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County's
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February 4, 2000

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Friday

·Meigs County Community Calendar, As
Marauder girls double up Belpre, a1

~rdQ:CIO~
Hflh: lOs: low: 20S

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Middle·purt • PurnProy. Ohio

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Helping out ·our feathered friends Soulsby
plans_
feeders
Local sportsmen.
_install . bird '

·write-·in
effort(

BY JIM FRE!MAN
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

•

'Pige Eight- The Deily s.ntlntl 2000 Tax Guide

~ - ----~----~----------------------~--~~--~----~~--------~.----------------------

------~-.lax.es: 6ettin·g ~!~h· ~GU.·g ·h~r~
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'The new phone syslen\ iniOaccuracy was a problan lhere,[!lo. ti-year computer rnodemization
In future years.. thQ8e !ape
grates what had bceq 2S .largely
Slugish Jll!one service is oqly program aimed at improvins
taxpayet files will be p'iidually
the tip of an'icebeqpll the IRS that · accessibility to lallpayer data
autonbmous sir,s into one system
SWitched OVCI to modem difu, I
centered in Manta. A tupay~'s
dates lillck. to tlie 1960s: ali
improve electronic filing and
monume~tal project jnvolvins
call could' be routed - virtually
aneient SySielll of tape computer
improve' butpayct asai&amp;llqli:e.
some of the largest comlJIIIer
anyw~ .In the Country instead
files thal slbre .illl U.S. taxpayer · '11\e lmPf?ved phone system is · files in the .'world. Risks inclUde
of staying in one geographic
data 1'he8e tapes ~ only be a part of lhst. The next step, Cos- loss oftaxpayC.- daiB,~CcoUnt misregion, as had been the case for
updated once a .week, meaning
grave said, is to ha've all Jlllller air- · takes or ~ays. . '
years.
even simple qqestlons &gt;' about respondence from taxpilycts
"There's a reason nobody has
. 'The more complicated calls m
refunds and payments can ·take
replaced the .fu.ster·.files in l5'
imme4ilitely logged in and
· to be handled by IRS WoOO!n With
days to answer..
'
imaged sO that IRS workers will
Ye&amp;r$.'' ~ Mlcl"lt'•• YaY·
moteexpertise in those areas, and
After years.of.fits and siamhave the most up-~ recortls
risky and difftcult job. lt'i a rea- .
they won 'I get bogged down 'with
and billions 'o f w-.ted dollars .
a
seemingly !Simple 'task that
sible projec~ but it'~ a hlsJt-risk,
more. routine mallefS, said IRS · the IRS u in··the midst of a mulhas 1ong elUded the SC!Vlce. ·
large-scale, difficult projeCt." '
Commissioner Charles Rossolli.
"From the tupayen' point of
view, we hope they'll
ter chance of gettiiJg ~J.I!Sih 'i!il'h~.:l
getting the right answer,"
"I think we'll be somewhat
tct. It will take years to~~ what
I consider top-quality le'vel of set. .
.
vjce."
· In some ca&amp;eS, taxpayers ~
asked 1o reCord their ljliestion wiih
the IRS and leave a telephone
number, with the answer
.promised within tiiree busineslt
· .days.•·
.
, · .. ·
· ,. The tRS inlming for a phone
response rate of 8S pcteent by
2001. !Ills year, Cos~ve ;Wii.
"we w11l be somewhere between·
•
70 and 8S pctcenl"
. Taxpayers can also access the
.
BIG
.· . IRS Web site - irs.gov - ·and
LOADS
find answers to·dozens of questions. Last year, the page received
!Wiygeltingthebugsou~"Cosnearly794millionhits,a 114per- ·
grave said: ''This year, we're not
cent increase from 1998. In addi'
' '' ..
going 10 have the same problems.
lion, ISS,OOO people ·e-mailed
We are much further ahead.••
q~tions to the agency, although

WASHINGJ'ON (AP) ·- For
years, trying to get a tax question ·
answered by calling the ·Internal
Revenuli Service meant frustration
. for millions of people. Taxpayers
frequen~y can 'I even set through
on I (800) 829-1040.
Last year was particularly ·
rocky for -the IRS as it tried to
implement a IIC1!' natiOilll callrouting ·syslem that . would link .
expens Jwith people who have
more complicated questions and
move all calls to the first able
worker. · ·
.
To make things worse, the
phone lines were · opened 24
hours, 7 days a week for the first
time- but there was no increase
· in staff. ; •
"We had a rough goofi~" ssid
Paul COSgrave, chief infonnation
officer at the IRS.
'
According to the con~ional Genel,'al Accounting om~ lhe
percentage of taxpayers who actually got through to an IRS helper
via telephone dropped toSS pet"
cent last year from 74 percent the
,.
year before,
The GAO audit said the drop
· resulted from - "unrealistic
assumptions," such as an expee- _
tation that 24-hour service 'would
even the calls out throughout the
day instead of peaking at certain
times.
"Last year's filing season was

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If you have
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Drawers
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might be eligible for EITC.

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rriun(J.Yet some people who

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Call .l-800-829-J676 for a .
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copy of IRS PUblicatiot,

-596, llorned Income Crlillt.

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Candidates for Republitan and
Democratic central committees are also
elected. The primary election is two
· months early this year, so that Ohio can
·be a part of the important "Super Tues·
day" presidential primary.
·
A county-wide levy issue, proposing a
4-mill, three-year levy for the operation
of the emergency room and other services at Veterans Memorial Hospibl, will
also be on the ballot, as will proposed

Please see Reclster, Page Al

~' CO~UMDUS

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(AI') -. OhiJ should consider ...
Tobin said Scudder's Ca.&lt;e raises fundamental quesino-torium on executions now that a second inmate tions about Ohio's system of ca.pital punishment.
i '2 5~~ --;.. 12 ,.,... . ·.'With~men!al illness in his background has ~ed to die, .
"Did our system really work well enough to take
· ihe Catholk Conference of Ohio said.
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his mental illness into consideration? And if didn't in
Calendar ·..
, AS
. "I'm not.sure,these ~re the type of people !hat peo- this case, are there other cases?': he sa1d . .
. 'Pie'think should be 'put t~ death," Jim Tobin, associate
Chris Davey, a Montb'Otnery spokesman, said it's ,
director ,of the Catholic. Conference of Ohio, said too early for people to be comparing Scudder's ca.&lt;e to
Comic•
Thunday. .
. . .
, ·
· llerry's.
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EditorialS ·
. ~t month, Keo;&gt;in,·liclldder, 36, filed a handwritten
"This is a case where we n~ed \O let the process
ObltJJidet ' ·
. . ~otice in fe~eral court that he 'is waiving his rights for work," he said Thursday. .
.
·SpOth
an
appeal
of
his
case.
H~
¥~
wrpte J'\ttorney General
Adele
Shank,
Scudder's
court-appointed
lawyer,
Al · Detty Mon.tgomery, asking for her help in havipg his downplays similarities between her client and llerry.
)Veathei
death .sentence carried out as scheduled on April 25.
Derry "had a long hi.&lt;tory of recent, court-ordered;
Scudder wi!$ itntence~ td death for the rape and thorough, detailed evaluations of his mental health
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fatal 'stabbing qf 14,-year-old Tina Baisden of Colum- with multiple .Xperts, opportunities for hearings and
• · b..S iri 1989 · .
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cross examinations,'~ Shal)k said. "None' of that has
Plck,3: 1-6-1; Plek 4: 5-&amp;-9~6
Scudder~\ case -bears some resemblance to the case happened in this cao;e."
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ofWilf&lt;;)rd Lee Berry Jr., whose mental _competency . A doctor first diagnosed Scudder with a learning
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w.IS ·questioned after he a$ked that hi1 appeals be . disability at age 9, according to report&lt; on file with
'£VA,
.
dropped.
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U.S. District Judge Algenon Marbley.
Dolly 3; 1-1.1-.7 ~ 4: 7-!\-3-0
Derry, executed by lethal injection on Feb. 19,
Scudder attempted suicide as a teen-ager .and bter
1999, was the first death row inmate executed in Ohio wa.&lt; di'agnosed as a paranoid schizophrenic, the reports
in 36 years.
indicate.
.

COLUMBUS (AP) - The
tW,_o Republican la..,makers positioning . them~elves to beco~e -llicreas~ 111
Qhio House speaker managed to holdet 'said,
• . Rarlay t~eir future prospects into a date for SJ·,eak:~r;l
, Harris
sucoessful fii!ld-raisil)g year in
1999, lind
. 19\19..
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· .' Larr,y ,Householder, 40, of 1\.epublic~n
. (lle.nford, will !&gt;ecome speaker in func\ Dec. 28.
2001 and Dill Harris, 65, of Ash- . 1 He ·has :s91,1
land, will serve as speaker in 2002.
Each ·WQuld be the other's toll
&lt;!eputy ilurhig his ter~.
. Hou'seholder
-· collected
$285,3 79 in co11tributioi1S in
999, a non-e~ection year, accord~ · report: . H ,
lf\g to campatgn finance _reports. . r:ltsers 'm the
. II) 1997, when he was. not in th~ coll&lt;;agues' t~.
running for speaker, Householder The. events · ·
collected $35,595.
$74,000, inch•4i
"I came on lead~rship for the · t~ilt , flelte~

commissioners, sheriff, clerk of Court~,
recorder, treasurer, Common Pleas
judge·, engineer and co roner.

.. -: 1-Jdars i(:~ . . ".Je!atn.. .enalfy foes seek moratoriu_m
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Lotteries

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find_ out_if you're·eligible.'

lai~m-i""~·,.._:..'R•S•We._b_si~...e..: ~.:

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had
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and earnings under $26,928, .•

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if you have one ~uymg child

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to a sl,816·credit.

If Y~. work hard but don't
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WASHINGTON '(Al') . Energy · said more cutbacks 'W\lre needed because
Richardson . said in. ~ stat~ment that before imposing involuntary layoffs.
Secretary Dill Richardson says he wlli · it:S ~o~t$ were ~oo'high· and a deal·to han- he thought many ·workers at the
About 2,100 people work at the
, try to find new jobs. ~or 1u,md_reds of• . ·dl~, .. u~niu?T J salv~ tiom · Soviet-era Port&lt;mopth Gaseol!s 'Diffusiqn Pl~nt&gt;in '. Ohio plant, making It one of southern
wotkers who wtll be la1d of!' th1s sum• warheads ;was .turmng out to be less Ohio an.d the Paducah Gueou~ Diflh-· Qh1o's laf'b&gt;eS~ employer;;. About 1,700
mer at the nation's uranium enrichment ; profitable tlia'n expected.
simi Plant in KentuckJ! coJJid m_OVe 'into .. \)'Qrk at the Kentucky facility.
plants:
,
.. ·,. "It is . well.~nown that increased glob- · other jobs a.r the same vyo'rk sites, clean,The COI)l~any said it intended to
~ . The
U.S: Enrichment ,· Corp. · al oversuJiply of eririchmeni and strong i!lg up radioactive and chemical con\3- re~uce costs at the company's headquaranno~ncedThursday chat it plans to ~ut ', £ompeti~q't· ha~, resultCII in increasing . mination. •. . ·
ters in Bethesda, (vld., but no layoffs
SSO JObs, 22 ,percent of the workfQr&gt;e,; ;(l~essure· on, tliS"to -further reduce our .
Doth Ja~ilitl&lt;is a.re · .highly polluted · were anhounced amol)g the 160 peop!e
from its plants in Ohio and Kentucky· ''labor ' costs." iaid . 'Miller, ~SEC. because envlromnental concerns took a who {vork tnere.
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where uranium is prepared for nuclear
vice
· · ,• .
. ba~k seat to' ~'roducti~l) during the Cold · . Rep. Ted Strickland: D-Ohio;whose
poWer plants.
. ·
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.$39. ,War er~;. deaning.'up th" sites will keep southern Oh10 diStract mcludes l1keton,
; Buyouts moved 250 people :off ·l~e ..
' ~utsi', ·. hun'~i:eds ofwork~.:S e_Mploy'ed for years. , s~id he would urge the Clmton ad nunpayroll at each plant last year, but USEC ·'
. . .0\.,:, .&gt; · !J,S~C sai~ it ~~u!d se~k voh~nt_eers
PINse see ~ffs, Pllp Al.

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S~ler

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Available In ~· :

OMEROY - Chickadees, cardinals, juncos
and other "snowbirds"
in Pomeroy have some
new feeding stations,
thanl,s to local spommen.
The M~igs County Fish &amp;
POMEROY - Meigs County Sheriff
Gam~ Club, working with local
James M. Soulsby, disqualified as a candi- ·
businesses and Meigs Colinty
date in the March primary. annourced
Game . Protector· Keith Wood;
Thursday that he will seek re-election as
installed three new bird feeders'
a write-in candidate on the November
. Thursday at Veterans Memorial
ballot.
Soulsby said that he plans to obtain'
Hospital Extended Care and the
Meigs County Senior Citizens .
the necessary hours to complete . the
Center.·
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training qualifications iA time to.file as a
· Two" s~ailer . feeders ~e're
write-in candidate.
installed at the extended care
The sheriff was disqualified from runwhile. a. large feeder, bl!ilt and
. ~ing for another term by the Meigs
installed by Pomeroy craftsman
County Board of Elections on the basis
Dob Thompson, was put in place
of a letter which he wrote to the board.
·at .the senior center. Also working
The letter said that_due to an error by
Qn the project was Tom Grueser
the Ohio Peace Officer Training Associaof Pomeroy, representing the fish
tion, ' he was not notified that .he had
&amp; Game Club.
insufficient hours of state-sanctioned
O'Dell Lumber and llaum
training, and beca'!se of that, he was not
Lumber supplied the material for
given an opportunity to get the additionbirdhouses, while the Ohio Divi. al training. ·
sion of W:ildlife and the Sugar
Soulsby refers to qualifications set
Run Mill, Pomeroy, supplied bir\i
forth by the state requiring that cimdifeed and suet blocks. The Fish &amp;
dates seeking the sheri.fl's office meet a
number of training ·and management'
Gaine Club also bought some
birdhouses.
conditions in order to qualify.
'.' The . important thing . to
He has served as sheriff of Meigs
remember about birdfeeders ' is . '
Cot~nty. for the past 12 years.
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that you have .io maint:iil) ,them," , ~T~Fqqif ~ : FfxQtEJiED ~~~!)$ ,"':-.': Local ,birds ~~~1~0 , -~~ ~uf11Y,,Ash &amp; !-'Jame Club, Meigs Game Protectpr Keiltl Wood
Wood said. O'rtte you start feed- ~1'11\!l&lt;tii~ bi~J~·~,-.•tJ Thursd~ behind tile Mll&amp;s•ti~''~Oi\]efciy area resident l;!ob Thompson, from left, install the
.. ;ng them, especially during the County Senior ~Citliens tinter, Pomeroy, Here, Tom.;Gcueser...ot......telide~.Which.was..bullt by.Jhampson from locally donated .material.
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Wi.r»er: YOu·HaVe to torititiue.
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she
~said.·
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~r.·;.~{'!f~~.~~·~~~fr~:t
~~:,A~d.·;~~~·
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~e;d
t~ re~1ember ~hat tiS a.dJ~;~,~~m·on~ila. ·
A variety of feeds will attract
more types cif birds, he explained.
To .pJ;l'vent sq~irfels !Tom' raiding· -:- Fl,uffy 'CA·N kill,
Birds with conjunctivitis will have matSome bird species prefers suet and. everl ' damaging .-, lii~feeders, Wells . ' C~,!:$ .+ even wellcfed cats-'are one of ted, crusted-over eyes and niay be partially
while others enjoy a die\ of seeds. 'Ub'lles!S·put(i{lg out a feeder for them, too. *e _biggest predators of sQngbirds, include .· or totally blind.
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POMEROY - Monday .is th e voter
O.ld' food and waste should be : Not ·all ~~e .birds that come to a bird .inf.i: lh~~fened a'!d ''endangered sp~cies,_
It is 'a fatal condition, Wells said. The
registration
deadline for the March 7
inte.rest~d in sunf!OY(er !!(!eds or ' and .atcoriiin'g to. :;llril~ · r~searchers, domes- probfe,n .is if that bird is feeding at your ·
cleaned regularly from the feed- feeder
primary election .
sqet.' sOme are ' ~tttacted'· to the .feeding tic cats ~ill hundn!ds .o(millions of birds in .feeder, it can give it to other birds. A bird
ers,~ "'
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Registration forms sent to a county
· : ~
·
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, the U!li~d States each yt!ar. Wells obserlied · w~tcher who finds a bird he or she sus- .
: Watching birds . is a popular birds.&lt; ' .. · ,
board of elections· or th e secretary of
pastime,.accdrding to Division of •·"pe~pl~ get reaUy 'upset when a ~awk that 80 percent of}efpand.&lt; . recovered pects has conjunctivitis should properly
staie 's office must be postmarked' or
Wildlife spokeswoman Carol C'9fll.es iJ'I ·and his lunch:' Wells : said.. from a. federal moprll'lng'ab~e survey were dispose of the bird and disinfect the bird
received in person by Monday, as well.
'~'ntere's not a lot }'Oll can do about it; you from cat kills. 'I;' ' ', ' · : · ·· '
feeder.
Wells.
Next month's primary is ·a partisan
· "If y~u have it out in an ··open C:ap't:!mrn th,em_. ', '
··
, The Division'tl,fWildtlfe ~lso wants bird
Salmonella can result from not having
election, meaping-that voters must regis-·
space, you can use an old Christ- ": "~rrraenil?,c!r. aftf'r all: the.y .do ,call it .a ·· lovers to ~~ o.n;tfiet lo.C.~~ut for two dis- fresh 'bjrd food or from having dirty bird
ter as ei ther Republican, Democrat or
mas tree for cover fi-om preda- ~!rCI:(eedor,.~d _all~~ecie! have_to eat:"
· eases_~~at cap af':ef($&lt;m!l'l\l:~s-: conjunctivi~ baths, Wells said. ·
Issues-only .voters.
·~
The ballot will include candidates for
president of the United States, US. Senat.e, the US. House of Rep resentatives,
the Ohio House of Representatives, as
well as several county ·offices: county

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BUCKEYE BRIEFS

, Page A 2 • The Dally Sentinel
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Poll workers in great demand
, .C LEVELAND (AP) - C ount Virginia Ballentine out for working
· the polls during the March 7 primary. Like hundreds of other veteran
· poll worke", Ballentine plans to be in Florida that week.
Oltio pushed up its primary by two weeks this year to try to wield
r11u rc i11fhrencc in the presidential race. California and New York also
are holdin g primaries March 7, making it the first major Electio,{ Day
af~er the Iowa caucuses and New Hampshire primary.
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But the earlier date has counry: board of elections of concerned that
iegubr workers will be vacationing in Florida. Senior citizens, who
make up the bulk of poll workers, also are worried that the weather
-· may be too bad for the~1 to drive.
,
" Ma11y peoplt!' are out of state or have health concerns or are wor, ricd about the weather. Finding workers is more difljcult this year
because of the early election date," said Marilyn Jacobcik, director of
l orain County's board of elections.
Th e county is about 30 percent short of the 1,200 poll workers .it
''. llenl&lt;, Jacobcik said. In Medina and Mahoning counties, election offi. r ial&lt; &lt;aid they won't be able to rely on dozens of their regular work.L' rs
. bcu usc they still will be down south on Election Day.
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State promises.Lawrence $15,000
, · JR.O NTON (AP) - The Ohio Department of. Development
pledged up to $25,000 Thursday to help Lawrence County's econ, omy rebo und. ,
Local officials requested the money to hire a consultant for a
. IIIa rkcting analysis of the area. The study would prepare the county
"f&lt;ir execu tion of a $70,000 marketing plan.
· · 1 .
'" [he conununity felt it should use some outside expertise to
.. identifY their strengths and type.s of industries they could most
· dl'ec tively market to," said TJ Justice, regional econontic develop~
· ment representative for Gov. Bob Taft.
" · local officials previo1,1sly agreed to raise $35,000 for the market- ,
in[( plan ar1d will receive matching dollars from the state.
' ·
. Lowrcnce County, 85 ntiles south of Columbus, recendy lost
Ill Ore th an 1,000 jobs because of layoffs or plant closings in the area
iuvulvi11 g Ironton Iron , Cabletron, Ashland Oil and Allied Signal.

Report: ~airfield sheriff indicted
LA NC ASTER. (AP) - The Fairfield County sheriff has been
. ,indicred on numerou.s felony charges thought to include ·theft in
· oOice. th e sheriff's attorney said:
,
..
She rin· Gaty DeMastry is scheduled to be arraigned Thursday in
hirlicld C ounty Conm1on Pleas Court, .his attorney Sam DeMastry
;:~&lt;:~ld ' \ he Columbus Dispatch for a story today. DeMastry's wife, Penny,
;ar1 adr11inistrJtive assistant in the sheriff's office who bas handled book.:k0cpir 1g, .i lso has been indicted, the newspaper said.
:; -: Sharnansky said he didn't know how many charges the grand jury
:: tr ad lr&lt;1 mkd up against DeMastry or whether other employees of the
:.,hc· nll 's nllice \~ad been indicted. But he said he understands DeMas;: II y t:JCes ·a number of charges.
·:. · I kMmry has not been served with papers for the indictments; but
; he h:!' " l''' ncralunderstanding of the charges, Shamansky said.
: ·. " I snspcct 1hey will be very serious criminal charges involving theft
:i u ofli ce and theft-related conduc t while the sheriff was in office and
::cou ld conceivably involve very, wry serious viol~tions of law, all of .
·, whi ch we 'll be able to further tonunent on once we've reviewed the

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WASHINGTON (AP) - Gary Bauer,
stung by his last- place finish in the New
Hampshire GOP,primary and unable to break
through the pack of Republi cans, is dropping
out of the presidential race, an offi cia l close to
the conservative activist said.
''I'm a . fighter, but I'm not delusional,"
Bauer said Tuesday after getting just 1 percent
of the vote in New Hampshi(e's c;ritical leadoff presidential primary.
.
His campaign scheduled a riews conference
for this morning. Spokesman Tim Goeglein
would not give further det:iils.
Bauer, who would be the sixth Republican
to drop out, leaves a field of four still battling

.

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having bills last 'til Friday .:"hen .the paycheck
only lasted until Thursday, he sa1d m a debate
last fall.
Bauer worked for Prf' ident Re&lt;rgan , first in
the Educaiion Department and then as
dop1estic policy adviser at 'the White Hou se,
and often invoked the former president's
image i~ his, campaign literatUre and rhe1oric.
Before running for preSident, Qauer was
head 'of the Family R.esean;h Council, an
influential conservative group based in Washington. Under his lead,ership the council came
to rival the Christian Coalition a'[ the voice of
grass- roots conservative activism in American
politics.

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WASHINGTON (AP) spend an additional $2.7 billion for on planting and gave (armers a intended to substitute for additionAgriculture Secretary Dan Glick" conservation -programs, including series of fixed annual payments. a\ emergency bills that marly lawman says the administration's pro- $1.2 billion in direct payments to Griti,cs say the iixed payments were makers and admi•\istration officials
posals for S11.5 billion in nev; farmers who take steps to curb insufficient when · commodiry think are inevitable otherwise.
farm spending. will "lay the runoff of pesticides and ..fertilizers . prices feU sharply in 1998. ·
. "Two years of pl~nging comgroundwork" for developing a from their lal)d. An additional $1.3
C&lt;;&gt;ngress bas passed $15 billion modity prices, natural disasters and
· new agricultur:il policy that is bet- billion' would' go toward expand~ in emergency assistance over th&lt;&gt; nearly S15 .billion in emergency
ter for the ·environment and targets ing the federally subsidized crop !.S~ yea{ to compensate farmers for . relief was a tacit admission that the
money to small"~cal~ producers.
insurance program and .providing thtl: li'lw !?rices ;.rell as vo.:e~ther- 1996 farm bill was not satisfactory,"
At the top of the adm.inistra- discounts to farmers on ,the premi- relafed crop 'losses. , . Glickman said at a news confertion's w.ish list' is a new system of ums.
!f.he adl)linistration's·
· plan is • ence Wednesday.
"supplemental ' income" paym.ents
To Glickman and some farmers,
•• .
'targeted to small mi,d mediun1-size the "sul'plem.ental income'' profanm . and eStimated 'to cost $5.6 gram wo~ld correct they see as a
billion · t~ugh 2002, ·when the Q~~:w in the Republicm-a11thored
·.~ 996 farm Ia": is set'to expire. .
1996 farn1 ·law, which scaled back
. ; .•The " adtbinistr:ition wants , to ·,on cr_op subsidies, ended controls ,

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MJ.z\lv'!!Y · · . . :

Live Music: •8:00-·J.2 t00 ,
, .·c osts: $6.00 Each
• All Proc••ds To Berieftt
Frank Musser A Long Time lllker
B•neflt Party For .Frank Musser
Fr•e Chili
'

:;25% O~Fi . , .
MENS • ·WOMEN • ~IDS
''

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...

FOR GREAT SERYICE BEFORE

ANfl AFTER THE SALE

JERRY .B IBBEE
998 MIRCURY SABll

'1998 fORD IIPIDinQN

Sta. Wagon, V6, Auto,
AC, All Power Equipped

Sale Priced At

Eddie Bauer Pkg., V8,
Auto, Dual AC, Loaded
Sale Priced At ·

$13,990

$28,990

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1998 fORD .

Texans fight over mandatory tests

- V6, Auto, Air Cond..,
AM/FM Cass., Tilt, (:ruise
Sale Priced At

: LOCKNEY,' Texas (AP) - Larry Tannahill has spent ' his life
;\\orking the land iri west Texas, where livestock and agdculture
;tln!lnnate the econmny. His roors are deep and so are his convic·

';· l:tn iJ:dri\1 is refusing tci allow his 12-year-old ·son, Brady, to be
.1ested fm dru gs by the l ockney Independent .School District.
: ~ttrn.l:n o ry testing for the district's teachers and 400 students in
:gl.llies (, through 12 was completed Thursd~y.
:: Br:t dy. the only holdout, now faces th e san1e fllnishment as
:':o t Hcn t~t· . who tested positive: a 21-day suspension from. eXt~acUr­
:r;kular activrties, at least three days' in-school suspension and three
&gt;c~(. i o tt "i of su b_stance abuse counseling.
··
. ·
:·: 'lir e 'l xt h~grader also could be requited to take a drug test every
·I)Iollth .tor a year. E&gt;ch time he refuses, he will be considered a
:rqJe;\t olfe11der, and the punishment gets more strict.
; : ' 1~11lllalri ll phnncd to appeal his son's suspension.

~Would you buv. furniture on the Net? .

:·

::: W AS \ IlNGTON (AP)- Kick a tire,buy .the car.Cii\'k a mouse, ·
·)co rl'

:l

~o f:.l ?

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$16,9'90

'

VALLEY WEATHER '

Snow showers
to end in
by tonight
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The Daily Sentinel

Premiun S_port Pkg., .
V6, Auto, A~, All Power,
Low Miles ·
Sale .Priced.At

$

(USPS 113-HI)
Co,...nhy Nowopopor RCJ!dlap,loc.
Published eve~emoon, Momlay throuah
Fricby, ·ul
St.. Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
Ohio Valley
llthilll Compuy. Second
dw poetiJe paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
Member: The Assoeiated Prtu. and the Ohio
Newspaper Alloclation.
POSTMASTER: Send addrou corr~do111 to
'Illc"Daily Sentinel, 111 Court St., Pomeroy,
Ol!io 45769.

'

19,9·90.

SVBSCIUPTION RATES

Yl(.

199l fORD

$5,990

'

8) Clrrlertr Mocor RHte
Otle 'Wec:k ..................................... :t .......... S2.00
Otle Month.:......................................:.......$8.70
One Ycu .. ,... ,.• ,.............................. ll04.00

SINGLE COPY PRICE
Daily .................................................... 3.5 Cenl.l

'
Sllblcribors
not clelirinr; 10 pay tile carrier may
remit in advance direct to The Dally Sentinel
on 1 three, six or 12 month bull. Credit w\11 be
aJven carrier each wt:ck. ·
No subscription by mall r,rminecl in areu
where home e~rrier ICI'Yk:t s available.
Publithcr l'tlc:rves the riaht to adjuat rates dur~
Ina the subscription period. Subscription rale
chanaea may be implemented by c:hUJII\I the
duration of tile liubscription.

VB, Auto, Air Cond.,
AM/FM Cass., Loaded
Sale Priced At

eo...,.

MAILSVBSCRimONS
loold&lt; Mtlp
13 W..tu ............... ......... ................. S27.30
26 WeekJ .............................~................... $53.82
52 Wecks ......,................. ................... S!Ol.l6
, Rota Oalolde Mtlp c.u..,.
.
13 W.eks .......................................... S29.Zl
26 W..ks ........ .................................. SlM8
52 Wecks ........... . . ...................... ,... IIO!I,72

f:.

Reader Services

, . _.,

" The store-to-store shopping experience Wears them out," said
:Michael Kinnard, chairman of Chicago~based. Kozyhome.Con: ,
;which launched its Web site this month. '' They don't feel real con- .
(ident. The lengrily delays in getting gnods
eight to 10 weeks'()rives t he m bats." .
· ·
' .
.;: E\'en the biggc•t vcndurs are getting invo ved:Amazon.Com this
•week ar rnounccd .r S145 . million deal to sell furniture from Liv-'
:fr,g.Corn. and said it was bu yir1g 18 percent of its new partner.
(.
~- " I' m ,sure there an: some people for whom there, is no substitute
.Cor sittiitg on a couch before they buy it," said Scott Silverman of
fhe Washiugton-based National Retail Federation. "But as Internet
Shopping becomes more popular, attitudes are changing."

POMEROY - Ronald Fry, 52, Pomeroy, died Thursday, Feb. 3,
2000·in R-ocksprings Rehabilitation Center.
Arrangements will be announced by Fisher Funeral HomePomeroy.
I

O.r

•al•
CHW,_ I• aU IJtoliel II lo be
If yoa lullw ol1•
I• 1 llory,

a«an~te.

~

alii tile JNwaroom al (740) ttz~2l5!. We
wll elaeck JOUr laforaatlo• aid •ke •

I

to~aecdolllfomided.

,

Newallepll-nta

De JUia nu•bn 11 "l·Zl5!. Depia11ient

e" d ·, 11'11

.

G&lt;Mrol Ma_r_,...,...__,,,Ext.IIOI
Newa...................................- ....·..... lti:L ltOZ
_ .. ,..............................- ........... or Ext. 1186

Phone
740 .. 992-2196 .

461 S . Third

OlhwhrvloH
AdnrtialoC··•"""-""--···.. Exi.IIIM
ct ...~o~~oo .....,_.. _,.......-..... Eal. 1103
Cla•lfted Ado.........~....,_....,...... l!at.IIOII .

Ave. · .
Middleport

www.j!:lrfybibbee:com ·

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below zero in 1985. Sunset tonight
will be at 5:54 p.m. and sunrise
Saturday at 5:55 a.m,'

· Weather forecast:
Tonight. .. Snow showers likely,
mainly this afternoon. An inch \or
less of accumulation. Highs in the
mid 30s.West wind 10 to 15 mph.
Chance of snow 70 perc~nt .
Saturday. .. Mostly cloudy. Highs
in the upper 30s.
Saturday nigbt. .. Pardy cloudy.
Lows in the lower 20s.

Extended forecast:
Sunday... Mosdy clear. Highs in .
the upper'30s.
,
Monday.. Jncreasing cloudiness,
followed by a chance of snow
showers. lows in the lower 20s
and highs in the lower 40s.

Ltd. - 34"!.
Oak Hill Flnanclal-14'1.
OVB- 32'1.
One Valley - 28~
Peoples -18'1•
Premier ...:... 8%.
· Rockwell- 48'1.
RD Shell - 55,,.
Sears.- 31'•
Shoney's - 1y,
Wendy's - 1,8'.1.
Worthington - 15
Dally stock reports are the .
4 p.m. closing quotes of the
previous day'a transactions,
p.rovlded by Adveat of Gal·
llpolla.
'

Register

1998 fOlD IIPlORIR.

LX, V8, Auto, AC,
Low Miles, All Power,
Power Seats ·
Sale Priced At

$14 900

Ronald Fry

AEP-34'1.
Akzo-42'.1.
AmTech/SBC - 42
Ashland 011 - 32\
AT&amp;T- .50'.1.
. Bank One - 29~.. ·
Bob Evans - 15"1..
BorgWarner - 33'1.
Champion - 4~.
Charming Shops - 7'!.
City Holding - 13'/o
Federal Mo.gul - 17'1.
Flrstar- 23'"/,. ·
Gannett - 71 "/,.
K mart- 8'/o
Kroger - 17',,.Lands End - 34'4

:: So me Internet compames "" hoping consumers who think .
·nothin g of ordering books, music, toys, and even wine online a]so
. :will ' 1"' ud big bu cks on furniture through 'the Web -without ·
.rctmlly plopp1ng on a couc h or sitting in a:chair. .
lu fJCt . an ad for Furniture.Com, a Web startup in Framingha\TI,
·~1 0s"i. , ·Shuws a woman ln a living room thinking, 11 1':hree stores for
furniture. Who has
'·t11 nps,. five st0res for rugs,· two niore stores for
l{)nH! lor t us.
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LOCAL ST:OCKS

Key pieces of downed jet located

·..(i u ns. ·

LANGSVILLE - Mildred Mae Morris, 91 , Langsville, died Thursday, Feb. 3. 2000 in Holzer Medical Center.
·
She was born Sepr, 21, 1908 in Salem Center, daught&lt;'r of the late
Theodore and Myrta Titus Smith. She was a homemaiLer and a m~m­
ber of the Salem Center Unired Methodist Church.
She is survived l&gt;y two liOilS and a daughter-in-law, Carl and Janet
Morris of Rutlond, lnd Jack Morris of Pomeroy; a daughter-in-law,
Rebecca Morris of Jamestown, N.Y.; two brothers and a sister-in-law,
Max and Dorothy Sntith ofWilkesville, and Edgar and Sarah Sntitb of
· Amesville; a sister-in-law, Grace Smith of Columbus; nine grandchildren and 13 great-grandchildren; five step-great-grandchildren and
two step-great-great-grandchildren; and several nieces and nephews.
She was also preceded in death' by her husband, Marvin Morris; a
son, Fred Morris; three brothers, Giles, Titus and Orin Sntith; and four
sisters; Thelma Nelson, Helen Woodall, Garnet Swan and Vivian
Steverison.
~
SeJ;Vices will 'be 1 p.m. Monday in Birchfield Funeral Home, Rutland, With Pastor Brenda Johnson· officiating. Bur~! will follow in
Standish Cemetery, Dexter. Friends may call Sunday, 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
at the funeral home.
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· from the snow over the weekend.
The National Weather Service
said the state, under the influence
: of a high pressure system, will have
dry skies Saturday ·and Sunday.
Temperatures. could climb
above freezing on Sunday, forecasters said.
·
Much of Ohio was expected to
have an additional 2c4 inches of
' snow on the ground tortight from
today's storm.
Lows overnight were in the
20s.
The record-high temperature
for this date at the Columbus
weather station was 66 degrees in
1946 while the record low was 9

. ' : BOOTS

·, .
ME.GS CO. BIKEaS
' When: S&amp;turclay.: February $th

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The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

DAR.E.·grant

Mild,_ Mae Monis

0 hio will be gettin'g a break

l.o{

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

DEATH 'NOTICES

at

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for the GOP presidential nomi~ation : Texas
Gov. ·Ge9rge W. Bush, Sen. John McCain of
A,rizona, pttblisher Steve Forbes and former
ambassador Alan Keyes.
·
Bauer ran as a social conServative,
denouncing abortion and gay rights , but he
was competing with Forbes and Keyes for the
votes of Christian conservatives and was never
able to break out. He finished fourth in the
Iowa caucuses Jan. 24,just ahead of McCain,
who did not campaign there, and Sen. Orrin
Hatch of Utah, who dropped out soon after.
The son of a janitor, Bauer · aimed his
appeal at ordinary Americans , frequently ,
mentioning his humble roots. ''I'm used to

Ag sec~ry touts Clinton fann spending plan

BRIEFS

; 1'0\l\ HUENEME, Calif. (AP) - . With star tling speed, investi-•
·!(·'rors h :~ ve looted th ree key pieces of evidence in the crash ofAlas:k., Airlines Fiight 261: Both "black boxes" and the tail control sin:.~l'e d o ut by the pilots before the jet's pl unge into th e Pacific Ocean.
: · The fl ig;ht data recorder was recovered from the ocean"f!oor by
' the N;II'Y on Thursday, not far from where the cpckpit ,;oice .
:r&lt;:corder was found a day earlier.. Also spotted was a large piece of
:the tai l, complete with the airline's distinctive logo .of a snU!ing
· Ahs~an rrative.
·
·
; : All wnc in about 650 feet of water some 10 miles from shore. It
:is w her" the MD-83 crashed M6~day, killing all 8~ people aboard.
· · A Navy submersible sen t up v.ideo images of a piece of the fuse'bgc wi th four windows, several pieces up, to six feet wide and
IIUIIJero us smalle.r pieces, said john Hammerschmidt, a member of
l~e Nat ior(a l Transportation Safety Board.
·
.: ; Also c;tptu red were picwres of the tail's stabilizer, which has·been
the f(&gt;Cu s of th e iJ)Vestigation. NTSB officials said they were not able
;"; d••scrihe the condition of the tail and stabilizer.

Friday, l"ebruary 4, 2000

Then there .were 4: Bauer drops out

·: irl,hctmt. ' nt," he said.

&gt; N ATIOl'\IAL
.

Friday, February 4 , 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

from PageAl
levies for townships and villages.
U.S. citizens who ·are residents
of Ohio fur . at least 30 days prior
. to March 7, and will be at least 18
years .old on or before the general election on Nov. 7 are eligible
to register; and may do so before
Monday at the Board of Elections, the Bureau of Motor Vehicles, public libraries and other

Layoffs
froni PapAl
istration to scrunmze whether
the company will be able to
honor its commitment to maintain a . domestic s~pply of
enriched uranium.
"They are reducing the workforce very significandy in a very
rapid period of time," he said. "Is
that consistent with their obligation?"
Sen. George Voinovich, R Ohio, issued a statement encouraging the company and the Clinton · admil)istration to work
together "to ntitigate the impact
these layoffs will have on the
workers and the economy of the
entire region."
This was the latest in a series
of retrenchments for . us~c.
\Vhich used to be part of the government before being spun off in
1998 in a $1.9 billion stock sale.
VSEC's sto,k, initially $14.25 ,
per share, has fallen steadily and

EMS units
record 11 runs
. I'O .\o11·\I..UY -

Mc'b" Cou,nty

Emergt.'lll}' \1L•drct l St•tVlCC unit$

lo[.(~;cd

II

, .J! \, lor "''istan ce

WL"dl ll'.,lby .md r hur'iday.

C EN T R AL DISPATCH
.r m Wl'di1L''day. ll..ock\prinh" RL"luhlln,uion Center,
POll leroy, l l tll'ltl'r Lklong, Vereran s
M emori.1l lfo,p11.1l,
8:Il.J p m., Cok Street, Mi ddleport, Bryan !l:ts-,VM H ;
10:2 1 p.n&gt;..Vill1g~ Manor Apart"
mcntl, Middkport, Edward Gordon, treat~d ot th~ &lt;cene, Middleport SC.}U&lt;!.d ;t'~lS,h;d;
4:Dh · p.m. Thu rsday, Spring
Avcmlt.', Pom~roy. M.1ry Lee, Holzer Medical Cent~r;
6:1)\ p.m. ThumlJy, Township .
R oad 641. William Stove r, VMH,
Racin e squad assisted;
10:18 p.m. T hursday.. Jo pp~
R oad,
Rccdsvrl iL·,
R.o\;&gt;ert ·
Marcinko. St. Joseph's 1-Iosp.ital,
~ R~:cd~vi lk sql1;1d aS!&gt; i ~t ed .
COLU MDIA VFD
8:18 p.m. Thuroday. au to mobile
fi re on State Rou.te 68 I.
MIDDI\EPORT
\OA2 a. m . Wcd rK·sday, vo lunteer
The Meigs County Sheriff's Department teceived an $8,640 grant for administration of its Drug' Aouse ·fi re departm ent lO Barefo ot Hole
Resistance Edu.cation program. Here, Holly Marvin, southeast Ohio field representative for Attorney Gen· low, au to m obile lire, Hugh
era\ Betty D. Montgomery, presents a mock check to Sheriff James M. Soulsoy, left, and DARE Officer Th ompso n ow1wr. no injuries.
MonyWood.
·
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POMEROY
•
5: 3f&gt; p.m . Wed nesday, Darst
Nursi ng H ome. No ra Jordan,
VMH , Ce ntral Dispatch assisted .
R U TLAND
11 ' 15 p.nl.Thursday, Kingsbury
R.o ad, l'om~roy, Cary Tillis, HMC
.
SYRACUSE . .
2:48 p.m. Wednesday, John
Street,
Chris l cc,V MH .
WASHINGTON (AP)
About a · third went to work dur- cational materials.
Moving off welfare and into the , ing the six-month study.
The federal government gives
work ·force can be · traumatic for
The families lived in or near abom $3 billion to' the states each
single mothers, but their , children one of five cities: San Francisco or year for child care subsidies, which
can also suffer by receiving poor San Jose, Calif; Manchester or can be u sed for professional
child care that provides litde stim- Ne~ Haven, Conn.~ and Tampa, providers or even family members
ulation or direction from adults, Fla.
who take care of the children. But
researchers say.
The researchers interviewed many families don't take advantage
Schedule For
Feb. 4th
, ." The welfare rolls are shrink- the mothers, visited their child of ,the aid because the y simply
Doors Open At 6030 PM Mo&amp; tbru Fri
ing, but the number of toddlers care provider; · and studied the don't know theY're eligible and the
allll I 2:30PM o~ Sat. &amp;Stt#.
placed in poor child care is children's early language and social program is often confusing, Fuller
Afli~Nit
expanding;· said Bruce Fuller, co- skills.
said.
~~ 7:00,
a1.1thor of a study ' examining the
While centers receiving federal
(Su&amp;penseJIIorro•l Dav~ ArqueHe, Neve Cam~~~
II1IWing .811. &amp;SUI. Ill :00, 2.110, 8:10, 4:311,
impact of welfare reform on near- or state funding cared for a third of
'7:00, 7:30, 9:80, 10:00
ly a thousand single mothers and the children, most of the chlldren
their children,
were cared for in homes by family,
Most of those . receiving poor ,friends or baby sitters.
Fuller said that in the centers,
care spent hours watching television with litde exposure to reading · 65 percent of the teachers or careor educational materials, according givers had some training beyond
to the study released Thursday.
high school, while in the homes
Beginning in 1994, strict new only 39 percent had higher educaru(es and a vibrant economy tion.
caused welfare rolls to shrink. The
"The education of the adult the
number of welfare families, mosrly child spends his or her day with is
single mothers and their children, one of the strongest predictors of
fell from more than 5 million in child.development;' he said.
1994 to half as many last year.
The home care environments
During the second half of were also more likely .to be disor1998, researchers .from Yale Uni- ganized, unclean and lacking eduversity and the University of California, Berkeley, randomly selected
single mothers who had recenrly
enrolled in welfare programs.

7 .14

Study: Children may suffer when .
single mothers move off welfare

*

offices providing public assistance.
. The b.o ard office ih Pomeroy
is located on Mulberry Avenue. ·
Ohioans who have registered
or' cast a ballot ill' any Ohio election, and who have not changed
their name or address, within the
last four years, are still registered
·and eligible to vote. Questions
about one's voter registration status should contact the board
office at 992-2697.
• There are currently 7.1 million registered voters in Ohio.

closed unchanged Thursday at
$5.87 1/2 on the New YorR
Stock Exchange . .
USEC said the quarterly dividend its pays investors will be cut
in h:ilf from 27.5 cents. It also
will announced plans to buy
back 20 million more shares of
stock, increasing the total buyback to 30' million shares by June
2001.
Rep. Ed Whitfield, R-Ky., said
would use planned collgressional
hearings "to continue looking at
USEC's alarming financial prob-

lems."

·

The House Commerce Committee has been investigating
issue~ stemming from the privatizatio'n of USEC. Chairman J.
Thomas Bliley Jr., R-Va ., said
that probe bas intensified.
"It is becoming cle~r to me
that the administration and its
financial advisors were ; more
focused on selling stock than
reviewing the results of a downturn in uranium prices ntigpt
have ha,d on a privatized USEC,"
Bliley said,

**

(Dramaj Denz~ Vlashm~on. ll!bo·ah Unger,L1ev Sc!l!ibei ·
Bhllwrtl Sat II Sun. al2:38 &amp;8:16

JILL AGES, ALL TIMES 84.00

Holzer ~linil!
Urgent ~are ~enter

Is Expanding hours!
Starting ·saturday,
February 5, 2000
.For these unexpected ailments
that occur after hours!'

New Hours
Weekends/Ho i.idays·

11:00 AM - 9:00 PM
(Pediatric Services will he Available 1:00pm)
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U·rgent Care Center
90 Jackson Pike
G~llipolis, Ohio

446-5287

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BUCKEYE BRIEFS

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Poll workers in great demand
, .C LEVELAND (AP) - C ount Virginia Ballentine out for working
· the polls during the March 7 primary. Like hundreds of other veteran
· poll worke", Ballentine plans to be in Florida that week.
Oltio pushed up its primary by two weeks this year to try to wield
r11u rc i11fhrencc in the presidential race. California and New York also
are holdin g primaries March 7, making it the first major Electio,{ Day
af~er the Iowa caucuses and New Hampshire primary.
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But the earlier date has counry: board of elections of concerned that
iegubr workers will be vacationing in Florida. Senior citizens, who
make up the bulk of poll workers, also are worried that the weather
-· may be too bad for the~1 to drive.
,
" Ma11y peoplt!' are out of state or have health concerns or are wor, ricd about the weather. Finding workers is more difljcult this year
because of the early election date," said Marilyn Jacobcik, director of
l orain County's board of elections.
Th e county is about 30 percent short of the 1,200 poll workers .it
''. llenl&lt;, Jacobcik said. In Medina and Mahoning counties, election offi. r ial&lt; &lt;aid they won't be able to rely on dozens of their regular work.L' rs
. bcu usc they still will be down south on Election Day.
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State promises.Lawrence $15,000
, · JR.O NTON (AP) - The Ohio Department of. Development
pledged up to $25,000 Thursday to help Lawrence County's econ, omy rebo und. ,
Local officials requested the money to hire a consultant for a
. IIIa rkcting analysis of the area. The study would prepare the county
"f&lt;ir execu tion of a $70,000 marketing plan.
· · 1 .
'" [he conununity felt it should use some outside expertise to
.. identifY their strengths and type.s of industries they could most
· dl'ec tively market to," said TJ Justice, regional econontic develop~
· ment representative for Gov. Bob Taft.
" · local officials previo1,1sly agreed to raise $35,000 for the market- ,
in[( plan ar1d will receive matching dollars from the state.
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. Lowrcnce County, 85 ntiles south of Columbus, recendy lost
Ill Ore th an 1,000 jobs because of layoffs or plant closings in the area
iuvulvi11 g Ironton Iron , Cabletron, Ashland Oil and Allied Signal.

Report: ~airfield sheriff indicted
LA NC ASTER. (AP) - The Fairfield County sheriff has been
. ,indicred on numerou.s felony charges thought to include ·theft in
· oOice. th e sheriff's attorney said:
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She rin· Gaty DeMastry is scheduled to be arraigned Thursday in
hirlicld C ounty Conm1on Pleas Court, .his attorney Sam DeMastry
;:~&lt;:~ld ' \ he Columbus Dispatch for a story today. DeMastry's wife, Penny,
;ar1 adr11inistrJtive assistant in the sheriff's office who bas handled book.:k0cpir 1g, .i lso has been indicted, the newspaper said.
:; -: Sharnansky said he didn't know how many charges the grand jury
:: tr ad lr&lt;1 mkd up against DeMastry or whether other employees of the
:.,hc· nll 's nllice \~ad been indicted. But he said he understands DeMas;: II y t:JCes ·a number of charges.
·:. · I kMmry has not been served with papers for the indictments; but
; he h:!' " l''' ncralunderstanding of the charges, Shamansky said.
: ·. " I snspcct 1hey will be very serious criminal charges involving theft
:i u ofli ce and theft-related conduc t while the sheriff was in office and
::cou ld conceivably involve very, wry serious viol~tions of law, all of .
·, whi ch we 'll be able to further tonunent on once we've reviewed the

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WASHINGTON (AP) - Gary Bauer,
stung by his last- place finish in the New
Hampshire GOP,primary and unable to break
through the pack of Republi cans, is dropping
out of the presidential race, an offi cia l close to
the conservative activist said.
''I'm a . fighter, but I'm not delusional,"
Bauer said Tuesday after getting just 1 percent
of the vote in New Hampshi(e's c;ritical leadoff presidential primary.
.
His campaign scheduled a riews conference
for this morning. Spokesman Tim Goeglein
would not give further det:iils.
Bauer, who would be the sixth Republican
to drop out, leaves a field of four still battling

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having bills last 'til Friday .:"hen .the paycheck
only lasted until Thursday, he sa1d m a debate
last fall.
Bauer worked for Prf' ident Re&lt;rgan , first in
the Educaiion Department and then as
dop1estic policy adviser at 'the White Hou se,
and often invoked the former president's
image i~ his, campaign literatUre and rhe1oric.
Before running for preSident, Qauer was
head 'of the Family R.esean;h Council, an
influential conservative group based in Washington. Under his lead,ership the council came
to rival the Christian Coalition a'[ the voice of
grass- roots conservative activism in American
politics.

