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Pomeroy • Middleport. Ohio

P.age 12 • The Dally Sentinel

.I

Tuelday, January 28, 1991

~perts study Earth plants, an,imal~ .·: : :_~~~:,~:a:~::.::ms
for use by future space colonists
· Jt::ld~." · ·
,
.

Wednesday
Jenuery 27, 1M

MN BANCISCQ (AP)- V~~:e President AI Gore has p!OPI*d spending .
have found that the scnes ill the milliQnl of fedalll c1o11us on pmgnrns with plenty of California appeal- cdu·
space grown cells changed.
'
ca~ intmigr.aon, le!:hoology and crime.
·
Just how t~e changes would
'I1lC White Houle .,w. 10 ICdt $1.3 billion over five years 10 restore health
affect the cells 1s not known. .
and~ benefits and food stamps for leglll immigrants who lost coverage
" If we find gravity-sensitive undetthe 1996wclfareoverhaul.
.
,
genes, there is no reason why we . "h:sidcnt Oinlon and 1 made a solemn·promise to this nation that we would .
can't have designer Oll!anisms that · raneive thelc harmful provisions," Gore said Monday. "~ are following
would be viable in the new envi· through on tllat promise." '
'
.
ronmenl," said Morey-Hollon.
The jriupi&amp;l is expected 10 be part of .the budF Ointon sends to Congress
In effect, Earth plants or animals on Fcb.1.
.
·
could be genetically altered so they
'The vice president, who has announced he will seek the Democratic nomina·
would thrive in the changed &lt;:Ond!· lion for preaidcnt in 2000, c:ame to California in hopes of sooring points with H~· •
lions of Mars and would then be puics, who were livid at the 1996 cuts and have since eme'l!cd as a crucial vot·
put on board a space-age ark .thai · ing bloc.
.
•
·
would carry colonists to the Red
Undct Qinton's proposil, immigrants who enter the country legally will
Planet.
bccomceliaibleforMedicaidandSupplementaiSecuritylncomcafterfiveyears.
The National Aeronautics and
The 1996law denied the benefits to non-citizens arriving after that date. Din·
Space Administration is planning a IOn's plan vrould allow people who arrived after the deadline to be eligible as
series of experiments on the Inter· early as 2001.
national Space Station to find Earth
The administration would expand food stamp eligibility to certain elderly
organisms best suited for Mars. ilmn~Aots.ll atso·would give states the option to provide hc:alth coverage to
Plants and animals will be grown legal inlmigrant children and women who entered the country and became prcg·
through several generations aod danl after Aug. 22, 1996.
.
then analyzed for genetic c~angcs,
Go~ flew to Califumia on Saturday and began promising more aid for an
Morrison said: ·
.
. · ' III'I)IY .othther initiatives..
·
·
·

Southern beats in overtime, Page A ·
Abused children need help, Page 6
County court cases. settled, Page 10

t;

By PAUL RECER
AP. Sc'-nce Writer
· ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP)
SQmetime in the next century
humans may colonize the moon or
Mars and researchers are looking
fqr t,he plants and animals that those
settlers from Earth will take with
them.
·" For a long-term habitation of
Mars, you' 11 have to grow crops,
deal with microbes and so forth,"
David MorrisOn of NASA's Ames
Rj:&amp;parch Center said Monday.
• ." We have to understand the
response of those organisms to the
different conditions."
·
· Organisms that evolved in the
gravity of Earth may not thrive in
tlic lighter gravity of the moon or
Mars, said NASA's Emily R.
Morey-Hollon.
. In the one-sixth gravity of the
moon and the one-third gravity of
Mars, there are changes in the fun·

~amen tal

processes of heat con vee·
In another orbital experiment, a
lion and sedimentation.
type of mustard plant failed to
Also, the surface tension of thrive in space because water
water, which shatters easily in droplets clustered about the roots,
Earth's gravity, becomes a strong blocking absorptio11 of nutrients.
barrier in lighter gravity and could Again, the cause is thought to be
affect basic biological functions. . the enhanced surface tension of the ·
"We don't know the effect of water droplets.
.
these changes," Morey-Hollon said
Changes in gravity could als'o
af the national meeting of the affect how genes work and could
.American Association · for the even affect evolution, Morey·
Advancement of Science. .
Holton said.
"We have to learn if Earth
"Some researchers arc looking
prganisms 'can live and evolve in for gravity-dependent genes," she
these changed conditions."
said.
.
For instance, Morey' Holton
"T\Iere is concern that in a difsaid, researchers found that lad- ferent gravity some genes may fail
poles hatched in orbit never devel· to tum on while others could shut
oped lungs.
· down."
In the low gmvity, the surface
Such actions could dramatically
tension on air bubbles became so alter a plant or animal or even cause
strong that the tadpoles c6uld not lethal changes, slie said.
punch through to J,reathe, she said.
In one orbital experime.nt, sever·
"They would hit the bubbles and at gene~ations of human kidney
just bounce off."
cells were cultured and researchers

l\llan with transplanted hand 'stares .:a t it and grins'
By CHARLES WOLFE
Aasoclated Press Writer
·.LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) - Thirteen
years after an explosive blew off his left
hand, Matthew David Scott has a new

one.

:. "He ~tares at it and grins," · family
ftiend James Brown s.aid Monday as
Scott, a paramedic from Absecon, N.J.,
recovered from the first hand transplant
in th.e United States.
.
The 14 1/2-hour surgery ended early
Monday at Jewish Hospital in
. Louisville.
, His doctors said Scott, 3.7, was doing
as well as possible.
·. ,They watched closely for blood clots, TRANSPLANT RECIPIENT
Matthew David Scott
other complications and a~y sign that
the donor hand was being rejected.
" We don't expect to see rejection in the early phase. Our big con·
cern .is in the first three months," said Dr. Jon William Jones Jr., an
organ rejection expert who was part of the surgical team.
. Tiny pieces of skin from the hand will be microscopically examined
every few days to see if lymphocytes - tissue-killing cells -. are

also is assistant director of the School of
Paramedic Science at Camden County
College.
Some doctors have questioned the risks
of transplanting a non-vital organ such as
a hand. Breidenbach said Scott was chosen
because he had not adapted well to his
artificial hand and is intelligent, ·articulate
and has support from his family, · which
includes his wife and two young sons. ·
In an interview videotaped before his
surgery, Scott said that with his artificial
himd he lived in fear of going through buf·
fet lines and handling food at parties. Nor
was he able to show his sons how to play
baseball, he said.
"It's always been the little things- the
daily little things," Scott said.
Even so, Scott can pnly hope · to gain
limited use of the transplanted hand ·able lo pick up objects but unable to but·
ton his shirt, Breidenbach said.
"You should be able to get fairly go9d
flexation and extension- not complete-

·

•'

and some sensation, but not normal,"

If so, Scott's medication could be adjusted.
.Scott was being given powerful drugs that reduce the chances of
rejection but pose significant dangers of their own.
His ·suppressed immune system makes him vulnerable to infections
that could be life threatening, said Jones and the lead surgeon, Dr.
Warren Breidenbach.
·Scott lost his dominant hand in a J?e~. 23, 1985, blast from an M80, wh1ch resembles a firecracker but 1s far more powerful. M·80s
have been illegal in the United States since 1966.
Scott got a prosthetic hand and resumed working. In 1990, he was
·named National Paramedic. of the Year by Emergency Medi,cal Ser·
vices magazine, said Tom Starr, director of the Mobile Intensive Care
Unit at Virtua Health, where
Scott now oversees paramedic training in southern New Jersey. He

Breidenbach said.
Surgeons for years have been able to
reattach severed limbs following acci·
W::~~o!i;. ~~~::~:~:·
left, Dr. Wlll'-m Jonn; Jr., center, and
dents, but they had never been able to suc- Dr. Gordon R.
· en11vitll' q ·
of the media.after announcing the n..-t transplant of
cessfully transfer a limb from a dead donor a hand In the United Statea Mon:.:r.ln Louisville, Ky, Surgeons at J-lsh Hospital In
to a living recipient. .
Loulsvll'- attached a hand from a
ver to Matth- David Scott, 37, of Abaecon, N.J., In
In September, a hand transplant was a 15 hour opertlon that ended nrly Monday
.
·. '
·
performed in Lyon, France, on a New
The surgeons had to join the bones, clamping them together with
Zealand mim who lost part of his right arm in a prison sawing a.ccidenl
· ·
.
metal
plates ·and·screws.
in 1984.
·
and
gently
tugged
to
make
sure
they
would
Tendons
'were
attached
. At least one attempt at a hand transplant occurred in South Ameri·
cain 1964, but the patient's body rejected the hand within two weeks. cause fingers to move.
. Nerves .were joined next, then arteries and veins. The hospital
The recent surgery joined the cadaver hand a bit above wristwatch
refused to disclose any information about the donor.
level with Scott's arm.
'

School bus collides with ·
truck in deadly crash

If yqU t.pon't need

' Last year, the percentage of companies with 500 or more workers providing h~alth benefits retirees over age 65 fell to 36 percent, down from 46
.Pe.rccnt 10 1993.
. As for active workers, about one-third of employers said they cut pre·
sctiption drug benefits, either by reducing choice of certain drugs or asking
workers to pick up a higher share of the costs. In come cases, workers have
been paying higher co·paymcnts on each prescription.
Co-payments that used to average SS or $10 per prescription can now be
as·high as $20 or even $40.
Underlying the higher benefit costs is the fact that health plans are fac·
ing a profit squeeze due to their inability to pull the reins in on risi ng health
costs. Those plans are now passing on their higher c&lt;ists to employers, and
this, in tum affects employees.
·

.. '

at
Meigs County's

Houston Rockets '

· -Pages

•

en 1ne

Hometown Newspaper

•• br','·. g a friend to
share"1··e savings!

By LARRY MARGASAK
for a vote on the articles of impeachment
after witnesses arc questioned in private .
~••oc'-ted Pnn Writer
: WASHINGTON (AP) Senate
Lou won over some wavering Repub·
-Republicans are ready to make Monica
licans on the issue of deposing witnesses
after House prosecutors Tuesday restricted
l,ewinsky a witness in President Clinton's
impeachment trial, dashing even some
their list to Ms. Lewinsky, the former
GOP hopes for ending' the case this week.
White House intern at the center of the sex
and cover-up scandal; Vernon Jordan, a
But the Senate's Republican leader sug·
Washington attorney and longtime Clinton
gestcd today the end'is in sight. ·
friend, and Sidney Blumenthal, a White
Republicans were expected to mus.ter
House aide.
party·line majorities today to defeat a
, The three would face private question·
Democratic motion to dismiss the
ing in sessions likely to be videotaped, so
impeachment ·case and approve witness
depositions. At the same time, Democrats
that all se.nators could watch the deposi·
were ready to demonstrate the strength 10 block the tWo- lions and determine whether to bring the witnesses in for
.
.
thirds majority that eventually would be needed to oust live testimony.
As for the remainder of the trial, Senators from both
Oinllln from office.
In remarks before today's ·votes, Majority Leader panies cme111ed from three hours of closed-door delibTrent Lon said, "There is a point when we will complete erations Tuesday, confirming that revived negotiations
the work we are .involved in and I believe it could be were under way on abipartisan timetable.
House prosecuiOrs ·on Tuesday asked the Senate to
within the next 10 days, two weeks al the most.''
invite Ointon to testify, but the White House has reject·
Lot~ who commented in a speech 10 the U.S. Cham·
tier of Commerce, said ' he and other senators were · ed the idea and Senate Democratic le.ader Tom Daschle
searching for a bipartisan approach 10 ending the trial. called the proposal "a red hefring. It is not going any·
Some of those talks have' focused \IB selling a timetable where."

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Good Afternoon

Sentinel

1 Sections • 10 Pages

C!ass!Oeds
Comles
Editorials
Lo!;al
Spor!l!

Weather

7
7&amp;8
9 .

2
3
4&amp;5
3

Lotteries
omo
Pick 3: 3-4·9; Pl~k 4: S-4.0.5
U.c:keye 5: 13-23-25·26·35

w.yA.

o._u1 3: 7-9·5; Dally 4: 0-8.0.3

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Daschle warned the trial would plod on indefinitely if
witnesses were approved, and Clinton lawyer David
Kendall said the White House would be "faced with a
critical need" to review mountains of previous teslimo·
ny before deciding whether to seek rebuttal witnesses.
Loti, sensing the Senate will not remove Ointon, is
considering a proposal by Seh. Susari Collins, R: Maine.
to end the trial with two votes: the first on whether Oin·
ton committed perjury and obstruction and the second
on whether he should be removed from office.
Collins, interviewed today on ABC's "Good Mom·
ing America," said, "II is well-grounded both in the
Constitution and precedents 10 have separate findings of
fact, separate from the decision on whether. or not the
offenses ... justify removing him from office. Many of us
are concerned about whether an acquittal vote-.what
kind of message that would send to the White House and
the American people."
Sen. Paul Wellslone, D-Minn., scoffed at that propos·
al. "Our vote is whether or not 10 remove the president,"
he said on ABC. "We can admit to the fact the pr~sident
has not been truthful. ... But the question is a judgment
question: Do we believe it is grounds for overturning an
election.The answer is no."
GOP Sen. John Chafec of Rhode Island, a moderate,

proposed ground rules for the witness depositions that
would set a four-hour maximum for each sworn interro-:
galion - two hours of questioning by the House team
and two hours for the president's lawyers. Witnesses
could be questioned only about areas of factual dispute,
and the sessions would be videotaped for senatOrs ,to
view.
Rep. Ed Bryant, R·Tenn., said .on CNN's "Larry
King Live" program Tuesday that he, along with GoP
Reps. Bill McCollum of Florida, James Rogan of Cali·
fornia and Asa Hutchinson of Arkansas most lik•ly
would depose the witnesses for the House.
,
Following the depositions, the Senate would decide
whether to approve live testimony in the well of the Senate.

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Prosecutors want to question Jordan about his effori'
to find Ms. Lewinsky a job at the same time she h~
been subpoenaed in the Paula Jones sexual harassment
. case against Clinton.
, ..
Blumenthal is one of the White House aides to who111
·the president falsely denied having had a sexual rel~.:
tionship with Ms. Lewinsky. The article of impeachmc.nt
alleging obstruction of justice says Ointon lied to h~
aides so they would pass on the false information to . .
grand jury.

"BRY.OO"' HIDE-A-CHAISE ROCIG:Rii
STORAGE AND WMIIAR MASSAGE This todtrr

!mum a plutb headrest wilh 'a triple·dered inse1,
roDvenlent sqnae ann dw suppons the lumbar 1111d
oontrol and room lot a bcYmae·
''

. . . . . . tty !furtJit~re ~. ."""'
!Furniture~ C~qq, &amp;PliiUUiS
4ZWS,_~ i' • ~~~ OH
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--

...J...,OO..ZOD-4005

-- ----·-----

Commissioners:
.reinstate utility ..
permit process.::
The Meigs County Highway
Department will return to issuias
permits for the installation of utility
lines after . action taken during· a
recessed meeting o.flhe Meigs Coun·
ty Commissioners on Tuesday.
County Engineer Robert Eason
and his administrative assistant;
David Spencer, met with two of the
commissioners and , Prosecuting
Attom~y 10 resolve an 1ssue that hU.
been d1scusscd at. length for the past
three months. ·
. ~ ~~fall, Eason reco!)IIIICiodecHIH! !nst1tuti~n of .a $250..fee .for the,
mstall.at1on of ne~ ullhty lm~ .~
~ell :"' the mapPmg of all utll1tr
h~es m county nghts. of way. Eason
wd .that such mappmg was ncccs·
sary for the protection of county road
workers, and yesterday, Lentes said
that the county would face legal lia·
bility from several directions if coun·
ty crews accidentally struck a utility
line.
Lentes said that the permit
proCess would also provide the writ·
ten record. of any legal liability 0'!
the part of the county and the utility
company.
County Commissioner Jcff~y
Thornton objected to the institution
of a fee for the permit necessary ·10
install new lines and set a public
hearing in December for public inpu!
on the . proposal. Thai hearing was
later canceled by the commissioi)Crs'
office, although Thornton mel with
those who attended.
Thernton said yesterday that he
would insist on another public hear·
ing before a permit fee is levied, but
voted yesterday, along with Commiss.ioner Janet Howard, 10 reinstate
a permit that was used prior to the
proposed changes in policy.
Eason stressed that the reinstated
permit policy will not cost individual

Man convicted of killing

four women denied parole
CHIU.ICO'IlJE (AP) ..-.A man
convicted of killing four women in the
.I 970s was denied parole and will not
be eligible for another 10 years. ·
Larry Ralston, 49, Qf Norwood,
was denied parole on Tuesday because
of the nature of the crimes and because
board members didn't think he served
a long enough sentence, prison system
spokeswoman Andrea Dean said.
The board also considered
from the public and victims'
she said. More than 400
petitions and wrote letters
release.
The hoard met·Tuesday with Ral·
ston at the Chillicothe Correctional
Institution.
Ibllston was sentenced to ·four life
terms for killing Linda Kay Harmon,
17, Elaina Bear, 15, Diana Sue
McOobie, 16, and Mary Ruth Hopkins; 21, all .from the Cincinnati
area.

MAKES
·Ell Dennison Amerlc•n Legion Post 487 recently made a donsUon of
$1,000 to Eastern High School. Pictured ere, from left, post buelneea msn1ger Dennie.McKinney,
Ellis Myers of the Ohio Educ1t1onal Support Group, Ea,s tem High Principal Rick Edw1rde, and
Post CoiJ'Imlnder Eugene Fink.
·
· ·

CINCINNATI (AP)- The .gov·
cmmcnt has asked a federal appeals
court to reinstate the. criminal con·
victions of an Ohio barge company,
one of its former executives and two
towboat captains for polluting the ·
Ohio River.
All were convicted in 1995 of
violating the Oean Water Act by

dumping garbage in the river.
The convictions.were.thrown out
in 1997 by U.S. District Judge Herma.n Weber and ·shouldn't' be rein·
stated, defense lawyers said Tues·
day.
·
"The fact remains there was ·
insufficient evidence to support con·
victions," said Glenn Whitaker, rep..

resenting M/G Transport Services
Inc. •
·
"Based on the evidence, it is hard
to imagine how M/G could not be
liable," said attorney James
Morgulec, representing the Justice
Department

COLUMBUS - Amcncan Elec- m power generation
ene'l!Y. IV·
tric Power Co. has reported net cry staff," Draper added. "Desj)lte the
income for the year ended Dec. 31, ncgativeimpactoftheweatherandthe
1998, increased 11 cents per share, or Cook outage on sales, we arc pleased
4.1 percent to $536.2 million.
with the development of trading, mar·
The increased income lOOk the kt\ing and critical risk management
value up 10 $2.81 per share, from $S11 skills since we initiated our enc.gy
million or $2.70 per share in 1997.
trading ai:tivities in mid-1997."
Contlnuad on page 3
Net income.for the foUrth quarter of
The extended outage of the Cook
1998 decreased 28 cents per share or Nuclear Plant began in September
42.4 percent to $72.1 million or 38 1997 when both generating units wen:
cents per share, from $126.1 million or shut OO.Wn due to questions about the
66 cents a share in 1997.
operability of certain safety systems,
' ·&lt;
The favorable result for the ycsr which arose during a Nuclear Regula·
was due to the effect of a 1997 extra· tory Commission architect engineer
ordinary loss for the United King· design ir.;pection.
dam's one-time windfalllalt on priva·
Efforts 10 restart the Cook units
tized utilities and certain tax benefits reduccdeamingspershareby21 cents
and adjustments related to the invest· for the 12· months ended Dec. 31,
ment i.n Yorkshire Electricity Group.
1998.
The windfall tax was ~ ·on a
The generation and ene'l!Y dcliv·
n:troactivc revaluation of the original cry staff reductions are being made as
privatization price. Exclusive of these · part of an effort to strengthen the comitems, 1998 earnings per share , pelitivc performance of the power
decreased 33 cents or I0.5 percen~ generation and •DCil!Y delivery 011!8from $3.14 in 1997.
nizations, Draper said.
"Our . 1998 .earnings were disapFourth quarter earnings per share
pointing," said E. Lil!ll Draper Jr., were -aJso depressed primarily as a
AEP's chairman, president and chief result of unse&amp;50Rably mild weather,
executive officer.
the severance a&lt;:auals and the nega·
"This was due to unseasonable, tive impact of the extended Cook
mild weather; an extended outage at plant outage. Warm temperatures dur·
, the Cook Nuclcsr Plan~ a write-down ing the fourth quaner of 1998 reduced
WATER FAWNQ - The
River etopped rising Tueadt!ut not before entering the dip In of Yorkshire's inv~~ent in tonica, a ene'l!Y usage by retail customers and
thi·Pomeroy Parking Lot. According to the National WNther
Ice, the river Ia expected to con- UK telecommumcat1ons com~y; tempered dcm81Jd for wholesale encr·
Unue dropping·throughout the week.
.
.
and severance accruals for reduct1ons gy.

The Ohio River ,reaches it's ·

RECUNER Ease back In ml5 CfiijSC
recliner and entoy all it has to
Pearum a plush padded bock wilh
channel·sdtching. Sloped pand
anna and deep cushioned seat.

..

'

Continued on page 3 ·

for 1998 up 4 percent American Electric
Government asks court to reinstate convictions AEP's net income
.
.
.
. and
del' ~ Power says windfall

Buy.This For

'VOLUNnl!K" C""'lillllQQ!~R

"'

'

By Scott Wolfe
upcoming year, we are planning to distribute even more
The Eli Dennison American Legion Post 467 recent· money to area schools."
ly made a donation of $1,000 to Eastern High School for
The donation will be a part of a rural Appalachia pro·
the purpose of building an incentive program to better gram developed to aid students not afforded an.opportu·
foster scholarship 'at the school. The donation was the nity for sacial and cultural growth, including awards and
last of a series of donations to Meigs County SChools field trips aimed at building student morale through
from the post, an amount that totaled over ·$9,000 for the incentives to achieve.'
·1998 fiscal year.
Also, the program hopes to build increased allen·
Eastern High School principal Rick Edwards said, "It dance, reduce student discipline problems, and ultimate·
is with exttcme gratitude that we accept this donation. ly increase academic performance. This type of pro·
The Eli Dennison Post has been extremely supportive of gram will mesh well with the district's continuou~
Meigs County schools. This money will be a tremen· improvement plan currently being developed. The focus
. do us boost to what we aie trying to develop here at East· of the continuous improvement plan will be 10ward aca·
ern."
dcmi~ improvement and increasing student attendance.
Edwards added, "I especially would like to thank the
As part of the program, students are required to write
members of the post for remembering us. It's nice to a reflections pajler at the conclusion of each activity.
have yo4r hem~$OWD.,£1:f!l&amp;;JD¥',i¥gu ,M!ill!\P·yqu•in .,... Edwarduoncludcd. "We- have·a.gi'HI..w&lt;ient-body,. pursuit of your goals."
' ·
.
Donalions such as this help reward good behavior and
The Jl!lSt is based in Rutland, Edwards' hometown.
add to the already positive academic climate of .the
Post .business manager Dennis McKinney said, "We school. l:'low we will be able to provide opportunities to
are proud to be able to help Eastern High School. In the students they might not otherwise get to.experience."
' ·

Today's

"

essas part

epu

&lt;),

pn

some active workers.

