vanc o~on·er 82
Chtca~ o 98, Dettoit91
·
San Antonio 96, New York 83
Utnh 1Q..I.. Sacrnmento 101
Athmw 11 1. Washington 9)
Charl ene I10. Boston 96
Ph iladelphia 103. lndiaoo 97
Ponhmd 95, L.A. Lakt:n 91
Ph uen i~ 101 , CLEVELAND 88

Sunday's scurfs
Toronto 94. Sennle 77
Dill las 99, Dl:troit 91
Houston 101 . Miami 88
Minnesota 99. Golden State 81
Orlando 101. L. A. Clippers 89

Tonight's games

Thesday's games
p.m.

New Yorto: at Washington, 7 p.m.
Detroit at ClEVELAND, 7:30p.m.
Chi ~ a go at Atlan\a, 7:30p.m.
Roston vs. Miami, 7:30p.m.
Sac ra~ nt o al Charlotte, 8 p.m
L A. C11 pp&lt;:n at San Antomo, 8JO p.m.
Min nesota at Ho uston, 8:30p.m.
Gu'lclen St me a1 Dallas. 8:30 p.m.

. .....

'I

1. Cincinruu:i (66) ....................... 18-1
2. Stanford (2) ............................ 1S·l
3. Duke
...................... 15·2
4. Syracuse(!) ............................ \,~.()
5. Arizona (I) ........................ ,.... 16-3
6. Co nnecticut .... :...... ,............... .JJ.J
7, Aubum .......... :.. ,...................... l6--7

fli.-

1,741.

'I

I,664
I,S82
1.546
1,36.5

3
'
6
2,
8

I,JOO

4

1 ,~3

8. OHIO ST................................ 13·3 1,199

9. M ich~gan St............................. ll -5
10. Florida ............. ........ :............ l4·l
II Tenneuee .............................. J&amp;-2
12 . Kans!15 ... .,.......... :.... ;............. 1~ - l
IJ . Tulsa ..................................... rs- 1
14 . Indiana .............. ................. 14-3
15. Oklahoma St.. ...................... \4-2
16. Kentucky ............ :................ 13 .~

I

884

II

739 ' 12
723

.

.

NCAA Division I
men's scores .
~aturday's
Ea ..

Buckne-ll 67.

~hi f h

.n

acti9n .

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you need to hit The Tran.
.

FREEZING over

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Southwest

Ark.·Pine Blutf91, Grambling St. 78
Arkanw 83, Miulu ippi St. 73
Lamar 70, NichOlls St. 63
Okllhoma 80, Iowa St. 75-20T

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guarantee the weather, we·dm promise you great golf. '
Calll-800-949-4444 for i~fo~ation about our3-day/
2-night golf and hotel packages' as low as. $162.
,,' '

· Oral Robcns79. Youngstown St. 6]
SMU 85, Fresoo St. 78
San Jose St. .58, Ric:e ~6 ·

TCU 80.llTEP 79
Texas 72, Texu T«h .59
· Texas A&amp;M 64, OkJihoma St. .59
Texas-ArlinJ10t19l, SIC~ F.Austin 87
Tulsa 100, H•w•ii 78

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Far ,WeH

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1-8~0-848-4444

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.·sto:r·.m. howls up 'East co·ast

CAMPAIGN 2000

Ron P. C~sci .seeking·,
:Meigs treasurer's p~st
.. ''

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· ay:n.

Today's

.. ,
,'
MIDDLEPORT - Ron P. Cnscl of ~iddleport hilS
'811nounced he is seeking the office of Meigs !County
(feuurcr.
·
·
Casci, a Democrat, attends
Sacred Heart Church in Pomerpf.
and has been a me111ber o( the Mid" .
dleport "tobluntec!r Fire. Department ...
since 199l. He is employed at Shell ,
q1emical.of Apple Grove, W.Va.
.From 1983 to I 991, tuci- .
worked for Southem Ohio Cnal Co.
in the accounting department whc:re
he was responsible for UMWA pay'roll: c.ost repo1ts and 'budgcting: ~J: ·
· • .,•, C&amp;tcl
also worked at Vaughan's u iL '
.,
clerk,
.
• , , "With the experience from these two jobs, 1 fee!
··COrilfortable in handling the county's money with the .
ouiQ '
.
·.
· allility to give a personal touch of good service to the
.
Pkk
3:
S-9-0;'I'Ick4:
4-Ck-3
·peop!e of the couiny," hc'said. •
. '
1
\ ~·' $: tS-24-28-2!1-:31 .
•, · He is son of the late Paul L. and Gemma Girolami
Casci, both vet~rans o~ World War II, he in the Na&gt;~y
and she u a Navy WAVE, ,He has three childrerf
Bruno, Rocco and Gino.
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"1. was raised with a strong belief In God and coun•
iry, and feel that I am the person able ind capable of
·ierving
the jleople
of Meigs
County," Cascl said. · •
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By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel Ntwa $taff
MIDDLEPORT - Middleporl
· Village CouncU made plBIIs to begin,
a $217,000 water improvement pro. ject at Monday night's regular m~t·
ing.
·
Jay Shutt Blld 8c(;ky Hayes of
Floyd Brown Associates, the vii·
lnge's water and sewcrajlC· conault· ·
ing and engineerina firm, proposed
dril\i~f imd satllpling .of a.potenti.al ·
welfi s1te beyond Hobson, near the
Midllleport 1-aoon:· 10 replace two
wells now in operation.
Along' witli the sampling•.council
approved submitting a water
improvement plan to· the Ohio EPA
and applying for a $10,000 five-year
planning loan through the. Ohio
Water Developmcnt,,.uthority.
FBA will conduct the drilling and
s~mpling at the new field, 11 a cost
of $10,000, t~ be paid from the vii·
lage's water Improvement fund. If
the well site proves satisfactory, the
village will pursue $207,000 in public funds for the projcet.
Myron Duffield aRjl Don Stivers
of"the Board of Public Affairs said ·
they had approved the plan at a BPA
mectinjl·earlier Monday,
The decision 10 proceed with the
project is the culminaiion ~of months
of discussion about drilling new
wells or purchuing !"'&amp;ter from
another water system.
In' 1998, it was · r~vealed water
from on~ of the villaae•s two wells
was contaminated with two volatile
organic comJ'!oundi,' · and·. al.ihough
the VOC levels have since remained
under the maximum allowable level,
council has been coiosiderin• alternatives to usi njl the contaminated
well.
Duffield said the village and FBA
tried to sample , water from a well
donated by James Mourning on

St~et;

Grant
the piBIIS
well was
inac- .
cessible. The but
village
to inves·
tigatc a well at the former ice cream
' ' ~.
,
factory on Park Street, near the vii·
~lh•lated Pr"wishing the snow would .stop.
Iage garage.
J .Apo;lw""'l Winter storm churned up the East
More thBII 200,000 customer.; in North and
In other business,' council
~ -lodl.y a~ bancrinjl the Sou~east with South Carolina were without power early today. endorsed the four-mill, three-year
1ceand mare ti!MO a foot ofsnow, lcavmg tens of In noithcast Alabama, I 2,000 people·remAined levy proPosed by VeterBIIs Memori·
thouaands of P,eOP)c without power.
.
without power from·a Saturday ille storm:
ai Hospital, following a presentation
', S,.OW~gan ~ling in·New Ymk City before
In Adanta, about 100,000 customers were by Rhonda Dailey, YMH vice presitlre ptOtnmg co'mm~lc and up to 8 inches were ·still without electricity three days after a week· · dent of nursing, and Administrator
~ 10 fall !POl' New J:lngland by tonight. end ice storm left approximale)y 1.8 million. Robert Bowers.
, The .lllonn ariiYed with winds gusting to 30 powerless. Energy companies'say it may take a
Levy funds would be used for the
mph. maldnllillcel well below zero from New few more days to rc:store power·to·everyon~.
operation of lhe hospital's emer:
JerseYto NeW &amp;&amp;land.
Schools were·closed again IOday in Atlanta gency room and supportive services,
, . A:S. m~ il$ 7 inch~ of sno~, were predicted Blld a ·preliminary statewide damage estimate Blld would allow for the develop,(or Viralnla Mid the Washmgton- ¥Suburbs. slood al $25 million.
ment of a "blue ribbon pBIIel" to
~ and buainesscs were closed in North
In the ~t, the bi118CSI'winlcr storm' of the determine lhe county's health care 1
Caroijnll whet:e Dlghll were cBJiceled ·at season lingered acro5s lite Sierra Nevada after and hospital needs.
·
•,Ralei&amp;JI·Diilhom International Airport. .
dumping mme than 3 feet of snow. Storm warn·
If the levy fails in March, the hos"l'eciple· kcptsaylni'~ 'haven'thadwinter, ings were iSsued for western Nevada and the pital's emergency room and acute
. ~ (ha"'"'i had)Winter,"'said Richard Jories, a La~e Tahoe region. ·.•
. · '
. care unit would ·be closed no later
tom:aster with the National Welll1er Service in
"We are very happy. We'll be 100 percent .' than July 1.
.
Raleiah. "J·a•lhis·wlll'lliow them." ' . . open by , (today)," said Monica Bandows,
Council approved hiring Denzil
· . Tiny ~o, $.C., - e d·rnore like Buffa- ,spokeswoman for Heavenly Slti Resort on the · Hudson as ·'village building inspec·
·to, N.Y., aftcr •llrc; rare winter JIOrm dumped southshoreofLakeTahoe. "·
tor, lluateof$6perho'ur,for1S to
IIKIR'thBII&amp; foot of snow.
·
' six,year-old James CariJja was waiting for 2S hours per week. Hudson also will
'· "lt'i'just liku Cbritotlnas card,"..Jd aorilc ' the snqw 'to end so hC can act bt~ek to his' first- r~cive . 10 percent of building per·
Duncin, 1 retitd= whO tpent Monday afternoon Jll1lde class ai General Greene Elementary in m1t fees collected. Mayor Sandy
watdtin&amp; tile ~~ flakes .QOat !M't taW!!· . GrcensbQro, N.C.
.
l~nnarelli said council s~ou_Jd con"lt\,8 pure sheetQfllilow, and li'sjust so pretty,
Olrbla made a snowrnBII, threw snowballs . .••~er an lncrc~ m theb~1klmg per·110 prelly."
·
with the other kids, read. his favorite book and · m1t r~e at ther~ next meeung. . .
Cynthia Vanderford, whoae family had "0 ' even talked his dad into making up maU, quesCnuncll d1scussed partll:1patoon
power mCsl of the day, said she .P.nt h~r dme .'lions for him.
·
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·J~·· ·~ Y~stc{day

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for the sunny South and the heralded Robert Trent Jones Golf
.
. ·"
Trail. The .word has gotten around in Cold Countr}r th~t the
.
. . . '
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beautiful courses, the nice weather anQ the low rates ip.
Alabama are nothing to sneeze.at. And while we can't;
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a putt isn't just an expression. Unless you-head

&lt;

Village
approves
water/.
contract

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Purdue 8) , Indiana 77
S. Ulioois 7'2, Bradky .59
SE Mi5souri 77, E. Utinois 66
Salru l.ouis7.5, Deftlllll69
W, lllinoi1 64i V...,_ai1o :SO
W. Michigan 78, OHIO 74-0T
Wilconsin 1:5, Minnesota B
Wrigl\t St. 60, Wii..CJreen Bay' 44

BY:U 68, Colorado St. 47
Boise. St: SJ .·UC lrvi• ~1
CS NOI!hrid&amp;e 79, Mont:ona 67
Cal SI.·Fullenon 82, Idaho 74
Colorado 78, KansaJ St 70
E. Wuhinaton 90. Weber St. ?8
Fla. International 69, Den\ler 57
Goouga 84, San Die,o 79-0T
l.o_
nJ Br11.c h St. I 00, Nonh Tc:JtiU 63
N. Arizona 89, M,ont~tn ll St. 80
New fde,-lco 8,9, Air Force: 12
New MeJtlco St. 48. Pacific ~7
Oregon 81, WashinatoP St. 80-0T
. Peppc:rdinc 76, San Fra~i sco 70
Portland St. 72. Sacramento St. 70
S". Uulh 90. Chicdgo St. 69
Santa Clara 79, Loyola Marymount 7.,
SoUthern Cal SO: Ari zonD 72
Stanford 81 . Cnliforni D70
UC Sa.ma Barbara 89. New1du 6.5
UCLA 8.\. Arizonu St. 17
UNLV 8.\. San Dic:so St. 5~
Ut t~h 69. Wyomins 6 1
.
Utoh St. 7". Cnl Poly-S l O 62

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17. 1e.. as .................................... 12-!1
626
14IS. Oklahoma ............................ 15·3 484
17
1t&gt;. Utnh .................. ,.. , ................ l4 -~ 474
22
20. Vanderbilt ............................. l2-.l 300 20
ll ..N.C. Stale ...... ....................... I3·J 263
22 . Maryland ......... :................ ,... 1 ~\i:-5 225 14
n Southem Ca \.. ....................... 13·5. 176 - I.
~ - Te mple .......... ,........... ·.......11-4
174
St. J oh r~ ' s .............................. 12-4'' 170
19
Othtrs R'«i"lna ..-otes: Purdue 152. UCL:A 97,
low.a St. 49, Ore! on 4l ,,Gonmga J4. LSlJ 34, Seton
Hall 28. Michl!an 20, DePaull 6, llllnoi' U. KENT
l.l Miuouri I Marqucue 10, O~Y1UN8 , S~U 8,
Nonh Carolina 7, Wake= Forest 7. Akron 5. BYU 5,
S!. Bonave nil.]_rc, ~. Virt:lnill 5. Loui sviUe ,.t
BOW LING GREEN I. Delaware I. Dtlroll L
M ini hi~pi I, Tuhme I.

a

I,

p ·

1.044 ' 10
1,034
9
1,027
16
I,OU - 7
9SO
I:S

i'j

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belmplt~­

td In the county.

Today is 'We're ready New Hampshire."'
Bush said early this momjng after an
ovemight !1ight to Man~hester, N.H. "I'm
energized, I'm excited, my spirits are high
and I really like IJlY chances."
On lhe Republican side, with more thBII
95 percent of the state's 2,142 precincts
reporting, Bush had 41 percent of the vote
while Forbes had 30 percent. Cnnservative
Alan Keyes had a solid third-place showing
wjlh I 4 percent.
.
. . "This is nol a good night for .the power
brokerS in Washington," Fmbes told cheering backcn Mon(jay night. "We· bro~e lhe
,
•
political rules."
.. • •
·
1
. Forbes argued that his · showing means Pr•~tilll hopefu' GeOI'ge \¥. Buah
he's "emerged as the conservative candi- celebr~li his win ~ondl!y In .. the
dare•: to serve as an alternative to the front· Iowa oauoua. (AP photo) · 1 •
running Bush. It alSo set' the stage for a
.:• .
three-way primary fighi in New Hampshire too-close-to-call race with Bush. "We'll find
· between himself, Bush .and Sen. John' ®t in tire' next f~w days whether It·was a
McCain.
wise invC:stment."
' ·
· Trailing those three and likely facing
Arnot)&amp; Democrals, with more thBII 95
campaign re-evaluation was Washington percent ~t· the 2,131 precincts reporting.
activist Gary Baue~ at 9 percent and Ulilh Gore had piled up a commandiii863-3S lead
Sen. Orrin Hatch at 1 percent. McCain, the· ,. ~( Bra4'0y after a tough caucus c:ampaign
Arizona senator who skipped Iowa to focus . alid, was l!oping {or a bump 'he,ading into
on New Hampshire, pulled 5 percent of the New H '· ire.
vote. .
.
\
·
', With
47 Democratic .BIId 2S R.epub" In my view, the game is here,'' McCain li~ del '
' 11 stake in Monday,'s caucus·
said from New Hampshire, where he .was es,, the
1piize was niomenlum for New
campaigning and where polls show hlm i&lt;i a Hornp5hl
'maries Feb. I. l · . / '
·

';',.
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••

m~wlththa

county com.mlaelon.,. on
Monday to dl•
cuu plana for
geuglng
progreuon
._nPRC
program• to

DES .MOINEs, Iowa (AP)- Democrat
AI Gore and Republican GeorjlC W. Bush
posted victories in the first voting of the
2000 presidential campaign .and quickly
turned their attention to the next &lt;;Ontest in
New Hampshire exactly one week away. .
In the caucuses Monday nigh~ Gpte piled
up a yawning gap over rival Bill Bradley,
and Bush fac.ed stiff competition f.Ym~­
·• ._llll&lt;hplace finr•het Steve l'orbes. ,
, . ~·

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e

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M'ke Swlehtr,
Mtlge County
DHS director,

Gore crui~es;
Bush• not
as
•
conv1nc1ng

. t

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the lnttltute
for Human
Servlcea, •nd

·grams funded through the Meigs County grams now in place, and to make any 1cc,
Depao;tmenl of HumBII Services' Proven- ommended changes in th~ program~.
!ion, Retention Blld Contingency .ProThose planner groups will cooperate
gram.
with people with specific i"terests in the
PRC is designed to implement pro· goals of the program, such 115 economic
grams· aimed at preventing the need for development and chamber of commerce
cash assistance, and at enabling welfare· · representatives, significant employers in
recipients to find and reb!in jobs.
the counly an!l educaton.
, ·
Th~ programs, approved last fall by . Quarterly rcpor1s on the programs will
the commissioners, arc designed to assist be i,.ucd and evaluated, Boyle said. .
and tutor children in basic skills, prevent ' . "When you expend public monies
teenage pregnancy, 'and place case min· with eitlics privllc indust1y or public
agers in ~hools· to assist "highly-mobile" aa~ncies, we want something iil .retum,"
children in the community.
Boyle said. "Monitoring in projlrams like
Boyle, a former DHS director in Han-· this is very important."
cock County and a former DHS district
In related action, •the commissioners
director, will work with local planning
groups to·evaluate the success of the proPita~- llelga, Page A3

IOWA CAUCUS

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35 Cents

PLANS
UNVEILEDHelen Boyle, a
conaultlint ,
•mlltted with

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01
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Notre Dsme 81 . PiltJbUPah 66
Oak110d, Mkh. 64, UMKC 62

parentheses, records throu gh Jan. 23, total poina
bnscd on 25 p&lt;lints for a fj rst·place vOte throuah ooe •
poi nt for a 25 th-place vote and previoua rankin11: :

lY:L

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N. Illinois 92. MARSHALL 74
N. Iowa. 66. Wiehita St. 54
Nebraska 69, Baylor SS

The top 25 learns in 'The AssOl:iated Press' men'•
college basketball poll, with first-place votes in

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Single Copy-

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Middlepor t • Pomeroy, Ohlft

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By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel Ne- Staff
POMEROY -. Tracking progress on
several Welfare to Wo1k programs will be
made easier wi t~ help. from a Cnlumbusarea consultant, and the Meigs County
Commissioners met with her during their
regular meeting on Monday morning.
Helen Boyle of Worthington, from the
Institute for Human Services, a non-prof·
it agency working with social service
agencies, has been retained by the county
to help gauge progress on seven pro-

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'it\ ,. ,·.

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for,.,.,.,_-.,''

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.They want to tra~k
progress
on reforms
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If this is. who you
call when you need.a fourth •••
.

Missouri 81. Kansas 59

APTop 25 men's poll

fum

--~

Mklwest
Akron 69. Kent 64 ,
Ball St. 8R, Cent. Michignn 69
Butler 72, Wis.-Milwaukee 64
Dayton 83. Oeorae Wuhington 76
Oetroit 71, Cleveland St. 68
E. Micbigan 71, Toledo 68
Illinoi s 87, Penn St. 76
Illinois St. -72, SW Missouri St. 61
Indiana St. 67, Drake 6 2
Iowa RJ. Michifan 78
Loyola, Ill. 86, 11.-Chicago 80-0T
Mi.W , Ohio 74, Putfalo 54
Michigan St 69, Nonh~J ic:m 45

Sean I~ at N~ w York. 7:)() p.m.
LA Lnkers 0.1 Utah . 8 p.m. .
Indiana at Cllicagp. 8:JOp.m.
Vancouver ill Denver, 9 p.m.
New Jersey at Pon land, 10 p.m.
P lu:x:ni ~ 111 Indiana. 1

~!aware Sa. 61 , AoridaA&amp;.M S~
Duke 75, Wake Forest 61
ETSU 92, W. Carolina ·84
East Carolina 65. N.C.·Wilmington ~7
Aorida 77. Alabama 7]
·
Florida St..76. Nonh Carolina 7}
George: Mason 76, Va. Commonwealth 63
Georl!lla 90, South Carolina 62
Georgja Southern 93, The Citadel 81
Georl!lm St 66 , Mercer 5 I
Houston 98. Memphis "89
Jacbonville 82. florida Atlantic 6;\
Jacluonville St. 69, Samford 65-0T
Keptucky 8\ ,,Vanderbih 73-0T
louls)ana Te(:h 78. ArkansaJ St. 70
Louis ian a-L.arayettc 89, Ark.-Unl c Rock 7S
Louisiana-MOnroe 8S, Texas-San Antonio 71
MVSU 74. Jackson St. 61
MaryliUld 74. Clemson 62
McNee Se= St. 67. SE Louisiann 66
Miami 62, BOiton College 54
Middl~ Tc:nnc:sStt 80, Tc:nn es~e St. 7~
Mis~ issippi 79, Au~urn 77-0T
Murray St. 87. Morehead St. 86
N. Carolina A&amp;T 80. Md.-EaMc:m Shore 68
N.C. 0\arlot.te 69, Louisville 59
N.C. Stale 66,,Genrgin Tech S8 .
Norfolk St. 78. Morglln S1. 70
Old Dominion 74, William &amp; Mllry 60
Radford 82. Charleston Southern 7~
Rlcbmond 78, Amcri con U. 6.'\
South Aorida 73, Southc:i'n Mi ss. 51
~nhem U. 83, Alcorn S1. 17
S!e.lson 88. Cent Aorida 86 '
Tenn.·Manin 81. E. Kentucky 74
Tennessee Tech 75. Austin Peay 64
Tens Southern 71, Al abamn St. 51
Troy St. 71. Campbell 59
W Kentucky 92. Snuln.Ainbamn l:i8-20T
Winthrop.7S . Hi gh POim 57
Wofford 71, ChaUa11oogu 68

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New!lpaper
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.Offic·ials tackle:· welfa·re

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Scoreboard

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Thundering Herd
overpowers Ball St.

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WESTERN CONFERENCE

GOP, Dems spar over budget. surplU$, A2 · Marauder girls take 14th straight,-81
Meigs Community Calendar, 86

Today: Cloudy
High: 30s; Low: 10.

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:·Congress weighs In on Ellan
WASHINGTON (AP)- An election-year Conpaa is enlerifllthe fes.
lering dcbale over Elian Ocinzalez's future, as lqillalion 10 deem the 6. year-old Cuban refugee a U.S. citizen draws support in both chamhera.
Adding to the drama, Elian 's two pandmolhera scheduled meclinp with
lawmake111 here today to press their case that the boy should be retullled to
.,!lis homeland.
· ., Versions of the citizenship bill were formally inlrodo&amp;ced Monday in bolh
.the House and the Sclllle. and Sclllle Majority Leider Trent loll, R·Mill.,
told his colleagues they might debate the measure as early as Wednaday. A
vote Wednesday was p&lt;liSSible, but both sides said they doubted final action
would occur until next week at the earliest.
At the White House, spokesman Joe Lockhart declined,!O say what Pres" ident Oi1110n woul&amp;do if Congress passed the bill-sign it or veto it ..:.. but
. llllid the Wllite Hollsc '!{OIIId consider the matter after Conareu acts. The
,president has indicaled he does not believe Congress should get involved.
"There is a real danger here that this can become a political issue, that
• this young boy will be a political football," Lockhart said. "And I think the
president has made it very clear to everyone thai they ought to stay away··
• from politics here and stick 10 what the facts and the law dictate."
·
·:- In the House, rival but unbinding legislation was introduced urging that
· Elian be repatriated with his father ip Cuba.
· -·" "It is time to put an end to his ordeal by reuniting him .with his family
. .. and his grandparents in .Cuba," said p.ep. Charles Rangel, 0-N.Y:, senior
. :·Democrat on the House Judiciary Committee.
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: Clinton changes speech strategy
·.

WASHINaroN (AP) ·_. A younger Bill Clinton's inclination toward
hite-nigbt, ·brainy ·exchanj!es with aides and advise111 and an equal tendency
• to write a lot of his own stuff meant that his first State of the Union address
was very much a skin-&lt;if-the-teeth affair.
.
.
.
·- "I remember once they were typing it, like, an hour beforehand," said
'· one Clinton aide, recalling that the final version "!'ith the president's scrib: 'bled, last-minute changes was rushed onto a computer disk,.whisked across
town to the Capitol and popped into a TelePrompTer.
· No word.on what might have happened if the disk had failed.
Seven years later, things are much mOre organized for Ointon's final
" State of the Union speech Thursday night. Most of the major themes and
' -ideas were set before Christmas.
"We've had the general frame of the speech for some time," said deputy
·'White House spokesman Jake Sicwen, who was among a small group of
aides who began work on the speech several months ago.
: · "There will be changes - . burnishing, pc!lishing - ·right ·up to the after·
- 'n&lt;?IJn before, but it's minor .stuff," said Don Baer, .the president's former
· · •chief speechwriter and still a regular adviser. "It's a matter of presentation,
emphlll!is, et cetera. There's not a lot of last-minute, major things if they've
done their job right~ "
'
Baer is among the advisers, Cabinet secretaries and outside scholars and
•· writers asked to submit a "policy memo" to the While House weeks or
·· :months ahead of the speech. Often the memos are lengthy wish lists for what
. "people from very diffeienl worlds would like to hear in the president's
. address.

-Golf village balks at homeless
· ·' PINEHURST, N.C. (AP) -This quaint Nonh Carolina villag~ known
· ·for hosting one of the. nation's premier golfing events is balking at hosting
something else -tlie homeless.
·
· Some; residents of Pinehurst object to a church-led plan 10 offer tempo.racy shelter to homeless families in the milE! of their sedate golfing an.d
·:retirement community of 8,000.
.
.
"I don 'I have a problem v,.ith I he homeless," said Unda Cox, a busi. nesswoman and.leader of a petition drive against the proposed shelters. "I'm
:;against puning a shelter in a residential neighborhood."
.
:- Pinehurst, which hosted the 1999 U.S. Open golf tournament and has
::been tapped to host the 2lJ05 competition, is one of t~le's wealthiest
·;communities. Retirees live in homes siurounded by HedgeS; brick wBlliS or
.
.
::white picket fences.
·: The dispute began when two churches located across the street from the
: gold-domed Pinehurst Hotel and Country 'Oub offered to house up to 14
• people a week for about four weeks a year.
·
·
·
: The candidates would be families IVith children who were screened lo 1
.; weed out derelicts, drunks and drug addicts, said officials at the churches,
: the Community Presbyterilan Church and the Village Chapel. ·
But what staned as an attempt to provide emergency housing for needy
families h""' evolved into a battle over how exclusive Pinehurst should
· r:emain.

40 storie-s

,: NEW YORK (AP)- An Empire State Building elevator·with !Wo pea; pie aboard plunged 40 stories before a safety system finally stopped·the c;~r .
.; on the founh floor. The passengers were not seriously hun. ·
·
:; "I thought I was going to die," Shameka Peteoon said. "II was going
. ·. really, really fast."
.
·
·
.; Peteoon and Joe Masoraca, who work in different offices on the 44th
:floor, boarded the elevator Modday afternoon and pressed a button for the
·- lobby.
ij
: . "II just plunged," Peteoon told the New York Post. "It .was like a bungee
.; fall. It was terrifying." .
.
·
·: The elevator dropped about 400 feet before the ·safety system caught it
•, and slowed 11 to a stop on the founh floor. The elevator services the lobby
: and fl""!rs 41 through 55, so there.was n6 way to exit. Masoraca called for
: h~lp on the elevator telephone.
:· Maintenance workers rode up in an adjacent elevator, pried open an
:: emergency hatch and guit:led the pair across a beam to safety.
, Peteoon was treated for neck and shoulder 1!8-in and released from a hos• pital Masoraca has made
an appointment to see a doctor.
.
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:states sue sweepstakes outfit

ST. PAUL (AP)- Minnesota and 2S other states have now sued .Pub: lisher.; Clearing House; claiming false advenising by the sweep5takes
· giant thai sends its "Prize Patrol" minivan out on Super Bowl Sunday.
· "Publishers Clearing House's deceptive.sweCpslakes solicitations are
: designed to ~.nvince consumers that they are on the v~rge of winning big
: and that addtttonal or~ers of !'lagazines or goods are needed to improve
• theu cha~ces of wmnmg," Mmnesota Attorney Oeneml Mike Hatch said
·
·
.
: Monday. ·
· • The company also allegedly misrepresents that it has a "personal rela: tionship with cOnsumers" and induces people into believing that they are
:·guaranteed winners of big prizes. ·
.
: · Christopher Irving, director of consumer affairs at Publishers Clearing
· House pf Port Washington, N.Y., denied· the allegations and said the
:·majority of people who return their sweep5takes entries do so without
: ordering.
·
.
'
·
"The majority of our millionaire winners, 23 of 30, did not order with
: their winning entry," Irving Said.
"
:; Publishers Clearing Hou\IC was founded in 1953 and has been holding'
· • sweepstakes since 1~7. The company has given out about $137 million
. ; in major prizes and awards, Irving said. In 1997 and 1998, the company ·
;;had annual sales of about $375 million.,
. ·'
:
In addition to MiniiCliOia, suing Mondf,y were Colorado, New Yor"' ·
' • Nonh Carolina, New Jersey, Illinois, Ohio, New Mexico, Oklahom~. Yer-.
: mont, Oregon, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Louisiana, Georgia, Utah al)d
; California. Similar complaints already had been filed in nine states. .
'
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j Gates Foundation now largest

DeWine, Cre:eaeans spar
WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen. ,Mike !JeWine
asys his lllli-lbonion credentials are seci&gt;nd to
none. Political rival Frink Cremeans says those cre·
denliala Ire ICCOild-!ate.
ANi-abortion ldivists wbo
uave!Cd from Ohio for the
- ' March for Ufeon Mon·
day all seemed lo side with
DeWine.
' N Anyone
WhO questiOnS
Mike DeWine's credentials has
real problems, ... said Peggy
Lehner of Dayton Right to
Ufe. "It's stupid. It's crazy."
Cremeans. wbo served in
Congress in 199S-96, contends
.
DeWinc sullied his abonionfighting ieoord by falling to introduce an anti-abortion amend!Jltnt lo the Constitution, and by picking
the wrona lidi ' in ~eans· last congressional

race.