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WASHINGTON (AP) spend an additional $2.7 billion for on planting and gave (armers a intended to substitute for additionAgriculture Secretary Dan Glick" conservation -programs, including series of fixed annual payments. a\ emergency bills that marly lawman says the administration's pro- $1.2 billion in direct payments to Griti,cs say the iixed payments were makers and admi•\istration officials
posals for S11.5 billion in nev; farmers who take steps to curb insufficient when · commodiry think are inevitable otherwise.
farm spending. will "lay the runoff of pesticides and ..fertilizers . prices feU sharply in 1998. ·
. "Two years of pl~nging comgroundwork" for developing a from their lal)d. An additional $1.3
C&lt;;&gt;ngress bas passed $15 billion modity prices, natural disasters and
· new agricultur:il policy that is bet- billion' would' go toward expand~ in emergency assistance over th&lt;&gt; nearly S15 .billion in emergency
ter for the ·environment and targets ing the federally subsidized crop !.S~ yea{ to compensate farmers for . relief was a tacit admission that the
money to small"~cal~ producers.
insurance program and .providing thtl: li'lw !?rices ;.rell as vo.:e~ther- 1996 farm bill was not satisfactory,"
At the top of the adm.inistra- discounts to farmers on ,the premi- relafed crop 'losses. , . Glickman said at a news confertion's w.ish list' is a new system of ums.
!f.he adl)linistration's·
· plan is • ence Wednesday.
"supplemental ' income" paym.ents
To Glickman and some farmers,
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'targeted to small mi,d mediun1-size the "sul'plem.ental income'' profanm . and eStimated 'to cost $5.6 gram wo~ld correct they see as a
billion · t~ugh 2002, ·when the Q~~:w in the Republicm-a11thored
·.~ 996 farm Ia": is set'to expire. .
1996 farn1 ·law, which scaled back
. ; .•The " adtbinistr:ition wants , to ·,on cr_op subsidies, ended controls ,

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MJ.z\lv'!!Y · · . . :

Live Music: •8:00-·J.2 t00 ,
, .·c osts: $6.00 Each
• All Proc••ds To Berieftt
Frank Musser A Long Time lllker
B•neflt Party For .Frank Musser
Fr•e Chili
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:;25% O~Fi . , .
MENS • ·WOMEN • ~IDS
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FOR GREAT SERYICE BEFORE

ANfl AFTER THE SALE

JERRY .B IBBEE
998 MIRCURY SABll

'1998 fORD IIPIDinQN

Sta. Wagon, V6, Auto,
AC, All Power Equipped

Sale Priced At

Eddie Bauer Pkg., V8,
Auto, Dual AC, Loaded
Sale Priced At ·

$13,990

$28,990

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1998 fORD .

Texans fight over mandatory tests

- V6, Auto, Air Cond..,
AM/FM Cass., Tilt, (:ruise
Sale Priced At

: LOCKNEY,' Texas (AP) - Larry Tannahill has spent ' his life
;\\orking the land iri west Texas, where livestock and agdculture
;tln!lnnate the econmny. His roors are deep and so are his convic·

';· l:tn iJ:dri\1 is refusing tci allow his 12-year-old ·son, Brady, to be
.1ested fm dru gs by the l ockney Independent .School District.
: ~ttrn.l:n o ry testing for the district's teachers and 400 students in
:gl.llies (, through 12 was completed Thursd~y.
:: Br:t dy. the only holdout, now faces th e san1e fllnishment as
:':o t Hcn t~t· . who tested positive: a 21-day suspension from. eXt~acUr­
:r;kular activrties, at least three days' in-school suspension and three
&gt;c~(. i o tt "i of su b_stance abuse counseling.
··
. ·
:·: 'lir e 'l xt h~grader also could be requited to take a drug test every
·I)Iollth .tor a year. E&gt;ch time he refuses, he will be considered a
:rqJe;\t olfe11der, and the punishment gets more strict.
; : ' 1~11lllalri ll phnncd to appeal his son's suspension.

~Would you buv. furniture on the Net? .

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::: W AS \ IlNGTON (AP)- Kick a tire,buy .the car.Cii\'k a mouse, ·
·)co rl'

:l

~o f:.l ?

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$16,9'90

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VALLEY WEATHER '

Snow showers
to end in
by tonight
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The Daily Sentinel

Premiun S_port Pkg., .
V6, Auto, A~, All Power,
Low Miles ·
Sale .Priced.At

$

(USPS 113-HI)
Co,...nhy Nowopopor RCJ!dlap,loc.
Published eve~emoon, Momlay throuah
Fricby, ·ul
St.. Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
Ohio Valley
llthilll Compuy. Second
dw poetiJe paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
Member: The Assoeiated Prtu. and the Ohio
Newspaper Alloclation.
POSTMASTER: Send addrou corr~do111 to
'Illc"Daily Sentinel, 111 Court St., Pomeroy,
Ol!io 45769.

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19,9·90.

SVBSCIUPTION RATES

Yl(.

199l fORD

$5,990

'

8) Clrrlertr Mocor RHte
Otle 'Wec:k ..................................... :t .......... S2.00
Otle Month.:......................................:.......$8.70
One Ycu .. ,... ,.• ,.............................. ll04.00

SINGLE COPY PRICE
Daily .................................................... 3.5 Cenl.l

'
Sllblcribors
not clelirinr; 10 pay tile carrier may
remit in advance direct to The Dally Sentinel
on 1 three, six or 12 month bull. Credit w\11 be
aJven carrier each wt:ck. ·
No subscription by mall r,rminecl in areu
where home e~rrier ICI'Yk:t s available.
Publithcr l'tlc:rves the riaht to adjuat rates dur~
Ina the subscription period. Subscription rale
chanaea may be implemented by c:hUJII\I the
duration of tile liubscription.

VB, Auto, Air Cond.,
AM/FM Cass., Loaded
Sale Priced At

eo...,.

MAILSVBSCRimONS
loold&lt; Mtlp
13 W..tu ............... ......... ................. S27.30
26 WeekJ .............................~................... $53.82
52 Wecks ......,................. ................... S!Ol.l6
, Rota Oalolde Mtlp c.u..,.
.
13 W.eks .......................................... S29.Zl
26 W..ks ........ .................................. SlM8
52 Wecks ........... . . ...................... ,... IIO!I,72

f:.

Reader Services

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" The store-to-store shopping experience Wears them out," said
:Michael Kinnard, chairman of Chicago~based. Kozyhome.Con: ,
;which launched its Web site this month. '' They don't feel real con- .
(ident. The lengrily delays in getting gnods
eight to 10 weeks'()rives t he m bats." .
· ·
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.;: E\'en the biggc•t vcndurs are getting invo ved:Amazon.Com this
•week ar rnounccd .r S145 . million deal to sell furniture from Liv-'
:fr,g.Corn. and said it was bu yir1g 18 percent of its new partner.
(.
~- " I' m ,sure there an: some people for whom there, is no substitute
.Cor sittiitg on a couch before they buy it," said Scott Silverman of
fhe Washiugton-based National Retail Federation. "But as Internet
Shopping becomes more popular, attitudes are changing."

POMEROY - Ronald Fry, 52, Pomeroy, died Thursday, Feb. 3,
2000·in R-ocksprings Rehabilitation Center.
Arrangements will be announced by Fisher Funeral HomePomeroy.
I

O.r

•al•
CHW,_ I• aU IJtoliel II lo be
If yoa lullw ol1•
I• 1 llory,

a«an~te.

~

alii tile JNwaroom al (740) ttz~2l5!. We
wll elaeck JOUr laforaatlo• aid •ke •

I

to~aecdolllfomided.

,

Newallepll-nta

De JUia nu•bn 11 "l·Zl5!. Depia11ient

e" d ·, 11'11

.

G&lt;Mrol Ma_r_,...,...__,,,Ext.IIOI
Newa...................................- ....·..... lti:L ltOZ
_ .. ,..............................- ........... or Ext. 1186

Phone
740 .. 992-2196 .

461 S . Third

OlhwhrvloH
AdnrtialoC··•"""-""--···.. Exi.IIIM
ct ...~o~~oo .....,_.. _,.......-..... Eal. 1103
Cla•lfted Ado.........~....,_....,...... l!at.IIOII .

Ave. · .
Middleport

www.j!:lrfybibbee:com ·

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below zero in 1985. Sunset tonight
will be at 5:54 p.m. and sunrise
Saturday at 5:55 a.m,'

· Weather forecast:
Tonight. .. Snow showers likely,
mainly this afternoon. An inch \or
less of accumulation. Highs in the
mid 30s.West wind 10 to 15 mph.
Chance of snow 70 perc~nt .
Saturday. .. Mostly cloudy. Highs
in the upper 30s.
Saturday nigbt. .. Pardy cloudy.
Lows in the lower 20s.

Extended forecast:
Sunday... Mosdy clear. Highs in .
the upper'30s.
,
Monday.. Jncreasing cloudiness,
followed by a chance of snow
showers. lows in the lower 20s
and highs in the lower 40s.

Ltd. - 34"!.
Oak Hill Flnanclal-14'1.
OVB- 32'1.
One Valley - 28~
Peoples -18'1•
Premier ...:... 8%.
· Rockwell- 48'1.
RD Shell - 55,,.
Sears.- 31'•
Shoney's - 1y,
Wendy's - 1,8'.1.
Worthington - 15
Dally stock reports are the .
4 p.m. closing quotes of the
previous day'a transactions,
p.rovlded by Adveat of Gal·
llpolla.
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Register

1998 fOlD IIPlORIR.

LX, V8, Auto, AC,
Low Miles, All Power,
Power Seats ·
Sale Priced At

$14 900

Ronald Fry

AEP-34'1.
Akzo-42'.1.
AmTech/SBC - 42
Ashland 011 - 32\
AT&amp;T- .50'.1.
. Bank One - 29~.. ·
Bob Evans - 15"1..
BorgWarner - 33'1.
Champion - 4~.
Charming Shops - 7'!.
City Holding - 13'/o
Federal Mo.gul - 17'1.
Flrstar- 23'"/,. ·
Gannett - 71 "/,.
K mart- 8'/o
Kroger - 17',,.Lands End - 34'4

:: So me Internet compames "" hoping consumers who think .
·nothin g of ordering books, music, toys, and even wine online a]so
. :will ' 1"' ud big bu cks on furniture through 'the Web -without ·
.rctmlly plopp1ng on a couc h or sitting in a:chair. .
lu fJCt . an ad for Furniture.Com, a Web startup in Framingha\TI,
·~1 0s"i. , ·Shuws a woman ln a living room thinking, 11 1':hree stores for
furniture. Who has
'·t11 nps,. five st0res for rugs,· two niore stores for
l{)nH! lor t us.
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LOCAL ST:OCKS

Key pieces of downed jet located

·..(i u ns. ·

LANGSVILLE - Mildred Mae Morris, 91 , Langsville, died Thursday, Feb. 3. 2000 in Holzer Medical Center.
·
She was born Sepr, 21, 1908 in Salem Center, daught&lt;'r of the late
Theodore and Myrta Titus Smith. She was a homemaiLer and a m~m­
ber of the Salem Center Unired Methodist Church.
She is survived l&gt;y two liOilS and a daughter-in-law, Carl and Janet
Morris of Rutlond, lnd Jack Morris of Pomeroy; a daughter-in-law,
Rebecca Morris of Jamestown, N.Y.; two brothers and a sister-in-law,
Max and Dorothy Sntith ofWilkesville, and Edgar and Sarah Sntitb of
· Amesville; a sister-in-law, Grace Smith of Columbus; nine grandchildren and 13 great-grandchildren; five step-great-grandchildren and
two step-great-great-grandchildren; and several nieces and nephews.
She was also preceded in death' by her husband, Marvin Morris; a
son, Fred Morris; three brothers, Giles, Titus and Orin Sntith; and four
sisters; Thelma Nelson, Helen Woodall, Garnet Swan and Vivian
Steverison.
~
SeJ;Vices will 'be 1 p.m. Monday in Birchfield Funeral Home, Rutland, With Pastor Brenda Johnson· officiating. Bur~! will follow in
Standish Cemetery, Dexter. Friends may call Sunday, 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
at the funeral home.
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· from the snow over the weekend.
The National Weather Service
said the state, under the influence
: of a high pressure system, will have
dry skies Saturday ·and Sunday.
Temperatures. could climb
above freezing on Sunday, forecasters said.
·
Much of Ohio was expected to
have an additional 2c4 inches of
' snow on the ground tortight from
today's storm.
Lows overnight were in the
20s.
The record-high temperature
for this date at the Columbus
weather station was 66 degrees in
1946 while the record low was 9

. ' : BOOTS

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ME.GS CO. BIKEaS
' When: S&amp;turclay.: February $th

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The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

DAR.E.·grant

Mild,_ Mae Monis

0 hio will be gettin'g a break

l.o{

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

DEATH 'NOTICES

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for the GOP presidential nomi~ation : Texas
Gov. ·Ge9rge W. Bush, Sen. John McCain of
A,rizona, pttblisher Steve Forbes and former
ambassador Alan Keyes.
·
Bauer ran as a social conServative,
denouncing abortion and gay rights , but he
was competing with Forbes and Keyes for the
votes of Christian conservatives and was never
able to break out. He finished fourth in the
Iowa caucuses Jan. 24,just ahead of McCain,
who did not campaign there, and Sen. Orrin
Hatch of Utah, who dropped out soon after.
The son of a janitor, Bauer · aimed his
appeal at ordinary Americans , frequently ,
mentioning his humble roots. ''I'm used to

Ag sec~ry touts Clinton fann spending plan

BRIEFS

; 1'0\l\ HUENEME, Calif. (AP) - . With star tling speed, investi-•
·!(·'rors h :~ ve looted th ree key pieces of evidence in the crash ofAlas:k., Airlines Fiight 261: Both "black boxes" and the tail control sin:.~l'e d o ut by the pilots before the jet's pl unge into th e Pacific Ocean.
: · The fl ig;ht data recorder was recovered from the ocean"f!oor by
' the N;II'Y on Thursday, not far from where the cpckpit ,;oice .
:r&lt;:corder was found a day earlier.. Also spotted was a large piece of
:the tai l, complete with the airline's distinctive logo .of a snU!ing
· Ahs~an rrative.
·
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; : All wnc in about 650 feet of water some 10 miles from shore. It
:is w her" the MD-83 crashed M6~day, killing all 8~ people aboard.
· · A Navy submersible sen t up v.ideo images of a piece of the fuse'bgc wi th four windows, several pieces up, to six feet wide and
IIUIIJero us smalle.r pieces, said john Hammerschmidt, a member of
l~e Nat ior(a l Transportation Safety Board.
·
.: ; Also c;tptu red were picwres of the tail's stabilizer, which has·been
the f(&gt;Cu s of th e iJ)Vestigation. NTSB officials said they were not able
;"; d••scrihe the condition of the tail and stabilizer.

Friday, l"ebruary 4, 2000

Then there .were 4: Bauer drops out

·: irl,hctmt. ' nt," he said.

&gt; N ATIOl'\IAL
.

Friday, February 4 , 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

from PageAl
levies for townships and villages.
U.S. citizens who ·are residents
of Ohio fur . at least 30 days prior
. to March 7, and will be at least 18
years .old on or before the general election on Nov. 7 are eligible
to register; and may do so before
Monday at the Board of Elections, the Bureau of Motor Vehicles, public libraries and other

Layoffs
froni PapAl
istration to scrunmze whether
the company will be able to
honor its commitment to maintain a . domestic s~pply of
enriched uranium.
"They are reducing the workforce very significandy in a very
rapid period of time," he said. "Is
that consistent with their obligation?"
Sen. George Voinovich, R Ohio, issued a statement encouraging the company and the Clinton · admil)istration to work
together "to ntitigate the impact
these layoffs will have on the
workers and the economy of the
entire region."
This was the latest in a series
of retrenchments for . us~c.
\Vhich used to be part of the government before being spun off in
1998 in a $1.9 billion stock sale.
VSEC's sto,k, initially $14.25 ,
per share, has fallen steadily and

EMS units
record 11 runs
. I'O .\o11·\I..UY -

Mc'b" Cou,nty

Emergt.'lll}' \1L•drct l St•tVlCC unit$

lo[.(~;cd

II

, .J! \, lor "''istan ce

WL"dl ll'.,lby .md r hur'iday.

C EN T R AL DISPATCH
.r m Wl'di1L''day. ll..ock\prinh" RL"luhlln,uion Center,
POll leroy, l l tll'ltl'r Lklong, Vereran s
M emori.1l lfo,p11.1l,
8:Il.J p m., Cok Street, Mi ddleport, Bryan !l:ts-,VM H ;
10:2 1 p.n&gt;..Vill1g~ Manor Apart"
mcntl, Middkport, Edward Gordon, treat~d ot th~ &lt;cene, Middleport SC.}U&lt;!.d ;t'~lS,h;d;
4:Dh · p.m. Thu rsday, Spring
Avcmlt.', Pom~roy. M.1ry Lee, Holzer Medical Cent~r;
6:1)\ p.m. ThumlJy, Township .
R oad 641. William Stove r, VMH,
Racin e squad assisted;
10:18 p.m. T hursday.. Jo pp~
R oad,
Rccdsvrl iL·,
R.o\;&gt;ert ·
Marcinko. St. Joseph's 1-Iosp.ital,
~ R~:cd~vi lk sql1;1d aS!&gt; i ~t ed .
COLU MDIA VFD
8:18 p.m. Thuroday. au to mobile
fi re on State Rou.te 68 I.
MIDDI\EPORT
\OA2 a. m . Wcd rK·sday, vo lunteer
The Meigs County Sheriff's Department teceived an $8,640 grant for administration of its Drug' Aouse ·fi re departm ent lO Barefo ot Hole
Resistance Edu.cation program. Here, Holly Marvin, southeast Ohio field representative for Attorney Gen· low, au to m obile lire, Hugh
era\ Betty D. Montgomery, presents a mock check to Sheriff James M. Soulsoy, left, and DARE Officer Th ompso n ow1wr. no injuries.
MonyWood.
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POMEROY
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5: 3f&gt; p.m . Wed nesday, Darst
Nursi ng H ome. No ra Jordan,
VMH , Ce ntral Dispatch assisted .
R U TLAND
11 ' 15 p.nl.Thursday, Kingsbury
R.o ad, l'om~roy, Cary Tillis, HMC
.
SYRACUSE . .
2:48 p.m. Wednesday, John
Street,
Chris l cc,V MH .
WASHINGTON (AP)
About a · third went to work dur- cational materials.
Moving off welfare and into the , ing the six-month study.
The federal government gives
work ·force can be · traumatic for
The families lived in or near abom $3 billion to' the states each
single mothers, but their , children one of five cities: San Francisco or year for child care subsidies, which
can also suffer by receiving poor San Jose, Calif; Manchester or can be u sed for professional
child care that provides litde stim- Ne~ Haven, Conn.~ and Tampa, providers or even family members
ulation or direction from adults, Fla.
who take care of the children. But
researchers say.
The researchers interviewed many families don't take advantage
Schedule For
Feb. 4th
, ." The welfare rolls are shrink- the mothers, visited their child of ,the aid because the y simply
Doors Open At 6030 PM Mo&amp; tbru Fri
ing, but the number of toddlers care provider; · and studied the don't know theY're eligible and the
allll I 2:30PM o~ Sat. &amp;Stt#.
placed in poor child care is children's early language and social program is often confusing, Fuller
Afli~Nit
expanding;· said Bruce Fuller, co- skills.
said.
~~ 7:00,
a1.1thor of a study ' examining the
While centers receiving federal
(Su&amp;penseJIIorro•l Dav~ ArqueHe, Neve Cam~~~
II1IWing .811. &amp;SUI. Ill :00, 2.110, 8:10, 4:311,
impact of welfare reform on near- or state funding cared for a third of
'7:00, 7:30, 9:80, 10:00
ly a thousand single mothers and the children, most of the chlldren
their children,
were cared for in homes by family,
Most of those . receiving poor ,friends or baby sitters.
Fuller said that in the centers,
care spent hours watching television with litde exposure to reading · 65 percent of the teachers or careor educational materials, according givers had some training beyond
to the study released Thursday.
high school, while in the homes
Beginning in 1994, strict new only 39 percent had higher educaru(es and a vibrant economy tion.
caused welfare rolls to shrink. The
"The education of the adult the
number of welfare families, mosrly child spends his or her day with is
single mothers and their children, one of the strongest predictors of
fell from more than 5 million in child.development;' he said.
1994 to half as many last year.
The home care environments
During the second half of were also more likely .to be disor1998, researchers .from Yale Uni- ganized, unclean and lacking eduversity and the University of California, Berkeley, randomly selected
single mothers who had recenrly
enrolled in welfare programs.

7 .14

Study: Children may suffer when .
single mothers move off welfare

*

offices providing public assistance.
. The b.o ard office ih Pomeroy
is located on Mulberry Avenue. ·
Ohioans who have registered
or' cast a ballot ill' any Ohio election, and who have not changed
their name or address, within the
last four years, are still registered
·and eligible to vote. Questions
about one's voter registration status should contact the board
office at 992-2697.
• There are currently 7.1 million registered voters in Ohio.

closed unchanged Thursday at
$5.87 1/2 on the New YorR
Stock Exchange . .
USEC said the quarterly dividend its pays investors will be cut
in h:ilf from 27.5 cents. It also
will announced plans to buy
back 20 million more shares of
stock, increasing the total buyback to 30' million shares by June
2001.
Rep. Ed Whitfield, R-Ky., said
would use planned collgressional
hearings "to continue looking at
USEC's alarming financial prob-

lems."

·

The House Commerce Committee has been investigating
issue~ stemming from the privatizatio'n of USEC. Chairman J.
Thomas Bliley Jr., R-Va ., said
that probe bas intensified.
"It is becoming cle~r to me
that the administration and its
financial advisors were ; more
focused on selling stock than
reviewing the results of a downturn in uranium prices ntigpt
have ha,d on a privatized USEC,"
Bliley said,

**

(Dramaj Denz~ Vlashm~on. ll!bo·ah Unger,L1ev Sc!l!ibei ·
Bhllwrtl Sat II Sun. al2:38 &amp;8:16

JILL AGES, ALL TIMES 84.00

Holzer ~linil!
Urgent ~are ~enter

Is Expanding hours!
Starting ·saturday,
February 5, 2000
.For these unexpected ailments
that occur after hours!'

New Hours
Weekends/Ho i.idays·

11:00 AM - 9:00 PM
(Pediatric Services will he Available 1:00pm)
.
.

U·rgent Care Center
90 Jackson Pike
G~llipolis, Ohio

446-5287

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_'fh_e_o_aii~y_se_n_un_e_I_ _ _ _ _ ____,;,.._0~
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The Daily Sentinel

·•

'EstaiJ[tsflitf in 1948

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111 Court Sl, Pom.roy, Otilo
740-992-21511 • Fax: 992-2157

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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

'

Chari•• W. Govey
Publlaher

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Charlene Hoeflich
General Managar

R. Shawn L-1•
Managing Editor

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P-IniOn

PageA4
...;,..Th_e
o_an"'-y5e_n_tin_el_...;..__ _

FIW.y, February 4, 2000
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:SOCIETY SCRAPBOOK
Evans Farms, inc. It will honor pagne, champagne punch, and
: 4-H volunteers inviteJ to volunteers who have made signif- non-alcoholi,c beverages.
Columbus conf•rence
icant contributions to the Ohio
Event tickets are now available
: POMEROY - Meigs Coun- 4-H program. "Volunteers are the at all PPSEO Health Services
ty 4-H volc1nteen arc invited to backbone o,f the Ohio 4-H pro- Centers in' Athens, Gallipolis,
attend the Ohio 4-H Volunteer gram.
·
Jackson, Logan, Pomeroy and
Conference and Recognition
Additional information on the Chillicothe for $25 · a person of
Ceremony to be held Saturday, program may be obtained by $40 for two people. They will also
March 11, in Columbus at the contacting Haggerty at 992- be available at the door that
Ohio Exposition Center.
6696 .
evening. Tickets for a prize drawC hip Haggerty, Meig.; County
ing are also available at the health
Extension 4-H agent, described
·service centers.
th e conference as an opportunity
to meet and share ideas with volPlann,d Parenthood 'to host ·
mi tee rs from across the state and fund raiser
to.. learn thing:; they can do to'
ATHENS - Planned ParentBirth announced
enhance their ~ole as a volunteer. hood of Southeast Ohio, which
LONG BOtTOM -Jeff and
. Registration fontlS are avail- selVes Meigs County, will host its Valerie Nottingham of Long Bot- ·
able at the Meigs County Exten- 13th annual Chocolate and tom announce the birth of th eir
sion office. The deadline to regis- Champagne A'lfaire on Feb. 12 second child, a son, Isaac Quinn
ter is Feb. 18.
·
from 6 to 9 p.m at the Ohio Uni- Nottingham, born Jan. 25 at St.
· According to Haggerty the versity Inn, Athens.
Joseph 's Hospital. ·
conference will feature over 80
The event is the kickoff to
He weighed eight pounds, two
different seminars for adult and PPSEO's maj~r gift campaign to ounces and was 20 inch es long.
ylmth volunteers . The objective fund cli~nt services, advocacy, and
Maternal grandparents are Paul
elf the conference is to enable vol- · comml)nity programs.
and Janet Simpson. Great-grandu'nteers to learn new skills and
The Affaire features a delec- parents are Jane Simpson ~nd Leo
c:&lt;change information on various table array of cho.colate desserts, Zwilling, all of Pomer:oy. Paternal
s(!bject matters and areas offered candies and novelties which grandparents are Carl and Mary
1:\'y the Ohio 4-H program.
guests 111ay sample and enjoy. Nottingham of Long Bottom.
: . Also as part of the conference, Chocolate items, donated by
. Mr. and Mrs. Nottingham have
tl! ere will be a special re.cognition individuals and area businesses, another son, Ethan Jacob Not1,:mcheon sponsored by Bob will be served along with cHam- tingham, five.
,
. ·.

Diane Hill
Controller·

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Ullm lu liN flfiMtH',. wricDMt. Tlt.y ~·lw!Ud "' lm liNIIt JOO wOtW,, All !lfl•n an SMbjrU
lo MilhrJ •IIII•U IH siflled •M i11clu~' aldtGS •lllltltp/toltr '"'"'"'·No IUUig11td ltUm MliU
H p116U.rAIII. L«t•,.. •ltoMU M iM totJ Uu:t•,IIIUNnhtJ iu111.. lid ,~i••·
T•• opUrJou •.r,....u .a ;" ,,, coiMMII 6¥/uw .,..,,, COIUIIUtu , , ,• • ol,;o VuiU, Pllbli!tltU.J
Co.~ MlilorW lloanl, lllfl.u oflrnwi'fl ltrli.J.
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. OUR VIEW:
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Well done
'

Career Day 2000 projed
hits' mark with students
a

G

allipolis' Washingto·n Elementary deserves
hearty "well done" for its Career Day 2000 project. Nearly 50 community members representing business, industry and government told students about different occupational. choices.
·
While most adults love talking
about their jobs, relating the work
place to children can be a daunting ·
task. Dut, chairwoman Phyllis Brandeberry said the . tri-county community responded with enthusiasm.
Some presenters were parents or
grandparents ·of students or staff.
Many were former Washington students who were proud to give back
to their school. Still others were
. cot'nmunity minded et~ough to realize the importance of interacting
with children on such a.waluable project.
Children need exposure to different career choices, not just the typical
ones they deal with - teacher, doctor, firefighter, etc. Studies show adults can have as many as seven different jobs during their working years. And, while few of us know the job
choices the .future holds, children need to be reminded a
good education will be a factor in determining those
choices.
·
Another lesson is the importance of work as an expression
of self. Work provides a pleasure adults sometimes overlook.
For all the jokes about "laboring in the salt mines," work
defines who .we are and gives a satisfaction unequal to other
endeavors: Taking pride in one's work and having a strong
work ethic translates into better communities and better
living for all.
· We hope other schools m the tri-county area follow
Washington's example.
· Brandeberry was on the mark when she said, "We felt that
~y using professionals they could spark-interest is other areas ·
~nd open up their· knowledge of occupations in a way that
books may never cover. It also helps to instill a pride in their
own community."
: We applaud Washington Elementa~y for promoting edu- ·
i:ation,jobs and public service as a way to \?uild strong com-'

Children need
exposure to
different
career choices,
notjust the
. typical ones
they deal
withteacher, .
doctor,
firrfighter, etc.

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~1umttes.

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TODAY IN HISTORY
. BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

, Today is Friday, Feb. 4, the 35th day of2000.There are 331 days lett
jn the year.
: Today's Highlight in History:
: On Feb. 4, 1789, electors unanimously chose George Washington
to' be the first president of the United States.
.
: On this date:
: . In ·1783, Britain declared a formal cessation of hostilities with its
former colonies, the United States of A~erica.
.. In 1861, delegates from six southern states met in Montgomery,
~Ia., to form the Confederate States of America.
~ In 1941, the United Service Organizations (USO) came into exislence.
.
• In 1945, President Roosevelt, Dritish Prime Minister Winston
Churchill and Soviet leader Josef Stalin began a w.&gt;nime c~nference at
Yalta. ·
, . in 1974, newspaper heiress Patricia Hearst was kidnapped in Berkeley, Calif. ,by the Symbionese Liberation Army.
· In 1975, more than 22,000 died when a severe earthquake struck ,
(;;uatemala and Honduras.
·
·
:: In 1980, Abolhassan Dani-Sadr was installed as p!e!iident of h;m by ·
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini~
·
~ In 1983, singer Karen Carpenter died in Downey, Calif. at age 32.
· In 1987, pianist Lib.lrace died at his Palm Spring.;, Calif. home at
;\ge 67.
&lt;\ In 1997, a civil jury in Santa Monica, Calif., found O.J. Simpson
~able for the deaths of his ex-wife, Nicole DroY{n Simpson, and her
friend, Ronald Goldman.
:: Ten years ago: Cheering protesters thronged Moscow streets to
~emand ·that the Communists surrender their stranglehold on power.
!iline people were killed as guerrillas attacked a bus carrying Israeli
toprists near Cairo, Egypt.
"
: Today's llirthdays: Civil rights pioneer Rosa l'arks is 87. Feminist
~uthor Betty Friedan is 79.Actor Conrad Bain is 77.Actor Gary Con!13Y . is 64. Movie director George Romero ("Night of the Living
·Dead") is 60. Singer Florence LaRue (fhe Fifth Dimension) is 56.
Comedian David llrenner is 55. Former Vice President Dan Quayle is
S3. Rock singer Alice Cooper is 52. Actor Michael Beck is Sl.Actn:ss
Pamela Frankli.n is 50. Actre~&lt; Lisa Eichorn is 48. Rock musician
Henry Bogdan (Helmet) is 39. Country singer Clint Black is 38.
Count~y nu"ician Dave Buchanan (Yankee Grey) is 34. .
·
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WATTENB.ERG'S v1IEW:

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.RACO hears ab.out riverbank project

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Ggntinuation qfpolitical show~· good for America
·.

So, the big political · show continues, and
that's very good, for the four candidates, an.d for
America.
'
Had fvlcCain lost to George Dush, the ca.&lt;hpoor McCain would have been out ofbusiness.
He didn't; he isn't. Now~t:e, Republican carny
moves on to South C
~Ia on Feb. 19. llill
Bradley did lose, but o
barely, and his poll
numbers swelled when .he finally ·equated AI
Gore with l'inocchio. Bradley has the cash and
the message to b"' on to the huge 14-state Dig
En~hilada on March 7, which may well prove to
be the functional equivalent of a national primary for Democrats.
.·
One can iense ':VhY these result. are so positive by considering the disillt1sionment that
would have been pervasive had the opposite
results been obtained. Sooo many voters would
have grumbled, "the fix is in ..."
George W. Dush? It would have been said
that Bush's early dose-out was nothing more
than "an establishment Coronation," a mere
"restoration" by !'resident Bush's ca,&gt;h-heavy
son, a charming young feUow but not yet ready
fqr heavy lifting. AI Gore? He would be ·
described as the hand-picked heir of Dill Clinton, Prince Albert of Embassy Row, Robom~n
pushed over the line by big labor, even as he was
caught, several times, saying thing:; that cannot
truthfully be described as truthful. And in such
sc~narios, who would have been deprived of a
role in helping pick the nominees? The public,
that's who.
I am reminded of the sage views of one of
America's most distinguished election experts,
Richard M. Scammon, my collaborator on sev·eraJ books. Dick repeatedly made the point that
the primary election was one of the· great
American contributions to democratic theory
- precisely because it put voters in the middle
of the nomination process, which is not the Cl!Stom in the party-oriented democracies of
Europe. ,

RACINE - Work on the
Racine riverbank improvement
project has began, it was reported
at 'a meeting · of the Racine Area
1
Community
Organization
(RACO) held last • week at the
American Legion hall.
··It was noted that money
toward the project has been con,
,ttibuted by the Village 9fRacine,
Star Mill Park Board, and RACO.
During the meeting the group
voted to retain the current officers, Kathryn Hart, president; Dr:
Melanie Weese, vice president;
Lillian Weese, secretary, and Ann
· Zirkle, treasu.rer. Mary Ball is the
ne~ corresponding secretary, and

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Ben
Wattenberg·
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NEA COLUMNIST
,, .
Scam~on's wisdom is apparent today, for ~11 .
four of the leading candidates. Shot\ld Bush
prevail, should Gore prevail, they will have been
legitimated by the · only proper legitin)ators,
Americans who go into a voting booth and cast
their ballot,, lloth Dush and Gore n;111ain the
front-runners. llut do not be fooled ' tly those .
who say that New · Hampshire is a fluky and
untypical state - too liberal, too white, too
independent, too funky, too spoiled, too likely
to vote. The corollary to that is that later contests will revert to candidates with organization
and endorsement,, which will help them-win in
allegedly more typical stales, Y{hich serve as
"firewalls" against political prairie fires. •
Mostly baloney. New Hampshire voters are
American voters, and the more you. study
American election data the more surpriled you
are at how much American voters shari, common values and perceptions, from sea to·shining
sea. When a candidat~ · captures the Atllerican
imagination he leaps firewalls .in a single bound.
. There is a peculiar dynamic· at work now.
McCain won big, yet his race may be tougher
than Bradley's, because his competitor is
tougher. Contrary to ~ceived wisdom/ George
W. Bush was not anointed front:.Yunner
through the divine right of king;. ltle wa.&lt;
anointed by the most successful, popular and ·
vigorous part of the Republican party•- the

moderate and pragmatic GOP Governors whq
hold elective office in 32 states with 70 percent
of the population.They devoutly want to see a•.
Republican in the White House, and they
picked someone they knew and ·respected, personally, politically and ideologically. (Haven't .
you noticed that no other Republican governor
is running for president?) Dush is an appealing '
' candidate, with a good theme, getting better..
Still, for now, McCain is Cinderella happen- ,
ing. He will be mythic in a moment, in .a game
where a myth is better than a n~ile.l don't agree:.
with one central premise of his campaign, that :
special interests run America, but from hi~ .
mouth it .comes out a.&lt; a vibrant and construe~.
tive message, not destructive. Listening to the
remarks of each of the candidates after the New__
Hampshire primary, it is clear why, for now at
least, McCain is the cia.&lt;.&lt; nf the field, the on~
serious adult at work. And, to top it off, there s··
a big entertainment bonus ~oming up as South
Carolina apprQache5: The attempt to paint war
hero, hawk, fiscally cautious McCain as a left- ,
leaning, big-b'&lt;lvernment, crypto-liberal wiU
lend an air of high comedy to an otherwise
serious enterprise.
Dradley, who lost only by a noS., is a solid ·.
man with solid ideas, but not yet demonstrably
in the league of super-star McCain. llut he does
have the advantage of running against a candi ~ ..
date who is, as · simply as I can put it, grating; ·
That's so even when he tells the truth. I am in .:
a dis!inct minority I know, but I do not find i~ .,
implausible to think the Gore campaign will
implode.
All this, with lots more to come, because the ·
people finally spoke.
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(Bm Wallen bel)/, a senior fellow at the America11 ·

Enterprise Institute, is tire author of" Values Mat·
ter MMt" and is the host ".[the weekly public tele-' ·
visio11 program "Think Tcmk."You may setrd com• '
meuts to lcim via e-mail: Watmailaol.com.)

P LAG EN Z 'S VI E'W: -

Envisioning the future: Now bere's
a
scary
idea
w
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Packard said in his book that he first heard
!he idea discussed at a conference on medical
ethics with more than 50 scienti~ts, physicians
and philosophers. The medical doctor propos·,I,
ing the idea pointed out that inillions of. ,
. women become victims of breast cancer, and",
enormous sums of money · are spent on
research and treatment of the disease. The
'doct~&gt;r said the whole p~blem could be elini- . '
. • r'J
., iriated by;silipping off a' bit of the breast tissue,·,
COLUM'NIST
at blrth. The operation would be as simple as :, '
circumcision is on baby boys. · .
;,
J&gt;ackard went ori to say that, for modern .,
'
.
women,
breasts are often a hindrance or the;;·
But it was Vance Packard who thr£ the
biggest scare into the genetic e~hicists~ lhe job, posing problems for women who "ar,e;.,
mid-1970s, he predicted that "embry&lt;)s will' foresters, JoFkeys, soldiers or mechanics. A'n.d; , .
,. ,
be for sale· on the seed . market startinlji per- they are also an encumbraqce in sport&lt;."
Packard· . rehmarfikedd wrylyb ihat a poll boC
haps, a few years from now." He env~\loned .
someone bke Arnold Schwarzenegger ($f for- women .1111g t tn a su stantta1 nuiJl er. ,
mer professional basketball. player and current respon~ing with a h~itant yes, "but only 011 ,
ptesideniial candidate Dill 'Dradley being the condition that all WOmer\ be breasdess." ..,
Another plan beins considered, he said,,,
induced to supply semen, which would .be
was
the cr~ation ~~subhumans to qo menial,,
uni'ted with the best .genes taken. (rom a
woman, perhaps sonieorie· like SophiajL{Iren, worlC. Doctors would ·do this by lowering th~ , ·
to produce a race of perfect human being:;. amount of oxygen given to unborn children, ,
However, it is. in his ~t-seller. "The 'ople resulting in lowered intelligence. As 1'ackard ,
Sh~pers" (1977) that Packard comes twough wrote, some of the projected experimen~ in
with his bi~est eye-opener. "There ha'f.been genetic engineering, "make your skin crawl."
serious t~lk,' he said,." of genetic engi11.eering
(G1·~rge R. Plagenz is a col11mlrist for Newspa,,,
to produce women· without breasts." •fl\•

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G·eorge R •
Plagenzu. ,.

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per E11ttrptise Associatiou.)
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r:;:;;~:;:umn~D

Tumss

Keeper
In I he book of Genesis, after Cain
killcd his brother Abcl, the lord asked Cain
•
thc question, "Where is your brothcr A~l?"
•
Cain's reply was, 'I don't know. Am I
supposed to takr care of my brothrr?" Not
only did Cain murder his brother, he thrn
lied to God about this terrible act. For this,
God placed Cain unde1 a curse, driving him
from the land, and he could no longrr farm
the soil. It appears that Cain showed no remorse or rcpcntan~ for his
actions and he felt that he was not his brother's krepcr. However, the
Biblc indicatcs to us that wc should lovc and trcat others as we would
want to bc treated. When Jesus was asked, which is tM grratcst
commandment in the law, He answtrtd; 'Love thr lord your God with
all your heart and with all your soul, and with all your mind. Love your ·
neighbor as yourSelf.'

Thr comfHand that Christ has givrrt us is this:
Whorvr-r lours God must lovr his brothr-r also .
ETHAN NOTTINGHAM

Good News Bible

I John 4:21

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L,ONG BOTTOM - Ethan
Nottingham ce lebrated his fifth
birthday recemly with a party at
the ho me of his parents, Je.ff and
Valerie Nottingham.
A Dale Earnhardt cake was
served with ice cream and chips.
Attending were Ethan's grandpi'rents, Paul and Janet Simpson and
Carl and Mary Nottingham; his
great- grandmother, Jane Simpson; and Joanie Buckland, Pam
and Holly Milhoan, Brad and
Staci Holsinger, and Jaso;, Nottingham.

COMMUNITY CALENDAR

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FRIDAY

RACINE, ·Racine Village
REEDSVILLE
Olive Council, Monday, 7 p.m . at the
Township Trustees, regular ses- · municipal building.
sion, Friday, 6:30 p.m at the
township garage on Joppa Road. ·
LETART- Letart Township
Trustees, Monday, 6 p.m. at the'
SATURD~Yj
office building.
SALEM tjiNTEII... Star
Grange 778 and Star Junior
POMEROY- Friends of the
Grange 878 will meet in regular Library, 7 p.m. Monday, Eastern
session on Saturday with a Library.
potluck dinner at 6:30 p.m. followed by meeting .at 8 p.m. firstSYRACUSE - Sutton Town-·
degree practice will be held. All ship Trustees, Monday, 7:30 p.m.
members encouraged to attend .
Syracuse Village hall.

Presidenfs List ·
Honoree

SUNDAY
CHESTER - Gospel Express
Puppets to perform at Harvest
Outreach Church, Sunday, 6 p.m.
Snacks to be served foUowing
presentation.

MONDAY
EAST MEIGS Eastern
Local Band Boosters, Monday, 7
· p.m., Eastern High School bind
room.

RACINE - Racine Chapter
134, Order of the Eastern Star,
Monday, 7:309 p.m. Mock iclitiation. Refreshments.

Rutland
Garden Club meets at Betty Lowery's home
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NEA

Jane · Cleland will continue ..as that 68 candy and fruit treats not
reporter.
dis[fibuted by Santa at Christmas
Robert
B~wers, Veterans in the Park celebration were
Memorial.Hospital administrator, . taken to God's Nei in Pomeroy. .
and Rhonda Dailey, vice presiChristmas wreaths have been
dJ,nt of nursing, met with the purchased
for
the
Cross
group .to discuss the four-mill tax Mill/Racine Museum building
levy for operation of the emer- doors for use during the next
gency room and related services Christmas season.
for three years. The levy will genMembers discussed briefly the
erate $970,000 a ·year. Pamphlets seventh annual flower festival to
Were . distributed and RACO be held in April at Sta'r Mill Park.
V!&gt;ted to endorse the levy.
.Officers' reports were given by
Appreciation was expressed to Nancy Carnahan and Ann Zirkle. ·
Darrell Norris for the donation Next meeting will be held feb.
of poinsettias that Were given to 22 at Star MiD Park building, 6:30
the judges of the · holiday home p.m.
decorating contest. It was noted

Page AS
Frldey......" •• 2000

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Fortunately, the future is not in the hands
of the futurists. If it were, we would have no
idea, where the world is going.
·
One 1975 magazine making predictiorls
for the year 2000 said, "Cars will be whisked
along computer-driven highways as the driver
reads his morning paper, looks at TV or plays
a 8\'me of heart&lt; with his passenger."
Now that the new millennium is here, we ·
are no closer to hands-off driving than we are ,
to Rachel' the computerized robot, who was
supposed to dust and vacuum, change the
sheets, scrub the ·floors, set the table,. serve
meals and do the dishes,
Another .futurist who peered into the
beyond saw 'som·e of us. living on the moon by
2000.
. Happily, some of the more pessimistic predictions about the year 2000 were just as far
out in space. In 1970, one alaFmist predicted
·that, by the beginning of the ne)(t century,
"we will have traffic jams that will last for
days. I) motorist · will leave the office at five
Monday evening and arr-ive h&lt;,&gt;me on Thursday." Talk ah\&gt;ut your gridlock! .
Another prophet pictured a new millennium world in which children would have t?
go to the zoo to see a dog. Pets would have
died out because the protein in their diet' ·
would have ·been needed for a mushrooming
human j.opulation.
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__:B=f the Bend

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TUESDAY
CHESTER
CHOICE
Home Educators skating party for
all home schoolers, Tuesday,
Skate-Away Rink, 1 tq 3:30 p.m.
POMEROY
Salisbury ,
Township. Trustees, Tuesday, 6:30'•
p.m. township haU meeting on
R?ckspring.; Road, Pomeroy
RUTLAND - Rutland Vii-.
lage Council, · 6:30 p.m. Civic ,
Center, Tuesday. ·

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·RUTLAND -· Donations to provided flowers for an Eastern . · There is a second species of
nature preserves and beautifica- Star meeting. I .
Juncos which are found along the
ti&lt;&gt;n p'rojects were made at MonLowery won the traveling border of Mexico and in f\ri. MEGAN NICHOlS
day's meeting of the Rutland prize donated by Atkins. JQy zona.
Garden Club held at the home of Combs will furnish the one for
Topic presented liy Lowery
KENT - · Megan Elayr&gt;e
Betty Lowery. ·
the Feb. 28 meeting to be held at was" Add Some Color to Winter
J"ichols,
a sophomore at Kent :
; The group voted to send the home of Marcia Dennison.
With Amaryllis." She noted that
m &lt;'mey to the Ohio Association · A program on winter l;&gt;irds they usually bloom between Jan- State' University, has been named
of Garden Clubs' Foundation, the and flowers was presented. Low- uary and April in a variety of to the President's List for ·d1e fall
· Wakheena Nature Preserves, ery. talked about the dark-eyed colors and fragrances. She said. semcstcr·of 1999, having achieved
Mohican School, and the Public Junco or · "snowbird" which that dormancy will begin when a grade point average of 4.0.
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To be included on the list, a
Beautification 'Program.
appear in the winter·after spend-. . leaves turn brown, and then the
.
student
must complete at least- 15
· ·' Pauline Atkins, president, ing. the summer in Canada. They plants require pl.e nty of iest du'tsemester
hours with a 4.0 CPA.
rcm;nqed members 'o f the April are consiqered a social bird . ing the spring and "summer, do
. · She is a .1998 graduate ofWarregional OAGC meeting to b~ · which ,feeds off the ground in not need water, and need to be
ren
High School, the daughter of
hosted by Meig:; County. Sheila winter.
kepi cool.
John and Brenda Nichols ofVinCurtis as contact chairman will
Th~ Juncos have dark eyes,
Once winter arrives, ihe bulbs
have cbarge of arrangemepts.
light pink beaks, . white edged should be put in brigh.t sunlight cent and the ·granddaughter of
Plans were made for [he annu- . tails, and some have pink sides a.n d once they turn green planted Clarence and Wanda Wolf of
al valentine party at the Veterans with gray head taps and make in fresh soil and watered .regtilar- · Chester.
She also is a cheerleader at
Memorial Hospital Extended singing sounds. Their favorite ly. They need to be reported
K.S,U.
Care Facility with the date to be winter foods, she said, are cracked every thre.t or four years. The
announced.
corn, whe'at, sunflower seeds, plant should he kept . away from
It was announced that Lowery wl!ile in ·summer they like pets and smaU children because it
The.motion picture "Titanic" tied
and Atkins took flowers to their insects, grasshoppers, ants and is poisonous, Lowe'ry said. :
a record on March 23, 1998 when it
churches. and that Atkins
won H Academy' Awards including
. also spiders.
best picture ~ of 1977. The film
. equaled the total won by "Ben-Hur"
in 1959.

I

Wonderful opportunities are av&amp;llable In Tom Peden Country.
We are e1Cpanding our facilities and need more sales people.
No experience Is required, only e willingness to leam, ·
work as ·a team and have a strong lnHiative..
• Excellent Payment Plan

• Greet Beliefltl . . . _

_..,.

• Work At The 11 Delllerahlp

Call To Schedule An Interview:

Tom Peden Country
1-BOD-822·0417 • 344·5947
475 South Church Stfeet • Ripley, WV

COLLEGE NEWS
I.

OU names dean's list
graduation at '&lt;;&gt;hio Univeni\}' at
ATHENS - The · following the end · of fall quarter, 1999:
students were named to the Betty Kuhn, ·Reedsville; Charles ·
Dean's List at Ohio University for · Mash, Cheshire;· and Kathryn
the fall quarter, 1999:
. Hubbard and Sean · Wal.t on,
·Kathryn Northup, Cheshire; Pomeroy.
Victor Van Meter, Chester; JenNamed to D~an's Uit
.
nifer Caldwell, Coolville; Mary
WILMINGTON
-·
Gregocy'"
H'bller, Coolville; Kelly Osborne,
'Long Bottom; Kimberly House- A. McKinney II of Portland . is
.
holder, Long Bottom; Jessica
Johnson,
Middleport; Anne
Brown,Li"Qrneroy; Cortney Haley,
Pomeroy·
Oenise
Arnold,
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Po1Mroy:
!-lolly
Delong,
Pomeroy; Rayan Young, Pomeroy;
S~br.ina.
Smith,
Pomeroy;
Stephani.e Stewart, Pomeroy1;rara
Grueser, Pomeroy; Brian Anderson, Racine; Jessica B'urchard,
&amp;eedsville; Michelle Caldwell,.
~eedsville; . Curtis Joh.nson, .
S.hade; Joelene Sedock, Shade;
Armber Thomas, Syracuse; and
dynthia Caldwell, Syracuse.

.

among a number of students
named . to the · Dean's List at
Wilmington College for the fall,
1999 semester. He attained a 4.0
grade point average.
In prder to be eligible for the
.honor, a student must be enroUed
fUll tin1e and maintain at least a '
3.5 grade poit\t average on a 4.0
scale.
· ·

·starting
, Feb. 8

at Eastern Elementary Schoe&gt;l
Clasaes on Tuesday• &amp; Thursdays

3:30-4:30

Come Enjoy .The Fun I

For More Information, Call 992.-6893

.

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' OU names graduates.
ATHENS .,.. The following
students were candidates for

.,

FB TogeiLr A.e.-.•k.w
J.......e(h......
C:...llfl•• ....... wlor.
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POMBROY CRACKI DOWN ON Cln TAX .IIVAHRI
Remember the old line about d. .th •nd t•xes.? $ome PomerOy
residents haven't figured out the taxes part, and the city Is trrlng
to help them leam.
Pomeroy Ia cracking down of people who don't pay their 1 percent
city Income tax.
· Thtt Cliy'• at•nce Is •o~ than jUstlfiMI. The city Income t•x has
.,.en.ln effect ~nee 1981. There should be no excuH for not · ·
underatandlng-thel•w.
And people·who don't pay their city. taxes •ren't Just pulling the
wool over the city's eye.,they•re rlpplftlf off their nelghbon~
If city offlcl.•l• could collect •II of the tax•s tlult w.,. owed ••ch
, . .r, 'they would need leas money 'from the rest of us.
.
Pomeroy city govemment •lre•cly has • pretty good record of
holding down taxes. There h•sn•t been •n lncreaH In the city t•x
r•t• since It went ·lnto effect In 1885• .
And th•t's good news for •II Pomeroy resldental
Nobody w•nts to s. . their neighbors jiiiiMI over • t•x ln.... It
should be the last resort for collecting city t•x••· ·
But unfortiiNitely, hu11111n nature being what It 1•, some people
wo"';t P•Y their ••••• If there Isn't the threat.of • Hvere peftlllty.
Five hundred doll•ra and/or six months ln.Jall ought to be enough
to et eo le to rt with 1 ~ent of their Income.