,

.

r

·Survey: Fewer workers·
are joining HMOs
By PHIL GAI,.EWilZ
AP Business Writer
NEW YORK (AP) ---' After years of steady growth, the proportion of
W\llkers joining health maintenance organizations fell in 1998 as employ·
e~.~v.;itched to more flexible plans, ac~rdi~g to a new employer survey.
. It s too early to tell whether the dechne m HMO enrollment is a short·
terrn phenomenon or more ominously a sign that these managed care plans
may not be the centerpiece of the nation's health care delivery system after
all," said Blaine Bos, a consultant for William M. Mercer, the employee
benefits firm which conducted the study.
·J'he survey of nearly 4,200 employers, released Monday, found that
enrollment m HMOs and HMO point-of-service plans - plans that give
some out of network coverage - dropped to 47 percent in 1998 from 50
percent the prior year.
·· In contrast, preferred provider organizations grew from 35 percent to 40
p~rcent in 1998.l'P0s are a less restrictive form of managed care in which
consumers pay less if they use doctors in the network, but they don't have
to: Unlike HMOs, PPOs do not require consumers to "isit their primary
care doctor before seeing- specialists.
·
· , PPOs have grown steadily in the past five years, rising from 27 percent
of employees in 1993. Traditional insurance has dropped from 48 percent .
o'l employees in 1993 to 13 percent last year.
The survey also found that m~st employers c.xpect the co~t of providing
heallh benefits for worker&amp; will nse 9 percent th1s year, the b1ggest increase
in seven years. In 1998, health benefits costs rose 6.1 percent, Mercer said.
. Employers blamed the increases
rising premiums charged by heallh
plan~ a~d skyrocketing dfllg costs. To deal with rising costs, employers are
contmumg to drop coverage for retirees and are reducing drug benefits for

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•winning debut wldl

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Pippen malwa

.$1,000 donation made to Eastern High School

attcicking it, Jones said.

VERO BEACH, Fla. (AP)- A bus taking students home from elemen·
taiy school ran a stop sign and crashed into a semitrailer Monday, killing a
child and the truck driver.
"It was like it didn 't see the stop sign," said Rebecca Clark, 23, who was
dtjving behind the truck. "The bus hit right behind the semi's cab. It's the
wOrst thing I ever saw."
The bus, carrying between 20 and 25 children from two magnet schools,
rolled at least once and ended up on its side with its f~ont end badly dam·
aged, said Pete Kersey, spokesman for the Indian River County Sheriff.
"Stu.~ents were thrown around inside the bus rather severely," he said.
The tractor-trailer also rolled over at least once and went into a deep
ditch, Kersey said.
.
Victor Dixon, 8, and the truck driver, Sammie Hughes, 63, were killed.
The bus driver, Deborah Colletti, 37, was in critical condition.
. Four students were in stable condition at a hospital.
Nine students and the bus driver were taken to another hospital.

;t'omorrow: Cloudy
Jilgh: 50s; Low:40s

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Mon-Thurs. 9-5

Fri. H • Sat t-4

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esmrngs
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COLUMBUS (AP) - Amcri~
Electric Power Co. said its ·I998 ·cam.:
ings increased only because the prevj·
ous year's revenue was affected by •
one·timc windfalltaJt loss.
The company n:ported Tuesday tho\!
it earned $536.2 million, or $2.81 por
share, on net revenue of $4.2 billipn
last year. That compares with 1997
earnings of $511 million, or $2.70 per
share, on revenue of $4.I billion. . _
· For the fourth quarter, eaminp
were $72.1 million, or 38 cents per
share, on revenue of $968.6 million.
That represents a 42:4 percent dccliot
from 1997 fourth-quarter earnings-of
$126.1 million, or 66 cents per share,
on revenue of slighdy more than $1 bii-,
lion.
The company said eamings for
1998 would have declined 33 cents per
share had its 1997 figures not includccl
extraordinary loss resulting from a
one-time windfall tax. Britain imposed
the tax in that year on privatized utili·
tics' net of taJt benefits and aailts.
AEP tOOk the loss based on its investmcnts in the Yorkshire Elcctri(Jty
Grolip, the company said.
Company Chairman E. Linn Draper
Jr. said AEP's 1998 earnings were dis,
appointing because. of u~lli!Y
m1ld ~!her, caus10g a reducuon ~~·
electnc1ty usc .

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�Wednesday, January 27, 1999

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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

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o,ath Notices

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: T he Da~ly Sentinel
'£sto8fiskl in 1948
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio

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740-H2·215e • Fu: 11112-2157

Community _Newspaper. Holdings, Inc.
•
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ROBERT L WINGETT
Publisher
DIANE HILL
Controller

'CHARLENE HOEFLICH
G.-!Men~ger

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&amp;olo--..,.,.,..

CWI•Iwrwl,..,.. ot,.
1M-.,.,_
pul&gt;l-.

.,.,. Sentinel seskoe;w,.,. ro th.fldlf«trom,_.,.
· IN.
or-) luwo

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of loolng

,.,.,.,-.
.•,.,~,_,-.llpadfy•-11-'•••"'•"'""''o•­
.- . or - · - lo: 1.o1t«e lo 1M odlt&lt;W, Tho Sentinel, Ill Coutf .St..
..~, ottlo 41711; ot;

er w(ll act mean and touJ)I, or at Icut poee with a
The San Francisco Otronicle's op-ed page fOOiball. Joe Montana, in hla apot, even did thlnp
noted the retirement of Michael Jordan with: . that probably required 1 stunt double. · Steve
"Every fan haa · a . favorite· White, in his ada, tries to act.
·
While
acting
attempll
by
atbletel
are
frequ~nt­
Michael Jordan moment."
Well, I don 't follow sports, so I ly embarrassing, they 're more often endeanng.
probably wquldn 't be considered Think of Mike Ditka. Think of Brian Bosworth:
a fan. So do I have 1 . favorite Jim Brown actually had a movie career. And what
Michael Jordan moment? Should about all those old light beer cqmmercials with
the over·the-hill baseball guys? They at least tried
I have.one? Do I deserve one?
I must at least try
to be as loyal to his
legend as the rest of
the American people, otherwise I
could experience what pundits call a

FAX to r••11a.

$aving Social Security

theae products carefully chosen 10 they' will not
detract from his irn~&amp;C? Or is money,the 10le c6n. sideratlon? Maybe he uaeslhese prOducts hi~! f.
Doea he. laze allout the manse in his Jordan line of
clothins, Nikes untied·on his huge feet, munchln&amp;
a dog, slppln&amp; a Gatorade as he chaiS long dis·
tance with animated characters from Warner
Brothers cartoons?
Is there a Bemu5ement' Factor that must be
considered before he will consent to endorse a

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I IIMatteld

J38'/41"

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I WANNABE
MIKE

nect"? I'm not really sure. I think
'i
it's similar to being disconnected,
LIKE
only more ominous. Not only has
' I
your. party (i.e. America) hung up on
.r ''
0
you, somebody's thrown away the .
0
'r
phone. And the damn pundits have
''
hidden all the phone books. We
'
don 't want that. So: my favorite
IJ
t)
Michael Jordan moment. Hm. Gosh,
they . all seem to be the same.
()
Whether he's hawking ~heap tele•r
phone rates, or clothing, or shoes,
.I
•I
hot dogs, batteries, cologne or
11
I
Gatorade, he's always doing the
I
•
I
. same thing-- looking bemused. As a
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•
(J.•
matter of fact, whenever I think of
Michael Jordan, I picture this really
0
tall bemused guy.
I •
I realize that Michael Jordan is
supposed to be a fabulous, passionate athlete, one of the best who ever
lived, if not the best. But you couldn't prove that byrne. All I've seen
him do is shake his head at '!Weety
Bird, and then give us a phone number.
Now I want to be fair to the guy. L.:.__--~-----------~ •·1I
It's not his fault I .don't watch pro basketball. to be amusing. Before his unpleuantness, O.J. product? Do his people bring him products, test· · 1
What if I'd never seen a Fred Astaire movie? If Simpson used to jump over luggage. When we, as ing his reactions? If he smiiks, :the product i~ , :
the only time I'd ever seen him was when he was consumers, see Michael Jordan, what are we see- rejected. If he frowns, Mr. Jordan says no. If ~ . :
dancing with the vacuum cleaner, I'd have been ing? As near as I can fisure it, Michael Jordan's laughs outright, the salespeople are shown the :
.
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1
confused. But because I do know who he is, when television persona is a person who's inildly·sur- door. I just don 't·know.
Ultimately,
I
.
have
to
admit
thai
I
hav~
no
,
:
prised
to
find
himself
on
television,
and
would
I saw those commercials I merely became mildly
1
fav.
l
'rite
Michael
Jorda~
moment.
I
watch
.h!m
!
rather
be
doing
something
else,
playing
nine
holes
enraged.
But I confess I'm still mystified. Unless of golf, for instance, or taking a nap. Is that sup- way he '\Vatches us .. det&lt;iche~, semt-tromc1
bemused -- only without the money. ·
·
. ·!
they're content with just having their faces plas' posed to make me thirsty for Gatorade?
(11n ShOaiH' n~ book, "Not Wit Yet," Ia I
· How does. he decide what products he's going
tered on a Wheaties box, when asked to endorse a
product, athletes usually bestir themselves to do to endorse? Why hot dogs and not brown-and- avlll.tllt from U3.111 Publl~onl, PO Box
something. A skier will ski, to show the efficacy serve sausages? Why Oatorade and not orange 11110, Lol Angeltt, CA 110071. The toll-frw '!
number le1-IIOO 182·13411.)
·
··
of lip balm on wind-chapped lips. A football play- juice? Why batteries and not power strips? Are CopyrtahtletO NEWIIPAPEA ENTEAP.RISE ASSN.
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The challenge"iS tD·ifi,mtsome;· ·. :.":. ~;_j .
way in which workers' dollars can
be invested with an assured mini- .
mal return while maintainztrg.a
degree of individual responsibility,
and limiting government to
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Letter to the editor

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ClllUIIy

Rain

Showlrrl T-olom\a

Boil advisory lifted

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. &amp;my Pt.

F!Lifioo

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Homestead applications being taken

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Meeting announced

Thursday...Cioudy. A chance of slio,wers in' t~e afternoon. Highs H1 the
upper.50s. Chance of rair 40 J:ICrcent.
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Thursday night ...Sho.,vers li~ely; Lows in the lower and mid 40s.
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Extendt!l forecast:
Friday...Mostly cloudy with a chance of rain or snow showers. Highs iq
the mid 40s.
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. The Lebanon .Township Trustees will meet in regular session, Satur-

C1~d~aNETp~~g~~m

Area teens are invited to participate in the Friday's fun, food and fellowship P!'\liect of God's Neighborhood Escape for Teens. Nutritional
foods are available free of charge for snacking during the evening. Nonviolent video games computer programs, cards, and pool tables are available for us.-fr&lt;&gt;m 6-10:30 p.m. every Friday and Saturday. The center is
located on Main Street, Pomeroy. There is adult supervision.

' The Pomeroy Police Departlherit
atrested t~ people on Thesday.
.
Acoord•ng to a Pomeroy offieer,
felony charges oflheft, forgery and passing bad checks were filed against a local
man and.woman after they were picked
up by Meigs County sheritl'sdeputies. .
Ouistoph~r BI'O)"n. ~e unreported,
of Po~et_UY· ts charged wtth two counts
of rece1vtng stolen propeny, two counts
of theft and two counts of forgery, while
Melanie Clark, 18, also of Pomeroy, is
charged with two counts of theft, two
~ts of forg!'ry and one count of pass- .
mg bad checks.
.
The two allegedly stole checks from
aColumbuswomanandcashedsomeof
them at a local bank, and reportedly
wrote other stolen.checks to local mer·

. Planning for the this fall's Town and Country EXPO will begin at a
meeling Thursday, 7:30 p.m . at the grange annex on. the Rock Springs
Faiwo~nds . This is the organiz.~tional meeting and.anyone interested in
helping ~~ invil~d tq,attend. ··
,

· Library Friends to meet ·

...

Friends of the Library will meet at the library Monday, 1 p.m.

meet ·

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The Sutton Township 'I'n!ste~s will meet at the Syracuse. Village Hall
. Friday,,6:30.,p;m. (egarlling amropriations.
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SAR meets .Thursday •

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Ewings Chapter, SOns of the American Revolution, will meet Thursday at the Meigs Museum, Pomeroy, 6:30 p.m. Speaker will be Steven
Raymond Cuckler, who will present a history on the impeachment
process and the individuals •involved during the framing of the Constitution. Cuckler' ~ill be installed ·as·a new member of Ewi,ngs Ch~pter. " · · ·

Mabel G. Cross Pauley
Mabel G. Cross Pauley, 90, 4?(Pomeroy,,fpfll\erly Af Dexter, died Tuesday, January 26, 1999 at Holzer Medical•Celtter~ n' Gallipolis.
'· ·
A homemaker, she was born September ,19, ;1908 in Mannington, West
Virginia, daughter of the late Eme~ll Cross aodArah Oda Toothman Cross.
She attended the Mount Union Baptist Church in Carpenter.
,
She is survived by a son and daughter-in-law, Pa~l J, and Mildred Pauley
of long Bottom; two grandchildren·and their spouses,. Jeamia K. and Tony ··
Connolly of Racine, and Kimberly K. and Dr. Mark Christopher pf Gallipolis; two great-gra~dchildren·•.'I)'Ie,r J. apd Chclsi N. Keams of OaJiiJ)olis; and
a sister, Mary Frances McClure of St. Albans, West Virginia..
She was preceded in .death by her husband, Frank Pauley; her pare~ts; a
daughter-in-law, Lois Pauley; and by several brothel'S and sisteni:
·
Services will be held at I p.m. on Friday, January 29, 1999 in ihe
Pomeroy Chapel of ihe Fisher Funeral Home, with the Rev. Joe Sayre officiating. Burial ~ill follow in the Miles Cemetery, Rutland. Friends niay, call
on Thursday, January 28,.1999 (rom'2-4 and 7-9 p.m. at the funeral home.

Permit proce,{Js ...

The Daily Sentinel
(USPSliJ-010)
Con.ult)' Newspaper Holdl... Inc.

Publis!tcd every afternoOn, Monday through
Friday, Ill Coun S1., Pomoroy• .Ohio, by the
Oblo V.lltr PublilhinJ Compony. Seooftd d"'

pOatap paicht Pomeroy, Ohio.
Member. The Aslociatfild Pre:ai irid lhe Ohlq
Newspaper Asloeialion.

Poltmattn Send address oorreqi.Ons to The
Daily Sentinel, ltt O:Nrt SL; .POmeroy, Oblo

4.!769.

S~BSCRimON

RATES
B1 Carrier or Motor Route
.
Ooe Weck .................................S2.00·
One Montb ................................ $8.70

One Yar••,.,,_,;, .......I •• - ... .. . . ..... Slot.OO
SINGLE COPY PRICE
Daily. •••••.••••.•.••.••••.•.•••.••••..••••.. 35 Ccatl

Continued from page 1
property owners anything.

Continued from page 1 ·
si5sippi rivers.
Tile government asked ;a, threeThomassee, who retired in 1992,
judge 'J)ilnel' of ihe '6th U.S. Circuit was convicted of conspiracy, fined
Court 'bf ~ppeals to reinstate the $22,500 was given six months of
convictions of -MIG Transport; its home confinement.
retired ·vice president of operations,
Weber threw out six other oonJ. Harschel Thomassee of Paducah, victions for dumping garbage withKy.; and towboat captains Fred E. out a permit against the company,
Morehead' of Vienna, W:Va. ·· and Thomassee, Morehead and MontRob~rt S.Mo~tgomery of·Racine:'
gomery.
MIG Transport of Cincinnati was
.The company and its employees
a subsidiary of Midland Co. and were accused of dumping bilge
operated hundreds of barges and slops, burnt waste and other kitchen
towboats until it was sold in 1994.
and industrial garbage into the rivers
The company was fin ed from 1972 to 1991. Defense lawyers ·
$250,000 and agreed to pay the gov- . said the company followed itldustry.. ·
ernment a $3.9 million settlement · wide disposal' methods.
after being convicted of conspiracy · Morgulec used the defense arguto dump oil into the Ohio and Mis·

26 Weeks ........................... .SS3.82
52 W.eks,................... :..... .SIOS.56
R8ta Oullkte Mcip County
13 Weeki ........................... .$29.2!1
16 Wecu ........................... .$56.68
52 Weeu ......................... .St09.72

Reader Services
Correction Polley
O•r m1l1

co.ter'll

11 allllorlel•ls to bt

r•• bow of •• enor In a
otocy, coli ... ..,.,roo., ot (740) 99Zaccwr11te. If

ll55. We will check· JOUr tnlormatlon
aad make a conictio• If warnnted.

News

Dtp~rtmenta

Tloe ••I• a•mber lo 99:1-2155. Deport·
•r•t
are:
·
Gnent M••••........................E•t 1101
Jl1ew,, ............................................ Ext tiOJ
or Ext 1106

extt••••

7:10'6 8:30 DAILY
MAnNEESSAT/SUN 1:1063:30

MIGHTY JOE YOUNG (PG)
7:CO t.l:20 DAILY
IIATIN!I!IIIAT!SUN 1;00. :UG

CE

JANUARYCL

~£J11E

.

Sale Ends Saturday

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,;vcn carrier each week.

MAIL S~BSCRtmON ,
lnolde Melp Coon!)'
t3 w.et0............................ Sl7.l0

PATCH ADAMS (PGt3)

m~en~t~i~n~s2ay~i~ng~th~a~t
~ju~s~tthe
t~h~e~re~a~
rn
the government ~w~a~s
thought
cnn-- J~!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!~J~~~~~!!!!~~!~

$ul»cribem DOt desiring to pay 1he arrjer may
remit in ldvance diRKt to The Daily Sentinel on
a three, six or 12 month basis. Credit will be
No tubsctjplion by mail permitted ln •reu
Where home caniv aervi&lt;::e ia availtble.
Publilher f'flltmll the Jtabt to 1djuat rttes dut·
ia&amp; the subscription period. SubsCription rate
changes m•y ~ implemented by Changing the
dunlion of the subscript.ion. ·

ease

fnvestigatloO into the
is Wntiituing and other charges may pending~
according to the officer.
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Both are in the Southeastern OJii01
Regional Jail in Neisonville, and well&gt;"
expected·to be arraigned !hi&lt;; mom1ng.
-The department also atrested·Edd,ieo
Patrick, 31, of Middleport, on Tuesday:
evening following an alleged alten:atioa;
a1 Jimmy's SjxJrts Bar in Pomeroy. ..ovl
. Aa;ording to the officer, Patrick was,
arrest~ as 'he l!llgJ'CSSOr in an alteroatio)llv
with Marty P.u81'" of Mid&lt;!Jeppf!.. 11 :&lt;J!
. Patrick is charged with .. ...ull '11"'1
disorderly conduct after a warning, at1f1J
is also being held in the Nelsonvijle~
facility. He is expected to be ~1
on Thursday.
"

Government asks court ...

No permit fee will be collected
for the time being, and Eason said ·
yesterday that he would be.willing to
discuss amendments to the commissioners' policy after public input is
sought. Yesterday 's action yesterday
does not require property owners or
,utility ·~mpanjes to map lines, .
although Lentes and Eason said yesterday that mapping is important, not
..only to the highway department, but
to public safety and emergency
workers.
•

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Pomeroy Police re.p ort arrestl~

EXPO meeting set

Tru~tees . to

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Homeo"':"ers are remmded that applications are liow being taken by Meip 1
County.Auditor Nancy Campbell for the homestead property.tax exei:nption.
state-retmbursed program provides real estate tax reductions for senior J:itizens
and the disabled.
·
·
fn order to qualify for the homestead exempeion, you must be at Jea.t 65 yearS' ·
old dunng 1999, or be permanently and totally disabled, have a total income of .
not more than $20,8!_KI for tax year 1998, and own and occupy the home as~ . •
pnnctple_ pl~ ofrestdence as of Jan. I, according to Campbell. Then; ,is 8 sept, I
::ate apphel\\tOn for owners of m311~fat;tu~ homes.
,.
. ·,
The deadline for filing for !he homestead exemption is June 7. Camplli:JI, i
encourages anyone who thinks they may qualify to visit her office in the Meigs•
County Courthouse or call the office at 992-2698 between 8:30a.m. and 4 pm~
Monday through Friday.
.

.The B.oaid 'of Trustees of Columbia Township will meet Monday at
7:30p.m. at the fire station~

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Trustees .to meet

By Tbe Auoclated PrHa
,
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A mild and rainy springlike c!My IS forecast for 'Thursday. But then things
will tum nasty again, the National Weather Sei'Vi~ &amp;aid.
.
Rain is likely for most of the state on Thursday and temperaturs will
climb into the 40s and 50s.
~.
But starting Thursday night, the rain will change to snow from north to
south. In between, there will be freezing rain as the niercury dips into the
30s.
.
.
The record-high temperature for this date at the Columbus weaiher station was 68 degrees in 1916 while the record kiw'was 8 below zero in 1936.
S~nset tonight will be at 5:44p.m. and sunrise Thursday at 7:44 a.m.
· Weather forecast:
· Tonight...lncreasing cloudiness. Lows in the upper 4Qs. West wind '5'to

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Cou.

The L:ading Creek Conservancy District has lifted the boil advisory
for custome~ on State Route 143 from SR 7, Bailey Run·Road, Ball Run
· Road and Wolf Pen.Road .

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Southern Ohio set to see
mild weather until Friday
.
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N:,wspaper owes Strickland an apology

Cherne was effective behind the scenes i

Due to low hog prices, the l!.S. ~ment of Agriculture, through~ Meigs
County Farm Servtce Agency, ts offenng a payinenl to small hog pmWcem.
ThIll' eligible, a prodUcer must !)ave seld less than l ,&lt;XXl hogs betwllCi) Juii, 1
and Dec. 31, 1~. and still be in opelation on Feb. 1.
· · · :..
Paymc:nt will. be determined'by ~cipation. A iltal of $50 million luis been
made available for thts program and a national determination will be madC if.t1te
payments are factored. Maximum benefits are based upon SS per head for Slaugh·
ter hOgs, and $1.80 per headfor feeder pigs. · "
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Prod~rs wishing to participate De¢ tQ tile an a)lllli&lt;:ation at the Mei(IS
ty Farm Service Agency office, 33101 Hiland Road; Pomeroy, betwectt Feb~
and F~. 12, and m~ provi~ sales documents and information about present
operations. For more toformatoon, contact the Farm Service office at 992-6646. ·:

. URG Meigs Center advising day and spring quarter preregistration
wtll be held Feb. 3, 3-6 p.m. at the center in Middleport. All URG night
students are to call to schedule an appointment.

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Personal choice vs. governm·en·t power ~~

i···

Small hog farmers offered assistanCe-·" ·.

URG Meigs Cerlter advising day

W. VA. ·

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The deadline to purcha&lt;;e Meigs County dog lice~ witlXJUI paying a penal- .
ty, will be Monday.
The deadline in previous years was Jan. 20, but lblse Bill219 extended~
time period to Jan. 3). Since Jan. 31 falls on a Sunday, dog licenses can be purchased on the following Monday without a penalty. .
•
The OJSI of dog licenses is $4 for a single license and $20 for a kennel license.
Tags pun:hased.beginning Tuescla~ will be •ssessed the penalty of an additional
$4 for a stngle license aqd an additton $20 fqr a kennel license.
. Dog licenses may be purchased at the Meigs County Auditor's Office during
the hoursof8 a.m. to4:30 p.m. or from Meigs County Dog Warden Wt,lliamPJ-:e.