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Along ·witti the rest of Ohio Republicans in
power in 1998,, ~Wine supported then-Lt. Gov.
Naaicy Hollister ag;ainst Cremeans and other.; in a
GOP pririuuy. He also divened some of his campaign dolhus to the Hollister effon.
"When he lOok his campaign money and put
$1,000 on Nancy in· the prim;try, he dri:w the line
between pro,ehoice and pro-life and these pro-life
people . are really upset," said Cremeans. "He's
going to have lo answer to the people who contributed to his Cllllpaign as right-to-lifers;"

.More inmates get GEDs
COLUMBUS {AP)- Ohio's prison system h~
a message for its inmates: the more you learn on the
inside, the better your chances once you're outside.
The slate ControUing Board .on Monday
·increased funding by $720,000 in a program that
allows inmate!; at juvenile detention centers and
prisons to get their high schoOl equivale!'CY degrees
or diplomas.
.
About 3,500 inmates took pan in the program
last year and officials believe. tha,t number could
. double this year. .
·
The money wm go io hiring.consultants to han·
die the increased workload expected this year•and

"He didn't think he was a aoocJ cnoup swllil·
next, said Ed Whitfield, 1 cille diredllr of the
Department of flductllort's Curriculum Asmament mer for the Navy, lei be wu pn.cticina,"llid Indianapolis police Detective Thomas Sarfaty.
and OED offtce.
1'1le boy'• 'father, Richard Powell, retired from
The bOard. wliicll COitliata of six lawmakers and
the
Navy in 1996. He thinks his son should not have
a president whore~ Gov. Bob Tall, approved
been
left unsupervised al the hotel.
without opposition the ilK• e in appropriation for
the OED program. 1'1le prop1111 ia fun&lt;1cd by the
.departments .of Rehabilitation IIDCl Correction and
Youth Services and ldminillered by the ncp.rtment of Education.
·
DAYTON (AP)-Ajudgehas upheld an arbitrator's decision to reinstate a city police officer
who used pepper spmy.on a worker at a· fast-food
restaurant.
Michael McDonald, 35, used pepper spray on
· CINCINNATI (AP)- Cincinnati public school
teachers have given union leaders the authority to Wendx's employee Brandy Martin, then 17, while
call a strike if conl..ct negotiations with the districl . arresting her in February 1998. McDonald contended she ~fused .to go with him to his cruiser
continue too slowly.
'
and
receive a summons after he accused her of
About 2,800 teachers listened Monday, night to
speeches by Cincinnati Fedemtion of Teachers shon-changing him at the drive-through win'dow.
McDOnald was found innocent of misdeleaders and supporter.; before .laking a voice vote
that authorized the union's executive council to call meano• assaull in June 1998, but was fired a few
weeks l~ter by police Chief Ronald Lowe. Lowe
a strike.
CFf Pr.Sident Tom Mooney sktd teachers will said McDonald's actions were "callous" and
. "brutal," but an .arbitmtor last year ordered
strike only "if they feel it's right for the kids."
'Mooney said he hopes the strike authorization McDonald rehired without back pay. The aibitravote sends a message to the school board that the tor .said that McDonald did not use unnecessary
teacheri; ~re very· concerned about the impasse in force and that his unprofessional conduct did not
negotiations. ·
merit firing:
Attorney Mark Stepal)iak, who · repre5cnts the
district in n,egotiations, called the ·strike vote a pres-·
sure tactic. He questioned.its timing, saying the district has agreed to extend the teaehers' contract
COLUMBUS (AP) - Iii what · may be lhe
through April 1 .- after the. March. primary in largest en'vil;onmental fines collected by the city;
which the district will seek two levies and after pro- four companies will pay more than $200,000. in
ficiency lesti~g.
civil penalties for illegally dumping heavy metals .
into Columbus' sewer system.
The compapies -:- three metal finishers and
&lt;me that cleans hazardous waste containe111 WEST CHESTER (AP) '-The ~ily of a 17· also agreed to improve their environmental monyear-old boy is awaiting a Navy investigation of his itoring programs so that city officials can tmck
drowning in a hotel swimming pool during an what they dump.
The agreements must still be approved by
enlistment trip to Indianapolis. '
,t.aron Powell, who graduated from Lakota West Franklin·County Environmental Judge Richard.C.
. High School two weeks ago, accompanied a Navy · Pfeiffer Jr.
The city has "·strict standards 10 protect ihe
recruiter to Indianapolis on Friday night so he could
· enlist the next day, his fil!nily sai,d. . , · , •·
quality of out rivers," City Allorney Janet ' E.
After the requiter left him 11 tile hole!, he spent Jackson said in a statement Monday, "It is my
seve~ bouts swimming, ale Slipper and swam hope thatthese ·consenl orders send a clear messome more. He was found at the' bottom (jf the pool sage: Polluters will be held accountable and prosand .was pronoynced dead 8t a hospital. '
ecuted for environmental violations."

Policeman reinstated

Te,chers OK strike

4 firms fined $200,000

Navy probes drowning

r-~------~----------------~

Two. partie.s dueling over · : VETERANS MEMORIAL MEDICAL CLINIC
size of expected surpluses
FREE Diabetic &amp;Hypert~nsion Screening ·
WASHINGTON (AP) - An use.
,
unusual decision by ·COngress' top . · . ~any Repoblicans like ihe secbudget analyst to produce three sep- ond option beca~se it allows room
arate surplus esfimates is touching for big tax cuts over the decade, ·but
off an election: year 'battle between 4oes not make the unrealistic
Democrats arid Rejiublic~ns over assumption. th~t 'the 'spending limits
how muc.h black ink there will be.
will be obey~d. .
Dan Crippen, director of the non· .
In the fiscal2001 budget he inlro'
panisan Congressional Budget duces next .month, President Clinton
Office, is expected to release three •. 'is e~pected to embrace a surplus
surplu~ proj!'Ctions for the ·coming ~ .. estill)at~ lhl!t iS a bit more generous
decade on ·Wednesday. The figure than the' $1 trillion figure congresCongress ul\lmately chooses wq!, siona\, Del))oc~.ts are expected to
determine. how much money JS· I use. , '· '
·
.

·
.

Thursday, January 17, 2000
,,' ... 8:30AM - ll:OOAM
" '~·

Screening Tes~
.
Information·.
. Nutrition~' ..·'a'nd:. Medication· Educational·
.
Cij[(740) 992-3632 to Pre-Register
~

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$499

$699·

you don~t ·:.need·two·. .~:. .brin~ ~ friend·and s~e
recliners~:.·.. /:. \ .the savmgsr Lane~
$69 '

thl· n,·\1 ~~· '~
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.,.&amp;.·.LM~ State !RJ:.
90 Day Lay·Away
.1 7,1m 66· _._7.'"8.'8 • 'l-8
. 00_2· 00-4005
'

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.

. available
for debt
tax reduction.
cuts., spending . l'-:~~~~~~· ~j---~--~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
increases and
. ....
Democrats are expected to
Buy A.Recliner For
embrace the smallest of three pro·
jections. That total, for the 10 years
ending 2010;will ·be roughly $1tril.
lion excluding Social Securi.ty; say
congressional ai~es speaking on
copdition of anon)'IDity. ·'
Republicans have not decided '
what to do, but many of them - · ..1
.including· Senate Budget Committee
Chairman Pete Domenici, R-N.M.
- seem'Jikely to endorse a .projection totaling about $2 trillion over
the period, aides said. that is about
double what CBO projected list
year, a figure that has grown beCause
"""''"
of the persistently strong economy.
lr.to l~i.,., ... .. ~ •• , ,~ .. ,h~o.... ....~....... Lh&lt; IM~
CB0 'II I
I
h'rd
"''·"'""11(0.\ ...-lj•""'' ,..u.•,..,,.,., •• ~· ·•·
WI a sore ease at I
pro·
. L l lllnl"lll••wi.11~~~~~ :nl-!1 il:
jection which, though arrived at dif· . ~=~~~====::=:~:!:::==:=._...=,:::=:;::::;=:::=:~==:==::=~!!!!!!!!!~~:::;
ferently, also forese~ about $2· tril·
Buy ARec!Hner For
lion in black ink, aides said.
It is unusual for CBO to produce
·multiple surplus estimates without
·'
endorsing one as the figure .. it
believes most valid. CBO's decision
to release . three projections high·
lights the immense political pressure
on the agency as the. two parties vie
over rival visions of how to use the
•government's projected extra cash.
The . figure Democrats like
'""'
assumes that the one-third of the
~.. , .. _ '"~' "" 1..-1 .•. ,., ... ,,. ~~~'·ti•+-·L~-~·
~1.7- trillion federal budget that Coni"
1.111• "'~'' ··~~··~· ·ul· h.u ·~ ~~~~ " ~' .,... ,"-''·
gfCS$ MUst approve every year Will
'''·'' · ' '11 ~ ~~U·I ' 11 "'
'
grow annually at the rate of infla·
lion, That 0~-third of the budget
covers everything but automatically
paid benefits like Social Security
and interest on the federal debt.
'rhitt option assumes the most
spending -·' with leSs money left
over for the GOP's proposed tax
c,uts - 'than &amp;J!Y of CBO's alterna........._ ...,.....
. ,"!!
tives. It al,$0 most nearly approaches
.' •
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•
what has tK:tually happened in recent
.·,Buy Thidlexback.
yea111, as-l!lwmakers have consistent·'
.!Y incrcued IJIIC'nding for defense
and many ®mestic progmms.
The number · many Republicans
like aiiSumcs that the money spent
on thai one-tl\ird of the budget will
·remain frozen at roughly $620 bil·
lion, aQollt whal is be,ing spent this
' year. It assumes hiss spending than
Democrats would like, with more
1N· '"'n•u,,·l\·,h.. ~ :nl\1 ·~~~~•un ,,ltt.ro~~lk: ~~~•~~.i,hu: lllni•~HIIIi·
. 'money left Oyer for laX C'ltS,
t~l h·~ I. :11~1 n ~I Jill\\ "llll: l;lih,,l •kif'! n-Jik .~··· nll),ll,·• I hi- •1•11'

Mon.-Thurs. 9-5
Fri. 9·6 • Sat 9~4
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not be available for an advance
until the first full week of February.
Comm issioner Janet Howard
said that the commissioners do ~ot
from PageA1
plan at this time to request an
POME~OY- The Meigs County Board of Elections will meet at 9 a.m. approved contracts for those proadvance before the final real estate
Wednesday in the Common Pleas Counroom of the Meigs County Coon- grams with the followins agencies: settlement in Ma"rch, but the comhouse. The meeting will include a hearing on the protest of several petitions Meigs County Chamber of Com- missioners have traditionally been
POMEROY- Edna Sc~nleb, 333 Lasley St., Pomeroy, di"Monday,
for candidacy filed by sheriff candidates in the March primary.
merce for the Guaranteed Work- required to make such an advance
Jan. 24, 2000 in Holzer Medical Center. ·
force
Progmm, $261,332; ACCESS in order to pay bills and make payArrangements will he announced by Ewing Funeml Home, Pomeroy.
to Human Resource Development, roll.
'
$375,000 for case managers in
Clerk of Courts Larry Spenoer
MIDDLEPORT- Carol Tannehill will offer a class in acrylic painting at schools; Athens/Meigs Educational and Title Office Clerk June
the Riverhend Arts Council headquarters in Middlepon, on Mondays, Feb . Service Center for math tutoring Eichinger met with the commls7 through 28, from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. The cost is $20. Those interested are programs, $359,225; prosecuting sioners to discuss the upcoming
, - . POMEROY- Everett Tonie Lightf'oot, So, Pomeroy, died Monday, Jan. asked to register with Tanneh!ll al 992-5336 by Friday.
attorney, $62,839 for the teen absti- installation of a new computer sys24, 2000 at St. Joseph's Hospital, Parkersburg. W.Va.
nence education program; Mid-Val- tern .
, He was born June 16, 1919 in Pomeroy, son of the late Dallas and Edith
ley Christian School, $23,030 for
They requested permission to
.· !1ysell Ughtfoot.
·
.
tutQring services; and the juvenile hire a tempc~rary employee to assist
. He was a U.S. Army veteran of World War ll, a retired GTE maintenance
coun, $54,494 for a home stabiliza- during the: transition, due to the
employee, and was employed as a coal truck driver; a school bus driver and
POMEROY- Weekend revival at Faith Valley Tabernacle Church, Bai- tion program.
•
maternity leave of another emplo,y. with the Highway Oil Co.
,
ley Run Road, Pomeroy, Feb. 3-6 at 7 ·p.m. daily with Elder Robert Hall of
.
The
board
met
with
Joe Bolin, ee in the office.
. He was a member of the Meigs County DAV and Bmdfofd Church of Point Pleasant as evangelist.
,
Soil arid Water Conservation superSpencer not1ld thaf any overtime
·
.
·
.Christ.
visor and Constance White of the incurred as a result of the new sys. Surviving are his wife, Geraldine Luarie Walburn Ughtfoot; two sons and
Ohio Department of Natural tern would be reimb~rsed to the
.daughters-in-law, Butch and Bonnie Ughtfoot of Pomeroy, and·Jeff and Con·
Resources, Soil and Water Conser- county by the · Ohio Bureau of
. . nie Ughtfoot of letart, W.Va.; two daughters and.sons-in·l•w, Cherie and
POMEROY - State Sen. Michael C. 'Shoemaker, D-Boumeville, will
' '
·
vation Division, as well as Blair Motor Vehicles.
.. David Williamson of Pomeroy, and Su:ptt~ and .Brian Will 0J Pomeroy; 13 hold office hours Monday, 1-2 p.m. in the conference room at the Meigs .. W'
d
d 0
f
Commissioner Jeffrey Thornton
tn on an
pal Dyer 0 the said that he has information avaiigrandchildren; a brother, Francis D. Ughtfoot of Middleport; a sister and broth- . PJunty Senior Citizens Center in J'omeroy.
SWCD office in Pomeroy, about a able for those interested in small
. er-in-la~. Genevieve and Raben Burdette of Pomeroy; a . r , Della Mae ·
new progmm funded through business loans or small business
Ovenurf of Whitehall; and a half-sister, Maggie Lee of Middleport.
ODNR
for log jam and debris loan refinancing. He recommended ·
He was preceded in death by a stepmother, Mae Ughlfoot; a sister. and
brother-in-law, Ethel1111d Ernest \\bod; a brother, Emmett·Ug\ltfoot; sister-inthat those who would like informaPOMEROY -A round and square dance will be held Friday from 8 to removal.
The progmm will make avail- tion about the loans contact him at
law, Clara Ughtfoot; and a h81f-brother, Lee·Lightfoot.
11 p.m. at the Pomeroy Senior Center. Music will be by True Country. Caller
able $142,000 in funding to the commissioners office.
.
. . . Services will be 2 p.m. Thursdl!y in the Fisher Funeral Home, Pomeroy, will be Art Conant.
.
.
improve
the
condition
of
local
The
commissioners
approved
a
. ~1lh Doug Shamblin and Eugene Uncle.rwood oft'jcialing. Burial will be in
streams
and
small
waterways.
The
bid
from
All-American
Fire
Equip·Miles Cemetery, Rutlancl, with military graveside services.by ,Feeney,BeMett .
SWCD is now seeking information ment, Ona, W.Va., for the pufchase
Post 128 of the American Legion. Friends may call at the fune~ home from 2, , 4 and 7-9 p.m.I Wednesday.
POMEROY - No. citations were issued following an accident in" and cost estimates from townships of a new pumper fire truck for the
interested in participating in the Village of Syracuse, in the amount
I
Pomeroy over I he weekend.
,
of S171,718. ·
According to Pomeroy Police Chief Jeffrey Miller, Johnny Billings of program.
Trustees
and
those
who
wish
to
The truck will be paid for with
Kegley, W.Va., failed to negotiate 1 curve at Lasley and Brick streets and
discuss
possible
·
projecis
for
the
$35,000
in Community Develop. CHESHIRE- Joan L. Thttle, 72, Cheshire, died Monday, Jan. 24, 2000 at struck a utility pole.
program
are
·asked
to
contact
the
ment
Block
Grant funds and funds
ber residence.
Heavy damage was reported lo his vehicle, but there were no injuries.
raised by the S,yracuse VFD. Bids
. SWCD at 992-4282:
. Born Dec. 28, 1927 in Harrisonville, daughter of the late Earl and Gaynell
County
Auditor
Nancy
Parker
for
the truck and equipment for
.Lamben Oark, she was a homemaker, and a retired wait~and cook.
Campbell
met
with
the
board
to
disother
depanments were opened last
. She is survived by a son and daughter-iii-law, Walter an&lt;tSharon Tuttle of
cuss continuing problems
in
the
k
wee ,
.
.
Thppers Plains; a son, Jon ThUle of ColumbQs; a daughter. and son-in-law,
·POMEROY - Randy Ebersbach of Racine reported the theft of two county . budget, spe~1fically
_prob..
The
board
approved
the
appoint_. ~usan and Gary Gregory of Thppers Plains; a daughter, Jeanne 1\tttle of Gal- chainsaw! from his truck while it was par~ed at Jeff's Carryout in Pomeroy. ·
terns wtth the county s health msur- men! of Mrs. Gene Lyons as acting
..lipolis; a brother and sister-in-law, Jack and Ullian Clark of Athens; a sister and ·
The saws were valued at about $1,100, according to Pomeroy Police ance cla1ms fund.
. EMS director upon the retirement
. brother-in-law, Priscilla and Rodney Bowen of Albany; .a siSter, Jeanette Chief Jeffrey Miller.
·
Ca~pbell said a transfer is ne~- of Bob Byer on Feb. 25.
. l;lwrence of Racine; two grandchildleri; severn! nieces and nephews.
essary tn that fund to pay the weeks
The commissioners also:
, . She was also preceded in death by a brother, Gene Oark.
hea.lth insurance claims, w~ich are
• JApproved transfers of funds
Services will be 2 p.m. Wednesday in the Sutton Church in Bashan, with the
estimated
at
approximately
for
the recorder, the first-half
Rev. Dewayne Stuller officialing. No calling hours will be observed and
LONG BOTTOM- Jimmy L. Buchanan, 34, 52302 Mount Olive Road, $25,000.
for the Meigs County
.
appropriation
arrangements are by the White Funeral Home, Coolville. ,
Long Bollom, was cited for failure to control following a one-vehicle acciCampbel!
also
advtsed
the
bo~rd
Council
on
Aging,
and an advapce
In lieu of flowers, donatiQns may be made to the American Cancer Society,
dent
al
3:13
p.m.
Saturday
on
State
Route
6~1.
·
that
they
wtll
be
unable
to
recetve
back
in
the
budget
of the Major
or to a charity of choice.
.
Troopers said Buchanan was westbound when he failed to navigate a an advance on real estate tax col- Crimes Task Force;
right curve, lost control ori snow-covered road and slid off the left side of the · lections for the benefit of the gener•· JApproved a contract for softroad, striking a metal retaining wall.
/
at fund for at least two weeks.
ware maintenance for the DHS;
Troqpers also cited Elnora Bernard, 53, 39557 Betzing Road, Reedsville,
. The Commissioners are allowed,
• Approved the payment of bills
.
LETAIU, W.Va.- Louie Gene Skeens, 71, Letart, died Monday, Jan. 24, for improper backing following an accident near the intersection of Joppa by law, !O advance 90 percent of in the amount of $511,,859, with
: 2000 in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
.
and Su.ccess roads at 4:12 p.in. Monday.
·
current collections into the general 190 entries.
Born Aug. 7, 1928 in Uncoln County, W.Va., son of J. Carl Skeens of Un·
Bernard was backing a.sehool bus westbound into ·the eastbound lane of fund to pay operating exf'Cnses, but
Also present were Commissioncoin County, and the late Edith Dotson Skeens, he was retired from Kaiser Alu- Joppa Road, and struck a stopped eastbound car driven by Judith A. Buck- said that tax bills will likely be er Mick Davenpon, Clerk ·Gloria
minum-Ravenswood Aluminum, and .was a member of United Steelworkers .ley, 50879 Joppa Road, Reedsville.
mailed by the ~reasurer's office later Kloes and Prosecuting Attorney
~ Local 5668 and Graham Onited Methodist Block Church.
The bus was slightly damaged, and Buckley's vehicle was inodemtely this week, meaning that funds will John Lentes.
. Surviving in addition to his father are his wife, Gladys June Lemon Skeens; damaged.
·
. , two daughters, Carolyn M. (Roben) Grimm and Kanon F. Lamben, both of
·New Haven, W.Va.; six grandchildren and a great-grandchild; two brothers,
. '
· ByNs "Bu!ldy" (Jenena) Skeens of Casey, W.Va., and Rooney A. (Sue) Skeens
member.; of the public addressed c&lt;iuncil.
. ,.• , SamSeveral
of Beckley, W.Va.; and two sisters, Nada Price of Casey, and Mona (Jack) Rus,
Eblen.
discussed
'thi!'lfeed for removing junked and
.. '
! sell of Nitro, W:Va.
· ;
,
. · · r. .
. abandoned car.; from village streets, and lannarelli said
: Services will be 1 p.m. Wednesday in 6mham Unitei!' Methodist Block
she agreed the issue should be addressed. She also
from Page A1.
· Church, witb.Pastor .[.arry Luckeydoo, J. Carl Skeens and Rodney Skeens offiqoted a problem with abandoned and Uf1Safe refrigera- ·
. cjati~g. Burial will be !n Of!1ham Cemetery. Friends may, ~;all al Foglesong in the Ohio Department of Trans?&lt;Jnation's Coopera- tors on private property.
·.Funeral Home, Mason, W.Va., from 6-9 tonight.
·
· tive Purchasing program, so the village can purchase a
Susie Qc:Moskey and Jean Craig read prepared let: Tl)e body will lie in state in the church one hour prior to the services.
ters
to council regarding comments allegedly made by
one-ton dump truck through lhd progmm at reduced
Iannarelli about their appearances at a past council
costs.
·
Action was tabled, following discussion of the need meeting.
Council also:
for such a truck and the proposed method of purchasing a.truck,
·
• Apprpved the hiring of Linda Warner as village
inch or less of snow accumulation.
::ay The A11oclated Pren
Councilman Steve Houchins noted such a proposal solicitor, at a cost of$450 per'month;
·: . The record-high temperature for Lows in the, mid and upper teens. would eliminate the opportunity for local bids.
• Conducted the first reading on an ordinance estab::ttiis date at the Columbua weather sta- Nonhwest wind 10 · to 15 mph.
Police ' Chief Bruce Swift was, authorized to pur- lishing Manin Luther King Jr. Day as a paid holiday
;·lion was 74 degrees in 1950 while the Chance of snow 60 ll"rcent: ·
for employees;
·
·:record low ·waS 15 below zero in ·
Wednesday...Moslly cloudy with a chase a police cNiser at a maximum cost of $6,000, to
Present, in .addition to lannarelli and Houchins,
replace a car deemed unsafe. Swift also was given
';1884. Sunset tonight will be at 5:42 chance of snow showeis. Less than an authority
· were council members Rae Owi~.jowsky, Roger Manto
fill
two
part-time
patrol
positions.
inch additional accumulation. Cantin·
:Jl.m. and sunrise Wednesday at7:46.
Iannarelli commended street crews for their work iit ley, Bob Pooler, Kathy Scott and~Bob Robinson, and
:
Weather rOftCIIIIt:
ued cold with highs in the mid 20s.
Clerk Bryan Swann.
· ·
•
snow
removal.
·: Tonight...Snow showers likely. An Chance of snow 50 percent.
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Meigs

Site changed for ·elections meeting

Edna Schoenleb

Class In acrylic painting offered

. . Everett Tonie Lightfoot

Revival scheduled for tt)ls weekend

Shoemaker sets local office hours

Round, square da11ce scheduled

Accident Investigated by pollee

' Joan L. Tuttle

Chalnsaw theft reported to officers .

Citations Issued In pair of accidents

Louie Gene Skee_ns

''

spending
limitsoption
on this assumes
portion ofthat
the
. The third
1 budget will be obeyed. These limits
· have been surpaSsed for the past two
: · SEA1TLE (AP) - Bill and Melinda Oates ha~e donated another S5
·years by tens of billions of dollars:
.' billion to their f\)undation, making it the world's rich~ an'd boosting ita
- : endowment to about $21.8 billion.
·
annually, and are vinually cenain to
be' ignored again Ibis coming year.
; The Bill a~d Melinda Gales FoundatiO\I surpassed London's W4111' come Trust wtth the latest gift from the Microsoft Corp. founder and his
This calculati9n assumes bigger surpluses for t~ next few years, but
: wife,.the Chroni£1e of Philanthropy confirmed Monday.
·
: Wellcome Trust now has $21.4 billion based on Monday's exchange
smaller surpl~J~e~!Jn late~ yem·than ,
· mte,' a Chronicle spokesman said.
!he assumption ·Republicans wilt'
.

LOCAL NEWS IN BRI.EF

BUCKEYE STATE NEWS IN BRIEF

::NATIONAL NEWS IN BRIEF

:cable·snaps; 2 fall

1\.lllday, ....._, 21, aooo

Pomeroy, Mkldleport, Ohio

P-ee A 2 • The Deily l1ntlnll

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Popteroy, Middleport, Ohio

Tuelldlly, JanUIIry 25, 2000 -

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Meigs EMS squads answer 31 calls for help

10:38 p.m.
Bashan Road, squad assisted;
.
Clarence Wolfe, VMH,
3:47 p:m. Sunday, Bridgeman
2:40 p.m. Monday, Sellers Ridge . Street, Bernice Winebrenner, HMC;
Road, Donald Raines, HMC.
·
12:54 p.m. Mo~day, Church Street,
REEDSVILLE
Evelyn Stowe, treated at the scene.
7:35 p.m. Monday, Eden Ridge
TUPPERS PlAINS
Road, Forest Adams, treated at scene.
1:11
Saturday, VFD to

ments, Pomeroy,
Lee Sjjlith,
Memorial
H~pital;
f ,Veterans
' 2:29 p.m. Saturday, Royal Oak
Reson; Lori Ann Bjorn Pahl, VMH;
6:24 p.m. Saturday, Riverside
Apanments, Middlepon, AeztlP Fish·
er, treated at the scene;
11:24 p.m. Salurday,' Coun Street
Grill, Pomeroy, Brandi Stewan,

RUI1AND .
9:03 a.m. Sunday, Beech Grove
Road, Lawrence Jinks, Pleasant Valley
Hospital;
10:05 a.m. Sunday, SR 124, Minersville, Amy Elliott Fields, Holzer
Medical Center.

2:33
p.m. Camlfen
Monday,Clark
Reedsville,
Susie
Kerwin,
Memorial Hospital, Reedsvillcsquadpassisted;
.. 5:29 p.m. Monday, White's Hill
Road, Rutland, Franklin Houser, HMC.
MIDDLEPOKr
11:55 a.m. ~turday, volunteer fire
department to Riversi~ ApanmentS,
sinoke odor,
VMH;
12:S1 a.m. Sunday, VFD to Paae
10:07 a.m. Sunday, 1 ~tate Route S!~t smoke odor at Michael Smith
124, Minersville, Andrew Fields, Don residence.
Rae, refused treatment;
12:15 p.m. Monday, Hobson, Calh·
· , 10:33 a.m. Sunday, Race Street leen Dttho, HMC.
Middlepon, Virginia Hindy, VMH;
POMEROY
12:15 p.m. Sunday, Grant Street,
8:24 p.m. Sunday, Anne Street,
'Middlepon, Nola Bradshaw, VMH;
Terry Chambers, VMH,.
5:22 p.m. S~nday, Bailey Run
RACINE
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641, William Slover, VMH, Racine

ALL AGES, ALL TIMES S4.00
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•• 13 Wceb ...............................................$29.2!1

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Su~~y.

POMEROY · EMS units . Road,. Pomeroy, William ·Butcher,
responde&lt;! to ~he following calls:
l;lo~r Medical Center;
CENTRAL DISPATCH
8:56 p.m. Sunday, Riverside Apart1:03. a.m. Saturday, state Route ments, Sherry Werbey, VMH. •
681, Thppers Plains, Calvin Hawk,
10:30 a.m. Monday, Att!aughAddiCamden-Clark Memoria! Hospital;
lion, Thpjiers Plains, Rose Peterman,
5:15 a.m. Saturday, ;'¥aptesApart· St, Joseph's Hospital;

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can us fOr more

dew ar.d a competitive prqu;al.
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'fli,'No,....'IW,4•

214 Eool Maill
Pomeroy
992-6687

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COME GIVE YOUR . ·
GRANDPARENTS' ATTORNEY

'£stufislid fnl94&amp;
'111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740 li2-215e • Fu: 11112·2157

/1, .. 11 .. . . 1.... 1..•• 1.... 1.... 1.... 1.••. 1•..• 1.... 1..•. 1..•• 1.... 1.... 1.1111 ... 11 .... 1.••• 1.... 1••.. 1.. ,'

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Super Bowl

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stahlerOfuse.net :

Lflt.,.I#IIN

General

M1n~g~r

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ChllriN W. Gowy
Publlllher
Chart- Hoeflich

The Dally S.ntiMI • Page A 5

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

A. BIG HUG!

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

A. Shawn Lewla
M111aglng l'dllor

I

: l'ulldlly, JenUIII:Y 25, 2000

TuiiUy, JMuery 21, 2000

·- ,.----------------,
The Daily Sentinel '
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TENNESSEE
TITAN'S
..
You Can Be A Winner Too!