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_'fh_e_o_aii~y_se_n_un_e_I_ _ _ _ _ ____,;,.._0~
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The Daily Sentinel

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'EstaiJ[tsflitf in 1948

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111 Court Sl, Pom.roy, Otilo
740-992-21511 • Fax: 992-2157

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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

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Chari•• W. Govey
Publlaher

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Charlene Hoeflich
General Managar

R. Shawn L-1•
Managing Editor

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P-IniOn

PageA4
...;,..Th_e
o_an"'-y5e_n_tin_el_...;..__ _

FIW.y, February 4, 2000
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:SOCIETY SCRAPBOOK
Evans Farms, inc. It will honor pagne, champagne punch, and
: 4-H volunteers inviteJ to volunteers who have made signif- non-alcoholi,c beverages.
Columbus conf•rence
icant contributions to the Ohio
Event tickets are now available
: POMEROY - Meigs Coun- 4-H program. "Volunteers are the at all PPSEO Health Services
ty 4-H volc1nteen arc invited to backbone o,f the Ohio 4-H pro- Centers in' Athens, Gallipolis,
attend the Ohio 4-H Volunteer gram.
·
Jackson, Logan, Pomeroy and
Conference and Recognition
Additional information on the Chillicothe for $25 · a person of
Ceremony to be held Saturday, program may be obtained by $40 for two people. They will also
March 11, in Columbus at the contacting Haggerty at 992- be available at the door that
Ohio Exposition Center.
6696 .
evening. Tickets for a prize drawC hip Haggerty, Meig.; County
ing are also available at the health
Extension 4-H agent, described
·service centers.
th e conference as an opportunity
to meet and share ideas with volPlann,d Parenthood 'to host ·
mi tee rs from across the state and fund raiser
to.. learn thing:; they can do to'
ATHENS - Planned ParentBirth announced
enhance their ~ole as a volunteer. hood of Southeast Ohio, which
LONG BOtTOM -Jeff and
. Registration fontlS are avail- selVes Meigs County, will host its Valerie Nottingham of Long Bot- ·
able at the Meigs County Exten- 13th annual Chocolate and tom announce the birth of th eir
sion office. The deadline to regis- Champagne A'lfaire on Feb. 12 second child, a son, Isaac Quinn
ter is Feb. 18.
·
from 6 to 9 p.m at the Ohio Uni- Nottingham, born Jan. 25 at St.
· According to Haggerty the versity Inn, Athens.
Joseph 's Hospital. ·
conference will feature over 80
The event is the kickoff to
He weighed eight pounds, two
different seminars for adult and PPSEO's maj~r gift campaign to ounces and was 20 inch es long.
ylmth volunteers . The objective fund cli~nt services, advocacy, and
Maternal grandparents are Paul
elf the conference is to enable vol- · comml)nity programs.
and Janet Simpson. Great-grandu'nteers to learn new skills and
The Affaire features a delec- parents are Jane Simpson ~nd Leo
c:&lt;change information on various table array of cho.colate desserts, Zwilling, all of Pomer:oy. Paternal
s(!bject matters and areas offered candies and novelties which grandparents are Carl and Mary
1:\'y the Ohio 4-H program.
guests 111ay sample and enjoy. Nottingham of Long Bottom.
: . Also as part of the conference, Chocolate items, donated by
. Mr. and Mrs. Nottingham have
tl! ere will be a special re.cognition individuals and area businesses, another son, Ethan Jacob Not1,:mcheon sponsored by Bob will be served along with cHam- tingham, five.
,
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Diane Hill
Controller·

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Ullm lu liN flfiMtH',. wricDMt. Tlt.y ~·lw!Ud "' lm liNIIt JOO wOtW,, All !lfl•n an SMbjrU
lo MilhrJ •IIII•U IH siflled •M i11clu~' aldtGS •lllltltp/toltr '"'"'"'·No IUUig11td ltUm MliU
H p116U.rAIII. L«t•,.. •ltoMU M iM totJ Uu:t•,IIIUNnhtJ iu111.. lid ,~i••·
T•• opUrJou •.r,....u .a ;" ,,, coiMMII 6¥/uw .,..,,, COIUIIUtu , , ,• • ol,;o VuiU, Pllbli!tltU.J
Co.~ MlilorW lloanl, lllfl.u oflrnwi'fl ltrli.J.
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. OUR VIEW:
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Well done
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Career Day 2000 projed
hits' mark with students
a

G

allipolis' Washingto·n Elementary deserves
hearty "well done" for its Career Day 2000 project. Nearly 50 community members representing business, industry and government told students about different occupational. choices.
·
While most adults love talking
about their jobs, relating the work
place to children can be a daunting ·
task. Dut, chairwoman Phyllis Brandeberry said the . tri-county community responded with enthusiasm.
Some presenters were parents or
grandparents ·of students or staff.
Many were former Washington students who were proud to give back
to their school. Still others were
. cot'nmunity minded et~ough to realize the importance of interacting
with children on such a.waluable project.
Children need exposure to different career choices, not just the typical
ones they deal with - teacher, doctor, firefighter, etc. Studies show adults can have as many as seven different jobs during their working years. And, while few of us know the job
choices the .future holds, children need to be reminded a
good education will be a factor in determining those
choices.
·
Another lesson is the importance of work as an expression
of self. Work provides a pleasure adults sometimes overlook.
For all the jokes about "laboring in the salt mines," work
defines who .we are and gives a satisfaction unequal to other
endeavors: Taking pride in one's work and having a strong
work ethic translates into better communities and better
living for all.
· We hope other schools m the tri-county area follow
Washington's example.
· Brandeberry was on the mark when she said, "We felt that
~y using professionals they could spark-interest is other areas ·
~nd open up their· knowledge of occupations in a way that
books may never cover. It also helps to instill a pride in their
own community."
: We applaud Washington Elementa~y for promoting edu- ·
i:ation,jobs and public service as a way to \?uild strong com-'

Children need
exposure to
different
career choices,
notjust the
. typical ones
they deal
withteacher, .
doctor,
firrfighter, etc.

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~1umttes.

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TODAY IN HISTORY
. BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

, Today is Friday, Feb. 4, the 35th day of2000.There are 331 days lett
jn the year.
: Today's Highlight in History:
: On Feb. 4, 1789, electors unanimously chose George Washington
to' be the first president of the United States.
.
: On this date:
: . In ·1783, Britain declared a formal cessation of hostilities with its
former colonies, the United States of A~erica.
.. In 1861, delegates from six southern states met in Montgomery,
~Ia., to form the Confederate States of America.
~ In 1941, the United Service Organizations (USO) came into exislence.
.
• In 1945, President Roosevelt, Dritish Prime Minister Winston
Churchill and Soviet leader Josef Stalin began a w.&gt;nime c~nference at
Yalta. ·
, . in 1974, newspaper heiress Patricia Hearst was kidnapped in Berkeley, Calif. ,by the Symbionese Liberation Army.
· In 1975, more than 22,000 died when a severe earthquake struck ,
(;;uatemala and Honduras.
·
·
:: In 1980, Abolhassan Dani-Sadr was installed as p!e!iident of h;m by ·
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini~
·
~ In 1983, singer Karen Carpenter died in Downey, Calif. at age 32.
· In 1987, pianist Lib.lrace died at his Palm Spring.;, Calif. home at
;\ge 67.
&lt;\ In 1997, a civil jury in Santa Monica, Calif., found O.J. Simpson
~able for the deaths of his ex-wife, Nicole DroY{n Simpson, and her
friend, Ronald Goldman.
:: Ten years ago: Cheering protesters thronged Moscow streets to
~emand ·that the Communists surrender their stranglehold on power.
!iline people were killed as guerrillas attacked a bus carrying Israeli
toprists near Cairo, Egypt.
"
: Today's llirthdays: Civil rights pioneer Rosa l'arks is 87. Feminist
~uthor Betty Friedan is 79.Actor Conrad Bain is 77.Actor Gary Con!13Y . is 64. Movie director George Romero ("Night of the Living
·Dead") is 60. Singer Florence LaRue (fhe Fifth Dimension) is 56.
Comedian David llrenner is 55. Former Vice President Dan Quayle is
S3. Rock singer Alice Cooper is 52. Actor Michael Beck is Sl.Actn:ss
Pamela Frankli.n is 50. Actre~&lt; Lisa Eichorn is 48. Rock musician
Henry Bogdan (Helmet) is 39. Country singer Clint Black is 38.
Count~y nu"ician Dave Buchanan (Yankee Grey) is 34. .
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WATTENB.ERG'S v1IEW:

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.RACO hears ab.out riverbank project

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Ggntinuation qfpolitical show~· good for America
·.

So, the big political · show continues, and
that's very good, for the four candidates, an.d for
America.
'
Had fvlcCain lost to George Dush, the ca.&lt;hpoor McCain would have been out ofbusiness.
He didn't; he isn't. Now~t:e, Republican carny
moves on to South C
~Ia on Feb. 19. llill
Bradley did lose, but o
barely, and his poll
numbers swelled when .he finally ·equated AI
Gore with l'inocchio. Bradley has the cash and
the message to b"' on to the huge 14-state Dig
En~hilada on March 7, which may well prove to
be the functional equivalent of a national primary for Democrats.
.·
One can iense ':VhY these result. are so positive by considering the disillt1sionment that
would have been pervasive had the opposite
results been obtained. Sooo many voters would
have grumbled, "the fix is in ..."
George W. Dush? It would have been said
that Bush's early dose-out was nothing more
than "an establishment Coronation," a mere
"restoration" by !'resident Bush's ca,&gt;h-heavy
son, a charming young feUow but not yet ready
fqr heavy lifting. AI Gore? He would be ·
described as the hand-picked heir of Dill Clinton, Prince Albert of Embassy Row, Robom~n
pushed over the line by big labor, even as he was
caught, several times, saying thing:; that cannot
truthfully be described as truthful. And in such
sc~narios, who would have been deprived of a
role in helping pick the nominees? The public,
that's who.
I am reminded of the sage views of one of
America's most distinguished election experts,
Richard M. Scammon, my collaborator on sev·eraJ books. Dick repeatedly made the point that
the primary election was one of the· great
American contributions to democratic theory
- precisely because it put voters in the middle
of the nomination process, which is not the Cl!Stom in the party-oriented democracies of
Europe. ,

RACINE - Work on the
Racine riverbank improvement
project has began, it was reported
at 'a meeting · of the Racine Area
1
Community
Organization
(RACO) held last • week at the
American Legion hall.
··It was noted that money
toward the project has been con,
,ttibuted by the Village 9fRacine,
Star Mill Park Board, and RACO.
During the meeting the group
voted to retain the current officers, Kathryn Hart, president; Dr:
Melanie Weese, vice president;
Lillian Weese, secretary, and Ann
· Zirkle, treasu.rer. Mary Ball is the
ne~ corresponding secretary, and

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Ben
Wattenberg·
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NEA COLUMNIST
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Scam~on's wisdom is apparent today, for ~11 .
four of the leading candidates. Shot\ld Bush
prevail, should Gore prevail, they will have been
legitimated by the · only proper legitin)ators,
Americans who go into a voting booth and cast
their ballot,, lloth Dush and Gore n;111ain the
front-runners. llut do not be fooled ' tly those .
who say that New · Hampshire is a fluky and
untypical state - too liberal, too white, too
independent, too funky, too spoiled, too likely
to vote. The corollary to that is that later contests will revert to candidates with organization
and endorsement,, which will help them-win in
allegedly more typical stales, Y{hich serve as
"firewalls" against political prairie fires. •
Mostly baloney. New Hampshire voters are
American voters, and the more you. study
American election data the more surpriled you
are at how much American voters shari, common values and perceptions, from sea to·shining
sea. When a candidat~ · captures the Atllerican
imagination he leaps firewalls .in a single bound.
. There is a peculiar dynamic· at work now.
McCain won big, yet his race may be tougher
than Bradley's, because his competitor is
tougher. Contrary to ~ceived wisdom/ George
W. Bush was not anointed front:.Yunner
through the divine right of king;. ltle wa.&lt;
anointed by the most successful, popular and ·
vigorous part of the Republican party•- the

moderate and pragmatic GOP Governors whq
hold elective office in 32 states with 70 percent
of the population.They devoutly want to see a•.
Republican in the White House, and they
picked someone they knew and ·respected, personally, politically and ideologically. (Haven't .
you noticed that no other Republican governor
is running for president?) Dush is an appealing '
' candidate, with a good theme, getting better..
Still, for now, McCain is Cinderella happen- ,
ing. He will be mythic in a moment, in .a game
where a myth is better than a n~ile.l don't agree:.
with one central premise of his campaign, that :
special interests run America, but from hi~ .
mouth it .comes out a.&lt; a vibrant and construe~.
tive message, not destructive. Listening to the
remarks of each of the candidates after the New__
Hampshire primary, it is clear why, for now at
least, McCain is the cia.&lt;.&lt; nf the field, the on~
serious adult at work. And, to top it off, there s··
a big entertainment bonus ~oming up as South
Carolina apprQache5: The attempt to paint war
hero, hawk, fiscally cautious McCain as a left- ,
leaning, big-b'&lt;lvernment, crypto-liberal wiU
lend an air of high comedy to an otherwise
serious enterprise.
Dradley, who lost only by a noS., is a solid ·.
man with solid ideas, but not yet demonstrably
in the league of super-star McCain. llut he does
have the advantage of running against a candi ~ ..
date who is, as · simply as I can put it, grating; ·
That's so even when he tells the truth. I am in .:
a dis!inct minority I know, but I do not find i~ .,
implausible to think the Gore campaign will
implode.
All this, with lots more to come, because the ·
people finally spoke.
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(Bm Wallen bel)/, a senior fellow at the America11 ·

Enterprise Institute, is tire author of" Values Mat·
ter MMt" and is the host ".[the weekly public tele-' ·
visio11 program "Think Tcmk."You may setrd com• '
meuts to lcim via e-mail: Watmailaol.com.)

P LAG EN Z 'S VI E'W: -

Envisioning the future: Now bere's
a
scary
idea
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Packard said in his book that he first heard
!he idea discussed at a conference on medical
ethics with more than 50 scienti~ts, physicians
and philosophers. The medical doctor propos·,I,
ing the idea pointed out that inillions of. ,
. women become victims of breast cancer, and",
enormous sums of money · are spent on
research and treatment of the disease. The
'doct~&gt;r said the whole p~blem could be elini- . '
. • r'J
., iriated by;silipping off a' bit of the breast tissue,·,
COLUM'NIST
at blrth. The operation would be as simple as :, '
circumcision is on baby boys. · .
;,
J&gt;ackard went ori to say that, for modern .,
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women,
breasts are often a hindrance or the;;·
But it was Vance Packard who thr£ the
biggest scare into the genetic e~hicists~ lhe job, posing problems for women who "ar,e;.,
mid-1970s, he predicted that "embry&lt;)s will' foresters, JoFkeys, soldiers or mechanics. A'n.d; , .
,. ,
be for sale· on the seed . market startinlji per- they are also an encumbraqce in sport&lt;."
Packard· . rehmarfikedd wrylyb ihat a poll boC
haps, a few years from now." He env~\loned .
someone bke Arnold Schwarzenegger ($f for- women .1111g t tn a su stantta1 nuiJl er. ,
mer professional basketball. player and current respon~ing with a h~itant yes, "but only 011 ,
ptesideniial candidate Dill 'Dradley being the condition that all WOmer\ be breasdess." ..,
Another plan beins considered, he said,,,
induced to supply semen, which would .be
was
the cr~ation ~~subhumans to qo menial,,
uni'ted with the best .genes taken. (rom a
woman, perhaps sonieorie· like SophiajL{Iren, worlC. Doctors would ·do this by lowering th~ , ·
to produce a race of perfect human being:;. amount of oxygen given to unborn children, ,
However, it is. in his ~t-seller. "The 'ople resulting in lowered intelligence. As 1'ackard ,
Sh~pers" (1977) that Packard comes twough wrote, some of the projected experimen~ in
with his bi~est eye-opener. "There ha'f.been genetic engineering, "make your skin crawl."
serious t~lk,' he said,." of genetic engi11.eering
(G1·~rge R. Plagenz is a col11mlrist for Newspa,,,
to produce women· without breasts." •fl\•

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G·eorge R •
Plagenzu. ,.

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per E11ttrptise Associatiou.)
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r:;:;;~:;:umn~D

Tumss

Keeper
In I he book of Genesis, after Cain
killcd his brother Abcl, the lord asked Cain
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thc question, "Where is your brothcr A~l?"
•
Cain's reply was, 'I don't know. Am I
supposed to takr care of my brothrr?" Not
only did Cain murder his brother, he thrn
lied to God about this terrible act. For this,
God placed Cain unde1 a curse, driving him
from the land, and he could no longrr farm
the soil. It appears that Cain showed no remorse or rcpcntan~ for his
actions and he felt that he was not his brother's krepcr. However, the
Biblc indicatcs to us that wc should lovc and trcat others as we would
want to bc treated. When Jesus was asked, which is tM grratcst
commandment in the law, He answtrtd; 'Love thr lord your God with
all your heart and with all your soul, and with all your mind. Love your ·
neighbor as yourSelf.'

Thr comfHand that Christ has givrrt us is this:
Whorvr-r lours God must lovr his brothr-r also .
ETHAN NOTTINGHAM

Good News Bible

I John 4:21

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L,ONG BOTTOM - Ethan
Nottingham ce lebrated his fifth
birthday recemly with a party at
the ho me of his parents, Je.ff and
Valerie Nottingham.
A Dale Earnhardt cake was
served with ice cream and chips.
Attending were Ethan's grandpi'rents, Paul and Janet Simpson and
Carl and Mary Nottingham; his
great- grandmother, Jane Simpson; and Joanie Buckland, Pam
and Holly Milhoan, Brad and
Staci Holsinger, and Jaso;, Nottingham.

COMMUNITY CALENDAR

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FRIDAY

RACINE, ·Racine Village
REEDSVILLE
Olive Council, Monday, 7 p.m . at the
Township Trustees, regular ses- · municipal building.
sion, Friday, 6:30 p.m at the
township garage on Joppa Road. ·
LETART- Letart Township
Trustees, Monday, 6 p.m. at the'
SATURD~Yj
office building.
SALEM tjiNTEII... Star
Grange 778 and Star Junior
POMEROY- Friends of the
Grange 878 will meet in regular Library, 7 p.m. Monday, Eastern
session on Saturday with a Library.
potluck dinner at 6:30 p.m. followed by meeting .at 8 p.m. firstSYRACUSE - Sutton Town-·
degree practice will be held. All ship Trustees, Monday, 7:30 p.m.
members encouraged to attend .
Syracuse Village hall.

Presidenfs List ·
Honoree

SUNDAY
CHESTER - Gospel Express
Puppets to perform at Harvest
Outreach Church, Sunday, 6 p.m.
Snacks to be served foUowing
presentation.

MONDAY
EAST MEIGS Eastern
Local Band Boosters, Monday, 7
· p.m., Eastern High School bind
room.

RACINE - Racine Chapter
134, Order of the Eastern Star,
Monday, 7:309 p.m. Mock iclitiation. Refreshments.

Rutland
Garden Club meets at Betty Lowery's home
. .
.

l'

NEA

Jane · Cleland will continue ..as that 68 candy and fruit treats not
reporter.
dis[fibuted by Santa at Christmas
Robert
B~wers, Veterans in the Park celebration were
Memorial.Hospital administrator, . taken to God's Nei in Pomeroy. .
and Rhonda Dailey, vice presiChristmas wreaths have been
dJ,nt of nursing, met with the purchased
for
the
Cross
group .to discuss the four-mill tax Mill/Racine Museum building
levy for operation of the emer- doors for use during the next
gency room and related services Christmas season.
for three years. The levy will genMembers discussed briefly the
erate $970,000 a ·year. Pamphlets seventh annual flower festival to
Were . distributed and RACO be held in April at Sta'r Mill Park.
V!&gt;ted to endorse the levy.
.Officers' reports were given by
Appreciation was expressed to Nancy Carnahan and Ann Zirkle. ·
Darrell Norris for the donation Next meeting will be held feb.
of poinsettias that Were given to 22 at Star MiD Park building, 6:30
the judges of the · holiday home p.m.
decorating contest. It was noted

Page AS
Frldey......" •• 2000

.,

"

Fortunately, the future is not in the hands
of the futurists. If it were, we would have no
idea, where the world is going.
·
One 1975 magazine making predictiorls
for the year 2000 said, "Cars will be whisked
along computer-driven highways as the driver
reads his morning paper, looks at TV or plays
a 8\'me of heart&lt; with his passenger."
Now that the new millennium is here, we ·
are no closer to hands-off driving than we are ,
to Rachel' the computerized robot, who was
supposed to dust and vacuum, change the
sheets, scrub the ·floors, set the table,. serve
meals and do the dishes,
Another .futurist who peered into the
beyond saw 'som·e of us. living on the moon by
2000.
. Happily, some of the more pessimistic predictions about the year 2000 were just as far
out in space. In 1970, one alaFmist predicted
·that, by the beginning of the ne)(t century,
"we will have traffic jams that will last for
days. I) motorist · will leave the office at five
Monday evening and arr-ive h&lt;,&gt;me on Thursday." Talk ah\&gt;ut your gridlock! .
Another prophet pictured a new millennium world in which children would have t?
go to the zoo to see a dog. Pets would have
died out because the protein in their diet' ·
would have ·been needed for a mushrooming
human j.opulation.
·1

__:B=f the Bend

..

TUESDAY
CHESTER
CHOICE
Home Educators skating party for
all home schoolers, Tuesday,
Skate-Away Rink, 1 tq 3:30 p.m.
POMEROY
Salisbury ,
Township. Trustees, Tuesday, 6:30'•
p.m. township haU meeting on
R?ckspring.; Road, Pomeroy
RUTLAND - Rutland Vii-.
lage Council, · 6:30 p.m. Civic ,
Center, Tuesday. ·

;

·RUTLAND -· Donations to provided flowers for an Eastern . · There is a second species of
nature preserves and beautifica- Star meeting. I .
Juncos which are found along the
ti&lt;&gt;n p'rojects were made at MonLowery won the traveling border of Mexico and in f\ri. MEGAN NICHOlS
day's meeting of the Rutland prize donated by Atkins. JQy zona.
Garden Club held at the home of Combs will furnish the one for
Topic presented liy Lowery
KENT - · Megan Elayr&gt;e
Betty Lowery. ·
the Feb. 28 meeting to be held at was" Add Some Color to Winter
J"ichols,
a sophomore at Kent :
; The group voted to send the home of Marcia Dennison.
With Amaryllis." She noted that
m &lt;'mey to the Ohio Association · A program on winter l;&gt;irds they usually bloom between Jan- State' University, has been named
of Garden Clubs' Foundation, the and flowers was presented. Low- uary and April in a variety of to the President's List for ·d1e fall
· Wakheena Nature Preserves, ery. talked about the dark-eyed colors and fragrances. She said. semcstcr·of 1999, having achieved
Mohican School, and the Public Junco or · "snowbird" which that dormancy will begin when a grade point average of 4.0.
'
.
To be included on the list, a
Beautification 'Program.
appear in the winter·after spend-. . leaves turn brown, and then the
.
student
must complete at least- 15
· ·' Pauline Atkins, president, ing. the summer in Canada. They plants require pl.e nty of iest du'tsemester
hours with a 4.0 CPA.
rcm;nqed members 'o f the April are consiqered a social bird . ing the spring and "summer, do
. · She is a .1998 graduate ofWarregional OAGC meeting to b~ · which ,feeds off the ground in not need water, and need to be
ren
High School, the daughter of
hosted by Meig:; County. Sheila winter.
kepi cool.
John and Brenda Nichols ofVinCurtis as contact chairman will
Th~ Juncos have dark eyes,
Once winter arrives, ihe bulbs
have cbarge of arrangemepts.
light pink beaks, . white edged should be put in brigh.t sunlight cent and the ·granddaughter of
Plans were made for [he annu- . tails, and some have pink sides a.n d once they turn green planted Clarence and Wanda Wolf of
al valentine party at the Veterans with gray head taps and make in fresh soil and watered .regtilar- · Chester.
She also is a cheerleader at
Memorial Hospital Extended singing sounds. Their favorite ly. They need to be reported
K.S,U.
Care Facility with the date to be winter foods, she said, are cracked every thre.t or four years. The
announced.
corn, whe'at, sunflower seeds, plant should he kept . away from
It was announced that Lowery wl!ile in ·summer they like pets and smaU children because it
The.motion picture "Titanic" tied
and Atkins took flowers to their insects, grasshoppers, ants and is poisonous, Lowe'ry said. :
a record on March 23, 1998 when it
churches. and that Atkins
won H Academy' Awards including
. also spiders.
best picture ~ of 1977. The film
. equaled the total won by "Ben-Hur"
in 1959.

I

Wonderful opportunities are av&amp;llable In Tom Peden Country.
We are e1Cpanding our facilities and need more sales people.
No experience Is required, only e willingness to leam, ·
work as ·a team and have a strong lnHiative..
• Excellent Payment Plan

• Greet Beliefltl . . . _

_..,.

• Work At The 11 Delllerahlp

Call To Schedule An Interview:

Tom Peden Country
1-BOD-822·0417 • 344·5947
475 South Church Stfeet • Ripley, WV

COLLEGE NEWS
I.

OU names dean's list
graduation at '&lt;;&gt;hio Univeni\}' at
ATHENS - The · following the end · of fall quarter, 1999:
students were named to the Betty Kuhn, ·Reedsville; Charles ·
Dean's List at Ohio University for · Mash, Cheshire;· and Kathryn
the fall quarter, 1999:
. Hubbard and Sean · Wal.t on,
·Kathryn Northup, Cheshire; Pomeroy.
Victor Van Meter, Chester; JenNamed to D~an's Uit
.
nifer Caldwell, Coolville; Mary
WILMINGTON
-·
Gregocy'"
H'bller, Coolville; Kelly Osborne,
'Long Bottom; Kimberly House- A. McKinney II of Portland . is
.
holder, Long Bottom; Jessica
Johnson,
Middleport; Anne
Brown,Li"Qrneroy; Cortney Haley,
Pomeroy·
Oenise
Arnold,
I
'
Po1Mroy:
!-lolly
Delong,
Pomeroy; Rayan Young, Pomeroy;
S~br.ina.
Smith,
Pomeroy;
Stephani.e Stewart, Pomeroy1;rara
Grueser, Pomeroy; Brian Anderson, Racine; Jessica B'urchard,
&amp;eedsville; Michelle Caldwell,.
~eedsville; . Curtis Joh.nson, .
S.hade; Joelene Sedock, Shade;
Armber Thomas, Syracuse; and
dynthia Caldwell, Syracuse.

.

among a number of students
named . to the · Dean's List at
Wilmington College for the fall,
1999 semester. He attained a 4.0
grade point average.
In prder to be eligible for the
.honor, a student must be enroUed
fUll tin1e and maintain at least a '
3.5 grade poit\t average on a 4.0
scale.
· ·

·starting
, Feb. 8

at Eastern Elementary Schoe&gt;l
Clasaes on Tuesday• &amp; Thursdays

3:30-4:30

Come Enjoy .The Fun I

For More Information, Call 992.-6893

.

.

' OU names graduates.
ATHENS .,.. The following
students were candidates for

.,

FB TogeiLr A.e.-.•k.w
J.......e(h......
C:...llfl•• ....... wlor.
. ..
,,

•

POMBROY CRACKI DOWN ON Cln TAX .IIVAHRI
Remember the old line about d. .th •nd t•xes.? $ome PomerOy
residents haven't figured out the taxes part, and the city Is trrlng
to help them leam.
Pomeroy Ia cracking down of people who don't pay their 1 percent
city Income tax.
· Thtt Cliy'• at•nce Is •o~ than jUstlfiMI. The city Income t•x has
.,.en.ln effect ~nee 1981. There should be no excuH for not · ·
underatandlng-thel•w.
And people·who don't pay their city. taxes •ren't Just pulling the
wool over the city's eye.,they•re rlpplftlf off their nelghbon~
If city offlcl.•l• could collect •II of the tax•s tlult w.,. owed ••ch
, . .r, 'they would need leas money 'from the rest of us.
.
Pomeroy city govemment •lre•cly has • pretty good record of
holding down taxes. There h•sn•t been •n lncreaH In the city t•x
r•t• since It went ·lnto effect In 1885• .
And th•t's good news for •II Pomeroy resldental
Nobody w•nts to s. . their neighbors jiiiiMI over • t•x ln.... It
should be the last resort for collecting city t•x••· ·
But unfortiiNitely, hu11111n nature being what It 1•, some people
wo"';t P•Y their ••••• If there Isn't the threat.of • Hvere peftlllty.
Five hundred doll•ra and/or six months ln.Jall ought to be enough
to et eo le to rt with 1 ~ent of their Income.

•

J

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Page A 8 • The Dally Sentinel .

Friday, February 4, 2000

Inside:

The Daily Sentinel

Top 25 hoops; Page B2
Brennaman headed for Hall, Page B2
Scoreboard, Page B6 .
1

Page 81

I

Apostolic

Pomoroy Wesllldo Chordt otCIIrlat

3ID6 Cllikhen's Home Rd.
Su.ncta~ School - I 1 a.m.
· Woralllp ~ IOa.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Churcll of JHUI C hrist ApoJtelk
VanZandt and .Ward ltd.
• Pastor: James Miller
Sunday 'SchooJ- 10:30 a.m.
Evening . 7:30p.m.

Mlcl4ltport Churdt of Christ
.5th and Main
PaSior: 'AI Hartson
Youth Minister: Bill Frazier
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship- 8:15, 10:30 a.m., 1 p.m.
Wedne_sday Services - 7 p.m.

Churth of Jesus Chrhl
Apoitollc Fallh
NC!w Lima Roa~

Paltur: Many Huuon
Sund3y, 10 a.m. and 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.

Ubtrty Msembly or God
P.O. Bux 467, Dudding Lane
Mt~ sOn ,

W.Va.

Pastor: Neil Tenmtnt

K- or

, Plae Grove Bible Holinea Church
1/2 mile off Rt 325
Putor: 'Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service:- 7:30 p.m.

Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.,,6: 30 p.m.
. Wednesday, Service.s- 6:30p.m.

Baptist
Maranalha hptlst Cburdl
Burlingham · 742-7606
Pastor: Jolm Swanwn

Zkln Church of Christ

Pomeroy, Harrisonville Rd. (Rt143)
Paslor: Roger Wa1son
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worsl!ip • 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wedneiday ServK:c:s- 7 p.m.

Sum.Jay School - 10:00 a.m.
Morn in&amp; Service 11:00 a.m .
Evening Service-6:00p.m.
Wednesday Service- '1:30 p.m.
Hope Baptist Churtb (Southern)
Pastor: Jim Dilly

570 Gram St., Middleport
Suni.Juy school - 9:30 11.m.
Worship · II a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wcdn~ sda y Service - 7 p.m.

Rutland First Baptist Church

Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Worshi p- 10:45 a.m.

Bndbul')' Cburdl of Chrt•l

Pastor: Tom Runyon
9:30a. m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Pomeroy First Baptist
East Main St
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wors hip,- lO:JOa.m.
First Southern Baptist
' 41H72 Pomeroy Plke .
Pastor: E. Lamar O'Bryant
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a. m., 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:00p.m.
t'lrsl Baptist Church
P1tstor: Mark Morrow
6tti anti' Palmer S1., Middleport
Sunday School - 9:15a.m. ·
Worship- 10:1 ,5 a.m., 7:00p.m .
Weduesduy Setvice- 7:00p.m.

~unday School ~

Rull..d Church of Chriot
Sunday School ·9:30a. m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Silver Run Baptist
Pastor: Bill Lillie
Sunday School - lOa.m.
Worship- !!a.m., 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Scr\' ices· 6:30p.m.
Mt. Union Bapllsl
!'astor : Joe N. Sayre
Sunday S&lt;;hool-9:45 a.m.
Evening - 6:30 p.m.
Wcdncsd;t y Services- 6:30p.m.

Anllqull! DaptiSI
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m.
S\Jnday Evening-6:00p.m.

....

.:..-

..

Church of God
ML Moriu Churcb of God
· Mile Hill Rd., Racine
Paslor: Brice Uti
Sunda~ School - 9:45 a.m.
Evening- 6 p.m.
Wednesday Sel'\lices-? p.m.

WedllCsday Services· 7 p.m.

i

Graham United Melhodisl
Wors.hip- 9:3() a.m. (1st &amp; 2nd Sun),
7:30p.m. (3rd &amp; 4th Sun)
.
·
Wednesday Service . 7:31) p.m'. . ·

Chn st1 ;-111 Un1 o n

Vit!tory Bapllsrlndependant
525 N. 2nd St. Middleport
Past\lr: lames E. Keesee
Worship - !Oa.m.. 7 p.m.

MI. Moriah Bapdot
Fourth &amp; Main St., Middleport
Paslor: Rev_. Gilbert Craig, Jr.
Sunda~ School -9:30a.m.
Wors ~ip • 10:45 a.m.

United Methodi st

Rutlaad Cburcb of God
Pastor: Ron Heith
Sunday Wonhlp -10 a.m.,.6 p.m.
Wednesday SenHce51_- 7 p.m.
S,riQIHFintChur&lt;hoiGod •
Apple and Second Sll.
Putor: ltev. David Russell
Sunday School and WoJShip· 10 a.m.
.
EverUn&amp; Services- 6:30 p.m.
Wedncs:laY. Services· 6:30p.m.

'

.

Catholic
Sacred Heart Catholic Cbareb
161 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, 992-5898
P a~ t o r : Rev. Walter E. Heinz
Sa1. Con. 4:45-5: 15p.m.; Mass- .5!30 p. m.
Sun. Con. -8:45 -9:15 a.m..
Sun ~ Mass- 9:30a.m.
Dailey Mass - 8:30 a.m.

'

Trt.lly Cborcb
Second &amp; Lynn, Pomeroy
SuOO.y.school and worship 10:25

Ep 1scopa l

.

C...uolty Churcb

Church of Chr1 st

•

Malo SUee!. Rullond
Sunday Wcnhl!'-10:00 a.m.
Sunday Serv1oe-1 p.m . .

Pomeroy Chureh of Cbrlst
212 W. Mai n Sl.
Ministe r: Danny Bias
Sunday S"hool - 9:30a.m.
Worshi p- 10:10 a.ni .. 7 p.m.
Wedncsd~y Sel'\liccs- 7 p.m.

I

'

~b.Chur&lt;h

Co. Rd.63
Sunday SChool • 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Nazarene

Chester
Pastor: Jane Beattie
Worship - 9 a.m.
Sunday Sc:hool • 10 a.m.
Thursday Services -7 p.m.

Ree&lt;l.,llle Fellowship
Churth of Ihe Nararene
Pastor: Teresa Waldeck
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

J

Pomeroy Cbun:b of the N.......,e
Pastor: Rev. Lloyd D. Orimm.Jr.
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m 1
Worship - 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services~ 7 p.m.

Tuppen Plalna St Paul
Pastor: Jane Beattie
Sunday SchOol- 9 a.m.
Worship- lO a.m.
Tuesd~y Services-7:30p.m.

Chnter Chun:h the NIWreae
P(!Sior: Rev, Herben Grate
Sunday School -9:30a.m:
Wo11hip • l l a.m., 6 p.m.
· Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

. Eoterprise
.
Pastor: Keith Rader
· Sunday School - 10 a.m.
. • Worship - 9 a.m.
Flatwoodl
Pastor; Ke.ith Rader.
Sunday S(:hool- 10 a.m.
Worship • 11 a.m.

Hutl Community Cllurcb
OffRI.l24
Pastor: Ed51Cl Hart .
Sunday SchoOl· 9:30a.m. ·
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Harrioon.Uie Prabylerlaa Cburcb
. Worship · 9 a~ m ..
Sunday School • 9:45 a.m.

or

Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m ..

Seveath·Day. .Adveatlat
HIS. Rd., Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Lawinsky
Saunday S~"' ices:
Sabbath Sc:hool- 2 p.m.
Worship • 3 p.m.

~ulbcrry

.

United Brethren
ML Renno• Uolted Brothrea
bl Christ Church

Texas Community off CR 82'
Pastor: Robert Sanders
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services-7:30p.m.

Support your
local
-churches
Place an ad in this

&amp;
PHARMACY

Ye are the light of the
world. A' city that is.set
on an hiU cannot be hid.
MattS·
' '
0

EWING

FUN~AL

HOME

Dignity and &amp;,rvice Alwa,Ys

EStablished 1913

992·2121
.
.

106 Mulberry AVe.

NAME WIU. I'UT lliEIR TRUST IN
1liEE, fill. iliOU, l.alo, HAsT 001'
fORSAKEN
TliEM THA.T SEEK THEE
.

I

Pomeroy

'

FIRE ec SAFETY .
FUNEIW. QOME
"We a.;.,epl Preneell 7hJR.Ifer." ' SALES lc SERVICE
'

112-1200 .

LUIIUif

.

I

•

'

992·7Q75

BTOYH! '!&gt;, ' •

.172

. 74

I

~i11~er ~uiural ;Jigrm ,;line.
264 South Second Ave.•Middleport. OH 45711101
740.992-5141
Bruce R. Floher • Dlroe1or
590

e..i Main S1root • Pomeroy, OH 45761
740·992·5444

Jalri.. R.

Mei§• Countyi Olde•r FlorUr

IIi,.. ... , .....
7 40--992-2644 .
. 740--992·6298

lM U, Send Your Tlle111Ah Witll Special

..

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-

·~

'

.

c.;_

Searching for a
· local church?
Check the Sentinel
e~ty Friday!

_..,~.._ . ,_"T""

••

"

.

Bv DAVE HARRIS
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

· play in the third. West's trey cut
the Marauder lead to 24-16.
. Price answered West's triple
by nailing another three ~ point­
er from about the same place
on the floor witlr&lt;2:13 left in
· the period to extend the )VIeigs
lead to 27 - 16. ·
Price's bucket jump -started
an 18-0 run for Meigs as the
Marauders built up a 42- 16
cushion,' which culminated with
a Shrimplin bucket · with 4:16
left, pt.ltting the game' out of

ROCK SPRINGS - Meib"
outscored Ddpre 16-0 in' an
eight m'inute span in the second
and third periods, and· went on
to defeat the Golden Eagles 4824 in girls TVC Ohio Division
action Thursday.
!he Marauder · win is the
team's 27th consecutive home
victory, and raises their record
to 16-1 overall and· 12-1 in the
TV C.
Delpre played a slow down reach.
· offense 'to start the game, but
Shrimplin le\1 all scorers with
Meigs jumped out to a 6-2 13 points. Vining added 10 and
advantage on a Drooke Williams Price had nine for Meigs.
bask)'t at the 3:3H mark of the
Meib" hit 20-of- 47 shots from
first period.
the floor, includn1g 6-of-9 from
llelpre (9-7,TVC 9-4) pulled three -point range.
' tO within 6-5 on a Candy Mal~
Meigs pulled down 26
one free. throw with 54 seconds rebounds with Shrimplin clearleft. Uut Jenniler Shrimp lin hit ing a team-high seven boards.
a bucket with 39 seconds left to Williams and Amy Hysell aJded
give Meib" an 8-5 lead at the six rebounds each.
end of the period.
Me iS' - had 10 steals led by
Michelle·Brown ignited an 8- Williams with five. Meigs had
0 run for the Golden Eagles, eight assists led by Williams and
who took a t'3-8 lead with 4:40 Price who had two each. The
left in the half. Shrimplin Marauders 'con1mitted just 10
scored back-to-hack baskets to turnovers.
start an 8-0 run as Meigs
Michelle Drown led the Lady
regained a 16- 13 lead at ·the Eagles with eight points. llelpre
half.
hit 11 -of- 26 shots from the
Shrimplin hit a free throw floor.
and purilped in a basket at the
In the junior varsity game,
start of th e second half to give Meigs (.11-5, TVC 8.4) won,
Meigs a 19-13 advantage. 30-1 n. Mindy Chancey led all
Williams made it 21-13 at ·the scorers with t 0 points. Jessica
6:41 mark, converting a steal Arhturs led Delprc with seven.
into a bucket.
Meigs · travels to VintOI\.
Shannon Price then nailed a County Saturday afternoon.
three pointer from the left cor- The junior varsity game startS
nerto give Meib"' a 24- 13 ,lead. at I p.m.
Michelle West drilled' a threeThe Marauders play at Well·
pointer to end the llelpre scor- stan on Monday.
·
UNDER FIR~ ,....
Vining .of Meigs (left) fires a shot against heavy pressufe from Belpre's Cheri
ing
drought.
with
4:02
left
to
Thomas (30) an~ Leslie Cunningham. Vining scored 10 polnts. '(Dave Harris photo)

.

. HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AI')
- Sophomor~ Tamar Slay mape
sure. he didn't have two b~d
games in·.a, row. _ ·
WEST LA'!;AYETTE. Ind.
The Mid-A:me~ican Confer(AI') - Katie Douglas tied her
ence's
leading ·starer, ·who was
career-high with 31 points
held .to just fou~ points in a los5 •
Thursday night to lead 17th·
~t Ohio. on, ~urday, , scored t6 .
ranked l'1•rdue to a 75-52 win
. ·of·his -26. jloi~~ in 'the second
over Ohio State.
half to lead M2rs~all·past Duffalo
Douglas, who finished 11 -of93-61 on Thur~d~y nig~t. • ·
1H from the field and 7 -of-8 from
.;,
Slay ,hit · 10-Qf•18 •shots .from
' the fn:e-throw line, also scored 31
.
the
floor, including 6-of-1 0 in
p~ints Nov. .19 at Dayton and
the . secoQd ~~It as ·Marshall
Nov. 26 against Florida.
'
broke
a I'M)~gapl ~· losing•streak.
·c amille Cooper sc.ored' 16.
The Thunderillg Herd (15-6, night after going four games
point!; for the Doilermaker&lt; (15- 'i· 'The · Qrst ~IIi I didn't· play MAC 7-5) led by as many as 3.5 without scoring in double fig· we&gt;U; but that's !J!as~etball and
S,' llig 107-3) and Shinika Parks
jus.r ·have to .luiep, afier: it every points on a J. R . Van Hoose layup ores.
had 10. Michelle Duhart had a
with 4:36 left. ·
·" ' "
"His job is .to score points. I
' !fo!ms!:' Slay 'said,\ I · · · · ' . ; f'
season-high ' 13 rebounds for the
Marshall held ' a 47-32 was considering a change in the .
·~lay'scored eighl points d11ting
Boilermakers.
rebounding
advantage .and Ollt· lin~up and so he. knew he had to
a. l,S-2 run 'to op~n the second
Purdue has won six consecutive
shot
Buffalo
58 to 33 percerjt get it done tonight, and he has io
games in the Big Ten after a 1-3 ·•, h*lf .as M~rshall1 pushed 'a :19- from the floor.
conrihlle that," White said.
·.p oint 1\alftime'.,!e~d to 56-33
start that inclu.ded a 53-51 loss at
Travis
Young
scored
IS
points
:
Young knows he has to be ·
.~ith , ts:so tert. i 1 ·
. • •
. 0hio State Jan . 13.
, "Slay imp~~!\"d me ver'Y, very :while VanHoose, :a sophomore; more 'comisten[ on both ends of
Courtney Coleman and LaToya
l)'lUch;' said Do'ffiild( ccillch !teg- had n · points and I 0 rebounds the court.
Tqrner each scored 11 points to
for his seventh double-double of ' 1 "You've got to :want to play
. ·lead Ohio State (11-9, Dig 10 4- . f "gie Wither'spoon; ,"~e do.es a lot riJel, season. Cornelius_)ackson 'defense}'ou've:got to wan~ to be
'•of thi[lgs•well, :~cr a$ gc:tting to
6) . .Toineka Drown added 1_0
10 ai;sists.
·
. ·'.• 'aggresSive . whether y_ou re at
•.'the
b~~ket. H,e; ~ ·iS.~~~ '~?urt , hadMarshall
points.
·
&lt;coach
Creg
White
home or on the .road;' he said. "I
.
If
'
.
'
'
•
~ .
t
sai~ he's
glad Young
had. , a good
See HERD- 82
.
.

'•

(.

I

.,

worry Browns

'

I

I

Warrick doesn't

Marshall
bullies.
Buffalt&gt;·
'

'

•

lead to six three times, but failed .
In the final period , Southern fell behind
49-39 as the Lancers slowly pulled away
for the win .
·
So uth ern hit 19-of-50 overall from the
field .The Tornadoes were 11-for-1 il at the
foul li!&gt;e.
..
Southern had 33 rebounds , with Dailey .
hauling in n(ne and Lyons grabbing seven.
The Tornadoes recorded 11 steals, led by
Brauer with thtee.
South ern had five assists, led by Cummins with two. The Tornadoes committed
25 turnovers.
Federal Hocking hit 26-of-61 from the
See SOUTH ERN - B:Z

Meigs rls
top Be pre

you

!fra11ccis FLORIST

'

....... __

Illinois

DE KAlD, Ill. (AP) - Shaun
Stonerook scored I 9· points
Thursday night in leading Ohio
t&lt;&gt; a 76-61 victory over Northern
Illinois.
TJ Lux. scored 19 points to p~s
I)onnell Thomas (1987-91 )• as
Northern Illinois' career scoring .
leader with t856 points. He ,also
· had a game-high 12 rebounds for
llis 55th caree~ double-double.
::Leading .31-29 at halftime, the
Dobcats (14-9, MAC 7-4) started
the second half on a 9-0 run to
go in ·front 40-29. They stretched
the lead to 51-36 and the Huskies
(U -10, MAC 5-7) couldn't get ·
aqy closer than nine after that.
Drandon :Hunter ended · up
.with 15 points and nine rebounds
for Ollie~. S~ve Esterkamp had 12
points.
,, and Patrick Flomo added
. 10 off the bench. .
.

H:OICE·

At-[) niv THAT Kt«&gt;W

We Fill Doctors'
Prescriptions

'

.

1,

992~432

S..w1DM

Eden United Brelbren In Christ .
2 1/2 miles north of Ree~ville
on Slate Route ·124
Pastor: Rt\1. Robe_rt Markley
Sunday School·ll B-Tfl

~:

228 w. Main St., Pomeroy

..

Bobcats thump N.