Southern I..o,ql ~hooi,Distri~ students will be dismissed early Friday
afternoon for a teachers' meeting at the high school to discuss continuous
improvement planning. The high school will dismiss at 2 p.m.

r

~ Rep. Ted Strickland
·
: If you are like me, the mos~ notable part of the President's Sta~ of the
~nion Address last week was hts proposal to protect and extend Social Secunty.
: It's no secret that the Social Security system will face tough times in the
ooming decades. And because of that, the average American•s·confidence iq
the system has been deeply shaken.
: ·This sentiment isn 'I without some merit. The simple truth is, unless we
~ · now, the Social Security system will be facing bankruptcy before the
rltiddle of the next century. The problem is driven mainly by demographics.
'(h~ number of seniors in America is expected to double between now and
2J130. By 2032 Social Security's resources will be completely exhausted and
itdncome will only be enough to cover 72 percent of promised benefits.
Obviously, at that point, none of our options will be good. •
: To avert a crisis in the program and to ensure that we meet our commitf9.ent to millions of future Social Security recipients, we need to start plannij)g now, using our hard-won economic prosperity to prevent the draconian
m6sures which would be required if we delayed action. ·
·
.• :rJtat's why I think this new proposal is helpful, and certainly worthy of
stydy and consideration. It may not be flawless, but it's a substantive starting point tor a national debate over how to refotm Social Security. The pro~~ is particularly timely because it gives the president and the Congress
a-1ear to hammer out a solid agreement before the next presidential election.
.The plan has three main elements. First, by earmarking 62 percent of our
ex~cted budget surplus of the next 15 years, it manages to shore.up Social'
Security without cutting benefits or raising the retirement age. Second, it
itla'Cases Social Security's return by following the. example of state and
local pension funds and investing a small, but meaningful, portion of its
resources in the private sector. It's important to remember that this is not privatization, but simply the Social Security system including the private seclor in its investment portfolio.
.
~· Tliird,· the proposal aims to supplement Social Security by creating new
lftiiveiSiil Savings Accounts, or U.S.A. accounts • voluntary, personal 401
K' iype funds that working people could establish and receive matching
fbni!s for, from the government.
The plan also seeks to improve Social Security as we save it. First of all,
i·~s _benefits for widowed women, generally the most vulnerable benIt was the format rather than
By JO~N CUNNIFF
elit:iariea.~Second, it completely eliminates the restrictions on what Social AP Bu1ineu Analylt
opposition to investing in the private
~.rii~ recipients can earn while receiving benefits. Right now, if a recipNEW YORK (AP)- You might . sector that caused the opposition,
ieDt.malces over a certain amount of money their benefits are reduced. This think from all the noise that fol- including that from Fede.ral Reserve
"
is;Gackwar&lt;!s and archaic, and it tends to liurt working class folks the most lowed the president's proposal to Otairman Alan Greenspan. Left and
bel!ause they usually have the greatest need to supplement their .Social Secu- . invest SoCial Security funds in the right seem to !lgree it's a fair idea.
riw 'income, I will strongly support eliminating the restrictions on what stock market that most people don't
The problems with government
~- .·
S~I;Seeurity recipients can earn.
want it.
itself making all decisions involves
• Socilil Security has been an incredibly successful program since its cre'
' 'J
•
Analyze their criticism, however, so many other issues it might be
''
atlpn by. President Roosevelt more than 60 years ago, It is the basic founda- · and you find that what generated compared to entering a thorny thick-I
ti6n of retirement security for all Americans, lifting millions of older Amer- most of the to-do following the State et and finding.a barbed wire fence in
i~ns out of poverty.
·
of the Union suggestion concerned the middle and a bull on the other
•: We must capture the opportunity to save Social Security before it's too the method by which . the funds side.
1~, and we are forced to drastically cut the program or go into more debt. would be invested.
First, the record of government as
• ,; 1
lf;we do act, our children and grandchildren will be able to l~k back years
go~
At one extreme are advocates of a · a fiduciary isn't good. Next, it has a
frlim now with gratitude, knowing that, because of our thrift anll wise invest- purely private investment program hard time separating politics and
•
ment, they will have solidly retirement security.
·for at least part of the funds, with goals. It has inherent conflicts that
:led Strickllnd rlpriMntl OhiO'I Sixth Dlltrict In thl U.S, HouM Of power and choice controlled by the would test its objectivity and maybe
A~~Mn.UV..
individuals involved. It would be a compromise decisions.
a seat on the board? How· would the return while maintaining a degree of .. ·
form of compulsory savings. .
Government is a customer of shares be voted?
indivjdual respon~ibility, and limit· , '. ·
At the other extrem~ is a continu- companies that in all probability ·
Inherent throughout is the matter ing government to governing.
ation of the eXisting method in would be among those considered of personal choice vs. government
Judging ·from the rhetoric, the '
which employee and employer. con- for investing. It is a regulator of power.
alternatives involve postponing the ·
tribute to a security system, with a companies. It is a complainant
Why, some critics have asked, retirement age, raising taxes, limit:itecently during the election there was quite a hullabaloo over road con· certain percentage of the funds then against s:ompanies. And it collects should still another agent be placed . ing benefits, or the utterly unacceptstrVction in southern Ohio. I confess I didn't quite know what to make of the invested by government in private taxes from all. ·
between the marketplace and the able alternative of letting the system
CDntroversy at the time, and I privately wondered who was right or .wrong. industry.
By themselves, such issues could investor? Middlemen such .as bro- go broke.
; After the election the matter was apparently cleared up and this newspaThe president's proposal leans create insurmountable ·problems. kers, a~visers and mutual funds . But the issue_i nyolves a lot more
ptr, The Daily Sentinel, gave the impression that Congressman Ted Strick- toward the latter form in that it, Add to them the problems and already take a bite · out of investor too. Unless corrected, the current ,
land had gone on to do essentially the same thing that his opponent, Ms. rather than the worker, would make threats that might be created by the profits.
' system pits young against old, and
fiancy Hollister, had proposed with her plan. At the time, I did wonder about the decisions. And that, more than . sheer size of government as an
The challenge is· to find some haves against have-nots. The haves;
t.at. However, I then forgot the matter entirely.
anything else, is what brought on an investor in the public marketplace, way in which workers' dollars can you might have observed, generally·
• In a recent edition of AAA's newsletter, The Motorist, AAA President instantaneous round of criticism.
or in a single company. Does it rate be invested with an assured minimal have stocks among lheir holdings. :
•
~bert L. Morton clears this matter up. Mr. Morton states that Congressman
~rickland's plan in no way resembled the plan Ms. Hollister put forth. The
&lt;fngressman's plan consulted with and had the agreement of all the intere,ted parties. Whereas Ms. Hollister's plan literally stole miles away from
tile Scioto County Commissioners without their consent o.r consultation. By Jack Anderson and Jan Mollar
The choice for his first
determined Germany would become an "agrarian
w, how would we feel here in Meigs County if our Congressman were to
bust -- Albert Schweitzer '
There's an old axiom that suggests amazing society."
al miles from us in order to make some other county happy?
Cherne's savvy caught the eye of Gen. Dou- - tells the most about what
things can be accomplished if one does not seek
Ms. Hollister's plan was divisive. The rural counties of southern Ohio credit for them. For the last half-century, the liv- glas MacArthur, who in 1946 was turning feudal was closest to Cherne's
niust stick together in our common struggle against the concentrated power ing embodiment of this principle was Leo Cherne, Japan into a fledgling democracy. The general heart. For '40 years, from ·
ol the major cities. (Along with roads this is also true on the issue of school a man with a long list of accomplishments whose summoned Cherne to develop a tax system that 1951 to 1991, he chaired
ftinding.) Now that the election is over, it is no cliche to say that Republi- name is little known to Americans.
would redistribute the wealth of Japan's rich, war- the International Rescue
cfns and Democrats from the same area with the same common probJems
making
class -- the ' zaibatsu' -- and create a large Committee (IRC), which
As Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan, D·N.Y.,
$st learn how to work together.
told us: "Leo has for more than 40 years been one middle class so democracy could thrive. The tax was founded by Albert
I But to come back to my first concern, does this newspaper .not owe the of
the best-kept secrets of American foreign poll· reform helped propel the war-ravaged nation into Einstein and others to help .
{$&gt;ngressman an apology? And if I still haven't got it right, !,welcome being cy. He has an absolutely extraordinary under- an economic superpower.
refugees escape Nazi Germany in the 1930s.
·
c4rrected by those who understand this issue far better than myself; those standing that if you want to get things done in
. We first found him to be an ally in early comCherne
plovtfted
adept
at
r\li~ing
mi)lions
of
dol~
wpo have worked long and hard on roads • which did get the Congressman Washington, you let other people take the credit. ·~ bat against the influence of Sen. Joseph Iars and drawing nfluential Amerlcit.ns into his
!IIOving.
Cherne, a friend of th is colunm who died McCarthy. While our predecessor, Drew Pearson, efforts. He he (I millions of refugees, from
•
Bob Smlddlt
Potnlfoy recently in Manhattan, was an important adviser was attacking McCarthy's witch-hunt tactics, Hungarians fleeing Soviet tanks in 1956, to Bosn,,
to nine presidents. He was a critical overseer of Cheine successfully debated the Wisconsin sena- ian Muslims in the 1990s.
•
Indeed, we partnered with him in this noble
the Central Intelligence Asency, serving from tor on .a popular radio program. Though an ardent
1973 to 1991 as a member, and later as chairman anti -communist, Cherne had no use for effort. Once, a single column we wrote on the
of
the Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board under McCarthy's demagoguery and disregard of civil IRC and the Ethiopian famine brought in moretr.
· ~ Tile Altoelllted Pr...
George
Bush.
rights.
than $150,000 froni ge'nerolis tctKierS'. •
. :~i;
i_Today is Wednesday, Jan. 27, the 27th day of 1999. There are 338 days
He
But
he
was
so
much
more.
Our
associate
Dale
fell
ill
in
the
mid-t950s,
and
his
doctor
told
"In the days il!imedia~Jy fo)lol!'Jh&amp;the pub!~;;
len,in.the year.
Van Alta, during hours of interViews with Cherne, him to "find a relaxing activity." Though he had- cation of ihc column," !RG-off!~tial · AI Kastner '
Jan. 27, 19'73;-the Vietnam peace accords were signed in Paris.
found him to be a true Jeffersonian renaissance never studied the form, he began sculpting. His told us, "IRC was flooded ·with 41111ls from people'
·
·
:On this date:
man,
who found success as a lawyer, economist, early, now-famous bust of Abraham Lincoln all over the country asking how they might help· ·
: In 1756, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart was born in Salzburg, Austria. .
businessman,
author, songwriter, sculptor and caught John F. Kennedy's eye, and has been in the - business.men, worJ(ers, professionals, studentS,'
•{n 1880, Thomas. Edison received a patent for his electric inc,andescent
humanitarian.
White House Cabinet Room or Oval Office ever homemakers, schools, and church arid communi·.
lahP
·
He first gained prominence in the early 1930s since; often used as an effective backdrop behind ty groups. Thousands of letters carried the same
. ,. . :tn-1944, the So~iet Union announced.the end of the deadly German siege
as a legal expert on taxes and the new Social successive. presidents as they addressed the messages of caring and ~=Cmpassion -- mos.t of
of•Leningrad, which had lasted for more th'iln two years.
.
. ·
them with contributions."
'
:1n 1945, Soviet troops liberated the Nazi concentration camps Auschwitz Security· laws. 1-k and a partner founded the nation.
·Research
Institute
of
America
to
advise
corporate
It
was
President
Lyndon
B.
Johnson
who
Until
his
death
on
Jan.
12
from
a
pulmonarY,
'
arijl Birkenau in Poland.
clients
on
economic
and
regulatory
developended
Cherne's
short
but
promising
career
as
a
ailment,
Cherne
remained
active
in
the
IRC's
vi!U
·In 1951, an era of atomic testing in the Nevada desert began as an Air
ments. Steady ihcome from the respected fore- sculptor. Johnson wanted Olerne to sculpt his work.
Fcirce plane dropped a one-kiloton bomb on Frenchman Flalll.
When we pressed him once on why he did so
:1n 1967, astronauts Virgil!. "Gus" Grissom, Edward H. Wh ite and Roger casting outfit allowed Olerne to donate his time head, but Cherne's attempts did not make it
" noble" enough,. in the president's OJ!inion. much, Cherne responded with an eloquence that
B.:Chaffee died in a flash fire during a test aboard thei r Apollo I spacecraft as a citizen to the government.
He helped Franklin D. Roosevelt plan the Though the piece was eventually fin'ished, serves best as his own epitaph: " If I am only for
at Cape Kennedy, Fla.
nation's
industrial mobilization for war. Harry Che rne's stressful ex perience with th e tempera· myself.'who am I? lf'l am not for others, what all'l ·
:1n 1967, more than 60 nations signed a treaty banning the orbiting of
Trum
an
assigned
him to evaluate the needs of mental and egotistical Johnson caused him to I?"
niiUiear weapons.
·
postwar
Germany,
and his work persuaded Tru- drop the hobby, which had ceased to be " relax• Copyright 1ItO, United FHiure Syndicate, Inc.
In 1977, the Vatican reaffirmed the Roman Catholic Church's ban on
man
to
cancel
the
Morgenthau Plan, which had
female priests.
·

Today In History

Dog license deadline nearl{,g

SLSD to d,istrJi$8 early Friday

.

t

Middleport Hill was reopened !hi&lt;; momill$ after beifl81emporarily ~due il
a rock slide.
·
·
·
A spokeswoman for ~ Middleport Police Deputment said that Mill 'Stnict
and 8ra(b)ry Road
'traffic brief!Y!hi&lt;; IIIOOIU18o
• but
'Uagewere closed to •'~·"'was
reopened after VI
crews deaned""""'i''
the area.

Announcements:

" disconnect." What is a ..discon-

-.... .- ·

r

Road closed

Mabel G. &lt;;ross PauJey, 90, Pomeroy, formerly of Dexter, died Tuesday,
Jan. 26, 199'! m Holzer Medical Center.
A homemaker, she was born Sept. 19, 1~ in Mannington, W.Va.,
daughter of th~ late Emerson and Arah Oda Toothman Cross. She attended
the M~nt . U~ton Baptist Church in Carpenter.
,
She ts survtv~d by a son an~ daughter-in-law, Paul J. and Mildred Pa'uley
of Long Bottom, two gtamk;htldren; two great-grandchildren; and a sister
Mary Frances McClure of St. Albans, W.Va.
'
~he was also preceded in death by her husband, Frank Pauley; a daugh• .
ter,m-law, Lots Pauley; and by several brothers and sisters.
·
. Services ~ill be I p.m. Friday in the Pomeroy Chapel of the Fisher Funeral Home, Wtlh the Rev. Joe Sayre officiating. Burial will be in the MiJ~s
Cemetery, Rutland. Friends may call at the funeral home from 2-4 and 7-9
P·I!l· Thursday.
'
·
" '

Thursday, Jan; 28

-·-

Local

Mabel~· Cross Pauley

A man without afavorite Jordari momeni
By lin Sholl..

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

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I'

�•

The ~oaily Sentinel

Sports
•

By IICOTT WOLFE
SenQ.nel Correapondent
·Southern Tornadoes trailed
by a:dozen or more points throughout
middle portions of the game,
1 then~owly· climbed back into contentioll to claim an exciti ng 71-68
overpine victory over the Federal
Hoekillg Lancers Tuesday night. The
win ~ Southern's second in a row;
som~ing that has not occurred for,
at leiiSI a couple seasons.
Sophomore post Nick Bolin had
another double-double, clearing the
board1 of 1I rebounds and hammering h9111e 26 points. Mitchell Walker
added: 12, while lerrod Mills and
Kyi~Norris had II each
·
Scott Chapman led Federal with
21 and Ed Beha had I0.
After one round the score was tied
I 6- 16, then Federal exploded for a
41-30 lead at the half, a margin that
carried over to a 55-44 lead after
three wunds.
In the finale, Southern intensified
its defense and became more selective with its shooti ng . From within
the three point circ le, Southern was
a~esome in an attack spearheaded
by Bolin.
The last round saw Southern go to
the paint three times for Bolin scores,
while 'Mitchell Walker also produced
· some fireworks . Walker went to the
paint twice for scores and notched a
three late in the game that pulled
Southern back into the game. .
Meanwhile, · Walker and Kyle
Norris, who did a great job protecting the ball went 5-5 at the line .to
keep Southern in the game and force

Beginning overtime, Norris set
the stage with a long three pointer,
then put SHS up five off a Cumings
steal 65-62. Federal came back with
a Beha field goal and three free
throws, but the game clincher came
on a gutsy three pointer by Bolin.
Norris added a much needed free
throw for a four point lead , then
Southern withstood a Chapman safety to win the game 71-68.
Southern was 27-58 overall, hitting a warm 61 percent from two
point range and a dismal 21 percent
5-22 from three point range.
Southern had onl~ 22 rebounds and
half of those went to sophomore
Nick Bolin who hauled down II.
Jerrod Mills had four. Southern had
22 fouls, two Bolin blocks, 19 steals
(Bolin 4, Cumings 3, Walker 3); and
20 turnovers, while hitting 12-19 at
·
the line.
Federal Hocking was 24-44 with
18-35 two-pointers for 51 percent
and 6-9 on three-pointers with an I ~2 1 ni ght at the line . Federal had 22
rebo.unds (Bartlett 7, Beha 5,
Sechkar 5); 15 turnovers, 12 steals
(Chapman 4); I 6 fouls, and ten
assists (Sechkar 4).
Southern won the reserve game
47-46 led by Garret Kiser with 17
points Jeremy Fisher nine, Chad
Hubbard eight and Brandon Hill six.
Jonathan Evans had five and Joey
Sands two . Federal was led by J.J . .
Guess with 13 , Shawn Simpson II,
and Ben Dunfee nine.
Southern hosts Miller Friday.
Quarter .!2l.lili
Southern .. ........... I 6- 14- I 4- I 8-9= 7 I
an overtime.
Federal Hock in g ... 16-25- 14-7-6=68
Federal had just one field goal in
Southern: Chris· Randolph 0-0the fourth quarter and one in the 112= 1, Mitche ll Walker 3- 1-313=12,
overtime .
Benji Manuel · 1-0-214=4, ' Troy

The

tDe

By 5The ~~let~d

H

cotu~

Ton 25 hOO"S ·

The Eastern Eagles continued the water, 69~57 .
their midseason winning trend by
Eastern hit 22-48 two-pointers
defeating the Nelsonville- York with 1-5 three-pointers and was 22Buckeyes 69-57 in Buchtel Tuesday 30 at the !me With 33 rebounds (Will
· 15, Smith 9). Eastern had four st~als
night.
.
The win is Eastern's third in a row (Smith 2}, I J. turnovers, II asststs
and is the seventh in the last eight (Casto 4 ), and six fouls.
· Nelsonville hit exactly the same
games.
The Eagles (6-4) were led by from two-point range on 22-48 arid
another double-double night from was 3- 18 on three-pointers with just
junior Josh Will who tossed in 19 a 418 night at the line. N-Y had 28
points and grabbed 15 rebounds. rebounds (Robey 10); four steals, 12
After other teams have begun to key turnovers, and 22 fouls.
Eastern won the reserve game 55on sophomore Joe Brown after his
· stellar performances , the other 44. Chris Lyons f!ad 22 points and
Eagles, led by Will , have filled the Chad Nelson had 18. Gary Edwards
void and picked up the offensive· added 12.
Eastern hosts Federal Hocking
slack. That teamwork has helped
Friday and hosts South Gallia
lead to Eastern's. success. ·
Joe Brown and Matt Bissell Saturday.
locked in on 14 point efforts, while
•
••• ••• •••
Jeremy Casto notched 13 and Eric Quarter il!tlb
'
..
Smith five . Joe Dillon had two and Eastern .. :.... ,........... 12- 15- 17-25:69
Steve Weeks added two. All other Nelsonville-York .... 11 •13- 14- 19=57
Eagles played, but did not score . · Eastern: Matt Bissell 3-Ddespite contributing to the win.
· 818=14 , Joe Brown 4-6110=14,
Nelsonville- York was led by Ben Jeremey Casto 6-0: 111=13, Josh Wdl
Robey
with
18
and
Matt 6-1-417=19, Joe D1llon 1-0-0=2, Enc
Katterhenrick with 15.
Smith 2-0- 1/2=5, Steve Weeks 0-0Eastern led 15- I I after one 212=2. Totals: 22-1-22/30=69
round, then upped· the ante to 27 -24
LAUNCHES SHOT- Southern's Troy Hobl!ck (15) launches this
Nelsonville-York:. Ben Robey 8at the half. The three round tide saw
short-range jumper In front of an unidentified teammate (35) and
0-212= 18 , Noah Watkins 1-0-013=2 ,
4438,
but
a
definitive
the
score
Federal Hocking's Chris Withem (42) during 'Tuesday night's
Eric Glass 0-2-0=6, David Burnett 1Hocking Division game near Stewart, where the Tornadoes won 71 - fourth quarter put a lock on the
0-010=2,
Travis Smathers 1-0-112=3,
game .
68 in overtime. (Sentinel photQ by Dave Harris)
Will, Brown , Bissell, · and Casto Kevin Lindsey 4- I -0= II, Malt
Hoback 3-0-0=6, Kyle Norris 1-2- Ed Beha 5-0-0-10, Jack Sechkar 0- took turns on the scoring Merry-go- Katterhenrick 7-0- Ill= 15. Totals:
314=11, Nick Bolin 10-1-316=26, 0-212=2, Matt Quinn 0-3-0=9, Josh . round in blasting the Buckeyes out of 22-3-418=57
Jerrod Mills 4- I -0= II. Totals: 22·5· Martin I -0- 112=3, Logan" Bartlett 02-416= I 0, Chris Withem I -0-0=2 ,
12-19=71
F,deral Hocking: Matt Green 1- Dusty Bond 4-0- 112=9. Totals: 16-70-0=2, Scott Chap111an 4-2-719=21, 15/21=68

.
·
42

said. "I'm fitting in comfortably. I
feel we did·a pretty. good job."
The Rockets gave away all I 6,285
seats to the game. Not every seat was
filled, but fans clearly were glad to
have pro basketball back.
. "It w~s such a long layoff, "
P1ppen satd. "It was hard to know
what to expect, but I am really glad
the fans supported us."
In Toronto, several people were
hurt as thousands of fans ~ laking
advantage of free admission - tried
to enter through a smgl e gate at
Sk:,:Dome for the Raptors ' game
agamst Boston.
The surge of fans created a r:nini stampede that produced four smashed
doors a~dso~e broken turnstiles . No
sen.~us IOJ~nes w~re report~d.
I waS JUSt trymg to g.et tn and my
head w~s pushed up a~.atnst the d~or
and It JUSt shattered, ~.a1d Dame!
Segon, 1.6, of Toronto. It was too
rough for me."
Fans

noon because of the free-ticket offer
part of the NBA's plan to win back
fans following the lockout.
·
But the organized lineup became
outofc.o ntrolwhenthousandsoffans
arrived later in the day.
"We were really caught off
guard," sa id . Jim Roe, director of
event operatwns for Maple Leai
Sports and Entertainment. "We were
a little overwhelmed by the number
of people taking us up on our offer of
free tickets."
Ron Mercer scored 25 points,
including Boston's first I), as the
Celtics beat the Raptors 106-88.
As the regular season drew closer,
t--:o ~ore top players were rewarded
w1th nch contracts..
.
Allen Iverson s1gned a Slx-ye.ar,
$70.9 m1lhon contract extens1on wtth
the Ph1ladelphta 76ers whtle Shareef
Abdur: Rahtm and th e. Vancouver
Gnzzhes agreed to a SIX-year, $71
million extension..
The NBA 1s

year-old Iverson to be one of its best
young stars in the post-Michael
Jordan era
"1 want to win the most championships," Iverson said. "And 1 want
to be ~he best player.''
Agent David Falk said Iverson
wanted to stay in Philadelphia all
along, but he got a final push from his
mother and former Georgetown
coach John Thompson to stay with
the Sixers .
"They took their best player and
they didn ' t get into the game of a
negotiation," Falk said. "Allen reciprocated and said, 'Thanks . 1 want to
be here, and enough's enough. "'
Iverson's chance to strike it superrich with a $100 million contracthke those signed by Kevin Garnett
and Shawn Kemp_ was wiped out
by the lockout
·
. Abdur-Rah1m has one year left on
hts three-year deal and would have
had the opportunity to become a free
at the end of this season.