DIIM HIH
Controller

.1.;,., ,..._, .,.., •"-" llwW. d.,,. JtiO WOf"b.A.U /.am.,. ·~

111..1Mb11 W - ~ .S,11IIIIIItll iltdiii•.Miwu•INII.,_,• ,.,,..,, N• .,_,,.. , _ , wilt
N ,M,dlli. L.Unw •ltlHM H Ia pal ltal•, .Mnnllf1 luun, ttot rns rut.tlllft.
n. OfiUUtnu "f!W"_• ill r•• col_,. Uow rn rlpl't:HIIMU oftlu 0/Uo Y,., I',..IUiq
c .. .,. rtiJwW ~• ..,.,_ utllmn.. ~N.

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~ Get

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involved

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Number of local candidates in,primary
refreshing sign of pomical activism

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Our view:·

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I All Entries Must Be .
. . 2000 SUPER.BOWL
I
1 Submitted Before
SWEEPSTAKES' ENTRY
:
1
~~::;;;,o:;,n I
the winning team &amp; final score .1

"

::
With -the filing deadline over, local candidates seeking their par. ': ties' nomination for various offices are making themselves known to
·.: the electorate as the March 7 primary approaches.
.;
More than any' other time, the voting public has an opportunity to
·• find out where these candidates stand and what they hope to accom~ plish as officeholders.
•:
If one comes to your door, or if you are
:: ~Vllh voting attending a political function. ask them about
!: .
down their motivation and plans for the future·. By
~
nd
.
asking questions and. getting answers, voters
~ a cymcism can make an informed decjsion on who they
::
about
want representing them.
~
With voting levels down and cynicism about
government rising, it's up to the voters to
:; rising, it:\' up remind office-seekers ·they are ultimately
~ to the votet's responsible to the public.
•
Despite the belief one vote doesn't make a
: to remind difference- so why bother even going to the
::
office·
polls - past elections have proved a handM
.•
of those single ballots made the difference in
~
some important races. It's one thing to com~ are ultimately plain about the kind of government we have;
~
doing something about it is another.
~ responsiblt! to
A resurgence of interest has been seen in
:; the public. such top county offices as commissioner and.
:;
sheriff, and to some extent, it can be attributed
:; .to the various populist movements that arose in the 1990s, symbol;. ized by Reform Party leader Ross Perot's runs for the White House.
• ~ · Disillusionment with the status quo' that followed the impeachment
~ attempt against President Clinton may be another reason citizens are
; getting energized over the political process. Standing by isn 't cutting
: it with a growing number of people; they want to make a difference.
~
It's a refreshing trend to see more people getting involved, either
,; as candidates.or as campaign workers. The chance to speak with can;: didates, weigh l lleir responses and make an informed decision in
;: March isn't one to pass up.
·o
•
:;
Anyone passionately interested in an i~ue, either lo&lt;;ally or nation~ ally, can take advantage of the situation to make their views known
. : and get their questions answered. '
·
~ That was the message John Smart, national commander of the Vet;: erans of Foreign Wars, presented to VFW lodges during his Novem~
:: ber visit to Ohio. Smart asked veterans to take,an active role in pro:: tecting the programs that serve them against the budget ax by going
~ ~irectly to the candidates.
-~
"It's up to us to make these changes," he said during a stop in Gal~ lipolis. "They won't be so much concerned about what John Smart
~ says, but they will be cbncerned when you go to their offices. You
~ need to get involved in the proeess."
.
.
~
And while it's an old saying, _it's one that still has a lot of meaning:
· ;: Exercise your right to vote. It's worked for more than two centuries,
:: and compared to the alternative, it's still the best.
'

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: got•ent.mellt

seekers they

Employees of this
newspaper and the
participating
businesses are not
. eligible. Enter as
often as you like.
No purchase

Perkins' view:

Linking marriag~ an_
d pqverty reduction:
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Some missing the boat

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Address_________---,-_
·

!Jlartflle{(

·!Jlousi
Open

l-4 Super Bowl
Stinday ·

-Gifts -Antiq~;~es
-Folk Art ·

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42123 Sr-,7, BOX 250
r..,_s Plains, OH 45783

100 E. Main .

.Historic

1-740-667-7388
1-800-200-4005

~owntown

PQmeroy, Ohio

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111 Court
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INGELS CARPET
169 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Oh
;. 992-7028
.

Arthur

Treacher''·a
•

· Weekly Lunch
Special!!
. -Pizza Special
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toppings for $12.

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Pomeroy~ Ohio
' 992~2156

Ewing. Funeral
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Fisher
Funeral
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Br41ce Fisher-Director
J!lmes R. Acree Jr., Director
H.Anderson- Director
Middleport

Pomeroy

992-5:141

9112-5444

RIDENOUR'S
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

lUMBER

CHESTER ·

555 Park St.
Middleport, Ohio
992-6611

··5·3307

MIDDLEPORT DEPT.
STORE

/;Q.I(tH:r ffo~t:rt
"

~giving a ~en .fresh

Open l-40n
.Super Bowl
Sunday ·

cut roses away
Valentines Day... Stop In
and~ We carry

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all oftbe latest dtslgns

Selective Candles
Check Out Our Hot
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Arriving Daily!

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-Wild Bird Chow

FOR TOTAL

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FRIENDLY
SERVICE

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107 Mill Street

992-2644

Middleport, OH

Pomeroy, OH

·Po•eroy, Ohio

; ' eatafili.he(J,J913'
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TR~CTQRS and
. RIDING MOWERS '

399W. Main
.1•740·992·2164

Deaier

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Cfhfl CfJJickflr
Qpen Super Bowl
Sunday
1-4 pm

Crow's
· Ft~mily
ResJaurant

Storewide .Sale

87 Mill Street
1-740·992-5205

JUST DO IT.

II

228 WEST MAIN
POMEROY
992-5432

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Arrangetntnt
Ben H. EwingDirector
108 Mulbetry,'Ave.

IAUM
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. Po_merny

3408pSR 7
Ohio

992.2121 ''

CHESTER, OHIO
1185--3301 OR 9115-3330

SALES- SEIVKE- NilS

RIDE·NOUR
.· s·UPPLY ·
1185-3308

Cheater, Ohio

N. 2ND AVE .
MIDDLEPORT
992-5627 .

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Open Monday-

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-Bird Blocks
-Wild Life Blocks

l()li(}

Make us your Super
Bowl party headquarters

10 am- 10

-Bird Feeders

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Local
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1·740~992·3148

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Middleport
992-2929

VALLEY

..GAS SERVICE ·

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Dignity - ' St.rvke
Alwiys
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Offering Pre-Need

• Beer
•Wine
• Ohio Lottery ' ·
• State Uqour Outlet

Tony's
Carry Out

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Ingels Carpet .
Specializing in
Mill Direct
Mohawk Carpet
"Best Prices" in town!

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SAT; 9-4

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FURNJTURE
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By JOHN CUNNIFF
, .
· N~ YORK - All the warnings and admonitions have been
,, / used to little effect, and all the explanations have been examined and
debated without concluSion, while the economy just rolls on.
The expansion, wllich old-school scholars !lilY should have died
years ago, is soon to enter virgin territory, an economic area that prO. vi~ no historical record from which to draw lessons.
-~
No expansion has ever done so,much forfiO many. It has made the
rich richer, swelled the middle class and left rooni on the ladder of
opp;l!IUnity for these with the most minimal beginner skills. ·
It 'hasn 'I alleviated all problems, of oourx, and its benefits haYe
been.mainly material, as opposed to spiritual or cultural. In,£~ iJs
m&amp;I!Y critics say, it has lowered standards and values.
·:
But what it has done is astounding, flooding govem!Jient with·•
· S!'rplus of revenues, lowering unemployment to a level thought unaktail'lable, restraining inflation, redi!Cing poverty, creating new businesses, expanding home C?Wnership to two-thirds of all residents. .·
You can make your choices ·from a long. long lis~ but what.ls
mOle difficult to extract are the lessons learn~
. .;
, r.erhaps first is \hat the new economy doesn't necessarily perfOf!)l
liy die old standards. This econbmy has ICiually strengthened in.its
old age, climbing mountains rathec than sitting in a beach chair. :
In December alone it created 315,000 ne.w jobs, 100,000 more &lt;$1
, average than in the first II months of the year. And at a time when jt
was'said there weren't skills enouglt to fill new jobs.
·
·' Such a seen arlo, which to some degree has existed for two Or
thJCC years. had always produced inflation, as surely as a matc:fi
tossed into a gasoline container ignites a fire.
. · ·
"·
It ~asn't been that way during this exp&amp;nsion. Because, saY,s
Michael Flamenl of Wright Investors' Service, it is "one of the lof·
. ·cal results of the explosion in technology."
1,
' Somewhat reluctaJidy, and after repeated warnings that inflati~
migltt p~~uncc upon economy, even Alan GreensJllll, the Federil
.~~c chief, ·has come to that conclusion. The explanation: ~
'OUctiVIty. '
. ·
.
,
i .
\{,, The development of high-tech ways has produced smart n4'
!Xlfllpanies employing creative techniques to do more with less.Tlliy
save man~ while raising outpuL They f~ older 1l0111panies f
· lower costs 1n o~r to COmpete. And (for a pnoc) they share the1r
knowledge with old-lillc III&amp;Pfds and resurrect them.
1 •
.!
If you believe the technologists, and if.youf ot.rve the ra~ l t
· which .rel.iv~ly new technology becomes triim(ied by even 11et~r
technolOgy, the phenomenon has a long way to run. ·
. · •
Nobody can be certain pf this; there is no frainc of reference rroliJ
· which to p(Ojed.. But even those economists with lingering doullts
have b,egun to think a~J9ul 'adjustingthelr view$.
'
~
They doli 'I have to agree thaf the economic cycle, the up-down
pattem of economic h,havior, has beCn flattened fOrever.
~
Just that produ!:livity growt~. so long as.it lasts, can make the upi
and dowils milder and farther apart.
:· t ·
(John Cunnltl Ia I bill!- IMiy8t lor The AIIDCIIIM
~
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Business Mirror:
ls1 ~ it a.new economy? ·i

.

0 n th
•n
• to ry •••
_ I•s· date 1
. · hIS

Team ____.........,_____

(No photo coplee) .

By JOSEPH PERKINS
broadly slwircd," said Jared Bernstein, one the have dtamatically il!"reased over the past thiee
The firSt time I heard Bill Ointon, live and report's co-authors.
".
decades. And with two-parent families earning
uncu~ was in May i992 at the annual Jefferson·
"The strong economic growth in the u.s. results nearly three times the income of one-parcnl fantiJackson dinner hosted by Democrats in San Diego. from the contributions of people in all walks of life, lies, it is little wonder that there is a growing gap
The Arkansas governor blamed Republican cco· from laborers to corporate cxccu~ves, " hc=ntin- between families at the top and bo~m of the
nomic policies of the preceding 12 years for crcat- ucd. "The fact that many families are not slwing in nation's income scale.
ing the biggest gap between rich and poor Aineri- the resulti111 prosperity stands as our nation's most ·
So if the nation's economic growth, its prospcricans in more than half a century.
serious economic problem."
.,
ty, is to be more broadly shared, as the Center tpr
"What .the Repub6cans said was, 'Give us more
It's kind of interesting that Bernstein offered no Budget Policy Priorities and the Economic Policy
inequality, and we'll give you more growth,"' Qin- criticism of Ointon's economic policies fQr the Institute advocate, and as every mail seeking to sueton sneered. :•11 turned out to be a fraud." ..
growing· iJ!COille disparity between the .nation's . ceed Ointon professes 115 0111' of his foremost goals;
So, here we are, eight years later, and Clinton is most and Ieist affluent
then it will not be accomplished through economic
completing the final year of his presidency. And
For duri'lg the 1980s, when Ronald Reagan and policy, but through social policy.
:
guess-what? A new study by the Center on Budget George Bush we"' in the White House, the Center
For the problem of the poor is not the availabiliand Policy Priorities and the Eci&gt;nQmic Policy Jnsti- Clll Budgetllid Policy Priorities and the Eoonomic ty of jobs, for the economy has generated so many
tute says that the gap between rich and poor was · Policy Institute- both left-of-center public policy new jobs during the past decade that anyone who
"significandy greater in the late 1990s than ... dur- . organizations -laid the blame for income inequal- can't find a job just doesn't want to work. And the
irig d)e 1980s,"
, ·ity squarely, at the feet of the two Republicans.'
problem isn't taxes because most poor folks do~'t
Well, that's quite shocking. After all, Clinton ~as
But Reagan and Bush deserved no more blame . pay taxes, and many actually receive chi:cks from
persistently daimed to have·presided over "the best for income inequality during the 1980s than Clinton the government in the form of the earned iac;omc·
economy in 30 years." And he trots out numbers to does for the widening gap between rich and poor tax credit
back his claim. · . ' .'
'" " during the 1990s. For this trend actually sllitted
No, lo cloSe the income distributiOn gap. \he
Come next m_onth, the current economic expan- · some 30 years ago.
' · next president will have to )Jave the courage to say
sion will be the longest of the post-war (that's
It has litde to do .with tax policy - whether a tljat the path' to upward mobility for the naliOfi's
World War II for you Gen X and younger readers) president raises or cuts taxes. It has Jitde to do with . least-well-off begins at the marriage altar.
era. During this unpr~dcnted expansion, the ccon- welfare policy- ~thcr a president in~ or · . That's not to disparage those who are poor apd
omy has generated more thari 20 million new jobs decreases spending on anti-poverty programs,
unmarried not by choice, who would like nothing
and $2 trillion in additional economic output
The reality is that the single biggest deterlliinant more than to have a loving, supportive spouse 1o
· Yet, according to the Center on Budget and Pol- of a family's upward (or downward) mobility is help them raise their children. Only to recognize
icy Priorities and the Economic Policy Institute, whether the family is headed by. a married couple. that there .is no government program nearly as
during the age of Clinton, the rich h~ve gotten rich· Indeed, one' of every three~ families in America effective as marriage in helping a family escape brer, while th.e poor have remained in place.
. is headed by an unmarried parent. Conversely. only avoid poverty.
,
"The report shows tha~ with few exceptions,)'.cone out of 20 married-couple families are poor.
(JOMJII't Plrldlll 18 1 cotumnlat!Or The s.n
economic growth in the 50 states has not been · It happens that the ranks of one-parent families Dtlgo. Unlor~oTrtbune.)
·
~

Ohio Perspective:

necessary.

0

COLUMBUS (AP)- The econom- between unskilled and low-paying ser- '
ic boom_of the last five years a~ to vice and retail jobs and skilled, high- ·
be an ocean liner of wealth and oppor- · ' paying higlt-tcch jobs, Gallagher said.
~
!unity. But are some people missing the The Joss of manufacturing jobs in
~
boat?
ColuJ!!blll! 'underscores that gap, he said.
••
News of the soaring stock market
In H.mllton County, the number of
:: By The Aaeoclated Prh~ competed in the past thrc;e weeks adults on. welfare has fallen from about
:~ Today is Tuesday, Jan. 25, the 25th day of 2000. There are 341 days J~ft in with several reports that many in Ohio 19,500 in the early 1990s to less thiiJ
:. the year.
.
are still StruQiing for basis amenities. ·5,000 ~. said Don ,Tholllas, director
!; Today's Highlight in History:
·
• Between· 1988 and 1998, families · of the i-lamii!Q~ County Department of
:: On Jan. 25, 1890, re~r Nellie Bly (Elizabeth Cochrane) of the New comprising the richest fifth of Ohipans Human Services.
.
:· York World received a tumultuous welcome home after she completed a saw their income increase by about '57 · .It's unclear whetber people who are
;: round-the'world journey in 7~ days, 6 hours, 11 minutes. ·
percent, while the poorest fifth of Ohio off public wistance are worse off,' he
.; On this date:
. families slid by about II percent, said. What is clear is that many jleople
~:
In 1533, England's King Henry VIII secretly m~ed Anne Boleyn, who according to the national Center on are avoiding some forms of public
'· later gave bil;lh to Elizabeth 1.
·
Budget and Policy Priorities and the · assistance' l;)ccause of the red tape they
;
In 1787, Shays' Rebellion suffered a setback when debt-ridden fanners led Economic Polioy Institute.
face to '*ivc those benefits. . ·
'
• The number of poor Ohio children
The drop in food sllimp participation,
:: by Capt. Daniel Shays failed to capture'" arsenal at Springfield, Mass.
~
In 1890, the United Mine Workers of America was founded.
is growing even as the number of chit- fo{ example, has -been blamed on the
~ In 191,5, Alexander Graham Bell inaugurated U.S. transcontinental tete- dren receiving traditional welfare pay- · intimidating amount ' of paperwork
:; phone service. ·
ments is plunging, according to a report required and the stigma associated with
!: In 1946, the United Mine Workers rejoined the American Federation of by the Ohio Association of Community · welfare
;. 4bor- .
Action Agencies. ·
''There may be more people who
~ · · In 1947, American gangster AI Capone died in Miami Beach, Fla., at age
• Emergency food assistance pro- have . ·left a5sistance who are really
.: 48.
grams in Ohio distributed 19 percent struggling who eli~ not to put up
:· In 1959, American Airlines opened the jet age in the United States with the more meals between 1997 IUid 1998 as with the IJureaucrBiic_'requirements that
.; first scheduled transcontinental flight of a Boeing 707.
·
the numbeF of Ohioans receiving food have beeli impose~~J :• Thomas said.,
i; In 1961, President Kennedy held the first presidential news conference car- stamps diopped by SO pcrecnt from six "Obvi~ly if they got help, their fami:. ried live on radio and television.
.
·
·
years ago, according lo.a report by the lies might be better ofHinancially."
~
In 1980, Finance. Minister Abolhassan Bani-Sadr was eleCted president of Center on Hunger and Poverty at Tufts
The fact that more people are taking
: Iran.
.
.
University in l)oston.
advantage of public assistance pro·
• In 1981, the 52 Americans held hostage by Iran for 444 days arrived in the
The severity. of !Iiese gaps between grams, l!_nd hence lumped ipto the
~ United States. ·
.
rich and poor, and how to interpret "poor" category, is pol necessarily a
,: Ten yem ago: An Avianca Boeing 707 ran out of fuel and crashed in Cove them, are up for debate.
bad thing,- said JCIII Allen, a spokesman
~ Neck, N.Y.; 73 of the 161 ~pie aboard were killed.ActressAvaGardner died
· "It is accurate to lay that over the last for the state -Hum• Servi~ Depart~ in London at age 67.
· five years, and lastiO yan, we've had ment
·
• Five years ago: The defense gave its opening statement in the·o.J. Simp- as a local oomnumip'..,V&amp; . l!l..d.,~ A-~ -He poin!S to state efforts to expand
: son trial in Lcs Angeles, 51\Ying Simpson was the victim of a "rush to judg- nation, a ~ncentralion of wealth 111d a the 'num~r of childi'e.n eligible for ·
ment" by authorities who had mishandled evidence and ignored witnesses.
concentratiOn ,o( ~. poverty," silid Brian Medicaid : health . insui'IIICC, a benefit
• One year ago: The Supreme Court rul.ed, S-4, that the 2000 census could Oallagher, 'prcaident of the United Way available to children of working par: _not use statistit11l sampling to enhance its accuracy. A Louisville, Ky., man of Franldln County. "It's a fair thing to ents.
:;rtccived the fiiR hlind transplant in the United States. Jury selection began in say that the economic expansion .over
That option is there even as the nuni•,Japet, Texas, in the trial of John William Kina. charged in th.e dragging death the-last half deca~ is piobably a little ber of people on' welfare in Ohio has
~of James Byrd Jr. A powerful earthqUik~ rocked Colombia, killing more than more uneven than IIIOfit people ,would dropped li;om about 7$1,000 eighl years
~ 1,000,people.
·
·
· want."
·
.
./
\ ,_
ago to about 21!0,000 today.
~- Today's Birthdays: Jou~list-auth&lt;;&gt;r Edwin Newman is 81. Georgian Pres·
Gallagheds alanDed that46 peroc~t
'"The .mphasis ·is starting· to shift
·.idcnt Eduard Shevardnadze 1s 72. Actor Dean Jones is 69. Corazon Aquino, of adults in Columbus homeless shelters from just helping people f~ the low~former Philippines president, is 67. Blues singer Etta James is 62. Movie ~working full-tim~. The fastest-grow- est end. of.. the .~lc spectrum,"
;-director Tobe Hooper is 57, Actress Leigh Taylor-Young is 56. Actress Dinah mg group of !'Coplc m shelters arc chit, . Allen sa1d1 If you ,re aolng to help~-- ·
, ·
.
-. pic move o~fofthal, you end up~~ng
;:Manoffia42. Country musician Mike Burch (River Road) is 34. Rhythm-and- • dren, he~·
.:plues singer Kina Cosper (Brownstone) is 31. Actress Otina Kantner is 29.
In adcblion, there IS a growmg gap people at h1glter economk:olcvels.
~
.
.
'
'
•
/.
I .

predict

..·

Clip ou_t ·the .
entry form
below and
drop off at .
one of the ·
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businesses.

.

'

�..
•
•

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•
PacJ• A IS • The Dilly Sentinel

Pomeroy,
•

Tueedey, J•nuary 25, 2000

Support Your Loeal
High School
Basketball Team

•

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. Marauders' 1999-2000 agenda

Lady Marauders' 1999-2000 alate

alll.

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llhmboo F,D,,C,

Pomeroy, OH
r4CW92-2136
Tuppers Plains, OH 740/667-3181

740/446-228!5

authorizltion form nee&amp; ta be completed

Crow's Famlly
Restaurant
1

Featuring KentUcky
Fried Chicken

Opponent
Dec. 3 ................................................. :................... River Valley
Dec. 7.................... ,.............................. ,............... :....... Southem
Dec._10 ................................................................... at Alexander
Dec. 14.................................................................... at Waterford
Dec. 17 ............................................................ Nelsonville-York
Dec. 18.............................................................. at. Wheelersburg
Dec. 28 .................:.... ,................ ,......................Gallia Academy
Jan. 4............ :............................. .'....................................,Eastem
Jan. ? ......................................................... :...................... Belpre
Jari · it .............................................................
·
. ,............ At·M·Iller·
.Jan. 18 ....................................................................... at Wellston
Jan. 21 ...................'..................................... ,........ Vinton a;unty .
Jan ..25 ........... .............................................................al Trimble
Jan. 28 ............................... :........... ............................. Aiexander
Jan. 29........... :...... :,,......................................... ... at River Valley
Feb. l ............................................................... Federal Hocking
Feb. 4 ............................... ........................... at Nelsonville-York
Feb. ll ........................................................... ............... at Belpre
Feb. 15 .. ......................... .'........................................ :..... Wellston
' Feb_18 ............................................................ at Vinton a;unty

· 228 Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

12111.. ·

.

OJ!PADtnt

Nov. 27 .............................................................n.at River Valley
Nov. 29 ............................................................ at Marietta (JVs)
Dec. 2............... :........................................... at FederalH~g .
DeG. 6 ....................................................................... at Southern
Dec. 9 ..... :................................................................... Alexander
Dec. 13·................., ......:.........................................:.... Witerford
Dec. 16 ..........._. ............:.................. :............ at Nelsonville-York
Dec. 20 ............................................. :..........................11 Eastern
Dec. 27-28 ......,. ....-....................... at Logan Holiday-'lblimament
Jan. 6 ...........................:... :..........·.................................. &amp;1 Belpre
Jan. S.....................:.......... :......................................River Valley
10......................................................:....................... Miller
Jan. 13 ............ :........................................................ :.... Wellston
Jan.. 17 ..... ~ ........ ............................:............. Marielta (freshmen)
Jan. 20 ...........................................................:.at Vmton County
Jan. 24 ............................................................................Trimble ·
Jan. 27 ................. .'........... :...................................... atAiexander·
Jan. 31 ................... :....:.............................:...... Nelsonville· York
Feb. 3,............. ~•.'......... ..........,........................................:. Belpre
Feb.7................................................ t ....................... :at.WeUston
Feb. lO ......................................................... :....... VI!liOn•Co\lnty
FCb.ll .....·......... ... ;.......••. ~ .............................................at.

Phone
992-5432
Eastern 1999-2000 agenda

GoodLue• To
All Area

Teanu
We recognize your
efforts to be the _
.best you can be~
anil•wish you the
best this season!

"The area's bel!t.selection of
Athletic footwear"

.

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•

87 Mill Street
Middleport, Oh

Middleport

~
.
~MMM
Dec. 7 ...... :.......,........................................... ~ ....... at Belpre· 6 pm
Dec. lO .... .................:................ ,........ Federal Hocking 6;30 pm .
Dec. ll ......:.............. ............:...... :............. Eastem Pike 9:30am
Dec. 14·.......,...................................................... .Aiexander.6 pm
Dec. 17 ..........:................................................ afMiller 6:30pm
Dec; 21 ...................................................... at Soul)l Galiia 6 Pill ·
·
·
, ''" ·.; •.,,..
· ..,U!i.....,,....::.,
·Jan-·4
·.
• ' ''' ' '''""' " ' ''' '' 1 '''' ' ''''''''''' ••••• • ••••• •• • •••'•• • ••• ••;, ,,, ,,8t~,J.:':!'-,lfS~ V IJ.III
Jan. 7..................................................~........... trimbie"6: 30p~e
Jan. ll ................................................ :·.. At Vinton County" 6 pm
.
""'
·~
··- .
Jan: 14 ........ :.~. : ..... :..............:.......... ..-~f:-. .. :.... Wltilitl'ocd&lt;6tl0jim
Jan.. 18 ..............................................................&amp;1 Wahama 6 pm
Jan.·21 ......... :............. :.. ...........................~ .. at Southern 6:30pm
Jan. 25 ....................:.................. .........,... Nelsonville-York 6 pm
Jan. 28............; ......... ,.......c.....: ....... at Federal Hocking 6:30pm'
Feb.. !.. .................................. ............... .... ............ Wellston 6 pm
Feb. 4...........................:...................................... Miller 6:30pm
Feb. 8 ................................... .............. ................ .. Wahama 6 pm
Feb. 11 ...........................................:............. at Trimble 6:30 pm
Feb. 15 ....................................... :................... at Waterford 6 pm
Feb. 18 ....... ...................................... ............ Southern• 6:30pm
·
• Senior Night

.

Eastern Girls 1999-2000 state .

DilL . .

. · .· . • .

6-8..
5-8
4-8

ALL

7·2 '7-5
7·2 10-3
3-7 4-10
2.8 4-9
0-9 0-11
0·12 0·13

Weclne8day:a acheclule
·South Gailla at Eastern

Gifts

_

ThuradaY'• echeciule

· Meigs at Alexander ·
Miller at SoU1hern
Federal Hocking at Eastern
Waterford a1 Trimble.
Belpre at Nelsonville-York
Wellston at VInton County ·

.An~iques

Folk Art.

•.

BOYS
-TVC......
Ohio

1-740-992-7696

TVC

Belpre
Wellston
Alexander
l)lelsonville-York
VInton County
Meigs
·

Office Service
&amp;Supply

.-

,,

·~

TVc;

Monday•a reauna ·
Wellston 43, Southern 42 .
Meigs 97, Trimble 33
Nelsonville-York 47, Eastern 46
Belpre 54, Miller 22
Wa1erford 51, VInton County 34
Alexander 80, Federal Hocking 43

HARTWELL
HOUSE ·

.

6-4
5-5
4-7

Federal Hocking
Waterford
Southern
Eastern
Miller
Trimble ·
.

We support our
local teams

~-

AU ,

10-0 14-0
9-1 . 12·2
7-2' 7·5

Hocking

(beside Acquisitions)

OPPW"'

Dec. 2..............;........ ,.... ,....... :....,......... :.. ,.at Wellsll!ft· 5:$5 pni
Dec. 6....................,.....................:........................ Belpre 5:55 P!D
Dec. 9............................................ at Federal Hocking 5:55'pm
Dec. 13 .........................................., .......... aiAiexander 5:~5 pm
Dec. 16 .......... ,...................... :..........., ................. Miller 5:55pm
Dec. 20 ........... ,.............. ,.................................... M~igs S:55 pm _
-Dec. 27 &amp; 30 ......................... :....ThutnaOI'ent ai-IIctver Blstetta
Jan.. 3 .. .......................................................
'
at South Galli.:.ti pm
. , .......................... at Trimble 5:5:&gt;
' ~
Jan. 6......................... ;.......
pm
.Jan:. \O......... c.... , ...., .... , .......,.. ............... Vinton County 5:55pm ·
J an. 13 .. ............................... ....................
. at Waterford
.
5:55pm
J4n. 20., .. ........~ ............................................... Souihem 5:5.5 pm
Jan. 24 ...........................:............... &amp;1 Nelsonville.York 5:55pm
Jan. 26 ........................................................... South Gallia 6 pm
Jan. 27 .......... ..................................... :Federal Hocking 5:55pm
Jan. 31 ............................................................ at Miller 5:55pm
Feb. 3 .... .'............................. .............................Trimble 5:55pm
Feb.7,................:.........................................Waterford•
'
.. pm
5;55
Feb· 10 .......................................................
. ' at Southern. 5:55pm
'
• Senior Night

.