Purdue' women .
whioOSU

"Featuring K~N~Iuclcy Fried Chicken'

'

5.S
0-15

I

•

craw's Family Restaurant

t

7.a

Saturday's achldule
Southern ;~t South Gallla
Vinton County at Portsmouth

~··

.·.

here for ·
INSURANCE
~~~ current Church SERVICES
214E.
Main
Gl!NCIES lnr.'
.
listings.
Bill Quickel 992.-n
992·5130 Pn""."'"

,,

While's ChaJ?tl Wesleyan
Coof11ill~ Roa,d
Pastor Rav . PhLIIip Ridenour
Sunday Schod1 • 9lM a.m.
Worship • 10:30 'a .m.
Wednesday S~:rvice 1.:'_ p.m.

.,,

ALL

14·1
8-5
10-5

Today·~ achldu.l e

Freedom ~. Miuloa
Bald Knob, on Co..1\d. 3\
Pastor: Rev. ROger WillFord
Sunday Sch?OI · 9:30a.m. ,
Worship· 7 p.m.

Portland Flnt ChUrth of the Naurene ·
Pastor: Mark Matson ·
Sunday School-10:30 a.m.
Morning Worship -11:15 a.m.
Sunday Service- 6 p.m .
Wednesday_Services ·1 p.m.

TVC

11-1
7-4
7-5
6·6
4·7
0·12

Miller at Eastern
Meigs at Nelsonville·York
W;1terford at Sout~ern
Wellston at Alexander
Trimble at Federal Hocking
Belpre at Vinton County

Cortetaalattnleaomlallloaol Church
Kln&amp;lbury Road
Pastor: Clyde Henderson
,
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
"
Worshtp Service 10:30 am.
·
No Sunday or Wednesday Night ~ervices

Rullaod Church ollhe NU.reae
Pastor: Rev. Samuei.Y(. Basye

Fu.ll lne of

Eastern
Waterford
Southern
Trimble
Federal Hocking
Miller

Seventh·Day A dve ntist

·
Silver Ridge
, Pastor: Robert Barber
' Sundar Sch0.,1 • 9 a.m.
Sun. Worship · 10:10a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.

lu.L

11 ·1 13-1
7·5 7-7
5·6 5·9
5·7 5·11
4·6 5·9
2·9 2·12

Hocking

Soutil Bethel N"' T-.!aD.eat

'

:ATTEND THE CHURCH OF YOUR

'INSURANCE

TVC

Belpre
Alexander
WellstQn
Nelsonville· York
Meigs
Vinton County

I'

.. -

.

Ohlo

full GoapeiiJ&amp;bthoUJe
33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Psstor:-Roy Hunter
Sunday School- 10 a;m.
Evening 7:30p.m.
Tuesday &amp; Thutsdoy • 7:30 p.m.

Fore~l Ru•
Pasror: Bob Robinson
Sunda~ SchoOl .·- 10 a.m.
Worship- 9 a.m.

--- .

.- .T VC-

Middleport Presbytertu
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Worship -10 a.m.

Ualled Faith Cblll'Ch
Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By·Pass
Pastor: Rev. Robert E. Smith, Sr. ·
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m·., 7 p.m. ·
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Synaue Church-oflbe Naarae
PaStor Mite Adkins.
Sunday School - 9:30 l ; m,
Wonbip- JO:JO a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Reednllle
Worship • 9:30 a.m.
Sunday School· 10:30 a.m.
UMYF Sunday 6:30 p.m.
First-Sunday of.Monlh- 7:30p.m. service

S,roaiSf First Ualled Prabyterlu
Pastor: Rev. Krisana Robinson
Sunday School. 10 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.

ML Olin Community Churtb
Pastor:. Lawrence Bush
Sunday School - 9:-30 a.m.
Evening -7 p.m.
.Wedneday.Service • 7 p.m.

11·5
12·7
5·11
5-10
1·15
0·15

BOYS

Pres byteri an

Faith Goapel Cburcb
Lona Bouom
Sunday School . 9:30 a.m.
Worship -10:45 a.m., 7;30·p.m.
Wednesday.. 7:30p.m.
.

·ALL

9·3
12-3
4-8
2-9
1-12
0·12

score to 29-24 in favor of Federal Hockmg.
Southern started slow in the third
frame, falling behind by as many as 17
points (47-30) before Crisp made adjustments that sparked the Tornaodes. Jamie
Simmons had six points, while Waderker
and Withem each notched five' points to
lift the Lancers.
Southern's offense kicked into overdrive
and cut the score to 47~:\9, going on a 9o·run to end the period.
,Brigette Barnes. and Kati Cummins
sparked the attack with five poin'ts each.
Southern gathered several st-eals off tlie
press and had the opportunity to_cut the

HQCklng 64, Southern 51
Waterord at Miller, gpd.
Trimble,at Eastel'll, ppd.
Meigs 48, Belpre 24 ·
N!!.lsonvllle·York 44, Wellston 31
Alexander 81, Vinton County 30

•

Moi'H Chapel Chun:h
Sunday school-10 a.m.
Woilship • 11 a.m. ·
Wednesday ServiCe •·vp.m:

TVC

tually put us away.".
Although Jamie Linscott split the $eams
of the Southern defense with a great ~rop
ster and five first quarter points, f;ederal
Hocking was forced exclusively to the
perimeter, where Deth Withem and Han·
nah Sayers both canned three-pointers.
Six· Lancers hit the scoring column,
while Southern had four players in the
boxscore. Sarah Drauer canned four of her
six points In 'the period and Kim lhle
notched a three-pointer.
At the conclusion of the tim .quarter,
Federal Hocking led 18-1 t. As Federal's
outside game failed, the Lancers' Linscott
ad~ed five more points. That pushed the

. Thursdlly'e rHI!Ita

Middleport Pentecootal
ThirdA11e.
Pastor: Rev. Clark Baker
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evening - 6 p:m.
Wednesday Services- 7:00p.m.

'

RACINE . League-leading Federal
Hocking skirted a late Southern comeba, kllo claim a 64-51 TVC Hocking
Divis)on win Thursday at Hayman Gym-,
nasium.
Sol!thern (5-11 and 4-8) played one
its be~ter games, bur not a victory caliber
~me: The Tornado~s suffered from an
untimdy 25 ·turnover&lt; and a lack of
qefen~ive rebounds.
.
"&lt;?ur game plan was pretty much on
tar~ d' but we did not execute when we
nee4ea to make our final run," Southern .
· H~a4 coach Alan Crisp said: "We gave up .
17 offensive. boards and that killed us. Federal had several second attempts and even'- '

Saturday's schedule
Southern at Eastern
Miller at Millersport
Trimble at Tree of Life

SyriCideMisiloa
1411 Brida,cman Sl., Syracuse
Rev. Mike Tbompson,Pastor
Sunday SChool · 10 a.m.
Evening- 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.

Dya"·llle Comm~nlty Cllurtb.
Sunday School -9:30a.m. ·
.Worship ·•10:30 a;m.,-7 p:m.

.

Middleport Cburdl of the Nua""e
Sunday Scllool - 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services • 1 p.m.
Pastor: Allen Midcap

.

Holin ess

•

Mclp Cooperotln Parllh
-~orthelst,CIUster ·
Alfred
Pauor: Sharon Hausm&amp;n
Sunday School'· 9:30a.m.
Worship· 11 a.m., 6:30p.m.

Sunday S&lt;hool11:00 a.m. ·

Www.frognei.neV""'('eanery

HocklniPort Chur&lt;h
Grand Street
' ··
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m .
· w.cdncsday Services- 8 P·rt:' ·
.

.,

'

Central CIUJier
Albury (Syracuse)
·Pastor: Bob Robinson
Sunday School · 9:45a.m:
·..
Worship • 11 a.m.
·.
_Wednesday Services • 7:30 p.m.

G,_l!. . . .l Chur&lt;h
, 326 E. Main Si., Pomeroy
Rev. James Bcmac:ki, Rev. K.alharin FOster
Rev. Deborah RanldJI, ClerllY .

p..._: Rev. ,Amos Tillil

,..

Loaallollom
Sunda~ School - 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m,

OJ. White Rd. off Si. Rl. 160
Pastor: P.J. Chapman
• Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worsttip- 11 a.m.
Wcdnelday Services • 7 p.m.

Holy Eudlarilund

...

Pastor: ~':andolph
Worship· 9:30a.m:
Sundaf School~ 10:30 a.m.

Con greg ational

Rutland Free Will Bapllst
Salem St.
'Pa.\tor: H.tv . Paul Tuylor
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening- 7 p.m.
Wc d n cs d ~y Se rvices . 7 p. m. .

Bethel Charch
TownshiP Rd .• 468C
ASunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services- 10 a.m.

ML Olive United Methodlot
Off 124 behind Wilkesville
Pastor: Rev. Ralph Spires
··~ S~day School-.9:30&lt;a,rt). &lt;t.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Services. 7 p.m.

..

'

Cbun:llolGoclotrn.bKY

~,

. .

,..,~·

'·'·'

ALL

16·1
15-2·
9·7
7-11
6·10
6·11

~ ·9

Federal Rocking pulls away to beat Southern

t=eder~l

. Peat_,.l Allembly
Si. Rt. 124, Racine
Pastor: William Hobac:k
Sunday Sc:hool· 10 a.m.
Evening· 7 p.m.
Wedr1c ~ay Services - 7 p.m.

F•lth Valley T1btmade Church
Bailey Run Road
Pastor: Rev. Emmeu Raw!iOn
Sunday Evenin£ 7 p.m.
Thursday Service - 7 p.m.

·Cool•llle Ualted Metbodlll Parilb
Pastor: Helen KIWte
Cooi•Uie Churcb
Main&amp;. Fifth St.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship · 9 a.m.
Tuesday Service' -7 p.m.

·St. Poui .Lulheroa Churcb
Comer Sycamore &amp; Second ·st., Poffieroy
Rev. Donald C. Fritz
Sunday School - 9:45 a.m.
Worship - '11 a.m.

Hartlonl C...,..h ofCiorfalla
ChristloaUaloll
Harllord, W.Va.
Pastor:Jim Hughes
Sunday SChool · 11 a.m.
Worship· 9:30a.m.~ 7:30p.m.
WediJCsday Services - 7:30p.m.

Hillside Baptist Church
St. Jlt. 143 just off Rt. 1
.Pas tor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worsl1ip · \ !a.m., 6·p.m.
Wc:d nesday Services· 7 p.m.

Forest Ruft Baptist
Pa"&gt;tor : Arius Hurl
Sunduy School · ·10 a.m.
Worship - H a.m.

Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood, W.Va.
Pas101: David RuSiell
Sunday School - lO:OOa.m.
Worship- 11 a.m.

Dexter Churcb of Chrlat
Pastor: Justin Campbell
Sunday school9:30 a.m.
.Norman Will, superin~cndcnt
Sunday worship _. 10:30 a.m.

Old Beohel Free Will BopiiSI Cbur&lt;h
28601 St. Rt. 7, Middleport
Sur1day School- 10 a.m.
Evening - 7:30p.m.
Thur~day Services· 7:30

Fallh Baptist Church
Ra ilmad St., Mason
SUnday School - 10 a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
~ednesday Se_fvices. 7 p.m.

Our Safiour Lulhenn Chun:h

Rood.,Hie Church of Chrisl
Pastor: Philip Sturm
·Sunday School: 9:30a.m.
Wof\hlp Service: 10:30 a.m.
· ~ible Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

oethlehem Baptist Chufch
Grc&lt;Jt Bend. Route 124, Raci ne, OH
P a~tor : Gene Mdrris
S u nd~y School - 9:30 a·.m.
Sunduy Worshi p- 10:30 a. m. &amp; 1 p.m. ·
Wcd ncsdny IJib_f.Study- 6:00 p.'m . .

Raclae
Paslor: Brii.P Harkness
Sunday School· 10 a.m . .
Worship - 11 a.m.

St. Jolin Lutheran Church
Pine Grove
Rev. Donald C. Fril:z
Worshlp- 9:00 a. in.
Sunday School- 10;00 a.m.

Hemlock Grove Chun:b
Pastor: Gene Zopp
Sunday school- 10:30 a.m.
Worship · 9:30a.m., 7 p.m.

Middleport Community Cbun:b
l75 Pearl Sl., MiddlePQrt ·
· Pastor: Sam Anderson ·
St.inda~ 5\cttoollO a.m .
Evenmg ·7:30p.m .
Wednesday Service- 7:30p.m. .

Waterford ·
Federal Hocking
Southern
Eastern
Trimble
Miller

Pentecostal

Haniloo.Uie eo-ually Church
P~IOr: 'Theron Purham
Sunday • 9:30 ~.m. and 7 p,m.
Weilnesd~ y- 7 p.m.

E'!SI Lellrt
. Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sunday School-tO a.m.
Worship . 9 a.m. ·
Wednesday· 7 p.m.

Lutheran

uap•lll&lt; Cbrlstlaa Cloun:h
. Sunday School ··9:30a.m.
·worship- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service 7:30p.m.

-.m·

TVC

12·1
12·1
.9-4
1·7
6..S

Hocking ·

God'1 Temple or Pralle
3166.'1 McOulr~ Rd. Pomeroy, Ohio
Pastor: Wayne Balcolm
Services: Thurs. Nite,7:00 pm
New-church No Sunday service established.

Tile
fellowlhlp Mlaiotey
• ·• New Ume Rd., Rutlaod
l,'ulo~: Rev. ~brpret 1. Robinson
Servtccs: Wednolday, 7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2:30 ~. m.

Mornlna Star
Pastor: Dtwuyne Slutler
Sunday School - II a.m.
Warship · 1Q a.m.

The Chun:ll of Jaus
Chriot ol ulter·Day Salall
St. Ro. 160,446-6247 or 446·7486
Sunday School10:20-11 a.m ..
Relief Society!Pri~thood l J :05-12:00 noon
Sacrament Service 9- 10:1.5 a.m.
H~memaking meeting, lst Thurs. - 7 p.m.

Hlckorj HUla Church of Chrilt
Evangelist Mike Moore.
Sur1day School - 9 a.m. .
Worship · -10 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services- 1 p.m.

Putor:.SteVe. RCcd
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship· 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m. ·
Wedneada~ • 7 p.m. •
frid~y - fellowatup servioe 7 p.m.

Rac:ine, Ohio
P4stof: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday Schuol - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m:
B i ~l c Study Wed. 7:00p.m.

Meigs
Alexander
Belpre
Wellston
VInton CountyNelsonville·York

Full Goopel Cbon:h of the UYint~ Savior
· Rl.338, Antiqully
Pastor: Jesse Morri!l
Asst. Pastors: Jim Morris
. Servi~s: saturday 7:30p.m_.

LongBottom

carme'I--Suttoa
Carmel &amp; Bashan Rd s. ·

·Ohio ·

New Ult Victory Center
3773 Georges Cr&lt;ek Road, Gallipolis, OH
· '
.. Pastor: Bill Staten
Sunday Services · 10 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m:
Wednesday · 7 p.m.&amp;. ·Youth 1 p.m.

Faltb Full Gospel Church

-TVC-.

•

Frtday(. Febru•ry 4, 1000

of

GIRLS

•

Cllftoa Tabvaade Cb.n:b
. Oiflon, W.Va.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Wqrihip. 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Hobooa Chriotlan Fellow1hlp Clwrch
Sunday service, 10:00 a.m., 7:00 p.:n.
Youth Fellowship S~y. 7:00p.m.
Wednesday serv1cc, 7:00p.m.

llelbooy Pastor: Dewayne Stutler Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship- 9 a.m.
Wednesday Services· 10 a.m.

.Keoraaalzed Cblll'&lt;h of Je•u Chrill
of Latter D•y Saints
Portland·Racine Rd.
Pastor: Jerry Sina.er
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship • 10:30 a.m.
Wed_nesday Services- 7:30p.m.

Dradfonl Chun:h of Christ
Comer of S1. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
Mm1s1er. Doug Shamblin
Youth Minister: Bill Amberger
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship - 8·00 a.m., 10.30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services -7:00p.m.

Racine First Bapllsl
· Pastor: Rick Rule
. ·sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worshi p· 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesda y Services-7:00p.m.

Saow•llle
Sunday School-10 a.m.
'Worship · 9 a.m.

Prep Basketball

~lcla1 Uie Cbun:h
500 N. 2nd Ave., Middleporl
Putor: Mib Foreman
Pastor: Emcrilus LawJCnce Foreman
Sunday School· 9:30 a.m.
Worship.•10:00 aln
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Cluisllu Fellowoldp c..lfr
Salem St., Rudand
Pastor: Robert·E.' Musser
. Sunday School-10 a.m·.
Worship - 11:15 a.m., 7 p.rn.
Wednesday Service • 7 p.-m.

Salem Center
Pastor: Ron Fierce
Sundtly School-9:15a.m.
Worship · 10:15 a.m.

JO:J0t1. m., 7:30p.m.

Stivers\' lilt Word otF•Ith
Pastor: David Dailey
Sunday SChool9:30 a.m.
· Evening . 1 p. m.

Faltil Cbopel
923 S. Third St, Middlcpon ..
PuiOr Michael Panaio
Sunda~ Rrvite, 10 a.m.
Wednesda)' servic:e, 7 p.m.

Worship· ~O: JO a.m.
Thursday Service&amp;- 7 p.m.

Latter·Day Saints

Wo r.~hip

Wednesday Service -7:30p.m.

1\Jip&lt; Ufe Cenlfr
M
Fuii-Gospel Church" ,
Pastors.John &amp; Patty Wade
603 Second Ave. Mason
773·l017
Service ti me1 Sunday 10:30 a. m.
· Wednesday 7 pm . ·

Sur1day School- 9:JOa.m.

HIGHLIGHTS

Cal•ary Bible Chun:b
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pustor: Rev. Blackwood
Sundlty School - 9:30a.m.

47439 Roibc:l Rd., Ch&lt;51cr
l'al«&gt;n: Rev. May and Harold Cool&lt;
Sunday Services: 10a.m. &amp;: 6p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.·

· Rulland

FRIDAY's

Fellowthlp Cruude for Cbrill
· Pastor: Rev. Frsoklin Dickens
Service: Friday, 7 'p.m.

Fall~

H1n-ett O..treacb Ml•ldries

Rock Sprinp
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School - 9:15a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.
Yo uth Fellowshtp, Sunday'. 6'p.m.

Wnleyao Bible Hollattl Churcb
1S Pearl St., MiddlepOrt.
Pas1or: Rev. Douj Co~t
Sundoy w..,hip • 9:30p.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Service: · 7:30p.m.
Hylell Run HoUness Church
Rev. Mark Michael
. Sunday School '- 9:30a.m.
Worshif. · 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
ThurSday Bib e Study and Youth- 71?.m,
uurel Clllf F,.. Melllodlot Cburcb
Pastoc Charles Swigeer
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - -10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Ser_vi~ -7:()(fp.m.

1ioppen PI IIIII ChiU'th of Christ
InstrUmental
Worship Service - 9 a.m.
Communion- 10 a.m.
Sunday School • 10: 1!i a.m.
Youlh- 5:30pm Sunday
Bible Study Wednesday 7 pm

Alii So., Middleport
Pulor La Hayman
Sundax Sdlool· 10:00 a.m.
Sunday SefYk:e • 6:00 p.m.
Wedneadly Service-7:00p.m•._

.
Pomeroy
Pas10r: Connie Fiares
SurYday School- 9:1' a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study Tuesday . 10 a.m.

sur.. Holl- C1iomll

LcadinJ Cr&lt;ek Rd., Rolland
Pastor: Rev. DeweyJC_ing
SUnday school· 9:30 a.m.
Sunday worsh+p -7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meeting- 1 p.m.

Br•rwlllow Ricl&amp;e Churth of Christ
Pas!Ol:Terry Stewart

Sunday Services- 10:00 a.m. an d 7 p.m.

Alii-Cis-

hari Cbopel
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.

!

Fainltw Blblt Churda
Lelart, W.Va. Rt. 1
Pastor: Brian May
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wonhlp ·7:00p.m.
Wedncsda,- Bible Study· 7:00p.m.

Other Churches

Mlnenvlle
Pastor: Chad Emrlck
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship· 10 a.m.

Cahaey l'lllrl• Cluopel
Harrisonville Road
Putor: Chules McKenzie
Sunday School 9:30 a:m.
Worship . 11 a.m.,' 7:&lt;X;) p.Ql.
Wednesday Service .. 7:00p.m.

Keno Chun:b of Chrilt
Wonh ip - 9:30a. m.
Sunday School- J0:3U a.m.
Putor-Jeffrey Wallace
lst and Jrd Suriday

Assembly of God

HfOth (Middleport)
Pilstor: Vernagaye Su ll iv1 n
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Worship " 10:30 a.m.

Du•HI&lt; Holl- Cloordl
31057 State Route 325, Lanpvlle
Pastor: Gary JICbon
Sunday school • 9;30 a.oi.
Sunday wonhlp • 10:30 Lm. &amp; 1 p.m.
WedDC1day prayer IIO!Vice • 7 p.111.

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UEREA, Ohio (AI') - l'eter men Policy said Thursday. "A
Warrick's misdemeanor crime misstep. that I might add, a lot 'o f
for discount· shopping, last year young pe.opl,e could conceivably
hasn't taken him off the Cleve- become involved in.
land Drowns' most wanted list.
"Peter Warrick needs to be
·While the Drowns are con- jud'ged more so by how he han ~
· cerned about the NFL's 'image died the · situation once it '
following recent off-the- field became apparent he did sqme·
problems invojving players, they thing wrong as opposed to that
aren't going to hold Warrick's particular fonn of wrongdoing."
past against him. .
Warrick , along with Penn
The still think he's a good . State's L ~ Var Arrington and .
player, and a b'Dod person.
Courtney Drown, are presumed
Warrick,
Florida
State's to be the players most likely to
speedy All-America'.' wide become the Drqw.ns No. 1 pick .
receiver, was arrested last year Earlier this week ,Dwight Clark,
for paying $21.40 for S412 .3B the .tean1 's . director of football
worth of clothing at ~ depart- operations, agam said the
ment store in Florida . He was Urowns' priority in the draft
suspended for two' games and would be to get wea)lons for
the incident probably cost him quarterback Tim Couch.
the Heisman Trophy.
There's not a more leth al
However, the Drowns, who weapon available than ·Warrick,
&lt;&gt;Wn the No. i overaH l'ick in who closed his college career by
th~ NFL· dtaft, were impressed scoring a Sugar Dowl record 20
by Warrick 's humili,ty in admit- ·points
two tol1chdown
ting his mistakes.
catches, a punt return TD and 2"1 don't think we would shy point conversion - in leading
away from him because of a the Seminoles to the national
misstep during . his college championship with a 46-.29 win
years," Urowns president Car· ·over Virginia Tech ..

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Page A 8 • The Dally Sentinel .

Friday, February 4, 2000

Inside:

The Daily Sentinel

Top 25 hoops; Page B2
Brennaman headed for Hall, Page B2
Scoreboard, Page B6 .
1

Page 81

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Apostolic

Pomoroy Wesllldo Chordt otCIIrlat

3ID6 Cllikhen's Home Rd.
Su.ncta~ School - I 1 a.m.
· Woralllp ~ IOa.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Churcll of JHUI C hrist ApoJtelk
VanZandt and .Ward ltd.
• Pastor: James Miller
Sunday 'SchooJ- 10:30 a.m.
Evening . 7:30p.m.

Mlcl4ltport Churdt of Christ
.5th and Main
PaSior: 'AI Hartson
Youth Minister: Bill Frazier
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship- 8:15, 10:30 a.m., 1 p.m.
Wedne_sday Services - 7 p.m.

Churth of Jesus Chrhl
Apoitollc Fallh
NC!w Lima Roa~

Paltur: Many Huuon
Sund3y, 10 a.m. and 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.

Ubtrty Msembly or God
P.O. Bux 467, Dudding Lane
Mt~ sOn ,

W.Va.

Pastor: Neil Tenmtnt

K- or

, Plae Grove Bible Holinea Church
1/2 mile off Rt 325
Putor: 'Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service:- 7:30 p.m.

Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.,,6: 30 p.m.
. Wednesday, Service.s- 6:30p.m.

Baptist
Maranalha hptlst Cburdl
Burlingham · 742-7606
Pastor: Jolm Swanwn

Zkln Church of Christ

Pomeroy, Harrisonville Rd. (Rt143)
Paslor: Roger Wa1son
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worsl!ip • 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wedneiday ServK:c:s- 7 p.m.

Sum.Jay School - 10:00 a.m.
Morn in&amp; Service 11:00 a.m .
Evening Service-6:00p.m.
Wednesday Service- '1:30 p.m.
Hope Baptist Churtb (Southern)
Pastor: Jim Dilly

570 Gram St., Middleport
Suni.Juy school - 9:30 11.m.
Worship · II a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wcdn~ sda y Service - 7 p.m.

Rutland First Baptist Church

Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Worshi p- 10:45 a.m.

Bndbul')' Cburdl of Chrt•l

Pastor: Tom Runyon
9:30a. m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Pomeroy First Baptist
East Main St
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wors hip,- lO:JOa.m.
First Southern Baptist
' 41H72 Pomeroy Plke .
Pastor: E. Lamar O'Bryant
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a. m., 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:00p.m.
t'lrsl Baptist Church
P1tstor: Mark Morrow
6tti anti' Palmer S1., Middleport
Sunday School - 9:15a.m. ·
Worship- 10:1 ,5 a.m., 7:00p.m .
Weduesduy Setvice- 7:00p.m.

~unday School ~

Rull..d Church of Chriot
Sunday School ·9:30a. m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Silver Run Baptist
Pastor: Bill Lillie
Sunday School - lOa.m.
Worship- !!a.m., 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Scr\' ices· 6:30p.m.
Mt. Union Bapllsl
!'astor : Joe N. Sayre
Sunday S&lt;;hool-9:45 a.m.
Evening - 6:30 p.m.
Wcdncsd;t y Services- 6:30p.m.

Anllqull! DaptiSI
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m.
S\Jnday Evening-6:00p.m.

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Church of God
ML Moriu Churcb of God
· Mile Hill Rd., Racine
Paslor: Brice Uti
Sunda~ School - 9:45 a.m.
Evening- 6 p.m.
Wednesday Sel'\lices-? p.m.

WedllCsday Services· 7 p.m.

i

Graham United Melhodisl
Wors.hip- 9:3() a.m. (1st &amp; 2nd Sun),
7:30p.m. (3rd &amp; 4th Sun)
.
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Wednesday Service . 7:31) p.m'. . ·

Chn st1 ;-111 Un1 o n

Vit!tory Bapllsrlndependant
525 N. 2nd St. Middleport
Past\lr: lames E. Keesee
Worship - !Oa.m.. 7 p.m.

MI. Moriah Bapdot
Fourth &amp; Main St., Middleport
Paslor: Rev_. Gilbert Craig, Jr.
Sunda~ School -9:30a.m.
Wors ~ip • 10:45 a.m.

United Methodi st

Rutlaad Cburcb of God
Pastor: Ron Heith
Sunday Wonhlp -10 a.m.,.6 p.m.
Wednesday SenHce51_- 7 p.m.
S,riQIHFintChur&lt;hoiGod •
Apple and Second Sll.
Putor: ltev. David Russell
Sunday School and WoJShip· 10 a.m.
.
EverUn&amp; Services- 6:30 p.m.
Wedncs:laY. Services· 6:30p.m.

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Catholic
Sacred Heart Catholic Cbareb
161 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, 992-5898
P a~ t o r : Rev. Walter E. Heinz
Sa1. Con. 4:45-5: 15p.m.; Mass- .5!30 p. m.
Sun. Con. -8:45 -9:15 a.m..
Sun ~ Mass- 9:30a.m.
Dailey Mass - 8:30 a.m.

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Trt.lly Cborcb
Second &amp; Lynn, Pomeroy
SuOO.y.school and worship 10:25

Ep 1scopa l

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C...uolty Churcb

Church of Chr1 st

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Malo SUee!. Rullond
Sunday Wcnhl!'-10:00 a.m.
Sunday Serv1oe-1 p.m . .

Pomeroy Chureh of Cbrlst
212 W. Mai n Sl.
Ministe r: Danny Bias
Sunday S"hool - 9:30a.m.
Worshi p- 10:10 a.ni .. 7 p.m.
Wedncsd~y Sel'\liccs- 7 p.m.

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~b.Chur&lt;h

Co. Rd.63
Sunday SChool • 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Nazarene

Chester
Pastor: Jane Beattie
Worship - 9 a.m.
Sunday Sc:hool • 10 a.m.
Thursday Services -7 p.m.

Ree&lt;l.,llle Fellowship
Churth of Ihe Nararene
Pastor: Teresa Waldeck
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

J

Pomeroy Cbun:b of the N.......,e
Pastor: Rev. Lloyd D. Orimm.Jr.
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m 1
Worship - 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services~ 7 p.m.

Tuppen Plalna St Paul
Pastor: Jane Beattie
Sunday SchOol- 9 a.m.
Worship- lO a.m.
Tuesd~y Services-7:30p.m.

Chnter Chun:h the NIWreae
P(!Sior: Rev, Herben Grate
Sunday School -9:30a.m:
Wo11hip • l l a.m., 6 p.m.
· Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

. Eoterprise
.
Pastor: Keith Rader
· Sunday School - 10 a.m.
. • Worship - 9 a.m.
Flatwoodl
Pastor; Ke.ith Rader.
Sunday S(:hool- 10 a.m.
Worship • 11 a.m.

Hutl Community Cllurcb
OffRI.l24
Pastor: Ed51Cl Hart .
Sunday SchoOl· 9:30a.m. ·
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Harrioon.Uie Prabylerlaa Cburcb
. Worship · 9 a~ m ..
Sunday School • 9:45 a.m.

or

Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m ..

Seveath·Day. .Adveatlat
HIS. Rd., Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Lawinsky
Saunday S~"' ices:
Sabbath Sc:hool- 2 p.m.
Worship • 3 p.m.

~ulbcrry

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United Brethren
ML Renno• Uolted Brothrea
bl Christ Church

Texas Community off CR 82'
Pastor: Robert Sanders
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services-7:30p.m.

Support your
local
-churches
Place an ad in this

&amp;
PHARMACY

Ye are the light of the
world. A' city that is.set
on an hiU cannot be hid.
MattS·
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EWING

FUN~AL

HOME

Dignity and &amp;,rvice Alwa,Ys

EStablished 1913

992·2121
.
.

106 Mulberry AVe.

NAME WIU. I'UT lliEIR TRUST IN
1liEE, fill. iliOU, l.alo, HAsT 001'
fORSAKEN
TliEM THA.T SEEK THEE
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Pomeroy

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FIRE ec SAFETY .
FUNEIW. QOME
"We a.;.,epl Preneell 7hJR.Ifer." ' SALES lc SERVICE
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112-1200 .

LUIIUif

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992·7Q75

BTOYH! '!&gt;, ' •

.172

. 74

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~i11~er ~uiural ;Jigrm ,;line.
264 South Second Ave.•Middleport. OH 45711101
740.992-5141
Bruce R. Floher • Dlroe1or
590

e..i Main S1root • Pomeroy, OH 45761
740·992·5444

Jalri.. R.

Mei§• Countyi Olde•r FlorUr

IIi,.. ... , .....
7 40--992-2644 .
. 740--992·6298

lM U, Send Your Tlle111Ah Witll Special

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Searching for a
· local church?
Check the Sentinel
e~ty Friday!

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Bv DAVE HARRIS
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

· play in the third. West's trey cut
the Marauder lead to 24-16.
. Price answered West's triple
by nailing another three ~ point­
er from about the same place
on the floor witlr&lt;2:13 left in
· the period to extend the )VIeigs
lead to 27 - 16. ·
Price's bucket jump -started
an 18-0 run for Meigs as the
Marauders built up a 42- 16
cushion,' which culminated with
a Shrimplin bucket · with 4:16
left, pt.ltting the game' out of

ROCK SPRINGS - Meib"
outscored Ddpre 16-0 in' an
eight m'inute span in the second
and third periods, and· went on
to defeat the Golden Eagles 4824 in girls TVC Ohio Division
action Thursday.
!he Marauder · win is the
team's 27th consecutive home
victory, and raises their record
to 16-1 overall and· 12-1 in the
TV C.
Delpre played a slow down reach.
· offense 'to start the game, but
Shrimplin le\1 all scorers with
Meigs jumped out to a 6-2 13 points. Vining added 10 and
advantage on a Drooke Williams Price had nine for Meigs.
bask)'t at the 3:3H mark of the
Meib" hit 20-of- 47 shots from
first period.
the floor, includn1g 6-of-9 from
llelpre (9-7,TVC 9-4) pulled three -point range.
' tO within 6-5 on a Candy Mal~
Meigs pulled down 26
one free. throw with 54 seconds rebounds with Shrimplin clearleft. Uut Jenniler Shrimp lin hit ing a team-high seven boards.
a bucket with 39 seconds left to Williams and Amy Hysell aJded
give Meib" an 8-5 lead at the six rebounds each.
end of the period.
Me iS' - had 10 steals led by
Michelle·Brown ignited an 8- Williams with five. Meigs had
0 run for the Golden Eagles, eight assists led by Williams and
who took a t'3-8 lead with 4:40 Price who had two each. The
left in the half. Shrimplin Marauders 'con1mitted just 10
scored back-to-hack baskets to turnovers.
start an 8-0 run as Meigs
Michelle Drown led the Lady
regained a 16- 13 lead at ·the Eagles with eight points. llelpre
half.
hit 11 -of- 26 shots from the
Shrimplin hit a free throw floor.
and purilped in a basket at the
In the junior varsity game,
start of th e second half to give Meigs (.11-5, TVC 8.4) won,
Meigs a 19-13 advantage. 30-1 n. Mindy Chancey led all
Williams made it 21-13 at ·the scorers with t 0 points. Jessica
6:41 mark, converting a steal Arhturs led Delprc with seven.
into a bucket.
Meigs · travels to VintOI\.
Shannon Price then nailed a County Saturday afternoon.
three pointer from the left cor- The junior varsity game startS
nerto give Meib"' a 24- 13 ,lead. at I p.m.
Michelle West drilled' a threeThe Marauders play at Well·
pointer to end the llelpre scor- stan on Monday.
·
UNDER FIR~ ,....
Vining .of Meigs (left) fires a shot against heavy pressufe from Belpre's Cheri
ing
drought.
with
4:02
left
to
Thomas (30) an~ Leslie Cunningham. Vining scored 10 polnts. '(Dave Harris photo)

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. HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AI')
- Sophomor~ Tamar Slay mape
sure. he didn't have two b~d
games in·.a, row. _ ·
WEST LA'!;AYETTE. Ind.
The Mid-A:me~ican Confer(AI') - Katie Douglas tied her
ence's
leading ·starer, ·who was
career-high with 31 points
held .to just fou~ points in a los5 •
Thursday night to lead 17th·
~t Ohio. on, ~urday, , scored t6 .
ranked l'1•rdue to a 75-52 win
. ·of·his -26. jloi~~ in 'the second
over Ohio State.
half to lead M2rs~all·past Duffalo
Douglas, who finished 11 -of93-61 on Thur~d~y nig~t. • ·
1H from the field and 7 -of-8 from
.;,
Slay ,hit · 10-Qf•18 •shots .from
' the fn:e-throw line, also scored 31
.
the
floor, including 6-of-1 0 in
p~ints Nov. .19 at Dayton and
the . secoQd ~~It as ·Marshall
Nov. 26 against Florida.
'
broke
a I'M)~gapl ~· losing•streak.
·c amille Cooper sc.ored' 16.
The Thunderillg Herd (15-6, night after going four games
point!; for the Doilermaker&lt; (15- 'i· 'The · Qrst ~IIi I didn't· play MAC 7-5) led by as many as 3.5 without scoring in double fig· we&gt;U; but that's !J!as~etball and
S,' llig 107-3) and Shinika Parks
jus.r ·have to .luiep, afier: it every points on a J. R . Van Hoose layup ores.
had 10. Michelle Duhart had a
with 4:36 left. ·
·" ' "
"His job is .to score points. I
' !fo!ms!:' Slay 'said,\ I · · · · ' . ; f'
season-high ' 13 rebounds for the
Marshall held ' a 47-32 was considering a change in the .
·~lay'scored eighl points d11ting
Boilermakers.
rebounding
advantage .and Ollt· lin~up and so he. knew he had to
a. l,S-2 run 'to op~n the second
Purdue has won six consecutive
shot
Buffalo
58 to 33 percerjt get it done tonight, and he has io
games in the Big Ten after a 1-3 ·•, h*lf .as M~rshall1 pushed 'a :19- from the floor.
conrihlle that," White said.
·.p oint 1\alftime'.,!e~d to 56-33
start that inclu.ded a 53-51 loss at
Travis
Young
scored
IS
points
:
Young knows he has to be ·
.~ith , ts:so tert. i 1 ·
. • •
. 0hio State Jan . 13.
, "Slay imp~~!\"d me ver'Y, very :while VanHoose, :a sophomore; more 'comisten[ on both ends of
Courtney Coleman and LaToya
l)'lUch;' said Do'ffiild( ccillch !teg- had n · points and I 0 rebounds the court.
Tqrner each scored 11 points to
for his seventh double-double of ' 1 "You've got to :want to play
. ·lead Ohio State (11-9, Dig 10 4- . f "gie Wither'spoon; ,"~e do.es a lot riJel, season. Cornelius_)ackson 'defense}'ou've:got to wan~ to be
'•of thi[lgs•well, :~cr a$ gc:tting to
6) . .Toineka Drown added 1_0
10 ai;sists.
·
. ·'.• 'aggresSive . whether y_ou re at
•.'the
b~~ket. H,e; ~ ·iS.~~~ '~?urt , hadMarshall
points.
·
&lt;coach
Creg
White
home or on the .road;' he said. "I
.
If
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sai~ he's
glad Young
had. , a good
See HERD- 82
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Marshall
bullies.
Buffalt&gt;·
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lead to six three times, but failed .
In the final period , Southern fell behind
49-39 as the Lancers slowly pulled away
for the win .
·
So uth ern hit 19-of-50 overall from the
field .The Tornadoes were 11-for-1 il at the
foul li!&gt;e.
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Southern had 33 rebounds , with Dailey .
hauling in n(ne and Lyons grabbing seven.
The Tornadoes recorded 11 steals, led by
Brauer with thtee.
South ern had five assists, led by Cummins with two. The Tornadoes committed
25 turnovers.
Federal Hocking hit 26-of-61 from the
See SOUTH ERN - B:Z

Meigs rls
top Be pre

you

!fra11ccis FLORIST

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Illinois

DE KAlD, Ill. (AP) - Shaun
Stonerook scored I 9· points
Thursday night in leading Ohio
t&lt;&gt; a 76-61 victory over Northern
Illinois.
TJ Lux. scored 19 points to p~s
I)onnell Thomas (1987-91 )• as
Northern Illinois' career scoring .
leader with t856 points. He ,also
· had a game-high 12 rebounds for
llis 55th caree~ double-double.
::Leading .31-29 at halftime, the
Dobcats (14-9, MAC 7-4) started
the second half on a 9-0 run to
go in ·front 40-29. They stretched
the lead to 51-36 and the Huskies
(U -10, MAC 5-7) couldn't get ·
aqy closer than nine after that.
Drandon :Hunter ended · up
.with 15 points and nine rebounds
for Ollie~. S~ve Esterkamp had 12
points.
,, and Patrick Flomo added
. 10 off the bench. .
.

H:OICE·

At-[) niv THAT Kt«&gt;W

We Fill Doctors'
Prescriptions

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992~432

S..w1DM

Eden United Brelbren In Christ .
2 1/2 miles north of Ree~ville
on Slate Route ·124
Pastor: Rt\1. Robe_rt Markley
Sunday School·ll B-Tfl

~:

228 w. Main St., Pomeroy

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Bobcats thump N.

Purdue' women .
whioOSU

"Featuring K~N~Iuclcy Fried Chicken'

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craw's Family Restaurant

t

7.a

Saturday's achldule
Southern ;~t South Gallla
Vinton County at Portsmouth

~··

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here for ·
INSURANCE
~~~ current Church SERVICES
214E.
Main
Gl!NCIES lnr.'
.
listings.
Bill Quickel 992.-n
992·5130 Pn""."'"

,,

While's ChaJ?tl Wesleyan
Coof11ill~ Roa,d
Pastor Rav . PhLIIip Ridenour
Sunday Schod1 • 9lM a.m.
Worship • 10:30 'a .m.
Wednesday S~:rvice 1.:'_ p.m.

.,,

ALL

14·1
8-5
10-5

Today·~ achldu.l e

Freedom ~. Miuloa
Bald Knob, on Co..1\d. 3\
Pastor: Rev. ROger WillFord
Sunday Sch?OI · 9:30a.m. ,
Worship· 7 p.m.

Portland Flnt ChUrth of the Naurene ·
Pastor: Mark Matson ·
Sunday School-10:30 a.m.
Morning Worship -11:15 a.m.
Sunday Service- 6 p.m .
Wednesday_Services ·1 p.m.

TVC

11-1
7-4
7-5
6·6
4·7
0·12

Miller at Eastern
Meigs at Nelsonville·York
W;1terford at Sout~ern
Wellston at Alexander
Trimble at Federal Hocking
Belpre at Vinton County

Cortetaalattnleaomlallloaol Church
Kln&amp;lbury Road
Pastor: Clyde Henderson
,
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
"
Worshtp Service 10:30 am.
·
No Sunday or Wednesday Night ~ervices

Rullaod Church ollhe NU.reae
Pastor: Rev. Samuei.Y(. Basye

Fu.ll lne of

Eastern
Waterford
Southern
Trimble
Federal Hocking
Miller

Seventh·Day A dve ntist

·
Silver Ridge
, Pastor: Robert Barber
' Sundar Sch0.,1 • 9 a.m.
Sun. Worship · 10:10a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.

lu.L

11 ·1 13-1
7·5 7-7
5·6 5·9
5·7 5·11
4·6 5·9
2·9 2·12

Hocking

Soutil Bethel N"' T-.!aD.eat

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:ATTEND THE CHURCH OF YOUR

'INSURANCE

TVC

Belpre
Alexander
WellstQn
Nelsonville· York
Meigs
Vinton County

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Ohlo

full GoapeiiJ&amp;bthoUJe
33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Psstor:-Roy Hunter
Sunday School- 10 a;m.
Evening 7:30p.m.
Tuesday &amp; Thutsdoy • 7:30 p.m.

Fore~l Ru•
Pasror: Bob Robinson
Sunda~ SchoOl .·- 10 a.m.
Worship- 9 a.m.

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.- .T VC-

Middleport Presbytertu
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Worship -10 a.m.

Ualled Faith Cblll'Ch
Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By·Pass
Pastor: Rev. Robert E. Smith, Sr. ·
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m·., 7 p.m. ·
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Synaue Church-oflbe Naarae
PaStor Mite Adkins.
Sunday School - 9:30 l ; m,
Wonbip- JO:JO a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Reednllle
Worship • 9:30 a.m.
Sunday School· 10:30 a.m.
UMYF Sunday 6:30 p.m.
First-Sunday of.Monlh- 7:30p.m. service

S,roaiSf First Ualled Prabyterlu
Pastor: Rev. Krisana Robinson
Sunday School. 10 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.

ML Olin Community Churtb
Pastor:. Lawrence Bush
Sunday School - 9:-30 a.m.
Evening -7 p.m.
.Wedneday.Service • 7 p.m.

11·5
12·7
5·11
5-10
1·15
0·15

BOYS

Pres byteri an

Faith Goapel Cburcb
Lona Bouom
Sunday School . 9:30 a.m.
Worship -10:45 a.m., 7;30·p.m.
Wednesday.. 7:30p.m.
.

·ALL

9·3
12-3
4-8
2-9
1-12
0·12

score to 29-24 in favor of Federal Hockmg.
Southern started slow in the third
frame, falling behind by as many as 17
points (47-30) before Crisp made adjustments that sparked the Tornaodes. Jamie
Simmons had six points, while Waderker
and Withem each notched five' points to
lift the Lancers.
Southern's offense kicked into overdrive
and cut the score to 47~:\9, going on a 9o·run to end the period.
,Brigette Barnes. and Kati Cummins
sparked the attack with five poin'ts each.
Southern gathered several st-eals off tlie
press and had the opportunity to_cut the

HQCklng 64, Southern 51
Waterord at Miller, gpd.
Trimble,at Eastel'll, ppd.
Meigs 48, Belpre 24 ·
N!!.lsonvllle·York 44, Wellston 31
Alexander 81, Vinton County 30

•

Moi'H Chapel Chun:h
Sunday school-10 a.m.
Woilship • 11 a.m. ·
Wednesday ServiCe •·vp.m:

TVC

tually put us away.".
Although Jamie Linscott split the $eams
of the Southern defense with a great ~rop
ster and five first quarter points, f;ederal
Hocking was forced exclusively to the
perimeter, where Deth Withem and Han·
nah Sayers both canned three-pointers.
Six· Lancers hit the scoring column,
while Southern had four players in the
boxscore. Sarah Drauer canned four of her
six points In 'the period and Kim lhle
notched a three-pointer.
At the conclusion of the tim .quarter,
Federal Hocking led 18-1 t. As Federal's
outside game failed, the Lancers' Linscott
ad~ed five more points. That pushed the

. Thursdlly'e rHI!Ita

Middleport Pentecootal
ThirdA11e.
Pastor: Rev. Clark Baker
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evening - 6 p:m.
Wednesday Services- 7:00p.m.

'

RACINE . League-leading Federal
Hocking skirted a late Southern comeba, kllo claim a 64-51 TVC Hocking
Divis)on win Thursday at Hayman Gym-,
nasium.
Sol!thern (5-11 and 4-8) played one
its be~ter games, bur not a victory caliber
~me: The Tornado~s suffered from an
untimdy 25 ·turnover&lt; and a lack of
qefen~ive rebounds.
.
"&lt;?ur game plan was pretty much on
tar~ d' but we did not execute when we
nee4ea to make our final run," Southern .
· H~a4 coach Alan Crisp said: "We gave up .
17 offensive. boards and that killed us. Federal had several second attempts and even'- '

Saturday's schedule
Southern at Eastern
Miller at Millersport
Trimble at Tree of Life

SyriCideMisiloa
1411 Brida,cman Sl., Syracuse
Rev. Mike Tbompson,Pastor
Sunday SChool · 10 a.m.
Evening- 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.

Dya"·llle Comm~nlty Cllurtb.
Sunday School -9:30a.m. ·
.Worship ·•10:30 a;m.,-7 p:m.

.

Middleport Cburdl of the Nua""e
Sunday Scllool - 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services • 1 p.m.
Pastor: Allen Midcap

.

Holin ess

•

Mclp Cooperotln Parllh
-~orthelst,CIUster ·
Alfred
Pauor: Sharon Hausm&amp;n
Sunday School'· 9:30a.m.
Worship· 11 a.m., 6:30p.m.

Sunday S&lt;hool11:00 a.m. ·

Www.frognei.neV""'('eanery

HocklniPort Chur&lt;h
Grand Street
' ··
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m .
· w.cdncsday Services- 8 P·rt:' ·
.

.,

'

Central CIUJier
Albury (Syracuse)
·Pastor: Bob Robinson
Sunday School · 9:45a.m:
·..
Worship • 11 a.m.
·.
_Wednesday Services • 7:30 p.m.

G,_l!. . . .l Chur&lt;h
, 326 E. Main Si., Pomeroy
Rev. James Bcmac:ki, Rev. K.alharin FOster
Rev. Deborah RanldJI, ClerllY .

p..._: Rev. ,Amos Tillil

,..

Loaallollom
Sunda~ School - 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m,

OJ. White Rd. off Si. Rl. 160
Pastor: P.J. Chapman
• Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worsttip- 11 a.m.
Wcdnelday Services • 7 p.m.

Holy Eudlarilund

...

Pastor: ~':andolph
Worship· 9:30a.m:
Sundaf School~ 10:30 a.m.

Con greg ational

Rutland Free Will Bapllst
Salem St.
'Pa.\tor: H.tv . Paul Tuylor
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening- 7 p.m.
Wc d n cs d ~y Se rvices . 7 p. m. .

Bethel Charch
TownshiP Rd .• 468C
ASunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services- 10 a.m.

ML Olive United Methodlot
Off 124 behind Wilkesville
Pastor: Rev. Ralph Spires
··~ S~day School-.9:30&lt;a,rt). &lt;t.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Services. 7 p.m.

..

'

Cbun:llolGoclotrn.bKY

~,

. .

,..,~·

'·'·'

ALL

16·1
15-2·
9·7
7-11
6·10
6·11

~ ·9

Federal Rocking pulls away to beat Southern

t=eder~l

. Peat_,.l Allembly
Si. Rt. 124, Racine
Pastor: William Hobac:k
Sunday Sc:hool· 10 a.m.
Evening· 7 p.m.
Wedr1c ~ay Services - 7 p.m.

F•lth Valley T1btmade Church
Bailey Run Road
Pastor: Rev. Emmeu Raw!iOn
Sunday Evenin£ 7 p.m.
Thursday Service - 7 p.m.

·Cool•llle Ualted Metbodlll Parilb
Pastor: Helen KIWte
Cooi•Uie Churcb
Main&amp;. Fifth St.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship · 9 a.m.
Tuesday Service' -7 p.m.

·St. Poui .Lulheroa Churcb
Comer Sycamore &amp; Second ·st., Poffieroy
Rev. Donald C. Fritz
Sunday School - 9:45 a.m.
Worship - '11 a.m.

Hartlonl C...,..h ofCiorfalla
ChristloaUaloll
Harllord, W.Va.
Pastor:Jim Hughes
Sunday SChool · 11 a.m.
Worship· 9:30a.m.~ 7:30p.m.
WediJCsday Services - 7:30p.m.

Hillside Baptist Church
St. Jlt. 143 just off Rt. 1
.Pas tor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worsl1ip · \ !a.m., 6·p.m.
Wc:d nesday Services· 7 p.m.

Forest Ruft Baptist
Pa"&gt;tor : Arius Hurl
Sunduy School · ·10 a.m.
Worship - H a.m.

Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood, W.Va.
Pas101: David RuSiell
Sunday School - lO:OOa.m.
Worship- 11 a.m.

Dexter Churcb of Chrlat
Pastor: Justin Campbell
Sunday school9:30 a.m.
.Norman Will, superin~cndcnt
Sunday worship _. 10:30 a.m.

Old Beohel Free Will BopiiSI Cbur&lt;h
28601 St. Rt. 7, Middleport
Sur1day School- 10 a.m.
Evening - 7:30p.m.
Thur~day Services· 7:30

Fallh Baptist Church
Ra ilmad St., Mason
SUnday School - 10 a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
~ednesday Se_fvices. 7 p.m.

Our Safiour Lulhenn Chun:h

Rood.,Hie Church of Chrisl
Pastor: Philip Sturm
·Sunday School: 9:30a.m.
Wof\hlp Service: 10:30 a.m.
· ~ible Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

oethlehem Baptist Chufch
Grc&lt;Jt Bend. Route 124, Raci ne, OH
P a~tor : Gene Mdrris
S u nd~y School - 9:30 a·.m.
Sunduy Worshi p- 10:30 a. m. &amp; 1 p.m. ·
Wcd ncsdny IJib_f.Study- 6:00 p.'m . .

Raclae
Paslor: Brii.P Harkness
Sunday School· 10 a.m . .
Worship - 11 a.m.

St. Jolin Lutheran Church
Pine Grove
Rev. Donald C. Fril:z
Worshlp- 9:00 a. in.
Sunday School- 10;00 a.m.

Hemlock Grove Chun:b
Pastor: Gene Zopp
Sunday school- 10:30 a.m.
Worship · 9:30a.m., 7 p.m.

Middleport Community Cbun:b
l75 Pearl Sl., MiddlePQrt ·
· Pastor: Sam Anderson ·
St.inda~ 5\cttoollO a.m .
Evenmg ·7:30p.m .
Wednesday Service- 7:30p.m. .

Waterford ·
Federal Hocking
Southern
Eastern
Trimble
Miller

Pentecostal

Haniloo.Uie eo-ually Church
P~IOr: 'Theron Purham
Sunday • 9:30 ~.m. and 7 p,m.
Weilnesd~ y- 7 p.m.

E'!SI Lellrt
. Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sunday School-tO a.m.
Worship . 9 a.m. ·
Wednesday· 7 p.m.

Lutheran

uap•lll&lt; Cbrlstlaa Cloun:h
. Sunday School ··9:30a.m.
·worship- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service 7:30p.m.

-.m·

TVC

12·1
12·1
.9-4
1·7
6..S

Hocking ·

God'1 Temple or Pralle
3166.'1 McOulr~ Rd. Pomeroy, Ohio
Pastor: Wayne Balcolm
Services: Thurs. Nite,7:00 pm
New-church No Sunday service established.

Tile
fellowlhlp Mlaiotey
• ·• New Ume Rd., Rutlaod
l,'ulo~: Rev. ~brpret 1. Robinson
Servtccs: Wednolday, 7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2:30 ~. m.

Mornlna Star
Pastor: Dtwuyne Slutler
Sunday School - II a.m.
Warship · 1Q a.m.

The Chun:ll of Jaus
Chriot ol ulter·Day Salall
St. Ro. 160,446-6247 or 446·7486
Sunday School10:20-11 a.m ..
Relief Society!Pri~thood l J :05-12:00 noon
Sacrament Service 9- 10:1.5 a.m.
H~memaking meeting, lst Thurs. - 7 p.m.

Hlckorj HUla Church of Chrilt
Evangelist Mike Moore.
Sur1day School - 9 a.m. .
Worship · -10 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services- 1 p.m.