·

•

Bas ketball
•'

NCAA Division I
men's scores
East
Army ·77, New Paltz 60
Fairfield 7.1 , Manhnuom 70
Fonthan'16fi. MllJSaehusttls 60
Pfl?vldeilce 85, Villilnova 72

Soulll' '
Belmom 84, AUstin Peay 82
Kentucky 91 , GeOrsia 8~-0T

Midwest

Minncsota90. Indiana 8~-0T

Allentown 12, FDU· Modison 66
Babson 68, Brandeis 17
Bridxewater, M.nss . 67. Worcester St. 58
Buffalo St. 83: brockport 74-0T
Clarkaon 62. Keuka 61 ·
• ·.:
~
Colby 71, New Enfland ~
Conland St 66, Uuca Tech 37
Elizabelhlown 76, Messiah 70
Framingham St. 66, Fitchbuf8 St 51
Franklin&amp;: Mwhall 83, Notre Dame, Md. ~3
Geneseo St.' 88,-Frtdonia St. .Sl
Hortwkk 69, Unloti, N.Y. 4S .
Haverford 64, Bryn Mawr 27
Holy Cross 82, t..IUgh 62
Kings, Pi. 74, Drew 50
Lebanon Valley 69, Juniala 53
Lehman ~. Jobr~ Jay 32
Middlebury 66, Colby-Sawyer .SO
Mount Sl. Mary, N.Y. 58, Skidmore 50
Muhlenberg $4, Swlll'tbmorc 34
NYU 62, Vauar 46
New Rochelle 5S, Old Westbury 40
Notre Dame 94. Syracu.e 61
·Oswego St 70, Potldlm JO.
RPI67. Utica 38
.
"'
Rhode bland Coli. 76; Man.-Danmoulh 63
S. Maine 76, Mus.·Boston 25
Salem St. 78, Massachusctll Coli. 49
Sprinafield 8o4, Worcester Tech 72
St. John fiaht:r 63, Ithaca 56
St Lawrence 89, Hamilton 42
St. Peter's .56, Matist45 ·
./
St. Thomu Aquinas 74, ~Tk~)!6n ~- ,#
Trinity, Conn . 63. Westfield §t~ 4?
·
Tufu 70, Clark U. 68
•
Unity 70. Maine.A. ugusta SJ
W. Connecticut 6.5, E. Connecticut 62
W. Maryland 63, Johns Hopkins 50
W. New England ~5. s. VerTnont 52
Wuhington, Md. 66, Ursinus 60-0T
Widener 66. Albright 57
York, Pa. 8:5, Goucher 46

1

. The Daily Sentinel

'

'

East·

PICTURE YOUR PET
AMONG THE ••• PET VALENTINES!

tion .· Jones rimmed out a six-footer
from the right side at the buzzer.
It was the eighth victory ;n nine
games for Kentucky (18-4, 7-1 ). The
Wildcats have beaten Georgia I I
By ED SHEARER
consecutiv~ times and lead the series
· AtHENS,Ga. (AP)-ltwon'tbe
quit$, as emotional for Tubby Smith 94-17.
The B !dogs (12-8, 3-5) had an
the ~ext time he brings his Kentucky
(Se . TOP 25 on Page 5)
Wildcats to Georgia.
· The next time he won't have to
wat&lt;!h two of hi s sons playing against
OBSTRUCTION OF .OFFENSE
·
each other.
- Georgia's G.G. Smith (right)
The coach and son Saul got the finds Kentucky's Scott Padgett
better of Bulldog senior ·G.G. Smiih In his way while trying to score
again Tuesday night, thanks to the during Tuesday night's SEC
clut~h play in overtime by Scott game In Athens, Ga., where the
Pad&amp;ett that carried the sixth-ranked visiting Wildcats won 91-83 in
Wildcats to a 9 1-83 victory.
overtime. (AP)
':It's tough, " Tubby Smith said of
his second trip to Athens since leaving Georgia to take the Kentucky job
last season . "It's very emetional and
draining . We always scell) to be not
as ~gressive in the beginning here,
and •that's partly because of their
pia; On the rood j n this league is
tough . We're fortunate to have
COJO~g h depth to pull out wins on the
road. "
I~ the only other game involving
ranked teams Tuesday, it was No. 19
MirV!esota 90, No. 20 Indiana 83 in
ovcttimc.
'Fubby Smith is nQw 3-0 against
the ; Bulldogs si nce mo ving to
Kerrtucky for a national c hampionsbip seaso n last y.ear.
l'his o ne wasn 't easy.
With sophomore Jumaine Jones
scog ng a career-high 34 poi nts and
fres~man D.A. Layne adding 21,
Georgia stayed right with the
Remember that special someone this
Wilacats until falling behind for
goo(! 16 seconds into overtime when
Valentine's Day :mth a message in
Heshimu Evans hit his first of two
thr~- point plays in tiJe extra session.
~dgett, who fini shed with 23
• Sweethearts • Moms &amp; Dads • Grandparents •
poiMs, hit two three-pointers, added·
a tip-in and two free throws in overTeachers • Babysitters • Friends
lim(. ·
Anyone who ...:ould appreciate a thoughtful word from you I
!ladgelt was more pleased with
All Valentine Hearto will be publiohed in the February 12th ·
hi s 'defensive work on Jones, the
Southeastern Conference's leading
iooue at a cool of only $6.001
scorer at 19.5 per game. .
MUST BE PREPAID!
":He only had nine of his points
on me ," said Padgett, who sat out 14
mi"'Hcs of the first half wiih two
Print your message In
foul!; and watched Jones score 22
the heart and mall along
poiqts by intermission. " I knew the
with $6.00 to:
poi~ts he had on me more ~ than I
kn~ how many points I had. "
Kentucky won its fourth straight
The Dally Sentinel
garde.
"Valentine Hearts"
t Their effort against us was as
111 Court Street
goctd as anybody we lost to in the
fouf games \\e lost," coach Smith
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
sai~. "Toni ght's game was
great
co l!eg~ basketball game . Georgia
Must be received by Feb. S
showed a lot of heart."
And his wife, Donna, showed a
lot ;:or spi rit. She s~t behind the
K e~ tucky bench. holdmg shakers for
hot~ the Wildcats and Bulldogs.
Wayne Turner's free throw with
remain ing
lifted
36 ~ seconds
Ke ~tu cky into a 72-72 tie in regu la-

.

NCAA Division I ·
women'~ scores

Top 25 men 's
college basketball

"

South

OUR SPECIAL PAGE(S)
"FOR PETS ONLY" ·
WILL BE PUBLISHED THURSDAY,
FEBRUARY 11TH IN
.

.

Also a special section for In Memory Valentine Pets.
"

THE DAILY SENTINEL

Bowie St. 80, Elizabeth Cit)' St. 47
Canon-Newman 91· Tusculum 55
Chatlanooga 74, Wofford 66
Clark Atlanta 87. AlbBily St., Ga. 76
E. Tennessee St. 79, Furmtu1 67
En kine 67, limeuo n~ .5.~
Fayellevillc St. 16. Win.ston-Salem 66
Gallaudet 88, Salisbury·St. 84
George Mason 75. Va. Commonwealth 68
Georgetown 69. Miami 51
Georae town. Ky. 75, Pike"ille 55
Guilford 72. Lynchburg 69
lindsey Wilson 95, Wilberforce b7
Lipscomb 101 .. Bethel, Tenn. 5.\
Mou nt Olive 79. Quceris, N.C. 78
N.C. Central74. Johnson C. Smith 50
Newberry 96, Nonh Creenville 94.2QT
Novn Southeustern 58, P11lm Be,.ch Atlnntic 49
Old Dominion 75. William &amp; Mary 4]
Rhodes 66. Ftsk 50 '
Snvarumh St. 58, Miles 46
Tuakegec -74. LeMoyne-Owen 5.5
UNC·Gtttnsboro 54 . Coil. of ChMieston .50
Virginia Union 74, Shaw 64
Washington &amp; Lee 71, Va. Wesleyan 70

Midwest

Hurry! Deadline
.
.
Thursday, February 4th at 3p.m.
r----------~---------------,

I

VALENTINE PETS

•Pet's Name
I
•Owner's Name
!Address

ICity
IAmount Enclosed:

I

I
I

I

Amtrican Mideast Conference

L--~-----~-----------------~

The Daily Sentinel
"

111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Ohio men's college scores
Cedarville 83, MI. Vernon Nazarene 81-0T
RIO'GRA.NOE 82, Ohio Domi11i crm 51
Urbana 69, Shawnee Sr. 66

1

Deadline Thursday, February 4th at 3 p.m.
Mall or bring the entry form:

'

Non ..confefence

Tiffin 81. Wil~erforce 19

·'

·

Ohio H.S. boys' scores
Akron.Buchtel74 , Akron Keni)\Ort ~ -~
Akron Cent.-Howcr 72. Firestone 68
Akron Ellet ~0, Akron E. 4g
Akron Elms .\~ . Riumon 31,
Akro11 N. 58. Akro11 Garfield 46
Albany Alci&lt;tmdcr 59. Vinton Co . .~J
Allinnce 56, Mauillon Perry ~ I
Archbold 69. Hilltop H
Ar lingtoll 60. Hardin Nonbem 40
Athens 41 . Cheshire ~iver Val. 40
Austintown-Fitch 1:\. Wanen Kennedy 50

I ·•

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~I

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Niles 66. Poland 60
North Ridgevi lle Lnke Ridge 79, Medina First
Ootk Glen, W.Va. BO. Ri chnmml Edison 7:'1i
Obt-rlin 5.'i. Wcllin,l!ton 54
Ohio Vol. Otr. 5.' . Symmes Vat. 51
Onmge Chr. 67. J...todgemonl40
Otsc1:o ()!!, Northwood 4J
'Ott o\'ille 51. ConvOy Crestview 66
Paine~vi ll e Ri\'Ctside 7.' . Jefferson Area 6.\ •
Pnndora-Gi lboa 5R. Dlufhon ~ l
Parma Hts. Valley Forge 71. Normnndy 48
Peebles 84. N. Adams 60
Pembervi ll e Emtwood 6::1. K;msas Lakom 47
Philo 66. Crooksille 48
Proctol\·ille Fairl:md 7J. S. Galli a -1;1
Ruvenna Southeast 76. Wuterl oo 70
Reed sville Eastern 69. Nel~onville- York ~7
Ridgeway Ridgemont 75, Riverside: 72
Rock Hill 74, Trimble 68
Rut·kford Purkway 60, Beme (Ind.) S. Adams 44
Rootstown 71. Streetsboro 55
Ru ss ia 75. Anna 59
Sandusky Perkins 87. Pon Clint on 49 ·
Sebring McKinley 82. Colu mb iana 4.\
Solon 76. Mentor 69
Spring. North 78, kettering Fairmont 74-20T
Spring. South 56. Xenia 46
Springboro 65. Talawanda 4J
Springfield Grecnon 54. Tecumseh 51
Strasburg 9.1, TuscaraWas C,th. 81·JOT
Strongsville 95. N. Royalton 79
Struthi!rs 54, Girad 47
Summit Station Ucking Hts. 70, libeny Un io n

)4

Uberty Chr. 1 I . Moum Vern on Chr. J -'
Lima Cath . 67 . lima Bath 57
Li sbon 41 , Racine Sou them JB
U sbo n Bea ver H , Buckeye Local 52
Logan 7J, ladson J4
Lornin Cleorvi ew 71. Firelands 59
Louisvi lle 52. Canton ·nmken 4 I
Loui5v ill e Aquir~as 72. Kent Roosevelt 64
Lowdlville 72. Mineral Ridge 67
Madison 17. Geneva -t5
Malvern 74, Lakeland 55
· · Mantua Crestwood 6'8, Mogudore 62
Marion River Val. 69. Carey 60
Martins Ferry 91. Steubenville Cath . 50
Mason 6.\, On. Harrison 5J
McConnelsville Morgan 65, New Lc!xington 58 ,
McDermou Nonhwest 92, S. Point 80.20T
McDonald 61 , Jackson-Milton 47
McGuffey Upper Scioto Val. 73, Urbana 64
Medina 85. Midpark 32
Medina Hi ghland 79, Medina Buckeye 54
Mentor Lake Cath. ~6. Parma Holy Name 49
Middletown Fenwick 71. J,.emon Monroe 46
Middletown Fenwid. 71 , lemon-Monroe 46
Middletown Madison 6 1, Tri-County N. 49
Milfprd Center Fairbanks 49, Triad 48
MilfOrd Chr. Acad. 66, St. Rita 49
M_ogadore Field 82, Woodri.dge 45
Morrow Little Miami 47, Goshen 45
, MI. Blanchard Riverdale 53 ,- Wynford 47
Mt. Orab Western Brown 63. Geor~:etown 57
New Philadelphia 63, Coshocton 46
Newark Licking Val: 61 , Jonathan Alder 55
Newcomerstown 63. Gltraway 61

W. lafayette' Ridgewood 8 1, Jewett-Scio 34
W. Liberty Salem 67, Mechanicsburg .51
W. Salem Nonhwcstcrn 64, Ch ip~w11 55
Wap akoneta 55, Mario n Harding 5J
Warsaw River View 7J, Maysvill e 50
Wash C. H. Miami Tmc:e 65. Day S1ebbi11s 64-

Oapl. 48

lS

Sylvania Nonhview ~ 3. Amhony Wayne 4.5
Sylvania Southview 63, Maumee .59·
Ttffi n Calvat H3. Danbury Lakrsidr: 67
,lipp City Tippecanoe 64, Oakwood 53
Tol. Cotholi c 65,Adrian, Mich. 51
Trotwood Madison 70, Piqua 64
Troy Chr. 67, Sidney Chr. 28
Upper Arlington 66, Gahanna 47
Upper Sandusky 66, Marion River Val. 54
V!m Buren (J7, Mohuwk 59-0T
Vandalia Butler 71. W. Carrollton S I
Vi ctory Chr. 59, You. Christian 49
Vincent W;~.rren 60, Point (W.Va.) Pleasant 55
W. Hoimes 60, Black River 50

0T

. .

Waterford 64 . Heml ock Mt ll er -17
Welb101t 88, Oak Hill74
Wcstcn·illc S. 47 . Thomas Wonhmg1m1 ~~
Wheelt!rsburg 66. Ironton 58
Will i; umbar~ 62. Clermont NE 57
Will 1 um ~ port Westfnll74, Umoto 59
Wiii!Jughby S. 70, Ashtabu la Edgewood -'8
Wilmingt on 57. Climon-Massie 43
Windham 12, Garreusv'ille Garfield ;;
Yoo . Chancy 64, You . Wilson 51
You . Ursuline 60, Wuren Harding 55 •
Zanesville Rosecra ns 81, Buckeye Trail 38
Zanesville W. Muskingum 75. John Glenn 60
Zoorv1 lle Tuscarawas Val. 59. Conotton V11l. 39

Hockey

Tamp~ Bay ......... .. ....... 1I .11 4

26

·-*-

95 158

•'

.. ;. I '

WESTERN CONFERENCE

· :: ·

Central Divlsiun

. ~ I

Iwn

:1!:

~

Detrott ..
. .. .. 24 20
St. Louis ..
....... . 17 17 9
Nash\'ille ........
.. .. 16 26 4
Chi cago .. , .. .. ....... ........ . 1J 25 7

43 114 108 ,., . (' ·~
.\6 I 05 147
. 1•
J;t 97 J.l8 '· 'I•.

• •. 1

•.. '1._

Pacific Divisiun
Dal las. ......................... .. .27 9 7
Phoenbt ..................... .. 24 II 8
Annheim ... .. .. ............ . 1719 9
SnnJose ....... ................ 15 19 12
Los Angeles.. .... ............. 16 25 4

-~

'

Atlantic Di"ision

:1!: L I fl.!. ld liA
5Y IJ8

II
5
7
7
3

90
51 1 )~ 117
47 125 . 118
4.1 121 125
JJ 110 07

Northeast Did~ion
Toronto ............ .:......... ..... 27 \6 3
Onawa .............................25 15 6
Buffalo .................. ........... 23 13 8
Boston ..
.. .. .... 2017 7
Momrc:al ... ...
.. .. 18 21 8

.

'• •' 'I'~

:· t.. ' '2'

•

'·

' I .._:1 1,
• 'I 1 , )

.... ; · t,

Montreal at Aorida. 7:~0 p.m.
Los Angeles ar Dallas, 8:30p.m.
Olicago at Edmo11ton. 9 p.m.
Colorado at Anaheim , 10:30 p.m

'

Thursday's games

..., . .'

..•• !-!

New Jersey at Boston,, 7 p.m.
Nll.!lhvillc at Buffalo. 1 p.m.
N.Y. Rangers n1 Carolina. 7 p.m.
Phoenix. at Philadelphia, 7:30 p.m.
Toromo nl Pittsburgh, 7:30p.m
Chicago at Calgary, 9 p.m.
Anaheim at Colorado, 9 p.m.
St. Louis at Vancouver, 10 p.m.

Southea5t Dl\olslon
Caro lina ........................ 21 18 7 49 121 I 15
Aoridn ... ...... ............. .... .l71612 46113118
. Washington....
.... 16 24 4 36 101 117

r • , f' ~.

- ,., 1,

Tonight's games

.57 152 133
:56 1.\4 105
54 120 87
47117 101
441081 21

..-!

61 121 89
56 I 14 Bf 1
43 ! IJ 108. •\ )1 :;
42 104 109 ' ,, • •
J6 106 12 I • . ' I I

Phoenix 1. Buffalo 1-tie
N.Y. Rangers 4, Washi11gton I
· Montreal 2, Tampa Bay I
New Jel$ey 4, Ottawa I
N.Y. Islanders 4, Boston l
Florida 3, Philadelphia 3-tie
Caroh na. 5. Pittsburgh ~
Detroit 4, Nashville I
Sr. Louis 3. San Jose 0

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Philadelphia ...................... :!4 10
NewJersey .... .............. ..... 2614
Pinsburgh ..
. .20 15
N.Y. Rangers ............... ..... 18 21
N.Y. Islandtrs.. ................ l529

!

North\t'est Division
.
~ 1, ..., ·
1
Colorado .. .... .. ................ 22 19 4 48 114 'Jl.l
'
Edmom on ............ ........... IR 19 1 4 ~ 126 116 ·· 11 1'
Vancouver ........................ J524 6 .16 l iS IJ5. :. _, ~!·
Calg:u) .............. ............... l5 27 4 J4 112 1.\9

NHL standhigs
1wll

~I

I fl.!. ld GA. ~ ' f\
J S I I , 9 12.\ . .. \

Tuesday's scores

~

:~.....,

------~------_,-.., , .....

BONUS!.

.

'Dalton 47 , Smithville 42
Day. Carroll 7\ Miamisburg 6J
Day. Jefferson 55. Middletown Chr. 40
Day. Northridge 57, Bradford 55
Day. Stivers 60, Xenia Chr. 57
lkliance linora 61 . libeny Cemer .S.~
Dresden Tri.Vnllc:y 67. Sheridan 54
Dublin Scioto 68 . Marysville 29
E. Cleveland Shaw 62, Lakewood 'i4
E. Li\·crpool 84. lndim1 'creek 28 ·
Elyria First Bnpt. 5.~. N. Coast Chr. 4J
Fnueii.·Pa . 67, Mohawk 42
Feli city 61 New Richmond 47
Findlay Li~rty Be nton 52. Kalida 47
Fon Lo~amie ~-' .-Botkiris 47
Fmtoriu Sr. Wendelin 57, Hopewell-loudon 'i~-

20T

I

S1.M Sl

l6

'

' · '".,..

"'' J

,,
•

,' ', !
~ )' ' I

'•I I

.,..,

..

' I~' j

and the

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Indian Lnkc 74. Waynesfield-Goshen 47
Ironton St. Joseph 67, Portsmuuth Notre Dame

MASON,
W.VA.

It, ,,

'

off-peak minutes
until the

Franklin 7J. EdgCwood 50
Ga llipo lis 55. Marietta 50
Gulloway We stland .59, Mount Vernon 42
Garfield Hts. Trinity 54, Cle. Cath olic 50
Genoa I} I, Gibsonburg 79
Grafton Midview 50, Keystone 47
Grandview Hts . .56, Washingwn C.H. B
Grov!!port 79, Whirehall70
Hamilt on 73. Ci n. Winton Woods 57
Hamler Henry 64. Fair.-ie'w .58-0T
Hannibal River 66, Shadyside 57
Haviland Wayne Trace 154, Kalida 6~-0T
Henth 64. New Albany 60
Hi cksvi lle 71. Antwerp 64·20T
Hillsboro 75, Bethel· Tate 48
Holland Spring. SO, rossford 40
Ht;JUSion o47, Minuer 44
Hubbru-d 66, Salem .56
·
Hudson Western Rcsel'\'e Acad , 60 Akron St V.

'

Far West
Azusa Pacifi c 88, Biola 85-0T
Cal Lutherm91 , Occidental 44
LaVerne 58. Wlriuiel'~7
Mastet's 75, Otapmon 40
Point Lorna 72. Cal Bapli
UC Santa Cruz 56, N
mne, Calir. .54

Jefferson SS, Middletown Ch'r. 40
Johnstown 55. Dn11ville 54
Kenston 61$. Brush 63
Kenton 67, Riverdale 54
Kirtg~ Mills 51, Cin . Glen Este 29
Kinsman Bad.@\f 59, Brookfield 50
l.nkota W. 64. Midd lctown63
Luncasrer F:1irfield Union 69, Lo&amp;tm Elm 66
L·mcasrer Fidler 48. Gran\'ille 47
Lebanon 70. Hamilton R o~~ 46
Leesburg Fairfi eld 69. Ly nchburg Clay 5-I
~ Ionia 69. United 52
Leipsic 44. Arcadia .10
lenawee {Mich.) Chr. 77. To l. Emmanuel Dapr.

ere.

,

Hard in-Simmons 82, SW Auemblic5 of God 35

For--'plctures- l

lat $6 each.

Oin. Mt H"ealdly 66, Cin. Taft62
Cia. Oak Hills :\4, Cin. St. Xavier 30
Cin. Scvcn Hills 80, Nt;w Miami 40
Cln. Summmit Country Day 50. Cin: Landmark
pv. 4S . . ,
Circleville 4S, Amlnda-Ciearcreek 33
Clc.·Beftedictirle 8 I, Bedford 64
.
Clc. EaSt 86, Cle. Liricoln-WCst 5.5
Cle. East Tech 45, Cle. Collinwood 43 ·
Clc. G1c~villc 64, Cle J.F Rhodes 45
Cle. HcntDge 68, Mentor Cll r SS
Cle. Jane A.ddoms 64, He11lth Careen 31
Cle. John Hay 6.5, Oe. South 63
. Cle. John Manhall71, Cle. ~nnedy 5.5
IX' .........
Uit\Ye_rsitY stbool 5.5,-cillmour Acad. 44
Col. Beecllcrofl 57, Col. Mifflin 52
Col. BrookJ;iaven 72, Col . Unden·McKinley 62
Col. Franklin Hts . 69, Col . St. Charles60
Col. lmkpendence 68, Col. Briggs 62
Col. Marion-Franklin 6:5. Col. Eastmoor 62,
Col. Northland 82, Col. Ea$t 69
Col. Ready 6.'l~ Col. Hartley 62
Col. Walnut Ridge 74, Col. South 64
(:ol. Whc!1stone 6~. Col. Centennial6 2
Columbia64, Elyria O~n Door 55
Columbiana Crestview 50, E. Pulestine 47
Copley 67, Cloverleaf 41
Cortland la ke;v iew ~0, LaB rae 4.S
CuyahogaWtl. Chr Acod. 53. Akron Manchester

Southwest

1
I
1

Avon 56. Brookside 51
Baden City, W.Va. 74, Frontier 7]
Barnesvill e 72, Bellaire St Johns 63 -0T
Beachwood 79, Bet Sefer Miuachi 40
Beavercreek 61. Wayne 48
Bellaire ~0 , Sl. Clairsvi lle 48
Bellefontaine 85. Kenton Ridge 78
Bdmont Union 78, Cadiz 54
. Beloit W. Branch 63. Carrollton 59
Berlin Center Western Reser\'e 55. Mathews J.l
Berlin Hiland 92, Toronto 69
Berne Union 71. Millersport 54
Bexley 88. London ~9
Bishop Donahue, W.Va. 76, Bridgeport ~1
Bloomdale Elmwood 67, Woodmore 62
Bowling Grttn BS. Perrysburg 68
Brecksville 65. Berea 3 I
Brooklyn 91, Lorain Cath. 67
Brunswick 77, N. Ridgeville .53
Byesville MeOOowbl-ook -57. Shen:mdoah 4J
Calvary Chr. 71, Cin. Christian 48
Cambridge 48, Steubenville 46
Cllfl1lbell Memoria16J , Kennr:dy Chr. 61
Canal Fulton NW 51, Minerva 53
Canal Wiachesier 67, Hamilton Twp. 60
~anfield 72, Howland 38
.
Canton McKinley 66, Canton GlenOok 53
CantonS. 57. Akron Coventry 32
Carey 54, Ada 50
· CnrroiiBioo m-Cnrroll 53, Teays Val. 40
Oustown Miami E. 77, Arcanum 46
Celina 6~. Ouo.wa-Glondorf S1
CemerbUrg 82, E. Knox ~0
Centerville 77, Fairborn .56
Chanel71, Elyria Cnth. SS
Chardon 64. Ashtabula Harbor 62
Chnrdon ND-CL 59, Padua 56
Cin. Anderson 47, Cin. Turpin 46
Cin. Colerain 74, Cin. Sycamore 46
Cin. Elder 55. Kettering Alter 52
Cin. Hills Cbr. Acod. 6j, Cin. Lockland«
Cin. Hughes 66, Cin. Nonhwest62-20T
, . .C!n. La Sail~ ~8. Cirt_Roger Bacon ~7
C1n. McNlch'ola! 5-2, Day. Oaminade. Julienne

12

Bnldwin· Walloce 84, Ohto Northern 54
Benedictine, Ill. 71, COncordia, Ill . 41
Blockbum 60, Elmhurst 58
Buena Vista 76, William Penn .57
Copital78, Muskingum .52 1
Cedarville 81, Mount Vernon Nazarene 79
Central 70 ~ Upper Iowa 55
Centrnl St.. Ohid77, Trnnsylvania 67
Clarke 86, Rockford 67
Corne ll, Iowa 84, Loras 82
Defiance 57 , Calvin .5.5 •
Edgewood 62, Cqncordia. Wis. 54
Eureka 62, Aurora 52
Heidelberg 76, Otterbein 64
Hiram 88, John Carroll 68
~
.,
Kalamazoo 64. Albion 55
Lake Forest 78, St. Norbert 52
Malone 50. Walsh 47
Millikir~ 7 1, Nonh Park42
Milwaukee Engineering 61, Marian , Wi1 46
Mount Union 65. Maric:lla 54
Ohio Dominicllfl73 , RIO GRANDE 67
Ohio Wesleyan 83, Thomas More 62
Purdue 64, Ohio St 56
Shawnee St. 80. Urbana 64
Simpson, Iowa 94, Luther 72
W. Michigllfl 67, Ball S1. 63
Wartburg 68, Coe ~7
Wilmington. Ohio 77. Hanover 70

PER PICTURE
PRE·PAID

a

'

.