TVC

Meigs
Alexander
Belpre
. VInton County
Wellston
Nelsonville·York

100 East Main
Historic Downtown
- Pomeroy, Oh

Drlve-lhru Window

219 N. Se!ond Ave.

HIGBLIGHTS

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NOW AT•••

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Inside: Australian Open update - P-e• B2 .
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Page 81

Tun lilly, January 25, 2000

New Hours:

6-1
3-3
4-4
3-5

8-1 '
3-7
4-6
3-7,
2·5 2-7
3-4 ' 4-6

Hoc!dng
TVC
.'
Eastern
8-1
5-2
, Waterford
· 5-4
· So.uthern.
Federal Hocking
3-4
Trimble-··- .
-4-4
0-B
Miller

Mon-Fri 9-5 pm
Sat. 9:30 to 2 pm

F~ral

ALL

·ALL _.

8-4

3-5'
5-4

·0-11

Belpre

·

Miller a1
Meigs at Tr mble
Nelsonville-York at Eal!lern
Southern at Wellston

137-C N. 2rid Ave.
· Middleport, Oh
45760

...

.
Friday'• achedult
Ale.xander at Meigs
·
Eastern at Federal Hocking
SoUthern at Miller
Trimble at Waterford
VIntOn County at Wellston ·
Ne!sonville-Yoi'k at Belpre

740-992-1381

•

•

c·' ,

LatErrany ·by Wellston foilS Southern
'

~~li'IE- Unable. to hold. onto a 12.-

Rochelle Tribby tallied seven points. Rachel
point lead late in the game, .Southern •fell to Henneman scored points six and Jessie Kin&amp;
Wellston ~~·42 at €buies Vf. flay man Gym· had five points. .
· . ·
nasium Monday iJL&amp;ids JYC play; . . ;. .. .
Behind ·great floor balance and four
Wellston's Rocllille Tribby s,nk the sec,· . points.from Dailey, Southern took an initial
ond of-two free throws with no liJlle·pn tHe - 10~7.1ead. In the.second period, Crabtree and
Thomas
clock to sive .th~ '&lt;lolden Rockets~e;win. . . Kins bolstered 'the outside &lt;loiden .Rocket
Sixteen fouls were called in l''tph'ysiCal attack with a . trio of. three-pointers. That
paralyzed in accident
ga~e; one of which came after .'time had spark propelled the Rockets to a surge that
LIBERTY, Mo. -(AP)- Derrick
expired. : :
· ,
·'·
tied the game at 22·22 at the intermission.
Thomas, on~ pf the most feared
Southern was .led", by .{seni!:&gt;r gll~d- Kim h. ·The Tornadoes adjusted defensively at the
.pass rushers in NFL history; his a .
lhle
who scored 1~ints. 1Kati Cummins half and lhle fabricated a breakout quarter
broken neck and back and might '
added nine points 11,1111· four assi~ts. Heather that sent the Tornadoes into the last round
never walk again.
Dailey, Sarah . Bralt~.r. Stacy Lyons and with a 36-27 lead. Southern built on that
The star linebacker of the
Brigette Barnes adillld four points apiece. -lead, padding the score at 40-28 midway
Kansas City Chiefs has paralyzed
Tammy
Fryar chipped in three points.
through.the final round.
legs following a car crash on an
Wellston was led.,by Dusty Cremeans
Baskets that had fallim earlier for the Toricy- road In which his friend was
with
I!)
points,.
She
h_~t
four
three-point
field
nadoes
rimmed out, whil'e Wellston's trek(lied.
.•
.
goals.
,Kat~'
Crabtre~
add~~
nine
points
and,
means
ca~ned,
a pair of treys and Henneman
ThomaS has usc of his arms arid
'
· ~·
..
:
..,.· \
upper chest, and cloctors held but
• hope he might fully recover. Doctors said the 33-year player faces
exten.sjve rehabilitation and probably will have surgery.
'.

News and Notes

K.C.'s

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· Southern.199Q..2000 agenda .

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· .·

Southern ·Girle 1999-2000 slate

~
Qppgnant
DilL
a,;,tm
D
2
.
. County ,
Dec. 7 ...... ,.......................... :.............~ ................. at Meigs- 6 pm
. ec. .. ... :............., ............................... ,........... &amp;1 VintOn
, .Dec.to:.......................................... ~ .........:......... MiUer 6:30pm
Dec. 6.........~......:.................................~ .......................:.... Meip,
Dec. ll......... :.........,...................'............... South Gallia 6:30am
Dec. 9................. ;........................................................:. 1t Miller
Dec. 14..'.......................,.....,. ............................... Belpre 6:30' pm
Dec. 13 ............. ..................... :...................................... at Belpre .
Dec. 17 ..................................................... at Waterford 6:30 pm
Dec. 16 ....................................................................... Waterford
Jan. 4 ........................................................ at Alexander 6:30pm
Dec. 20.....-~ -- ................... :...........,:............................. Alexander
Jan. 7 ................. .-.............................. Federal Hocking 6:30 pme
Dec. :zJ ...............:.........:...............................
S:55 pm
~an. ll ..................._. .. ............................. Nelsonville •York 6 pm
Dec. 30 ;.............................................................. at ~uth Glillia
Jan. 14....................:.,........... ..... ~ ................. ,.at Trimble 6:30 poi '
Jan. 3 ..........., .............,......:............. :........,...0hio' v.ije,
' Christian
J
Jan. 15 ...................... ........................................at.Wa1Iama 6 pro
an. 6 ....... .... ,............................, ................... at F~ Hocking
J
.
·.
Jan.·2l ..... ,...................................... :................ : ~t~m 6:30pm
an. ro. ........................................................
at Nelsonville-York
Jin: 25 ........... ·...................................................
.
.
, ' · a.t"'
t 6'pm
,.
-..eIIson
Jan. 13 ..... _. ....:.•. ~~.................................. ~ ..................
Thmble
Jan. 28 ................................, ........... .-.. ;; .......... at Miller 6:3.0·pm ·
Jan. 17 .........;,,._.,.. :........ .'.... .'................... at Ohio Wley C~in
Fe.b. ! ........·...... ,.......................................... Vmton County 6 pm
Jan. 24.:.:.......~ . :..:.......,. ................................................... Wellston
Feb . 4.........................................................
.
' ,:.\Vaterford
· 6:30pm
Ja~. 27 ......··~·.....·.••.•......~ .....•.••.· ;~·: ........~ .................... ;~ ... ;.. :... Miller
Feb. 5..................... ,....................:......... at South Gallia 6:30pm
Jan. 31 ·:···v··............~ .............................. ,,,,..,,,,".....~ .•t Waterford
Feb. 11 .......... ,.............. .'................. at Federal Hocking 6:30pm . Feb. 3 ........ :.............,.................. ~ ..................... Federal Hocking
. ,. ... :.; ............................................. :,... :al 'liimble'
Feb. 15 ..... ,............... :....... :............. ...... .................,Tritilble 6 pm
.Feb.7 :···................
Feb. 18..........................................................at Eastern 6:30pm
Feb. lO'( ............................., ........................,.....Eutem 5:55 pm
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Rose honored by ,
Philly sportswriters
CfiERRY HILL, N.J. (AP) ~
The Philadelphia Sports Writers
Association gave Pete ~ose ibe
· "j iving legend"-award.
Rose,: a member of the PHil lies
t~ain that won· the 1980 World
Siries, thanked the city's fans and
.D)edia for their hone~ty and ha~ a
pul\chline for the sport that banned
hin1 for life following a ,gambling
. investigation in 1989.
, .' •
.· Also among those honored at'
tlle associa.tion :s 96th annual ban·
quet were former NBA star
Ghilrles Barkley (career achieve·
m~tnt), NBA scoring leader Iverson
(pro,athlete of the year) and golfer
Jay Sigei (most courageous athlele).
·

..

· We support ·the
local teams

'

·. Chester. ·Ohio

985-3301

•'

,,

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'•

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•·

drove in a pair of offensive boards to tighren . benches, and a Tornado crowd cheering in'
the background, the game's outcome hinged
•
lhe score.
Southern lost its momentum·, but had the on two attempts. Tribby rimmed the first
ball as time• ticked under the 30 second one, but netted the second to cement Wellmark. ,Cummins came off a double screen to ston 's comeback win.
Southern hit 18-of-56 shots from the
take the shot Qff the set play called previousfield
overall . T~e 'Tornadoes had 34
ly iri a Tornado time out. The play worked
well, but the shot rimmed in and out with rebounds, with Dailey and Brauer grabbing
nine each.
Wellston getting the rebound.
Wellston hit 15-of-47 field goal atiempts,
Wellston missed and Soulher.n had anoth- .
er tr,y, bu't the Rockets gained possession on including 7-of-14 three-point ~hots. Wella jump ball situation with three seconds . ston claimed 34 rebounds. · Henneman
hauled in a game-high 10 by herself.
remaining.
Southern won its eighth straight reserve
The Rockets drove the length of the floor
and dished off to Tribby whose shot thudded game with a 34-30 victory. Amy Lee led the
off the rim·as the buzzer 'sounded in unison charge with 13 points and Rachel Chapman
added 10 points. Doles led Wellston with 11
with the official's whistle.
With Tribby standing solo at .the lj~e. points.
Southern hosts Miller Thursday.
bqth teams huddled around their respectiVe

·MU Wiris·:·.~.:

'

Yoqng ponders
retirem.ent
: LAKE HAVASU CITY, Ariz.
(AP).- San Francisco 49ers . q~ar­
terback Steve Youna, si.delined for
the finall3 games oflhe. 1999s~a- .
son by concussion,s, says he still .
hasn 't dceided whether to return to
the team next season.

-

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•
By DAVE HARRIS
Williams, Vihing, Shrimplin
S•ntlnel Corre.,.ndent ' and Branon each scor~d two
· ROC~ SPRINGS - State ' p\&gt;intli 10~ Meigs took .a 73-25
ranked Meigs exploded for 33 lead.- into the final eight min·
first·period points and coasted utes.
.
With Marauder mentor Ron
to a 97· 33 win ove.t1'rimble in
a girls TVC basketball game· l,.ogan shuttling p)ayers in and
Monday eveninf;jl,1J..arry R: o~t . ,the . maroon and gold
Morrison GymnUMam: It was outscored Trimble 24·8 in the
th e Marauders ' - ~ consecu- final period. Vining had seven
ti ve h~me v ,ictor~·, ;it ,
·in the period.
Meigs had a . chflnce to
Meigs placed five players In
become the firs P !ifeigs High double figures led by Shrim·
School team to hituthc·eentury pljn with 18, Vining added 17,
mark; but Shanl)on Price's Price 14, Williams and Bratton
three. poiqter hi I ;.the back of each added 13.
the iron as the bu~,zer squnded.
-Meigs·shot 51 percent from
1
Marauder coaf~ Ron logan the. field (36-of-72). Meigs
s ubstitu ted . freely ·rt.hrough out · was 11-of-16 anhe line:
the game . He fi·r~ cleared his
The Marauders !had · 38
bench at the 2:4;7,,!11ark of the rebounds led by Williams with
(i.rst period. .. .. :.
n i n~ and Tiffany Qualls · with
· Meigs (14·0, 'l'VC 10-0) ran eight. Meigs had 10 turnovers
its winning stlt 'ak to 14 ·and 18 steals . Williams had
straighi games overall; B,nd 10 four thefts. Meigs liad 23
cons~cutive irw .TVC play. assists led by Marissa Whaley
Trimble (0·14, }1VC 0·12) is and Williams with five each.
winless this seas.on.
Bratton had six of the MaraudThe Maraude'r!''victory sets ers' eight blocked shOts.
up a TVC Jl howdown with
Trimble was led by Judson
Alexander (t'l·A, TVC 8-1.) with 10 points. Ash added .12.
Thursday in Alb~f\Y· T~~ Lady Trimble hit 12-of-43 shots
Spartans' only losses are a 55· from tile rloor. The Cats were
51 decision to ' the Marauders 9· of·16 at the foul line . Jud·
on Dec~mber 9,-""id a defeat in · son had seven of her team's
the finals of thQ•. San Diego, ·, 18 rebounds, and three · of
Calif.~ Ho)_iday, 1 tl1~rnament.
.· their six steals. Tr!mble
Mc1gs JumpK. •heaa 11 ·0 turned the ball over 27 limes.
behind ·Jennifer Shrimplin and · · Meigs won the reserve
Shannon ·· .Pri&lt;:;t:... Sltd!RPli.il ~ gallic 21·9, behind Shannon
scored six of i)e pointS and ·s o.IIJJbyls. nine, pointa . Giffin
Price added five.
..
lq~.Tri,ni~le ·wit~ four. ·
· Jessica Ash finally -got the . '•tl1'fill!l\te ·Will host WaterLady Cats on the board .at .!he · ford on Thursday, Meigs will
5:49 mark wheii"ihe hit a piir travel to "The Alley" in the
. of . free · thre\\(s·.. M;eiat •. m~:rquec · ,match-up. Game
.increased 1he lctd' to ..J3;1t :al· t·li'rtre:for the junior varsity is
·
the end of the~ J!eriod, Shrim· 5:55.
plio scored ' i091V·~e period'for·.
Meigs holds
one-game
Meigs, ,.Price . ilven 'and M*r· lead over Alexander in the
.'jorie Bratton sill:off the bench. T:VC Ohio table. Belpre is
.
Meigs p!ac";,eight glr~s . i~ two and a half games back
the sc9ring co[Iji!ln in the • •c· • of the Marauders .
ond period radng to a 55-l 4
Federal
Hocking
and
lead at th'i: fii lf. Sh rlmAiin · Waterford ·are tied for first
sc~redil.•2 i ~ ,tbe· first,~alf aH~ . in _the TVC Hockin~ stand,; Pnce ~llde~ •,UJ:, ..... .- ,11J ~•ilp ~ .,,{agi ..
.
..
.•·- ;,
'1. eight. ! 'i , , 1 He ,,.,. , ,, '·' ,.,,,
In otber TVC action from
The Cats •llat,lled in!Jhe 'lliird Monday, Alexander had no
period as S,~ awna .J'u~on trouble with Federal Hock·
,_· .scored.six ofjtHe 1.1 pqint~ &amp;.lid,· ing,, winning 8.0· 43 . . Belpre
Miller, 54·22 .
' Emily! ;&lt;Jiffiril::• adhe:d,·, five·. defeated
Meigs stili held1:an 18-fl scor· Waterford knocked ' off Vin- .
JUMP SHOOT.E R- Melga anlper Amber VIning flings In two of her 17 pointe de8plte the btst tllorta
ing advantage,;
.: Brooke ton County , 51-34.
of Trimble'• Kristin Coch during the Mar•udera' 07-33 win. (Dave Harrla photo)

a

11·1
6,2

TC!dl!y'a echeclule
Hocking at Alexande~

MeigS Wins 14th straight game

Akrdn.·'
ftllls:
.
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· ·to:B'Uffpa'to ·.; ~.
.

.

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~~
· · ' ·· ,. · · :•
·\
Sophomore ,Tal)lar·Siliy scored
21 of his 2S·points i~ : the second
half to lead Mallhill. Pa,st Ball
State 85-73 Monllay ~j2JII, ·
Sophomore J.R. "VanHoose
added 21 pdiilts and 1~ rebounds
for Marsllall (14-4, -MIAC. 6-3),
which remained unbeaten in nine
game~ at hon*this ac~n.
Ball S~ate ~11·6.' :'l:"AC 3-5),
whose leading scor~· D.u·ane
OeiDenSJS&amp;t.out t~e game: with !he
flu, hii just two field ' gclm in tlie
first 10 minutes of the se.cond.
. · .· '~
··
•
. half.
Marshall scoreil, the ' t_seven · AJRWAIJ(ER - Mll'lhllll'• · ·
'
jlQints Qf the- sec;on~,h.i!
a 43· I'WWH 1.~ cJurlng ,the Herd.. 85-73 win.
· '•
.~
34 lead with 17:45 ·rem ning.
· .::, .'• .
· ···:
'• ~ •
. Slay. lalcr hit t.Wi\r 3-jlointen 'Jones 14.
,
a second left.
and a free .thr~ dli~l)g a 14:1 run Bul'flllo 114 Akron 83
The Bulls (4·14, , M,AC 2·7)!1&gt;
that put .Marshall'- ~,-63·43
Mike,M~~le hit the aame· win· scored seven unanswered' pointS ,
· with 10:20 remairi[p&amp;:'1. dunk ning ~UJ! with seven seconds to in the final minute and six secgave the ;Tobundet~~.i
Td _its play u , Buf;alo. l}eat Aleron 84-to- ·onds. Nikolai Alexeev ·hli two free
•largest lead,ill·56,.w,uh , ,r mm· . 83 Moliiay. · · " :~:
· . throws to cut the lead to four, then .
utes left · , , · ·
·~·
.
Th~ ~ipa (14-5, MAC 8· 2) Louis CampbeU hit: a 3-pointer
.Th~ro~ !!"lith Jed, ~.1 ~tate " . tried for; • · lut .~n4 shot, but from 25 feel out ,tq make it 83-82
: with a c~reor;hil~ 23. . . plli"·' llilfi:Kl~"'blocked . a 'drivina layup with less than a minute to play.
Mickey H"!~er had,18,!'dLonnlc, out of bounds with four-tenths of
·Aleuov had 18 paints.
t,

Buckeyes edge

Easte,rn girls
BUCHTEL - Nelsonville-York run out onto the court," Brannon
took advantage of laiC Eastern mis- said, "It's a tribute to her compelicues to claim a hard-fought 47-46 ,Jive spirit. She has had to overcome
Tri·Valley Conference girls basket- a lot in the past year."
ball conu=st·Monday night at BuchAdditionally, Easiern (4-9, TVC
tel. Eastern . drops to 4·9 overall, x-x) had to fight off the emotional
marking the .sixth game this season . scars of facing Nelsonville-York on
that. Easu=m has dropped after lead- the anniversary of a :tragic bus-car
ing after three quarters.
accident of January 24, !996, when .
"There have . been six games th'e eventual -champion Eagles
when we were up in the third period defeated a. veteran Nelsonville· York
and ended up losing the game," said team.·
Eastern head ~IICh Paul · Brannon.
Ironically, Monday's bus driver
''Tonigh! we jus! did not execute. We · was Bob White, who drove the bus
had our. chances, but missed easy that night and was credited with prolayups . and didn't protect the lead tecting his passengers with cool,
once we had it. We had a chance at calm thinking during the acddent in
the end, but again we didn'J eKe- which two occupants of the at-fault
cute."
car were fatally injured.
·The loss was silmewhat bitter-In anoiher twist of fale, an Eistsweet for the 8ag1e~, who celebrated ern bus reportedly suffered damage
the ~tum of Tara Fisher,' wh«? last in a minor accident on its rouu=
year at this lime was diqnosed with · Monday.
cancer. . Fisher ·.played in . her first
Eastern took an early 8·5 lead.
aame since, iut year and bred but fell behind 21·17 at the half:
three -Points durin&amp; ·an emotional Eastern came back to claim a 32-31
stretch of the reserve ·eontcst. Most lead. after three periods of play and
signifi~ant is that slle is !)OW cancer held the ecj'ge to the mid-point of the
free.
.final round. With just shy of four
"It was great to ~t to see Tara
s.. EA!)TERN- 82

. I

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Page B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Tulldey, Januery 25, 2000

Tueedey, Jenuary 25, 2000.

Agassi, Sampras, Capriati, Davenport move into semifinals
Australian Open
By PHIL BROWN

MELBOURNE Austraha (AP)
-Two years 1180 Olympic champ!
ons Andre Agass1 and Jennifer
Capnall measured progress m terms
of chmbmg back mto the top 100
Gmng mto the Australian Open
semifinals Agass1 Is a confident No
I and Capnau - g1gghng 1n dehght
over her resurgence - IS a champ1
onsh1p contender again
Wh1le Agass1 1s one wm away
from h1s founh consecutive Grand
Slam final however h1s next opponent Is old nval Pete Sampras
Capnau must play No 2 Lmdsay
Davenport
Capr1a11 was overwhelmmg m her
6-0 6 2 v1ctory today slammmg
shots mto the corners and keepmg A1
Sugiyama from gettmg mto the
game She 1s 1n her first Grand Slam
semifinal smce 1991 when she d1d 11

at Wtmbledon and the U S Open
Sug1yama was tense tn her first
Grand Slam quarterfinal and even
1f I hit a good shot she hll a better
shot wd the Japanese player who
had knocked out another b1g h1tter
No 4 Mllry P1erce
Agasst s 6 4 6-4 6-2 dtsmJssal of
H1cham Arazi was more entertammg
The Moroccan who had not lost a set
m four rounds hit some flashy shots
and Agass1 showed off a between
the legs return of a surpnsmg reflex
lob by Arazt
'
Sampras was broken once but
otherwise looked sharp m beaung
Amencan Chris Woodruff 7 S 6 3
6-3
It took a week and a half but 11
came together tomght
satd
Sam1;1f3S who 1s one Grand Slam
!Jtle away from beatmg Roy
Emerson s record of 12
Sampras beat Agasst m the
W1mbledon final last year between
Agasst s tnumphs m the French and
U S Opens but saJd that m thts tour
I I
A'
bo

well as he ean play
Agasst sa1d that wtth P~te
there s a certam respect thBt goes
along With play1ng him that makes
you focus even more Wnh the
respect comes a level of ant•c•pauon
and energy
Davenpon d1d everythtn~t was
supposed- to 1n a 6-l 6-2 VIctory
over No 9 Juhe Halard Decug1s
She hll mne aces and y1elded only
five pomts m her first s•x serv1ce
games before bemg broken for 5 2m
the second set She 1mmedtately
broke Halard Decug1s at love for tho
match cndmg With a sharply angled
backhand pass
Davenpon who at 23 1s the same
age sa1d Capnau s comeback IS
one of the best stones that women s
tenn•s has had When I was 13 she
turned pro and she was one of my
1dols for abouta year because she drd
so well and I wasn t ever near that
level when I was 13 or 14
In Thursday s semtfinal 1f she
was playmg anyone else I would
I I
h
dO

who lost close semifinals here m
1998 and 1999
On the eve of the 1998 Austral1an
fanner No I and 1996 Olymp1c wm
ner Agass1 had JUSt re entered the top
100 at No 87 after falhng as low as
141 st m November 1~7
Capnat1 who was 14 when she
played her first Grand Slam scm1fi
nal and 16 when she won the 1992
Olymp1c gold medal was No 125
She had recovered only as far as No
101 by the end of the year
Capnau giggled when asked
whether one year ago she would
have thought somebody predJcbng
today s result was smoking some
thmg
No comment she said but then
added A year ago maybe ~ot but a
couple of years ago yeah
Was her 1998 goal getung back
Into the top 20?
Ftfty sa1d Capnau who had
dropped out of the tour after losmg m
the first round m the 1993 U S

Scoreboard

Open
She struggled through a penod of
personal problems mcludmg dru1s
and didn I return to Grand Slams
unttl 1996
I d1dn t accomphsh everything
that I wanted sa1d Capnatl who
was ranked as h1gh as No 6 between
1991 and 1993 If I would have
stopped II would have been a really
short career I thought I had a lot
more tenms left m me
Comms back she d1dn t get past a
Grand Slam first round unttl 1998
W1mbledon but las1 year reached the
fourth round m the French and U S
Opens
New coach Harold Solomon has
helped
He sa1d that he really beheved
could go all the way even No I
maybe I have a lot of respect for h1m
and I thmk he knows a lot alxiul the
game and knows what he s talkmg
about
That JUSt nght there hfted
my confidence she sa1d

In addlllon I ve stopped th1nl(
mg about what the world was go~
to thmk of me That s a btg step HI
my pro~ress
She also drew encouragement
from Agass1 s resurgence
It JUSt so happened that tt was
JUSt at the same ume that we were
both trymg to make a comeback
she satd He has been an msp1ra
t10n I can t say I man msp•ratJOn for
him because he JUSt got there before
I dtd
Agass1 sa1d
I m certnmly
pulbng for her
Be sa1d he had held doubts dunng
hts own comeback and I know 11 s
not easy She has certaJnly shown a
lot of perseverance and strength of
character The results don t come
n 9Jt away so when they do start
happemog 11 1s a pleasure to be out
there and 11 s a pleasure to watch
her

ANNOUNCEJ.1EN IS

005

l'lnonala

HERPES IYIRCLR STOPS
HERPES OUTBREAKS! ee%
Succeas Ra e To! F te 1 877
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No I To L J l
305 v and
S Otl PI P WV 25550 (W I
AniWIIr A~

Basketball

NCAA D1vis1on I
men's scores

Local scormg summanes
89~-'

6

'i

0 16

~7

Ctn Connc

lfl

...

COLUMBUS Oh o AP - How usn C pand

Buffa o 84 Akron 8\

-'6

or

Oh10 H S boys' poll

East

Nelsonville-York 47 Easeem 46
En
N on I e Yo k

Notre Dnme 41

S 67 St Fall( s Pa 64

lana 96 S ena 92 OT
Monmou h N J 69 Long Island U 44
Mount S MMy s Md 77 Sacred Hean 69
Pr nee em 90 Cathol e 49
Robert Moms 8 Qu nn p ac 74
S F nne s NY 68 Fru le 11h Oi k.inson S2
Syrn use 88 Connec u 74
Wagaer 90 UMBC 78

of spu11 wn er1 and broadc:u ers a es Oh o gh
s hool boys baske ba I ean s n he h rd of se -en
weekly rctuln sens01 1999 2000 pols for The
As I(}( a ed Pres re ords h oug gomes or Jnn l ~

S&lt;tuth
Alabama A&amp;.M 77 Teus Sou hem 72
Alabomn S 61 Prnine View 61
Appamch nn S 102 W Carol nn 12

El

14
56

fa.
19
I

6 12
I 1
0.!
I 2

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17-35

6
5
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Tnmble : : :·:::::: : : . ::38 6 1 8 =
M~a:•
lJ 22 18 24

33
Vl

Trimble

r1uu
Shawna Judson
JesSica Ash

"'"'
4

oUL0

2
2

0
0

2
I

0
0
0

Emily G ffin
flllth Couch
Ju e Richards
M..,di Ruuell
Krism Dugan

Q

ThlaiJ

M8tJone 8 atton

6

Brooke Wi I anu

4

Amy Hy~ll
Athlcy ThoiDIU
Tiffany Ha fhill
Tiffany Qualls
s c:phan e w ga
Thlals

3
2
2
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17

22

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97

Weson

71556

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Ka e Cleabtree.
Roche
Tr bby•••• .::
Rachel Hennemllfl
Jesse K n~
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fli!J'69

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EASTERN CONFERENCE
AUan c: Dl sKin
Iwn
.It I. fJ:l.
2"i

2l

4

641

5

625

4 17

585

0 alldo
New Jc: sey

9 21
II 24
7 24

4 !'i
429
4 5

6
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29

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Bos on

Ctntrt~l

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26
22

5

17

634
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525

9
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WESTERN CONFERENCE
Midwtll Dh'lsion

Iwn

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San Antonio
M nne101a
u
Denver

.It I. lsi.
26 13
22 16
-127
12
18 21

6)4
579
6!12
462

Hoos on

I6 24

400

Dallas
Vancouver

14 26
0 :vJ

3SO
2SO

Ph~nll

LA C pper&gt;
Golden S!atc:

33 9
31 0
25 13
27 6
23 15
0 JO

716
156
658
628
60l

8 ]I

205

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New York I 2 Seal )e 106
Ch qo 83 lnd ana 82

U ah IW: LA Lakm 01 20T

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2

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ll

17

Pac:lnc Di"l86on

LA l.akers
Po&lt;lland
Sacramenlo
Sea It

Denver I 0 Vancouver 98

P011lond 0

N'c:w Jersey 87

Tonlpt s games
Phoen "' ar lnd ana 1 p m

New York a Wa~h ng on 7 p.m

Detro 1o CLEVELAND 7 .lOp m
Ch agou. Alhma 7 30pm
So&amp;onv&amp; Manu 7JOpm
~ac:ramcnlo ol Ouu ot c: 8 p m

LAC ppena SrmAnono 810pm

M nnerota a Hoos on 8 lOp m
GoldenS IM~ a Dal as 8 ~0 p n

Wedne!lday s aamu
Phoen Jt at Ph lldc ph

n. 1 p m

Wash na on at Toron o 1 p m
Ros on at Orl#,. 7 ~p m

Socmmen o at M !waukee 8 p m
Vnll(uu eJ at Utah 9 p m
New kney at

~le

MVSU 101 Grambl n1SI 86
MARSHALL 85 Bill Sl 13
Nnffolk S K4 Coppin Sl. 7l
Rodford 67 Co111ol Carol 01 65
S Carol na S " Md Eallem Shore 65
Tro)' S 1~ Ste son 64
Tulane 53 New Orleans 46
UNC O...nsboro 7l VMI61
Vii'Jin&amp;l71 V1rgania Tech 66-0T
W. Kt:n ucky 83 Denver 71

Midwest
Do ler 70 lnd P11r lnclpl1 59
Kwu 19 Colorado 74

#

Southwest

(1) 11173 DOdge

Aa In emaUonal94 Teqs Paa American 69
Jackson S 62 Ark. Pine Bluff 61
SW Tew 70 S epben F AUJtln 63
Tu sa 84 Centenary 44

...._

fd~tle

0pm

I
22
23

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EASTERN CONFERENCE

I. I 11J: fll. llE liA
7

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50 B 129
47 146 1~8
29

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II 24
16 25

6
6

118
125
142
I 43 124 133
2 40 lOS 19

2

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SoutheatiDt.W..
:............... .....:21 ., 4 3 63 Ill 114
21 17 8 I " 1.10 121
, ................. 19 22 s o 46 123 m
II 29
.................... 11 JO

6
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Transylvarua 8~ Berea 7
Valda• a S 81 MontevaJio 62
Wes Alabama 80 Uotolo Memonal S3
W~st Oeor!1 a 63 Wes Aonda ~

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lnlemet UHrt
$350-$1100/w.rt

1 888-858-8336

Alii P ne Bluff 66 Jackson S1 59

A bany Aleunder 80 Federa Hocking 4~
Athens 49 Che1h re R e Val 29
Be toire S1 loha 68 S~~rahs• lie Shenandoah \~
Be pre ~4 Hemlock Miller 12
Btverly Ft Frye 68 New Mo amoras Fran e .W
F ankl n Fu nace Orten j6 PortsmouJh E \7
Ga pols Gal 11 Academy 64 Mont o 49
Grcenf.eld McClam 1~ Waaern Brown 66
l..ilncas er 48 Dub n CotTman 47
LoaM 1'9 JDilkaon 61
Nelson 1IJe..York 47 Reeds ~Ells em -Ul
Onk H 68 Mlnfn d 66 lOT
Oh o Val Chr .&amp;9 S Gall a 19
Pomeroy Me•gs-97 Trimble l
PoniiOOU h 60 Rea er Eastern ..U
RD&lt;k Hill 70 S Polm 16
Vinc¢n WIVI'fn -4~ Pt PkasiUM ~

Bill Mood opaugh Aucllonoerlng

219Nn4400

Colooo&lt;!o
Cllpry
Edmonton
Vanc:oover

Monday s 11&lt;0res
Calllll')' 4 Bo• on 3 OT
Wash nston 8 Tampa Bay 2
01 awa 1 Toronro J.t e
C~~rol n&amp;: J Mootm~[ 2 OT
N Y. Ranpn 6. A lnnta 3
Nashville ' Edmoo oo 1-0T A

Auction
and Flea Market

l complete auction service Buy

32 124 172

Southwest

Ohio H S girls' scores

80

• Bad Credit OK

••

TRUCK DRM5RS
A Malo Tuck ng Company Is
Looking For 0 T A Comapny
D Ivers &amp; Independent Cont ac
tors To F nd Out More Come
\I 1 t Ou Recrulte Greg Laird 0
Hampton Inn Charleston wv
E•H 5llc Monday 1124 18-2 5 ~M
7 PM Tuesday 10 AM 12
Noon EOE

, 1 OOpm Flldoy

Toron1J.::::: : : : ,2716 2116 136 43 6349 Ill
14S
130
24 16

llel'lldln-..