Putor:.SteVe. RCcd
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship· 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m. ·
Wedneada~ • 7 p.m. •
frid~y - fellowatup servioe 7 p.m.

Rac:ine, Ohio
P4stof: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday Schuol - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m:
B i ~l c Study Wed. 7:00p.m.

Meigs
Alexander
Belpre
Wellston
VInton CountyNelsonville·York

Full Goopel Cbon:h of the UYint~ Savior
· Rl.338, Antiqully
Pastor: Jesse Morri!l
Asst. Pastors: Jim Morris
. Servi~s: saturday 7:30p.m_.

LongBottom

carme'I--Suttoa
Carmel &amp; Bashan Rd s. ·

·Ohio ·

New Ult Victory Center
3773 Georges Cr&lt;ek Road, Gallipolis, OH
· '
.. Pastor: Bill Staten
Sunday Services · 10 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m:
Wednesday · 7 p.m.&amp;. ·Youth 1 p.m.

Faltb Full Gospel Church

-TVC-.

•

Frtday(. Febru•ry 4, 1000

of

GIRLS

•

Cllftoa Tabvaade Cb.n:b
. Oiflon, W.Va.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Wqrihip. 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Hobooa Chriotlan Fellow1hlp Clwrch
Sunday service, 10:00 a.m., 7:00 p.:n.
Youth Fellowship S~y. 7:00p.m.
Wednesday serv1cc, 7:00p.m.

llelbooy Pastor: Dewayne Stutler Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship- 9 a.m.
Wednesday Services· 10 a.m.

.Keoraaalzed Cblll'&lt;h of Je•u Chrill
of Latter D•y Saints
Portland·Racine Rd.
Pastor: Jerry Sina.er
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship • 10:30 a.m.
Wed_nesday Services- 7:30p.m.

Dradfonl Chun:h of Christ
Comer of S1. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
Mm1s1er. Doug Shamblin
Youth Minister: Bill Amberger
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship - 8·00 a.m., 10.30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services -7:00p.m.

Racine First Bapllsl
· Pastor: Rick Rule
. ·sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worshi p· 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesda y Services-7:00p.m.

Saow•llle
Sunday School-10 a.m.
'Worship · 9 a.m.

Prep Basketball

~lcla1 Uie Cbun:h
500 N. 2nd Ave., Middleporl
Putor: Mib Foreman
Pastor: Emcrilus LawJCnce Foreman
Sunday School· 9:30 a.m.
Worship.•10:00 aln
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Cluisllu Fellowoldp c..lfr
Salem St., Rudand
Pastor: Robert·E.' Musser
. Sunday School-10 a.m·.
Worship - 11:15 a.m., 7 p.rn.
Wednesday Service • 7 p.-m.

Salem Center
Pastor: Ron Fierce
Sundtly School-9:15a.m.
Worship · 10:15 a.m.

JO:J0t1. m., 7:30p.m.

Stivers\' lilt Word otF•Ith
Pastor: David Dailey
Sunday SChool9:30 a.m.
· Evening . 1 p. m.

Faltil Cbopel
923 S. Third St, Middlcpon ..
PuiOr Michael Panaio
Sunda~ Rrvite, 10 a.m.
Wednesda)' servic:e, 7 p.m.

Worship· ~O: JO a.m.
Thursday Service&amp;- 7 p.m.

Latter·Day Saints

Wo r.~hip

Wednesday Service -7:30p.m.

1\Jip&lt; Ufe Cenlfr
M
Fuii-Gospel Church" ,
Pastors.John &amp; Patty Wade
603 Second Ave. Mason
773·l017
Service ti me1 Sunday 10:30 a. m.
· Wednesday 7 pm . ·

Sur1day School- 9:JOa.m.

HIGHLIGHTS

Cal•ary Bible Chun:b
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pustor: Rev. Blackwood
Sundlty School - 9:30a.m.

47439 Roibc:l Rd., Ch&lt;51cr
l'al«&gt;n: Rev. May and Harold Cool&lt;
Sunday Services: 10a.m. &amp;: 6p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.·

· Rulland

FRIDAY's

Fellowthlp Cruude for Cbrill
· Pastor: Rev. Frsoklin Dickens
Service: Friday, 7 'p.m.

Fall~

H1n-ett O..treacb Ml•ldries

Rock Sprinp
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School - 9:15a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.
Yo uth Fellowshtp, Sunday'. 6'p.m.

Wnleyao Bible Hollattl Churcb
1S Pearl St., MiddlepOrt.
Pas1or: Rev. Douj Co~t
Sundoy w..,hip • 9:30p.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Service: · 7:30p.m.
Hylell Run HoUness Church
Rev. Mark Michael
. Sunday School '- 9:30a.m.
Worshif. · 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
ThurSday Bib e Study and Youth- 71?.m,
uurel Clllf F,.. Melllodlot Cburcb
Pastoc Charles Swigeer
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - -10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Ser_vi~ -7:()(fp.m.

1ioppen PI IIIII ChiU'th of Christ
InstrUmental
Worship Service - 9 a.m.
Communion- 10 a.m.
Sunday School • 10: 1!i a.m.
Youlh- 5:30pm Sunday
Bible Study Wednesday 7 pm

Alii So., Middleport
Pulor La Hayman
Sundax Sdlool· 10:00 a.m.
Sunday SefYk:e • 6:00 p.m.
Wedneadly Service-7:00p.m•._

.
Pomeroy
Pas10r: Connie Fiares
SurYday School- 9:1' a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study Tuesday . 10 a.m.

sur.. Holl- C1iomll

LcadinJ Cr&lt;ek Rd., Rolland
Pastor: Rev. DeweyJC_ing
SUnday school· 9:30 a.m.
Sunday worsh+p -7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meeting- 1 p.m.

Br•rwlllow Ricl&amp;e Churth of Christ
Pas!Ol:Terry Stewart

Sunday Services- 10:00 a.m. an d 7 p.m.

Alii-Cis-

hari Cbopel
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.

!

Fainltw Blblt Churda
Lelart, W.Va. Rt. 1
Pastor: Brian May
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wonhlp ·7:00p.m.
Wedncsda,- Bible Study· 7:00p.m.

Other Churches

Mlnenvlle
Pastor: Chad Emrlck
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship· 10 a.m.

Cahaey l'lllrl• Cluopel
Harrisonville Road
Putor: Chules McKenzie
Sunday School 9:30 a:m.
Worship . 11 a.m.,' 7:&lt;X;) p.Ql.
Wednesday Service .. 7:00p.m.

Keno Chun:b of Chrilt
Wonh ip - 9:30a. m.
Sunday School- J0:3U a.m.
Putor-Jeffrey Wallace
lst and Jrd Suriday

Assembly of God

HfOth (Middleport)
Pilstor: Vernagaye Su ll iv1 n
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Worship " 10:30 a.m.

Du•HI&lt; Holl- Cloordl
31057 State Route 325, Lanpvlle
Pastor: Gary JICbon
Sunday school • 9;30 a.oi.
Sunday wonhlp • 10:30 Lm. &amp; 1 p.m.
WedDC1day prayer IIO!Vice • 7 p.111.

•

.

'

UEREA, Ohio (AI') - l'eter men Policy said Thursday. "A
Warrick's misdemeanor crime misstep. that I might add, a lot 'o f
for discount· shopping, last year young pe.opl,e could conceivably
hasn't taken him off the Cleve- become involved in.
land Drowns' most wanted list.
"Peter Warrick needs to be
·While the Drowns are con- jud'ged more so by how he han ~
· cerned about the NFL's 'image died the · situation once it '
following recent off-the- field became apparent he did sqme·
problems invojving players, they thing wrong as opposed to that
aren't going to hold Warrick's particular fonn of wrongdoing."
past against him. .
Warrick , along with Penn
The still think he's a good . State's L ~ Var Arrington and .
player, and a b'Dod person.
Courtney Drown, are presumed
Warrick,
Florida
State's to be the players most likely to
speedy All-America'.' wide become the Drqw.ns No. 1 pick .
receiver, was arrested last year Earlier this week ,Dwight Clark,
for paying $21.40 for S412 .3B the .tean1 's . director of football
worth of clothing at ~ depart- operations, agam said the
ment store in Florida . He was Urowns' priority in the draft
suspended for two' games and would be to get wea)lons for
the incident probably cost him quarterback Tim Couch.
the Heisman Trophy.
There's not a more leth al
However, the Drowns, who weapon available than ·Warrick,
&lt;&gt;Wn the No. i overaH l'ick in who closed his college career by
th~ NFL· dtaft, were impressed scoring a Sugar Dowl record 20
by Warrick 's humili,ty in admit- ·points
two tol1chdown
ting his mistakes.
catches, a punt return TD and 2"1 don't think we would shy point conversion - in leading
away from him because of a the Seminoles to the national
misstep during . his college championship with a 46-.29 win
years," Urowns president Car· ·over Virginia Tech ..

..

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(,

1

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-~P~a~g~e~B~2=-·~Th~e~D~a~lly~S~en~t=ln=e~I~~----------------------------------P~o~m~e~ro~y~·~M~Id~d=le~po~rt~·~O=h~lo~------------------~----------=F~r~ld~•~~~F~e~b=~~~~4~,~~~

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Top 25 College Hoops

·. ·

:_Duke stops UNC; UC rolls; Iowa URSets Kansas
BY THE AS SOCIATFD PRESS

Th e fi rst half was maybe the worst half we ve
played Guthndge sa~d
The rematch IS March 4 at Cameron Indoor Sta~hum

Its abc•ll t tun e to drop \\Ords hke arguabl y or one
t I the l c •l n college basketball when descnbmg the
J), kc No n h Clrohu. n v•lry
I he ;t l, uoh etght nules apart met fo r the 250th
tunc I In ,-.;da) mght and came up With another
be l\lt) " N o 3 Duke beat the Tar H eels 90-86 10
0\~ 1

I

'

I

No I Cmcmnat1 70, N C Charlotte 62

S~ lll

Shan e Battler had 25 pomts for Duke Chns Carr •well h 1d 23 and Carlos Boozer had seven of his 15
11 1 the uvcrtnne
Wt could have eastly put our heads down when
lt "&lt; li t mto overtune Carra well satd I know I was
' y 1g O h God not here not now But we stuck 111
th e1e 1 d we fought
I I L&lt; ta had 21 pomts for North Carohna wh1c h
" " 10t ranked m thiS matcht p for the first tune
Slll t&lt; I J 10 whtle Forte had 20
I lt kc IS a great team I thought so before and I

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Kenyon Martm had 20 po mts e1ght rebounds ~nd
three blocked shots to lead the Bearcats (21 - l
C USA 9 0) to the1r 13th consecuttve VICtory and
avmd the1 r tlmd stra1ght loss at Halton Arena Jobey
Thomas had 19 points for the 49ers (12 9 CUSA
4-4) who lost for the first tunc m e1ght hom~ games
thiS seaso n

l lll ll

rhc h) pe really d1dn t measure ' 'P to the perfor
mamc ot all the young.;t~ rs 10 that ball game Duke
coh h l\lbke Krzyzewsk1 sa~d I thought there was
'"""ti Ona! basketball out on the court by both
h:ams
l&gt;u ke ( 17 2 ACC 8-0) had a 19 po10t lead m the
seu,llld half but the Tar H eels (13 9 ACC 4 4)
sco ted un 19 of their final 22 po.sesSion of regulati On - the last a 3 pomter by Joseph Forte With ~ 2
seco nds left - to tle tt 73 73 and set off the crowd
of 2? o70 at the Snuth Center
rhc Bille Devils scored 011 thetr first SJX posses
swm of overtJme to wm the 17th s tra~ght overall
and exlcnd thelf own record Wtth then:. 30th con
sewt1ve ACC regular season VI ctory
It "" then 16th stmght ACC road v1ctory and
f n1rth ovt rtunc bratue of the season
O ur guvs have done wel11n overtune but I don t
\W il t them to take me there anymore Krzyzewski

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No 2 Stanford 78, UCLA 63

DATING

TONIGHT!

Ha\11 Fun Meeting Eligible Sin

Freshman Casey Jacobse n scored 12 of hi~ 17
pomts over the fin al 13 1/ 2 nunutes as the Cardmal
(18 I Pac 10 7 1) won their SIXth stratght over the
Brums and th etr th1rd m a row at Pauley Pavihon
Freshman Ja son Kapono led U C LA (12 7, Pac 10 3
5) w 1th 21 po mts

gas In Your Area Call For More
lnformatlon 1 800 ROMANCE

e,, 9735

Why walt? Start maellng Ohio
si ngles tonaght Call toll fret 1

600-766 2623 exlonsk&gt;n 6178

30

No 9 Anzona 77, No 23 Oregon 71

Announcement•

AOOPTION
Happily Married Couple Will Pro
v de Your Newborn With Love

And A Secure Future Please Cell
TeraAB Or Dave
1-800-28!1-lM77

Will bu~ ~our Clean

Clolhlng &amp; Good Toys &amp; Olher

game had a season htgh 21 potnts and 10 rebounds
for Kansas (16 5) wh1ch had lost three of four
No 17 Tulsa 70, SMU 59
Enc Coley scored 14 pomts and the Golden Hur
ncane (21-2 WAC 6 1) took advantage of a horn
ble shootmg mght by the Vtsltmg Mustang.; Jeryl
Sasser had 15 pomts to lead SMU (16 5 WAC 4 3),
which shot 24 percent from the field (17 for-71)
mcludmg 1-for-1 B from 3 pomt range

Items or will Sale on cons gn

menllor you 13041576-2642
slble For Any BillS Made By .An

yono Olher Than Mysoll
Glen Paulk
Now To You Thrlff Shoppe
9 West Stimson Athens
740-591! 1842
Quality cloth ng and household
Items $1 oo bag sale every
Thursda~ Monday thru Satufday

Veteran Reds broadcaster to be
enshrined at Cooperstown
BY JOE KAY
AP SPORTS WRITtR

C lt'.ICINNATI (AP) - Marty Brennaman does
11 t have a cute call for a home run He doesn t th10k
t p cleve1 mcknames fo r players H e doesn t sugar
co lt the home teams problems
As a Cmcmnatt Reds broadcaster for 26 years
Blc1111ama11 has done 1t h1s way sp~emg his s tra~ght
ton va rd dcscnptwn of the game w1th doses of no
holds barred opm10n
The approach has gotten hun mto scrapes w1th
gt.: IH.: r:i1 ma nagers p layers pla.yers w1ves and even
the Nat10nal League preSident It s also gotten hnn
1uto l ascball s Hall of Fame
11" IIIJillan 57 was chose n T hursday as the latest
rc e~p e1 t of the Ford C Fnck Award ptesented
a IIHIJIIV to a broadcaster He U be honored July 23
1lon g "1th former Reds first baseman Tony Perez
who w IS \ oted mto the Hall last month
I do n t thmk that I m the best baseball anno unc"' that sever !JVed by any means - I thmkVm Scul
I) s that Brennaman SJid But at the same ttme for
one day m July I U be htS equal
L1ke Scully Brenna man has gotten to descnbe
so11 1e of base ball s greatest moments from the broadcost booth Hts first came m hts very first game as
the Reds anno un cer - HankAarons 714th ho mer
tl1 c "' c that matched Babe Ruth on openmg day
I 17 I
l ie '" has call ed Pete Rose s record-setttng h11
N • 1 I '12 three World Senes champ10nsh tps and
11e If! ) 1 gencratmn s worth o f Reds ups and downs
As the play by play announ cer he has descnbed
tl e 11 II 111 htS n ght to the pomt style Without
11 sh 'I
Yo 1 know tf 1t s b1g enough that you re gomg to
hear 1t replayed over and over and over Brennaman
sud A1 cl vou don t want to have to gnt your teeth
whenc\ cr you hear 1t I ve been lucky m that
' '&gt;u t I \C f) thm g has come o ut OK
It Ut 11 more than OK Brcnnaman and color
n J N uxh all have become as closely assoctated
" "' rl e C mu nnau Reds as the Btg Red Maclune
ot the IY70s
M •tty and Joe fill the empty nunutes dunng
g 1es w1 th banter and JOkes about the~r hobbtes
I mh g folksy touch that endears them With fans
It ' " " ks 111 Cmo nnat1 Brennaman sa1d It
mght 11 lt work somewhere else but were able to
I Uf(h at ourselves and talk about our golf game and
Ill\ t&lt; 1 ~atocs and everyth10g else under the blasted
Sl

I

I h t dudes nustakes - th ose on the field and
th ISc I y the front offi ce Brennunan often went
I&lt; e t o toe With forme r ge neral manager DICk Wag
"'' 1 d has been confronted by players over the
} lliS

'

'

I(

1

h1s &lt;..: ntJCtsm

I vc l ec n lucky because I don t thmk there s an
a mo IIll&lt; r 111 baseball that has the freedom to say
what he won ts to say hke I do he md
I I dl o f Fame catcher Johnny Bench sa1d he never

Herd
from Page Bl
p ut th e blame on myself
hav&lt; 11 t d edicated myself but
tl11s I "t wee k I have been
Alexe i Vas1hev and R1 ck Fox
led thc l3ulls (5 16 MAC 3-9)
w1t h I I pomts aptece

Southem
from Page Bl
field overall The Lancer-s were
9 of-17 at the free throw lme
Federal Hockmg had
36
reounds mcl11dtng 17 offenstve
caroms Lmscott grabbed 13
rebounds
T he Lancers coninutted 22

turnovers and had 18 asststs Lm
scott recotded seven aSSists
The Lancers had rwo blocks
and IS steals L10scott came up
with SIX thefts
Federal Hockmg won the
reserve game to end Southern s
11-game wm streak 53 37 The
Lan cers were led by Sarah
Spnnger wtth 24 and Tracy S1d
well wtth 20
Amy Lee had 15 for Southern

'
wh1le Brandl Lane and Tara P1ck
ens added etght pomts each
Federal Hockmg defeated
Waterford ~7 33 Wednesday to
move a half game ahead of the
w,Idcats mto first place m the
Hockmg DtviSlon T he two
sch9ols play for the league champm nshtp next Thursday
Southern goes to Eastern for a
5 30 contest Saturday

Property lr; New Haven Known
As The Old New Haven Pottery

'

Poalllon Ava ilable ROOFING
FOREMAN Mu lt Bt Tolonlod
Able To Mako Oeclolona Wan! A
P11manon1 Job Work Well With
People And Poaseu Exceptk)nal
Roo"ng SkiiiO (3-Tab. Domenslonol Single Ply Rubber Tin) Wo
Are An Eilabllshod Company
Tho Work Is Local Poy II Good
Bonuaes Paid If You Are Looking
For A Good Stable Job Pleaao
Submll YOUR RESUME To 1403
Ea&amp;lorn Ave Galllpollo OH
45EI3l Attn Foreman Poaftk)n

One Year Old Males

Quick

,.___..........

5 puppies 8 wkl!

1..:.::..:=-:-_-,--'----:--,-:-

~d

Lab I Ger
man Shepherd mixed 740 992
3516
_;:,:_ _ _ __ _.,....___ ,

740 441

DATA ENTRY

Nallonwlda Billing

Service Seeks A Full/Part Time

Medical Bllllr Salary AI $46K Per
Yoar PC Required No Exporl
ence Needed Will Train Call 1

888-846-5724

Provided Must Own Computer 1

weeks old mother Coberman

Tha Road Start At 29 CPM /All

740 949-2927 or 740 949-3084
60 Lost and Found

Ml Unloading Pay Porsonallzod
Dlapalch Homo Oflon Holiday I
vacation Pay 401K /Mod /Preo I

Found at Fox &amp; Pizza Den Red

2000 MODEl SllVIRIDD PICKUPS TO CHOOSE FROM!

dish Color Beaded Rosary Own
er please come In &amp; pick up at

HALL OF FAMER Reds play by play man Marty
Brennaman talks With the med1a dunng a press con
ference Thursday at C1nergy Fte ld Brennman and

Frelghl CALL SUMMIT TRANS
POATATION 800-878 oeao EOE

Found Big Black Dog With Tan
Has Red Collar Real Smart Dog

Drlvef8 2 Weok Paid COL Train
lng No Exp Needed No Money

Shakos Handsl 740-446-0754

70

former Reds pitcher Joe Nuxhall have formed the
C1nc1nnat1 broadcast team for about a quarter cen
tury (AP)

Buffalo trad ed only 27-24
wtth 6 35 left 111 the first half
before VanHoose then scored
stx of M ar shalls final 14 p omts
fo r a 41 -31 halft1me lead
Marshall tS a good enough
basketball team where you
thmk they re down and the n
they come up and get you
Witherspoon
sat d
Theu
defense IS great and they con-

te sted every sh ot
The begmn m g of the sec
ond half and the end of the first
half was a co1nplete co llapse
We don t have enough D1VtS10I1
I tal e nt to play well w h en
thmgs go badly We dtdn t pass
the ball well and so then the
shots were not open Pretty
much we collapsed and panIcked

Yard Sale

• Power Sunroof and Seat
• AMIFM CD l Ceuette
• Equlpp'ect Not Sttlppedl

• Vortec V·B Power
• 4 Captain's Chairs
• Rear Sofa Bed

semble Products At Home Call

ALL Yard Soloo Muot
8o Pold In Advllnco

DEADUNE 2 DO p m
lilt d8y belo .. lilt lei
Ill&lt;&gt; run SUndiy
odldon 2 00 p m
F~cloy Monday odltfon
10 DO • m llllurdiV

123,858* 822,950* •21,950*
•Automatic
• Remote Keyless Entry
• Totally Loaded!

Pomeroy,

All Vard S.lel Muat Be Paid In
Advance Deadline 1 OOpm the
dey betore lhe ad Ia lo run
Sunday
Monday odlllon
1 DOpm F~day

a

~8,950* ~9 850*

• Ram Air V·6 Power
• Power Window 6 Locka
• TIH &amp; Cruise

• Automalc
• Air Conditioning
•

q5,850*
• Automatic
• Air Conditioning
• Nicely Equipped!

' TaxeJ Tags THio Fees ex~a Rebale lllchJded In sale price of new vehicle ljoflld whenlappllcabfe "On approved credh On selected
models Not responsible lor iypOgraplllcal errors Prices Good febrQary •
•oogh February Glh

Medical Insurance BIIUng Assta

lance Immediately If You Have A
PC You Can Earn $25 DOD To
$50 000 Annually Call 1 800
291 4683 Dept t 109

Columbus Some Care Dutlas
Room Board Plus Salary 814
267 5354

HVAC lllstallero and Holpefl
Needed For Residential &amp; Com

wv 1338

740-992 9707

Apply In Person AI Comfort Air
407 Third Avenue Galllpollo No
Phone Calla

-7

Leadership Quantlos
lf"Vou Have Business And JOr
Health Carl Management Experl
ance We Offer Anracttve Salary
Wlih Comprehensive Benetlts

Please Mall Rl8umt Wllh Salary
Roqulromonls To CHANCELLOR
HEALTH PARTNERS c/o Galli
pc&gt;ls 85 E Slale StrHI SUllO 200
COlumbus OH43215
SINilERSI llDSPEL CLEAN
COUNTRY ond EASY LISTEN
INill Call 1 800 489 8164 For
Appointment To Come To Nash
ville And Audition For Major
Record Producers And Concert
Promotres Internet www wcln ac

Subatilule Bus Orivor Muol bo al
leaat 18 year&amp; old and poS&amp;tu a
high school diploma or equlval

onl $10 DO per hour Appllc:ellons
can be obtained an&lt;~ 8Ubm1Hed to
Athens Counly Board ol MROD
801 W Union S1 Athens Oh
45701
1luck Drivers -

Cla11 B COL Wllh HazMat &amp;
Tanker Endorsement For Home
Heating And LP Delivery Full

Tlmo Wllh Benofllo Apply Burllle
Oil Co ~ 0 Box 334 Gallipolis
OH45031
Up To $45 000 /Yr Billing Soli
ware Co Needs People To Pro
cess Medical Claims From Home
Training Provided MUST Own A

Computer Can 7 Days 1 888 522
11048 Ext 618
URGENTLY NEEDED lor plasma
donors earned $35 to $45 for 2
or 3 hours wnkly Call Ssra Tac

ln18rnol Malkellng
$25-$75/hr
www any.1 can-earn com
1 888-816-1692

portunlty Starling Balary 01 Ssoo

Absolule Top Dollar All U S Sll
ver And Gold Coins Prootaats

Diamonds Anllquo Jewelry Gold

Alnga Pre 1930 U S Currency
Slernng Elc Acqulslllono Jewelry
M T.S Coin Shop 151 Second

AliOJlUI Gallipolis

7~

2&amp;42

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

- - -Help Wanted

'MUST Own Compulor 888 332
li01Hxt t7DO n:&gt;olly
$100 WEEKLY BE YOUR OWN
BOSSI PROCESSING GOVERN
MENT REFUNDS NO EKPERI
ENCE NECESSARY! 124 Hr
Rocordod Moaoagal 1 800 854

/Wk Plus BOnf,JSII Commls
slon Benerus Retail Exp~rlence
A.nd Woman Excel Minimum 2
Years Collage Degree A Plus
We Train For Personal And Con
t

90

Wanted to Buy

lty Support Consultant In Local
And Surrounding Area Entry
lion EKcellenl Management Op

fleglsler 200 Main Sl
Pleasant WV 26550

Wedemeyer s Auction Serv ce

WAIINING.

Lovol Sales And Markollng Posl

Ga 11po11s, Ol1io 740-379-2720

773-5785 Or 304 773-5447

-$45 000 rlear /Pollnllall 00c1ors
-Need People! Proc..a Medlc•l
~111m1 From Homa WI Train

1

Industry Poslllon Requ res Out
standing Interpersonal And Com
muntcallon Skills W th Strong

Needed Must Be Experienced

;nllledl Pootago &amp; Suppllos Pro
"'ldodl Rush Solf Addrouod
1f1empod Envolopel GICO DEPT
6 Box 1438 ANTIOCH TN
37011 1438 Bien lmmt&lt;llto/y

Monday- Saturday 9 am • 8 pm

Thai Will Be Unparallelad In Tile

and Flea Market

PI

Local Truck Drlvor Needed Start
lng Pay $9 DO Hour lnouranoe
Plan Uniforms Muat Haw Tank
or Endorsemonta 740-245-5814
Magic Yean Day Care Center

S11klng Full Tlmt SubsiiiOio
Sand Resumo lo 201 High
Slrlll Pt Pleaaan~ WV 25550
Manager Retail Jewelry Store
Retail Sales And Computer Ex
ptrlence Neceuary Benetlta

Avallablo Apply Acqulolllono
Ftno Jewelry 151 Bacond Avo
nuo ClallpollO

erochuresl Satlafactlon Guar

West VIrginia s t1 Chevv. Pontiac, Buick, Olds,
And Custom Van Dealer

Of Care And Accommodat ions

FAILURE TO APPLY MAY BE
HAZARDOUS TO 'r'OUR
WEALTH!
lmmedlalo Opening For COmmun

f2 000 WEEKLYI Milling 400

Olc2ef I iClJII&amp;

Inns Are Luxurious But Afford

able And Will Provide A Ouallly

Installer And Service Technician

Local Business seeks Route
Sales Person Excellent Bene
fils Sales Experience Preferred
but not necessary Send Re
sume c/o ML 10 Point P1eaaant

110

munlty In Galllpolla Ohio Our

Auction

Rick Pearson Auction Company
full time auctioneer complete
auction
service
Licensed
166 Oh o &amp; West VIrginia 304

Tracker 4 Door 4x4

We Are Opening A New Ll
cenaed A11lsted Living Com

740-592-8661

Moodlspaugh AUctioneering
complete auction aarvica Buy
and sell estates Oh1o License

Brand New 2000 Chevy

AsaiBied LIVilg

merolal
Appllcallon
Call
(304)675-2792 Leave Meuago

Bll ~

Brand New 2000 Chevy
Silverado 4x4 Pickup

EMERiliNG COMPANY NEEDS

Disabled Pracllclng Allornoy In

&amp;VIcinity

17693

Toll Free 1 800 487 5566 Exl
!2170

Homemaker Live In Wanted For

Middleport

80

Brand New 2000 Pontiac
Grand Am GT Coupe Or Sedan

Retldonco 111-

Easy Workl Excellent Payl As

&amp; VIcinity

•

No Credil? No Problem! Eam Up

To $32 000 /lsi Yr W IFuP BaneIllS APply On Line AI www olr
drivers com Or Call I 877 230

6002 ~A M Thlnapon

Gallipolis

\

Cental Assigned 99 T2000 s
Rider Program 98% No Touch

FoK&amp; Pizza

, :...=.:.=~---

Brand New 1999 Chevy
Full Size Conversion Van

RECEPTIONIIT
The Arrwar Ell&amp; Center In Pt
Pleasant ~ looking lor an office
recepllonlst Must be lrilndly and
oulgQing Full time poolllcin
Previous experience In rnedlc:el
offiCe holplw llul noiiiiCOIIaary
Ptease send re~ume to our main
office ATTN Gino W.mocll
flnwwEyeCt.IIOOU!oyelll•Moundovllle WV 21041
INo Phone C.Ho P-1

l:-:-:-:-!l'WWg~lrrqgttdi~~~Ua.~no~t::-::­

1809
BD0-223-1149 Ext 480
,- -- - -- - - - -.[ DRIVERS $500 SIGN ON BONUS
Pups lwo male ooe female 8
IMMEDIATE OPENINGS Over

All New 2000 Chevy
Monte Carlo Super Sport

A Team Full Benefit Package In
eluding 401 K ReUremtnl Plan
Send Resume And Three Em
ploymenl Rellfences To Planned
Parenthood Ot ~outheast Ohio
398 ~lchland Avenue Athens
OH 45701 Closing Oato II Febru
ary 18 2000 EOE /ESP

4

Doberman Puppies

Brand New 2000 Che11y
ZR2 Extended Cab 4x4

Secretary !50 wpm Aequlrtd

$350 -$800 /Week
1-8811-!IDIJ.8085

DENTAL BILLER $15 $45 /Hr
· Free Dog (Prell)' Boxer) to a good Denial Billing Soltware Company
holM 1304)576 2273
Needs People To Process Medl
Free To Good Home Black Lab &amp; cal Claims From Home Training

had a run-10 Wi th Brennaman who remams a
fnend
One thmg you judge by IS how the players feel
Bench satd The players h sten Marry s honest but
he doesn t try to go after you or embarrass you
In 1988 Brennaman and N ux hall were summoneil to N ew York because then NL preSident
Bart Gtama\tl was concerned about thelf comments
dunng the game m whtc h Rose was eJected fo r
bumpmg ump1re Dave Pallone Fans threw debns
on the field for 15 nunutes and Brennaman h arshly
cntmzed Pallone
I sttllmamtoln \\e were n ght Brcnnaman S3ld
Ill never apolog•ze tor that They accused us of
m c1tmg a not I don t thmk we d1d then and I don t
thmk we d1d now
Astde from hts candor Brenrraman IS known for
his Signature closmg to every Cmcmnat1 wm And
thiS one b elotjg.&gt; to ~h e R~ds The phrase JUSt
popped mto hiS head after a game wmmng h1t by
Dave ConcepciOn two weeks mto hts first season
I satd tt I thought abou t 11 and I kmd of hkod tt
so l continued to use tt h e sa1d
Over the years Brennaman has passed up chances
to take JObs m li1gger markets tu rm ng down the
Yankees l;he Wh1te Sox the Dodgers the R ed Sox
and the Cubs H e mtends to fimsh h1s career 111
Cmcmnatl speaking hiS trund whtle descnbmg the
game
If the only thing I have when I walk away from
th1s IS credtb1hry then I ve been successfu l he sa~d
That s all I care about

Prlva1e Non Prolll Family Plan
nlng Agency Sooklng A Full Time

Loarners 740-367 n87

Cinnamon Color Female Cat De
clawed Fixed House Petl 740
446-3587 6 A M 3 ~M

OVER

POSTAL JOBS Up To $17 21 /Hr
Guaranleod Hlro For Appllcallon
And Exam lnlormatlon Cal 8 A M
9 ~M M F 1-888 898 5627 Exl
24-1D07

An E.Commerce Business?

992 8387 Wed Sal 1304)875
5955

lldenllal ln18fvltlv C.ll
1 843-857-o522
WILDLIFE JOBS To 521 60 IHR
INC BENE~ITS GAME WAR
DENS
SECURITY
MAIN
TENANCE PARK RANGERS NO
EXP NEEOEO FOR APP AND
EXAM INFO CALL 1 800 813
3565 EXT 14211 8 AM 9 PM
7 DAVS Ids Inc
work From Home $599

-t8 ooo

Pari Time /Fwl Time Contacl Kol
ly 1 888 882 2838 www 2moro
money com panoode row.,
MEDICAL BILLING. Eorn Excel
lent Income Full Training Com
puter Required Call Medl Workl

Toll Froo
2301

8oo 540 6333 Ed

140

BullnHI

-3358
Now Taking Applications From

Domino I Plzza Galllpollo I Pomeroy Only 740 ~~6 ~040
OWn A COft'4lU10(I
Pu111To World
$25 $75 Mr PT 1FT
1-86HI1-t750

www D"'""'hWm oom

Wa!"led To

Do

General C..anlng for Local Offic
Pay Negotiable

11 of Home

1304)885 3083
Georges Portable Sawmill don t

haul your logt 1o the mill lust call
304-875-1957
Cara tor one In -co unuy $840
month Mobile Honest Non
S100kor (304)882 3880

lng Etc Reasonable Rates 740
446 2025 Jeue Leave Mea

Gillllpolll Cai'Mr Cotllgo
ICorooro Clole To Homo!
Call Todayl7~11-43e7
1-800-214-0452
Rog 190-05-12748

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE
OU.SSIFIEDSI

Caah For Rema ining Payments

1·-------,....--

On Proporly Soldl Mortgogotl

Month 1 800 691 8777 16x80

Annuities! Settlemtntal lmme
dlate Quotas!ll Nobody Beats
Our Prices Natlone1 Contract

S500 Oown $283 Per Monlh
Free Ak 1 8Cl0-6Qt-e7n Double
WJde 3 Bedroom 2 bath $1000

wasllor $3D01Mo $300 Depos 1
740-446.0743

540

Buyoro 800 490 0731 Exl 101
www nalionolcontraclbuyon.can

stf-em

Down $282 Par Monlh 1 800

2 or 3 bedroom mob Ia home for
rent. no pets 740 992 5858

$$B AD CREDIT?

$2 500 VISA /MASTERCA RD
UNSECUREDII Guaranlaed Ap
provalll Bad Credll /No Cred ll

1981 Vtnluro 14x70 Dtck 10•8
Furnoco :104-e75-0319

US NEED CASH?? WE Poy

OKI lnclueiea Full Credit ResiO ra
tlon 23 Years In Bualneu Not A
Scam 1 8DIJ.566-9099 Ext 25
$FREE

CASH

NOW$

From

wealthy Famlllos Unloading Mil
llono 01 Dollars To Help Min mlzo

14 Wide 1500 Down 1182 Per

1,.;.:.;.;..:...::.;;:;;.;.:;:,:..:.;.:...;.;.~-&amp;9 Schultz 14170 $1 000 neg
740-992 8845
Country Living 3 Or • Bedrooms
Pay Cloa lng Coati l Move In

741J.4.46.3093

The ir Ta~ees Write Immediately

ooublewlde On Lot $250 Deposit

Windfalls 847 A SECOND AVE
1350 NEW YORK NEW YORK
1D017

Required 304 736-7295

CONSOLIDATE BILLS

From $3000 $1500001
(9'1. Average Rale)
LOANS 0 A C
For Fast Results
Call Toi$-Free
1-888411-6555

And Financing tn Progreu Call

3 Bedroom Tra er For Ae nl No
Pets In Rio Grande 740 379
2720AIIer6 ~M
3 Bedrooma 2 Bath s Unlur
nlshed Cora Mill Road Gall pot s
Fr11 Gu Heat No Pets Oeposlt

Required 74Q-245-5fi22

440

Apartments
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apa tments lu
n shed and unfurnished secur ty
deposit required no pets 74 0

For DolaN~ t 888-585.0187

992 2218

Non Qualifying

$4 000 Oown &amp; Take Over Pay
menls 741J.448.321 8

1 Bedroom Apartment AI Utll ti es
Paid Clean Handicapped Acces
slble au et Nelghbo hood Refer
ences &amp; Deposit Aequ ed 740

388 9770

Auumable

CONSOLIDATE

Ra tes No Upfronl Fees Bad

1 Lett $299/Mo

Plano lessons In my homo begin

Credll And Bankruplcy Accepted

304-736 72!15

ners and adults also teach
chording and transpos ing It In

24 Hour Approval Call Toll Free
1 en-804 7273

Factory Renovared 3 Bedrooms
$499 &amp; Aasuma OakwOOd Gall

Nice 1 Bed room Garage Apa t
ment In Kanauga Appliances In
eluded No Pets D 0 $270/Mo

CREDIT CAAO UP TO $3 000
Unsecured VISA /MC Bad Cre~lt
Or No Credl 18002568818 Ext
4000

polls 740-446 3093

Cal 740 888 7102 Or 740 BB6
1389

2025

CREDIT CARDSI GUARANTEED

Put You Ta• Rolund To Work

Will Co Hou&amp;ecle&amp;fllng $6 00 An
Hour Evenlnga And Saturdays
Have Experience And Aahlrenc
88 740-388-8421

APPROVAL! No Credit Check

llrooflld call740-992 5403
want To Take Care Of Senior
~lllzons

Monday Sunday 8 A M
10 PM In Your Home 740 446

BILLS

FLEETWOOD HOliES 01 Proc
torvllle Ohio ORAND OPENINil
Largeat Ntw lnv8t'ltory In South
ern Ohi o Spec ials On Homes

2 Bedrooms Total E ectr lc Cen
tral Air Washer &amp; Orye 0 sh

saga

Low

No Security Deposit $1 ODD llmll
Much More Best Package On

Marko! Musl Bo 18 I Have
Check tng Account 1 BOO 737

21 0

AUCrediiRIIks 74Q.4.t63583

FREE DEBT CONSOLIDATION

INOTICEI

Applicati on W /Service Fleduce

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO

Payments To 65% IICASH IN
CENTIVE OFFERit Call 1 800
32885!0 Ext 29

recommends that you do bual
ness with people you know and
NOT to send money through the
ma 1 until you nave Investigated

1 Bedroom Wa sher Dryer Hook
Up In Galllpof s 741].446-7903

Wllh Boaullfui Building S lo Be
h nd Pond Belwen Gallipolis &amp;
Jacl&lt;son 2 Miles 0" SA 35 Lend
Contract Aval able Free Maps 1

740-210-0081

350

Lots

REDUCED PRICES

OYER YOU HEAD IN DEBn??
Qualifying Ill FREE !IONSULTA·
TION CALL 1-8DO-fl5..1M6 Ext

33 www anewhorlzon org ll
cansed Bonded Insured Nation

8 Acres $5
10 Acres
'"•''"" · 5+ Acres For $8 500

FUNDRAIBINil IS BOOMINill
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Unlquo Fundralslng PrOduct With
Top
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Food
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www sctatchcard com Or 1 888

675-12&lt;15
Innovative Fundralalng Ideas
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·s Star Rating We Deliver 11

MacMillan o 1 BD0-387 4039
Learn •how you could make

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$ NO OOWNI HOMES NO CREDIT NEEDEDI GOV T FORE
CLOSURES! GUAAANTEEO AP
PROVALI 1 800 380 4820 EXT
8509
2br tba Home w/Attached Ga
raga 130 South Park Drive

$38 ODD 1304)675 5697

$11 chac~ or money order to

bedroom 2 baths heat pump
close to school tree main
tenence 5 veers old range &amp; re
lrlgerator stays In home 132 Mill

MEOICAL BILLER $15 $45 /Hr
Medical Billing Software COmpany
Naeda People To Process Madl
cal Clalma From Home Training
Provided Must Ow.n Computer 1

llD0-434-!i518 Exl 887
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CD ROM lnv111man1 $4 995
$8' 9?5 Financing Available Is
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877 811 G-424
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FORECLOSED HOMES Low Or 0
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Being Sold NOWI Financing Avail
able Call Nowl t BOO 355 0024
EJd 8040

Start Your Business Today
Prime Shopping Center Space

Available AI Allordable Rato
Spr1ng valley Plaza Call 740-446
0101
WOALO S BEST SECRETIII AU
TOMATE NOW To Earn $5 DOD
A Wook Wllh A Mouse Cllckl
http llwww aecreta2auc

Middleport corner of High Street

&amp; Powell Stroe1 2 bedroom homo
with dining room I vlng room and
kitchen Newer carpet and k tchen
cabinets makes the k tchen with

the Federal Fair Housing Act
of 1968 which makes It lttegal
to advertise ~any preference
limitation or discrimination
based on race color religion
sex famll si status or national
origin or any lntentfon to
make any Such preference

llmttallon or discrimination

advertisements for real estate
wtllch 11 n vlolallon of lho
law Our reade rs are hereby

ln1onned lhat aH d'MIIHngs
advorllsod In lhls newspaper
are avaHable on an equal
opponunlty basil
Real Eatate
Wanted

dor s12 DOD 740 446-2317

Wanted To Buy 2 5 Acres 01
Land Between Patriot Oak Hil l
Ohio Reasonably Priced Land
Contract Preffered 740 4417895

740 379 9289 Laavo Ml8sago

1304)875-8634
N~e 3 Or 4 Bedroom Ranch wtth
Full Basement Heat Pump On
1 78 Acres In Country On State
Floute 775 Past 0 0 Mcin ty re

Park Call740 441 1659 Aller 5
PM

3 Bedroom. 2 Beth 2 Car Garage
on 1 Acre Heaf Pump Appuanc
" Slay Broad Run Road Letart
Asking $80 DOD (304)882 3518
Nlca Home Plenty at Room 3
Bedroom Brick Reduced Price

Nlco ~ Slory A A Holf Houoe
In Country 1 Acre lol M/. Ap
prox 1 mile trom Sporn on Broad

ZIG ZIGLAR GOES MLMI Look
lng For Loadars Who Want To
Move From Success To Slgnlfl
cance" We Suggeat You Move

Call 1

877~

Money to Loan

we Pay lldll
con Ryan

10111213-8311

410

2 bedroom hou!ll In Portlan d

13041882 2885

dlolo Quo1eolll Nobodr Boall
Our Prlcoo ' Nallonal COnlraol
Buyoro 800 490 0731 Exl 101
YNtWnetiOnllcon~oom

se

1988 Rodmen Oanvlllo Ux70
Aloo Has Expando Yory Nice
113 000 740-388 6335

Compute AT&amp;T Globa lyst 375
TP C 3 Mon to 1 2 G gabyte&amp;
16 MB Ram Pent um Processor
lnte ne t Ready Wm do ws 95 3
Years 0 d Cxcel!en l Co nd 11 on

PAC MICRON sMach nes Desk
ops La.ot ops Merchanl Ac

co unts WeiJ s es Atmos Every
one App ved
No Money
Down I low Mon th y Paymen tslt
FREE Spa~ a Otfe

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1888 4792345 (Tot Freel
COMPUTERS l ow Or SO Down
Low Mon hty Payments Y2K
Comp ant A mos t Everyone Ap
pro ~~ed 1 800 617 3476 Ex! 330

COMPUTERS $79 89 /MO
EASY QUAL FY NG
FAST
N EW 500 600 MH z Comple.te
N T ERNET Sol wa e Te chnlaal
He p 800 300 26 40 Affo dable

Techno og es

no pets

740 698 7244

Good Location In Gallipolis No
Pera Deposit References 7.tO

4&lt;16-1182
Ranters Needed
Ranttus Needed
Three bedroom In Middleport
central air tenced corner lot

$375 pluo dopotlt 740'992 319•

Mobile Home•

Nice :2 bedroom apartment m Sy
acuse $200 dep osit $285 pe
month ren~ 740-667 3516
NiCe Ground FIOO 2BR W D
Hook up Reference Depos I No

740 992 2 43 0 740 992 6373

G eal Lakes Spa Hot Tub 5 seat
er 1 yea old pa d $2800 w II se I
fo $2 ooo 740 742 3509

Pots 1304)875-5162
Now Tak ng Ap plications- 35
West 2 Bedroom Town hous e
Apartments
Includes Water
Sewage Trash $315/Mo 740
One bedro om lurnlshe d apart
ment In M ddleport 740 992

9191

JET

Spring Valle~ Green One Bed
r oom Apartments Applia nce s
Fu mshed Call740 446 1599
Twin Towe rs now accept ng ap
pi cations for 1 SA HUD sub s d
lzed apt for elde rly and hand

VIllage Green Apa rtmenl s 2
bedrooms talal elecl c appl anc
as turn shed laundry oom lac
Ilea and close to school app ca
Uons B'Jallable at off ce 740 992

3711 TOO t 888 233 6694 Equal
Housing Opportun ty

Household
Goods

Appliances
Re cond Honed
Weshara Or~ers Ranges Ref
grato rs 90 Day Gua ran tee!
French C ty Ma~ tag 740 446

llOOD USED

APPLIANtE S

Washers d r ~ers refrlge ators
range&amp; Skaggs Appliances 76

VIne Stroot Call 740 446 7398
I 888-816.0126
Mollohan Carpet 202 Clark
Chapel Road Porter Ohio 740

446-7444

AERAT ON MOTORS
Repa ed New &amp; Aebu t In Stock
Ca 1 Ao Evans 1 800 537 9528

MOBILE HOME OWNERS

o y D scoun Prices
On V ny Sk I ng Doors Wmd
o ws Ancl o s Wal e Healers
P umbt g &amp; E ec cal Parts Fur
naces &amp; Hea t Pumps Benne us
Mob Je Home Supp y 740 446
H oe n... en

941 6
Ne w M Uen um 0 e ll Eat All Cay
And M elt Away Cali Tracy At
740 441 1962
New S na Viin 1 es White $~5
eact Top nnd Bonom Automo
b1e Po nt $25 ga (30 4 )675

4004

Prlmeatar
OlrecTV
F ee sate 1e sySiem Call tor de
Ia Is BOO 263 2640
Pro m 0 esses Fo
256 1651

Sale 740

RESIDENTIAL HOME OWNERS
Ta ppan H EH c ency goo., Gas
Fu r n ace~ 0 Fu rn ac es
2 Seer
Hea t Pu mp &amp; Ai r Condltton ng
System~ F ae 6 Year Parts 8 La
bor Wa any BenneUs Heat ng &amp;
Coo ng 1 BOO 872 5967
Aon s Gun Shop 740 742-8412

SAVE THOUSAND S Top 01 Tho

New And Used Furniture Stora
Balow Holiday Inn Kanauga
Good Used Bed s Orusars
Couches Dinettes Etc Big S8v
lnga On New FurOIIurt 74 0 441J

Lin e Sold Woo d K tc hen Cab
ne ts Exce lent Co nct tlon In
l: udes Desk Bu It In M c owave
&amp; Oven Sto ... e Top &amp; Sink
$ 800 l eavv Mess age 740
441 0013

4782
R&amp;D I U1td Furniture Great Se

Set Of Head lgh t Co.,.ers For A
199 7 1999 Ch evy Cavalier

locllon Priced To Sell I Come $25

oo

On y Used A Coupe 01

And BrowN corner ot Route 7 Ti mes Ca I 30/.f 773 5841

lor Rerit

S2eiJ.$300 740-m 2187

2 Bedroomo S2501Mo $250 Ooposlt Water BIN Paid Raterenc11

Call Allor 6 ~M 740-446-4318

E11

colltnl Condition $350/Mo $300
Deposit Relerencta 740 -4.t1

19!3

Fo sa e P me Star System a so
wanted olde RCA 0 ectTV or
Hughes sys ems w l h ac ceS&amp;
ca1d pay $150 &amp; up cash I Call
Wo I e 740 9~9 33 5 ea ...e mas
sage

Good Used Appl ances And Fur
n u e Ca 740 446 4039 Or 740
446 004 Any me

Jackson Awnue 1304)675-7388

3 Bedroom House 1 112 Baths
Good Local on In Gallipolis No
Pels Oepoa t References Small
1 Bedroom House Furnished

2 Bedroom• 2 Bath Treller

F ewood Oa~ &amp; H cko ry Delivery
$40 Truck LMCI 740 245 9337

992 5064 Equal Housing Opp01

For Sale Recon dllloned wash
ers dryer&amp; and relrlge1ator s
Thomps Ons Ap pliance 3407

Between Athena and Pomeroy 2
&amp; 3 bedroom mobile homee

12xo8 2 Bedrooms 1 112 Bolho
All Now Carpol Some Appflancaa
s~
995 740-245-9373

6pm

Free zer beef g an fed $1 5 7 per
!b hang ng wt nc udes cut wrap

2 bedroom house In Pomeroy

$350 month plu'J deposit wll sell
on contract Wllh good references

320 Moblla Home•
for Sale

Compete D SH Network sate 1te
system brand new $99 74 0
992 1182 o 30 4 773 530 5 after

~radous living 1 and 2 bedroom
eparlments at VIllage Manor and
Riverside Apartments In Middle
port From $249 $373 Cal l 740

7795

OK Consumers Financial 1 800
247 5125 Exl 1134 VOid OH KS

Caah For Rem1lnlng Payments
On Property Soldl Morlgageal
Annultleal Selllementsl lmme

74()-446-,519

$300 plus oloclrlc hoal wllh wood
740-843-SS&lt;te

420

S$$ NEED CASH?? WE Pay

Furnished 2 Rooms &amp; Balh Show
er Downstairs C ean No Pet s
Deposit &amp; Referen ces Require d

510

801J.319 3323 Exl 1709

rage Single Car Gall'ge Foncod

como Pollntlal

House• for Rent

Dobt Conoolldallon Mortgagos
And .Rellnonclng Credll Problema

Aula Loan• Peraooal Loana

Christy s Fam ly living apart
menls hom&amp; &amp; trail er ental s
740 992 4514 apartmen ts ava I
able h.lrnlshed &amp; unturn shed

MERCHANDISE

1 3 Bedrooms Foreclosed
Homes From $199/t.to 4% Down
For Listings &amp; Payment Details

Run Ad Home has New Re
placement Ooors/Windowa/St.tn
Porch/New Roof New 2 Car GaYard Alao on lot 111 up for
House Tra iler with 18para1e sap
tlclwater/e lectrk: Nice Rental In

NO CASH?? MMX Technolog y
Wt F nance wth 0 Down Past
Cred 1 P ob ems No Prob em Cal
To Fee 1 877 293 4082

Smokers Only $3SO/Mo $300
Deposit 740 446 9585 0 740
446-2205 A.sk For V rgln a

Two bedroom down stai rs $27 0
month plus utllltes and $100 de
posit Third Street Ra cl na Oh
74Q-247-.4292

For LANDI

Even tf Us Usted
20 500Acras

Trailer IFurnlohed) on 15Dx150
Lot on Map.. Slraet beside WeiMarl In Mason WV S30 000 AI
COnard 13041773-5188

SS

v

REN1ALS

1304)273-9485

Your Current Credltl In 24 Hours

Applications Betng Accepted For
Sma I But Ver~ N ce One Bed
room Apartment Counl Sen ng
Yet Close To Gall po IS Was her I
Dryer Stove Refngeralo P ov d
ed Water And Trash Remo val
Included Tennant Pays Elect c
Tolal Electuc No Pets Non

capped EOH (304)675 6679

An111ony Land C01f11811Y LTO
Naw home 3 bedrooms 3 baths
wwtf cgun!J\1\rme com
2413 square teet pluB oversized
2 car attached garage wrapar
WV Land wanted sultabl• tor
ound porches many amen Ilea I . ~~'::,~;,,~N.o ulllltlas no access
awesome views convenient loca
(740)288 7246
tlon $189 000 serious inquirers
call 740 992 2478 for more lnfor
House For Sale Newly Remo
de led Inside and Out 191 N
Park Drive Cell tor Appointment

WANT A COMPUTER ?? BUT

446-0008

Need 5 Sec uded Acres With
Homes ite Ou~et Road Gallla
County Deeded &amp; Surveyed Un

large lot Cute as can be Re
ducad to $33 ooo Please eall
Dottle Turner Realty Dott e S
Turner Broker at740-992 2888

YOU RE APPAOVEOI Cfldll
Cards &amp; Loans Regardless Of
801).577-4348

740 886-4531

1un ties

This newspaper wfn not
know ngly accept

loll of windows very brlltll Also a

.... com/opoclale8300.