. I"
~ .' • • (Conttnued from Page 4)
No. 20Jndiana 83-0T
e1ght-game home wmntng streak
snapped.
Quincy Lewis had eight of his 36
"If we played as hard as this points in overtime as the Golden
every other game, this would have Gophers ( 13-4, 4-3 Big Ten)
been our first loss," Jones said. " We rebounded from a 29-poinl loss to
did everything we could to win Ohio State last Saturd'ay. ·
tonight."
Lewis hit two free throws with
His coach agreed.
1:35 . remaining to put Minnesota
" We really gave a great effort," ahead for good at 84-83 . A(ter Joel
Georgia coach Ron Jirsa said. "I Przybilla tipped in a miss by Lewis
think if we pull together the rest .of with 55 seconds remaining, Lewis
the way, we :can still make this · a made four free throws over the final
30 seconds.
good season."
A.J . Guyton led the visiting
Michael Bradley added 18 points
for the Wildcats, whit~ Evans had· 16 Hoosiers (16- 7 , 3-5 ) with 27 points,
while freshman Kirk Haston had a
and Turner 12.
No. 19 Minnesota 90
career-best 24.

·.

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~re"

Cfn s

s

UK, Minnesota
~efeat Georgia,
Indiana in OT

•

&gt;·

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

· . seasons with the Chicago Bulls, had
ebut with the I~ po.ints an.d II rebounds Tuesday
oustonf hoc NBisAw~s a success. The mght m helpmg the Houston Rockets
m Thronto was a to a 106
· wtn
· over
· an
return
h o t e
. · 104 ex h'b'
I 11ton·
ruspj
wh
d h' fi
An!?mo.
.
, .
peen.
o P1aye IS 1rst II
I don 't feel wetrd at all, P1ppen

Eagles post 69-57
victory over N-Y

•

January 27, 1999

Pippen pushes Rockets ·to exhibition win over Spurs

January

Sputhern tops
11ederal Hocking
11-68
in overtime
..
•

Wed~ay,

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'•

Somi!ll!'i~ ll~ .

2000 dJ·peak mirutn .m rtmrbrted ~ &lt;M! a

l ~-1!101"1th

sp;tn,

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CELLU-LAR
wireless

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-,:,; ;,. - -By The Bend
:-..

The Daily

...

Sentine~P•aea

Wedneaday, January 27, 1919

~--~~~~~~~~--~------~--~--~-=~~~~~-a--~--~~~ ·

~hildren
in an abusive
.
"

remain in. My stepfather couldn't
deal with his own problems, so he
found an outlet directing his anger at
the people around him . I was his
IW7. Los AnJck:l Times
prime target.
Synd lnle 1nd Creators
· · My mother left that abusive man
Syndiull;'.
after I broke down ·in tears and
begged her to remove me from what
Dar Ann Landers: This •s m I called "a living hell." When she
rei4Jonse to "Sleepless in Little realized that the pain I was experi·
Rixer S.C." She said her new hus· encing was far worse than her fear of
bind gets angry over nothing and starting over, she finally had the
yells at her for hours on end. She is courage to leave him. I am 37 now,
reluctant to leave Jhis man beoause and even with years oftherapy, I still
sile~doesn't want to disrupt the life bristle at the mention of my ex-step·
of her 15-year o ld son again .
father's name.
• As someone who suffered the
"Sleepless" would be doing her
constant belittling of my stepfather son· a big favor if she go) out of that
ftj,m the age of 6 until I was 12, I · hellish situation, and the sooner the
c10 assure that woman herson's life better.• - s:riLL HUR(I'ING IN
is&lt; already being disrupted by the MASSACHUSETI'S .
e4vironment she ha ~ chose n to
DEAR MASS.: You have written

Ann

Landers

•

MILWAUKEE (AP) - Spike Lee
urged students to do as he says - and
~not necessarily as he did as an undergraduate at Morehouse College in
Atlanta.
In a speech titled "Minorities in
~-·
Films, " the film director told students
at Milwaukee Area Technical College
they should get serious about thCir
• •
studies.
'r
"At Morehouse, I took all my elec- ,
lives during the first two years, until
Lee
they said to me, 'You've got to come up
with a major,"' Lee said Monday. He
chose mass communications.
Lee hit it big as a filmmaker but said making money isn 't '
everything;
· "I go to bed every night singing praises for being able to do
what I wanted to do in life," Lee said. "And getting a lot of
money for it is only part of the joy."
':. ...
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Sarah Ferguson sees the silver
lining in the d~~t" she confronted her
'
own
weight problem: It pointed out the
'.
, .'
need for her to speak out about .
'..,.
women's health.
' ·
,1._:,.. . .
"It's a subject that's often pushei:l to
I;&gt;
one side, especially for women," the
. ,...Mo .
,duchess of York told about 350 people
at a fund-raising luncheon Tuesday.
.,
She said many women, especially in
~
underdeveloped countries, are so busy
working
and raisi ng families that they
.
neglect
their
health.·
~
~
Ferguson
Ferguson's visit helped raise money
:••_
for the Ohio State University Medical
Center's Spirit of Wo men 'Park, which iS to open next year. She
• spent the day talking with nursing . and health-science students
; - and touring the hospital.
;
The duchess also painted a cer~mic tile that will be part of a
' fountain at the hospital. The mother of two girls then gave
reporters a peek at what she painted: , " Yesterday is ~istory,
tomorrow is a mystery, but today is a gift. To my lillie darlings ."

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home situation need an end to ·the .living .hell ...

a _letter that could make a big differ- either.
casual rather than permanent posience in the lives of ma 0y young peoMost nurses ~gin their careers lions and unsafe nurse-to-patient
pie who are living in a war zone. passionate about nursing. They are ratios. Is it any wonder dissatisfacThank you on behalf of all of them. thrilled with the opportuniiy to make · tion and frustration are so wideP.S. To all women who .are slaying a significant difference in' people's spread?
with an abusive man "for the sake of · lives. Nurses care· for patients when
The future looks grim. We are
the children," read this a second they are most 'vul!lerable. They deal facing a severe shortage of nurses
time.
.,
with major life events • birth and that threatens to undermipe the
Dear Ann Landers: I am writing death. They are the.backbone of the health care system. We need to
in response to your column from healih care system, outnumbering change working conditions to retain
nurses who pre fed up. It is sad, but physicians four to one.
those nurses who are currenily in the
not surprising, that nurses are so
The nurse is there to calm the system and attract the brightest and
unhappy and dissatisfied. For fears of a middle aged man the night best. And we had beuer hurry before
decades, nursing has been devalued before his bypass surgery; to prevent it's too late.- L.G.N. , PH.D., MON- .
because. of outdated attitudes and bedsores in a tenninally ill patient; · TREAL, QUEBEC
prevailing myths. Although nurses to help a young man with AIDS deal ·
DEAR MONTREAL: Your sigcare for the most vulnerable and the , with the rejection of. his tamily; to nature surprised me. I didn't realize
sickest members of our society, they teach a mother confined to a wheel- the nursing · crisi ~ was as bad in
must continuously tight for the basic chair lfow to care for her children. Canada as it is in the United States.
tools to do their job - authority, Yet nurses are expected to accept I've had a ton of letters with a litany
recognition and respect The tinan· working conditions that are often of complaints. The profession is
cial rewards aren't all that great, intolerable • long working hours, clearly in a state of Jeopardy. And

now, I would like some suggestions
on how to fix it.
Gem of the Day (Credit Alexan·
dre Duinas): The chain of wedlock is
so heavy that it takes two to carry it.
sometimes three.
· Is life passing you by? Want to
improve your social skills? Write for
Ann Landers' new booklet, "How to
Make Friends and Stop Being Lone·
ly. " Send a self addressed, long,
business size envelope and a check
or money order for $4.25 (this
includes postage and handling) to:
Friends, c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Box
11562, Chicago, 111. 60611-0562. (In
Canada, send $5.15.)
To find-out more about Arm Laoders and read her past columns, visit
the Creators Syndicate web page at
www.creators.com.

•

G&amp;W PLASTICS AND

,
: ~
'
'

740-985-3813

4" thru 48~' Plaatlc Culvert In Stock
Full Line O,f Water Sto~~~e Tanks • •
Septic &amp; Cistern Tanks
ISewer Pipe: · 3" thru 8", Gas Pipe &amp; ~et~ullltorsl

~

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324

HOLES

parodied on " Seinfeld, " will be
allowed to operate through Feb. 12
unller a $1.96 million loan from a
priplary creditor.
·Lawyers for J. Peterman sealed
the-deal Tuesday, a day after tiling
for
U.S. Bankruptcy Court protec. .

.

uon.

!U'Jlder motions granted by U.S.
B4nkruptcy "Judge William Howard,
the company will be able- to pay its
awroximately 500 employees, pay
S:OS,OOO owed to United Parce l
Seyvice ·and process returned and
'
·exchanged
merchandise which has
be~n backing up since the holidays.
•J. Peterman, which earned notori ety as the target of satire on the topra~d television comedy, tiled Mondat. lor protection under Chapter II
of ~he U.S. Bankruptcy Code, w~ich
enables a company to keep operatin' under a court 's supervi sion
while it develops a plan for return ·
. inj to solvency.
:Slow :atalog sales and delays in

SEVEN

SITES

IN

1s easy. ..

Phone: 740-843-5572
Near the 338 '&amp;

614-992-7643

-Complete Auto .Serv,ce-

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.DESIGNS
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Ann~~n

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No Embarrassment ...
You're Treated with Respect! "

Custon:t Homes

Remodeling

M&amp;J

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"Build Your Dream"
1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Joe Wilson
(61

EXPRESS

ried that this culture would be fore vtheir culture.
In her review, Perrin noted that as er changed as she witne,j,'sed the
Elizabeth's husband conducted hi s preparations that would le)ll:l to ~ij~
research in the Nubian village, far lovely houses on the hill sil~ betng
·
from cities . and accessible only by covered by the ,Nile waters.'
boat on the River Nile, she took care · Perrin concluded by quoting from
of her three children~ all born in the author, "Our- view of the Nile
Egypt, and kept house .under primi - had been a pleasant one, an interesting one, but it was an ,b utsider's
tive conditions.
Perrin quoted Fernea tliat "the view. It would al ways be 'tliat." Bu!,
' lure' of adventure outweighs com- as they leave the cou ntry, of contramon sense" as the author accompa- ·dictions. that is dependent •upon one
nies her husband up the Nile to the river, tfiey know that their li ves have
Nubian village where they, will live. been eilrkhed forever, by Egypt.
In spite of cultural differences
Perrin told that Elizab, tti Fernea
and difficulties, the reviewer publi shed the book· i ~ 1970 and h ~s
revealed that Elizabeth found the continued to write books that focus
women friendly and the setting of on !he life styles and particular probtheir house beautiful, with a wide lem s of Middle Eastern women.
As 14 members and one guest .
vista of the Nile scenery spread
responded to roll call with combefore them.
Per,-.•
Perrin. related many of Eliza- ments about Egypt, they vie.w.ed
-./ ..
beth 's adventures as she learned rin 's photographs of het tflp there.
Pat Holter announced that she
about the customs of the Nubians
who at times seemed so miXJern and . wil~ have· the neXt .meeting at the
at other times so primitive. She wor- Pomeroy Public Library on Feb. 3.

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: The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to non·
profit groups wishing to announce
meetings and special events. The
calendar is not designed to promote sales or fund raisers of any
type. · Items are printed as space
permits and cannot be guaranteed
to run a specific number of days .

station. Training film to be .show, 6
p.m.
THURSDAY
REEDSVILLE
Riverview
Garden Club meeting Thursday,
7:30 p.m. at the home of Grace
Weber. An auction will be held .

$12.99
16" Deluxe $12.99

'

'

20 Yr~ - _Exp. ,: Ins,. Owner: Ronnie Jones

18" 4 Item

·SUNSE,. ·ROME
C.ONSTRUC,.ION..

992-9200

New Construction &amp; Remodeling
Minor Repairs • Cabinets. • Siding .
Roofs ~ Decks • Garages

Public Notice
I

• " '

-

Sealed bids will be
rocolvod until ' ':i:oo p.m.
January 29, 1999 at tho
mayors "olll~e, 237 Race
Stroot, Middleport, Ohio for
tho following equipment.
One t750 GPM pumping
fire angina. Spaclflcatlono
for this equipment i are
available upon requesl at
tho Mayqrs .oi:IJCA or from
tho Fire. Chl&lt;lf ol the
Middleport Fire Department.
In any contract entered
Into between the· VIllage of
Middleport ··.and the
succoalfuUIIdd.. ·~t shall be
the reapoirll!lllt!Y.,. o~ the
contractor

tQr,.meet all

raqulrom,)ita · "of NFPA
booklet 1901. All required
toot results shall be mode
available to tho Chief ol the
Middleport Fire Department
at or b·elora delivery olthe
completed 'apparatua.
Each bid shall be
accompanied by a detailed
dascrlptlon ol tho lira
apparatus and equipment
which Ia proposed to be
lurnlahed Including a copy
of all warranties that will
apply to the apparatus
Including engine and drive ·
·llno, pump and rotated
Components, booster tank,

etc. A detailed blueprint
·ahall also be provided with
all bldo. ·
Each bld shall be
WEDNESDAY
accompanied
by a 10% bid
EAST MEIGS - Eastern Local
bond
and
100%
Sc hoo l Board, specia l session,
performance bond. Each
Wednesday , 6 :30 P·O: · at the
bid shall contain a signed
administration office for purpose
statement of the bidder tha'
TUPPERS PLAINS . - VFW ,
.. " ' TRAVIS HYSELL
tho VIllage of Middleport,
of personnel. financial reports,
Post
9053
,
Thursday,
7:20
p.m.
at
.
.
TURNS
EIGHT.
Travis
Ohio
Fire Department fire
approval of stud ent enrollment,
·
p
paratus
ape_clll_c__altona
1
th
h
II
and other business that can be
e a ·
, Anth. ony Hysell of Nitro, W. Va . have been studied and
legall y addressed.
· · celebrated is eighth birthday reviewed . II ta understood
POMEROY Caring and...-. recently with a party at the home that In aomo aopectath~ae
POMEROY - M e ig s Local Sharing Sop·port Group. Meil!s . of his grandparenls, David and apoclllcattons are detailed
Senior Center, Ann Zirkle in Racine.
tn their dealgn and also that
Board of Ed uc ation regular meet· Multipurpose
After a cookout cake and ice exceptions may be taken by
in g_Wednesday. 7 p . m._ ~l the cen· Thursda)', I to 2:30 p.m. • Topic,
creare,were.served th_ose named soma bidders. Exceptions
tral offi ce on the seco nd noor of depression and preve ntion .
will be allowed If thoy are
and lll·parents, Terrt and Bruce determined
by
the
the Pomeroy Municipal Building .
Hysell of' Nitro, W.Va.; his sis- Middleport Fire Department
SATURDAY
'
ters, Samantha and Jessica to be equal to or auporlor to
POMEROY - Free diabeti c
CHESTER - Rev. Juliu s Wit - Hysell of Pomeroy; Brenda that apeclflod, and provided
so reening clinic Wednes day, 8:30
tenberg , two night reviva l at the Bryan a~d Kyrle S.w ann of Mid· they are listed ~.n ~separate
to It a .m. .,
dleport· arid' Amber· Maynard Of . page entitled E'xcoptlona
at the Veterans Mell)orial Hospital Harvest Outreach C hurc h, C licster.
''
·, . to Speclflcatlona" . . The
, .. .
. " ., · exception llat shalt. ...rer io
Outpatient Cli ni c . Patients will be Saturday ' ~nd S und a y. Pastors . Rat;l,ne.
The honored ·guest als9 tho page : numbiil' •n'd
screened for diabetes, given nutri-. 'Mary and f!arold Cook. invites the received ;gifts . from his g•and· paragraph of ,. ;the~.•
,
·
tional counseling, and evaluated public.
parents,' Norman and Patty apeclflcatlona. . " , ',.
for med ica tion . Preregistrati 9n
Hysell of Pomeroy; his great·
The VIllage ol tilddleport,
SUNDAY
grandparents
~oberta and Ohto reserves the rlghr' to
rf quired, 992-36 32.
. '
reject any or .all bids
Hymn sing , 7 p.m. Sunday, Ash
Harley SWISher of ~ew Haven , received and to watvo any
Street
Freewill
Bapti
st
Church.
CHESTER - Chester Volun,
W.Va. and Debbie and Cecil May· tnhumallty In thQ bidding.
tee r Fire Department, regular Middleport, featuring Marvin and nard, Jr. of Racine.
(t) 15, 11, 18, 19, .2o, 21 ;
22, 24, 25, 26,- 27, 28, 29 ,
. meeting, Wednesday, 7 p.m. ~t fire Deana Clark family. of Beverly.
1999•
•
,POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sororily, Thursday, 6:30 p.m. at
the Lutheran Church. Soup supper
with social committee members as
ho stesses.

MAGNOLIA
GROVE

· WORRYING!! r·

-7--PI.ZZA

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OAKS

No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy
Repo • Divorced

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· One toll-free call gets you championship
golf and hotel accommodations.

HAMPTON
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Owner: John Dean

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R. L. HOLLON .GUN SHOOT

Egypt, a land which seems to be
sl)rouded in exotic mystery for many
people, was the country featured in
the review at &gt;brecenl meeting of the
Middleport L"rary Club.
Gay Perrin reviewed "A View of
the Nile", by Elizabe th Fernea when
tlfe club met at the home of JoAnn
Wildman in Pomeroy.
Perrin gave many personal
acco unts of her own adventures in
visiting Egypt as she related the dayto-day life Fernea ~escribed. The
author , and her husband lived in
Egypt for several years in the late
'SOs and early '60s while he taught
at the American University in Cairo
and did research among the Nubian.
people who were soon to be displaced by the flooding of their
,
homelands.
, Flooding would be the result of
the building of the Aswan High
Qam, a project that would be good
for the country, but would destroy
the Nubian villages, and perhaps

\

12~ _split

Phone ·740·992-3987

et/icin~ ~-·

ALABAMA

a

\.

·imilp

I

opening new stores, including one in
New York's Grand Central Terminal,
combined to create inventory overstocks and push the privately held
company into debt , Peterman said.
Peterman,
57-year-old former
minor league baseball · player and
marketing consultant, first started
selling vintage duster coats in 1987
through ads in the back of The New
Yorker and The Wall Street Journal.
When ,Peterman P,ublished his
lirst catalogs in 1988, they were
something
new:
consciously
upscale, with color sketches of the
merchandise instead of photographs
and lyrica l copy that invested the
merchandise with a romantic , exotic
hi story. Printed on heavy paper and
dubbed an "Ow ner 's Manual." '
Peterman 's book of what he called
" faclual romance" was meant to be
A year ago, shonly before " Sein·
feld " went off the air, Peterman
announced an expansion into retail
that included plans for 50 store s and
20 catalog outlets.