All Yard Sllta Muat Be Paid In
AdYinct Dttdllnt 1 OOpm tho
lay before tlie 1d 11 to run
iunday 1 Mond•Y edition

98 153

..t..wedemeyer
~-----------------a Auction Service

OVER YOUR HEAD IN DEBT???
you ll8lld men m.tlhlng room???
Debt ContolklallOn no quaHfY.Inglll
FA~ CONI\.ILTATION
Call1-aoN. .1S41 ut. 33
-anewhorlzon org
l.lciJIIMI bonded Inaurld

~Gallipolis Ohio 740-379-2720

' 10

Wanted to Buy

~J.iloolult Top pollar

All U S 611
""vtr And Gold Coins P oofaets
~DiamonGa Antique Jewe ry Gold
, !!jngo P e 1930 US Cu&lt;rtncy
1
, S&amp;iilng Elc Acquls~lons Jewelry
~ .!o' T.S Qoln Shop 151 Second
,GIIIJpollo 740-448 2842.

EMPLOYMENT

lpape.,la not."'11portalbl~
content. PleaH
to contact
at

Tfllllahtsaamu

Tampn Bay a BuJ'folo 7 p m
N Y Range s a P SburJh '1 30 p m

Phocn Ka Carolina 7 ~ p n

Edmonton Ill Vancou er I0 p m
ColofodoatSan.Jose IO::Wpm
Wednaday • games
5.1 l usn Onawo 7pm
Cal1ary Wltlh ftJIOR 7 p fll.
Jl'hot111x o1 Aclnma. 7 ~ p n
New Jmey a1. Aorictl 1 :-&lt;&gt; p m

0 rector of Admllaiona and Mar
ktl ng Hea lhca e Nu sing back
1110und ab Ill)' to wrl e markellng
plana aalea calls rtta e to ptr;s
clans and dlacha ge planne s
we
lnterasred eandldalas
shou d aubm t the resume o
Aockap lngs Rehab Center
36759 Rocksprings Rd Pome f11
Oh o 45769 Atln lisa Yohl Ad
min atra or 740 992 6606 Equa
Opportunl1y Employer

Drlvor

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Northeast Divlllon
Onawa
Boo on
Buffalo
Montreal

Moms Wanted Amar ca 1 t1
.fiome Buslnen Moms Work At
Free Cassone 1 868-813-

SEfiV ICES

Help Wanted

DRIVERS Cannon EJtpreS$
98% Driver No Touch Fre ghl
Starl At 34e Ml 15 Yr + EMp
33c M1 /4 Yr 3U Ml 13 Yr 31c
Ml 12 Yr 30c Ml 11 Yr 29C M I
8 Moo 1 Yr 2Be M Je Mos. Or
Less Tre nee Or 1 Mo EJCP $350
Wk Pay Raise Eve y 8 Monlhs
Bonuaea Alder Program Pad
Vacat ons Ins Avail www can
nonaxpreu com Cal For Delli a

1-600-846-9390

DRIVERS Slar1 Up To 38cpm
With Bonuses All Milos Pa d
Average 2!100 M ea Per Weak
AND Get Home MOST WEE
KENOS A Aos gnod 98 Or
Newer Satellle Equipped AI
R de Conventlona a That Go
Home W lh Vou Excellent Bent
Ills Packagol 23 w 11 Yr OTR
01100-727 2888 EXT 145
D VI I 2 Week Paid CDI. 'II an
lng No E1111 Naodld No Monev
No C tell? No Problem! Earn Up
To $32 000 1ot Yr W Full BeneIlls Apply On Line AI www ol
drlvoro com Or Call 1 B77 230
8002 ~A M llanoporl
EMERGING COMPANY NEEDS
Modica lnourence 81 lng All 1
Janco lmmtellalely If 'mil Have A
PC You Can Earn $25 000 To
$50 000 Annual y Ca I 1 800
291-48831Jtp1 • 1011
Elllblloh,d Root&lt; I Ao I Old II
Band wloxlollng booklnga want
lng to add Koyboord P ayar &amp;
VOcallat Slf'IOUI lnqul 181 Only
(304)8715--4249 or (740)898 7172

I

I

, •..,~ ,,

3 IIOPm Un~lt OOPm ONLY
I

Bualneaa ueka ADUlt
S11es Person Excellent Bene
fils Stltl Experience Preferred
bul not neca111ry Send Re
aume c o ML1o Po nl Pleaeanl
Roglotor 200 Man St PI
Plto-.WV28650

POSTAL JOBS To $11 35 IHR
INC BENEFITS NO EXPERI
ENCE FOR APP 4ND EXAM
INFO CALl I BOO 113 3585
EXT 14210 8 AM 9 Pfol 7
DAYS Ida

no

POSTAL JOBS Up To S17 21 IHr
Guaranteed H rt Fa App ieallon
And
lnlormotlorl Col I A.M
9 ~ M M F 1-88B Bile 5821 Ext
24-1007

e..,.,

Sales Flnt Jewelry Full T me
With Bene! II Rtltll And Comput
tr Experience P elerrtd Apply
Acquls t on• !11 Second Ave
""" Galllpols
81NGERSI GOSPEL CLEAN
COUNTRY tnd EASY LISTEN
lNG I Call I BOO 489 81 B4 Fo
Al)polntmenl To Come To Naah
ville lond Aud ton For Malor
Record P oducera And Concert
Promotrea.ln...,.t www wcln IC
UAC.IENTlY NEEDED to p aomo
donora earned $35 to $4! kH' 2
or 3 houra watk y Cll Sera Ttc
740-5112-885
WANTED Buckoyo Commun y
Strvlcaa Cunonlly Hll Open ngo
In Molgs Counly
1) 33 H1w /Wk 8A M 5al Tl)tu
8 AM Mon Sloop-Ovor
Aequitd
~)25Hrs/Wk 8PM BAt.l Se1
/Sun
3)1:morgoncy- (S!Jbo-)

Hou&lt;ISchoduledAIWe Art Saa ch ng For Cornp11
alonate Prof1111onala With A
Team Via on And A Dellrt To
Teach Personal And Commun ty

Skill To lndlvldUIIII W I~ Menial
Retardation Tht Work Environ
ment Is lnJorma And Reward ng
The Requirements Art High
School Dlplomo GED Volld Drlv
er s License Three VNre GOOd
Drlv ng Experlonct And Ado
quata Automobile lnaurance
Cow ago B C S Offors Comp..honslv,Tralnlng In Tho Flold 01
MAIDD. Start ng Sola y S5 50 I
Hour lnllltltod AppiCIIlll NHd
To Spec fy Poallion Of lnttr..t
And Send Ruumo To P 0 Bo•
804 Jackeon OH 45840 0804
A Appl cations Muol Bo Pool
Mtrkod By 1/2e/OO Equal Oppor
lunl1y Empl(rjor

pol"r

OwnACompultr?

Put KTo World
$25 $751H PT 1fT
1 B88-6BI-6750
www lllPDIY'h'llhiJ cgm
,.__IV.IIoy Hoapltet
line..- Ply Scllel
CNA A!&gt;PIIconto
The Nu"lng and Rahablllllllon
Ctnl8r has posltionoa"'Mable
lor luH limo t~nl Mual be
WV sJa e certlfltd
Join ou lamlly of p oleos onals
to be the resource1or co••mu,nltY
hoellh oarvlco nttdl.
PIM1t aubmlt f'llurne 1 to
PllluntValllyJicapllal
c1o f'oiiGMII
21120 Volloy PL Plaaoanl, wv 2IMO
til Ftxlo j304)f711o8978
AAIIOE
Poalllbn Ava lab t ROOFING
FOR~IIAN Musl Bt Ta enltd
Able To Makt Gaels ono Want A
Permanent Job Work Wt Wth
Peoplo And PolitiS Exceptional
Roofing Skills (3-Tib Domonllonal Sing a Ply Rubbor lin) We
Are An Eslabllshtd Company
The Work Is Local Pay Is Good
Bonuses Pad II You 1o1t Looking
Fo A Good Slablt Job Please
Submll YOUR RESUME To 1403
Eaolo n Avo Galllpollo OH
45831 Ann Foremen Poo lion
POSITION PROGRAM
ASIIITANt AIIRICULTUIIE •
NATIIIIAL ftEIOURCEI,
IXTENIION
PolilkJn Aequ rea Teaching._ Con
sumtr ~ftd Homt Horticulture
Toplco facllllat ng Tho Miller
Gardtnfr Program And Asalat
lng W th" Other Extenalon Prq
grams tJo Hours Ptr Week
OullHicoiii&gt;Jlo lilg~ School D~o
ma Req!JUad With Preference
Givan To Candldatu Wllh An
Agrlcu ~~~ Sackground And /Or
Bachllol'' Dogroe In Agrlcufturo
lnlllal vo li~bllo Speak ~g And
Loado ohll&gt; 4b lftlt1 Are Noceo
Sala~Fiango $81;2 $10 00
Co=uratt Wnh Exptrilf!CI IC
all 'rho Ohio 84ot.
Un vorolly11o An EEOIAA Em
ployor For Appl colton Or Pool
lion Dtlc&lt;!Ptlon Contact Oh o
State Untveralty Extanalon 111
Jackoon Plkt Suit. 1572 Galli
polio OH 4N31 Pllono
7007

p,su

7-

Poolal Jooo'ii41 313 oo Yr Now
H lng NOj.,EKPtrltnct Paid
Train ng Gloat lontllll Call 7

llayl110lH2841110 Ext J 3811

'

Bualneu
Opportunity

MEDICAl BilLER $15 $45 Hr
Modlcll Billing Softwl I Company
NHdl Plopla To PIOCIII Modi
cal Cia ms From Home Tra n ng
Provklod Muot Own Co~ltr 1
Boo-434-m8 Ext.6B7
MED CAl BlUING Un m ltd In
come Po entlal No Expe ence
Ntctsury Frtt nlbrmat on &amp;
CD ROM lnvtolmtnt 14 995
18 185 F none ng Available Ia
land Aulomated MediCI. St vic
eo Inc 800 322 1139 Ext 050
\lold In K't IN C1:
Nttd A Loon? Try Dlbl Consoli
dotlon I! 000 1200 000 Bad
Crtdll 0 K FH 1-600 77Q-0092
Ext 21!
~EW AUTOMATED Hom" Busl
nou Qu ckly Ea n A Full Tlmo
Income W th Spare Time Effort
lnllrntl Roqum No So ling Un1mllod ncomo Call BOtl-433
8868 For Automated Pe senta

lion
PEPSI /COKE IFRITO LAY
SNACK AND SODA VENDING
ROUTE SE YOUR OWN BOSS
IISALl CASH BUSINESSIIS
INCRESE YOUR INCOME NOWI
SMALl INVESTMENT EXCEL
lENT PROFITS 1 KOO 731 1233
ext 403

Start Your Bua nus Today
Pr me Shepp ng Center Space
lova loblt AI Af1ordable Ra a
Spring Valley Plaza Co I 740-4480101

150

$$$ NEED CASH?? WE Pay
Caah Fo Remaining Payments
On Property Soldl Mortgagtl
AnnuUitll Settlemtnts lmmt
dlato Quoin Ill Nobody Boats
Our Prieta National Cont act
Buyo 1 B00-490 0731 E&lt;l 101

www ............,II'ICibuyers com

$1 2 000 VISA /MASTERCARD
GUIIronlttd Approvaft Bod C edit
No Cred I OK I 800 52 9170
24 Hr Fltj)ordlng

EARN A LEGAL COLLEGE DE
C.IREE OUICKlY Bacheloro
Masters Doctorate By Corre
apondlnco Besld Upon Prior Education And Sholl Study Cou111
For FREE Informal on Book et
Phone CAMBRIDGE STATE
UNIVERSITY 1-60J).ll64-831B

180 Wanted To Do

Care for one n country S840
month Mobile Honttt Non
Smoke (304)882 3880
Jlma Drywall &amp; Construct on
New Conal ucUon 6 Remodel/
Drywall Siding Roofa Addl
1ona Pa n1 ng ale (3041874
oMI23 or (304)67-4-01115

LOANIOA.C

Fol Foot Aosuls
CaiiT..,._

1-NH1HIIICONSOLIDATE BILLS Low
Rates No Upfront Fees Bad
Crll&lt;lll And Bankruptcy ~ccopled
24 Hou Approval Ca 1To 1 Free
1-677-8047273
CREDIT CARD UP TO $3 000
Unttcu Ill VISA IMC lied C edit
Or No Crodl 1 1100-258-8818 Ext.
4000
CREDIT CAAOSI C.IUARANTEEO
APPROVAL! No Crtdll Chock
No Secortl)' Dat&gt;ooll $1 000 Uml
Much Mort. 811t Package On
Market Muat 81 18 &amp; Have
C~tck ng Account 1 800 737
11073.
CREDIT REPAIR! AS SEEN ON
TVI Erast Bad Crod I Logo y
Ff'Minto B88 89-2580
FREE: DEBT CONSOliDATION
Application W /Service Roduco
Paymenll Tb 65% IICASH IN
CENTIVE OFFER Cal I BOO
321 8510 Ext 29
NUD AN EARLY PAYDAY??
No Offlct VIlli Nttcoooary Up To
$500 lnlllnlly ToN F •• 1 877
IAIILYPt\~

Uclloc70038

Plano 1t1101111 n my lloint beglnnart and adults also teach
cho ding and tranoposlng If In
ltrelllld ... 740-9112-5400
Aoollng Root R..,.lrl and Siding
Rouonoblo Roleo Free Eoll
mates Fully lnsu td (7401 245
9341 ...... Mt110gtl

Downl Govn And Bank Repo 1
Bollig Sold Nowl Flnonclng Ava
oble Call Now 1 800.355.0024
Ext.8040

Homo lor lilt - l y ton ICfll In
a country nhlng tour bedrooma
IWO and hall baths to mal I vlng
room and family room two I a
p acea two aparunen11 tau car
gnge anti 1w0 slooago buildings
Pltooe cal 740-1192 2292
Mlddloporl cornar ol High Sllael
I Powoll Strttl 2 btdroom homo
with dining room l'ilng room and
kllehtn N - CIIPIII and k lchon
cablneta makes the kitchen w h
lola ol
very brighl Also a
largt tot Cutt •• ctn be Re
ductd to $33 ooo P aaae ca
Dottle Turne Retlty Oott t S

wl-

320 Mobile Homea
for Sale
$2 000 00 oil Stlocted S ngle
Wide Hom11 Super Low Pay
mental Oak wood Hom11 Ba
bourov e Wv I (304) 73B 7295
0 1 (304) 736 2395
79 Oakwood 1wo bed oom two
batha taund y area new v nyl
floortng total tlectrtc wttn a r factory Ito ms appl aneta and
bl ndl llay, $7000 740-99:1 7680

lOOK
e Bedrooma 2 Batha over 2 000
1q It fo leu than $"50 mo
FREE Do Ivory &amp; Ill 1 BD0-948
5678
14x70 Mob le Home Will con
sldor Tradeo (304)675 2359 AI
It 8PM
1~x70 2 3 bed oom1 bah and
ha f new Berber carpet one of lhe
nicest used t a ltrs you I eve
eoo $10 000 OBO cal 740 992

5686

9809

TIIIIIIO DOWN OH
BOCIAL UCURITY 1881?

u-.

No Ftt
w. wtnl
1-8885823345

Want To Take Care 01 Senlo
C I zona Monday Sunday 8 I 0
PM In You Homo 140 448

c20=25=--"-------

360

Real Eetate
Wanted

For LANDI
E"'n IIIII llltd
20 -500 Acreo
Coli Ryan
1001213-8311
Anlhony land Company LTD

www countrytymt com

WV Land wanted aultable fer
hunung . No ut t ta no access
no problem (740)288-7246

RENTALS

Bualneaa
Opportunity

$15 145 Ptr Hour Country 1
Moll Eslabllhtd Mllllcoi/Donltl
B liars Sollwa o COmpany Nelda
Peop a To Proc:111 Claims From
Home Tra nlng Ptovidtd Mult
Own Compulor 1 BOO 223 1149
Elt1 423
INOTICll
OHIO VALlEY PUBLISHING CO
rtcommenda thlt you do bual
ne11 w 1~ pooplt you know and
NOT 1o !!lnd riiOfliY lhrougn lht
ma unut ~you hive lnveatlg•ttd
lho olforlng.
AT&amp;T ,. PHONE CAIIO IIOIITE
Mtktlf50000+Nr
ALL CASHI flwtlnlo
1-etl!J.997- ZIHII)X 71~
AT&amp;T t Coni PHONE CARD AO
1/TEI Mokt $150000 + /Yr AlL
CASHI Free Into Thll II No A
oiOII SSOOOIIoq 1-800-8971111B8

Ext. 11511 (24 Hrll

AVAILABLE YiNDING ROUTE
15 30 Locallono 14K UK In
veetment Ewcellent lncomell
F nonce AVI lable I 800 310

21118 (24 Hre I

GOOD NIGHT TRADITIONAL
MLM t Good Morning To Tho
Now Wovt Lot Uo Holp ;,!lulld
'Ybur lualneaa You Ooll.ct Tht
COmmlollon. Call How 1 21f-420.
183801'1-IIH71-21181
lnlllnaUonal Company lleeklng
DynomJc lndl'iHIUt 1 For E.Commoroo 1111tt Ho!n 1 UnllmHod lncomo 1-118-47• •703

---unllmlltd-

oi11111B""""' rnakll ~ lltgol
IO tdv1lnlae atl)' p!Ofenlnce
llmlllllon or dlscrtmlnallon
~on

or-

race color relglon
H&gt;CIIf1111al llltus
origin or any nJenllon 10
makt any such preleftsnco
limitation or discrimination

Thla newwpaper will not
knowingly IICCIIpl

tdverlloomenlt lor real ......
which loin vlolallon of 1118
111w our- are honoOv
lnfoonedtlllllolldwoiHnga
penll8d In tNII\8'11PIP8f'
. . ~on on oqua1

~F1EA L

f_ ~ ,TATE

(304)875-4446

4 Bedroom• 2 Bath Two Sto y
Located AI 463 Add son Pike
$550/Mo Oepos t And Referenc
es Requ ed W seman Rea Es
Jala roc 740-448-3844
For Rent Sa e or Trade 5BR
2BA Beside Commun ty Bu d
lng In Hanfonl (304)675-2484

replace two bedrooms lwo lu
baths centra a r cos1 $11 ooo
calt304-n3-!7BB aner Boo
1988 Redman Danville 1"'x70
Alae Has Expando Ve y N ce
$13 000 740-388 8335
1895 Sky no 14•70 3BR 2BA
V nyl S ding Shlng e Root 8
roch walls (30&lt;1)675-6055

420 Mobile Home~
for Rent

Doub ew de Repo ~... Hvtd n
28X80 $1 000 Down Delve s wl
AC No Otatl A owed 888
928-9898

Btlwetn A hens and Pome oy 2
&amp; 3 bedroom mob e homes
$260 $3QO 740-992-2167

Non Ouallly ng
Assumable
$4 ooo Down &amp; Take Over Pay
monlt 7&gt;!Q-446 3218

JANUARY SPECIAL
All HOMES ON SALE
$499 DOWN ON SINGLEWIDES
$999 ON DOIJBI.EWIDES
1 BOO 948 5678

Must Sacr fl~ My New Mqdel 18
Fl W de Holno Financing Ava
ablt 304 738-BIIM

Repo 14x80 Extra N ce No I&amp;
Payoff 130 000 Bank Sacrlllca
$25 000 $8 000 BilOW Book
cs• Hl00-&amp;91-&amp;Tn
Factory Renovated 3 Bed ooms
1489 &amp; Aasumt Oakwood Gal
poll 740-446-3093

Spec a New 6x80 Low Down
Payment and S289 pe month
Frtt Air Cal or qulco E Z appto"'1 1-888 928-34211
W I Pay All Mov ng &amp; Solup
Coatsl Musl St 1 Immediate yl
304733-4e83
land Home Packet~ta A I Areao
All C/tdl A lkl 7--3583

IT010ACRE8
Between Gall polls I Jackaon
Near Thurman Beaut ful Roll ng
Moadows wth Lola 01 Road
Prieto Slarl AI S 500
Lanc:l Conuac a A\lallab e Free
Mopo ANTHONY LAND CO
LTD 1 1100-213-8385.

Nloe HO'I\t Pltnly ol Room 3
Bodroom lrlcll Aoductd Prlct
(304)17»188

MERCHANDISE

510

Household
Goode

Tn ae bedroom
emodeled
Cheste eft ences fu I deposll
ease requ red 614 501 8339 M
F after 8pm anylrne waektndo

Unfu n shld lole electric 2 bed
room 12x64 on nice lot In Ma
son Oaposll aqulred Phone
(304)882 3287

$ NO DOWNI HOMES NO CREDIT NEEDED I GOY T FO'RE
ClOSURES! GUARANTEED AP
PROVALI 1 800 380 •820 EXT

2 ooo Sq. fl Houtt 1 8 Aoreo
8Jor~g~ Building lllg ound Pool
170 000 llala Roult 7 SouJh
740-245-8472

Off ce bu d ng Pomeroy 600
aquare tt $350 pa mon h S 50
deposit cal740-949-2093

Own A Now 1800 Sq Fl 4 Bed
rooms 2 Bath Home $2 000
Down 1-888 738-3332

Country L v ng 3 Or 4 Bedrooms
Pay Cloa ng Coats &amp; Move tn
740-448-3093

330 Farm• for Sale

1183 Jim Waltero Homo 48!1
atull bath llvlngroom kllchen/
dining lrtl l ulllly room w/3
ACIOI In Aohton A II $68 500
(304)571-23118

460 $pace for Rent

1883 14x70 with Bx20 expando

310 Homee for Bale

11508

Now Tak ng App cat on~ 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apa tmants Inc udll Wate
Sewage 1iaoh $315 Mo 740
446-00011

3BR 2 Sa h House for Rant In
Country Call alttr 5PM

3 Bedrooms $326 WID Hook Up
No Pill Dopoa~ 740 367-D811

Fron-

a

350 Lota It Acreage
2 44 Acr11 Homtelte G een
Townthlp, Goll t County Flot
Sctnlc Ctott TO Galllpolo Some
RasltiCIIOnl, 740-2oJ5.57711

Fo Sale Recond tloned wash
e s d yers and ef ige a o s
Thompsons App lance 3407
Jad&lt;son Avenue (304)675 7388
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers d ye s ef ge a o s
anges Skaggs Appl ances 76
v no St eol Call 740 &gt;¥6 7399
1-868-B 18-0 12B

R&amp;D s Used Fu n ture G eat Se
eel on P cad To Se I Come
And 8 owse Co ner Of Reule 7
&amp; Addison P ke We Buy Fu n
Jure 740 367.0280

2 Bedroom• In Kanauga Beautl
ful River View No Peta 740-441
0181
2 Bod oorno PriVIIlt Ou"" Clooe
To 35 Na• Cen erv It Thu man
No Ins de Pets Applcaon I Dt
posll $300/Mo 740-88211032.

Two bedroom t a fer n Tuppers
Plains new carper stove &amp; refrlg
1101o 1250 monlll plus utiiHos I
depos~ 740-6673487

210

2BR W 0

Hook up Refe enca Deposit No
Po. 1304)875-5162

3 Bod oom 47112 Spruce Sl
Carpon lg Kitchen $390 Mo
$390 Security Otpos I Apply
Topu Fllrnltu 1 15 Second
Avo No Phone Co lsi

NO PAYMENT TILL MAY 2000
ANY HOME PURCHASED IN
THE MONTH OF JANUARY
WE W Ll MAKE AAST 3 PAY
MENTS
1-601).948 587B

this .--Iss~ to

N ce Ground Floo

3 Bed oom Houae For Flent 142
1 2 Portsmouth Road Stale Ro
ule 141) $375.Tolo $300 Dtposl
Rele aneta Requ rid 740 256
B456 Days 740 25B 1530 Even
lngs

Two bed oom tralle In Tuppers
Plains Blpando and c1o11d n
po ch $250 month plus ut ltl11

lht F - Fair Housing Act

Gracious lv ng 1 and 2 bed oom
apartments a V llage Ma,nor and
Rlvarslde Apa 1men s n M Cld 1
po
F om $249 $373 Call 740
992 5064 Equal Hous ng Oppo
tunt ies

2 000 Sq F Houso largo lot Inground Pool $500/Mo Sla • Ao
ull 7 South 740-245-9472

NEW BANK REPOS
ONLY 1WO lEFT NEVER liVED
IN
CALL HID0-848 5678

raal- tdllllrllolng In

Garage ApJ tment Bed eorrt 2
Ca Ga age Washe Oryl!t Hook
Up Cen al Heal A Ava able
lmmed ate y 740 "'46 4555 AI e
5

3 Bedrooma Forecloaed
Homes From 1199/Mo 4'Jio Down
For L allnga 1 Payment Delalls
1100-319 3323 Ext 1709

diV WI tumah ret.rencea upon
,.queal Contocl Caroun• at
(304)675-4844
All

FunvsMd 2 RDOml &amp; 8a h Show• Downs a s Clean No Pets
Dapos 1 &amp; Aele encee Required
740-446-1519

410 Houeea for Rent

I -Will do houttUtplng lor homtl

f i NANCIAL

lor Rent

W.PoyCASH

Now 2000 Doublawlda 3BAI2BA
~ per month frH 4 r &amp; Dtl'i
ery 1 886 928 3426

i bualn11111 MQndav Jh u Frl

Apartrnonta

440

Need 5 Secluded Acres W th
Home&amp; te Cult! Road Gal a
Counl)' DHdld &amp; Surveyod Un
der$12000 7&gt;10-4482317

P ot Program Rentt 1 Needed
304-736 7295

Home for Jhe Ho ldays on a N co
Lol AI U1ti Its H304)-738-7295
Comp Olt Plano Tuning And
Service Elmer Geiser 740 388

2S ACRES Ia 1100
Off SR 7 Souln Of Gal po 1 No
Rtol k:tlonol NEECJS TlC S2 300
Down On land Conttcl
MEIGS COUNTY
Two 10 Ac 1 T acta Of Meadow
C eek And Wooded H 1 Sur
oundtd By Woods And Farm
Land WI Ball Togolher 126 000
t,and Contract Ava lablt 5 At tl
Of Wooded Hils $9 !00 Off SA
24 Ltll Than 20 M nu II Wtll
01 Gallpols
ANTHONY LAND CO LTD
1100-213-8385 For FREE Maps

Turner Broktr &amp;1740-992 2886

CONSOLIDATE IIIU8

Bualne..
Training

Schools
lnatructlon

FOI!ECLOSEO HOMES low Or o

Nlco Counl,y Sen ng 2 M loa
!rom lawn 3 Btdroom 2 Belh 2
Car Ga age HeatPump on 1
Aero Appt aneta Slay (304)882
3518

r;noney: com PII&amp;Ccdt rowan

Cal Todayt 740 HB 4387
HIOQ-214.()452
Reg IIJO.Q5-12748.