F111 Bacauso Thft Will

All real estate adVertising n
lhlo newspaper 11 subjecllo

360

Home for sale lovely len acres In
a country setting lour bedrooms
two and half baths formal living
room and Jam ly room two fire
places two apartments tour car
garage and two storage bulk:llngs
Pleaoo caN 740-9112 2292

740 992 ;1856 0 740 949 2607

Or ve from $289 to $370 Walk o
shop &amp; mbvies Ca 740 446
2568 Equal Houstng Opportuni ty

matlon

PEPSI /COKE /FRITO LAY
SNACK ANO SODA VENDING
ROUTE BE YOUR OWN BOSS
$$$All CASH BUSINESS$$$
INCRESE YOUR INCOME NOWI
SMALL INVESTMENT /EXCEL
LENT PROFITS 1 800 731 7233
EXT 503

UFIL

Sl Now Haven WV 304 882
2240

3 p ece V ng room smte $650
Hot Po nl m cro wave w th probe
$75 mus see o app ec ate ca l

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK
SON ESTATES 52 Westw ood

REAL ESTATE

Double wide for oale lreducodl 2

MAKE ONE MILLION People To
Sand You $2 001 LEARN MY
EASY METHODI Guaranleo&lt;t It
Works Rush $5 DO + LEASE
Sier lng 135 Amherst 51 20 Am
horat NH 03031 hllp //slorl ngfl
nancla12000 com 2 html

Maps ANTHONY
1 8oo-21 3-8 365

TURNED OOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Foe Unltss We Wlnl
1 1166-S!I2 3346

ay on other peoples Junk' Send
LEUCK'EL PO Box 5178 Bolh
Iaham ~A 18015

ooo

Sarvlces

310

Damage Depos1~ Requ red Re te
ences No Pels 740-445 1066

ences No Pets 740 441 09 o2

ARE YOU CONNECTED? Inter
nol UsoJO Wanladl $350 $8DO I
Week 1 888 858 9336 www eblz

2815 124 Hn1 I

2 Bedrooms Galllpols $325 Mo

$280 &amp; $325/Mo Oepo&amp;l Relo

20 ACRES $111,000

Profelllonal

(3041773-5577

460 First Aven ue (Gallipol s) 1
And 2 Bedroom Apartme nts

&amp; Acreage

Forest Off SA 140 &amp; SR 233
23 ACRES $21 000
011 SR 7 South Of GalllpoMs No
Rastr1ctional NEEDS TLC $2 300
Down On Land Contract
MEIGS COUNTY
CHEAPER THAN DIRT

vestment EKceliant lncomell
F nance Available 1 800 380

(3041675 4004

COMPUTER BLOWOUT II COM

pllcanto Only 1 877 760-1938

AVAILABLE YENDINil ROUTE
15 30 Locations $4K S9K In

1993 N ssa ntP ck up $3 995
992 S 10 P c~&lt; up 53 695 2811
T ave T a te S6 000 Compl ete
Se t of Ne w K tchen Cab ne ts
$2 800 30ton Wood Splitter
$495 1 Cat sman Ra d a Ar m
SaN $300 10 Table Saw $1 50
La ge AppteBuller Kelt e $400

2 Be droom Apa rtment New Ha
ven Area leave Messa ge

the ollerlng

230

180

$550 740 367 7055

All Wooded Wllh Road Thai

el Non Profil COmpany

Caoh

PaiS 740-446-2957

Farma for Sale

Continuaa Into Wayne National

AUT MCI SPRINT Whals
The Big Secral? Worll 5 Hrs /Wk
Moko $52K $125K /Yr Easyl
FREE lnlol 1 800 997 9868 h I
1155124 Hrs)

Gel

Loans To S5 000 Debt Consoli
eta! on To S200 ooo Credit Card&amp;
Mo gages Ref nanclng And
Aut o Loans A.,.a lable Me ri di an
C edt Cop I 800 4715 119 Ext

330

736-3409

MONEY TO LOAN Bad Cfldlt

dream net

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

1 Bedroom Near Arbor's Nu si ng
Home Economical Uti les Qu et
Location $279/Mo +- Ul I es No

OK Free Application US Ap

Do You Nead Mora Breathing
Room??? Debt Consolidation No

Buy or sell Aver n e Ant quea
1124 East Man on SA 124 E Po
me ov 740 992 2526 or 740 992
1539 Russ Moore owner

$489 Cown Only AI Oakwood
Homes In Barboursville 304

UCRES &amp; POND

CREDIT REPAIRI AS SEEN ON
TVI Erase Bad Credit Legally
Freelnlo 888-659-2580

Bu11ne11
Opportunity

Includes Lot

Land Home PaCkages All Areas

0073

FINANCIAL

220

Training
Nl!ed 7 ledltl To Soli Avon 741J.

180

Odd Jobo ~nllmiiOd l Roofin g
Palnllng Docks Siding Remodel

No You Looking For

4 QR78 x 1p Buckshot Tlru
(304)675-7340 Callaller 3 3DPM

Phone CAMBRIDGE STATE
UNIVERSITY t-80().984.8318

POSTAL JOBS To $18 35 /HR
INC BENEFITS NO EXPERI
ENCE FOR APP ANO EXAM
INFO CALL 1 800 813 3585
EXT 14210 8 AM 9 PM 7
DAYS fda loo

dependently As Well As Part Of

Dancers Wanted Top $$ 740

For FREE lntormat lon Booklet

Mother of 2 Fenced In Bacttyard
End of SandHill Ad Willing to
Babysit Jn my home Arry Shift
1304)885-374I

Computer Exptrlenct A Must
Oolall Orlontad Able To Work In

ATTN Own A Computor? Put II
To Workl $25 75 /Hr PT /FT
3 Cata 2 Year Old Male Grey aaa...tl1 122• www work.out~f
Neutered Dedawed All Shots 8 youMtQrne com
Monlh Old Grey Tabby Malo !=..:=:_===-:--::--::---:--::Neutered All Shots 1 Year Old AVONI All Areaal To Buy or Soli
Foma a Long Haired 112 Rag Doll ShOiay Spears 304-875-1429
740-245-91DO

By Carre
spondonco Boiled Upon l'rlor Ed-

Poslal Jobs $48 323 00 Yr Now
Hiring No Experience Paid
Training Great Benelila Call 7
Days f100..429-3EI60 Ext J.385

ASSEMBLY AT HOIIEII Crolla
40
Glvaaway
Toys Jowolry Wood Sowing
...,--:-.,--,---.,.:,....,.,-- Typing Greal Payl CALL 1 8D01/2 Bonjor Collie 1/2 Collie Mix 2 795-0080 Ext 1201 124 Hrs)

-Exi.5Dol8

\

Holzer Senior Care Ctnler Is Now
Accopllng Applications For RN •
If You Are Energe11c And Dedi
cated To Caring For The Elderly
Please Send Atlume To Ahonda
Coo AN DON AI 380 Colonial
Drive Bidwell OH Or Apply In
Person To View Our Beauurut
Faclllly F o r Holzer Senior Care Canter 11
Highly Skl'lod In The An Of Car
lng"
EOE

ARE YOU CONNECTEO? lnlor
""' Users Wanlodl $350 $800 I
Wook 1 888 723 2553 www work
4succea&amp;2000 com

9 D0-5 30

And this honor belongs to Brennaman

ucation And Short SIUdy CoUflt

Are \bu Connocted7
lnlomel u.... Wllnledl
$350 S8DO /Week
I 888 881-8750
WWW mn!'W!!tbatefun rom

I Glen Paulk Will Not Be Respon

No Trespassing on K &amp; B Realty

Part Time Poolllon ovolllblo Ap
ply In Person at Kipling Shoe
CO Rl2 Bypua Pt.Piouont.

MEDICAL BILLING Earn Excel
lanl $ S S I Procoa,lng Claims
From Home Full Training Provld
eel Compuler Required Call
Modi Prol Toll froo 1 886 313
6049 Ext 3125

Con&amp;lgnm"'ent Shop Open ng
Soon on Route 2/Ciose to the
Locks

Masters Doctorate

Hetzer S8nlor Csre Center Ia Now
Accepting Appllcatlona For Mtd
leal Rocordo Clark Quallfled Ap
pllcanto Must Have Knowledge 01
Medical Terminology And lCD 9
Coding Medical R'ecorda Spe
ctallzed Training Is Also Oaalr
'lble
For Those tnrereated In The Po
&amp;Ilion Apply Wllhln At 380 Colo
nlal Drive Bidwell OH
EOE

Responsible For Any Futher
Debts Occurred B~ Shalla A
Roce
Gregory A. Race

A LITTLE HELP HERE Kansas head coach Roy
Wllham s appears t o offer up a prayer durmg the Jay
hawks upset at the hands of Iowa last mght (AP)

Fiu:om IC&lt;Ido 113) Umltodl

2.11EOICAL RE&lt;;O- CLERK

I Gregory A Race Will Not Be

Loren Woods had 16 pmnts 10 rebounds and an
NCAA record rymg 14 blocked shots for the Wildcats (18 4 Pac 10 7 1) who tratled most of the
game and d1dn t lead by more than two pomts until
there were 23 seconds left It was Anzona s first
tnple double smce Damon Stoudanure had one
agamst
Oregon m 1995 Alex Scales had 18 pomts
GUIDANCE Duke coach M1ke Krzyzewsk t g1ves
for
the
Ducks (15 4 Pac 10 6-2) who lost for the
mstruct1ons to Jason Wtl l1ams dunng th e Blue Dev
15th consecuttve ttme at McKale Center
tis 90 86 OT w1n over UNC (AP)
Woods equaled the NCAA p1ark set by Davtd
even thmk more so now' North Carohna coach Bill Robmson of Navy m 1986 and tted by Shawn
Guthrtdge sa~d We JUSt got ourselves m too b1g of Bradley of BYU m 1990 and Roy Rogers of Alabama m 1996
a hole
Iowa 77, No 15 Kansas 69
I thmk they re the bes~ team 111 the country M1ke
Jacob Jaacks had 16 pomts and 10 rebounds as the
has done a tremendous JOb of moldmg those freshmen m wtth Battler and Carrawell and (Nate) Hawkeyes (10-10) beat the Jayhawks for the second
stratght season and won for the third lt'11e m thetr
James
last four games Freshman Ntck CoUlSon a nat1ve of
D uke led 41 24 at halfttme as the Tar Heels com
Iowa who was jeered by the crowd througho ut the
nutted 14 turnovers

-I'M

-ArlllMoe._,.,All
2• Hra 11 Oayt www Go-

EARN A LEGAL COLLEGE DE
GREE OUICKLV Bachelors

1 REGIBTERED NUIISE

MASTECTOMY Supplloa AI Ultlo
Or No Cost We Blll Medicare Or
Your Insurance Direct Gtl 2 New

PfT TECH 6111&gt;90rl • SIS Wind

I Addlsop P ke We Buy Furn
IUfO 741].387.()280
Whirlpool washer He avy Dut y
195 G E Washer Heavy Dul y

wa te rlfne Spec 3

3/4 200 PSI

$21 95 Per 100

1

$95 Kenmore Dryer Heavy Duly
$95 Whirlpool Dryer Nice $9S

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jael&lt;son Ohk&gt; ' BOO 537 9528

200 PSI

$37 00 Pe 100 A. ll Bfass Com
press on F t1 ngs In Stock

Ma~tag Gas Dryer $75 Eler. l c wr angle 4 Wheel Heav y Duty
Range 30 $75 Side By Side Ae Scooter Ha dly Used Ltke New
frlge rator $150 Cold Spot Re rig
1211 w nee l Chl'l Ra mp Real

oratorS t50 Skaggs App lances N (3041773 5207
76 VIne SlrOOI Gallipolis Ohio 1:.:.::ce:.=::.:.__:.c.::,.;:.._ _ _ _
741J.446-7:l9B I 888 618 0128

�'

•

•

'

-~P~a~g~e~B~2=-·~Th~e~D~a~lly~S~en~t=ln=e~I~~----------------------------------P~o~m~e~ro~y~·~M~Id~d=le~po~rt~·~O=h~lo~------------------~----------=F~r~ld~•~~~F~e~b=~~~~4~,~~~

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Top 25 College Hoops

·. ·

:_Duke stops UNC; UC rolls; Iowa URSets Kansas
BY THE AS SOCIATFD PRESS

Th e fi rst half was maybe the worst half we ve
played Guthndge sa~d
The rematch IS March 4 at Cameron Indoor Sta~hum

Its abc•ll t tun e to drop \\Ords hke arguabl y or one
t I the l c •l n college basketball when descnbmg the
J), kc No n h Clrohu. n v•lry
I he ;t l, uoh etght nules apart met fo r the 250th
tunc I In ,-.;da) mght and came up With another
be l\lt) " N o 3 Duke beat the Tar H eels 90-86 10
0\~ 1

I

'

I

No I Cmcmnat1 70, N C Charlotte 62

S~ lll

Shan e Battler had 25 pomts for Duke Chns Carr •well h 1d 23 and Carlos Boozer had seven of his 15
11 1 the uvcrtnne
Wt could have eastly put our heads down when
lt "&lt; li t mto overtune Carra well satd I know I was
' y 1g O h God not here not now But we stuck 111
th e1e 1 d we fought
I I L&lt; ta had 21 pomts for North Carohna wh1c h
" " 10t ranked m thiS matcht p for the first tune
Slll t&lt; I J 10 whtle Forte had 20
I lt kc IS a great team I thought so before and I

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Kenyon Martm had 20 po mts e1ght rebounds ~nd
three blocked shots to lead the Bearcats (21 - l
C USA 9 0) to the1r 13th consecuttve VICtory and
avmd the1 r tlmd stra1ght loss at Halton Arena Jobey
Thomas had 19 points for the 49ers (12 9 CUSA
4-4) who lost for the first tunc m e1ght hom~ games
thiS seaso n

l lll ll

rhc h) pe really d1dn t measure ' 'P to the perfor
mamc ot all the young.;t~ rs 10 that ball game Duke
coh h l\lbke Krzyzewsk1 sa~d I thought there was
'"""ti Ona! basketball out on the court by both
h:ams
l&gt;u ke ( 17 2 ACC 8-0) had a 19 po10t lead m the
seu,llld half but the Tar H eels (13 9 ACC 4 4)
sco ted un 19 of their final 22 po.sesSion of regulati On - the last a 3 pomter by Joseph Forte With ~ 2
seco nds left - to tle tt 73 73 and set off the crowd
of 2? o70 at the Snuth Center
rhc Bille Devils scored 011 thetr first SJX posses
swm of overtJme to wm the 17th s tra~ght overall
and exlcnd thelf own record Wtth then:. 30th con
sewt1ve ACC regular season VI ctory
It "" then 16th stmght ACC road v1ctory and
f n1rth ovt rtunc bratue of the season
O ur guvs have done wel11n overtune but I don t
\W il t them to take me there anymore Krzyzewski

ANNOUN CE ~1E tHS

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No 2 Stanford 78, UCLA 63

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Ha\11 Fun Meeting Eligible Sin

Freshman Casey Jacobse n scored 12 of hi~ 17
pomts over the fin al 13 1/ 2 nunutes as the Cardmal
(18 I Pac 10 7 1) won their SIXth stratght over the
Brums and th etr th1rd m a row at Pauley Pavihon
Freshman Ja son Kapono led U C LA (12 7, Pac 10 3
5) w 1th 21 po mts

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game had a season htgh 21 potnts and 10 rebounds
for Kansas (16 5) wh1ch had lost three of four
No 17 Tulsa 70, SMU 59
Enc Coley scored 14 pomts and the Golden Hur
ncane (21-2 WAC 6 1) took advantage of a horn
ble shootmg mght by the Vtsltmg Mustang.; Jeryl
Sasser had 15 pomts to lead SMU (16 5 WAC 4 3),
which shot 24 percent from the field (17 for-71)
mcludmg 1-for-1 B from 3 pomt range

Items or will Sale on cons gn

menllor you 13041576-2642
slble For Any BillS Made By .An

yono Olher Than Mysoll
Glen Paulk
Now To You Thrlff Shoppe
9 West Stimson Athens
740-591! 1842
Quality cloth ng and household
Items $1 oo bag sale every
Thursda~ Monday thru Satufday

Veteran Reds broadcaster to be
enshrined at Cooperstown
BY JOE KAY
AP SPORTS WRITtR

C lt'.ICINNATI (AP) - Marty Brennaman does
11 t have a cute call for a home run He doesn t th10k
t p cleve1 mcknames fo r players H e doesn t sugar
co lt the home teams problems
As a Cmcmnatt Reds broadcaster for 26 years
Blc1111ama11 has done 1t h1s way sp~emg his s tra~ght
ton va rd dcscnptwn of the game w1th doses of no
holds barred opm10n
The approach has gotten hun mto scrapes w1th
gt.: IH.: r:i1 ma nagers p layers pla.yers w1ves and even
the Nat10nal League preSident It s also gotten hnn
1uto l ascball s Hall of Fame
11" IIIJillan 57 was chose n T hursday as the latest
rc e~p e1 t of the Ford C Fnck Award ptesented
a IIHIJIIV to a broadcaster He U be honored July 23
1lon g "1th former Reds first baseman Tony Perez
who w IS \ oted mto the Hall last month
I do n t thmk that I m the best baseball anno unc"' that sever !JVed by any means - I thmkVm Scul
I) s that Brennaman SJid But at the same ttme for
one day m July I U be htS equal
L1ke Scully Brenna man has gotten to descnbe
so11 1e of base ball s greatest moments from the broadcost booth Hts first came m hts very first game as
the Reds anno un cer - HankAarons 714th ho mer
tl1 c "' c that matched Babe Ruth on openmg day
I 17 I
l ie '" has call ed Pete Rose s record-setttng h11
N • 1 I '12 three World Senes champ10nsh tps and
11e If! ) 1 gencratmn s worth o f Reds ups and downs
As the play by play announ cer he has descnbed
tl e 11 II 111 htS n ght to the pomt style Without
11 sh 'I
Yo 1 know tf 1t s b1g enough that you re gomg to
hear 1t replayed over and over and over Brennaman
sud A1 cl vou don t want to have to gnt your teeth
whenc\ cr you hear 1t I ve been lucky m that
' '&gt;u t I \C f) thm g has come o ut OK
It Ut 11 more than OK Brcnnaman and color
n J N uxh all have become as closely assoctated
" "' rl e C mu nnau Reds as the Btg Red Maclune
ot the IY70s
M •tty and Joe fill the empty nunutes dunng
g 1es w1 th banter and JOkes about the~r hobbtes
I mh g folksy touch that endears them With fans
It ' " " ks 111 Cmo nnat1 Brennaman sa1d It
mght 11 lt work somewhere else but were able to
I Uf(h at ourselves and talk about our golf game and
Ill\ t&lt; 1 ~atocs and everyth10g else under the blasted
Sl

I

I h t dudes nustakes - th ose on the field and
th ISc I y the front offi ce Brennunan often went
I&lt; e t o toe With forme r ge neral manager DICk Wag
"'' 1 d has been confronted by players over the
} lliS

'

'

I(

1

h1s &lt;..: ntJCtsm

I vc l ec n lucky because I don t thmk there s an
a mo IIll&lt; r 111 baseball that has the freedom to say
what he won ts to say hke I do he md
I I dl o f Fame catcher Johnny Bench sa1d he never

Herd
from Page Bl
p ut th e blame on myself
hav&lt; 11 t d edicated myself but
tl11s I "t wee k I have been
Alexe i Vas1hev and R1 ck Fox
led thc l3ulls (5 16 MAC 3-9)
w1t h I I pomts aptece

Southem
from Page Bl
field overall The Lancer-s were
9 of-17 at the free throw lme
Federal Hockmg had
36
reounds mcl11dtng 17 offenstve
caroms Lmscott grabbed 13
rebounds
T he Lancers coninutted 22

turnovers and had 18 asststs Lm
scott recotded seven aSSists
The Lancers had rwo blocks
and IS steals L10scott came up
with SIX thefts
Federal Hockmg won the
reserve game to end Southern s
11-game wm streak 53 37 The
Lan cers were led by Sarah
Spnnger wtth 24 and Tracy S1d
well wtth 20
Amy Lee had 15 for Southern

'
wh1le Brandl Lane and Tara P1ck
ens added etght pomts each
Federal Hockmg defeated
Waterford ~7 33 Wednesday to
move a half game ahead of the
w,Idcats mto first place m the
Hockmg DtviSlon T he two
sch9ols play for the league champm nshtp next Thursday
Southern goes to Eastern for a
5 30 contest Saturday

Property lr; New Haven Known
As The Old New Haven Pottery

'

Poalllon Ava ilable ROOFING
FOREMAN Mu lt Bt Tolonlod
Able To Mako Oeclolona Wan! A
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People And Poaseu Exceptk)nal
Roo"ng SkiiiO (3-Tab. Domenslonol Single Ply Rubber Tin) Wo
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Tho Work Is Local Poy II Good
Bonuaes Paid If You Are Looking
For A Good Stable Job Pleaao
Submll YOUR RESUME To 1403
Ea&amp;lorn Ave Galllpollo OH
45EI3l Attn Foreman Poaftk)n

One Year Old Males

Quick

,.___..........

5 puppies 8 wkl!

1..:.::..:=-:-_-,--'----:--,-:-

~d

Lab I Ger
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3516
_;:,:_ _ _ __ _.,....___ ,

740 441

DATA ENTRY

Nallonwlda Billing

Service Seeks A Full/Part Time

Medical Bllllr Salary AI $46K Per
Yoar PC Required No Exporl
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888-846-5724

Provided Must Own Computer 1

weeks old mother Coberman

Tha Road Start At 29 CPM /All

740 949-2927 or 740 949-3084
60 Lost and Found

Ml Unloading Pay Porsonallzod
Dlapalch Homo Oflon Holiday I
vacation Pay 401K /Mod /Preo I

Found at Fox &amp; Pizza Den Red

2000 MODEl SllVIRIDD PICKUPS TO CHOOSE FROM!

dish Color Beaded Rosary Own
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HALL OF FAMER Reds play by play man Marty
Brennaman talks With the med1a dunng a press con
ference Thursday at C1nergy Fte ld Brennman and

Frelghl CALL SUMMIT TRANS
POATATION 800-878 oeao EOE

Found Big Black Dog With Tan
Has Red Collar Real Smart Dog

Drlvef8 2 Weok Paid COL Train
lng No Exp Needed No Money

Shakos Handsl 740-446-0754

70

former Reds pitcher Joe Nuxhall have formed the
C1nc1nnat1 broadcast team for about a quarter cen
tury (AP)

Buffalo trad ed only 27-24
wtth 6 35 left 111 the first half
before VanHoose then scored
stx of M ar shalls final 14 p omts
fo r a 41 -31 halft1me lead
Marshall tS a good enough
basketball team where you
thmk they re down and the n
they come up and get you
Witherspoon
sat d
Theu
defense IS great and they con-

te sted every sh ot
The begmn m g of the sec
ond half and the end of the first
half was a co1nplete co llapse
We don t have enough D1VtS10I1
I tal e nt to play well w h en
thmgs go badly We dtdn t pass
the ball well and so then the
shots were not open Pretty
much we collapsed and panIcked

Yard Sale

• Power Sunroof and Seat
• AMIFM CD l Ceuette
• Equlpp'ect Not Sttlppedl

• Vortec V·B Power
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semble Products At Home Call

ALL Yard Soloo Muot
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DEADUNE 2 DO p m
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odldon 2 00 p m
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10 DO • m llllurdiV

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Sunday
Monday odlllon
1 DOpm F~day

a

~8,950* ~9 850*

• Ram Air V·6 Power
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' TaxeJ Tags THio Fees ex~a Rebale lllchJded In sale price of new vehicle ljoflld whenlappllcabfe "On approved credh On selected
models Not responsible lor iypOgraplllcal errors Prices Good febrQary •
•oogh February Glh

Medical Insurance BIIUng Assta

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Columbus Some Care Dutlas
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HVAC lllstallero and Holpefl
Needed For Residential &amp; Com

wv 1338

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lf"Vou Have Business And JOr
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Subatilule Bus Orivor Muol bo al
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can be obtained an&lt;~ 8Ubm1Hed to
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801 W Union S1 Athens Oh
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1luck Drivers -

Cla11 B COL Wllh HazMat &amp;
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Heating And LP Delivery Full

Tlmo Wllh Benofllo Apply Burllle
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Up To $45 000 /Yr Billing Soli
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Training Provided MUST Own A

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www any.1 can-earn com
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portunlty Starling Balary 01 Ssoo

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Alnga Pre 1930 U S Currency
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M T.S Coin Shop 151 Second

AliOJlUI Gallipolis

7~

2&amp;42

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

- - -Help Wanted

'MUST Own Compulor 888 332
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$100 WEEKLY BE YOUR OWN
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37011 1438 Bien lmmt&lt;llto/y

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Thai Will Be Unparallelad In Tile

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PI

Local Truck Drlvor Needed Start
lng Pay $9 DO Hour lnouranoe
Plan Uniforms Muat Haw Tank
or Endorsemonta 740-245-5814
Magic Yean Day Care Center

S11klng Full Tlmt SubsiiiOio
Sand Resumo lo 201 High
Slrlll Pt Pleaaan~ WV 25550
Manager Retail Jewelry Store
Retail Sales And Computer Ex
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Local Business seeks Route
Sales Person Excellent Bene
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but not necessary Send Re
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110

munlty In Galllpolla Ohio Our

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Rick Pearson Auction Company
full time auctioneer complete
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service
Licensed
166 Oh o &amp; West VIrginia 304

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We Are Opening A New Ll
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Moodlspaugh AUctioneering
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Brand New 2000 Chevy

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EMERiliNG COMPANY NEEDS

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Toll Free 1 800 487 5566 Exl
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Homemaker Live In Wanted For

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6002 ~A M Thlnapon

Gallipolis

\

Cental Assigned 99 T2000 s
Rider Program 98% No Touch

FoK&amp; Pizza

, :...=.:.=~---

Brand New 1999 Chevy
Full Size Conversion Van

RECEPTIONIIT
The Arrwar Ell&amp; Center In Pt
Pleasant ~ looking lor an office
recepllonlst Must be lrilndly and
oulgQing Full time poolllcin
Previous experience In rnedlc:el
offiCe holplw llul noiiiiCOIIaary
Ptease send re~ume to our main
office ATTN Gino W.mocll
flnwwEyeCt.IIOOU!oyelll•Moundovllle WV 21041
INo Phone C.Ho P-1

l:-:-:-:-!l'WWg~lrrqgttdi~~~Ua.~no~t::-::­

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BD0-223-1149 Ext 480
,- -- - -- - - - -.[ DRIVERS $500 SIGN ON BONUS
Pups lwo male ooe female 8
IMMEDIATE OPENINGS Over

All New 2000 Chevy
Monte Carlo Super Sport

A Team Full Benefit Package In
eluding 401 K ReUremtnl Plan
Send Resume And Three Em
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Parenthood Ot ~outheast Ohio
398 ~lchland Avenue Athens
OH 45701 Closing Oato II Febru
ary 18 2000 EOE /ESP

4

Doberman Puppies

Brand New 2000 Che11y
ZR2 Extended Cab 4x4

Secretary !50 wpm Aequlrtd

$350 -$800 /Week
1-8811-!IDIJ.8085

DENTAL BILLER $15 $45 /Hr
· Free Dog (Prell)' Boxer) to a good Denial Billing Soltware Company
holM 1304)576 2273
Needs People To Process Medl
Free To Good Home Black Lab &amp; cal Claims From Home Training

had a run-10 Wi th Brennaman who remams a
fnend
One thmg you judge by IS how the players feel
Bench satd The players h sten Marry s honest but
he doesn t try to go after you or embarrass you
In 1988 Brennaman and N ux hall were summoneil to N ew York because then NL preSident
Bart Gtama\tl was concerned about thelf comments
dunng the game m whtc h Rose was eJected fo r
bumpmg ump1re Dave Pallone Fans threw debns
on the field for 15 nunutes and Brennaman h arshly
cntmzed Pallone
I sttllmamtoln \\e were n ght Brcnnaman S3ld
Ill never apolog•ze tor that They accused us of
m c1tmg a not I don t thmk we d1d then and I don t
thmk we d1d now
Astde from hts candor Brenrraman IS known for
his Signature closmg to every Cmcmnat1 wm And
thiS one b elotjg.&gt; to ~h e R~ds The phrase JUSt
popped mto hiS head after a game wmmng h1t by
Dave ConcepciOn two weeks mto hts first season
I satd tt I thought abou t 11 and I kmd of hkod tt
so l continued to use tt h e sa1d
Over the years Brennaman has passed up chances
to take JObs m li1gger markets tu rm ng down the
Yankees l;he Wh1te Sox the Dodgers the R ed Sox
and the Cubs H e mtends to fimsh h1s career 111
Cmcmnatl speaking hiS trund whtle descnbmg the
game
If the only thing I have when I walk away from
th1s IS credtb1hry then I ve been successfu l he sa~d
That s all I care about

Prlva1e Non Prolll Family Plan
nlng Agency Sooklng A Full Time

Loarners 740-367 n87

Cinnamon Color Female Cat De
clawed Fixed House Petl 740
446-3587 6 A M 3 ~M

OVER

POSTAL JOBS Up To $17 21 /Hr
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1304)885 3083
Georges Portable Sawmill don t

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lng Etc Reasonable Rates 740
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1·-------,....--

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wasllor $3D01Mo $300 Depos 1
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Country Living 3 Or • Bedrooms
Pay Cloa lng Coati l Move In

741J.4.46.3093

The ir Ta~ees Write Immediately

ooublewlde On Lot $250 Deposit

Windfalls 847 A SECOND AVE
1350 NEW YORK NEW YORK
1D017

Required 304 736-7295

CONSOLIDATE BILLS

From $3000 $1500001
(9'1. Average Rale)
LOANS 0 A C
For Fast Results
Call Toi$-Free
1-888411-6555

And Financing tn Progreu Call

3 Bedroom Tra er For Ae nl No
Pets In Rio Grande 740 379
2720AIIer6 ~M
3 Bedrooma 2 Bath s Unlur
nlshed Cora Mill Road Gall pot s
Fr11 Gu Heat No Pets Oeposlt

Required 74Q-245-5fi22

440

Apartments
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apa tments lu
n shed and unfurnished secur ty
deposit required no pets 74 0

For DolaN~ t 888-585.0187

992 2218

Non Qualifying

$4 000 Oown &amp; Take Over Pay
menls 741J.448.321 8

1 Bedroom Apartment AI Utll ti es
Paid Clean Handicapped Acces
slble au et Nelghbo hood Refer
ences &amp; Deposit Aequ ed 740

388 9770

Auumable

CONSOLIDATE

Ra tes No Upfronl Fees Bad

1 Lett $299/Mo

Plano lessons In my homo begin

Credll And Bankruplcy Accepted

304-736 72!15

ners and adults also teach
chording and transpos ing It In

24 Hour Approval Call Toll Free
1 en-804 7273

Factory Renovared 3 Bedrooms
$499 &amp; Aasuma OakwOOd Gall

Nice 1 Bed room Garage Apa t
ment In Kanauga Appliances In
eluded No Pets D 0 $270/Mo

CREDIT CAAO UP TO $3 000
Unsecured VISA /MC Bad Cre~lt
Or No Credl 18002568818 Ext
4000

polls 740-446 3093

Cal 740 888 7102 Or 740 BB6
1389

2025

CREDIT CARDSI GUARANTEED

Put You Ta• Rolund To Work

Will Co Hou&amp;ecle&amp;fllng $6 00 An
Hour Evenlnga And Saturdays
Have Experience And Aahlrenc
88 740-388-8421

APPROVAL! No Credit Check

llrooflld call740-992 5403
want To Take Care Of Senior
~lllzons

Monday Sunday 8 A M
10 PM In Your Home 740 446

BILLS

FLEETWOOD HOliES 01 Proc
torvllle Ohio ORAND OPENINil
Largeat Ntw lnv8t'ltory In South
ern Ohi o Spec ials On Homes

2 Bedrooms Total E ectr lc Cen
tral Air Washer &amp; Orye 0 sh

saga

Low

No Security Deposit $1 ODD llmll
Much More Best Package On

Marko! Musl Bo 18 I Have
Check tng Account 1 BOO 737

21 0

AUCrediiRIIks 74Q.4.t63583

FREE DEBT CONSOLIDATION

INOTICEI

Applicati on W /Service Fleduce

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO

Payments To 65% IICASH IN
CENTIVE OFFERit Call 1 800
32885!0 Ext 29

recommends that you do bual
ness with people you know and
NOT to send money through the
ma 1 until you nave Investigated

1 Bedroom Wa sher Dryer Hook
Up In Galllpof s 741].446-7903

Wllh Boaullfui Building S lo Be
h nd Pond Belwen Gallipolis &amp;
Jacl&lt;son 2 Miles 0" SA 35 Lend
Contract Aval able Free Maps 1

740-210-0081

350

Lots

REDUCED PRICES

OYER YOU HEAD IN DEBn??
Qualifying Ill FREE !IONSULTA·
TION CALL 1-8DO-fl5..1M6 Ext

33 www anewhorlzon org ll
cansed Bonded Insured Nation

8 Acres $5
10 Acres
'"•''"" · 5+ Acres For $8 500

FUNDRAIBINil IS BOOMINill
Up To 50o/. Commission Market
Unlquo Fundralslng PrOduct With
Top
Fast
Food
Chains
www sctatchcard com Or 1 888

675-12&lt;15
Innovative Fundralalng Ideas
Schools Churches Oaycares
Sports Organizations Sail Tha
Ulllmate In Gourmel Cookie &amp;
Mutnn Batter Customer Service
·s Star Rating We Deliver 11

MacMillan o 1 BD0-387 4039
Learn •how you could make

man

Homea for Sale

$ NO OOWNI HOMES NO CREDIT NEEDEDI GOV T FORE
CLOSURES! GUAAANTEEO AP
PROVALI 1 800 380 4820 EXT
8509
2br tba Home w/Attached Ga
raga 130 South Park Drive

$38 ODD 1304)675 5697

$11 chac~ or money order to

bedroom 2 baths heat pump
close to school tree main
tenence 5 veers old range &amp; re
lrlgerator stays In home 132 Mill

MEOICAL BILLER $15 $45 /Hr
Medical Billing Software COmpany
Naeda People To Process Madl
cal Clalma From Home Training
Provided Must Ow.n Computer 1

llD0-434-!i518 Exl 887
MEOICAL BilliNG Unlimited In
carrie Potential No Experience
Necessary Free Information &amp;

CD ROM lnv111man1 $4 995
$8' 9?5 Financing Available Is
land Automated Medical Servic

es Inc 800 322 1139 Exi 050
VOid In KY IN CT
Need A Loon? 1ly Debt Consoti
dallon $5 DOD S2DO 000 Bad
Credit 0 K Fee 1 8DO 770 0092
Ext 215
People In Network Marketing
Huge Opportunity For MLM
Leaders LUast~Jes In 13 Coun
trjes Opens The U S A Transfer
Program Ready We Must Talk 1
877 811 G-424
www dunro

bin oom'lntra

FORECLOSED HOMES Low Or 0
Down I Govn t And Bank Repo 1

Being Sold NOWI Financing Avail
able Call Nowl t BOO 355 0024
EJd 8040

Start Your Business Today
Prime Shopping Center Space

Available AI Allordable Rato
Spr1ng valley Plaza Call 740-446
0101
WOALO S BEST SECRETIII AU
TOMATE NOW To Earn $5 DOD
A Wook Wllh A Mouse Cllckl
http llwww aecreta2auc

Middleport corner of High Street

&amp; Powell Stroe1 2 bedroom homo
with dining room I vlng room and
kitchen Newer carpet and k tchen
cabinets makes the k tchen with

the Federal Fair Housing Act
of 1968 which makes It lttegal
to advertise ~any preference
limitation or discrimination
based on race color religion
sex famll si status or national
origin or any lntentfon to
make any Such preference

llmttallon or discrimination

advertisements for real estate
wtllch 11 n vlolallon of lho
law Our reade rs are hereby

ln1onned lhat aH d'MIIHngs
advorllsod In lhls newspaper
are avaHable on an equal
opponunlty basil
Real Eatate
Wanted

dor s12 DOD 740 446-2317

Wanted To Buy 2 5 Acres 01
Land Between Patriot Oak Hil l
Ohio Reasonably Priced Land
Contract Preffered 740 4417895

740 379 9289 Laavo Ml8sago

1304)875-8634
N~e 3 Or 4 Bedroom Ranch wtth
Full Basement Heat Pump On
1 78 Acres In Country On State
Floute 775 Past 0 0 Mcin ty re

Park Call740 441 1659 Aller 5
PM

3 Bedroom. 2 Beth 2 Car Garage
on 1 Acre Heaf Pump Appuanc
" Slay Broad Run Road Letart
Asking $80 DOD (304)882 3518
Nlca Home Plenty at Room 3
Bedroom Brick Reduced Price

Nlco ~ Slory A A Holf Houoe
In Country 1 Acre lol M/. Ap
prox 1 mile trom Sporn on Broad

ZIG ZIGLAR GOES MLMI Look
lng For Loadars Who Want To
Move From Success To Slgnlfl
cance" We Suggeat You Move

Call 1

877~

Money to Loan

we Pay lldll
con Ryan

10111213-8311

410

2 bedroom hou!ll In Portlan d

13041882 2885

dlolo Quo1eolll Nobodr Boall
Our Prlcoo ' Nallonal COnlraol
Buyoro 800 490 0731 Exl 101
YNtWnetiOnllcon~oom

se

1988 Rodmen Oanvlllo Ux70
Aloo Has Expando Yory Nice
113 000 740-388 6335

Compute AT&amp;T Globa lyst 375
TP C 3 Mon to 1 2 G gabyte&amp;
16 MB Ram Pent um Processor
lnte ne t Ready Wm do ws 95 3
Years 0 d Cxcel!en l Co nd 11 on

PAC MICRON sMach nes Desk
ops La.ot ops Merchanl Ac

co unts WeiJ s es Atmos Every
one App ved
No Money
Down I low Mon th y Paymen tslt
FREE Spa~ a Otfe

CALL NOW!

1888 4792345 (Tot Freel
COMPUTERS l ow Or SO Down
Low Mon hty Payments Y2K
Comp ant A mos t Everyone Ap
pro ~~ed 1 800 617 3476 Ex! 330

COMPUTERS $79 89 /MO
EASY QUAL FY NG
FAST
N EW 500 600 MH z Comple.te
N T ERNET Sol wa e Te chnlaal
He p 800 300 26 40 Affo dable

Techno og es

no pets

740 698 7244

Good Location In Gallipolis No
Pera Deposit References 7.tO

4&lt;16-1182
Ranters Needed
Ranttus Needed
Three bedroom In Middleport
central air tenced corner lot

$375 pluo dopotlt 740'992 319•

Mobile Home•

Nice :2 bedroom apartment m Sy
acuse $200 dep osit $285 pe
month ren~ 740-667 3516
NiCe Ground FIOO 2BR W D
Hook up Reference Depos I No

740 992 2 43 0 740 992 6373

G eal Lakes Spa Hot Tub 5 seat
er 1 yea old pa d $2800 w II se I
fo $2 ooo 740 742 3509

Pots 1304)875-5162
Now Tak ng Ap plications- 35
West 2 Bedroom Town hous e
Apartments
Includes Water
Sewage Trash $315/Mo 740
One bedro om lurnlshe d apart
ment In M ddleport 740 992

9191

JET

Spring Valle~ Green One Bed
r oom Apartments Applia nce s
Fu mshed Call740 446 1599
Twin Towe rs now accept ng ap
pi cations for 1 SA HUD sub s d
lzed apt for elde rly and hand

VIllage Green Apa rtmenl s 2
bedrooms talal elecl c appl anc
as turn shed laundry oom lac
Ilea and close to school app ca
Uons B'Jallable at off ce 740 992

3711 TOO t 888 233 6694 Equal
Housing Opportun ty

Household
Goods

Appliances
Re cond Honed
Weshara Or~ers Ranges Ref
grato rs 90 Day Gua ran tee!
French C ty Ma~ tag 740 446

llOOD USED

APPLIANtE S

Washers d r ~ers refrlge ators
range&amp; Skaggs Appliances 76

VIne Stroot Call 740 446 7398
I 888-816.0126
Mollohan Carpet 202 Clark
Chapel Road Porter Ohio 740

446-7444

AERAT ON MOTORS
Repa ed New &amp; Aebu t In Stock
Ca 1 Ao Evans 1 800 537 9528

MOBILE HOME OWNERS

o y D scoun Prices
On V ny Sk I ng Doors Wmd
o ws Ancl o s Wal e Healers
P umbt g &amp; E ec cal Parts Fur
naces &amp; Hea t Pumps Benne us
Mob Je Home Supp y 740 446
H oe n... en

941 6
Ne w M Uen um 0 e ll Eat All Cay
And M elt Away Cali Tracy At
740 441 1962
New S na Viin 1 es White $~5
eact Top nnd Bonom Automo
b1e Po nt $25 ga (30 4 )675

4004

Prlmeatar
OlrecTV
F ee sate 1e sySiem Call tor de
Ia Is BOO 263 2640
Pro m 0 esses Fo
256 1651

Sale 740

RESIDENTIAL HOME OWNERS
Ta ppan H EH c ency goo., Gas
Fu r n ace~ 0 Fu rn ac es
2 Seer
Hea t Pu mp &amp; Ai r Condltton ng
System~ F ae 6 Year Parts 8 La
bor Wa any BenneUs Heat ng &amp;
Coo ng 1 BOO 872 5967
Aon s Gun Shop 740 742-8412

SAVE THOUSAND S Top 01 Tho

New And Used Furniture Stora
Balow Holiday Inn Kanauga
Good Used Bed s Orusars
Couches Dinettes Etc Big S8v
lnga On New FurOIIurt 74 0 441J

Lin e Sold Woo d K tc hen Cab
ne ts Exce lent Co nct tlon In
l: udes Desk Bu It In M c owave
&amp; Oven Sto ... e Top &amp; Sink
$ 800 l eavv Mess age 740
441 0013

4782
R&amp;D I U1td Furniture Great Se

Set Of Head lgh t Co.,.ers For A
199 7 1999 Ch evy Cavalier

locllon Priced To Sell I Come $25

oo

On y Used A Coupe 01

And BrowN corner ot Route 7 Ti mes Ca I 30/.f 773 5841

lor Rerit

S2eiJ.$300 740-m 2187

2 Bedroomo S2501Mo $250 Ooposlt Water BIN Paid Raterenc11

Call Allor 6 ~M 740-446-4318

E11

colltnl Condition $350/Mo $300
Deposit Relerencta 740 -4.t1

19!3

Fo sa e P me Star System a so
wanted olde RCA 0 ectTV or
Hughes sys ems w l h ac ceS&amp;
ca1d pay $150 &amp; up cash I Call
Wo I e 740 9~9 33 5 ea ...e mas
sage

Good Used Appl ances And Fur
n u e Ca 740 446 4039 Or 740
446 004 Any me

Jackson Awnue 1304)675-7388

3 Bedroom House 1 112 Baths
Good Local on In Gallipolis No
Pels Oepoa t References Small
1 Bedroom House Furnished

2 Bedroom• 2 Bath Treller

F ewood Oa~ &amp; H cko ry Delivery
$40 Truck LMCI 740 245 9337

992 5064 Equal Housing Opp01

For Sale Recon dllloned wash
ers dryer&amp; and relrlge1ator s
Thomps Ons Ap pliance 3407

Between Athena and Pomeroy 2
&amp; 3 bedroom mobile homee

12xo8 2 Bedrooms 1 112 Bolho
All Now Carpol Some Appflancaa
s~
995 740-245-9373

6pm

Free zer beef g an fed $1 5 7 per
!b hang ng wt nc udes cut wrap

2 bedroom house In Pomeroy

$350 month plu'J deposit wll sell
on contract Wllh good references

320 Moblla Home•
for Sale

Compete D SH Network sate 1te
system brand new $99 74 0
992 1182 o 30 4 773 530 5 after

~radous living 1 and 2 bedroom
eparlments at VIllage Manor and
Riverside Apartments In Middle
port From $249 $373 Cal l 740

7795

OK Consumers Financial 1 800
247 5125 Exl 1134 VOid OH KS

Caah For Rem1lnlng Payments
On Property Soldl Morlgageal
Annultleal Selllementsl lmme

74()-446-,519

$300 plus oloclrlc hoal wllh wood
740-843-SS&lt;te

420

S$$ NEED CASH?? WE Pay

Furnished 2 Rooms &amp; Balh Show
er Downstairs C ean No Pet s
Deposit &amp; Referen ces Require d

510

801J.319 3323 Exl 1709

rage Single Car Gall'ge Foncod

como Pollntlal

House• for Rent

Dobt Conoolldallon Mortgagos
And .Rellnonclng Credll Problema

Aula Loan• Peraooal Loana

Christy s Fam ly living apart
menls hom&amp; &amp; trail er ental s
740 992 4514 apartmen ts ava I
able h.lrnlshed &amp; unturn shed

MERCHANDISE

1 3 Bedrooms Foreclosed
Homes From $199/t.to 4% Down
For Listings &amp; Payment Details

Run Ad Home has New Re
placement Ooors/Windowa/St.tn
Porch/New Roof New 2 Car GaYard Alao on lot 111 up for
House Tra iler with 18para1e sap
tlclwater/e lectrk: Nice Rental In

NO CASH?? MMX Technolog y
Wt F nance wth 0 Down Past
Cred 1 P ob ems No Prob em Cal
To Fee 1 877 293 4082

Smokers Only $3SO/Mo $300
Deposit 740 446 9585 0 740
446-2205 A.sk For V rgln a

Two bedroom down stai rs $27 0
month plus utllltes and $100 de
posit Third Street Ra cl na Oh
74Q-247-.4292

For LANDI

Even tf Us Usted
20 500Acras

Trailer IFurnlohed) on 15Dx150
Lot on Map.. Slraet beside WeiMarl In Mason WV S30 000 AI
COnard 13041773-5188

SS

v

REN1ALS

1304)273-9485

Your Current Credltl In 24 Hours

Applications Betng Accepted For
Sma I But Ver~ N ce One Bed
room Apartment Counl Sen ng
Yet Close To Gall po IS Was her I
Dryer Stove Refngeralo P ov d
ed Water And Trash Remo val
Included Tennant Pays Elect c
Tolal Electuc No Pets Non

capped EOH (304)675 6679

An111ony Land C01f11811Y LTO
Naw home 3 bedrooms 3 baths
wwtf cgun!J\1\rme com
2413 square teet pluB oversized
2 car attached garage wrapar
WV Land wanted sultabl• tor
ound porches many amen Ilea I . ~~'::,~;,,~N.o ulllltlas no access
awesome views convenient loca
(740)288 7246
tlon $189 000 serious inquirers
call 740 992 2478 for more lnfor
House For Sale Newly Remo
de led Inside and Out 191 N
Park Drive Cell tor Appointment

WANT A COMPUTER ?? BUT

446-0008

Need 5 Sec uded Acres With
Homes ite Ou~et Road Gallla
County Deeded &amp; Surveyed Un

large lot Cute as can be Re
ducad to $33 ooo Please eall
Dottle Turner Realty Dott e S
Turner Broker at740-992 2888

YOU RE APPAOVEOI Cfldll
Cards &amp; Loans Regardless Of
801).577-4348

740 886-4531

1un ties

This newspaper wfn not
know ngly accept

loll of windows very brlltll Also a

.... com/opoclale8300.