. Racine ,. Ohi.o

very 'effective for thdse problems.
'
Computer Graphics
Unfortunately;
we
are
not
as
suc\ . •'
·AT 6:30P.M.
Deslg'ls
cessful with true PMS.
Main st.;
All Landscaping &amp;
The cause of PMS has not been
Pomeroy, OH
identified. Most researchers current·
Lawn Services
Paying $Bo.oo
· ly believe that it is a subtle disorder
•Commercial
per game
inv olving the relationship between
;Residential
,300.00 Coverall
the lo~els . of s~xt hormones, .princiQwff~r, .Mickle H"oJIIln
, , $5!)9.00 Starbufll
jl~ll)i ,9S(r&lt;;igeO aijd prog~sti d , an~ fhe
Gi1&amp;ster, Ohio' ,
Progressive top line.
chemicals in the brain called neuroL.lc. II 00·50
.
7~0-985-4422_
,_
..
11119 n
. transmitters, . particul~ily serotonin.
Because of ttiis the ·curreht "cure du
jou' includes the use of an antidepress.a~t medidne t~at ra,i ~es .the
. • level of sero,l.~ -~in. It.is be~p_f,c\al for
. Racine
_.., ~
'•
~\'J
most. There are other m~dtc ines that
, ·.
.. &lt;'· • · ••· ,
nature.
c~n .truly become a dis-:
Hollow
are also helpful fof some su(fe rers,
DUIVIP TFIUCK
~ Qud tion: I am clirr~'ntly 'starting abling condition.
· ·.
but there are also a number of pre·SERVICE
a: relationship witli a girl 'who has
In PM!i th~ symptoms clear up
•
scription and non-prescription prodtqld me she suffers from PMS quite within a da:{ ·after the stan .of. the
.
Ag'rlc;ultural
Lime,
·
ucts !h'at !)ave bee~ touted as the
saverely. I have known her for nine' menstru~l perjod. All seems' well fot ,
~2:30'pm
umeston' .• Gra!lel '
cure ~u jo~r forJ•M,s . aQd are no~
w~teks, and twice;~lit{bas b4en ~e!')' . an«1\ne" ' two : ·t&lt;&gt; three week.s.
. ' ··
prpy~~ . to ~e, inefte~tive. fl:jgh ,doses
. '" .. San~
'
eQ1otif_&gt;nal,,er(ilti¢, 'l!n,d:acted !i,ke.shl!' ; ' Qii~J?&gt;'t~~ I reeks bef~ . tll&lt;~e~r of progesterone, vitamin B6, . vit~·
985·4422
was m a; pary1~. Can. rou 1\clp ·tn~' '· pe~bcl , •tS '&lt;1ue, anotHer eptsode
min E and Primrose oil are among
Chester,
Ohio
understand her condltlon and sug- · begms.·
·
•"
these. The 'usc of cat'dut)-1. i)nd mag10125196tttn
gest things t cal) do 'io help her !i'ur· ',. :· .The laqel "PMS" is .often used by
n,siu!!] ~uppleme~ts are cu~ently in
ing these ti~snt is .vtiry important. both ·men and women to describe a
vqgue, and they Jllay or m.~Y not ulti·
· Answ~r; ,, Preil)e.nstn!ill.
:Jvoq\anwh~ is irritabte,'aiiifo11s mid.
pfi&gt;~e I? t;&gt;e b_~,nefici~) -. ,
.drome1 , ~ften_ al;J!,lrevr't~ihs ~~~i~ .f11:~;' pii1)tularly if she l'aro'Yis': , mf~!ely
There are two important things
s9 ti&amp;iq~itous ; th!lt '' the tertq has ,tit ~se: ¥.ol!.nd her. In mQre ~n 80
you :can do for your friend: Be emobecome a ..part of the common , percent ~f cases, the cause of the
tionally supportive, and eqcourage
vpcabulary. It describes an t;&gt;CCUr· mood disorder is not PMS. Depresher to t~lk to a family doctor or
rence of B!IXiety, , depre,s~iQn Of oiher : sion.: an,xi:l'y or even too. much cof·
gynecologist about what may be
changes iri mood befo!e ,t~e onset .!'f.' , f~~ ·. 9,JfqJher~cll:llgs can ,be the cause,
her -·sympioms. It inay
ole meli'S\rua~ petl,o d, ,~er symp•; ··I!J.J~s·~, wdmw.-don't ha_v~. e".tlcJ~.sivc causl~g
true PMS or it may be another .con·
t&lt;lms sucl:i~.aS " breast t'nderness,- 1, ngiits · t',! · rq~y behavwr. ·Men act ·
dition . In either case, suita~l.e .tl'l'atfatigue, btolting ail~ ,. ab\lomirial , · this
about as often, there just
ment can be recommended once the
ciamping may also be present. Most isn't a cafchy acronym to describe
correct cause of her symptoms has
women have some or all of these their behavior..
been established . .
symptoms associated wi_th their
· For the majority of women with
menstrual· cycle; ·but in a .mild· and. - PMS·Iike symptoms and for all
. ;1Fa.;,-ily Medicl~e\: is a. weekly
brief fonn. F'or ·an' unfOttlln~te' fe-R those men who act the same way, the
column. To submit questions,
·'women, estimated at between 3 to ·s · " tteatnientis directed at the ullderlywrite to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio
percent, the mood changes and other ing depression , anxiety disorder or
University College of Osteopathic
physical symptoms are .both longer psychiatric condition. Fortunately,
Super Bowl
Medicine,
Grosvenor
Hall, ·
in duration and more ~evere in . we have treatments today that are
Athens, Ohio 45701. ·
Special

Getting here

~ -- Peterman granted loan
The

COURIES . ON

52954·State Rt. 124

Middleport Literary club reviews book on Egypt

NEW YORK (AP) - Diane Sawye r and Charles Gibson
pulled in viewers during their lirsl week as hosts of ABC's struggling "Good Morning America."
Niel sen ratings for the duo's debut week were 25 percent
· higher than the show's average numbers during the last three
, months of 1998. Sawyer and Gibson had 4.2 million viewers on
. . . their first day. and the audience declined only slightly tho rest of
the week .
NBC's "Today" show had an average 6. I million viewers last
week and "GMA" had 4.1 million. CBS 's "This Morning" had
an average of 3 million viewers, Nielsen Media Research said
Tuesday.
Sawyer and Gibson replaced Lisa McRee and Kev in Newman on Jan. 18, after ratings ~eclined during the previous duo's
,. tenure . The reign of Sawyer and Gibson was announced as tern'
.
.
; . porary but indefinite.
•
MINNEAPOLIS (AP)- Fans hoping for a front-row seat at
the Rolling Stones concert next month are stuck between a rock •
and a hard place: Those tickets a're !l,Oing for more than $250.
That's the Twin Cities ' highest ticket price ever for a rock
... concert.
The Stones were charging as much as $15 1.25 for the best
f seats for their Feb. 15 concert at Target Center. Those tickets
. quickly sold out.
So concert promoter Jam Productions released a new block o'f
tickets Tuesday for seats even closer to the stage - for a top
.
price of $251.25 before service charges.
The promoter said the seats can be made available because
· !he stage the Stones are using on their " No Security " Tour will
allow for 360-degree views.

't,~XINGTON, Ky. (AP) -

18

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofing, Siding
Commercial &amp; Residential
27 yrs. exp.
Ucensed &amp; Insured

'

PMS symptoms very real p~Qblems . forwomen

•

.

J. feterman Co., the upscale retailer

GOLF:

Fonner-"VelVet
Hammer"
,,
'

ft~~~~~~~
C JD CONSftiUCftON

Sunday Calls) 't:

landowners and residents , includ· '
ing delivery of technical ·assis·
tance, conservation education and
information programs and overall
program planning.
The OFSWCD was organized
in 1943 to strengthen the natural
resource conservation prog·rams
of Ohio's 88 county-based
SWCDs .
The annual meeting gives
elected SWCD supervisors and
their staffs an opportunity to gain
new insights into local program
development as well as to learn
about natural resource manage·
ment offerings available at the
state and federal level.
Rice also received his oath of
office during the annual banquet
held at the · OFSWCD's annual
meeting.
Others attending the convention, from Meigs County, were
Joe and Janet Bolin, Tom and
AWARD PRESENTED- The Ohio Federadon ·of Soli end Water
Sheila Theiss, Marco Jeffers, , Conaervat!on District haa awarded a superior rating on ·Mrvlcea to
Janis Carnahan, lllair Windon the Melga SWCD Soil and .W ater Conaervetlon Dlatrlct, Here John
and Opal Dyer.
Rice eccepta the award from the.Prealdent, Robert Carroll, left, and
Goodyear Reprnentatlve David Fuhon.

OF CHAMPIONSHIP

open:

·· New Home$ • VInyl $1dlng New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Rqom Ad~lt.lon~ •'RoDfJng
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
fREE ESTIMAtES

;

·'. . .

..

·

Dave's Garage

~

Meigs Soil and Water Con~ervation District
earns superior $ervice award from OFSWCD
The Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District (SWCD)
has received a superior service
award rating from the Ohio Fed·
eration· of Soil and Water Conser. vation District (PFSWCD).
The award was presented at
the 50th annual meeting, January
19-21, in Columbus. The award is
part of the Distinctive Service
Goodyear Conservation Awards
program.
John Rice, a .member of the
Meigs SWCD, received the award
from OFSWCD President Robert
Carroll and Goodyear Represen·
tative David Fulton.
The Distinctive Service Pro·
gram, sponsored by the Goodyear
Tire and . Rubber Coll)pany,
encourages SWCD supervisors to
eval~ate their county-level natural resource conservatiOn programs on an annual basis.
This year marks t,~e 51st
anniversary of Goodyear's sponsorship of the awards. SWCD
programs are rated in a number of
areas of service to county

T~ppera Plalna, Ohio 451r83

St. Rt. 7

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Insured

Free Estimates

740-742·3411 __. I
.________
HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

RUTLAND, OH.
AMERICAN

!Jmgtane Hpvii'W

tEG~ON

Bulldo.er &amp; Ba~]&lt;hoe
SeMJices

Honse &amp; Trailer Si tes

Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic Sy1tem &amp;
Utililie•

1740)992-3838
(Lime Stone·
Low R~les)

BEECH GROVE
ROAD
GUN SHOOT
SUN., 1:00 PM
Slug &amp; Shot
Matches

Don't Need A

BANKRUP...CY c~n

relieve:.

household goods .

distribution of asset s. Debtors in ba nkruptcy may
keep Hexernpt" property for his or her per sonal
use. This may include a car, a hou.se, clothes, and

For Information Regarding Bankruptcy contact:

Law

William Safranek, Atton~ey At
.
'
(7 40)_59.2-5025 Athens, Ohio '

Snow

992-3141

981·1100

Home
Call Anytime

Out of Area
l -1100-564-3227

ROB.ERT BISSELL
C6NSTRUCTION

HILL'S
SELF STORAGE

FREE
.
ESTIMATEES

985-4473 .
7/22/tfn

1120100 1 mo .

.. , i.o

Pick up dlacarded .. i'::
appliance&amp;, battarleo,,:- ""

Furniture Refinithing

Cell phone

Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

·''• .t

FREE

&amp; #fepair
Pickup &amp; Delivery
Ava ilable

•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete·

.. r 1oq

. many metals I

motor blocks

.. ; 1

~7=40-=99~2;-4~0~2~5~8~·~.,....==~·;,11

r

~.

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio 45771
7 40-949-2217

Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM·8PM
1/4199 1 mo pd

YOUNG'S . , I .i J
CARPENTER SERVICE I

v 11 .f!
• Room Additions
cf
•Remodeling &amp; Siding'
'
!(
h
•Garages &amp; Decks
· ,1.
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing . .~
•Interior' &amp; Exterior
..• · ,..,
Painting
·• , ,1
•Roofing &amp; Gullers
I.
•Concrete Work
· ' "'
1

•J

!.

0

(Free Estimates) ' :.l•
. ' "'c•
. C. v• oling Ill 11
~-,
(Owner- 21 yrs)
ui

v.

(740) 992·6215' m"
"Fully Insured"
-Reduced Winter Rates

t

•

J

992-5455

Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,

591-1897

I

Driveway Stone
Light Hauling
up to 8 ton.

debtor of financial obligation s and arrange a fair

Removaf

I

Big One
Call a Little
One

WICKS
HAULING
Top Soli, Fill Dirt
614-992·3470

I,

•

�.'

•

•

(_
Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday. January 27, 1989
'

VVedneeday,January2T,181t

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel •

BIIIDGI:

NEA CrOIIWOrd Puzzle

PHILLIP

ALDER

. 38=hlll~

ACROSS
1 Llllel

-y

40

pereon'a

ochedule
1 Aellgloua

&lt;\NNOUNCE MENTS

OCS:
•

Personals
ASK QUESTIONS,

GET ANSWERS
&lt;CALL AMERICA'S t1 PSY·
;q_HICS 1-900-741)-6500 Ext
•
3591!,
&gt;•

www.lheholpagal2 comtnstpsy"1"\'1250291 him $3 99/Min 18+

, - S•uv·U 619-S&lt;I5-8434

SM. 28 Yra. okl, looking lor S F
18..afl II Interested call (304)882-

90

Antiques &amp; clean used fur niture,
will buy one piece or complete
household, Osby Martin, 740·

m-esr6

We Buy Ever~thlng Furniture,
Appliances, Etc. By The P1ece Or

The Loti 740-25e-6989

EMPL OYM ENT
SERV ICE S

DIIIBETIC PATIENTS: Vou May
Be Enlitled To Receive Your Dia

New To 'lbu Thrift Shoppo
9 Wes1 Sllmoon Alhens
,
740-S92·1842
Quality clothing and household
Items. S 1 .00 bag sale every
Thursday Monday thru Saturday

9 oo-5 30
40

Giveaway

112 !)olden Retriever Puppies, 5

112 Weaks Old, Mother Full·
Blooded ~n Retrtever, Father

Unknown 740.446-2161
4 Month Old Male Husky Type
Pup, Very Friendly &amp; Wormed ,

740-«15-8780
Answering Machine, Also Female
Cat, Declawed &amp; Spayed 740·

245' 5806
Glveawa~

5 Garman Shappardf

Collie Mixed Puppies (304)615·
6508
Giveawa~ White German Shep

a good hOme In the
coontry (304)67S.2620

pard, to

Happy Haaltlly Puppies To Good
Homes, tt Weeks Old, Paper
Trained Outdoor Lovers! 740·

24S.5104
Paf1 Beagle/Pert Austrlallan
Sheppard , to a good home ,

11 o

Help Wanted

AVON I All Aroaa I Shirley
Spears, 304-67S.1429.
Application$ are being accepted
for Home Health Aides AppUc·
ants should have a high school
diploma or G E D , reliable trans·
portaUon, telephone In the home
and willing to work weekends &amp;
hollda~s Must be motivated and
llex•ble Eacperlence In providing
d1rect care or. working with older
adults a plus Wil l train State
tested nursing assistants en·
couraged to appl~ Applications
are available at the Meigs Multi·
purpose Senior Senior, Mulberry
Heigh ts, Pomeroy, OH An EOE
Employer
1

AVON PRODUCTS Start your
own business, work flex ible
hours, benefits available, Enjoy
limited earnings, Call toll·free 1·

888 58 H!IIU
Clean Office and Commercial
Bulidmg In Eleanor/Burfalo Area
Part lime • 20 to 36 hrs week dll·
ferent shill times Permanent
part time job mate or female
(304)768-7290, leave message
with best time to call bade
Computer Users Needed Work
Own Hrs $20K $75K !Vr 1 BOO
348·7t86 Ext 1173 www a,mp·
Inc com

(304)4S6·2l!1 8

CREW LEADER

Part Datmatlon. Pan Beagle. To A
Good Home, 6 Months Old 740-

379-9125

60

Lost and Found

Found Boxer pup, sk~ blue eyes,
Southern High School area, 740·

992·3066
Found· female blue healer puppy
FlOOd Road vldnlty call 740-9923090

Land Development Company Is
looking For A Mature , Reliable
And Competent Crew leader To
Find Contractors For And To
Oversee MO\\:Ing Week · Wack·
pan~

Owned Land For Sale All
9ver Southeastern Ohio Some
Construction And Main te nance
EKperlence Is Helpful Seniors
And Retired Persons Are Urged
To Apply This Is A Part Time
Permanenet Position Hours And
Salary Are Negotiable Calf Mike
A~thony

(304)67s-7582

Detective • Private Investigator
Trainees Good Wages 614-523·
6290

named Darcie, Blue collar, At 2
Sandhill Road Area (304}895·

3942 Reward
LDtt· Blade:, spayed female German Shepherd $100 reward,

(304)1175-2277

Lost small black end brown Beagle &amp; small Dachshund mlac, vlcln·

lty ol Flatwoods Rd 740-992·
5039
Missing· Rottweiler, 3 Years Old
Male Scar On Left Paw Name
Bear, Friendly Blue Collar, Hart·
sook Keystone Mount Tabor
Area . Reward Olferedl 7~0·388

oa76

70

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
AU. Verd Sales Muat
Be Paid In Advance
QEAQLINE· 2.00 p.m.

the day before the ad
11 to run Sunday
edition - 2:00 p.m.

F~dey

Monday edition

• 10:00 a.m. Saturday

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
All V•rd Sates Must Be Paid In
Adv•nce . De•dllne 1·00pm the
day before the ad Ia to run,
Sund1y 6 Monday edltlon-

1:OOpm Friday.

80

Auction
and Flea Market

Auction February 5th, 6 PM 241
Third A'ltenue , Gallipolis Large
Load Of Name Brand Tools &amp;

Houaehold Goods 740 256-1270
Bill Moodlspaugh Auctloneermg
Services , Little Hock1ng, Oh10
Appraisals ·
Farm
Estate
Household Commercial OhiO Ll
cense 17693 741).989-2623
Rick Pearson AuctiO n Compa ny
full time auctioneer complete
auction
service
Licensed
t66 ,0hlo &amp; West V1rgln1a, 304-

773-5785 Or 304 n3 5447
Wedemeyer 's Auction Serv1ce ,
Galllpol~,

90

0111o 740·379·2720

Wanted to Buy

Absolute Top Dollar All U S Sil·
ver And Gold Coins, Proofsets,
Diamonds, AntiQue Jewelry, Gold
Rings , Pre 1930 US Currency,
Sterling. Etc Acquisitions Jewelry
• M TS Coin Shop, 15 t Second
A"""""· aan~1s 740-«6-2842
Antiques top prices paid, River'"' Antiques Pomeroy, Ohio
Russ Moore owner 7&lt;40· 992·

2526

tors 308 East Main Street, Po·
maroy Ohio Apply In peJSon

140

Buslneas
Training

GelllpoHs C - Colle!la
(Careers ClOse To Home ) Cell
Today I 74o-446-4367, I -eoo214-0452, Regi90-05-1274B

Good Location, (304)675-7854 or
(304)441-0450.

3 BR, 2 Beth, delached 2 car garage, Glanwood: $350 monlh +
depoolt; (30o4)743-8584.

Restored VIctorian home sllualed
on 12 acres, VIllage Middleport,
secluded and private, appoint·

312 WeiZgal SL Pomeroy 3 Bdrm
House , S3SO 00 Month, Doposll
Required. Hl88-840-0521 .

For Sale or Rent .. BR, 2 Bath,

ment, call740-892·5696
Two

bedroom

80itx1621t

~~

0 740-286-0081

Farm J-telp needed, must have
experience with horses, call

Southside Farms (304)675 1993
Housekeeper (live-in) For Dlsa·
bled Practicing Columbus Allor·
ney Cooking Cleaning Laundry,
Some Care, Some Driving, 614·

2875354
Housekeeping/laundry Super
visor needed tor lOO·bed s1cllled
nursing a.nd rehab facility Position It full·tlme and eaccellent benetits Candidate must be willing to
work with stall, scheduling~ problem solving, excellent communi
cator, knowledgeable of Regulator
Compliance as well as related required documentation Interested
candidates should submit resume
to Rocksprings Rehab ilitation
Center, 36759 Rocksprings Aoad,
Pomeroy. Ohio 4576 9 Attn Usa
J Yehl Administrator
Legal secretary, part lime f lull
time , computer lrlandly short
hand prelerra:d but not required ,
send resume c/o the Point
Pleasant Register boK C W 22·
200 main St PI Pleasant WV

25550
Need 3 Ladle s, To Sell Avon!

740-446-3358

180

Wanted To Do

Auto Detailing Buffing, Paint and

Body Work (304)674-0002,
Babysitting available In my home,
Human Services certified, re·
sponslble mother of two for more
Information can 740-742--3807.
Electric maintenance ser'itlce
Wiring, breaker boKel, light IlK·
ture. heating systems, and Re·

$22 000 00 (304) 882·3804
320 • Mobile Homes
for Sale

Amazing only $9"99. down on
large selection of double wldes.
free delivery ll setup owner fl·

nandng awll- 304-755-51365
$500 Down on an~ 141170 In
stock, limited number, free dellv·

ery CeH 1·800·691-6777

bo"'s $16 each, (304)675-6925
Have 2 Openings For 24 Hour In
Home Care or Elderly Or Handl•
cappod 740·44 I ·1536
Professional Tree Service, Stump
Removal Free Estimates! Insurance, Bidwell, Ohio 740-388-

9648 740-367·7010
Will Do Ironing In My Home,
ShirtS And Blouses $1 00 Each,
Straight Skirts, Slacks And Jeans,
$1 50 Each , Straight Dresses

$3 50 Each, 74o-448·3636

FINANCIAL
21 0

Business
Opportunity

$11 ,500,0BO (304)675-2819

1988 14x70 Manorwood, 2 Bed-rooms, 2 Baths, Elec AC, Good

COnditiOn $10,500, Call 740.245·
5332

1992 Norris, 18Ft X 70FT, VInyl
With Shingles, 2 Bdrms 2 Baths,
All Electric Appliances Porches,

And $3SO/Mo. In Country, Relor·
ence &amp; Deposit Raqulrod, 740·
386-9686.
Pay Utilities, &amp; Oeposlt. In Porler
Araa $28!/Mo' 814-388-9182

the olfanng

FIRE YOUR BOSS
t 00+ Opportunities to Stay Home
&amp; make $$$In 1999! Ffee Re-

PQrl CaR 1-eoo-410·2812
X3001, (24 hours)
STANLEY HOME PRODUCTS
&amp; FULLER BRUSH 740·423·
3331 Or 740·698-5392, Parties,
Fund Raisers Products Employ·

ment
230

Professional
Services

"Promotional Sales Prod ucts"

Dick Roberts, 740-446-7612
(Volco /Fax) ' Sse Us At
www vemoncompany com•

Grande /Thurman Area, 740·379-

2361, After 8 P.M

2 Bedrooms, 2 Bath Trafler In
Green Terrace $350/Mo , Includes Lot Rent, Water, Sewer
And Trash, $250 Deposit And
References Required, No Pets,
Eaccetlent Condition, 740·441·

740.386-1100

IIHie $250 (304)576-2588

For Sale. Electric Furnace, BTU
53000 for Doublewlde, used very
One bedroom. furnished, on SR
t43 trash and water paid, refer·
ences and deposll, 740-992·

~18862
Small 2 Bedroom Molllle Home, In

24hr Licensed Home Daycare ,
Meals/Activities provided, State
payments accepted. Redmond

Ridge, Debbie; (304)674-0039

Daniels Piano Service· tuning
and repair expert service since
1965 740 742 2951, lane Daniels Rutland
Livingston'• Baaement Water·
Proofing, all basement repairs
done, free estimates lifetime
guarantee 12yrs on job uperl-

ence 304-895 3867.
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We Wlnl

I·688·582 3345

Minutes! B00·38~
New 14x70 $500·Down $199·per
mo Free air, sk1rt 1·800·691·

two bedroom In country, water
and trash Included, references
and deposit required, call 740-

6n7

949-2833
Two bedroom mobile home In
Middleport, no pets, 740·992·

8777

5039

Now 1999 14x70 three badroom,

430 Farms for Rent

Tired 01 No? We say Vest

304-736·3409

Of Your Rap id Refund
elude A Big Screen TV With
Each Purchase! 1125·2128199, 1·
800·251-5070
Rent Buster, new 1999 14.:70 2or
3 bedrooms , only $995 00 down
,$19!5 00 per mon , free delivery

and set up call t-1100 948·5878
New bank repos, onty two left,
never lived In call 1·800-948·

5878
Factory goof Ill Save thousands

call t -eoo-946 5e7a

ca111-80o-945·5e78

law Our raaderl ate hereby

Informed that an rtwetllngs
-laed In this nowtpapot
•re available on an ~ual
opponunlty basil

REAL ESTATE

Finance Land &amp; Home With

As Lillie As $500 Down 1-606·
928·3426
Relocating? Take Over Pay·
1
ments 304·736-7295

350 Lots

&amp; Acreage

Ranch , Additional 2 car garage,
Acre Lot Sandhill Road, Pt

Pleasant, (740)441-061 B

EXCELLENT CONDITIDNII

By Owner 3 Bedrooms , Fu ll
Basement 2 Flreplacea, D•·

tached Garago. 2 AC M-l (Rodney) 740.379·2540

992·2218
1 Bedroom, Economical Gas

Heat, WID Hook·Up, Near Cinema
$279/Mo , Plu&gt; UtiNtles, Deposit &amp;

Leaae Required, 740-446-29S7

ttes are Included A $300 deposit
Is required. For more Information.
or an appointment, call 74G-843·
5343 and leave a message

Stocll Cer·Dirt lM Stock Car,

1993 Rockel Cha881a, Track
Champion In 199t, aomt extras,
W/0 e;nglne and transmlaalonl

$3,400. steel block T&amp;H 436
Chevy, w/Brodlx hlada all $8,500,
anglno only $6,000, call 740-9492045

Used Kltcnan Cabinets &amp; Counter Cabinets, $800 , 740-446IJ2ol I, Allor 8 ~M

Waterline Spacial· 314 200 PSI
121.85 Par t 00, t' 200 PSI

$37 oo Per 100: All Brasa CompressiOn Fillings in Stoct

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jad&lt;&amp;on, Ohio. 1·80G-537-8S28
550

Building
Supplies

Block, brick, sewer pipe&amp;, windows, lintels, etc Claude Winters,
Rio Granda, OH Call 740-245-

5121

755·7191 Oak wood Mobile

448-1282

MERCHANDISE
510

Pets for Sale

4 Year Old Himalayan Cat, 4

Paws Oectawed, Flaed, $15(), 740-

AKC Collie puppies, sable and

740-385-43117.

whlta, certllle&lt;l normol eyes $300
each, 740-15911-1 QSS
AKC mala Pomeranian puppy,

AKC Registered Rott Weller Pup•
plea, Championship Bloodlne, Ex·
cellent Temperment· &amp; Disposi-

tion Flrsl Shols &amp; WOrmed, $360,
740-245-5823

washers dryers, retrlgerators,
range&amp; Skaggs Appljances , 78

VIne Street, Call 740·446·7398,
t-886-618-0128
New and used Furniture Sto1e

Below Holiday Inn, Kanauga, Day
Bede Bunk Beds, Beds, COmpul·
er Desk, Entertainment Center,
Dressers, Couches. Dinettes,

740-446-4782

520

while remala, S350 each, 740696-1085
Four, full blooded Dalmatian puppies. 2 males. 2 females, 740·

992·3147 after 2f&gt;m,
Gulnla pigs, one female, one
male $35 tor pair, cage inoluded.