Brick home n tha Ntw Havel\
area Trip 1 pane wlndowt htat
)llllllp/conuo a~ wlflncod yard 2
min awey from Eltm school
ntlr pltnJolllt 33) 3733.

$S Auto loana Persona Loans
Debt Conaolldallon Mongagea
And Aelnanclng C ld~ Prob.,ma
OK Consumer~ F nanc al 1 800
247-5125 Elt1 1134 VOid OH KS

From $3 000 -$150 0001
(II% Avorago RaJa)

GalllpoloC... Cot....
(Careera CIOoo To Homo)

~FFORD~BlE PRE FAB LOU
DATION! Rep011111ed Must
Dlapost 4 B ond Now Super n
IUiiltd Horne Paclllgtl SuperiOr
H Toch OuiH'Y Fool Slmplo As
aembly Vour Foundation Flex ble
Layout Sac lllcell 1 800 B74
8032

220 Money to Loan

Wo1k From Homo $599 $8 000
Pori Time /Full-Time Coni8C1 Kit
y I 888 882 283B w- 2mo e

140

350 Lota &amp; Acroago

Nlco 3 Or 4 Bod oom Randl With
fu B111men1 Heat
On
1 78 Ac 11 In Counl y ~~~~~;;;;
Roulo 775 Pas1 0 0 M
Po k Ask ng $79 000 Call
448 B280 Or 740-441 1859

SFAEE CASH NOW$ From
Woa Jhy Fam 1111 Un oad ng M
llone 01 Dollaro To Help Minim zo
Their Taxt~ Write lmmed ately
Wlndla 1 847 A. SECOND AVE
1350 NEW YORK NEW YORK
10017

Fu T f111 W (h

cQ.unts Payab e Aceounla Re
c!'llvabla Pay ol And Genera
Ta,f Prepara on Excel tnl Op
p6rlun I)' For Ca 11 With Eo abllihtd Buolnoas Available lmma
dllllt y For Tra nlng SOIIry llestel
011 E•po lonco Apply Tope Fur
niiUre 151 Second Avenue Ga 1-

210

WILDLIFE JOBS To 121 60 IHR
INC BENEFITS GAME WAR
DENS
SECURITY
MAN
TENANCE PARK RANGERS NO
EXP NEEDED FOR APP AND
EXAM INFO CAlL 1 800 8 3
3585 EXT 14211 8 4 M 9 PM
7 DAYS Ids roc

llntflts Aaaponslblt For Ac

(
I

Ask ForMs Hammond

011 co Manage

DRIVERS $500 S GN ON BONUS
IMMEDIATE OPENINGS Ovor
The Road Slall AI 29 CPM A
Ml Unloading Pay Personalized
0 apBIOh Homo Ofttn Ho lday I
Vacallon Pay 401 K /Mod /Pres
Donta Ass gned 99 T2000 1
A de Prog am 98'Jio No Touch
Frelghl CALl SUMMIT TRANS
PORTAl ON 800-876-oseo EOE

Loca

TonaotttDewo 710pm
Los ,4.nydH 11 Dallal 8 \0 p n
N Y: ldoftders OI..Anaht m 0 Qp n

MCCC
238 Will Msln Stroot
!'cmeroy Oh 45789
No phone call piOatt

DENTAL BltLING S1 5 $45 /Hr
Denta B lllng Software Company
Needs People To P oceu Mad
ca Cia ms From Home Training
Provided. Must own Computer 1
Boo-223-1149 Ext 4eO

ALl. Ytnllllltt Muot

Pomeroy,

Atllnlic DMsion

Methodi11 67 N C Wesleyan 43
Nnffolk S K4 COJ!IIIn Sl 75
Nonh Alabama 72 A a Huo sv lie 61
Radford 60 Coutal Carolina 43
Shaw a Bentd ct, ppd.
S-74 Lee 57
S(Kinl H II 73 LoyoiL NO 60

Hous on 811p( a 81 Paul Qu nn 61
l..anJNon 78 SW Auembl es of God 4~
Stephen F. Austin 65 SW Tuas 60-0T

Yard Sale

lilt dly ........... td
lilorun ~
edition 2 110 p m
Frtdly Molldty odlllon
10:110 I "'- lllhmlly.

NHL standmgs

Uberty 67 Charleston Southern 6S
Md. EU em.Shore 84 S Carol na S 68

Bethany Kan 82 Otlawa Kan 58
Coacordia M ch 90 Rochelle 52
Conentone M M ch aan Dearborn .50
Findlay 89 H I ~dole 62
John Carroll 67 Oberl n 57
Ken 85 ViiJln a 74
S~ena He Jhtt 68 Olivet 54
Wes VUJfnia 74 Wilberforce 71
WittenberJ 69 Kenyon 66

Lost and Found

DEADLINE 2 00 p m

4
6

""""'
o to

1'.1rl Colle Mala Pup 1304)882

Hockey

20 20

Mernbeqbjp StqttaN
The mtlga County chamber ol
Comme ca seeka a friendly and
annthua aauc lnd vldua 10 join
our staff as our membership ai
cratarv This 2S hour ))er week
pas on coord nates membe ship
actlv lias produces the mambe
new titer and genera ty ttrves
the n.. da of the chambe' mtm
barah p A p easan phone man
nor and ho iblllty to worll an oc
cblona night of -weekend tor
tpec al chambtr tvtnla and re
qu red Please forward ~ur re

.tabiCocke span el ma e and le

Galllpolla
&amp; VIcinity

P sbu gh ,....... ... 9 ll
NY lsondtts
0

MED C~L BilliNG Earn Exce
ant .S S $ I Procualng c a ma
F om Home Fu I 'llalnlng P ovid
ad Computer Rtqulred Call
Mll&lt;l Pros Tol F ao 1 888 313eD49 Ext 3125

NOW HIRING
_,70PERWEEKIMRTTIME
IGuontniMCIIIIIoryl
Men and Women netdtd1odo
olephone operalar work lor
lOCAL RADIO STAnON
PROMOTIONI
'llo\Y 6 EV&amp;NlNG SHIFT
AVAILABtE
FULL AND MRTTIME OPENINCJS
NO EXPERIENCE NEEDEIIWETRAIN
H S. And Collogo &amp;tudlnto
WOicomt
Prevlouo Appllcenll P. .H
Attply
Applylnl'orlonAt
1 t7 Pint Gtlllpallt Olllo
i
Monday Januery lOth
I
1\.eadoy Jaooary 1llh

• 70

NY Rilllgers

MEQICAl BILliNG Earn Exctl
ent Income Full Tialnlng Com
pule Aequ od Col Mod Worllo
Toll Free 800 540 8333 E•l
2301

$10 00 column Inch Sundays

Penn 79 Lnf1ye e 62
Ph adepha94 NYTe h~O
Pr nc~ton 77 R de 7'
S ony 8 ook 6S Bu kne 44
Te k.yo Pos b7 Dom n nn NY 60
Wns ng on Md S4 Gou he 4K
Wentworth Te h 64 Enle on 49
\\oes ey (H Neun ann .W

68 154 15
&lt;9 14 109

Major Marl&lt;el ng Fl m Sitko Prr.
Enthusiast c And Prof11alonal
St f Sla ltrl To Work AI Mer
chand oora In Tho Chllllcolha
Ga Hpol s Now BOJIOn And Jack
son Areas Flt11lb 1 Hourt EMcel
lanl Pay W I Be Work ng W th
D splays And Interact With All
Levels 01 Management Roqu o
m•nts A Compull email Ad
d Ill lnlt na Mlc OIOft Wo d
And E»~cal And T ansportat on
T arnlng P ovldtd Fa• Reaumt
To81J0.884-1B12 Ref DT'I

-tqale neute ad and spayed
&amp;1Jiendly good watchdogs need
counfly home 740-992-&amp;789

Kuzown8." CoumbaUnon7

]

ATTN Own A Computtr? Put ft
To Workl Ul 75 /Hr PT 1FT
111-411 1224 www work-out-ol
your-llomt com

Homomaktr Uvt In Wanltd For
Ol1tbl1d Practlc ng Attorney n
Co U{nbus Some Cart Outlta
Room Board P us Salary e14
267 5054

Colorado MeDona d 1 Enjoy L v
ng And Wo king In Tho Aocklosl
Employee Houa ng $7 DO Pe
Hour A 10 Hlr ng Shill And As
alatanl Manage s Call 1 303
567 21140

eludes tlec pocket organizer
t:.ost Near or Bel ween Wa
Mort Glllpo Is &amp; Monroe Ave P
PI
Very lmporlant
Ae
wardl(304)675-5550

5
I

ATTN Mothefl And Others
Wo k From Home Earn An Ex a
$500 $I 500 PT Or $2 000
$4 000 FT Per Month Cal 8B8
382-82211

Ha 1tyllat needed with expar
anca F~twlb t hOu 1 PleaH cal
740-992 2550

~)8823828

Sl po Has had lhOII

Lost Black/Snap Over wa leVIn

10 J
2l 14

Are 'mu Connecltd?
nttrne Users Wanted
$350 $800 /Week
888 88HI7~
www.mgiJI\Itbaflfun oom

Send Or Ot Iva ~fiUmt And
Refe tncos To GMCAA 8010
No 1h Stall Roull 7 Chtlh re
45620 By 112B 00 GMCAA Ia An
Equal Clpportun11y E/fllll1ftr

hard worker ap
to 18 hou" week
ca I 740 742

T1go

Cllbnn S7 Ceda Ctts 48
Eastern 45 Rosemon 7
G&amp;en le S 99 Oh o Valley 58
K nss Pa 7' Marywood 68

New Jesty
Ph lodolph a

s-

Ga Ia MtiQI Community Action
Ia Seek ng 'two Laborer• For 111
Waathe lzat on C ew Th 1 11 A
Ttmpo a y Full Tlmt Pos ton

ply Point Pleasant Can or Gena
ala E darcare S!a e Route B2N
Roule 1 Box 326 Po nl Pleas
an WV 25550 EOE

't month old cat AI American

East

»:

Send Resume Ia
Gallpolo Daly liibune
RE Advertising
Aop
B25 Third Avenue
Golllpolli OH 45831

Holp Wllltld

110

Buut dan aerv ces needed Fie
qu res West VIrgin a license Ap

CCNY 45 Hunt 43

Furman 86 Gco pa Sou hem 72
Ga Soulhwes em 73 Brt-w on Parker43
Gmmbl ng S 9 MVSU 58
Hampton 87 Morgan St 73
Howll'd 67 Flonda A&amp;M 54

Giveaway

eo

Iwn

7pm 9am wondng wllh 1118 tide 1y
74Q-992 5023

AVON A Areasl To Buy o Stl
Sh loy Spea" 304-675 1429

(1)25 31,(2)7 144tc

Midweot

6
6

ADOPTION
Happ y Monied Couplo WII P oYide You Newborn W th Love
And A SecUf'e Future Please Cal
ToreoaOrDM

NCAA DIVISIOn I
women's scores

Alabama A&amp;M 60 Texns Southern S..f
Alabama S 77 Pmi e V ew 60
Albany Go 66 Morr s Brown 46
Appi'lnch an S 70 Woffo d 60
Belmon 86, Oml RQbens 74
Bethune Cookman 60 DelawareS SJ
Cha onooaa 88 Oav dson 77
Chns an Brothe s 80 Hcnderso S 67
Clem5on 66 Wake Fores SS
Coke 7+ Moun 0 e 67
Delto S 96 Ark Mon c~llo 8
Denve 68 Sou h A abama 67 OT
Duke 59 Flondn S 'i4
ETSU 66 UNC.(l een bo o 62
Emmanuel 94 Southern Wesleyan 79
Fort Volley S 92 Lone 55

www ytiOIWOI1cathome com

~£lion-now com

By order of Eallern Loael
8ch0olllolrd of Education
UN Rltchla Treaaurer

Wa sh 92 Po m Park 49

Cal 1.US-BeS-8067 01' VI&amp;~

Pla'/0

Now To 'ltlU Tlwtft Shoppe
9 Will Sllmson A!hens
740-!592 842
Qual ty clo hlng and household
tem1 $1 00 bag sale ave y
Thurlday Monday thru sa urday
9 D0-5 30

Par more Information call

76 F ndlay 65

..ATTENTION""'

Wol1l From Homo
Eam An E•lla $450 $5 000 PI 1Ft

&amp;kUs
MUll have good cJrMng record
&amp; Provide own Tra~Uan
"Must have ablll)' Ia be aIDM

,

740-817-etl78

Great Lakes Intercollegiate

$800 WEEKlY POTENTIAl
Complete S mple Government
Forma At Home No Experience
Noctllary CAlL TOll FREE
1 1100-IIBe-3599 Ext 2601 $'/" 00
A-Fee

Muat have good Communication

NOTICE TO BIDDERS

of. bid

Oh1o men's college scores

tl489l;xt5046

ARE YOU CONNECTED? lntar
na Users Wantedl $350 $800
Week 1 988 718 4044 .,.,. take

Theaa vehlelaa can ba 80711 By order of tha
vl-.1 II the bul gara111 II E11tern Loael Boerd of
10008 SR 181 Tuppera EduCition
UN illtohlt Truaurer
Plalna Ohio The Boerd
reHrvaa tha rlpht to reJacl (1) 25, 31 (2) 7 14 4 tc
any and all bkti or eny part

Far West

H

Buckeyes d1d not y1eld
Eastern hI 17 of 42 shots from the field The Eagles
had 36 rebounds led by Amber Baker wnh nme pmnts
Eastern had seven steals 21 turnovers and 4 asSISts
wh1le comm1tmg 18 fouls
Nelsonville York hn 14 of 60 overall trotn the field
overall and was 17 of 35 at the hne The Buckeyes had
34 rebounds led by Wh1tlach wuh 10 Nelsonv1lle York
had 12 turnovers 8 asmts 15 steals and 22 fouls
Eastern won the reserve game 43 21 led by Wh1lney
Karr and Sara Mansfield w11h I 0 pomts aptece as the
JV s moved to 9 2 overall

S..led p~la will be
accepted by the Board of
lduaetlon of lhe Eaatem
Local School Dlatrlot of
Rledl¥1111 OhiO II the
'INMurer I OffiCI Untll
12 oo noon on llondily
February 21 2000 end 11
that time opened lty the
Truaurer of ..ld laird for
ana (1) naw thirty elx (31)
Pllltngar hlndlcappad
aocaeelbla achool "ua
IP.•alflcetlana
and
lneti'\ICIIIoM to blddanl may
be oblalnecl II the ofll.,. of
tha Super!ntandant 500011
Van (UIId SR eat Raedavllla Ohio

" coiiCMIIon van)

U oh 76 Colorado S 70

Wlll:c:rford jJ VintonCOMn )' 14
Wn c 'i 'liS lucM lie Vnl ~6
Wdb o 41 ~oc nc Soutbern 4:1
Whet ~bu M..,4 !M; mo NW ..,2

•

'r

South

NBA standmgs.

New York
"""

PUBUC NOTICE
l11led blda will ba
recahred by the Board of
Educatl.on ol the E~ttern
Local School Olatrlct of
Division n
Raadavllla Ohio at tha
Ilia
.w:L
I'll
I WooucrTriway( 7
13.0
294 Treuurer • Ofllca until
2 Dlyton Ouisuan S
11.0
16.5 12 30 Pll on February 28
3 Cia Pufc::dl Manan (9
12 I
140 2000 end at thet time
4-Willanl (I)
2I
194 opened by the ,.,_,., of
5 Olnuled FaD•
0.2
101 eald
6- Poland Semnwy
72
o follOWingBoard for tha
7Sirulhen
10.2
94
8~~
92
90 (2) 11184 Chavrolat 85
9 Navane F11rlen
83
88 peuengar bu••
IO.Can on Cent Cadi
IQ.r2
.50 (1) !8113 Ford 71 PIINngar
Othtn reetil'lna 12 or more points 11 bUa (nllda engl.. worlc)
GALLIMLIS GALLIAACAD 341 12-Too opny (1) 1887 OIIC Slap Side Van
OUeao 27 1l Uma Shawnee 23 I" (tle)-Grcenneld
(Oraan Machine)
McClam, Tallmadse 1..

Associatioo of Mideast Colleges

Welbton 43 Southern 41

=

Gcorgja Southern 62 Cbananooaa
HllmpiOR 82 M011an S1 73
tt Jb l'o nr 60. N.C Asheville 58

33

I

2
0

37

5
4
2

9-15

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0

~:;::, V.rung,•. " ............~
....6
8
4

I2

Q

"
Metp

Jenn fer Shrimpl n
Shannon Price.

Elftl.
2 5 10
5-6
9

Bethune Cookman 70 De aware S 60

1800 WEEKLY BE YOUR OWN
80111 PROCESS NG GOVERNMENT REFUNDS NO EXPEAI
ENCE NECESSARY! (24 Hr
Rocordod Moasage) 1 800 854

SERV~G TAI.COUNTY AREA

Public Notice

CIUIIpbe 54 Jacksonv lie Sl ~I
Charleston Soulhern 60 Ubeny !i8
Col of Charles on 77 Funnon SO
Floridn A&amp;.M 71 Howard 67

m nutes remammg an Eastern player was whistled for a
techn cal foul that resulted m a four po nl turnaround and
a Nelsonville York lead
W1th 30 seconds lert Eastern called ume out leadmg
by one pomt On a s1dehne mbounds play Eastern
coughed up the ball and N Y drove 1 m for a score and
one pomt lead
We set up a play on our last 11 ne out Brannon sa1d
but someone ran the wrong route and Nelsonville recov
ered
Eastern had to foul to try to regam possession but
once Nelsonville York had reda1med the lead the

$45 000 Nea IPoltnlltll Doctors
Need Ptoplel Proeeas Medica
Cia ma F om Home We Tan
MUST OWn Compu er 88B 332
501Hxt1700 iDalll'

Fol Wo~ Eslabl~he&lt;l LOCI!\ Co

Continued from B 1
54 Ponsmou h

HelpWanted

ADVERTISING
SAlES REPRESENTATIVE

EAstERN...
W 1O'fl Wood Symmes Va

110

2BR No Pets Rele encea Re
qu red Sand HII Road (304)675

3834

540 Mlscellaneoua
Merchandlae
$$BAD CREDIT? Gal Cash
Loans To $5 000 Debt Canso
da on To $200 ooo C tel Ca ds
Mo tgages Ref nanclng And
Aulo Loans Ava lab e Mer dl•n
C edl Cop I BOO 47 5119 E•l
I 80

and cloposll 740-687 3487

440

Apartment•
for Renl

1 and 2 bod oom apartmonll fu1
nlshad and untu n ahMI stcu ty
depos t equlred no peta 740

275 Ga on Kerosene Tank 2

Kero-sun Hea e 1 740.388 8897
WANT A COMPUTER?? BUT
NO CASH77 MMX Technology
WI F nance w h 0 Down Past
C td t Problems No Problem Cal
To 1Free 1 877 293-4082

992 2218

1 Badroom Apt or Aonll (7ol0)
4&lt;18-1785
I Bedroom Noa Arbor's Nursing
Home Economloa U IIIII OUiol
location $279/Mo • Ulllllles No
Poll740-448-29!7

2 Bedroom Apartment Upsta ra
Stove &amp; Retrlge ator Furnlahad
34 112 Smithers Avenue Gall po.
IS $250 Mo 1 150 Dopoolt 740
448-90111
2 Bedrooms Gallpolll $325/Mo
Damage Depoe~ Aoqulrtd Rel11
oncea No fills 740- 1086
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRIC&amp;S AT JACK
SON EITATE8 52 Woatwood
DI'IVII from $289 to 1370 Walk lo
ahop &amp; mbvloo Call 740 448
2588 Equal Housing Opponunlty
Chrloly 1 Fam ly Llv ng apart
menta homt I 1r111e rtntala
740 1192-4514 apar1men11 ovoll
-IUrnlehtd&amp;unturnlohtd

Camp eta DISH Nerwork sate te
sys em b and new $88 740
992 11 82 o 304 773 5305 aile
6pm

COMPUTER BLOWOUTII COM
PAO MICRON eMach ntsl Desk
opa Lap ops Merchant Ac
coun a Webslles A most Eve y
ont App ovedll No Money
Down f Low Month y Pay menta
FREE Special Of orl CAll NOW
I 838-&gt;478-234! (Tol Free)

Compute
OS 7 5
100MHz
KeybOard

Power Mac Perform•
Syslem BMB A.t.M
Colo Mon tot Moult
Htw att Packa d InkJet
Otsk Write Color Prln e 660C
Exttrnal Modem 57K Y2K OK
Tons Of Softwear In ernet Ready
(M95 Barga n) 740-448-8031
CoMPUTERS Low 01' $0 Down
Low Monthly Paymentt Y2K
Camp an1 A moat E\llry6ne Ap
pfl&gt;l'td 1-600-617 3478 Ext 330
FlrJWOOd $140 Dump Tl'uck l.Otc1
7&gt;10-379-2758

•

�· P • 84 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Mlddl1part, Ohio

110 F11111 Equipment

,..,_

-

Tht Dilly SentiMI. Seated b!dl

: can~b• 1ubmlttH to: Coke M•·

: · For aMt· Prima S11r SYtltm ai&amp;O
~ ~wtnted

ACA Direct TV older
.. .model with aetna card, top dot... ""'•'· Wolfle 740·849-331 5 leave

: •• ,.,ge

: "'GOOd UMd Appllanc:ea Anc:l Fur·

PHILLIP
ALDER

""'· (300)e15-32&lt;8.:,_

1038, Or740-

Grubb't Plano- tuning &amp; repairs.
Probtlml? Need Tuned? C.tl lh*

Jlilno'Dr. 7 - 5

Club Bingo On

Hay &amp; Grain

Thuradays

Wanted: Laue Ollllltr Tobie·
00 Poundage 2,000 Pounda. 740-

116-1062.

PlYing 110.00
per lllflll
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Stlrbul'll

(300)175-5721.

, TRANSPOFnATION

Very GOOd CondiUon, Y2K Com·
pliant, a..n On Llna $400 OBO,
740-215-!HOe.
JANITAOL HEATING AND
COOLING EOUIPIIENT
INSTAUJ:D

CARS•SIOO, $500 &amp; UP. POLICE
IMPOUND. Honda's Toyota's;

"" If You Don't Call Us we Botn
to11. • Free .Estimates! 740-4468308, 1-800-291.()098.
.

Chevya, Jeeps, And Sport Utili-

JET
AERATION MOTORS
' Ropairtd, &amp; 'Rebuilt In Stock.
ca• Ron e...... HI00-537·9528.

1977 Chevy PIU 8 Cylinder, Au·
tomatle. $400; 1978 F.ord PIU Automatk: 3&amp;0 Engine. Needs Bal·
tary $400; 1988 Buldl Century, 1
Naw Tires. AutOfnatlc, 6 Cylinder,
$1,500; 4 P.M. ·8 P.M. 740·245·

Huge Inventory, Olacount Prices.
Plumbing &amp; Electrical Parts, Furnaces I. Heat Pumps. BenneUe
Mobile Home Supply, 740-446·

11116.

.

1981 Chevrolet Monte Carto. Mint

COndition, 740-367-7116.

837·8217 or 740·742·2511, ask
lor DaYo. RU!land, Ohio.

1989 Beretta With Enaln&amp; 55,000
Mllea, $2.300. 740-256-ro32.
1991 Ford Tempo Automatic, AC

New Mltlenlum Dietl Eat All Day AM/FM Cassette Power Wind·
And Mtlt Away, Call Tracy At
ows /Dooro, Sunroof. No., Brakes,
710-411-1962.
Tlroo, Battery, AnornatOf. Exhaust
Premium' Firewood, Oak &amp; Ash Good Shape With 128,000 Miles,
$50 Load, Full Size Plck·Up, 0. Runs Fino $1 .900. Call 710-446·
2661 AHar 6:30 P.M.
'·
- · 740-992-4!566.
1992
Dodg•
"
Shadow;
1988
Prtmaotor
Dodge Caravan; 1988 Buick At·
DlrocTV
Fret satellite system. Call for de- gal; 191!9 Dodge Spirit, Days: 740286·1618 , Evenings: 740·148·
raus. 800·263-2640.
4736.
RESIDENTIAL HOllE OWNERS 1992 Ford Probe GL 4 Oyiindar
5
Tappan HI Efficiency 90% Gas Speed, co Player A/C, $3.500.
Furnacea. OU Furnaces, 12 Saer 740-:J88.8866.
Heat Pump &amp; Air Conditioning
Syatams F.-.e 6 Year Parts &amp; La·
bor Warranty Bennetts Haadng &amp;
~. 1-800-672·5987.
Aon't Gun Shq&gt;, 7~742-8112.

Set Of Headllght Covers For A
1997·1999 Chevy Cavalier.
$25.00. Only Used A Couple 01

1992 Grand Am $2,895; 1992
Caval lor RIS $3, I95; 1991 COval•
er $2,795; 1991 Cavallar $1,795;
1989 c 1 s
s2 195
Cook Mo~~~~4=1~3. ' '
1993 Ford Probe

Automiltlc

Windows. Locks. Red 5 Speed.
13.200.740-367·7754.
~. can 304-77:&gt;5841 .
1993 Mercury Cougar XR7,
Starting Lineup ligures, buying Laathor lnttflor. Sunroof. $3.500
OB0740-411-o:J70.
o~r OTV tyatems, paying $150
and up. Cal Jay, 700-1119-2516.
I995 Buick Lesabra Custom 1
STEEL BUILDINGS · Buy Nowl Doors, Losdod. aluminum
1899 Prices /Limited Stockl W,heets, AIC, Tilt, Cruise. Pwr,
25x30. 30x40, SOx120. tmmadlara Lcx:ks, Pwr Windows, Pwr Seats,
$8,200.00; (2',000 Under Book
Do~Mryt , ·800-462-7930 •·80. .
Vlliuo)t 740-682·7512
TV tor Sale. Gold Star. Built-In
VCR w/Remote. $100. (304)675· 1997 Bulek LeSabra automObile. .
....sa.
mlleaga 27,000, excoltant condl·
tlon, garage kept, for appointment
Two (2• cemetery plots and two call 71o-712-4301 altar 8pm or
· (2) vautta In Meigs Memory Gar- call740-992-7tOI .
'*-· v - at $3850, will Hll for
$2750. Plea• call 740-742·2979 · 1999 Chevy Cavalier. W~lto, 2
or7~989-Q058 .
o,., 5 Spd., Am/Fm CaOBattli. N
Two Used Colt ·4 Drawer File c. Rear Do(root, 1,950 milts. Aak·
lng SB.:zeo.oo Obo. 7 256- 101 1
Coblnall. 740-448-1!566.
CARS FROM S211MD. tm·
Waterline Special: 314 200 PSI pounda /Rapo&amp;. F... sc Down 124
$21.85 Per 100; t• 200 PSI Mos. 019.9% For Llstlnga 1·800.
$37.00 Per 100; All Broa&amp; Com- 31
9-3323 X21ti6.
p&lt;oulon Fltllngo tn Stock
· RON EVANS ENTERPRISES For Sate or Trade, 1991 Caprice
.Jickoon. Ohio, 1·800-537-9528
Classic. Now Shocks. Brakes.
Fully Loaded Loather Ect.
WANT A COMPUTER???? BUT $3,500.00.
Negotiable on Trades.
NO CASH?? MMX TECHNOLO· Call On Vjoakands
Only. 740·
GY We Finance, ·.o· Downl Past
Credit Problema OKII Even If 379-2842.
1\lrned Down Beloralt Aeestabllsh 720 li k1 f Sale
'!bur Crodlllt HI00-659-0359.
rue or
'1986
Fora
Ranger 5 Speed, 4 ey.
650
Building
Iinder. $800, Good Transportation,
Supplle1
740-441·9575.
.
1966
F
d
R
Block. brtclc. ae.wer pipes, windor angar, 4 ely.. 2 ll~r.
ows, lintels. etc. Claude Winters. good body &amp;good motor. $1,800;
RIO Grande, OH Call 740· 245·
1985 Plymouth Horizon, 2.2 titer.
5121.
rune good, body In good shap&amp;,
$8!10, 740-712·1049.
Steel Buildings, New. Must Sell!
1993 Ford .,._
·-,...r Spluh, 4 eyt, 5
· 30x40x12 Wa1 $10,200 Now
ap.• 90.000 mila&amp;. excaHant cond"
$6,990, 10x80x14 Was $16,400 lion, $5900, 740-992·1182 or 300·
Now $10,971, 50x100x18 Was nH305.
$27,590
Now $1.9,990;
80x200xt6 Was $58,760 Now
19111 Cllovy S· 10 txtllnd cab. 1.3
$38,1180. 1-800-406-5126
lltar.
8 cyt .. 5 ap., ale, ps. pb,
120,000 miles, good condition,
Ten 28' Root Trusses $30 Eacll; 740-416-7tll10f740-992·2529.
Nina 40'. Root Trua11a $80 Ea,cll;
Sovon 21' Roo! Truseoo $20 1999 Rangar XLT, 3.0, V·8 En·

*

Each: Eleven 34' Root Truasea

150 ~. 740-992-&amp;196.

560 Pete for !Isle ·
Adorable AKC Reglatored Show

gina, A.C.(300)675-4014.
95 Ford F· 1150 1.. oxcollent 000•
dltton. Fully and more. Ga·
rage kept, 32,000 actual miles,
oharp kucld &amp;17,000. (740)·256·
1243

Quality Boston Terrler ·Pupplel,
Sholl &amp; Wormed, 1 Male. I Fi·
male. "For Tlrllt Spec/IJI Somoone
On lfVo!Onllnl'lllf $300, DE·

"
&amp; •-wo
·730 •.ane ..- I

POSIT WILL HOLD, 740·388·

Speed. R..,. Good. Easy

11325.