F111 Bacauso Thft Will

All real estate adVertising n
lhlo newspaper 11 subjecllo

360

Home for sale lovely len acres In
a country setting lour bedrooms
two and half baths formal living
room and Jam ly room two fire
places two apartments tour car
garage and two storage bulk:llngs
Pleaoo caN 740-9112 2292

740 992 ;1856 0 740 949 2607

Or ve from $289 to $370 Walk o
shop &amp; mbvies Ca 740 446
2568 Equal Houstng Opportuni ty

matlon

PEPSI /COKE /FRITO LAY
SNACK ANO SODA VENDING
ROUTE BE YOUR OWN BOSS
$$$All CASH BUSINESS$$$
INCRESE YOUR INCOME NOWI
SMALL INVESTMENT /EXCEL
LENT PROFITS 1 800 731 7233
EXT 503

UFIL

Sl Now Haven WV 304 882
2240

3 p ece V ng room smte $650
Hot Po nl m cro wave w th probe
$75 mus see o app ec ate ca l

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK
SON ESTATES 52 Westw ood

REAL ESTATE

Double wide for oale lreducodl 2

MAKE ONE MILLION People To
Sand You $2 001 LEARN MY
EASY METHODI Guaranleo&lt;t It
Works Rush $5 DO + LEASE
Sier lng 135 Amherst 51 20 Am
horat NH 03031 hllp //slorl ngfl
nancla12000 com 2 html

Maps ANTHONY
1 8oo-21 3-8 365

TURNED OOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Foe Unltss We Wlnl
1 1166-S!I2 3346

ay on other peoples Junk' Send
LEUCK'EL PO Box 5178 Bolh
Iaham ~A 18015

ooo

Sarvlces

310

Damage Depos1~ Requ red Re te
ences No Pels 740-445 1066

ences No Pets 740 441 09 o2

ARE YOU CONNECTED? Inter
nol UsoJO Wanladl $350 $8DO I
Week 1 888 858 9336 www eblz

2815 124 Hn1 I

2 Bedrooms Galllpols $325 Mo

$280 &amp; $325/Mo Oepo&amp;l Relo

20 ACRES $111,000

Profelllonal

(3041773-5577

460 First Aven ue (Gallipol s) 1
And 2 Bedroom Apartme nts

&amp; Acreage

Forest Off SA 140 &amp; SR 233
23 ACRES $21 000
011 SR 7 South Of GalllpoMs No
Rastr1ctional NEEDS TLC $2 300
Down On Land Contract
MEIGS COUNTY
CHEAPER THAN DIRT

vestment EKceliant lncomell
F nance Available 1 800 380

(3041675 4004

COMPUTER BLOWOUT II COM

pllcanto Only 1 877 760-1938

AVAILABLE YENDINil ROUTE
15 30 Locations $4K S9K In

1993 N ssa ntP ck up $3 995
992 S 10 P c~&lt; up 53 695 2811
T ave T a te S6 000 Compl ete
Se t of Ne w K tchen Cab ne ts
$2 800 30ton Wood Splitter
$495 1 Cat sman Ra d a Ar m
SaN $300 10 Table Saw $1 50
La ge AppteBuller Kelt e $400

2 Be droom Apa rtment New Ha
ven Area leave Messa ge

the ollerlng

230

180

$550 740 367 7055

All Wooded Wllh Road Thai

el Non Profil COmpany

Caoh

PaiS 740-446-2957

Farma for Sale

Continuaa Into Wayne National

AUT MCI SPRINT Whals
The Big Secral? Worll 5 Hrs /Wk
Moko $52K $125K /Yr Easyl
FREE lnlol 1 800 997 9868 h I
1155124 Hrs)

Gel

Loans To S5 000 Debt Consoli
eta! on To S200 ooo Credit Card&amp;
Mo gages Ref nanclng And
Aut o Loans A.,.a lable Me ri di an
C edt Cop I 800 4715 119 Ext

330

736-3409

MONEY TO LOAN Bad Cfldlt

dream net

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

1 Bedroom Near Arbor's Nu si ng
Home Economical Uti les Qu et
Location $279/Mo +- Ul I es No

OK Free Application US Ap

Do You Nead Mora Breathing
Room??? Debt Consolidation No

Buy or sell Aver n e Ant quea
1124 East Man on SA 124 E Po
me ov 740 992 2526 or 740 992
1539 Russ Moore owner

$489 Cown Only AI Oakwood
Homes In Barboursville 304

UCRES &amp; POND

CREDIT REPAIRI AS SEEN ON
TVI Erase Bad Credit Legally
Freelnlo 888-659-2580

Bu11ne11
Opportunity

Includes Lot

Land Home PaCkages All Areas

0073

FINANCIAL

220

Training
Nl!ed 7 ledltl To Soli Avon 741J.

180

Odd Jobo ~nllmiiOd l Roofin g
Palnllng Docks Siding Remodel

No You Looking For

4 QR78 x 1p Buckshot Tlru
(304)675-7340 Callaller 3 3DPM

Phone CAMBRIDGE STATE
UNIVERSITY t-80().984.8318

POSTAL JOBS To $18 35 /HR
INC BENEFITS NO EXPERI
ENCE FOR APP ANO EXAM
INFO CALL 1 800 813 3585
EXT 14210 8 AM 9 PM 7
DAYS fda loo

dependently As Well As Part Of

Dancers Wanted Top $$ 740

For FREE lntormat lon Booklet

Mother of 2 Fenced In Bacttyard
End of SandHill Ad Willing to
Babysit Jn my home Arry Shift
1304)885-374I

Computer Exptrlenct A Must
Oolall Orlontad Able To Work In

ATTN Own A Computor? Put II
To Workl $25 75 /Hr PT /FT
3 Cata 2 Year Old Male Grey aaa...tl1 122• www work.out~f
Neutered Dedawed All Shots 8 youMtQrne com
Monlh Old Grey Tabby Malo !=..:=:_===-:--::--::---:--::Neutered All Shots 1 Year Old AVONI All Areaal To Buy or Soli
Foma a Long Haired 112 Rag Doll ShOiay Spears 304-875-1429
740-245-91DO

By Carre
spondonco Boiled Upon l'rlor Ed-

Poslal Jobs $48 323 00 Yr Now
Hiring No Experience Paid
Training Great Benelila Call 7
Days f100..429-3EI60 Ext J.385

ASSEMBLY AT HOIIEII Crolla
40
Glvaaway
Toys Jowolry Wood Sowing
...,--:-.,--,---.,.:,....,.,-- Typing Greal Payl CALL 1 8D01/2 Bonjor Collie 1/2 Collie Mix 2 795-0080 Ext 1201 124 Hrs)

-Exi.5Dol8

\

Holzer Senior Care Ctnler Is Now
Accopllng Applications For RN •
If You Are Energe11c And Dedi
cated To Caring For The Elderly
Please Send Atlume To Ahonda
Coo AN DON AI 380 Colonial
Drive Bidwell OH Or Apply In
Person To View Our Beauurut
Faclllly F o r Holzer Senior Care Canter 11
Highly Skl'lod In The An Of Car
lng"
EOE

ARE YOU CONNECTEO? lnlor
""' Users Wanlodl $350 $800 I
Wook 1 888 723 2553 www work
4succea&amp;2000 com

9 D0-5 30

And this honor belongs to Brennaman

ucation And Short SIUdy CoUflt

Are \bu Connocted7
lnlomel u.... Wllnledl
$350 S8DO /Week
I 888 881-8750
WWW mn!'W!!tbatefun rom

I Glen Paulk Will Not Be Respon

No Trespassing on K &amp; B Realty

Part Time Poolllon ovolllblo Ap
ply In Person at Kipling Shoe
CO Rl2 Bypua Pt.Piouont.

MEDICAL BILLING Earn Excel
lanl $ S S I Procoa,lng Claims
From Home Full Training Provld
eel Compuler Required Call
Modi Prol Toll froo 1 886 313
6049 Ext 3125

Con&amp;lgnm"'ent Shop Open ng
Soon on Route 2/Ciose to the
Locks

Masters Doctorate

Hetzer S8nlor Csre Center Ia Now
Accepting Appllcatlona For Mtd
leal Rocordo Clark Quallfled Ap
pllcanto Must Have Knowledge 01
Medical Terminology And lCD 9
Coding Medical R'ecorda Spe
ctallzed Training Is Also Oaalr
'lble
For Those tnrereated In The Po
&amp;Ilion Apply Wllhln At 380 Colo
nlal Drive Bidwell OH
EOE

Responsible For Any Futher
Debts Occurred B~ Shalla A
Roce
Gregory A. Race

A LITTLE HELP HERE Kansas head coach Roy
Wllham s appears t o offer up a prayer durmg the Jay
hawks upset at the hands of Iowa last mght (AP)

Fiu:om IC&lt;Ido 113) Umltodl

2.11EOICAL RE&lt;;O- CLERK

I Gregory A Race Will Not Be

Loren Woods had 16 pmnts 10 rebounds and an
NCAA record rymg 14 blocked shots for the Wildcats (18 4 Pac 10 7 1) who tratled most of the
game and d1dn t lead by more than two pomts until
there were 23 seconds left It was Anzona s first
tnple double smce Damon Stoudanure had one
agamst
Oregon m 1995 Alex Scales had 18 pomts
GUIDANCE Duke coach M1ke Krzyzewsk t g1ves
for
the
Ducks (15 4 Pac 10 6-2) who lost for the
mstruct1ons to Jason Wtl l1ams dunng th e Blue Dev
15th consecuttve ttme at McKale Center
tis 90 86 OT w1n over UNC (AP)
Woods equaled the NCAA p1ark set by Davtd
even thmk more so now' North Carohna coach Bill Robmson of Navy m 1986 and tted by Shawn
Guthrtdge sa~d We JUSt got ourselves m too b1g of Bradley of BYU m 1990 and Roy Rogers of Alabama m 1996
a hole
Iowa 77, No 15 Kansas 69
I thmk they re the bes~ team 111 the country M1ke
Jacob Jaacks had 16 pomts and 10 rebounds as the
has done a tremendous JOb of moldmg those freshmen m wtth Battler and Carrawell and (Nate) Hawkeyes (10-10) beat the Jayhawks for the second
stratght season and won for the third lt'11e m thetr
James
last four games Freshman Ntck CoUlSon a nat1ve of
D uke led 41 24 at halfttme as the Tar Heels com
Iowa who was jeered by the crowd througho ut the
nutted 14 turnovers

-I'M

-ArlllMoe._,.,All
2• Hra 11 Oayt www Go-

EARN A LEGAL COLLEGE DE
GREE OUICKLV Bachelors

1 REGIBTERED NUIISE

MASTECTOMY Supplloa AI Ultlo
Or No Cost We Blll Medicare Or
Your Insurance Direct Gtl 2 New

PfT TECH 6111&gt;90rl • SIS Wind

I Addlsop P ke We Buy Furn
IUfO 741].387.()280
Whirlpool washer He avy Dut y
195 G E Washer Heavy Dul y

wa te rlfne Spec 3

3/4 200 PSI

$21 95 Per 100

1

$95 Kenmore Dryer Heavy Duly
$95 Whirlpool Dryer Nice $9S

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jael&lt;son Ohk&gt; ' BOO 537 9528

200 PSI

$37 00 Pe 100 A. ll Bfass Com
press on F t1 ngs In Stock

Ma~tag Gas Dryer $75 Eler. l c wr angle 4 Wheel Heav y Duty
Range 30 $75 Side By Side Ae Scooter Ha dly Used Ltke New
frlge rator $150 Cold Spot Re rig
1211 w nee l Chl'l Ra mp Real

oratorS t50 Skaggs App lances N (3041773 5207
76 VIne SlrOOI Gallipolis Ohio 1:.:.::ce:.=::.:.__:.c.::,.;:.._ _ _ _
741J.446-7:l9B I 888 618 0128

�•

- ...

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.'

710 Autoe for Sale

Me1chandlae
WANT ACOMPUTER11?1 BUT
NO CASH11 MMX TECH NOLO.

t993 Chevy Cavalier, SIK, good
condition &amp; 011 miltiQI, $2800,
740-915-3505.

Cre dit Problema OKII Even It

t993 f'onl P-. om'lm CUHno,

runa good, look&amp; goOd , 35 mpg,

•

-Down

t

550

Doors, Equipped With Evarytntng

•

BolOrtll - - $3750, 740-992-M24.
Crdl t ·800-e59-035t.

t994 Gernel COlor BuiCk Regal, 2

Building
Suppllea

Very Good Con411ion, $8,150,
740-2~5009 .

Block, br ick, atwer plptu . wind-

ows, lintels, t tc. Claude Wlnttra,

Rio ()rondo , OH Call 740·245·

5121 .

Peta lor Sale

580

e Ador~ble Aottweller PuQplts,

Tlill &amp;. Otwcii WI, Now Takin g
Oapostts Matts: 1125; Females
$150; Ready For Valtntlnt'sl

1994 Pontlac/Grand· AM , 2dr.J
Sspd, Teal Green w/Un)t d wind·
ows, AmBf'lcan Racing Wheels ,
New Tires. C.O. Player &amp; Car
Alarm , Excellent Condition .

$0,200.(3041773·5103 afttr
5:30PM or Leave Message.

1994 Pontiac/G rand-AM , 2dr./
5spd, Teal Green w/tinted wind·
ows, American Racing Wheels,
New Tire s. C.O. Player &amp; Car
Alarm , E~ecel le n t Condition . .

740-2!1&amp;-9123.
AKC Chocolate Lab Pu ppies,
GI'Oit Fomlly Dog&amp;. Roady To Go. $4,200.(:)041773·5103 . after
740-367.()659.

5:30PM or Leave Message.

AKC registered Chinese Shar-Pe!
puppies, lots of wrin kles, $300,

1995 Chevy Corsica 3.1 Litre V6, Beautiful Ca~ . A/C, Power
Windows &amp; Ooorlocks, Aski ng

740-949-2t 28.

CFA Reglllared Himalay an Per-

alan Kltten a, Shot,, Worm ed &amp;
Litter t:ralntd, Deposit Will Hold
For Valenti ne's Oav t 740· 367-

. 7705.
For Sale Old English Shoop Dog
Puppies. AKC Shots. Beaull full

304-273-2t 31.

Looking tor female longhair
Dachshund to breed, Please call
,740-446·2055 1eawt massage.

$1,000, 740·388-8210.

.

1995 Mustano 33000 milts; 1989

Cavalier 2·24. (3041675-4154.
CARS $100, $500 &amp; UP. POLICE

IMPOUND. Honda's To yota's,
Chevys, Jeeps, And Spor t Utili·

ties. Call Nowl 800·772·7470:
EXT.6336.
CARS FROM $211/MO. Impounds /Ropos. Faa. so Down /24
Mos. 0 19.9% For listings 1-800319·3323 )(21 56.

Miniature· Dachshund Puppies
Great Valentine Gift! 740·255·

720 Trucks lor Sale

Purebred Siberian Husky pup·
pies," 3 mates. 2 females, black &amp;
white &amp; silver, btue eyes. masks,
wormed , IO'Je :;Ids. vary nice,

1986 Dodge 112ton Pick-up.
64,000mlles. Slant 6, Auto, AJC,
AM /FM Cass. Custom Striping
Pkg. Ver y nice truck. $2 ,800
.080. Partial trades considered.

6750 Or Leave Message.

"

St30eacn. call740-992·5t44.
13041875-6959.
This Year Give A SPECIAL t988 Ford pickup. $900. 74().992·
•VALENTINU To Mom: Wh\10 3194.

Btchon Frlse 9· 11 " High Parents 1990 ' Mllsubishi Mig hty Max,
From South, 11 Family .Petl Oellv· Husband's Truck. Wile Says Has
ery Possible. 740·379-9081 , 740· To Go! $3.000. 740-388·0579.

:3~~~~~
· ------------1 1993 Foo-d Ranger Splash, 4 cy\, 5

sp., eo.ooo miles, excellent condt·
lion. s5soo. 740·992·1182 or 304--'-------~--=-:......--1 773·5305.
Hammond M300 .0rgan with Les· - -- -- - - - - .
Ito Sound C.ablnet $600. Call 1993 Ford truck t50 XL. auto. air.
(304)675·3388.
excellent shape. 740'669-5092.

570

Musical
Instruments

1994 Chevy S-10 pickup Extended cab, 6 cylinder, 6 speed, air,

FARM SUPPLIE S
&amp; LIVE STOCK

61 0 Farm Equipment'
0% Financing Now Avallbale On
John Deere Balers And Mower
Condllloners. Carmichael's Farm
&amp; Lawn t-800·594·111 t Or 740·

PS. P!l. t20,000 miles, good condillon. $4500, 740·448·1194 or
74().992-2529.
t994 S· tO Automati c $4,295:
199t S·10 Durango $2,895: 1988
S·10 Automatic V·8. NC. $2. t 95:
t992 Cavalier $3, t9~ : t992
Grand Am $2,695; 1991 Lumina
Euro $4,295 . Cook Motors, 740·

448·24t2 Gallipolis, Ohio. Don't 446-0103.
Mlss Our John Deere Day Febru- 92 Ford Ranger XLT, 5 sp:,
ary t2, 11 :00 A.M.
85,000 miles, aluminum wheels,

630

many e•tras. good condition,
$3400, 740-992·74t0. '

Livestock

Trail Horses For Sate. Starting At

$t ,000, 74Q.38H504.

ACHA 2 Year Old Red Roan Slud

.Colt, Foundation Bloodlines;
Brown &amp; While 3 Year Old f'ony,

740·388-9130.
Butcher Hog 740·2$-05t0.

640

Hay &amp; Grain

Straw: Bright Wire Tie Straw Year
' Round Delivery &amp; Volume Discount Available. Heritage Farm .

(304)675-5724.
So.optua Hay For Sate

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs
t 990 Chevy Con-v ersion Van

$3,800. (3041675-t907 .
1991 4&gt;&lt;4 S·tO Blazer, 2 door, 4.3
V·6, auto, ac, $6300 OBO, .740· .
742·2574.
1993 F-350 Ford.4x4, Diesel XLT,
Automauc, PW. PL. 740·388·
8796.
t994 Ford F·150, 4x4. 6 cyl .. 5.

Box 9, Plant Lane Road, Lakin ,

Februa' 4, 2000

ILL'S

45771 .

JONES'

C2)41tc

218708aahan
Road
A•clne, Ohio
45771
740-MI-2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'

Public Notice

(740) 367·0266
1·800-9 50-3359

TO DEFENDANT JAMES C.

AND, If DECEASED,
HIS UNKNOWN SUIIVMNG
SPOUSE, AND/011 HEIRS.
WHOSE RESIDENCE IS
UNKNOWN, COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS, MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
MEIGS COUNTY
COURTHOUSE
SECOND STREET
POMEROY, OH 45789
IN MEIGS COUNTY COURT
OF COMMON PLEAS
POMEROY, OHIO
LAVEAN JOADAN,
end
MARY JOADAN,
PLAINTIFFS,
vs.
. ROBEAT HOMAN, ET AL.
Including JAMES C. EGAI,
whou
realdlnce · In
unknown.
Cau No. 99-CV-058
Judge Freel w. Crow, 111
NOnCE
Plelntlfle have brought.
thle action naming_1ou ••
one o1 lila Dlfendenl*ln lila
above·n•m•d court by
filing their Complelnt on
999.
June
The21, ·1oblect
of the
complaint le to partition
r111 11tate In which you
own an undtvldtd tractlonel
lntor11t, uld real 11t1te
btlng generally deacrlbtd
aa 67.118 acres, In Section
28, Columbia Townehlp,
YouCounty,
Ire re
·~ulrtd to
Melge
Ohio.
anewer the . o'mplalnt
within 28 daye 11ter tho leat
publication of thla notice, ·
which will be publlehed
once eech week tor elx
euccoeolvo wuka, end the
lilt publication will be
made on 2·25, 2000.
Your anawer mua1 bl ftlld
wlth the Clerk or Court end
aerved on coun.. l for
Plalntlffo: Herman A.
C1reon, SOWASH, CARSON
&amp; FERRIER, 39 N. College
Street, Athene, Ohio 45701.
ln caaa of your failure to .
en ewer or otharwltl
r11pond •• permltttd by the
Ohio Rultl of Civil
Procedure wlthln 'the lime
ltated,ludgmant by defeult
win bl r~ndertd egalnst ~ou
EGA~

•

S\\llt\9

• Gt\~1\Q

Hours ·
7:00AM ·8PM

2 0 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

BURKE'S
740-7 42-2706
740-446·1141

Public Notice

on sa1urd'ay, Fe bruary 12'
2000 at ·10:00 a.m., the
Home National sank will
offer for eela al public
auction on the a.ank parldng
lot the following vehlclee:
Franklin Skldder Model
1TOXL
1990 Ford Rangor XLT
VINI1FTCR10T4LUB81278
The terms of the eale are
caah.
,
The Home Netlonal Bank
rtMrvee the right to rtiiCI
1ny or ell bide or to romova
lny unll from the ule el
any time.
Arrangements may be
made to lnapect any of the
above nemtd vehlclea prior
t th
1 b
Ill 740
~.~,~~ e Y co ng
•
(2) 1, 4, a, 10 41c

SAVE TIME AND MONEY
SliOP THE

CIASSIFIEDS! ·

WORRYIIIIU.

Manager, (304)675-Q856.

~M~~~~CLOSEO It

•

~penence

,
'. r

.------...;.-.----------:

WICK'S.HfiULIMG
ctnd

Discount

99J 7945
667-7311

evrdlld'I'IHG
*G ....
. *U st
.~ au 1mg me one rav.,,

LIIL
. .

Budget Priced Transmissions All
Types, AcCess To Over 10,000
Transmissions. CVC Joints, 740·

245·58n.

'83 ,Otds Datta 88. runs good, no. 790 .
rust, new llras, $850, 740-742t300.

Campers&amp;
Motor Hom••

1973 Dodge motor home, full
CARS $100, $500 &amp; UP. POLleE . balhrOom,
hot water, stove, oven,
IMPOUND. Honda's Toyotl'l ,

BAN.KRUPTCY

Really for s change?

&amp;Juthern Ohlo Disposal

refri(lerator, good condition, 140·

810

740-245-0319.

MasonVFW
Dance Saturday Night
Music by Flashback
Members and Guest
602
will be having a Ham &amp; Turkey
Dinner
Jan. 6, 11 AM till ?
Drive In or carry OUt

Announcement

Home
Improvement a

BINGO

WATERPRODFINO

tabllahod t 975. Call 24 Hra. 17401
4~8.0870 , 1·800·287-0578. Rog-

1984 Chevrolet Monte .Carlo, Mint

ers Waterproofing.

Condlbon. ·740-367-7117.

1984 Trans-Am. Origfnal Paint .

AMERICAN LEGION

POST 467
RUTLAND, OHIO

·

Appliance Parts And Service: All
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex·
Perience All Work Guaranteed,

Loaded. $4.500. (3041675-1907.
1985 Escort, $595, 740·446·
Franch City Maytag. 740: 4462t55.
7795.
t08e Dodge Omnt1 t2,000 Mltea,
Runs Good. New ShOck, Struts,

Ballery $t .ooo Call . 740·44 t ·
1247.
1986 Ford Mustang LX, 74 ,500

Milea, 4 Cylinder, Automatic, Air,

PL. Cruleo. Great Shape\ 740'

- t.

.1986 Toyota Camry Run&amp;· Good.
740-44&amp;-9287. .
1986 Tran s- An, 350, Automatic,
Good ConditiOn , $1 ,995 . 740·

441Hl390.

•l

.

1987 Mercury Grand Marquis,

$1250.00 AND

COVERAll MON &amp; WED.
DOORS OPEN AT 4:30

Jlm1 Drywall &amp; · Construction .
New Construction &amp; Remodel/

Drywall. Siding, Roolo, Add!·
Ilona. Patnllng, tic. (3041874·
4623 or (304)674-0t 56.
Livingston's Basement water
Proofing: all basement repalra
done, free estimates, lifetime
guarantee. 12yrl on job experi-

Superior Home Maintenance Anc:l
Plumbing W• Do A,ll Aepatrs·On
·Homes And Mobile Homes, 7•0·

5Spd ., Caasane, Looks/Runs

7t28.

STAIIURST

6323.

$3,500. ceo 740-388·9788:
441.0113.
1989 Olds Regoncy Brougham,'
excellent condition. Nice Car. 840 Electrlcel and
$3,900. (3041773-5840.
. Refrigeration
1990 Goo 'ltact&lt;er, LSI, 4•4. I..C.,
Good. 3ml per gallon. (3041875·

GUARANTEED 60 A
GAME. OVER 80 PEOPLE
80 A GAME, OVER 99
PEOPlE 99.00.AGAME

C&amp;C General Home Main·
tenance- Painting., 'Jinyl siding,
carpentry, doors, windows, baths.
mobile home repair and more. For
free estimate c:all Chet, 740-992·

$2,300. Good · Condition. ence. (304)895-3887.
(3041882-2888 or (304)882·2085.
1988 Park Avenue, Nice Sh1pe,

C:J..NX!i' FN..lt.T I

fW.I !iT~t&gt;~
~loJ~I

William Safranek, Attorney

•Residential

-c•._.....,

592-5025 Athena ·

•ladDJirlal
SerVIa&amp; Melp ud Galllri-.. Co•ly
CoD ror more IDformllloD -

'

Slop In And See
Sieve Riffle

Ae&amp;ldenUal or comme~cial wiring
new service or repairs. Master U·
censed electrlc:lan . Ridenour

t992 Ford Probe GL 4 Cylinder 5
Spoed, CO Player A/C, $3,500, Electrical; WV00030B, 304·675·
t788.
74\).388-8888.

GAMESS1ART

AT 6:30

D Auto p o stery •
Ohio
Truck seats, car seats, headliners,
truck tarp~. convertible &amp; vinyl tops,
Four wheeler seats, motorcycle seats,
boat cover$. carpets, etc.
Mon • Frl 8:30 - 5:00
Rutland ,

Over 40 yra experience

(740) 742·8888
'

1·888-521-0916
'

:

'

'

Phone

11C.

......

...... bit,.•

21 llldco22Ciumpe

23e.~
24 c
25

A , I.ITTL.E
C:.O.NI&gt;\1&gt; TtiAN

IN MINI&gt;.

I

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33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio .

IO X l OS·!O

SEEKS SOURCES FOR LEASED SPACE ,

The United States Government, Department ~
Velerans Affairs Medical Cenler, Chillicothe, Ohio, i~
seeking to lease approximate!~ 1500 to 2000
contiguous, occupiable square feet of space for a fie!
service center to be local~ in the Pomeroy, Ohio area\
Square footage on 1st floor ground floor is desirabl~
and must have handiCap accessibility. Space must
suitable for 1 to 2 examinations rooms, clinical supp,orf
area/office, administr~tive office, · waiting .room, a'
storage room, small conference room, patient restroom
facilities and staff restroom facilities.

. 740-992-5212
1121l00 1 mo. pd.

YOUNG'S

be

CUPIITEI SEIVICE

•Room ttddlllonl &amp;Rlmocllllng
•NiwGanlgn

•EiectriCII l Plumbing
•Roallng &amp; Gultlll
•VInyl Siding &amp;P1lnllng
. •PIIIo &amp; POrdl Dicke

Space offered is desired within the city limits of
Pomeroy, Ohio, and must be located within close• '
proximity to a major/principal highway or.
thoroughfare. Property •musl have ample parkin
available for the exClusive use by the VA. Close
proximity to veterans ' organization is desired.
Expressions of interesl should address the following:
•Brief description, with sketch or picture, of available'
property
.
.
•Exact location including complele address of
available property
·
•Available of parking with number of space
• Rentable square feet of property
•Name of nearest major/principal highway or'
thoroughfare wilh . approximate .distance from
available property.

'FIW Elflnllttt

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215

Pomeroy, Ohio
22 yn. LocaJ

~

,.....,a.....

·eonstrudfon
New .Construclion 8i.
Remodeling - Kilchen
Cabinets· Vinyl Siding·
Roofs - Decks · Garages
Free Estimates
740-741-3411

Bryan Ree•es .

Submit ~xpressions of interest in writing, no later
than Febrnary 18, 2008, to:

Contnctlng otllcer (90C) . •
VAMedieal tenler
17173 S.R. 104
CbiUkotbe,
Ohio 45601
.,
FAX 740-772-7008

bini
Plllllpa

6..--+-4---J.-~~

41 Short lick* : '
42 "TIIrAI-- ·•'

'

For additional information, yqu niay contact Sharon
Kemptort, Contra~ting Officer, at 74(). 172:7011.

.

· NOTE: This isa requestfor Information only, and· ··
·.

.

~:

·Calllll-11111

r-:===~~~:""!:~·

FREE ·
E$TIMATES

1185-4473

dwtv.UV. ·.•~

47 Concerning : •.

.. 12.:.....,

.

52 Ccwq
pl. 114 c .. ._, .... . ::

·:

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lula Campos

.

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c.llbrity ~ere•••
~
7 • II'Y tlrnoul peop~t, PIMind Pflld
Eodl
ln . . _ _ b"""""!. T-"'"' ZOOII"!'L

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N U S Y 1··

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ZPHU

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SAV
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VUSRW ,
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PAXKSY
CUYXKSA
J
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "TTie music lily lo ~ lotl"hea people becauaa ,·"·
. ·
·
. ...
n'speaka on being hurna~."- Cunls Moyflekl
J

RO..rrongo 'lottors of ·
0· .four
acrornblld worcla

,.

low to '""" four slrnplo -··· -•

.I I I
~

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GREES

...•

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SAHAB ·
A compromise is the art of di:
1--lns~~~T~~rl~· viQing a cake in such a way thai

I

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quOied
by filling In tho milling words
you develop from oqp ·No. 3 below.

v

,...

SCIAMoLITS ANSWIU

'•

Voiced- Opine· Troop · Limpid -IMPROVED
My elderly uncle taught me not to talk unless I could
n;~ake the sHence IMPROVED. .

IISSElL IUILDIIS :
· INC.
New Homes • Vln~l
Siding • Nilw Garages
• Aeplace!Jient Windows
• Room Additions
• Roofing

COMMEROAL and RESIDOOW
FREE ESTIMATES

740-992~7599

n

Bulldo•er &amp; Bacltlaoe
S.ri&gt;keo ·

Houee &amp; Trailer Sitae
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Sepde SyoteirU &amp;

. Utllbi&lt;l•
1740),24~1

-

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..

,

,..

.·• ,..,
. ."
. ,··1

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.~

ilive measures can · now be ~Aken
. today 10 shore up importanl .rel~tion· '
' '
.
, ·Ships lhal lul'ev't been ~ot~· your .
· ~ Saturday, Feb. ' · 2000
wtiy, be they businea or soctal. Oet
. In sililalions where your Ieider·
workins on lhem. .
'ship sl&lt;,ills were once llappy to· pl1y
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
. second fiddle, y&lt;iu' II now begin to
Don't be afraid 10 lAke • well c~cu·
want lo direct the ortheslra in· lhe
laled risk where yqur ~ is con· .
year ahiad. The new effects will be
cemed'tOday. You c1n be ralher.for·
music to your C8f!.
tunale now in iitualions lhll have
~ AQUA"-IUS (Jan. 20-Fcb. . 19)
compclilive elemen\i. · ·
'
if!tat which you personally manage or
'. GEMINHMay 21-June 20) if you
~it'ect today havelhe best c~ for
believe you are a winne,r, then· the
s.uccess today. Don't allow inept ·
results will reflecl il inday. '(our sue·
associates :to handle anything you
cess may he dclqmined by hoW
fc'now you can do better. 'Tryin&amp; to
much faith you have in yourself.
~lll:h up a broken romiiiCe.? The ,.
CANCER (Jun~ 21-luly 22)
1\.SirO-Oraph Mlll:hmater Can help
There's a chance 1 side ven1ure wilh
you u!.dersiand what to do to make " 'profitabie palenlial tould be brought
the relationship work.' Mail $2.7S lo ·
to your ~nlion lodl)':lf your .ource
Malc)lmakcr, c/o lhis newspaper,
is crediiable, it'll be worth j l to
P.O. Box 17,8, Murray Hill Slation,
explore ,it funher. ·
ilew York, NY 101~.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) A oluloi• PISCES (Feb. 2Q-Merch 20) A
lizing
influence in an ariangeJIICnl
tiew ambition is likely 10 be awak·
·
thlll
hiun't
been 100 '-rmoniuus lale·
~ned in you today. However, no ~•1:
ly
mighl
be
ushered In on a new wind
ter how excilcd you set oboul n•.it·
today.
The
chan,. will be a welrllight be wise to keep it to y~lf..
comed
by
one
and Ill. .
·
tintillhin•• ue belter cryltalliud .
VIROQ
(Au
I
.'
23-Sept.
22)
Be
•
I ARIES- (Merch 2l•Apri1[9) J1o1.

.

.

doer, n&lt;it adiclatortoday. Focwt your
lltention and effons on l'tsponsibili·
ties y&lt;iu c111 W&lt;e care of by yo~lf.
rether than lh,rou1h the need of ·sur- ·
roptes. ·
·
,
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Today
will olr~ y'ou a chance to put your
alflirs in sood order. Begin immedi-· · ·
ately to reoralllize slipshod silualions
so lhll you can be more elrective and
productive In lhe fulure. ,
.
· SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Present conditiqr11 are favoring you in
mauen· lhal need closure. Give IOJ)
priority to impcll1ionl issues, espc· .
r:iolly domeslic ones .lhal should be
puliOJe&amp;(, !•

•

.

. '

·

SAOITIARIUS .(Nov. 23-Dec.
m lr' y'ciu haven 'I ,produced lhe
lyPeS of result.! you dcsite, don'l hcs·
ilale today lo revise your plans and
11111 anew. II msy only lake a few ·
chanps to pt you hack on lnlek.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 2.2-Jan .. 19)
Take. advanmse of loday 's aspects
d111 are favorins you where your
fi~ancial interests are concerned. '

The.C propilious tilltes offer a bit of
lhe Midas louch.

\

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FEBRUARY4l

'

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AD Malues Tractor &amp; ·•
Eqojpment Parts · ~
Factory Authorized t
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I ~AlDAY

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DIPDYIAI :'
PARt'S
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•

992-17 17

·HOWAlD
EICAVITIIIII CO. ,

Remodeling
Stop I Compare

from me"

43FMIWII
44 Pebollum

I

1 0 X 20 S(lO

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GETANE
1--.IJi-c...:;1,..:.7-TI:..,_I=-,-1-j ·8 C......plohl the chuckle

dlllnnd dlnctl to
. JDIU 'daar

101111 BISSELL,

•Compl~

.
As regular readers know, I teach a
lot of bridge classes. I enjoy them
immensely •. despite the occasional
frustration s. Still, I haven' t yet had
the problem that confronted B.J.
Becker some 30 years ago when he.
was using.this deal. How should the
play go in four hearts after WeSileads
1he diamond king?
Nonh has a very soft hand, with
all seven points in quacks. But with ·
four lrumps, it would be .taclically
poor to pass. (Yes, in the modern
tournament game, West would make
a wea.k jump overcall of lhnie dia·.
moods. But what would happen after
that? Nonh .would 'pass, South would
reopen with a takeout double, North
would bid three hearts, and South
would · probab!y pass. Pre-emplive
. bidding sometimes ' backfires,
because three hearts is laydown.)
East should overtake the diamond
, king at trick one, cash 1he spade ace
(not necessary here, but good technique),.and return the diamond eight.
West will win wilh the ·queen and
conlinue wilh lhe diamond nine or·
10, allowing East 10 overruff the
dummy to defeat ttle contract.
Becker 's beginner sittin g East
played the. diamond eight at trick one,
though. Now four !leans couldn 't be
beaten.
·
Becker pointed out 10 East that
parlner's opening lead of the· king
showed eilher the ace-king or king·
queen. And as East could see 'the ace,
she knew. Wesl had the kin g-queen.
This drew a blank stare, so Becker
asked , " Have you ever ·seen anyone
with , say, K-10· 4·2, plunk down the
king a~ the opening lead ?"
"The people I play with do it all
the
"
·

.........,.,.,'

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..

37S.myn

I

7

(No Sunday Calla)

• NewHomea
•Oaragea

·,

t.--&amp;.--L--it......J......J~ each person believes he gollhe •
,.......,...------'·;.;· · - -- piece.
.

www.sunsethom .

CONSTRUCTION

,.

Arch-

HARIWFIJ ,
S L RL

lmpll

31 Woocllcl
vellly

I

STORACE

,o

~·

30r.:=.u.. '..

(740) 59:J-6C&gt;711

High &amp; Dry
• UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT ~
DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS AFFAIRS'~ Self-Storage

is not asolicitation ror otren.

1-I
cae .

2t' llrkh pert
2tEdgH
21 Egypllln

her

.

WA~

Sales Representative

NowR•tinl

UncondlliOnal lifetime guarantee.
Local references furnished . Es-

.

· '"'II

!&gt;0 TW..T~ IT- ·
IT'!! W-

&amp;.1\11-lD· E.IJU'(
~i:JL.

For lnforinallon reg'ercllng
Bankruptcy contact

pl'I)Tides waste dlspoool
ror

I

IASEMENT

1980·90 Hondaa From $29/Mo.,

• 3901 .

h --&lt;

"' aftOII\OY loofart pncaodlog. .

750 East Slate Street
Athens, Ohio 45701

· 1968 ~\nnebago Motor Home

'

LOSER
IT'!i &amp;.01 ..,
~II&gt; n\~T

''"' rtlim a4oOior of fioandal oWigrrHoros and.,... tIN ditlrWtort o/IIIIGIIg aodlt«s. Aptt1011 goill) lhrGugh boakrupky moy cortio propotlj, a
01 ' oxompl" 11'01*11. lor hlo or her pononaf UM. lflls moy lododo a car, a hoUM,
clotfoos, and hotsohold pis. Y011 shotld dlnd ""' qUOiliam """" '-krupky It

'

SERVICES

' I

•

Larry Schey

1\os. Call Now\ BOO· 772· 7470: 992-2t43. 740-llB2-6373.
EXT. 7832.

Impounds\ 0 Down, 24 Months 0
t9.9% Llatingo, 800·3t9-3323 Ext

wO~IIIG
P~#Cff(TI- Y.

~HE .BORN

740-367~0652 .

Accessor lea

Needs Work $1,200: 1987 Ford
Araostar $1 ,2_
50: 1966 Mustang
Fast Bade Serious Inquiries Ontyl

fO FAIC, MY .
- PL~N IS"

•• •

tires. 39.000 miles. $11 ,500.
(3041675-1742.
1999 Chevy Btazar LS 7,300

accepted at 13041852-60901.

Chevys, Jeeps, And Sport Utili·

,/

. ""I. .

(740) 99Z·J470

New.

Wrlnan bids will be accepted un· 7 40
Motorcycles
til ·february 11 , 2000 . .Bids can '
be mailed to: WV Department of 1999 Polaris 4x4 Less than 500
Agriculture, MarkeUng and De· Miles, $5,000 Firm . 'Phone:
'Jtlopment Division . Land Sec- (3041576-3259, Alter'5PM.
tion, P.O. Box 160, Slatersville,
WV 26175 . (Faxed bids will be 760 . Auto Parta &amp;

710 1Autos for Sale

~

· t~ ~OP~ TO L.IVf F()fCfVfJ.

Sand*TDpsoii*FIII Dirt*Mulch
·
Bulldozer Services

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

-oJ:z.?

.

H

~LI:

"f.Da..ld. ,-..

· -"'

~;;A~ WJ'II I

iF;;;;;~~;;~=~====;;;;;;;;;;,

Happy Ad

5 Afw. 15org.
I P1 auenl legelly
.7 Type ol fty

By Phillip Alder

Honest &amp; Re.l iable .
Free Estimates
S e nior C itizens

nne.

Peunltllo

· Teaching bridge
can be lots of fun

50 Yrs . Combined

Prog.....lve top
Lie. I OO.SO 11MII/Ifn

4 "c'nlllln

Opening lead: • K

IT WAS NOT

1997 Jeep Wrangler 4 cyl, 5sp,
ale, sofl top, new wheels ~ and

Miles EKtrast

TRAN SPORTATI ON

BARNEY

._.

E

27 Du 111 d In

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South
Weal North East ·
Pass
Pass 2 •
Pass.
Pass Pass

ftdMIL
.,.1'1
.P WMBINft

AT 6:30 P..M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy., OH
Paying $80.00
per 9111}8
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburat

-P• or

2 · - bOyl"

In
3t Glnun city
10 Ofdlr of
.40 tlablt_....
..,.._
-43 ~ excltld 11 Eye llyer
· 4&amp; fiMdy or 12 Europllfl
47 . . . bllckblnl

•,AK

No Embarraasment ...
You'111 Tftated with Respect! ,
c8~1Ncwr for Instant Appi'OYIIII*

1 Rueolln

21 .._..,..,.

32......
33 Fiber 111ent .
M lie. Dlcldnton
· 31Hithlnl
31 "dolat cent

•AKQ32
• 15 4

No Crtdh • Slow Credit • Bllnkruptey
R11po • Dlvordecl

OOWN

2311p -, 3

• 10 9 5 3

$41.00 per
hundred ft.

Pomeroy Eaglea
Club Blogo 0J1
ThUrsdays

2081Ue-

• J 94
• A8

9:00..12:00

CRIDIY PROBLIMI???

I 1/ 2" Water Pipe

I /03100 1 mo. pd.

. ·

....

-

1170....
.. Pllfwld

11 Spring holl dty
17 c:-.e tile
11 Awrtr

• Q' J 8
a 10 a 7 s
• J 3
• Q J 7 2
Eui
• A 10 7 4

Soulb
• K 53

Spring hweloplltnl
Spedal

Joseph Jacks
740-992-2068

Public Notice
lor lhe relief demanded In
the Complaint
·
Larry Spencer ·
Clerk of Court o1 Common
Molge Counh·,P~:!
.,,
Melge County Courthouee
Second Street
Pomeroy, OH 45719
(1) 21 , 28, (2) 4, 11 • 1B, 25, ·
atc

I

AO\IUaD l&gt;iW'&lt;NlE SYST£MS. INC.

St. Rt. 7
Tuppen PlaiDJ, OH
740-985-3813

New Roofs • Repairs
• Coating • Gutters
• Siding • Drywall
.• Pa inting • Plumbing
Free Estimates

Cle an &amp; Scotch
Guard $40 - Any
N o rmal Size R ooin.

1I I I

G~W Plasdes

JACKS ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUOION

CARPET SERVICE

........

=~klcll

14 11ow cervo
11 Certlly

740-8115 3813
4" thru -48" Plutlc Cutwn In Stock
Full Une Of Water Storage llnkl •
septic I Clltllm Tankl
ISewer Pipe: 3" thru a•, O• PI" I Res11u1at:orsl
Open:
SI:CJ0.4:30 W•lkd•~
•

·

.. , .. ~ .. hill

13 Guldee

1llppeq Pllllll, Ohio ~

I t Fit. 7

clanty

~=
7 lllwpo•dlc

PWnCS AND SUPPLY

SELF STORAOE

51 FcAcuutd

ACROSS
1 "TIMJGI

ALDER

windows, 740·992·2t43, 74().992·
6373.
Li~e

NBA Croaaword Puzzle

PHILLIP

Townehlp 11
compl.ted lnd ltYIIIebll foi
review 11 townehlp
-'lnp or by eppolnlnwlth clerk It 247·3121,
23231 Hill Ad., Aeclne, OH

1996. Jeep Cherokee Sport, 4 dr.,
auto, air, amlfm cassette; cruise,
tilt, pW, pi, 4x4, roof, rac:k, tinted

WVl. Hay has 1~. 000 Milos. $25,000
been stored Inside. Average
(3041882·2937.
weight per bate Is 900· 1100 lbs.
Hay will be sold In units of 25
bales par person. Our personnel
and equlpm&amp;n f will assist In
loading. Hay Is .available for inspection, prior to bid . Contact
Persort John Leport, Acting

IRIDOII:

Let ert

sp., needs some work, $5500

Pleasa ~t.

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5

LIGAL NOTICE

WV 25287 (Across from laki n 1997 Ford Con..,ersion Van .
State Hospital, At. 62 North of l oaded, TVIYCA /CO Player.

Point

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Ftlday,
~EYOOP

TIM nnanoll l - of

080. 740-742·2574.

200 Round Bales of llrst cutting
Hay, harvested In 1998. Hay Is
located at the Lakin State Farm,

•

&gt;

.. ... -

Public Notice

540 MIICellaneoua

-

t•

Pomeroy, Mlddltpbrt, Ohio

.Page B 4 • The Dally Sentinel

ov Wt Finance, ·o• Down! Pil l

·-

'

••

. '

'· .

.!

I

�•

- ...

. .

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.'

710 Autoe for Sale

Me1chandlae
WANT ACOMPUTER11?1 BUT
NO CASH11 MMX TECH NOLO.

t993 Chevy Cavalier, SIK, good
condition &amp; 011 miltiQI, $2800,
740-915-3505.

Cre dit Problema OKII Even It

t993 f'onl P-. om'lm CUHno,

runa good, look&amp; goOd , 35 mpg,

•

-Down

t

550

Doors, Equipped With Evarytntng

•

BolOrtll - - $3750, 740-992-M24.
Crdl t ·800-e59-035t.

t994 Gernel COlor BuiCk Regal, 2

Building
Suppllea

Very Good Con411ion, $8,150,
740-2~5009 .

Block, br ick, atwer plptu . wind-

ows, lintels, t tc. Claude Wlnttra,

Rio ()rondo , OH Call 740·245·

5121 .

Peta lor Sale

580

e Ador~ble Aottweller PuQplts,

Tlill &amp;. Otwcii WI, Now Takin g
Oapostts Matts: 1125; Females
$150; Ready For Valtntlnt'sl

1994 Pontlac/Grand· AM , 2dr.J
Sspd, Teal Green w/Un)t d wind·
ows, AmBf'lcan Racing Wheels ,
New Tires. C.O. Player &amp; Car
Alarm , Excellent Condition .

$0,200.(3041773·5103 afttr
5:30PM or Leave Message.

1994 Pontiac/G rand-AM , 2dr./
5spd, Teal Green w/tinted wind·
ows, American Racing Wheels,
New Tire s. C.O. Player &amp; Car
Alarm , E~ecel le n t Condition . .

740-2!1&amp;-9123.
AKC Chocolate Lab Pu ppies,
GI'Oit Fomlly Dog&amp;. Roady To Go. $4,200.(:)041773·5103 . after
740-367.()659.

5:30PM or Leave Message.

AKC registered Chinese Shar-Pe!
puppies, lots of wrin kles, $300,

1995 Chevy Corsica 3.1 Litre V6, Beautiful Ca~ . A/C, Power
Windows &amp; Ooorlocks, Aski ng

740-949-2t 28.

CFA Reglllared Himalay an Per-

alan Kltten a, Shot,, Worm ed &amp;
Litter t:ralntd, Deposit Will Hold
For Valenti ne's Oav t 740· 367-

. 7705.
For Sale Old English Shoop Dog
Puppies. AKC Shots. Beaull full

304-273-2t 31.

Looking tor female longhair
Dachshund to breed, Please call
,740-446·2055 1eawt massage.

$1,000, 740·388-8210.

.

1995 Mustano 33000 milts; 1989

Cavalier 2·24. (3041675-4154.
CARS $100, $500 &amp; UP. POLICE

IMPOUND. Honda's To yota's,
Chevys, Jeeps, And Spor t Utili·

ties. Call Nowl 800·772·7470:
EXT.6336.
CARS FROM $211/MO. Impounds /Ropos. Faa. so Down /24
Mos. 0 19.9% For listings 1-800319·3323 )(21 56.

Miniature· Dachshund Puppies
Great Valentine Gift! 740·255·

720 Trucks lor Sale

Purebred Siberian Husky pup·
pies," 3 mates. 2 females, black &amp;
white &amp; silver, btue eyes. masks,
wormed , IO'Je :;Ids. vary nice,

1986 Dodge 112ton Pick-up.
64,000mlles. Slant 6, Auto, AJC,
AM /FM Cass. Custom Striping
Pkg. Ver y nice truck. $2 ,800
.080. Partial trades considered.

6750 Or Leave Message.

"

St30eacn. call740-992·5t44.
13041875-6959.
This Year Give A SPECIAL t988 Ford pickup. $900. 74().992·
•VALENTINU To Mom: Wh\10 3194.

Btchon Frlse 9· 11 " High Parents 1990 ' Mllsubishi Mig hty Max,
From South, 11 Family .Petl Oellv· Husband's Truck. Wile Says Has
ery Possible. 740·379-9081 , 740· To Go! $3.000. 740-388·0579.

:3~~~~~
· ------------1 1993 Foo-d Ranger Splash, 4 cy\, 5

sp., eo.ooo miles, excellent condt·
lion. s5soo. 740·992·1182 or 304--'-------~--=-:......--1 773·5305.
Hammond M300 .0rgan with Les· - -- -- - - - - .
Ito Sound C.ablnet $600. Call 1993 Ford truck t50 XL. auto. air.
(304)675·3388.
excellent shape. 740'669-5092.

570

Musical
Instruments

1994 Chevy S-10 pickup Extended cab, 6 cylinder, 6 speed, air,

FARM SUPPLIE S
&amp; LIVE STOCK

61 0 Farm Equipment'
0% Financing Now Avallbale On
John Deere Balers And Mower
Condllloners. Carmichael's Farm
&amp; Lawn t-800·594·111 t Or 740·

PS. P!l. t20,000 miles, good condillon. $4500, 740·448·1194 or
74().992-2529.
t994 S· tO Automati c $4,295:
199t S·10 Durango $2,895: 1988
S·10 Automatic V·8. NC. $2. t 95:
t992 Cavalier $3, t9~ : t992
Grand Am $2,695; 1991 Lumina
Euro $4,295 . Cook Motors, 740·

448·24t2 Gallipolis, Ohio. Don't 446-0103.
Mlss Our John Deere Day Febru- 92 Ford Ranger XLT, 5 sp:,
ary t2, 11 :00 A.M.
85,000 miles, aluminum wheels,

630

many e•tras. good condition,
$3400, 740-992·74t0. '

Livestock

Trail Horses For Sate. Starting At

$t ,000, 74Q.38H504.

ACHA 2 Year Old Red Roan Slud

.Colt, Foundation Bloodlines;
Brown &amp; While 3 Year Old f'ony,

740·388-9130.
Butcher Hog 740·2$-05t0.

640

Hay &amp; Grain

Straw: Bright Wire Tie Straw Year
' Round Delivery &amp; Volume Discount Available. Heritage Farm .