Weatherby Mark 5 $porter 30·06

Cal Like New In Boxl $400, 740.
379 2801
Antiquee

Buy or sell Rl'iterlne Antiques,

FARM SUPPLIE S
&amp; LI VESTOCK

As Low As 3 9% On Used Hay
Equipment Now Thru Jan 30
Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn, tnc

Furnace, Heat Pumps, &amp; Air Con·
dltloning Free Eatlmatesl It You
Don't Call Us, We Both Lose!

740-«6-6306, 1-80G-29Hl0911
1 Crypl &amp; Plate, $2,000 00 Memory Gardens, Subject To Offer.
7~367-7864.

II" DlrecTV Setolllte Syotemo$69 00 purchase price w1th up to
Limited lima offer, call 1·800·

8194

610 f,arm J!gulpme':'t
0% Financing On New John
Desre Hey Equlpmantll Financing

"WAAMYPI"

ns.

199-4 Pace Shadow enclosed
trallar, deluace model 7000 GVW
with winch used only on weekends retailed new for $8,100,

sell lor $4,995, call740-949-2045
2 Model 20 Ditch Witch Tranch-

METABOLISM

Breaklhroughlt! Lose t0-200
Pounds Easy, Quick, Fast
Dramatic Resulls, 100% Natural,
Doctor Recomrrended. Free Sam·

pleaCell740-441 ·19112.

Midway Belween Gallipolis And
Rio Granda On Old 35 (Jackson
Pike) 740 446·2412 Or t-800·
s94-11' 1
Naw 5010, 8010, 7010 Sarles
Tractors In Stock 7 75% Fiaced
Rete John Deere Credit Financing
Available New 4000 Series Com·
pacts In Stock New John Deere
McCos And Round Balers 0% •

12 Mos. 1.75"/oo ·24 Mos. 3 5% 38 MOS., 4 5% -46 Mos , 5 5% 80
Moa Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn
Midway Between Gallipolis And
Rio Grande On Jackson Pike

740·446·2412 Or I -600·594·
1111.

Road, 740-446-94ol2.

In The Country, Northwest Gallla
County Beautiful Rolling Meadow,
Barn &amp; Fencing In Back Yald,

Only $14 500
20ACRES
Hu nting Or Rec reation Tracts
Touching Wayne National Forest
Meadow In Front With Ro111ng

Woods Onty S22.000. land Corttract Available Free Maps 1 800·

Furnished Upstairs 2 Rooms &amp;
Bath, Clean, References , &amp; De-

posit Required, Utilities Paid, 740.
448-1519
Grack)us living 1 and 2 bedroom
apartment• at Village Manor and
Rivers ide Apartments In Middle·

Green/ City SChOOl DistriCt Beau

port From $249-$373 Call 740992·50114 Equal Housing Opportunities

360

Ground floor aptaltmanr, 2 bed room with WID hook-upno pets

Acres

In

Real Estate
Wanted

(304)67S.SI82

Wanting To Buy 15 To 20 Acres,
Prefer Something With Buildings
&amp; Barn. &amp; Some usable Acres,
On Land Contract 740-367 .(1280
We Bu~ L.and 30 · 500 Acres,

we Pay cash 1·800·213-8365.
Anthony Land Co

Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment

741).446-0390
Prime location In

downtown Gallipolis No Petal
$300 00 month plus ulllltlos. Reloronceo &amp; Deposit Required
Call. (HOI 446·3302 tor appoint-

mont.

RENTALS

Norlh 3rd MIOdleport, 2 br. unfur
apt dep &amp; rot. 30o4-1182-25ell ,

410 Houses for Rent

Health Rider, Nordic Track,
TV Monitor $25; P VA E. Y
tar Amp $50 Cast Iron Tub,

Caft Ron Evans, HKH&gt;·537·9528

-------1
Macintosh Computer, Ink Jet Col·
or Printer, Modem, Mouse C 0
Rom With Internet Hookup Hardt.,

One bedroom apartment lor rent

Nascar Collectibles

By Action · Revell· Brooksfleld ·
Winning Circle and Aaclng
Champions Dale Earnhart, Jeff

446-24t20r 1·800·594-11 11

630 ;

Livestock

448-3659

640

2nd. 3rd &amp; 4th rows $120 &amp; up

Hospital large Storage Build·
lng, Cit~ Water And Sewer No

Manlna McBride &amp; Diamond Rio
2nd &amp; 3rd ro\s, call 740·949-

er

-"B-24n

Pets 140.446-3638

304-736-7295

'·

Renters Dream COme Tl'uel Call

Square baled hay 2nd cutting
orchard grass S:ilo bale, round
baled 10001 hay, 1st cutting ,
orchard grass, alfalfa ha~. S14
bale, 740.742•2270
Square Or Round Bales Delano
Jacksan Farm1, 740·446·1104
Straw And Hay For Sale, Square
Belea, Alllzer Farm Supply, 740·

710

Rod Stewart tickets lor sale - 111

3315 after 7pm

M&amp;J Auto, 740·742 4510
1987 Chevy Celebrity $ t .200
Good Condition 740 256-11 02

!!:t50WTIOO 7

DOWN

12 Comedlon
D,.•• bonom
Phlllpa
3 Dan Rsther'o
&lt;*Work
4 Blobbed
5 Perfect
6 Percussion

........

number
9 Coach

ln1trument

li£
- tO Bernateln,laf'~

7 -the

Par~eghlan

pavement

(looked for
work)
8 Indefinite

lhOrt

1,.1 Fem. IItle
13 l'rlends

Pass

49

Pass
Allpaas

BIG NATE

Vana &amp; 4·WDs

1985 Nlssan Klngcab 4x4 $2,800,
740-4411-1420 Aftar 5 PM
1988 Eagle Wagon 4 WD, Runs
Good, Needs Rear End, $400,
740-441-0 I09
1993 Astro Extended Van. Tilt,
Cruise, Air, Reese Hllch Exc

Cond $5,!500, 740-«15-9278

defenae

11 tl\)

20 Shouter

-, ''I

'22 Actress

4

1994 Chevy Astro 4x4 Excallont
condit ion , like new. 59,000 '
miles , Automattc-AC·VB, New
tires, Leather Interior, Completely

card

loaded with TV NCR, Black co~r.
$10,SOO/Negotlable Call C C
Shah at (30M675-IB37,(304)675·
6914 qr Mrs Shah at (304)675·
6534

,

0

o~ l,,

I

u ..

Loren

Important Lavmgs called for dum·
my's last dtamond, wh1ch East, who
had only trumps left, had to ruff
On the forced heart rerum, Lav·
mgs ptcked the suit, as they say m
Australia, putting nl his 10 · When
West had to play the kmg, Lavings
could cla1m II tncks: lwo spades,
rwo hearts, two dmmonds, two clubs
and lhree ruffs m hand. Yet suppose
West had held Jack-doubleton in
hearts Declarer would have laken the
Jack With dummy's ace, then led the
last spade Thts would have scored
· the heart queen en passant. If East
ruffed low, declarer would overruff.

Exqellent Condition, LOts 01 EM·~ l
trasl740-44fH289!&gt;- ...
•' •

...

". ,, ~..

18 Sound
syllem
19 Hard-handed

Eaet

event, wmmng an overtrick was

1995 GMC Jimmy 4 WD 4 Ooorl. j

t

II) P

23 Uke seawater
24 Sharpar
25 .Magazlne J!o
copies
• ,•
27 Confederate : 1

general
, ·""
32 - Kapltal - " ,
34 Entrance
35 In abund~nce •
39 Certain

painting

• II

~

"~•~"

43 Crleo

,

mournfully • '~

""

45 Send by 1aa , •
47 Tide type
'
48 Informed _.,;)
49 Sick

r.uo((l;)

50 Sticky atuff•"~
52 Timetable
_

abbr.

• •1..t

53 Casual ahlrf 1 b"

54 Pigpen

CELEBRITY CIPHER

·rr

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'" lT

. _, ..:::

by Lule Campos
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created Irom quotations by lamoua people past and present
Each letter 1M the Cipher stands lor another Today'll clue R eqWJis W

'K C U H

uJ y

CT

G

KJOD

NKGM

G

EPGE

YHPHGYTGK
CT

NYJLXAHL.'

(HODKCTP

NKGMRYCDPE)

WCAPGHK

OHBHY

' 'lr

WGAKCGWWJCY
"'
PREVIOUS SOLUTION "The earnmgs ol a poet could be reckoned by a '"
metaphysiCian rather !han a bookkeeper '~ Edward Dahlberg
~~

''

WOlD
UMI

....' .1 !1

.."

'

' ,_
li' !'\0

O four
Reammge

ltHers cf
scrambled words
low to form four words

tho
bo-

'

.

MARLOC

.,.

.••,.

...

"'' r...,.

'

..
··'••

"'~,'
1 1 1 ...
~s-.-G1_H,.,..N_Or--T,..-4/N
~

" 11"1

6

' Increasing taxes to stop In·
L.........l.-L-L-L......J~ fia t1ond," t.~e ckong ressman eX·
. - - - - - - - -.... P1a10e , 1s 11 e 1ann1ng a 11re
T RE E I C
the· ·· .I"

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n~

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~-.,~~.:...,~7=-.;:,~~,...:....,..r-1

Comp lete the chucklo quotod
by t•lhng •n the m•s:s•no worCb
L__JL:......J.._.L__J~...J......J you de'ltelop from step No 3 below

.

IF 'I'OU KNOCK OVER THE WATER
6LA5$, AND IT $PILL$ ON THE .
DESK AND ALL OVER TI-lE F=LOOR,
TME TeACHER 6ETS MAD AT 't'OU

.

_

_

_

_

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

'•

You'U build a brg nest egg when
rou save wlf1t the clo$ilfieds

1998 300 Honda Fou1Traac 4x4, :
Practically New, Must Sell, Pro· •
lesslonal Uanlcurlng Table, Slack ~

/Grey With Light Attached, Call '
Alter700PM 740-44Hl657.

.

f9

toma ~c. good condition, $3800, ,

Larder· Mumps· Exult- Taurus· SPEED
"Now that I'm mnety ," my aunt laughed, "my m1nd
and body go 1n the same d1rect1on but not at the same
SPEEDI"

ROBOTMAN

..

....

,.•.lot.

• •

JANUARY 27 I:~,,

!,WEDNESDAY

97 Honda 4 Trac 300, !S hours on "•
It, factory eactended warranty, ask·

lng $3,500, 740.742·1503 or 740592-4530.
Auto Parta &amp;
Accessor lee

Budget Priced Transmissions
and Engines, All Type&amp;, Acceaa
To Over 10,000 Transmissions,

t

740-245·5877.

New gas tanks &amp; body pariS D &amp;
R Auto. Ripley, WV. 304-372·
3933 or J-800 273-9329

SERVICES
810

ASTRO-GRAPH

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Unconditional lifetime guarantee
Local references furnfshed Es-

labllshed 1915 Call 24 Hrs (740)
446-0870, 1-800·281·0578 Roger&amp;

Waterproofing

Pans And Service. All
25 Years Elt·
Guaranteed,

740.949-3420.

eaccellant condition, S650

Of C.DUil.SE ~T! COCS N-IYOI'If:
B./f.!!:. ~TIC.K.'lt&gt; 11\£1\l: ~ ~

•

'93 Pontiac Grand Prlac, automatic,
a~m cassette, air, sunroof, POL,

Chrome Bumpers, $800, 74H4B·
9552

..,

1995 Chevy S·IO PU, V·8, 5
Spoed, A/C, 30,000 MHes, $7,400
Phone 740·245·5160, 740.245· '

Autos for Sale

t971 Super Beetle, All New
Parts, Fender&amp; Running Boards,

I"

1994 S·IO 43 Liter V-6, Excellent
Condmon, 740-446-9884

740-992·5578

monetary unit

28 Port of the eor
29 Romon bronze
30 Porry'o creator
31 Sella
33 Sir Walter 38 JapaneH
nollve
37 Parlo

character

By Phillip Alder
Dtck Cummings' articles, wh1ch
appear m !he Sydney Sun-Herald, are
sent to me by Paul Lavmgs, another
Australian rn1emat10nal. His Web
s1te
at
www libertygrove.com au/postfree
hsts many old bndge books for sale
Here ts a Lavmgs deal that Cum·
mmgs featured m his column.
North's ratse to four hearts 1sn't
recommended, but 11 was a playmg
lesson w1th a student. North preferred
to have his expert partner as declar·
ei. And 1romcally three no-trump is
no cakewalk, though it probably
would have made.
Lavings srarted wuh dummy's
two top clubs, discardmg a spade
from hand. He continued w1tlj a club
ruff, a spade to dummy's king, a sec·
ond club ruff, a spade to the ace, and
a spade ruff Now Lavings cashed his
two d1amond tricks, ending 10 the
dummy. That was the first mne tncks
10, wuh the heart ace sull in the dummy However, as thts was a pa1rs

Carry Warranty, KC Auto Salits,

730

mlterlllform
13 Mo,. Indigent
14 l1l1m bellevor
15Pir._
18 Apply llghlly
17 Sman bHI
18 Shade of blue
r•l~nt
21 Emllted
56 Bordeaux wine
COIIorantllght 57 Flopo down
23 Glide downhill 5I See hawk
28 Chlne11

More from Sydney

1991 Chevy Full Size Pick-Up, V·
6, AUIOmatlc, 53,000 Mllaa,
$4,900 1994 Goo Tracker 5
stiOod, 47,000 MIIH $5,500 Both

760

Hay &amp; Grain

LESSON

1987 S·IO Plck·Up, Now P245
eORt4 Tlroa. Chromo Mag
Wheels. Jensen CD Souil'd S~·
tem Amp W/12' Woofers Call
74o-.4oi6-737S

TO 11-\\S POINT?'

39

Nertb
2NT

Opening lead: •

1988 Ford Truck, F·ISO, 4WD,
$UOO OBO, (304)882·2771 or
(304)8112-SSf
t 987 F 250 Diesel 4 X 4 Supar
Culy XLT Lariat, 143,000 Mlloo,
Black. $6,!500.00. 740-2S8-t 579

YOlJi!:. r-1W ~':&gt; ~WrtON

West

TAUGHT
YOU A

1981 Ford pick up Stepaldo, s~~c : .
1900, mutt ••
ssll, call 740·992·7478 luv• •
message or 7-40-949-2046.
" I:

'MvE YOU~ \0 1"W' "'

South
Tur•T'

cylinder, runs great,

For Sale· 5 Registered Limousine
Hetfers, 3 Registered limousine

Bulls Call Alter 8 oo PM 740·
446-3127

I HOPE

•

740
Motorcycles
,...,.,..-..,....,.......;:.....""",...,..,,
'97 Kawasaki Prak1e .(()(), 4x•, au--

1988 Ford'f.Bird, 740-24S.S«3
Gordon, plua Dale Jr. and others. 1986 Nlssan ptekup, 4 new tlrea,
large selection Starling Line-ups, runs perfect, gas aaver, motor
we havo all good players and pro- has 80,000 mites, $875
tectiw CO\Iera tor dlspteytng, Me·
Gwlre- Grllfey· Marino- E Smllh· 1995 Gao ' Metro automatic, 49 oo
Shak~ K Bryant and others Can aclual mllea, $3500
be s11n at Rutland Bottle Gas or
by calling 741).742 2St1 or t-8001985 Dodge Caravan, 7 pas
837-82 17 ask lor Dave
sanger, new Urea, 5 speed, body

quiOI ,dop li ret required
Grande College, S300.1Mo , Water $30000 304-67S.1550
Sewage, Garbage, Paid, 740-441· One Bedroom ApL Leleyona Mall
1005
$350 00 Per Month Deposit
3 Bedroom Home Close To Hoiz· Aeq'd All Utllltlll Paid Call 740·
1 Bedroom House Clos"&amp; To Rio

.

We Have From 25 To 30 Used
Tractors In Stock Financing As
low As 8 5% Fixed Rate On
Qualifying Tractors With John
Deere Credit Approval Car·
michael's Farm &amp; Lawn, Midway
Between GaiHpolls And Rio
Grand' On Jackson Pike 740·

080;;:;:;'.;,740.::..-44:.:6-::..::.:97=09:-:-----l ~45-5193
JET
TRAN SPORTATION
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired New &amp; Rebultt In

Uaed $800 00 140 ·379-2801

Nawl~ Remodeled one bedroom

apartment

Grubb's Plano· tuning &amp;
Problems? Need Tuned?
740 448-4525

446-8470

call Ron 740-742-2050

For Sale MIXED HAYI (740)
288-2959

from $279 to $358 Wst~ lo shop
&amp; movies Call 740·446·2588
Equal Housing Opportunity

Bod, :nroa, Paint Jill&gt; 32,000 At·
tual Mll18, $2,750, j TOJI, 740: •

ny, 304-675-7421.

Colorful Buckskin Stallion, 740·

Dry Flrawood GoOd Hay Charles
McCain, Farltieid Centenary

All New:

Two 1979 Jeep cnarokaea, ona
runs, one for parts, $700 OBO,

PUPpies &amp; Kittens

tor No Pets $225.00 Month Plus
Retrence &amp; Deposit 740-446-

oump~uck

Keroscene Heater Wlcs &amp; Re·
palrs 1 Sider&amp; Equipment Compa-

3 Room apt newly decorated
quite neighborhood, Ref/Stove
furnished , referencesldeposlt re·

loot, 4 tan loot $200 each, 740·
949-2217

Sale

$4,000 OBO, (304)675-3624

Baby Calves, 740·388-8524 No
Sunday Calls Please

Kitchen With Stove &amp; Aefrlgera·

1979 Ford

I GOT BEAT REAL
BAD-· THeY CAUGHT
ME OEALIN' OFF
TH'
BOTTOM

I

1998 Chevy Blazer lS Burgundy,
Loadad, 29,000 Miles, 740·256·
1011

B.V. ~lholde Aque~uOI
2006 Camden Avonuo
Parkersburg, wv 28101
304-411!i· l293

Church pews for sate, 12 twelve

1997 Chivy Cavalier, 2 OoOrt, /lJ '
C, Tilt, Cruise, 5 Speed, CD Play· ·
er, Power Mirrors, Power Sunroof,
Green, 38 000 Milos, $9,500, 740-

Farmall • 140 Tractor with cuiUvators, has just been restored,

Appllcallons available et VIllage
Green Apts 149 or call 740·9823711 EOH

Full Nne of pets supplies

•s

t:"

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North

9504

Pomeroy Hours M T W 10 00

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

• 5 • 3
9 Q 10 6 5 4
t A 10 8 2

I 995 Ford Escort GT, 38,000
mllea, 5 speed, 2 door, nelch·
back, CO player, new tires ,
$8,500, 74o-7ol2·3172.

720 Trucks for

9 J 9 7 2
• 9 4
• Q 9 6 3

S..Uib

•

)

• Q8 2

9 K 3
• Q J? 3
• J 10 7 4

1993 Ford Escort , 4 cylinder 5
opeed, 911,000 mllol, $2000; 11191
Ford Taurus, V·B automatic,

$1800, 740-742·2357

Eaal

• J 10 6

304-67S.272l!

1993 Ford, F150, XLT Pkg 4x4,
5 Speed, 305 Englno, 47,000
miles Very Good Condlllon,
Clean , Red on Red, $13,000 .
(304)882-3358

aorn

We•l

1991 Cadillac Sevllte 4 dOOr ••·
dan. loaded with ecceaaoriU,
great gas mileage, car phone,

Pure Siberian Husky With Pa·

Aegtatared Mini Plnchers 2 BIT
Males
Nov 2nd, 740·3888082 As~ For Barb

rr DrDI.l'T

~~- ..

tomatlc/PW/PB/PS, CD Player;
$1 ,800; OBO, (304)67S-4452

740.448-8172

1124 E Main Slreot, on AI 124.
am to 600 pm, Sunday 100 lo
8.00 p m 740·992·2S28, Russ

1989 Chrysler Lebaron Sports ~;
CoiJI)O, WhiiO/W BIUI lnttrtor, Au· '

992·5930
pars. 6 Months Old, $100, 140·
448-2398 After 5 ~M

Sporting
Goods

530

AKC Shellle pupplia, two blue
me1le females, one sable and

9 A 8
t K 6 5
• A K 8 2

,.

maintained, $1500, 740-742·2160 . ,

Bod, 8 9 dlosel, 5 speed·2tpeed
Single Axle. (304)675-6734

gralors, 90 Day Guaran'leel
French City May1ag 740-446 ·
GOOD USED IIPPLIANCES

1988 Crown Victoria LX, well

I

Ql-17 9ft

• . A K 9?

AKC Registered Mini Dachshund
puppies, long and short hair,

Appliances
Washers, Dryer&amp;, Ranges, R.ilrj·

7795

N

2539 lor dellia

~,:.:.98;:3.;;G:,;M:.:.C_.T;;.ru;;.ck.;;..;w.;.lt:.:.2-:-II~D~u-m-p:.

m-9999

Aa~ond1Uol;td

83 MUstang Con'lerUble, rtbullt
trtnamtsslon, new front 1nd,
tires, brakes, etc Call 304·458·
1

cream sabla, $300, 740·698·
1085.
breeding pair ol Cockatalls, 740·

Householc;l
Goods

12 =••ntln

992·7102

560

AMAZING

2bdrm apts total electric ap·
pliancea furnlehed, laundry room
tacmllas, close to school In lown

and apllt, &lt;11111/ertd, $30 lOad,
740-7ol2·2283

Why Rent , you can own your
own home tor as low as $499.
down low monthly payments,
owner financing available 304·

Street Gallipolis, Kitchen With
Stove &amp; Refrigerator $495/Mo .
Plus Utilities, Deposit, Aeferenc
as, No Rets, 74G-44B·9580

Mixed seaaoned firewood , cut

ESTATES !52 Westwood Drl'ite

7.5ACRES

17

Upstairs efficiency with private
entrance, completely furnlahed,
quiet surroundings. three mites
tram the Ravenswood Ritchie
Bridge In p!11o Perfect first apart..
nient for a single person or new
couple It you are looking, It's a
must aee. It's $390 a month, uUII·

Baths, Great location! 15 Court

C&lt;unpus, 74o-24s-SB58

740-368-8878

App roximately

tzed apt for elderly and handl·
cappod EOH 304-676-8879.

ars $3,500 Each ; One 20 Ft
Gooseneck Trailer, $2,800, I
Volkswagon Dune Buggy, $800
Firm. 1 Female Eskimo Spitz,
Spade, $50, Che81 Freezer $15(),
740-379-2351 Evonlngs

2 Bedroom Apartment, Adjacent
To Unlverslt~ 01 Rio Grande

BEAUTIF,Ul APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

On~ll74o-446-3385

740-992·5e96

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, rurnlshed and unfurnished, aacurltv
deposit required no pets, 740·

9580

Acres Blacktop Frontage &amp;
lake View, Gallla Count~.
$32,000 More Acreage Available,

for t br. HUD oubstd·

$200 worth ol !rae programming

s

Red Brick Ran ch St~le Hou ae,
Partially Finished Basement, 2
Car Garage, Serious Inquiries
By owner, 725 Page Street, Mid·
dleport, house &amp; 3 lots, must see
to appreciate, wm sell house without lots for $89,000 , 740·992·

Apartments
for Rent •

5 Court St Small One Bedrm ,

333 Third Aven ue, Gallipolis, 2

Story Houso, no-441-0432. 81418S6·3465
3 BR, 2 Bath, 2 Car Garage, Bride;

8252

1/2 acre tot In Syracuse. call 304-273-0297 after Spm or 304 3727308 ask for Irene Murphy

Utw HQmo Silo 740-4411-3545

All Applicat ions Must Be Post
Marked Sy 1128/99 Please In·
dtcate Position Applying For

electric and frost trae water 10
mlleslrom GallipoliS $650 month
plus t month security (610) 588-

qulred. (304)117S.1090.

213-8365
31 0' Homes for Sale

ac401t.'garage,barnwtth-4stalls,

2 Bedroom Apartment , 1 112

Used &amp;Ingle wide , around $100

we

65 fenced In acres. 3 bedrooms
2 baths, central air, fireplace 30ft

4l10

Rapid Aelundlll Will Pay

appllcat~ns

Moore owner.