AKC rO'gl&amp;tared Chln.sa Shar-Pol
puppies. Iota ot wrinkles, $300,
7~1119-2126.

AKC Registered Dachshund .fe.
lllllt 4 Months Old. 101 2 sots 01

Shots, Vary Friendly, $250, 740.

41e-199tl.

.

AKC rtgllltrecl Yor~lt puppy for

ult.710-IJ92.2371.

Over 75 Tanka of Freshwater
Fleh, Locally Raised Paralc"llt'

Supplies. Fish Tank/Pet Shop,

. 2413

Jackson

Avenue,IPt.

P-.nt. (304)875-2063. Sun. t ·
1PM, Mon·S.t 11AM-6PM.
FuM BloOded Rottweller Pupp.lea
Falhar: AKC Reglottrtd; Mother.
Full·-· S1 00, Firat Shots &amp;

-.7~743.

L~king

for female longhair

Dldlohund to brHd. Pleue call
740-416-P~--.
. - . '

1967 .Ford F-150,

4~4.

300 .1

an Gao.

54•000 . 7ot0-37H880.
1991 Gmc Safari van. Autom ..
High Mileage. 11.750.00. 740·
416-1782, GlllipOIII, Ohio.

19112 lauzu Rodeo V-8, 5 SpHd,
Sharp. se.ooo Call Altar. P.M·.
710-411·14tltl.
1992 Jeep·Wrenglar. 1cyt., fled/
New Top/Mulllor. Amer.Raclng
Whael. 88,137mlles. Run/Looke
Good. $7 .ooo. OIQ.(301)875·

8722 · Aalr lor Rlehlt.

1993 5-10 8iazor PW. PL. PS. N
c. 4.3 Litre VoriOC E-llont COn·
dillon, Runs Greatt Groen Cotorod. 85,000 · Mlleo. Asking
$10.000, OBO 710·448·44~3
Days; 7~256-trl&lt;11 Ellln·~

1991 GMC Jimmy. 4Door. 4·W·
Drive. Loaded, High Mlloogt. Ex·
cellent

ConCIIIIOil.

(304)875-791fbottn9PM.

$7~99.

G"WPiu.del
St. Rt. 7
Tuppers Pla!Dt, OH
740-985-3813 .

COIIIIIS810N ·

'NOTICE TO BIDDERS
1. Blda wtll boo rece1vac1 by
tha Southam Local School
Dlatrlct Board, at 47725
·
State -Routt 124, P.O. Box
178, Racine, Ohio 45771,
Ann: Dennie Hill for the
follOWing ProJtcl:
New K ·a BchDal and
Addition 11111 Ranovallon.
to Southam High School
S-·~-m , ---le~-•
-u~
........, .....,_,
D18lrlot Board
RaciM, Molgo
In accordance ·with thli
D r a w 1n g a
1 nd
Bpec:lllcatlono p,.par.d by: .
. MilT KNipp Crawlll
Astoclatel, Inc.
104 Fair Avenuo NE
P.O. Box 1002
N- Phllllllolphla,
Ohlo44863

Sprl•l hv,lop•••t
Sped•l
1 1/2" Water Pipe
$41.00 per
hundred ft.

•

503 Milt Street
Middleport. Ohio

• Coating • Guttera
• Siding • Drywall

~~

Joaepfl Jacks
740-992-2068
1101.00 1 mo. pd.

Houn:
Mon &amp; Tue9to 3
Clooed Wedneodayo
Thure &amp; Fri 9 to 3
Saturd•y• 10 to 2
Clooed Sunda

A&amp;

We.t
• Q 10
.. 10 53

a•

• 9 6 2

• K8

RuUand, Ohio
·:
Tru-ck seats, &lt;;ar seats, headliners;
truck' tan&gt;s. convertible &amp;, vinyl tops,
Four wheeler seats. motorcycle seats,
boat covers, carpets, etc.
.'. Mon • Frl 8:30 • 5:00
Over 40 yra experience
~

'

lhnojlr......,...,

• """"'looloit .........

YOII

Southern Ohio DisJxl$a]
'

...

Tltl Quandol Group, Inc.
3518 Rlvoraldt Drlvo
Suitt 101
Columbue, Ohio 43221

•ladulrlal
S...lq Molp ud Gollla
Coaat1
Call for...., ~doll

25 yrs experience
Free Estimates

St. Rt. 7

""'
1111

740-742-8015
877-353-7222 (tall free)

Longer.
. Call Todayl
Free EIUmatea
(740) 882-1101

TUpp!IN Plaine, Ohio

Weot North
Pass 41'ff

•

...

Open:

9:00-4:30 WMkdaye
9!IJ0-12:00 Slturdey

..

""""""'JDANIWlE SYSTBIS. INil

Repo • Dlvordecl

-·

·

'

~_,

WORRYIII!!!
No Ernblm11ment...

You're 1'IUtllcl with Rllf*ll

; THE BORN LOSER

V.C. YOUNG Ill

•tr

t'

992-6215

or
882-2763 .

- .

Upon. NCOipt of • requeot,
a.ccomponlod by • dopoall
aa namod abo~e, the
Conotructlon Manager will
forward coplea of bidding
docurnenta to the bldclor.
11 '
I'll . . . n
4. Shipping chargH for
all bidding documento are
Bulldo- &amp; Backhoe
non-..fundlbll tlnd orit to
bl paid · VII a uparato
Siteo ·
check 1n the 'amount of
$25.00, 1110 made out to the
&amp;
southern Local School
d
n1 d
Dlatrlct In torwa 1 to
SeJ&gt;IIc
&amp;
the Conatruatlon Manager
with tho dlpoalt ohock.
5. ·tntereated blddere
(7401
ehould contact Tammy
Smith 11 {814) 442-D500 or ·
lind dopoolt chlek.diNCIIy
to tho Ou1ndll Group Inc.,
351 a Rlvaraldo Drlvo, Suite
101, Columbue, OH 43221.
• NIW.HoliiH
No IRON thin thret (3) will bl provided on I
•Garagn
rtfundlblo bull to I
lllddlr. Dopoelt will bo •Complete
refunded to Prima Blddere
Rllll~llng
'
only who return their
Stop
&amp;
Compere
drawlnge within nn..n (15)
.FREE
deye of tho bid -lng •1111
tubmlt 1 bonaftde bid per
ESTIMATES .
Artlclo 1.1 o ol tho
985 4473
lnetructlon1 to Bidders:
6.
Thl
Contract
Document•
be
rovlowod for may
bidding
~
h ·
purpoot w11 " 0 u1 c arge
durl=buelnoae houia at
the
locallona:
.......
Archltect'a
ce:
·
10--a....• .-£~~.........
Marr Knapp Crawfle
'Aeaoolaltl, Inc. Now
Now Construction &amp;
Phllodllphll, Ohio
·
Ownor
Remodelini. Kitchen
Southern Local .School
Cabinet•· Vinyl Siding·
Dlatrlct Boird, R_...Ohio
Roofs. Declrs. Garages
_ _,
Conatructlon Manag•r'•
Free Estimates

.......
'

'

om..: .

Ohio

~-

.

•Cha"-, Witlt Vlrglnllo .

Appliance. Parto And Strvleo: AN {25302), 401 Cepllllllltrwli1
Nama Brandl Ouor 25 v..,. Ex· •1111 the following addlll-1
porlenoa All Work Guaranteed, plan n111ma:
~ch City Milytag, 740·1~6·
. 'tonatrucllon, 1010
.. ~.
Cincinnati, .
C&amp;C Gonaral Home . MainJononee· Painting. vlnYioldlng,
carpentry, doors, windOws. bttho,
mobile horne rapaJr and more. For
'!roo Ollilllllt call Chet, 740-992·

. ·
740•742-3411

~=~~~·~R~et~V~III!~!

.i

·RUTLAND
CAR SALES

Houra .

7:00AM. 8

•Ohio v.lltor Conatructltin
Emp, loyare ·counoll, 11.
Armory 1Drlve, Wheeling,
WV :18003 . ·
7. A pre-bid - n g W!ll
be held . on January 20,
II ·
at the

• .....~

•

..

.~m

•

••

. 740.742·3311 ,,..\ 0c
1-888·816-9609\
.
.' N

c

R
E
T
E

M ..._ "'-~ dor &amp;

11 _ . _ _ _

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

Pill

CONTRACTOR~,
.

Eut
All pass

25 Potaonoua
ptan1
25 Golf pep
28 Ball
2t Coupd'30 Pan ol the .
foot
31~
37 Bini ol prey 1

• BACKHOE SERVICES

"MASONRY

• BOBCAT SERVICES.

n.,.;....,.,,
__;..;· ,

S'

o

Beatie•
--

E.m

'FTAYGYDD
WZD

Z

_ _.., ....... _, pulond,_._

clphw ltandl tor....,._, Todly'l: cW: J ~ V

In h

FD

DSG,

TZRE~KYI,

Z

llloodiuJ, Ololo (740)

ISUUYIM,

11/2819R 1 ·,;,.,.

JFHKSt

WRGEYI.'

W RES

PREVIOUS SOlUTION: 'When you land a good punch you can feel h In your
ann, your ~lder, your hlp, your toes, your.toanail&amp;."- Ken Norton
:

'=~:t:~' s~ ll4\\1A
-l&amp; t.~sfl IAMI
,.....----loy CLAY I. POLLAN-...---.,-WOlD

l~lto~

Roorrango Ienon of
0 four
ocramblod wordo

lhe
be·
low lo lorm lou; simple wordo.

t----

"c_.t"·_rr-1, .
. --~~--ns_Pr-o
1
1

~

1 I 1 I' I .

•

·'..

:._ A R N G
L I
5;..;;.l--1
,.:.:.I
+I
~l
..
1
h•: - .

1

BUL EM

~~,' .

·I I' I I .:~

Fi.. .,;~,;. . ;.EI-

•,

...

a

I have friend who is never
satisfied. I know thai If his cup
were full he'd want a • • ' •••

,.•
•

•

.

.

•

~- ~omploto t~o

,,

.'

,...

SCIAM~ITS

.......... dlractiJ lo
door

.

.Call •2-11•

,.

98~9411

..

..

ITUESDAY

..

:e....., ·

-~-

-•..

'

.Cellular

Sewing M~ehll)t &amp;
.VICcuum Cl.a~
Repelre ,, ·

~

'
IIISILL lllql..,
IIC. .

'

Steve Riffle
Sales · Represe.ntative ·
Larry Schey

·R~Windowa
•Room Addl!lqne

.

,."

ANSWIIS

Occupy· Scout· Press· Hiatus· SUITCASE

.

My husband mused lhat, "The sum of the pa{ts can

•ADDfinG
ctP rtcia .. IIIIEIIIAL

'fhile

FREE ES'nMATI!S

7...,92·760

. ..
(NoSu...o-&gt;'
' •.....,ipal~)

uy

"A Better

.,

•
i

\

source.

•·

JANUARY 251 ·~

~

· SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. '22_)
, Theie are limes .when we all get-hunches on something, boil whet11er ~ ·
it's reel or wishful thinkihg is always,:
dte question. 1bday, 1.out intuition '·
could lie IIQIO accurate than UIIJII.
, SAGIT'I'ARII)S (Nov. 23-Dec,
21) Make·~ efflllt to pt iii Iouth
with.loft1COIIC who has been on y~
lliirid lale_ly who you liav~n'tiAito,tcl
10 In qullc orome time. Thi• penon has
10111'1 intcrea~llll jnfor11181ion to.trl(e
' wtth JOU.
..
· rr
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) .
Sometliina that could either benefit
JOU flnlnc:ially or ca,.erwlse might.
Ullertpeetedly develop for you today.
, !fowe•er, it wo~'t linger llrOund,-,o
· you'll have to act on it quickly.

·

•

(I

...

··.

·be greater then the whole, especially when it come~ to
repacking a SUITCASE.' '

·,
23-Sept. 22)
ARIES. (Maich . JI·April 19)·
could be of ben·
Before makincon i)DporiMI dtci•ion ,
tloatina
. Joday, sound It out with a ·couplc of
to
clever and i"'"8inative friends. One
:, scnut out• .new',
becluore
.. of tbem may ~~ up with a very . ·· , : your seaith ·will hOI be · ~ain.
wiique solution. · ·'
•!\
·
LIBRA(Stpl. 23-0ct 23Y Distin·
TAURUS : (April 2Q-May 20)
· guioli between i cakulaled risk and '
·Experiment today' with ilevi tech· · , ·. a fooliih pml!le 111d it may be quite
· nique• or "l'l'f.o.lches to overcome a,. . • l""'ible lhiiJOU cnuld realize 'some
511\JnDie coildltion thai's """" boia·
type·of Sll()cess ~~a ve')l ,unlikely ·

Wednesday, Jan. 26, 21l(l0
New ·prodix:la, llliW SJSiems' or
;new ·inventions cOuld prove· to 110
lc•IRmely lucky for 1"" i11 lhc yeai ·
. 'lhead. This is esp«ially 1r11e if any .
· iere of your own conception. '· · · giAi you. Your innovative talents can ·
f ' AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Peb. 1.9)
work wonders In brea~ing 'tluouah
· :Unless you are involved in some type
· brick walls.
•. ·
· ,,
of stimulating activity today lhal
OEMINI (May 21-lul).e'· 20) :
: 1 challengeo your lmqinltion and
Through a chance renliuit of ~one
· '' IOCiun:~fulness, you're not likely to
wilh whom you mlaht be ihvolved
:: reel fulfilled. Gel your jui&lt;:a llooyiq.
·socially . todaJ, """'" conslnlctiYe .
',- Acauaius, treat yourH,If till blm.lay.
info'rmotion'cQUid come ui ~)Jt. Po
· !· alft. Send dte noquiriKI refund form .. inore listcnirifdmn talkin1. · ~· ._
!••••lfor Jour Astro-Onph predictions ·
CANCI;!R (J~ne . 21-July 22)
.; for dte year ahelJd by mllifin1 $2 and
Although you miaht'be subj~ted to
: self·addressod st.omped ¢nvelope to
a coupie of inlcrrllplions In yollr·nor·
1
.. Astro-Graph. c!o Ibis newtlpttpOr, ,
mal mutinelodlly, JOU're bOI .Iikely
!' P.O. IPO• 17'8, Mumy Hill StatiOII, ' .to lind them llit_WYI... In foe~ ·!hey
I NeW Yort. NY 10156. Be IU~ to'
coulcfbe a blealh Oflieah oir. ,,
· ; otatc yllllr Zodiac alp. ,.
.
LEO (July 23-Aua. 'll)
. • PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) . ·
solna about JOUr bullnc"'· fiiday,
! Don'lupoaa all 10"' atrenpha too · don'tlpoN II,.,..Uveolbat pap
l eerly when hiVolVC\11 In e~ del"'*
ln1'!!'1'hoadeotamlna·how'tdha• ·
1businet• trnn!'i~Ctioh .today. It ml1h!
die 1 &lt;:el1lln llliln_,t, h C011'ia be
~-

Stopclo And·,See

NII'N&gt;Hornea • VInyl
. Siding • New G1ragee

.. '111~.1

,

Jeff Warner Ins.
992·5479 ·

Jlms Drywall &amp; · Construction.

.

I'

EXCAVATinG

'

Z

• ....pap.

and

2

r

0

337951liland Rd
, •
PnmertW Ohio
'!'J&gt;

ZGT

(740) nz~J470

,

r ..

DWY

·•· Bulldozer Services

~

740~992·52J-

LSKWYI.

. Haullng*Umestone'Gravel
Sand"Topsoii*FIIl Dh1"Mulch

.

'

by Lule Clmpoe
~Ctpllt&lt;a=-1•.,.,_

I

.

OH 46123

8323.

..

CELEBRITY CIPHER

I

FREE ESTIMATES; ........ FULLY INSURED

~~J~-~~~~~~·~·~·~d

.

organ

..

WI(K•s JtfiULinG.·.

Deale

.

50 Marqula de r52 Building lot;
54 Hutrlng

chuckle quolod
. by filling In tho mlulng ·word&amp;
L..-L-L--L-L-....___,_ you dovalop from otop .No. 3 _b el-.

•

c--IH PaiU .

•

48 ~pe otlloh :
49 VP'I auperlbr

.

A

a

CfOH

L--L--L--L-L-~"

BESID ~lAIJ//1//1///COMMEBCIAL

Brla~ lllo..Uo~

Lettar~on

47

. ,.

M

..

45 Wild ahlop '.

_

.,

·.CooM._,

44 Sect

·

Facto..,. A'ldhorlzed
_ St. Rl.
1uuv

41 Doctrine
42 Norlllin-.o..
leland
.
43 - conlondoro

INC.

• CONCRETE

z.ro

31

$:::\1\Q .

.

org.

21 Iran, formerly
22U. .at
23 "How clumay
of mel"

G;;.,lri;;...N:;.I·....;T-.1-ll

We 1118ke bDiue11:8U1
740-742-ci418

OII'!J43D

.

,OHI04841110

.l.

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

WeWIHDNI

.... ,~
-

S!Qt·f' x 10'
.
to 0' X 30'

•

·109 · (740) 367·0266
• ~~e\ 1·800·950·3359

Good Clean Cars

.

Ohlo447GI

,,

'(0\)P\CJJP?

TREE SERVICE
.

HI h&amp;Dry'
Sf' · ..
f•. ora••

· Now Conotructlon &amp; Remodel/
Drywall. Siding, Roots, Addl·
1S97 Ford Expedition 1 WD Ilona. painting. otp. (301)87440,000 Mlltl, Exeollorlt COndition, &lt;!823 "'(300)1171-01 55.
of
$24,800. 710-3117-ol!t •.
Road,
Llv!nftt1on't Batement Water
•Oayto.n
Bulldere
740 Motorcycl,e
Proo,lng, all baaoment repairs
done, frM t1tlmal11,_llfeUme Exchange, 1077 'lmbury
1990 Ytmlha Blaster. Looka QuarantH. t2yrt on IOb.ixperl· Park Road, Dllyto~, Ohio
Good/A una
Qood. ·. $800. once. (300)185-3117. ,
41414
(304)875-2814.
•Builder• l!xchange of
840 ·· Ellcttlcel end
l!a•t c,ntral Ohio, · 2521
760 Auto Pirte &amp;
34th ltroet NE, Canton,
ACCIIIOI'hll
R~rlgeratlol'i

.

( Bltii-IC.

JOlES'

Now Is rlretimt for·g·r·r·r-«&lt;f
liuys In .,. dolsl(leds
\

.,......,

.

Mi\l(.E~, U\l~f. ~'(

•

N•~

·

r~ 00 ~'( WP\'(TO Tl'£. &lt;.Offe:E:

•

- - • r - • - • ...p.:-

Columbul,
F.W.following
Dodgo Plan
tho
clll•:Roome In
•Cinclnnall, Ohio {41202·
1997 Palomino Shetland Pop·Up 1001), Tlte Grand Baldwin
Camper. (304)117_5-7910. .
· · Building, 855 Eden Plrll
Drlw,Sulte&amp;15
•lndapondence, Ohio
· •
{..4131), 5200 'ROOkll41
Home·
. 810
WoodiBivd:{Cialioland) ·
.
•Columblll, Ohio (43218. lmpro¥ementl
l073), 11 '~1 Dublin Road
BASEMENT
•Deyton, Ohio (415431),
WATIRPROOftHG
aon
Kwotterlng Boulevard,
Uncondltjonalllletlme guaranrae. Point 111 Office Park,
Local re1eroncea lurnlohod. Ea· SUitt 301
. tabllohad 1975. Cel 24 Hra. (740) • •Tolodo, Ohio {43123),.
:!8w0,:~~_-m-om. Rog· _. ~!.~.!'!'.,nloroat Collrt, P.O.

.,

.

RGJII•

790 Motor
Campere
&amp;
Homee

'

co.

IOIIRIIISSILL
CONStRUCTION

Ofllco: · ·
.
·
Tlie Qua111111 G-p, Inc.,\ ·

.

12 A Scott
1t Moloflato' .

24 SlniJI' Jony

lis

•

457113

CIIDrr
No Crwdlt • Slow Crwdlt • Ben,ki'Uptcy

· Central Ohio Minority
Admln(etratlon, 111 bat
Electrical. WV00030f, 301-175·' Moun" 8trllt. Columliua,

\

10 Bring to ruin
11 Actro.. C1rtor

NASA

l'lr!M•n

To the south of Madrid lies Tole·
do.
cathedral is so incredible that
I walked around dumbslruck : II con·
tailfs a collection of items, like those
in King Tut's tomb, that are impos·
sible 10 value. You may guess, but
. won't know if you are even close.
At the bridge table, sometimes
you ha•e to guess the layout ·- as in
this deal, played by an anoriy~ous
South during a duplicate .in Madrid.
How would you plan the play in
four no-trump after West leads the
spade four to his partner's ilce, and
the spade five comes back?
Yes, Nonh's quantitative slam-iry
of four no-trump is ambitious. ·
There are nine top tricks: one ·
spade, lhree hearts, four diamonds
and one club. The obvious place to go
for the other Irick is the club finesse.
If East has lhe king, everything is
fin~ . However, iflhe defenders' card·
ing in spades is hoTtest, West has
either five spades or e&lt;acliy Q - 10-6·
4 . .In bolh cases, you cari make the
contract, though you may have to
guess correctly.
Don' I duck trick rwo; win with 1he
spade king. Then, cash your. four dia·
mond tricks (pitching a club from the
dummy). followed by 'your three
heart tricks ending in the dummy. If
you judge that West has at least two
clubs left, cxif with the spade jack.
After taking his tricks, West will he
forced 1Mead in!dyout ace-queen of
clubs.
'
If you think West has only one
club remaining, you must decide
whether it •is the king or a iQw one.
At the table, West defended well,
coming down to a singleton kirig, but
somehow South worked it out, play·
.ing a club to his ace.

.

tnasonary/Wood -

992-93l0 or l-81N19-ml
•

prior to the bid opening. II
no Addenda It l11uod In
auoclollon with the
Blddw'a roquoat, the
d E
1 h II b
propooo
qua I I
•
canalderod rojactod.
.
Soilod bide will be
recelvacl for:

17811.

9 l.uH peymont

·~k,to

.Guess how
much it 'is worth

YO'RE fREE TO 60
NOW, SNUFFY!! .

740-985-;1813
•~
4" thrt.t 48" Pialtlc Culvert In StOck
.
Full Line Of wator Storago Tenkl •
:
•
Slptlc &amp; Cletern Terikl ·
IS.wor Pipe: 3" thru 8", Gaa Pipe &amp; R~luhttof.•l

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION
www.qUindel.com
2. Any propoud Equal for . Ita Winter, So Don't
• Standerd 1hall bo
Put orr Thole
eubmlttod to tho Architect
no later than ten (10) daye
Illllcle Joba Any

Allktenual or commercial wtrlng,
now - o r repllra. Mlotor L•
cenaed electrk:lan. Ridenour

I Slobber
7 Bl-11"1
Lou-

40 Set-(put

Opening l~d: • 4

BAltNEY

&lt;

Phono: (740) 442-o500 ' .
FIX: (740) 442-01101

··~-··..,

.

PLASTICS AND SUPPLY
CONCRETE G&amp;W
•

Quality Driveways,
Sidewalks, Patios
Complete Garages:

•Rnlcleallal
oCommmlll

·

me

1 NT

(740) 592·5025 Athens ·

'CONNECTION

. provld;o- dlopoatl

The C'Dnatructl011 Manager

Contrect No. 08·0058·
9008801·01, Sltowork,
Alrucly Under C o COI11racl No. No. oe..ooe&amp;900~801·13,
Brick
Procuromant, Alrearcty
Under Contract
PNH 11
co· ntract No. 08·00.6•
~
9006801-«1: Site UtllltiH
Contract No. 08·00889006801-G:I: Gonaral Traclle
Contract No. 08•005 a900680l-D4: Maoonry
Contract No. 05•0088·
9006801-oe: Rooftng
Contract No. 08·0068·
8008801·08: Aluminum
Entrancea, Wlndowe, Glooa
&amp; Glizlng
Contract No. 06-0088· .
8008801..07: Food Service
Equlpmem
Contract No. 06·0058·
9008801·08·: Ca ..work
(Ubnrry and Sell,..)
Contrecl No. 08·0058·
9008801·09: Plumbing ad
Fire Protoctlon
Contract No. 08·0088·
9006801-10: HVAC ·
Contract No. 08·0058·
9006801·11: Eloctrlcal
·contract No. oa.oo5·a .
9006801·12: T~ahnoiOIV
until Bid Dille of Fftruary 3,
2000 at 4:00 p.m. (local .
ltandard lime), when they
will boo openld and rtld.
3. Bidding Documonta
may ·bo Oblllnod from lhl
Conatructlon Manager by
Prl
BlddeN o nty, ·upon
receipt of a check, which 11
refundllblo, In the amount of
$200.00. Chacke ahall be
madt payable to lht
Southern Looal Scho'ol
-Diatrlct and f-a.nlod to
tho Conetructlon llan~~g~r.
,.

Soutb

William Safranek, Attorney

40 742-8888

.......

Anawer to P•awto'lt PUZZle

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

,.. rolm' rloblorofllooodalolll!oiioos and ...... ' ltfr..,,,£11 ol-molton. A,.... ...
nllio-~looM
· as 'mmpt" fiOPOIII\ lerloii orlooi """""'"'· 1lris lllfY ~a Ill, 1 hooro. !
dorioos, ani howhaloi ..... Y110 !louli dnd '"I ...,...,.,.... loorokruplcy II

For information regarding
Bankruptcy contact:

41 I I - EMt
org.
1 Prllldent Ford 47 a . - a
7 Part Ill opooch 51 - 13 -lluder 53 BpeciM
1
4-~~~
15 Blletl
5$ Glamour
~·t
5I Spoiled
11 Mlnlpulltlo
57 tnform
17 Tlllor'o line
51 Mol odic
11"-'a20 Aelltld
DOWN
21 Tartenllbrlc
1 Aoqulw
23 f;tllpticll
'/OEMrnal
. 2Crycl
bllcciWIIila
32 Cowboy movie
3 lncamllllon Ill
33Falgn
YlahnU
34~
4 Comedian
:SSI'apo'IIDirl
llondlor .
31 Ml'ltlng
31 •• ..,....., I Allow to

42~

t A J 7 5
• A Q2

.1\.NKRUP'f(;'Y:

{

ACROSS

By Phillip Alder

Fop: (514) MII-330V

Ph111 1

No
• J 9 ?
lfAKJ
t KQ 4
• 7 6. 3
East
3
• A5
• 7 6. 2
• 10 8 3
• J 10 9 5
South

• Q' 8

•to Up . o stery • P us, Inc

Ready for 'a clutoge?

Phone: (814) 948 211e

for the ProJect II:

llllrpln 0
Tllrift sco..

New Roofs • Repairs

• P~ntlng • Plumbing
Free Estimates

.

•

• K8 2

STATE OF OHIO
OHIO SCHOOL FACILmi!B

1980·90 Hondss From S291Mo..
lmpoundal 0 Down, 24 Mo~tno e .
tU% L~tlngo , 800-319-3323 Ext.

3901 .

992·1945 .
667·73Z1

Public Notice

ties. can Now I 800·772·7470;
EXT. 7832.

1988 Trano·Am 350, Automatic,
Nauer: Just arrived. Oat&amp;, Sr.; \)oOd Condition, St ,995. 710·
Taz Car; Dale. Jr.; Mom &amp; Pop 148 0390.
·
Car: Tony Slewart; Home Depot.
1988
Bulek
Sky
Hawk.
Runs
And
All sizes. Limited quantities. New
places arriving weakly. last Lap Looks Gooc!l $800.00 Firm. 710·
11111 available. Laroe selection of 116-3149.
'l1ew and old places. c;;au t-800·

&amp; CONSTRUCTION

Progi'MIIvt top line.
Uc. I CJ0.50 nn-

58815.

On Vinyl Sklrllng, Doora, Wind·
ows, Anchors , Water HaattJI,

PWMBINQ

Experience
Honest &amp; Reliable
Free Estimates
Senior Citizens
Discount

M81n8t.,
POIMnly,OH

Straw: Bright Wire ne Stfi:.W Yur
'Round Delivery &amp; Volume Dis·
count A'tllillblt. Htrla.ge Farm.

'85 Chewy truc)c, $1000 or btlt
offer: ·ee whit• Monte Carlo ss.
$3000 or best offer; 740·992·
3357.

-LEHOMEDWNERS

JAClS ROOFING

so Yrs. Combined

AT 8:30P.M.

710 Autoe for Sill

t.B.M. Computer /Accenorlea,

DfiMIL

Pomeroy Elgltl

. 416-1004 Anytimo.

·

NEA Croaaword Puzzle

JDZO Ditch Wllch Troncll·

Super A Ferm AU, with Cultlva-

640

-

7~ 148

'

: AUEYOOP '

. chine, clo: The Dally Sentinel,
P.O. Bol 128. Pomeroy, OH
45781. Wt rtatrvt the right to

• ~-.. Colt

•

• $1 ,..,, 740 1 •• 1044.

Oklllr 101 Ccllla IIUIII•u
Good oondHion. can bt II

lljOC:t . , "' .. -

The Dally Sentinel• Page B 5

,Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

I

�c)

.

The Daily·
Sentinel
·
.

By The -Bend

P~~geae .

Tundey, January 215, 2000

..