New 16.:80 $50G-Oown $245--per
mo Free air, skirt t·800-69t ·

Limited orfer 1999 double wide, 3
br 2 ba $t,799 doWn, $275 00
per man , delivered and set up

Thts newspaper will not
knowln!tf accept •
advertisements for real estate
which 1o tn vlolollon ot lhe

tar &amp; Trash Paid, $250/Mo $250

Deposit, No Pets, May Consider
Land Contract. 740-388-9325

Taking ApplicatiOns On 3 Bed·
room Repo, Pre·Approvalln 10

por mon 1·80o-948-S678

All real estate advertising In .
this newspaper Is Slll)ecl to
Ihe Federal Falr Housing Act

Porter, Close To Schools H6spttal &amp; Stores, Newt~ Painted, wa-

Trailer for rent In Racine, 2 bed·
rooms, porch, carport, eKcellent
condition, $300 per month plus
utilities, $300 deposit, 740·9492217

wv

Twin Rtvera Tower now accepting

1913

Bu~ers,

Oakwood Homes, Barboursville,

ol-48-3481

Mobile home aile l'itallable bet·
ween Athens and Pomeroy, call

II 1/2% Interest Rate, To Quelllled

- · Call 1·801l-637·3236

Floors, CA, I 112 Balh, Fully Carpeted, Pallo, No Pels, Lease Plua
Security Deposit Required , 740·

tric, CA, t0x12 Outbblldlng, Rio

no pot&amp;, 740-892·5e5e

e

Tara Townhouse Apartmantl,
Very Spacious, 2 Bedrooms, 2

460 Space for Rent

CA, 8Xt0 Metal Building,
$18,000 oo 740·256-6851 II N"o
Answer, Lea.... Message.

Includes months FREE lot rent
Includes washer &amp; dryer. skirting,
deluxe steps and setup Only
$200 74 per month with $t150

Sowago, Tra1h, $295/Mo , 740·
446-0008

2 Bedrooms, 1 Bath, On 1 Ac11
Private Wooded Lot, Total Elec-

3 bedroom mobile hOme for rent,

Good selection of used homes
with 2 or 3 bedrooms Startmg at
$3995 Quick delivery Call 740·
385·962t

Now Taking Applications- 35
Wast 2 Bedroom TownP'Iouu
Apartment•, Includes Water

Homes.

1994 Noms Cla~ton 14X70, 2
Bedrooms 2 Full Paths, 2 Decks,

Lowest Rate In The Industry! largest Selection In Ttie
Tri·State, ov 81 50 To Choose
From, 1 800 251 -5070

Merchandise

9668

2 Bedrooms, Water And Trash
Paid No Pets On Bulaville Pika

recommends that you do bust·
ness with people you know and
NOT to send money through the
mall until you have Investigated

WANTED: Part·Time Posit ion
Available At A Community Group
Home For People With Mental
Retarda ton In Gallipolis 35 5 Hrs

CLASSIFIEDS!

2 &amp; 3 Bedrooms, Stove Refrigerator, Water &amp; Trash Paid $275

carport, 740·256-6336

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHI~G CO

limitation or discrimination
based on race color, llligkln,
S8)C familial status Of national
origin, or any IntentiOn to
make any such Pflferenol,
limitation or dlsatmtnalkn•

F

water and trash Included, 740·

992·2167.

2 Bedrooms In Kerr, 7~0·448·

Double Wide New $999-Down
$237·per mo Free delivery &amp; setup 1·800-69 1•6777

of I968 wl&gt;lch mikH It Illegal
10 advertise ~anv preference,

SAVE TIME AND
SHOP THE

1998 14x72 2 Bedrooma, 2 Betha,
740-245·983o4

VIew·

Salesperson Needed Furniture
Store, Full Time, Immediate
Opening, Apply Lifestyle Furnl·
ture 856 l:hlrd Avenue GalllpoUs,
10 To 2- No Phone Calls Please I

CHECK THE
FIRST!

14X80, 2 BedrOOinO, AIC, W &amp; D.
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I

Thursday, Jan. 28, !999
In !he year ahead, there's a strong
possibility that you could become
involved 1n ajotnt endeavor of some
kind that will prove 10 be of great
benelilto you Although rl will be a
colle&lt;:tive effort, you. m1ghl be the
brams behind it all.
,· AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb. 19) It
behooves you to so out of your· way
to be extra amicable to persons
whose lrne of work IS similar to
yours. A relarionship could develop
that will prove profilable for you
borh Know where to look for
romance and you'll find il. The
Astro-Graph Matchmaker inslantly
reveals which signs are romantrcally
perfect for you Mall $2 1S to Match·
milker, clo lhiS newspaper, P.O Box
1758, Murray Hill Slatton, New
York, NY 10!56
PISCES (Feb 20-March 20) By
0011aldng yourself or evenrs too seri·
ously, you'lllum whileveroccurs to
your advanlage, maktng all that happens today a mo.ot pleuant experi·

cnce.
ARII!S (March 21-April 19) You

,.

have lhe abilny to lransfonn your
good ideas into profilable successes
today, but first you must heheve in
yourself That's when lhe full force of
your luck comes nito play
TAURUS (Apni2Q..May 20) Two
unrelated sources could produce per·
sonal benefits for you roday, partly
from your own domg, but mostly
lhrough the represenlalton or people
who hke you. ·__:
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)

Where your worldly destres and
wants are concerned, cond1t1ons gen~
orally look extremely favorable for
you today As lhe trde sweeps in, II

could even sp1ll over mto your cmer
areil.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Don'l
back away from competitive devol·
opments loday, because it could turn
out to be your strong suit, includ1ng
both in buSiness jousts or sports

endeavors
LEO (July 23-Aug 22) It m1ght
lake a lillie patience on your part
roday, but 11 will be worth tl Even
!hough opportunittes mtght not be
visible JUS! yel, all will work out as
you have been hoptng

VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept 22) Put ht·
lie projects on the back burner today
and concentrate more on handhng
major asstgnments You will he far
better equ1pped to take care of them
than you are toying around wuh pel·
ty thtngs
LIBRA (Sepl 23-0ct. 23) Promtsing developments you have gomg for
you careerw1se should be your top
priority at thts ue. Both today and
tomorrow could be excellenl days To
capilalize on them.
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22)
Assume command

when the Situation

calls for illoday Under your personal
control and duectton everythrng
could work oul favorably for you and
all those mvolved
SAG!TIARIUS (Nov 23-Dec
21) Any negat1ve financ1al trends
you ' ve been expenencmg will make
a post live upsw1ng roday When you
see the stgnals, IT)' ro reap their
advanlages whtle the getting" good
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan 19)

Tlus 1s an excellent day to auempt at
lymg down any agreemen ts you've
been workmg on The fruus of your
ncgouauon w1ll be pennanen t and

bounuful

,,'
\•

t'

&lt;~~

Today(CC)

Uve(CC)

.:!I,.'
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~ P~ge 10 • The Dally Sentinel

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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

..

'

~ases

Wedn~ey,

.

resolved in Meigs County. Court session

· ·The fo~lowmg cases were settled tpbuung to the delinquency of a

school year and refunded if there are
nr 010rc unexcused absences; Ronnie
$100 bond to be posted and held until Wetls, Long Bottom, DUI, $850 plus
the end of the school year and refund· costs, one year OL suspension, 30
ed if there are no more unexcused days jail suspended 10 10 days, 9().
absences;
day vehicle immobilization, one year
Vickie Baker Pomeroy con- probation·, driving under suspension,
•
•
tributing to the delinquency of a . $200 plus costs, 30 days jail susmin or, three days jail suspended, pended to 10 days coQcurrent, one
$100 bond to be posted and held until year probation; fictitious tags, costs
the end of the school year and refund· on ly; open container, $50 plus costs;
ed if there are no more unexcused
Paul c. Reynolds. Cheshire, driabsences· Deborah G Ray Vinton
ving. under financial responsibility
seat belt', $25 plus ·costs:, Joseph' actiOn
· suspension, $200 plus· costs,
Quivey Pomeroy contributing to the three days jail and $100 suspended
. '
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dehnquency of a mtnor, three days upon proof of a val id OL within 90
jail suspended; $100 bond to be days, one year probation; speed, S20
posted and held until the end of the plus costs; seat belt, $25 plus costs;
· J

1a~t week 10 the Metgs County Court minor, three days jail suspended,

.of J~dge Patriclc H. O'Brien.
• ~med . were: Danny. D. Pauley,
Rat;tne, tllegal . possesston of buclc
deer, $100 plu~ costs; two counts of
iRegal possession of doe deer $200
•
pluS costs; Gary A. Spencer, Bidwell,
"gross overload, $672 plus costs;
Stanford 0. Co&lt;, Cheshire, failure to
yiold, $20 plus costs; Sarah M.
Smith, Mineral Wells, W.Va., speed
. .
.
'
$50 plus costs· Gerald Pemx Jr
S'yr'acuse , seat belt, $25 plus costs·:,
Russell W. Stewart, Middleport, seat
1
• f 'I ·
·
be)t. $.25 pus
costs , at ure to yteld,
i20 plus costs; Gene Meadows, Iron;to~, sP':ed, $30 plus costs; ·
· Davtd G. Lambert, Pomeroy, ille·
gal possession of deer, $130 plus
~o~t's; Joseph R. Gilkey Jr., Cheshire,
s~ar belt, $25 plus costs; stop sign,
·$20 plus costs; Joshua A. Davison,
Cr9wn City. speed, $30 plus costs;
Dexter R Mays, Uniontown, ('a., seat
belt, $25 plus costs; Paul E. Wallace,
Proctorville, speed, $30 plus costs;
Larry R. Batten, Parlcersburg. W.Va.,
speed, $30 plus costs; Jackie G.
.P!'r.ker, Pomeroy, overload, $450 plus
costs; Paul F. Amberger, Syracuse,
speed. $30 plus costs; Robert A. Triano, Charlotte, N.C., spefld, $30 plus
costs; Chad A. Burton, Middleport,
speed, $30 plus costs ; Rubin E. Bill,
Pasakala. speed, $30 plus costs;
Thomas E. )ohnson , Bid ~Ye ll, speed,
$30 plus costs; Chad J. Cook, Corniqg, speed, $30 plus costs; Robert E.
Sa~nders Jr.. Logan, axle overload,
$278 plus costs;
. Robert E. Grismeyer, Hinsdale,
Ill., speed, $30 plus costs; Caron R.
Edwards, Marietta,· speed, $30 plus
. costs; seat belt, $25 plus costs; Jere. , my C. Hubbard, Pomeroy, driving
11ncter the influence, $850 plus costs,
~0 days jail suspended to 10 days, 90.
day vehicle immobilization, one year

TamiL. McVay, Racine, spotligh.tlng 90 days· R · E Am0 ld p
$50 plus costs two ea h 1. '
: o;:;~ ·
• omeroy,
'license suspensi~n; Ant~on~ vu~r~~ it:ss;::n $IOOee~ parts 001 properericlc, Linle Hocking, disordeJiy con· ·~1 !u~ 'rided !~s ~~SIS\ IO ~ay~
duct, $30 plus ·costs; Wallace 1
Jer:'ld
Y thprobatton,
Reuter, Pomeroy, DUI $850 . lu~
ary b ns, omeroy, ree counts
costs IO d
· 'I
'd d hrp · p~tng. ad checks, $25 plus. costs,
.
ays Jat sus pen e tot ee resmuuon· James L Oarnes
days, 90.da OL sus nsion one Po
'. . ·
•
year prob ti~n, jail a~ $~SO sus· 30 n:farot .~mesUc vtoleQce, C'!5ts,
· pended ·up~n com letion ofresiden- ' . · .Y. J ' o~e ye~ lll'?bation,
tial treatment r~ ram within 90 .restnllnmg order •ssued, Dame! Mu!days·
p g
., phy,thL!&gt;o~; Bottom: t.heft, costs, stx
•
man sjlrison·recetvmgstolenproJa
E R d 1 h R · DUI
'
P·
$ 850mels · atsn 1P
'
d
act~~·
.
'
erty,
costs,
six
months
prison
conpus cos , 0 ays Jal 1 sus- secubve· Davtd Park Albany driv 1'ng
pend d 10 thr da ~d OL
d FRA'
'.
•·
~
ay, . . sus- un er
suspensiOn, $150 plus ·
. ee ys,
penston one year probauon Jatl and costs five days J'ail ·and $75
$550 su~pended upon compietion of pend~d if'valid OL present d ·!~sresidential treatment program within 90 days· '
e W.t 10

b

p·

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PEPSI &amp;
PEPSI
PRODUCTS

STORE HOURS
Monday tliru
Sunday
8AM·IOPM
298 SECOND ST.

24QZ.Nb

2/$

Accepts Credit Cards .

WE

•

.
.
.
•
Jennte M. Gnnstead, Mlddlepon, •
DUI, $850 pl~s costs, 10 days jail :
suspend."!~ to 1' ree days, ~~ay ~~ :
suspenston, one year probauon, ~atl ,
and $S~O ~u~pended upon compleUon
of restdenttal treatment program '
w'th'
f 'I
· 'd '
1 10 90 d
•
ays; at ure to. provt e :
proofof!ns~rance, SI&lt;J?concurrent,
~o.st~; Rtchard S. Damels: Athens, •
llnvmg under PRA suspenston, $150 ,
plus costs, IO ·daysjatl suspended to •
t d
b1
f ' 'I d$75
wo ays, a ance 0 J31 an
suspended
if
valid
01:.
presen1ed
within
·90 d
b · R0 be '•
ays, one year pro altOn;
rt
J.Glass,Pomeroy,domesticviolence
t 10 d
· ·1
d d
'
coss, . b a7s Jat suspe~ e ' ~ne
rear dpro atton, restratntng or er ::
tssue .
•

P0 WE L L-'S
THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU January 30, 1999

RC COLA
PRODUCTS

WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS
FOR DETAILS

Thursday

January 27, 1989 ·

2 LITERS

.January 28, 11Mi11

OSU falls to Michigan State, Page 4
Inter-family infidelity causes pain, _Page 8
·
Eastern school news, Page 7

•

Today: Cloudy
High: lOa; Low:.CO.
Tomorrow: Cloudy
High: .co.; Low:30s

..

~arriage licenses
. .· The following couples were
J~sucd marriage licenses recently in
tlie Meigs County Probate Court of
Judge Robert Buck:
Brian Keith Kimes, 19, Racine,
and Andrea Nicole Runyon , 18,
Pomeroy; Kevin Wayne Oiler 28
Langsville, and lois Jane Ebli~. 29:
Rutland; Ronald Earl Hart 84
Racine, and Betty Lou Merce~. 61 :
..ycst Columbia, W.Va .

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-Page~

..
Meigs County's

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 49, Number 185

Single Copy · 35 Cents

White House s'i gnals it might sl.&lt;ip witnesses;
By LARRY MARQASAK
Pr... Wrtt•r

~ochlted

WASHINGTON (AP)- Senators are struggli11g to
~eacl\ a ·bipanl'san timetable for the remainder of Pres.
Jdent Clinton's impeachment trial as the White House
signals it may forgo defense witnesses if there's no
new .damaging testimony.
Seriate Republican leader Trent Loll and Democra·
tic leader Tom Daschle e~pressed hope they could pre·
sent a proposal today to conclude the trial by Feb. 12
or sooner.
Any agreement approved in party meetings would
be presented for approval in today's impeachment trial
session.
If a negotiated settlement for the rest of the trial
eludes senatprs, they still would need to approve pro·
cedures for depositions of Monica Lewinsky, prcsi·
dential friend Vernon Jordan and White House aide
Sidney Blumenthal.
.
These issues arc expected to be the only business in
the proceeding today.
.
White House lawyers, . meanwhile, let Daschle
. know their views on the possibility of forgoing wit·
nesses, accotdingto senior presidential advisers who

would not be quoted by name.
·
The defense team .said, first, that
there would have to be no new damag·
ing information from the three witness·
es.
But the White House also wants the
. Senate to decide against live testi,mony
"'d opposes a Republican idea that
Clinton could be found guilty but not
removed.
Under those conditions, one legal
adviser said the White House was comfortable to just argue the facts ." and
bring this to a vote."
Wedneaday morning, Lott had said
he was seeldng a conclusion of the perjury and obstruction-of-justice case by
Feb. 6, but he backe!l off that date when
negotiation~ picked up in the afternoon.
Between the proposal and the negoti·
ations, the Senate took back-to-back votes that demonstratcd that·Democrats have the muscle to prevent the
· two-thirds majority . needed to convict Clinton and
remove him from office.

First, senators defeated a motion by
Democrat Robert Byrd of West Virginia
to dismiss the case.
With only 34 votes needed to block
conviction, the Democrats produced 44
votes for dismissal.
Only one Democrat, Russell Feingold
of Wisconsin, voted "no" along with 55
Republicans.
Moments later, senators cast their
votes in favor of deposing Ms. Lewin·
sky, Jordan and Blumenthal.
With Feingold again joining Republicans for a 56-44 margin, Democrats
demonstrated a second time that the 67
votes for conviction are not there.
A USA Today-CNN-Gallup poll
released today found that 44 percent of
the 645 adults surveyed approve of call·
ing witnesses and 54 percent disapprove.
The poll had a margine of' error of 4 percentage points.
After the back·to·back votes Wedneaday, Republi;
cans and Democrats turned to working separately on
proposals, including different approaches to possible
'
.

resolutions condemning Clinton's conduct
••
Democrats worked on language that would coi\·
demn Clinton's extramarital affair with Ms. Lewinsky;
but without a finding of guilt.
Republicans discussed a finding that Clinton com•
mined perjury and obstruction but separate that issue
from a vote to remove him from office.
"I think there is a widespread feeling on both sides
of the aisle that some expression of the inappropria~ness of the behavior is a good idea,,.said Sen. Mild
McConnell, R-Ky.
Loll told reporters Wednesday that "tight now,
everybody understands that we're going to the sub·
poenas and the depositions of these three witnesses.
We'll need to see what that reveals.
"And then everybody will have a chance to read jt
and decide what they want to do at that point."
Daschle said Democrats were "very opposed" to
any proposal that would include a finding of guift
against Clinton that .was separate from a vote on lltC
actual articles of impeachment.
·
Such a finding would only need a majority of 51
senators, a vote Republicans could win at the cost of
ending the case with partisan rancor.
·

Eastern board discuss·es property sale
US"I C"OI~IIOIE.LE~S ~IE~

Steak

~~~~~~~ STIIP

.
.......................

sa
r. 91

Lit

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Ham ••••••••••••••••••• 7. 9
$
39
yteiners~.;.........~~ 1
$
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St
99 c Tavern Hams •••~. 1 .
'

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SMITHFIELD SMOKED.PICHI~.
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K

DRESSINGS

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.OSCAR MAYER

.FRES~ CHICKEN

SUPERIORS .WHOLE .BONELESS

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Breasts •••••••••••• ~~.
USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEE~ $·149
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180Z.

KRAFT HANDI·
SNACK PUDDING
: OR GELATINS
Good Afternoon

4PAK.

Chuck Roasts •••••••• ~.

$·1 69

USDA ~HOICE BONELESS·BEEF

Today's

Sentinel

l Sections • lll'ages

English Roasts ••••••'!~ ·· .
USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF $

HUDSON

.Ru p Roa s•• ~~.

CREAM
FLOUR

(REGULAR ONLY)

slb.99C

EPA wants more
school site tests
COLUMBUS (AP) - An old acrial .photo of a military depot in Mar·
ion. County showing an area where
digging had been done has prompted
the Ohio Environmen tal Protection
Agency to seek more tests at the site.
An agency official said Tuesday
the photo talcen in 1961 may indicate
another dump was on the ·grounds
where two River Valley District
schools now sit.
· The EPA, Ohio Department of
Health an,j U.S. Corps of Engineers
have been investigating the property
since it was discovered that an abnor·
mally high number for former River
Valley High School st udents had
~cquired leukemia.
Tests detected cancer-causing solvents in the soi ll 0-15 .feet below the
surface , but the results seemed
. insignificant until the aerial photo
W'15 found by the EPA.
:'This is .new infonnation. ieff
Steers of the EPA office in Bowl.ing
Green told The Columbus Dispatch.
·:1don 't know where the source (of
the chemicals) is or the extent."

'

•

operator's license suspension 1 one

year probation ; failure to control.
cos.ts only; possession,. $50 plus
odsts; Peggy L. Hall, Racine, passing
bad checlcs. $25 plus costs, three days
j~il suspended, restitution; Virginia
Jenkins, Pomeroy, three counts of
passing bad checks, $25 plus costs.on
each, three days jail suspended on
eacH, restitution; Tanya S. Hess,
f&gt;t&gt;meroy, passing bad checks, $25
plus costs, restitution:
jleverly S. Halley, Middleport,
. passing bad checlcs, $25 phis costs,
restitution; Danny D. Pauley, Racine,
th'ree counts passing bad checks, $25
plus costs, restitution; Sherry Hollen,
lvliddleon, two counts of passing bad
checks, $25 plus costs on each. resti·
tution; Linda Bing, Middlepon, contributing to the delinquency of · a
minor, costs, three days jail suspended,' $100 bond to be posted and held
until the end of the school year and
refunded if there are no more unexcused absences; Guy Bing, Middle·
port, contributing to the delinquency
of a minor, three days jail suspended,
$tOO bond to be posted and held until
the·end of the school year and refunded if there are no more une&lt;cused
absences:
:· Shirley Diddle, Middleport, contrfuut ing to the delinquency of a
minor, three days jail suspended,
$100 bond to be posted and held until
t~e end of the school year and refunded if there are no more une&lt;cused
absences; Pamela Richards, Portland, con tributing to the delinquency
of a tninor, three days jail suspended,
$! 00 bond to be posted and held until
the end of the school year and refunded' if there are no more unexcused
abinces; Sara Partlow, Rutland, con-

WVU beats
Marshall In
overtime

INO
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By MARTIN CRUTSINGER
AP Economic&amp; Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - Federal Reserve
Chainnan Alan Greenspan said today what
President Clinton and most politicians have so
far avoided saying: Any pennanent solution to
keep Social Secu.rity from going broke will
almost certainly require increasing · taxes or
cutting b!:nefits.
.
In testimony before the Senate Budget
Committee, Greenspan also repeated his criti·
cism of one element of Clinton's plan, having
the government investment around $700 bil·
lion of Social Security money in the stock market. "Even with herculean efforts," he said, he
doubts decisions on investing this money could
be insulated fr()m political pressures.
On the politically sensitive issue of benefit
cuts or tax increases, Greenspan said the demographics of a huge baby boom generation retir· .
ing and fewer workers left to support retirees
present policy-makers with few choices. ·
"In all likelihood, these taxes will have to
bo; raised, or benefits cut, given that the system
as a whole is still significantly underfunded,"
Greenspan said.
Greenspan's views carry great weight on
Capitol Hill, given what most politicians
believe has been his exceptional direction of
monetary policy during the current lengthy
period of prosperity.
He is also. considered a top authority on

bond issues for construction of new K-8 ·
elementary school buildings.
.
Bucldey said the permanent improv~
ment funding is being di~ctcd loW~
Meigs High School sinoe that buildin$
will most likely remain pan of the district
. "We don't w.ant to submit a significanl
chunlc of change to A building we may
close," he said.
T,he architects have examine4
Pomeroy and Middleport elementart
schools and Meigs Middle School in Middleport.
·
There is a possibility of a school con=
struction bond issue being on the ballot in
November, Bucldey said. In the event that
the district·pursues a school construction
bond issue, the-pennanent .improvement
money will be rolled over into the bQnd
issue, he added.
. In personnel mailers, the board hired
Danny Thorn~ as reserve baseball coach
and hired Chad E. Griffith as a substitute
teacher for the re~ainder of the school
year.
The board also approved two field
trips at no.cost to the board·and moved the
next board meeting to Feb. 10, 7 p.m. at
the district's central office in Pomeroy.
Present were Buckley, Treasurer Cindy
Rhonemus, Board President John Hood
and board members Scott Walton, ·Roger
Abbott, Randy Humphreys and Wayn~
Davis,

•
" I

·'

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