By
ANN LANDERS
my· father was never without a cigar
in his mouth or in his hand.
I married a man who smoked
three ·packs a day. After II years, we
were divorced, and I married anoth·
er heavy smoker.
.
Please tell your readerS (again)
that secondhand smoke can be
extremely hard on .the lungs. I am
living proof. I pose this question to
"Disgusted in Cleveland" and anyone else who is hooked on tobm:co:
If you · don't care about yourself,

.

BY BECKY BAER
Meigs County Exten1lon ·Agent
.
Family and Consumer SclenceiiCom·miJnlty Development

BY ED PETERSON
Manger, Athens .S ocial
ty Office

.

phone. Can my daughter •call Social
Security about my Social Security
business?
A. Generally. we will discuss
your personal business only with
you. We need your permission if you
want someone else to help with your
Social .Security business. If you ask
a family member, such as your
daughter, to call Social Security, you
need to be with her when she calls
so we will know that you want her to
help. The Social Sec~rity representative will ask . your pef111ission to
discuss your Social Security business with your daughter.

g uideli~es.

First read all directions carefully. Find out on what surfaces the
cleaner can be used. Especially notice on what surface~ it should not
be used. Follow the instructions. in order to maximize the cleaning
ability of the prciduct.
.
Use the appropriate .amount too much of a good thing inay not
improve the cleaning propenies ·,in fact, it may damage the area to be
cleaned. If too little is used, it may not be sufficient to do the job properly.
· .
Work with a clean solution. If the water gets dirty, change it. Otherwise, you will be redepositing the soil back on the area that is being
cleaned.
The solution should be the correct temperature - warm to hot. Hot
water works best when cleaning, but since it may be hard on skin, a
warm temperature would be easier· on the hands.
Allow the cleaning solution to be in contact with the dirty surface
·the right length of time. This may only need to be for a few moments.
Be willing to supply some elbow grease. You will need to add the ·
scrubbing action in order to loosen and remove the dirt.
. Rinse the area, especially. if you are using a liquid cleaner-straight
from the bottle, unless the manufacturer's instructions ~ell you otherwise. Use clean, clear water for this step.
·
Consider the cost .per use when buying deaning . products. If an

Q. I'm exPecting my first baby
this year. What do I need to do to get
a Social Security number for my
baby?
· A. The easiest way is to apply for
your baby's Social Security number
at the hospital. When your hospital

p

11 ,_

--........---,-~Community . Cale~dar----_;_,.;.._
TUESDAY
.
RACINE -Racine Area Community Organjzation, Tuesday,
6:30 p.m. American Legion hall .
Potluck dinn~r.

get the job done, ii may be more economical to buy the higher priced
·

Using h~ usehold cleaners may not be the most enjpyable part of
yo ur day, but if you follow these suggestions, they will expedite your
housecleaning chores. The most important thing II' remember is. to
read and foll ow the label directions. ·

to 3 p.m. at the Meigs Multipur·
pose . Center, Pomeroy. Take
immunization recO'rd; come with .
a parent/legal guardian.

RUTLAND - Leading Creek
Conse rvancy District. annual ..
organizational meeting, Tuesday,
5 p.m., at the office, followed by
regular board ,meeting.

W!!;DNESDAY .
·
.
POMEROY - Meigs County
Board of Elections, special meet'mg. 9 a.m.. to conduct.hearing on
prote.sts of petitions of sheriff's
cand1dates. .

POMEROY - Immunization
clinic, Tuesday; 9 to II a.m. and I

THURSDAY
POMEROY -

Preceptor Beta

Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi ings.
Sorority, salad Stlpper, home of
:
Jane Brown, 6:30 p.m . Thursday.
POMEROY ·- Caring andHostesses, Jean ·Powell and Car- Sharing Support Group, Senior.
.
Citizens Center, Thursday, I p.m ~
· olyn Grueser. IJ'
.
· Topic, eye care.
.
·
, · RACINE - · iRjlcine American •. '
·
.
:
teaion Auxililcy; Post 6023, ' .POME~OY Town· and:
Thursday night.J.p.n\ . at the hall . .. Country EXPO organizationat
Note new meeting time.
·
meeting, Thursday. 7!30 . p.mr
,, ,
Meigs County Fai·rgrounds.
TUPPERS PLAINS - VFW grange anne•. All volunteers
.Post 9053 , TupPl:rs Plains, Thurs- invited t&lt;i attend.
day. 7:30 p.m,J!With name draw-

..
.

•

··, ~

.

.

'01

.

')t,

SHAUN WICKERSHAM

j::AITLIN HARRISON .

ATHENS Ten •musical
events and a theatrical production
will be _presented at Ohio University in February. 1
The School ofTheater will perform "A Streetcar Named Desire"
on Feb. 9· 12 and Feb. 16-19 at 8
p, m. and Feb. 19 at 2 p.m. at
Baker Theater. The tickets are $8$6 and can be reserved by· calling .
593-4818.
.
. .
The music presentations, all
free, will begin on Feb . 2 at 8 p.m.
in the Recital Hall with the
Tuba/Euphonium Choir. On Feb.
· 4 at 8 p.m. also at the hall, David
Wehr will . present a concert on
piano; while at Memprjal Auditorium on Feb. 5 from I to 6 p.m. ·
will be the student soloists com1 .

DAUGHTER iiORtil - John
:TURNS ONE - Shau:i Vl.ncent Wickersham, son of Keyla and Janel Harrison of tilew
Lonas and Tim Wlckeraham, . Haven, W. Va. announce the
Racine, cele!1rated hla .flrlt birth of their third child, a
birthday with a party at the ccx.- daughter, C.ltlln Ail111.
'
pie's home on Dec. 18.
, ·
The i:tfiU'It W8l bom on Dec.
. Attending were Chad .1nd 21111 tht Helzer Medical Cantil'
Brenda Wolfe, Racine; Sharon O.Uipo.lll. Sht waightad ..,.;
and Summer Wicoktrlhlln, paund1"one ounce, 1nd Wll 21
.Letart; Bewerly, Michael, 1nd ).· lncha1 long.
C!lristopher Roueh, Letlrt; June·
Maternal granaparantl ara
Wickersham, Letart; Trani Dlnny OIIH1pla of New Haven
Bitchtel, Pomeroy; and Mlchilal alid.Jania .dltillpl.a of Malon, W.
M?rrls ·of Letlrt.
·
Va. Pe~t grandparents art .
Roger ·and 0181\1 Coetn and .
Jol'!nnla
Ha"l1on, all of .
OCC representative to discuss. p ·
· "l't ·
omaroy.
··
u,...t Y tssues at Senior Center
Mr. tnd Mtt. H1rrl1on h.1vl a
1on, . \VIII.,., and another
. : POMERO¥ - ·Representatives dlughtlr, ~gsn. ,.
from .the Ohio Consumer's Cou'ncil
will be in Pomeroy on Feb. I to dis-

petition.
.
·At Galbreath Chapel on ·Feb. 6,
Paul Barte . will giye an organ
recital · at 4 p.m.; while John
Schlabach, trumpeter will _p er·
form on Feb. 6, John Bailey,

.

'

flutist on Feb. &lt;8, and Tony Baker,
trump~ter, orf.&lt;Feb. fO, all at g
p.m. at the Rei:ljtal Hall. .
The tru~pet ensemble/horn
ensemble will perform on Feb. ~
at 8 p.m.; the Phi Mu Alpha
"''

Alumni Musical .will be presented.
on Feb. 13 at 2 p.m ., both in·
Recital Hall, and Jazz combos·
will perform on Feb. 13 at 4 p.m.
at the Rehearsal Hall, Room I0 I.

-- -

Single Copy· 35 Cents

-

·committee.
overseeing
Southern-'s
financeS.

KEEPING WARM

Low temperatures
can mean trouble
for older residents

.

.

P

OMEROY - Temperatures dipping weU below
freezing can prove particularly troublesome for
the elderly, who are at risk of suffering from cold- ·
weather related illnesses.
.
Having the right information can be the key to surviv- ·
ing the ' winter in good health, and with that, the Meigs
County Council on Aging has joined the Ohio Department
of Aging in offering some tips.on staying safe and warm.
The agencies stress the importance thai seniors and
those helping care for elderly persons know the warning
signs for hypothermia and take the proper precautions to
stay safe and warm.
·
As people get older, their ability to perceive cold dimin·
ishes, and they have a more difficult time responding lo
cold weather. Seniors with heart and circulatory diseases,
a history of stroke, diabetes and·Parkinson's Disease need.
to be especially careful, of cold winter weather.
Hypothermia can occur if a person's body temperature
falls below normal, usually 95 degrees Fahrenheit or
lowet. It can affect anyone exposed to cold temperatures;
however, some older people and the chronically ill can
develop hypothermia after just a short period of time in
mildly cold temperatures.
Symptoms of hypothermia Include uncontrolled shivering," slow or irregular heartbeat, shallow breathing, weak
pulse, confusion, disorientation, slurred speech, a change
in appearance or behavior, drowsiness, bluish skin, and
loss of fine motor coordination.
To avoid hypothermia and other winter related inci~
dents, the agencies on aging suggests: ·
. • Dress in layers and avoid·wearing ,COI)Strictive _cloth·
Jng·
•-- .. .... .
'
I
•
"
--•
• -~· ..... '
• Eat regular meals, dnnk· adequate amounts of water
and avoid alcohol;
• Keep your thermostat at 65 degrees F or higher;
• Use extra blankets at night;
·

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel
Staff
RACINE - Financial forecasts for the Southern
LOcal School District show the district's financial prob·
lems aren't likely to improve.anytime soon.
The district's financial future was the topic of a meeting Tuesday morning by a commission of state and local
officials and citizens tasked last November by Auditor of
State Jim Petrillo oversee the district's fi~ances.
This was after a state. audiSuperintendent ·
tor's analysis confirmed a
$627 ,()()(). openiting deficit James Lawrence
that the district had forecasted
the
for the fiscal year ending June
school board luis
30,2000.
The commission is com- been frugal, but
prised of Chairman Bill
thaJ a combinaWol~. representing the State
Superintendent of Public
tion of unforeInstruction; Kim Murneiks,
seen circumfrom the State Office of Budstahces, emerget and Management; community representative and
gencies .and risdistrict parent Sandra Hawley;
and Susan Oliv~r. a Meigs · ing costs in genCounty Auditor's appointee.
eml have token
Nancy Burbacher of the
Ohio ·nepanment of Educa- their toll on dis·
trict jintmca•
. tion, Division of Financial
Oversight .COnsultant, serves
· as coni mission secretary and state fiscal oversight monltor'for the distric.t.
. ·
Superintendent James Lawrence maintains the school
~ard has been frugal, but that a combination of unforeseen circumstances, emergencies and rising·costs in general have taken their ioll on district finances.
·
At
the
meeting,
held
at
Southern
Local
High
School
iri
want tO gat alck, ao whtn ht gellll out to take «:;lrt of hla
Racine, Larry Weeks from the sttae auditor's office
up and puta a hat on hla head to curb heat loll.
Plea1e sea Warm, Page A3
reported the office is conducting a performance audit on
the district; something done to all districts placed in fiscal emergency status.
·Weeks said auditors will look at the district's financial
sysl'!ms, humait resourCes, facilities and transportation,
and compare their findings with similar districts, including neighboring ,EaStern Local, Bridgeport Exempted
Village in Belmont County and Green Local in Scioto
:~~
County.
.
. .
.
By CATHERINE HAMM
''We have teachers doubUng up. classes
ihe teacher'.s safary wilh l!enefits such as
The
audit
will
determine
if
the
district's financial
OVP Community Editor
nd • ·
h. · ,_ •
~-.3- ,
Health insurance, llld· personal and sick
problems
stem
from
overspending
or
underfunding
from
GALLIPOLIS -There is something
a giVIng up t ell' pJUilliUig perw~M.
days.
·
important missing from tri-county class··
'
.Hout noted the· age range of subs is state ~nd local sources, Weeks explained.
Weeks said about half of similar audits showed that
rooms.
Mll!ll Loctl Supert-t 8111 ~
mixed, with "some right out of college
administrators
were spending wisely, but just didn't have
It's not updated textbooks or high-tech
getting theit feet we~ while others are
enough
money
to work with.
·
· compulers. It is a far more valuable asset, ing, but solving social ills, the shortage there· are still only 20 to 25 teachers on retired teachers." ·
The
audit
should
be
completed
by
the first week in
and harder to find. The lack of substitute applies also to substitutes. ·
· • the district's sub list - and thi:&gt;se same
Marple said some subs will only work
March,
he
said.
teachers is causing problems nationwide,
Some states such as Mississippi are names appear on the Gallia County Local at o'ne school, thus reducing the actual
Treasurer Dennie' Hill presented a brief 5-year finan'a11d the tri-county area is no exception. . hiring substitutes with only a high school Schools list.
number.
. 'Fhe need is so great thai Meigs Local diploma, while others are waiving
"There are only so many to go
· Joyce Twyman, secretary to Gallia· cial forecast, showing steadily worsening finances, with
Superintendent Bill Buckley sllid, "There teacher e&lt;;rtificates, taking people with ·around," Hout said, "and the need is County Local Schools Superintendent a deficit exceeding $2 million in five years. He pointed
are often days when we don't have every college d~grees or work experiences, · always there."
.
·Robert Lanning. said the need for subs in · out that renewallevies cannot be included on the forecast.
class covered.
Ohio and West Virginia are no differWhile each school principal does the math and science is "always great."
Wolfe and Burbacher presented a similar 5-year fore"We have teachers doubling up on ent. Ohio recently passed measures to actual calling for subs, the city and counProspective candidates for the tempo·
cast.
·
classes and.givihg up·their planning peri· issue a temporary one-year"substitute cer- ty superintendents update the list and rary certificate are, Twyman said, given a
Lawrence presented staff and enrollment profiles of
brief interview as compared to other can. ods," Buckley added. "We do the best we tificate, and West Virginia has its candi· inform the schools of a0 y,additions.
the
district:
·
c.an with what we have, but I see it get- dates take a workshop before acquiring a
Gallipolis t:ity Scpools Treasurer didates, but 'must stili go through the finThe
district
currently
employs
61
certified
employees,
t)ng a lot worse," .
. .
_ license to sub.
)!t.f
• ··
,, "' , . ~ M.~c .. ~ Jjle . ~,Y . is .based. lin gerprinting pr~f'/"~u{it.)' ~As · more teac~ers are _leav!ng the·' • Mary Hout, dtacyl t,o ~-QII~~i's · ~~~at IYJi6 ji6, ·1!1Jt'.,,Woi-k.'Fil,\t
In Miloii .Oiutity, I&lt;;ay••~·ov.e,_ including teachers, principals and the superintendent, and
dass~oom for )ugher-paytng JObs or · ·City Schools SuperintendCrit ·~k P'ay,· . cine-diY:Jab1 ~~- -il~. buhfter
· • · • ·. • '-t~
., • ''':. ·
PI~- SchOOII, Pagt A3
cscapmg the demands of not only.teach· ton, said evep with -the charrle it\' Jaw, ., 60ttayl inlthed.U.: wm t~rillc· ps to .
Plaut! ....-~8MH; PitQel\3.

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maintzrins

Substitute teacher short~ge_ a,trikes region
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Bailey ~yes co·mmission seat
MIDDLEPORT - Richard B. Bailey ofMiddleport announced his candidacy for the Republican nomination to the Meigs Board of Commissioner's
term commencing Jan. 2, 2001.
Bailey was born and raised on a dairy farm in Meigs County and graduated
from Middleport Hig!J School. He attended office training school in Columbus
for accounting, and is a member of the Middleport Olurch of Olrist.
He was formerly emplojled by Ebersbach Bros: Coal Co. .
and Goeglein,Bros. Coal Co., was self-ilmployed in ,home
builqjng and ~O!klling, imd ~as in the timber logging
businl.s:; ~nUl retiring.in 199~.
·
He, was el~ clerk-lreaiurer for Middleport during the
,installtition. of tlie village's sanitary sewer system and pur-·
chase of the water system, He helped seo::ure financing for
constnlction of a new building for Imperial Electric and
moving the welfare deJ)artmentto Middleport.
·
He lias been Salisbury Thwnship clerk since 1979, and
was involved in securing sevcraf grants for improvement '
Bailey
of toiNIIship roads 111d had· charge of Federal E,nc:rgepcy
,
Management Agency gratits fqr replirs1to township prwerty from noods of 1995, 1996 and 1997.
·
,
He was involved in a flood mitigation &amp;rant bf S61.8,QOO sponsored·by. t11c
township to elevate 20-pi~JS flood-prone homes·including four this year.
He has served as secrctary·t::easurcr of the Meigs COunty Township~and Oerk Assoc:iation for 14 years. · ·
·
,
"I feel my experience in government aeoounting and budgeting will be.VIlr):,'
helpful in the commi~ion~rs· office; he said, adding th~t he (s opposed ton~ '.·
taxes.
.
"Government needs to be more involved .in seo::uring roads, schoOl~ and
other services for the citizens, and needs to help the (Community lmproverpeni
Corporation) and OJamber of Commerce in promoting the 'county."

a'fj Ce I' rated

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Hometown Newspaper .

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CAMPAIGN 2000 .

LOS ANGELES (APJ. ..:..., B~l:l
Barker's libel suit against a former
model on his show "The· Price Is
Right" has been postponed as she
searches.for a new attorney.
H· o11 y Ha11 strom ' s couotersuu
·
against the game show host was' also
postponed Monday. Both suits are
now scheduled for Aug, 2,
Barker, 76, sued Miss Hallstrom
after she left the show . in !995;
'rthd ·
b
denying claims she made to .the
·c ~ss utility issues and ·answer q4~s~ . B
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media that she was fired because she
ti~&gt;.ns about services offered by the
,
had gained too much weight. ·
agency. ,
·
P9MEROY - The 80th birthda~
Miss Hallstrom ~ad filed suit
•The meeting. will be held at the of Mary S)archer was celebrated on claiming she WaS fired unjustly alter
Sohior Citizens Center in Pomeroy J~n. 8 with a surprise party;,eld af. 19 years on TV's longest-running
a( l0:30 a.m.
·the . Enterprise Unit~d Metbodist game show, which ~as bad Barker as
::The ace is a 'state agency that •Church.
·
host since 19'72.
. represents ·residential utility cusSjll.ty relatives and friends atte'nd· ~ttorney Lester Ostrov would
t&lt;imers of Ohio's investor-owned ed the celebration. She was present- · gQI give. details on why he a~ked in . ·
e l~ctric, natural gas, ·telephone. and cd cljrds and gifts, and refreshments · Superior Court on Mond~y to .be
water companies.
incl~ding a variety of f.ood~ was ·released as . Miss Hallstrom's 'attar:·The. agency investigates and served with the birthday cake.
. , ·ne_y. Attorney Nick Alden, who said
r~o(ves complaints against utility'
Mrs. Starcher has ·attended the · he is advising the model until aneth.Celnpanies, provides· inrormation to Enterprise Church all of her life. For er attorney is named, said a ''differhe·ip consumers make wi!e choi~e~ the past 27 years she bas maintained erice ' of opinion" between Ostrov
al)out utility services.
perfect attendance.
· and Miss Hallstrom was involved.
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Bob Barker's libel .
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No.7 Auburn

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
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Ohio University announces variety of entertainment for February

Tennessee rocks

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Vulunw 50, Number 162

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inexpensi ve brand is purchased, but twice 'as much has to be used to
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.Securl~

representativ~ or doetor asks xou ·for will increaSe in gradual steps begin- appointment to apply for benefits at
the information ~ded to complete ning in ·2003 until it reaches age 67' a time that's convenient for you, ·
your baby's birth 'certificate. all you in 2027. It affects ·people born. in contact SCx:ial Security at 1-800- ·
772-1213.
have to do is tell them to .~av~ your 1938 and later.
For a detailed explani11ion, call
state's vital siatistic.s office shart'.the
.
infonnation with the ~ocial ~curiJ)' . SOcial'Security at 1-800-772-1213 Changes \Ills year
'If you're a high wage e!irner, you .
Administration.
and request ihe booklet, "RetireRemember to have the mother's ment."
may see slightly more money withand father's Social Sec.urity numheld from· your paycheck for Social
bers ·handy when you do. .Your . Soc~ Security and husbandS and Security this year.
baby's Social Security card will then wins
That's because the maximum
be mailed to you. .
With more and more women amount of taKable earnings for
If you don't apply for the card at working these days, many couples Social Security jumps from $72,600
the hospital, contact Soc;iety Securi- · are finding that when it comes to ' for 1999 to $76,200 for 2000; The
ty directly at 1·-800-772. 1213. And . Social SeeuritYI!Ithey can have it · tax rate ·remains unchanged at 7.6;5
remember, Social Security does not either Way.
r '·
.
percent for Social Security and
·charge for a Social Security card.
. That is, a wife"may be entitled to Medicare combined. Other Social
Social Security 'benefitS based on Security 'changes workers need . to
Q. What is the retirement age for her own· work recdrd as well as addi- know about are the $40 increase for
Social Security? Is it true the age for tlooal benefits dil her husband's. a quaner of coverage, now at $780,
retiring is tieing increased? .
And the same goes for· m~n. Either and the .increase in earnings limits
A. The nonnal retirement age for·· bi-Cadwinner m~fjnd . he pr she is for people who are still working and.
people retiring now is age 65. Social eligible for additional benefits on his receiving Social Security.benefits.
Security calls this the "full · retire- or her spouse's earnings record.
To find out all about the Social
ment age" because the benefit
When it comes time to apply for Security changes for the year 2000,·
amount that is payable is unreduced Social Security benefits you won't .calll-800-772-1213 and ask for the
and is considered the full retirement have to figure out•how to apply. The factshee.~ Social Security Update for.
benefit. Because of longer · life people at Social Security w(ll figure 2000.
expectancies, the full retirement age your benefit ·amounts. To set up· an

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Meigs County's

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Q.J don 't hear well over the tcle- ·

Today we have many cleaning products to
help us maintain our homes. They may come
in the fonn of all-purpose cleaner~ (which
can be a powder dissolved ·n wat r, liquid
straight from the bottle or iluted) water or
a spray), cleansers ·w·
.it-/or specialty
cleaners, such as w ow or oven cleaners.
We can help these products do their jobs a ering tO the following

variety.

church.
Gem or the Dar (Credit Chicago
columnist Zay N. Smith): A bumper
sticker sighted in Los Angeles: If
you lived in your car, you'd be home
now.
Feeling pressured to have sex?
How well'infonned are you? Write
forAnn Landers'booklet "Sex and
the Teenager." Send a selfaddressed, long, business-size enve- ·
lope and a check o~ mon¢y orderfor
$3.75 (this includes postage and
handling) to: Teens, c.fo Ann Laoders, P.O. Box II 562, Chicago, Ill .
60611-0562: (In Canada, send
$4.S5.)
To find out more aboui Ann Laoders and read het past columns, vi!it"
the Creators Syndicate web page at
www.creators.com .

Sports

Our View: Marketing the Ohio Valley, A4
What's happening in Meigs County; AS
Eastern boys cruise
to 12th straight win, 81
.

Thursday: Cloudy .
'liiJgh: 20s; Low: 10s

Social Security Column:. .. Quest~ns and answe·rs

TIME OUT FOR TIPS

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abQut I00 people. There is 111 older please keep it down because his
gentleman who shows. up every shouting interferes with the service,
Sunday, and punctuates every but it hu made no difference.
phrase with "Hallelujah!" or Franlcly, I'm. not sure he c111 help
"Amen!" or "That'sright!" Thi~ it;ri· himself. I JIP~'t want tQ. change
tales me to no end.
churches, but it Is important to me
I know in some churche&amp; emo- thai I hear what is going on.
tiona! comments such as these are
Is there any way to handle this
welcome, but it is not the custom in distraCtion without making a huge
my church, and I find it extremely issue of it? -NIAGARA FALLS.
disrup_tive.
. .. , N.Y.
I cannot focus on the prayers 01" ·
DEAR NIAGAlA: The elderly
!he readings when that man is con- parishioner who is praising the Lord
stantly shQuting and stirtling me. is "expressin1 him~! f." If the pastor ..
The pastor has had to pause several does not obj!Jiltto his emodonal outtimes during his sennons beciuse of buntf, and rioone else in the· conthese interruptions. but he has never greaation coli\Piains, there is little
said anything directly to that overly you can do ali!!ut it. .
zealous person.
• · '' ' Since you have asked him to
This man is otherwise pleasarit keep it downPIIItd ~e continues with
and unquestionably devout. -Seye~al .. the "'Helujabs, •I suggest you pray
weeks ago, I asked him if he could. for tolerance, or look for another

what about your family? One of
them could end up like me. ••
MARTHA IN POUGHKEEPSIE,
N.Y.
DEAR MARTHA: Talk about
the sins of the father (and mother)
being visited upon the children. You
are a prime example.
I read that the tobacco companies
may have to pay billions of. dollars
to their victims, but what gocid .will
it do~ now thatthei'r health is shot?
Better the tobacco companies put
thar money into developing something that takes the carcinogenic
substances out of cigars and cigarettes -especially since. for too
many smokers, quitting does not
appear to be an option. They are
hopelessly hooked.
.Dear Ann Landers: I attend a
small church that seats , at. most .

Janu.-y 28, 2000

Weather
Toct-v: Cloudy
High: 20s; Low: 10s

~eade.r suffers health problems because of second~ hand smoke
. Dear Ana Landen: I kno~ you
olosed the subiect on the 55-yearOld man from Cleveland who can ·
barely walk a block but is determined to keep smoking becalise be .
'"epjoys it." However, I hope you
. will print one more, because my letlei might change his mind.
• I had to move out of my woilderful home because I could no longer
walk up the stairs to my bedroom on
the second noor. Lhave severe -lung
·aisease, and must use inhalers to.get
through the day. There are times
\\'hen I cannot get a full sentence out
be'cause I am short of breath.
• · If you are thinking I am one of
t)lose smokers who is payjng the ·
price for my foolishness, please
think again. I ~ever snioked.
. Ho'!'ever, I grew up in a home
~here my mother smoked a lot, and

Wednesday .

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sentiriel

2 Sections -12 Pages

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Clwlfteds ' -:

cOmla
Edltogele
Ob!tuirla
Bl-2.6

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C 10QO Okio Yalky I'Ublilhllll Co.

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.Future of uranium plants uncertain
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· wASHINGTON. (AP)- Mote .'',~hose district incl,udes the company is profitable, it is losing
uncertainty lies ·ahead for workers at Portsmouth Gaseous Diffusion Plant money on a contract to sell enriched
the nation 's two uranium eluichment' in Piketon, said significa[lt layoffs uranium from Russia to utility ·complants, where 500 jobs were ·cut just an4 a plant closure are both u~justi­ panies world-.:ide. The deal was set
up by the U.S. government io keep
last year. The company thl! owns fled.
th~ facilities says it is considering
"If lhl.s board of directors is pre- Soviet-era warhead uranium away
• closing one plant or laying off more sented. with such· a plan like that I . .from rogue nations and terroris!S.
. USEC asked federal government
workers.
will raise as much hell as possible
in.
December io compens·ate the
Falling p[iocs fo:: enriched ~ranh · · .anq I will, do whatever I can to get
u~, used .t,o fuel ~uclear power ' this·aovemment to hold ~USEC's feet company for up to $200 million lost
on the Russian deal, but the governpl111ts, 'and increased .Pr'~uction to the fire;" be said, ·
001ts. prompted dltc,ctors -of ·: U.S.
Bethesda, Md.-based· USEC was ment declined.
"Our industry is paying for world
Enrichment. Corp. to discuss cost-. a aovernment entity set up to enrich '
peace,"
said Dari Minter, president
cutting. options at a meeting Tues· urll\ium ·for commercial nuclear·
of
the
Piketon,
Ohio, chapter of the
day.
.r • ·
~
·
'. 'plants.' it was'privatiied in 1998 to
. _'~'fl'e lxiard discllssed com~y :)etier cptnpcte in a global m~rket: Paper, · Allied-Industrial, Cl'lemical .
•n•ttabves
.and . cost-cuttmg ·However, !he terms of that arrange- "'d Energy Workers International
n:~iews," said USEC SJ!Qk~";O'!lan '!leil! set ,iiP a series of C1)nditio'ns Uni.on, which represents Portsll)outh
Ehzabeth 1St~ckle. · , ·
" ' that·&lt;would have to l!e met before a . plant workers. ·
USEC employs about 2,100 pea·
• 0Jst-CIItting .measures the \Xlfll· pl.., cl'-re would be allowedr
piny )la8 consi~ in ~he post .f~w o~ 1~. a ~aution, Stricld111d.sai,d; . pic in'Portsntouth 111d 1,700 in Padmonths havt incllkjed ~bl' l~y- , ~ ~lead5' bas ~scill!led the aitua· ucWI. The company laid off _250
· offs or the .eventual . cl""'t118 or a ;tioit ·wltK -the .Treuuty Departmeill )l(orkcrs at each plant last year. Any
gUCOI!s d_lffus!on pla~t,. el'!"'r &lt;in liild the . ~ of Vi!!O President AI additional layoffs also . would be
bd~cah, Ky., or ,in Piketon, Ohro, ~- · Both• ll'e· interealed in moni· .divided between the two plants,
Stuclcle ,aid.
,,
, t!l':\ng · ~§.EC, Strickland said, Stuckle said. · .
Minter said employees did not
"JIIeither of those lb:isjons have ~tile ~ terms of the privati.za·
l!eeil &lt;11ade 8.\ of yet,·~ she 'S!iid, tiolllgrcell)Cnl require that the com· know the board was t:9¥!deringlayadding the director!l plan to meet pany protect the United States' tlbil· offs or a plant cloting. I&lt;IS said they
again next week.
.
ity to produce its own nuclear fuel .. were adopting a wait-and-see atti· '
R-ep. Ted Strickland,. .0-0hio,
USEC officials .say while the tude.

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