(304)675-5724.
So.optua Hay For Sate

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs
t 990 Chevy Con-v ersion Van

$3,800. (3041675-t907 .
1991 4&gt;&lt;4 S·tO Blazer, 2 door, 4.3
V·6, auto, ac, $6300 OBO, .740· .
742·2574.
1993 F-350 Ford.4x4, Diesel XLT,
Automauc, PW. PL. 740·388·
8796.
t994 Ford F·150, 4x4. 6 cyl .. 5.

Box 9, Plant Lane Road, Lakin ,

Februa' 4, 2000

ILL'S

45771 .

JONES'

C2)41tc

218708aahan
Road
A•clne, Ohio
45771
740-MI-2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'

Public Notice

(740) 367·0266
1·800-9 50-3359

TO DEFENDANT JAMES C.

AND, If DECEASED,
HIS UNKNOWN SUIIVMNG
SPOUSE, AND/011 HEIRS.
WHOSE RESIDENCE IS
UNKNOWN, COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS, MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
MEIGS COUNTY
COURTHOUSE
SECOND STREET
POMEROY, OH 45789
IN MEIGS COUNTY COURT
OF COMMON PLEAS
POMEROY, OHIO
LAVEAN JOADAN,
end
MARY JOADAN,
PLAINTIFFS,
vs.
. ROBEAT HOMAN, ET AL.
Including JAMES C. EGAI,
whou
realdlnce · In
unknown.
Cau No. 99-CV-058
Judge Freel w. Crow, 111
NOnCE
Plelntlfle have brought.
thle action naming_1ou ••
one o1 lila Dlfendenl*ln lila
above·n•m•d court by
filing their Complelnt on
999.
June
The21, ·1oblect
of the
complaint le to partition
r111 11tate In which you
own an undtvldtd tractlonel
lntor11t, uld real 11t1te
btlng generally deacrlbtd
aa 67.118 acres, In Section
28, Columbia Townehlp,
YouCounty,
Ire re
·~ulrtd to
Melge
Ohio.
anewer the . o'mplalnt
within 28 daye 11ter tho leat
publication of thla notice, ·
which will be publlehed
once eech week tor elx
euccoeolvo wuka, end the
lilt publication will be
made on 2·25, 2000.
Your anawer mua1 bl ftlld
wlth the Clerk or Court end
aerved on coun.. l for
Plalntlffo: Herman A.
C1reon, SOWASH, CARSON
&amp; FERRIER, 39 N. College
Street, Athene, Ohio 45701.
ln caaa of your failure to .
en ewer or otharwltl
r11pond •• permltttd by the
Ohio Rultl of Civil
Procedure wlthln 'the lime
ltated,ludgmant by defeult
win bl r~ndertd egalnst ~ou
EGA~

•

S\\llt\9

• Gt\~1\Q

Hours ·
7:00AM ·8PM

2 0 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

BURKE'S
740-7 42-2706
740-446·1141

Public Notice

on sa1urd'ay, Fe bruary 12'
2000 at ·10:00 a.m., the
Home National sank will
offer for eela al public
auction on the a.ank parldng
lot the following vehlclee:
Franklin Skldder Model
1TOXL
1990 Ford Rangor XLT
VINI1FTCR10T4LUB81278
The terms of the eale are
caah.
,
The Home Netlonal Bank
rtMrvee the right to rtiiCI
1ny or ell bide or to romova
lny unll from the ule el
any time.
Arrangements may be
made to lnapect any of the
above nemtd vehlclea prior
t th
1 b
Ill 740
~.~,~~ e Y co ng
•
(2) 1, 4, a, 10 41c

SAVE TIME AND MONEY
SliOP THE

CIASSIFIEDS! ·

WORRYIIIIU.

Manager, (304)675-Q856.

~M~~~~CLOSEO It

•

~penence

,
'. r

.------...;.-.----------:

WICK'S.HfiULIMG
ctnd

Discount

99J 7945
667-7311

evrdlld'I'IHG
*G ....
. *U st
.~ au 1mg me one rav.,,

LIIL
. .

Budget Priced Transmissions All
Types, AcCess To Over 10,000
Transmissions. CVC Joints, 740·

245·58n.

'83 ,Otds Datta 88. runs good, no. 790 .
rust, new llras, $850, 740-742t300.

Campers&amp;
Motor Hom••

1973 Dodge motor home, full
CARS $100, $500 &amp; UP. POLleE . balhrOom,
hot water, stove, oven,
IMPOUND. Honda's Toyotl'l ,

BAN.KRUPTCY

Really for s change?

&amp;Juthern Ohlo Disposal

refri(lerator, good condition, 140·

810

740-245-0319.

MasonVFW
Dance Saturday Night
Music by Flashback
Members and Guest
602
will be having a Ham &amp; Turkey
Dinner
Jan. 6, 11 AM till ?
Drive In or carry OUt

Announcement

Home
Improvement a

BINGO

WATERPRODFINO

tabllahod t 975. Call 24 Hra. 17401
4~8.0870 , 1·800·287-0578. Rog-

1984 Chevrolet Monte .Carlo, Mint

ers Waterproofing.

Condlbon. ·740-367-7117.

1984 Trans-Am. Origfnal Paint .

AMERICAN LEGION

POST 467
RUTLAND, OHIO

·

Appliance Parts And Service: All
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex·
Perience All Work Guaranteed,

Loaded. $4.500. (3041675-1907.
1985 Escort, $595, 740·446·
Franch City Maytag. 740: 4462t55.
7795.
t08e Dodge Omnt1 t2,000 Mltea,
Runs Good. New ShOck, Struts,

Ballery $t .ooo Call . 740·44 t ·
1247.
1986 Ford Mustang LX, 74 ,500

Milea, 4 Cylinder, Automatic, Air,

PL. Cruleo. Great Shape\ 740'

- t.

.1986 Toyota Camry Run&amp;· Good.
740-44&amp;-9287. .
1986 Tran s- An, 350, Automatic,
Good ConditiOn , $1 ,995 . 740·

441Hl390.

•l

.

1987 Mercury Grand Marquis,

$1250.00 AND

COVERAll MON &amp; WED.
DOORS OPEN AT 4:30

Jlm1 Drywall &amp; · Construction .
New Construction &amp; Remodel/

Drywall. Siding, Roolo, Add!·
Ilona. Patnllng, tic. (3041874·
4623 or (304)674-0t 56.
Livingston's Basement water
Proofing: all basement repalra
done, free estimates, lifetime
guarantee. 12yrl on job experi-

Superior Home Maintenance Anc:l
Plumbing W• Do A,ll Aepatrs·On
·Homes And Mobile Homes, 7•0·

5Spd ., Caasane, Looks/Runs

7t28.

STAIIURST

6323.

$3,500. ceo 740-388·9788:
441.0113.
1989 Olds Regoncy Brougham,'
excellent condition. Nice Car. 840 Electrlcel and
$3,900. (3041773-5840.
. Refrigeration
1990 Goo 'ltact&lt;er, LSI, 4•4. I..C.,
Good. 3ml per gallon. (3041875·

GUARANTEED 60 A
GAME. OVER 80 PEOPLE
80 A GAME, OVER 99
PEOPlE 99.00.AGAME

C&amp;C General Home Main·
tenance- Painting., 'Jinyl siding,
carpentry, doors, windows, baths.
mobile home repair and more. For
free estimate c:all Chet, 740-992·

$2,300. Good · Condition. ence. (304)895-3887.
(3041882-2888 or (304)882·2085.
1988 Park Avenue, Nice Sh1pe,

C:J..NX!i' FN..lt.T I

fW.I !iT~t&gt;~
~loJ~I

William Safranek, Attorney

•Residential

-c•._.....,

592-5025 Athena ·

•ladDJirlal
SerVIa&amp; Melp ud Galllri-.. Co•ly
CoD ror more IDformllloD -

'

Slop In And See
Sieve Riffle

Ae&amp;ldenUal or comme~cial wiring
new service or repairs. Master U·
censed electrlc:lan . Ridenour

t992 Ford Probe GL 4 Cylinder 5
Spoed, CO Player A/C, $3,500, Electrical; WV00030B, 304·675·
t788.
74\).388-8888.

GAMESS1ART

AT 6:30

D Auto p o stery •
Ohio
Truck seats, car seats, headliners,
truck tarp~. convertible &amp; vinyl tops,
Four wheeler seats, motorcycle seats,
boat cover$. carpets, etc.
Mon • Frl 8:30 - 5:00
Rutland ,

Over 40 yra experience

(740) 742·8888
'

1·888-521-0916
'

:

'

'

Phone

11C.

......

...... bit,.•

21 llldco22Ciumpe

23e.~
24 c
25

A , I.ITTL.E
C:.O.NI&gt;\1&gt; TtiAN

IN MINI&gt;.

I

•

'

I

'

'

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio .

IO X l OS·!O

SEEKS SOURCES FOR LEASED SPACE ,

The United States Government, Department ~
Velerans Affairs Medical Cenler, Chillicothe, Ohio, i~
seeking to lease approximate!~ 1500 to 2000
contiguous, occupiable square feet of space for a fie!
service center to be local~ in the Pomeroy, Ohio area\
Square footage on 1st floor ground floor is desirabl~
and must have handiCap accessibility. Space must
suitable for 1 to 2 examinations rooms, clinical supp,orf
area/office, administr~tive office, · waiting .room, a'
storage room, small conference room, patient restroom
facilities and staff restroom facilities.

. 740-992-5212
1121l00 1 mo. pd.

YOUNG'S

be

CUPIITEI SEIVICE

•Room ttddlllonl &amp;Rlmocllllng
•NiwGanlgn

•EiectriCII l Plumbing
•Roallng &amp; Gultlll
•VInyl Siding &amp;P1lnllng
. •PIIIo &amp; POrdl Dicke

Space offered is desired within the city limits of
Pomeroy, Ohio, and must be located within close• '
proximity to a major/principal highway or.
thoroughfare. Property •musl have ample parkin
available for the exClusive use by the VA. Close
proximity to veterans ' organization is desired.
Expressions of interesl should address the following:
•Brief description, with sketch or picture, of available'
property
.
.
•Exact location including complele address of
available property
·
•Available of parking with number of space
• Rentable square feet of property
•Name of nearest major/principal highway or'
thoroughfare wilh . approximate .distance from
available property.

'FIW Elflnllttt

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215

Pomeroy, Ohio
22 yn. LocaJ

~

,.....,a.....

·eonstrudfon
New .Construclion 8i.
Remodeling - Kilchen
Cabinets· Vinyl Siding·
Roofs - Decks · Garages
Free Estimates
740-741-3411

Bryan Ree•es .

Submit ~xpressions of interest in writing, no later
than Febrnary 18, 2008, to:

Contnctlng otllcer (90C) . •
VAMedieal tenler
17173 S.R. 104
CbiUkotbe,
Ohio 45601
.,
FAX 740-772-7008

bini
Plllllpa

6..--+-4---J.-~~

41 Short lick* : '
42 "TIIrAI-- ·•'

'

For additional information, yqu niay contact Sharon
Kemptort, Contra~ting Officer, at 74(). 172:7011.

.

· NOTE: This isa requestfor Information only, and· ··
·.

.

~:

·Calllll-11111

r-:===~~~:""!:~·

FREE ·
E$TIMATES

1185-4473

dwtv.UV. ·.•~

47 Concerning : •.

.. 12.:.....,

.

52 Ccwq
pl. 114 c .. ._, .... . ::

·:

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lula Campos

.

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c.llbrity ~ere•••
~
7 • II'Y tlrnoul peop~t, PIMind Pflld
Eodl
ln . . _ _ b"""""!. T-"'"' ZOOII"!'L

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N U S Y 1··

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PK 'SXUI
ZPHU

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PAXKSY
CUYXKSA
J
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "TTie music lily lo ~ lotl"hea people becauaa ,·"·
. ·
·
. ...
n'speaka on being hurna~."- Cunls Moyflekl
J

RO..rrongo 'lottors of ·
0· .four
acrornblld worcla

,.

low to '""" four slrnplo -··· -•

.I I I
~

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GREES

...•

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SAHAB ·
A compromise is the art of di:
1--lns~~~T~~rl~· viQing a cake in such a way thai

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by filling In tho milling words
you develop from oqp ·No. 3 below.

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SCIAMoLITS ANSWIU

'•

Voiced- Opine· Troop · Limpid -IMPROVED
My elderly uncle taught me not to talk unless I could
n;~ake the sHence IMPROVED. .

IISSElL IUILDIIS :
· INC.
New Homes • Vln~l
Siding • Nilw Garages
• Aeplace!Jient Windows
• Room Additions
• Roofing

COMMEROAL and RESIDOOW
FREE ESTIMATES

740-992~7599

n

Bulldo•er &amp; Bacltlaoe
S.ri&gt;keo ·

Houee &amp; Trailer Sitae
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Sepde SyoteirU &amp;

. Utllbi&lt;l•
1740),24~1

-

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ilive measures can · now be ~Aken
. today 10 shore up importanl .rel~tion· '
' '
.
, ·Ships lhal lul'ev't been ~ot~· your .
· ~ Saturday, Feb. ' · 2000
wtiy, be they businea or soctal. Oet
. In sililalions where your Ieider·
workins on lhem. .
'ship sl&lt;,ills were once llappy to· pl1y
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
. second fiddle, y&lt;iu' II now begin to
Don't be afraid 10 lAke • well c~cu·
want lo direct the ortheslra in· lhe
laled risk where yqur ~ is con· .
year ahiad. The new effects will be
cemed'tOday. You c1n be ralher.for·
music to your C8f!.
tunale now in iitualions lhll have
~ AQUA"-IUS (Jan. 20-Fcb. . 19)
compclilive elemen\i. · ·
'
if!tat which you personally manage or
'. GEMINHMay 21-June 20) if you
~it'ect today havelhe best c~ for
believe you are a winne,r, then· the
s.uccess today. Don't allow inept ·
results will reflecl il inday. '(our sue·
associates :to handle anything you
cess may he dclqmined by hoW
fc'now you can do better. 'Tryin&amp; to
much faith you have in yourself.
~lll:h up a broken romiiiCe.? The ,.
CANCER (Jun~ 21-luly 22)
1\.SirO-Oraph Mlll:hmater Can help
There's a chance 1 side ven1ure wilh
you u!.dersiand what to do to make " 'profitabie palenlial tould be brought
the relationship work.' Mail $2.7S lo ·
to your ~nlion lodl)':lf your .ource
Malc)lmakcr, c/o lhis newspaper,
is crediiable, it'll be worth j l to
P.O. Box 17,8, Murray Hill Slation,
explore ,it funher. ·
ilew York, NY 101~.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) A oluloi• PISCES (Feb. 2Q-Merch 20) A
lizing
influence in an ariangeJIICnl
tiew ambition is likely 10 be awak·
·
thlll
hiun't
been 100 '-rmoniuus lale·
~ned in you today. However, no ~•1:
ly
mighl
be
ushered In on a new wind
ter how excilcd you set oboul n•.it·
today.
The
chan,. will be a welrllight be wise to keep it to y~lf..
comed
by
one
and Ill. .
·
tintillhin•• ue belter cryltalliud .
VIROQ
(Au
I
.'
23-Sept.
22)
Be
•
I ARIES- (Merch 2l•Apri1[9) J1o1.

.

.

doer, n&lt;it adiclatortoday. Focwt your
lltention and effons on l'tsponsibili·
ties y&lt;iu c111 W&lt;e care of by yo~lf.
rether than lh,rou1h the need of ·sur- ·
roptes. ·
·
,
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Today
will olr~ y'ou a chance to put your
alflirs in sood order. Begin immedi-· · ·
ately to reoralllize slipshod silualions
so lhll you can be more elrective and
productive In lhe fulure. ,
.
· SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Present conditiqr11 are favoring you in
mauen· lhal need closure. Give IOJ)
priority to impcll1ionl issues, espc· .
r:iolly domeslic ones .lhal should be
puliOJe&amp;(, !•

•

.

. '

·

SAOITIARIUS .(Nov. 23-Dec.
m lr' y'ciu haven 'I ,produced lhe
lyPeS of result.! you dcsite, don'l hcs·
ilale today lo revise your plans and
11111 anew. II msy only lake a few ·
chanps to pt you hack on lnlek.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 2.2-Jan .. 19)
Take. advanmse of loday 's aspects
d111 are favorins you where your
fi~ancial interests are concerned. '

The.C propilious tilltes offer a bit of
lhe Midas louch.

\

'

.

FEBRUARY4l

'

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AD Malues Tractor &amp; ·•
Eqojpment Parts · ~
Factory Authorized t
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I ~AlDAY

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DIPDYIAI :'
PARt'S
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-45 SUrtelt

•

992-17 17

·HOWAlD
EICAVITIIIII CO. ,

Remodeling
Stop I Compare

from me"

43FMIWII
44 Pebollum

I

1 0 X 20 S(lO

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• 31 Coflladlen

GETANE
1--.IJi-c...:;1,..:.7-TI:..,_I=-,-1-j ·8 C......plohl the chuckle

dlllnnd dlnctl to
. JDIU 'daar

101111 BISSELL,

•Compl~

.
As regular readers know, I teach a
lot of bridge classes. I enjoy them
immensely •. despite the occasional
frustration s. Still, I haven' t yet had
the problem that confronted B.J.
Becker some 30 years ago when he.
was using.this deal. How should the
play go in four hearts after WeSileads
1he diamond king?
Nonh has a very soft hand, with
all seven points in quacks. But with ·
four lrumps, it would be .taclically
poor to pass. (Yes, in the modern
tournament game, West would make
a wea.k jump overcall of lhnie dia·.
moods. But what would happen after
that? Nonh .would 'pass, South would
reopen with a takeout double, North
would bid three hearts, and South
would · probab!y pass. Pre-emplive
. bidding sometimes ' backfires,
because three hearts is laydown.)
East should overtake the diamond
, king at trick one, cash 1he spade ace
(not necessary here, but good technique),.and return the diamond eight.
West will win wilh the ·queen and
conlinue wilh lhe diamond nine or·
10, allowing East 10 overruff the
dummy to defeat ttle contract.
Becker 's beginner sittin g East
played the. diamond eight at trick one,
though. Now four !leans couldn 't be
beaten.
·
Becker pointed out 10 East that
parlner's opening lead of the· king
showed eilher the ace-king or king·
queen. And as East could see 'the ace,
she knew. Wesl had the kin g-queen.
This drew a blank stare, so Becker
asked , " Have you ever ·seen anyone
with , say, K-10· 4·2, plunk down the
king a~ the opening lead ?"
"The people I play with do it all
the
"
·

.........,.,.,'

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..

37S.myn

I

7

(No Sunday Calla)

• NewHomea
•Oaragea

·,

t.--&amp;.--L--it......J......J~ each person believes he gollhe •
,.......,...------'·;.;· · - -- piece.
.

www.sunsethom .

CONSTRUCTION

,.

Arch-

HARIWFIJ ,
S L RL

lmpll

31 Woocllcl
vellly

I

STORACE

,o

~·

30r.:=.u.. '..

(740) 59:J-6C&gt;711

High &amp; Dry
• UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT ~
DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS AFFAIRS'~ Self-Storage

is not asolicitation ror otren.

1-I
cae .

2t' llrkh pert
2tEdgH
21 Egypllln

her

.

WA~

Sales Representative

NowR•tinl

UncondlliOnal lifetime guarantee.
Local references furnished . Es-

.

· '"'II

!&gt;0 TW..T~ IT- ·
IT'!! W-

&amp;.1\11-lD· E.IJU'(
~i:JL.

For lnforinallon reg'ercllng
Bankruptcy contact

pl'I)Tides waste dlspoool
ror

I

IASEMENT

1980·90 Hondaa From $29/Mo.,

• 3901 .

h --&lt;

"' aftOII\OY loofart pncaodlog. .

750 East Slate Street
Athens, Ohio 45701

· 1968 ~\nnebago Motor Home

'

LOSER
IT'!i &amp;.01 ..,
~II&gt; n\~T

''"' rtlim a4oOior of fioandal oWigrrHoros and.,... tIN ditlrWtort o/IIIIGIIg aodlt«s. Aptt1011 goill) lhrGugh boakrupky moy cortio propotlj, a
01 ' oxompl" 11'01*11. lor hlo or her pononaf UM. lflls moy lododo a car, a hoUM,
clotfoos, and hotsohold pis. Y011 shotld dlnd ""' qUOiliam """" '-krupky It

'

SERVICES

' I

•

Larry Schey

1\os. Call Now\ BOO· 772· 7470: 992-2t43. 740-llB2-6373.
EXT. 7832.

Impounds\ 0 Down, 24 Months 0
t9.9% Llatingo, 800·3t9-3323 Ext

wO~IIIG
P~#Cff(TI- Y.

~HE .BORN

740-367~0652 .

Accessor lea

Needs Work $1,200: 1987 Ford
Araostar $1 ,2_
50: 1966 Mustang
Fast Bade Serious Inquiries Ontyl

fO FAIC, MY .
- PL~N IS"

•• •

tires. 39.000 miles. $11 ,500.
(3041675-1742.
1999 Chevy Btazar LS 7,300

accepted at 13041852-60901.

Chevys, Jeeps, And Sport Utili·

,/

. ""I. .

(740) 99Z·J470

New.

Wrlnan bids will be accepted un· 7 40
Motorcycles
til ·february 11 , 2000 . .Bids can '
be mailed to: WV Department of 1999 Polaris 4x4 Less than 500
Agriculture, MarkeUng and De· Miles, $5,000 Firm . 'Phone:
'Jtlopment Division . Land Sec- (3041576-3259, Alter'5PM.
tion, P.O. Box 160, Slatersville,
WV 26175 . (Faxed bids will be 760 . Auto Parta &amp;

710 1Autos for Sale

~

· t~ ~OP~ TO L.IVf F()fCfVfJ.

Sand*TDpsoii*FIII Dirt*Mulch
·
Bulldozer Services

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

-oJ:z.?

.

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~LI:

"f.Da..ld. ,-..

· -"'

~;;A~ WJ'II I

iF;;;;;~~;;~=~====;;;;;;;;;;,

Happy Ad

5 Afw. 15org.
I P1 auenl legelly
.7 Type ol fty

By Phillip Alder

Honest &amp; Re.l iable .
Free Estimates
S e nior C itizens

nne.

Peunltllo

· Teaching bridge
can be lots of fun

50 Yrs . Combined

Prog.....lve top
Lie. I OO.SO 11MII/Ifn

4 "c'nlllln

Opening lead: • K

IT WAS NOT

1997 Jeep Wrangler 4 cyl, 5sp,
ale, sofl top, new wheels ~ and

Miles EKtrast

TRAN SPORTATI ON

BARNEY

._.

E

27 Du 111 d In

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South
Weal North East ·
Pass
Pass 2 •
Pass.
Pass Pass

ftdMIL
.,.1'1
.P WMBINft

AT 6:30 P..M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy., OH
Paying $80.00
per 9111}8
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburat

-P• or

2 · - bOyl"

In
3t Glnun city
10 Ofdlr of
.40 tlablt_....
..,.._
-43 ~ excltld 11 Eye llyer
· 4&amp; fiMdy or 12 Europllfl
47 . . . bllckblnl

•,AK

No Embarraasment ...
You'111 Tftated with Respect! ,
c8~1Ncwr for Instant Appi'OYIIII*

1 Rueolln

21 .._..,..,.

32......
33 Fiber 111ent .
M lie. Dlcldnton
· 31Hithlnl
31 "dolat cent

•AKQ32
• 15 4

No Crtdh • Slow Credit • Bllnkruptey
R11po • Dlvordecl

OOWN

2311p -, 3

• 10 9 5 3

$41.00 per
hundred ft.

Pomeroy Eaglea
Club Blogo 0J1
ThUrsdays

2081Ue-

• J 94
• A8

9:00..12:00

CRIDIY PROBLIMI???

I 1/ 2" Water Pipe

I /03100 1 mo. pd.

. ·

....

-

1170....
.. Pllfwld

11 Spring holl dty
17 c:-.e tile
11 Awrtr

• Q' J 8
a 10 a 7 s
• J 3
• Q J 7 2
Eui
• A 10 7 4

Soulb
• K 53

Spring hweloplltnl
Spedal

Joseph Jacks
740-992-2068

Public Notice
lor lhe relief demanded In
the Complaint
·
Larry Spencer ·
Clerk of Court o1 Common
Molge Counh·,P~:!
.,,
Melge County Courthouee
Second Street
Pomeroy, OH 45719
(1) 21 , 28, (2) 4, 11 • 1B, 25, ·
atc

I

AO\IUaD l&gt;iW'&lt;NlE SYST£MS. INC.

St. Rt. 7
Tuppen PlaiDJ, OH
740-985-3813

New Roofs • Repairs
• Coating • Gutters
• Siding • Drywall
.• Pa inting • Plumbing
Free Estimates

Cle an &amp; Scotch
Guard $40 - Any
N o rmal Size R ooin.

1I I I

G~W Plasdes

JACKS ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUOION

CARPET SERVICE

........

=~klcll

14 11ow cervo
11 Certlly

740-8115 3813
4" thru -48" Plutlc Cutwn In Stock
Full Une Of Water Storage llnkl •
septic I Clltllm Tankl
ISewer Pipe: 3" thru a•, O• PI" I Res11u1at:orsl
Open:
SI:CJ0.4:30 W•lkd•~
•

·

.. , .. ~ .. hill

13 Guldee

1llppeq Pllllll, Ohio ~

I t Fit. 7

clanty

~=
7 lllwpo•dlc

PWnCS AND SUPPLY

SELF STORAOE

51 FcAcuutd

ACROSS
1 "TIMJGI

ALDER

windows, 740·992·2t43, 74().992·
6373.
Li~e

NBA Croaaword Puzzle

PHILLIP

Townehlp 11
compl.ted lnd ltYIIIebll foi
review 11 townehlp
-'lnp or by eppolnlnwlth clerk It 247·3121,
23231 Hill Ad., Aeclne, OH

1996. Jeep Cherokee Sport, 4 dr.,
auto, air, amlfm cassette; cruise,
tilt, pW, pi, 4x4, roof, rac:k, tinted

WVl. Hay has 1~. 000 Milos. $25,000
been stored Inside. Average
(3041882·2937.
weight per bate Is 900· 1100 lbs.
Hay will be sold In units of 25
bales par person. Our personnel
and equlpm&amp;n f will assist In
loading. Hay Is .available for inspection, prior to bid . Contact
Persort John Leport, Acting

IRIDOII:

Let ert

sp., needs some work, $5500

Pleasa ~t.

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5

LIGAL NOTICE

WV 25287 (Across from laki n 1997 Ford Con..,ersion Van .
State Hospital, At. 62 North of l oaded, TVIYCA /CO Player.

Point

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Ftlday,
~EYOOP

TIM nnanoll l - of

080. 740-742·2574.

200 Round Bales of llrst cutting
Hay, harvested In 1998. Hay Is
located at the Lakin State Farm,

•

&gt;

.. ... -

Public Notice

540 MIICellaneoua

-

t•

Pomeroy, Mlddltpbrt, Ohio

.Page B 4 • The Dally Sentinel

ov Wt Finance, ·o• Down! Pil l

·-

'

••

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.!

I

�.,

Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel .

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Fr1ctaY, February 4, 2000

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

TODAY'S SCO·REBOARD·

SPORTS

POLITICS

•

•

Local
, scoring summariM NBA tihlndlnvEASTERN CONFERENCE

-11c: .,.,._

Molge 41, hlpre 24 ·
Delpre .......... " .............. 5 8 3 8.
Meigs ............................8 8 15 17 •

24
•41

~

a.a.

x~r:r Vlning

~ ~

..
ShannonPrice .............. t
Jennifer Shrimptln ......... 6
Brooke Wllllams .. ... .-......3
Amy Hyson .................... t

2
0
0

9
13

0

·o
2

O·O

4

0·0
1-11

2
41

o

·nttanv Halfhill .. :.. ..,....... 2
Marissa Whaley ............ 1
Totalo
18 .

2~ ~

1·2
1·2
0·1
2·2

fi

4--6
1·2

1
~~

Washlngron ...................... 15 31 .3211

11\
14

Booton ..............................20 25 .444
NewJer~~y ...................... 17 211 .a7a

_.,.,._

lndlana ...................·.......•...29
Mllwaukea ........................26
GllarloHt ..........................24
Toronlo .........., ......... .-........ 24
Detroit ..............................22
CLEVELAN0 ................... 19
Atlanla ...... ,....................... 17
Chicago ............................9

-·-

l!la.
16

l erenla Waderker ... ...... 6
13
Jamie &amp;mmons ........... .5
0
o.o" 10
l~ e th Withem ........... ...... I
2
2·4
10
Hannah Sa~ers ... .......... 2
1
0.0
7
Calah Gllde1s...... .......... 2
o 2·3 6
l'racy Sidwell ................!
· D D:ll
Z
1'o1als
23-411 3·13 9-15 114
Assists: 18 (Linscon 7) .. Blocked ahota: 2.
Fouta: 18. Field goala: 26..£1. Rebounde: 36
tlinscott 13). Steals: 15 (Linscott 6).
Turnovers: 22

- 0
'2
0
0.
o
0

a

2-1 11~11
51
Assists: 5 (Cummins 2). Field g!)lla: 1 9·50
( 380) . Foulo: 18. Robounda: 33 (Dailey 9,
Lyons 7). St•ala: 11 (Brauer 3). Tu~: ;1!5

.

4~

5
5

n

10'1.

11 ~
19~

-Divjolon

.W L eta.

S!Jn Antonio ..................... 30
Utah ................................ 27
Minnesota·........... ... ~.: ..... 25
Denver .............................21

'

~ .

16 .652
17 .614

18 ,.581
22 .488

2

3',

1:,

Houston ...................... ,. ... 19 27 .413

· 11

Dallas ............................. 18 27 .400
Vancouver. .. ,... ..,.............. 12 32 .273

11\
17

PtoWic Dlvtalon.
L.A. Lakers ...................... 34 11
Portland,,... ...... :................34 11
Sacramento ··········----...... 28 · 16
Seattle ............... -r-············29 18
Phoenix ...... .................... .. 28" 18
Golden Slate .................... 1\ 32
l.A. Clipper&gt; .................... 11 34

.756
.756
.636
.617
.591
.256
.244

5'·,
6
7'•
22
23

Thureday•a acorea
New York 98; Portland 88
Houston 109. Phltadelj&gt;hla 106
San Antonio 112, Toronto 95
Dallas 106, Char10fte 96
Milwaukee 102, utah 99

Tonight's games

~ l!la.
2·5
12
o-o· 10
3·3
9
5·8
7
o.0
6
0·0
4

a .u

.659
.553
.545
.545
.&lt;e11
.422
.395
.209

New J~sey at Boston, 7 p.m.
Washif'fgton at Miami, 7:30p.m.
Portland at Atlanta, 7:30p.m.
Sacramento at indlt\na, 8 p,m.
CLEVELAND at OetroK, 8 p.m.
Houston at Minnesota, 8 p.m.
ChiCago at Va~uver, 10 p.m.
Phoenix at Seattle, 10:30 p.m.
Ulah at LA. takers, 10:30 p.m.
OenV~r at Golden State, 10:30 p.m.

Saturday's gam11

Cha~one at Washington, 1 p.m.

Area girls' scorea

Albany Ale)(ander 81, McArthur VInton 30
Ashville Teay!! Valley 59, Circlevlle 35'
Chillicothe Unloto 66, Westfall 39
Chillicothe Zane Trace 73, Richmond Dale
SE44

'

Frankfort Adena 43, Paint Valley 42
Jackson 80. Cheshire River Valley 51
Mariana 59, Athens 58
Nelsonville·York 44, Wellston 31
,
Plkelon 58, Chillicothe Huntington Ross 51
Pomeroy Mekls 48, Belpre 24
Stewart Fed. Hocking 64, ReCine S. 5t
VIncent Warren 43, Gallipolis 41 '
Waver1y 62, M!nlord 38

u.

a~

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Southern

etourCummins .............
2:al.
Katie
S
Kim lhle .........................2
Brigelle Barnes ............. 3
Heather Datley ....-.......... 1
Sarah Braue~.......... ,.....3
Stacy Lyons .......... .......&lt;,
ra mmy Fryar................ .!
• ·rotals
17-41

15
21
20
20
23
26
28 '
34

Eao1
cant. COmectlcu1 ·St. 73, Mount St. Mary's,
Md. 61
Fai~tlgh Dlcklnlon 70, Robert Morris 60
Hartloro IM, Naw Hampshire 71
Long llllrd 72, 5acnMI - · 56
Maine 811, varmoo1 83
Mariti 67, fllder 51
~onmooth, N.J. 41 , St. Francis, Pa. 40
Oulnnlplac 89, UMBC 55
St. Froncil, NY 78, Wagner 7 t

AI
4

111m

Federal Hoc.klng
0
0

filL

Pl1litdelplllll .....................25 21 .543
011andcl ...........................1!1 211 .447

4

Federal Hocking 64, Soilthern 51
Southern ......... .. ............ 11 13 15 12 ... · 51
Federal Hocking ............ 18 11 ·' 18 17 = 64

-

~

NtwYork .•......... .•........•...27 17 .B14

·&amp;

· A11iata : 8 (PriCe . Williams 2). Rebounda:
£6 (Sh rimplln 7). Stl81s: 10 (Williams 5).
Turnovers: 10.

£IIW
~
Jamie linscatt... ............ 6

W

Mllml ............................... 28 18 .136

lltlpr9 (t-7, TVC t-4)
~
1:&amp;
~ !II.
Leoiie Cunnlngham .......o
0
1-2
1
Candy' Melone .... ,_ .......0
1
1-2
4
'Micllelle Wosl. ..............o
1
2·3
5
Mlclleie Brown ..............4
o o-o a
Anon Thomhlll ..............3
o
o-o 'a
Totala
7
:z
'"7 24
Auloll: 10 (Thomas 5). Reboundt: 20
(Brown 7). Tllmo-.: 20.
Mtlgo·11'-1, TVC 1:Z.1)

NCAA Ohllalon I
men'IICOI'el

Atlanta at CLEVELAND, 7:30p.m.
Indiana at Orlando, 7:30 p.m.
Toronto at Milwaukee, 8:30 R.m.
Mlnne~ta at Denver, 9 p.m.
Callas at L.A. Clippers, 10:3CI p.m,

Sunday's gem11
Mla.ml at New York, 1 p.m.
Golden State at New Jersey, _
1 p.m.
Sacramento at PhlladeJphia, 3:30 p.m. ·
San Antonio at Utah, 3:30 p,m,
Houston at Detroit, 7 p.m.
Pontand at i!Oston, 7 p.m.
Seanle at PhOenix, 8 p.m.
Callas at Vancouver, 9 p.m.
Chicago at L.A. Cllpperli, 9 p.m.

South
Auotln Peay 70, E. l!lnols 69
Cai!IX&gt;eiiSI!. Samtord 55
·
Cincinnati 70, N.C. Chartol18 ,62'
Duke 90, North Carolina 86..QT
Georgia St. 91 , Jaetc:SQRVille St. n
Jacksorwllle 68, Mercer 65·0T
louisiana Tech 63, New Orleans 43
Louillana·MQnroe 95, Lamar 58
MARSHALL 93, Buffalo,61
,
Middle Tennessee 94. E. Kenluc:ky 71
Nol'tt1westem St..76. McNeese St. 63
South Alabama 69, louiSiana-·Lafayelte 65
Stetson 88, Troy St. 71
Tennessee St. 56, SE Missour1 52
Tennessee Tech 90, M01ehead St. 83
Virginia Tech 68. St. Joseph's 6~
Wollord 78, UNC-GrwensborQ 63
Mid-I
Clevelard St. 85, Ill. ·Chicago 73
Oetrolt 85, Loyola, 111. 67
Iowa 77 , Kansas 69
N. Iowa 72, S . Illinois 58
OHIO 76, N. Illinois 61
S. Utah 76, lnd.·Pur.·lndpls. 73
UMKC 75, W. Illinois 71
Valparaiso 65, Oakland, Mich. 62
Southw••t
Nicholls St. 74. Stephen F. Austin 56
Oral RObens 73, Chicago St. 72
Sam HousiOn St. 59, SW Texas 57
TCU B3, Rice 70

Texas A&amp;M·Corpus Christi" 87 , Bethune·
Cool&lt;man 72
Texas·San Antonio 96, Texas·Arlington 77
Tulsa 70, SMU 59
Far Weat
Arizona n, Oregon .?1
•
Arizona St. 75, Oregon St. 64
BYU 72, San.Oiego .St. 50
CS Northridge 79, Idaho St. n
Cafllomla 66, Southam Cal 82 ·
Colorado St. 71, Air Force 52
Fresno Sl. 82, San Jose St. 78.QT
Gonzaga 82, Pepperdlne 57
Hawaii 85, UTEP 78
ldaho.73, Boise 51. 71
Long Beach St. 69, UC Irvine eo
Montana 59, Sacramento St. 47
New Mexico St. 72, Novada 68
Pacffic 59, Cal St.-Fullerton 54
Portland 88, LoVQia Marymount 70
Slanlord 78, UCLA 63
UC Santa Barbara 87, Cat Poly-SLO 79
Ulah St 83, North Texas 70
.W~bflr St. e2. Portland St. 79

E. ~ ,3, llridyowater, Man. 72
Emmlnue170, I.IGIIIIGe 35
FDU~ 75, N.Y. TICII 45
Fromingham St 82, Fltctburg St. 55
Glnnon 63, Hllldole 82
,
Glenville St. 87, W. \lloglrlla Tod188
Kings, Pa. 67, Washington, Md. 58
Meine 88, Hartfortj 51
·
Meas.'COIIege 48, AU...n SSge 43
Mount Hoi'/Oke 73, Smith 63
Mount St. Mery, N.Y. 72, New Rochelle 28
Plymouth St. 75, New England Col. 51
Sl Jooeph's 70, Rhode lilond 33
St. Vincent 63, Notrw Dame, ONo 38
. Stevena Tod185, Yeohlva 55
Swarthmore 61. Eastem 46
Towson 68, Orexel64
,
Vermont 63, New Hamplt*a A~
W. Virginia St. 53, Concord 50

=

~ 71 . 01No1,....,.na 113

C.O. MelhodlltM, - 7 1
F - 81. 70, - · Mldt 59
l't, Mtrcyhullt67

.... Souilwellim. JW&gt;. 47
Grond '&lt;IIIW St. 113, llliiJnow Vllioy 61. 89

· G - 70, Pri1clpil43

rn

lndlona 70, IOwo
lndlana.southelll 77, Aaburi 80
~55, Wllllm Jewell47
Moe """"Y 70, Woblltr 44
UarM1141, Mo. 57; Wwtau•illwt, Mo. 55
Met(-.. 72, Wllllm- 53
Michigan 70, tlllnolo _.
Michigan St. 84. Nol1hweltem 52
Mid-Am Nazarerio 73, Evangel81
MIIIOU~ BaJ)tilt 73, ,.111&lt; 81
OhiO Oornlnlcan 81 , 8elon Hilt 48
Ottawa, Kan. 87, Wesleyan 58
.
Purduo 75, OhiO St. S2
,
' SIU.-rdoYIIIe 8~ lnd..Pur.-Fl 1'4oynt S8
SW Miasoun St. 74, .Ctoi!jlton 51
Slerllng 73, Bethel, 'Kin, 110
W. tllnoil69, UMKC 66
w. Mtchlgan 74, E.. ~an 72
WIY"~~, Mich. 63, AINond 42 '
Wlchi~ St. 85, Drake 58
,,
Wis.-Green Bay 67, Butler ~ 2.
Wis.·MIIwaukee 71, Wright St. 65
Wiscon!Mn 75, MlnnMOta 65

West Liberty 78, Fairmont St. 68

SOUth
A.ubum 71, South carolina 82
Austin P..y 88, E. Illinois ~
Averett 75, Randotph-Macon Women's 63
Beilarmlne .95, M!soou~·St. LouiS 80
·eetmont 71, TeMIS·Pan Amerklln 62
Campbell &amp;4, Mercer 53
Delta St. 91, Cent. Arkansas 58
Elizabeth City St. 85, St. Augustine's 78
Florida Atlantic 82, Jacksonville St. 72
Florida St. 76, Wake Forest 47
F~npe,n 81 , Coli. of Charleston 49
Georgia 8~ , Florida 76-QT
Kentucky St. 55, LeMoyne-owen 51
Kentucky We&amp;leyan 74, Quincy 57
Lee 72, Williams Baptist 61

~in~:o~~S:O:~e~~':tt~k 72

Wofford 57, Jacksonville 54
Xavier, NO 78, Mobile 71

Mid welt
Akron 83, OHIO 71
Bethany, Kan. 81, Tabor 39

.

soui-et .

Ark.·Monticelto 89, S. Arkansas 52
Arkansas 68, Alabaljlll62
Camemn 77. OklahOma Science 53
·e, Tem Baptist 88, Oa-as 38
Hawaii 65, UT~P 38 ,
··

,.

Lipscomb 85, Blue Mountain 62
LiVingstone 62, N.C. Central 38
LOuisiana Tech n , South Alabama 37
Louisiana·Monr9E! 59, Lamar 50
Loyola, NO 85, Tougaloo 58
Marquette 95, Southem,Miss. 86
~ Maryl and 63, Duke 62
Middle Tennessee 82, E. Kentucky 74
. Milligan 95, Va ..lntermonl 81
·
Mi_ssissippl Sr. 66, MlsslssiA'l 60
· Mount OHve El4, St. Andrew's 61
N. Kentucky 70, Wis.aParkslde 50
N.C. State 86, North Caronna 76
New Orleans 82, Louislana-latayette 75
Northweslem St. n. McNeese St. 47
Pikeville 83, Vlrglnla·Wise 52
Queens , N.C. 71, COnverse 51
Salisbury St. 68, Goucher. 52
Samford M , Cent. Florida 57
Shenandoah 71 , Villa Julie 31
St. Paul's 78, Dlst. ot COlumbia 74
Tennessee St. 65, SE Mlseou~ 60 ·
Tennessee Tech 90;- Morehead St. 42
Transylvania 51, GeorgetO'Mt, Ky. 49
Trev"ecca NaZarene 76, F"ed-Hardeman 73
Tulane 86, DePaul 76
·
llnlon, Ky. M, Berea 64
. lnrglnla 88, t3eorgia Tach 85 ·
VIrginia St. 66, Snaw 82
· VIrginia Union 77, Cheyney 51 ·

'

lnd.·Pur..ftilll. lie, 8. \Jiah 51

Wheettnq Jesuit 91, Salem·Telk)o 81

Ubeny 73, High Point 37 .

VINTON - Eastern defeated
tbe host Vinton Tigers in a
ttipl~header Thunday night at
Vinton Elementary. ·
The ' Eagle girls' squad won
.48·20 behind ]{.ass Lodwick~ 13,
points and Katie Roderton's 10.
Vinton was led by Kristina
Naylor's nine.
Eastern's seventh-gnde boys'
team ,;.,on 42-~5 behind Darren
Scarbrough's 11 points and Cody
DiU's ejght.
Terry Miracle led the Tigers
with 14.
Eastern's eighth-gnde boys
won 48-42 behind Nathan
Grubb's 14 ponts and .Brian
White's 12.,
Vinton's Jason Casey .led all .
scorers with 26'points..

e....

. , - , 1e,
v~~e 1s.oT
llullolo 68, 811 Sl. 50

DM•Inlcan, N.Y. 65, Nyacl&lt; 53

•

North Texas 81 , N1f,' 46
, ··
Oklahoma · BaptiSt ~
Oklahoma Christian

.

~

Oldahoma City 70 John Brown 41
Oral Robflno 74, Ct+;ago St. 58
Rice 67, TCU 65 ~~
S~ O~ahoma 60, SW 0klahoma 54

.

BIDWELL
·BidwellPorters girls' squad knocked off
Southern 50-3Y Thursday night.
Lindsay Godwin and Leslie
Ward l~d the Pirates with 15·
point efforts.
.
The Tornadoes' Katie Sayre led
all scorers with 18 ,points. Teammate Dearia Pullins had· J.2 .

~

Flo.,rlng
starting

'46

at

Yd.

BERBER
CARPETS

starting at

•sa Sq. Yd.

...

UConn Huskies

.. _Residents find
. relaxation

••

S..C1

tmes

BY KmN KILI.Y

HoiJ!iashelt, who supervises Gallipolis'
CHIP, urged applicants to file now so
. , ~ALLIPOL~S - Funding for .rehabil- their projects can be· addressed quickly.
1 ~at1on and Improvement · of homes . ·"We have two yeatS to complete this
?wnedby low.- to. ~odeme-in~ome res- project, so the more applications we get
· 1d¢n~ m Galhpohs IS now av;~ilable, but as soon as possible, 'the more those protnl_l5e planning to participate are urged to . jeers wiU move up the list," she said.
·
With the funding, CHIP can do full
file an application soon. .
The eity was ~rded $700,000 last rehabilitation on 15 homes, emergency
year from the 0~10 Department _of repairs to 25 houses at a maximum of
1
Deve~opment to 1ntt1ate a Comrnumty $5,000 per home, · and repairs to five
Housmg Improvement Program, super- rental unitS requiring at least $13,000
vise.d by housin~ speci~lisrs from Gallia~ worth of work ..For the rentals, the propMCIS$ Cornmumty Action Agency.
erty owner supplies $6,500 of the cost,
.The funding allows CHIP to work o.n with the remainder picked up by CHIP.
more than 40 structures. But Juha
Houdashelt said some appli~ations
TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF

ha.ve been received since the program
was first advertised in December and
inspections of those. applicants' homes is
underway.
"The inspections look at health and
safety issues involved,'' she said. "The
program dqes allow for the installation of
wheelchair access and ramps, if needed,
and the addition of storage in the kitchen ·
for food and utensils."
Of the total awarded, $100,000 is
directed to lead-based paint abatement,
Houdashelt said. She ·noted that those ·
. li~in~ in structures built after 1978 are
" pretty safe," but funding will help eliminate a potential hazard in the home.

Cars and kids:· Putting safety :first

'

ca'use of'·~ath

6 to 14 years old.
This fact can be linked, at
least in -part, to tire real,i ty 86
perqmt of kil:ls; are uqbu,cll_led.
or i~J&gt;~opeJiy . rea~r;U~ed iri...
I ' vehicle~. says~tr.'R:'E:

1999 Oldamoblle

.1999 Chevy

Eighty-Eight Sedan

·Lumina S8d~n

• 3800 V~ Power
• Power Windows &amp;Locka
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BY BRIAN .J. RI!D
TIMES-SENTINEl STAFF

a

• Pow~ Windows Locks
• Tilt &amp;Cruise
• FuiiJ Loaded!

are

Ple"e HI Sillily
.....
M
'
.
,uc~U_NG . UP .-

Kallle Bi~

field, 2. of Gallipolis, gets ready ·
for a ri~ with grandpa; Blake
Northup; by getting strapped iPto
her car seat.

.

1999 Oldsmobile
Alero Sedan ·

·· 1,999 Pontiac ,
Gra11(1 Am SE1. Sedan

Cavalier s,dan

.$500,000 block

~3,950* ~3,850* . ~0,950*
• AM/FM CD System ·
• Power·Windows &amp; Locka .
• Till &amp; Cruise

• Power Window• &amp;Locka
·. ~Tilt &amp; Crulal
·
• Aluminum whlelil

• Automatic
• Air Conditioning
• Tilt &amp; ·Cruise

VISIT OU.R WEBSITE AT~ www.tompeden.com
.

-

'

· West Virginia's 11 Chevy, Pontiac, B'ulck, Old•,
And Cuslom V4n Dealer.
··

car ·

l.P.nlttnr. Chrvn"-"t

(

.c.ql

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0
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to Sati3#(icn

..
~I
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.

Bv AubREY WARNER
nl!riEs.sENTINii NEWS'STAFF

&gt; POINT. PLEASANT, W.Va. - Gov. C~cil ·l:i: t:Jnclc1
,wQod 'p~sented a· $500,000 Small Cities Blo&gt;~
a~rd Frjllay to Point Pleasant to assist with ' con"ruction ·
o.f.~ riverfront p~ recre~tion fadlity.
·-: "I am very pl~ased to provide funding for this• irnPQr~ .
tant community development project,'' Undet:WQod 'said. '·
"These block grants create ·a better quality of life for Wes~
Virginians and continue· to improve the business ~viron~ ..
ment in i:~mmunities throughout'our ~tare:•
'
.•The , $5 million tourism ·and economic development
·Miss TennesSM .
project will be constructed along the . Ohio . River .ip
Miss ·USA paeeant fllday In
downtown l'oint Pleasant. The facility wilJ include an . ·sranson, Mo. J)etllll, M
..,. ' '
arnphithel!ler and one ~ mile walking trail. The riverfront
' .;
park will, en l)ance nocreatlonal opportun!ties
' M:uon
t· I w' :t ·'
"
..
~~~..lp:i7
Qounty residents and serve as a venue for many commu' c . ,,
~i~ activitie~ lnduding 'the .cicy's annual s!Crnwheel Rjpt. ', " Ht'd
.g .
~

'

.JWI.fShall University's MOVC opens .

Point Pleasant gets:·

1999Chevy

· underway &amp;, build similar clinics in
~ncastet and Marietta.
The field centers are considered
a "step down" from the community outpatient clinics. They are
, smaller, employ fewer . staff members, and perform more 'limited
services. A field service center ..
operated by the . Chillicothe VA :
Medical Center• is now operating .:
in Hillsboro.
"These centers are ideal for
smaller conununities, like Pomeroy '
and Jackson, which do not have
adequate vetenns populations on
their own to support a larger clinic like Athens','' Sullivan said.
Among the services offered by
the field ' service centers, Sullivan

'''POMEROY - A spokesman
· for the Veterans Administration
. Medical Center in Chillicothe said
Friday plans "are not definite" to
build a field service center, in
Pomeroy.
However, the VA is carefully
considering such a center, and has
placed a request for rental space in
Pomeroy in today's edition ofThe
Sunday Times-Sentinel.
!iaid,
routine exams, vaccina- .
Keith Sullivan of'the VA Med- tions, · blood pressure monitoring;
ical Center's planning department discharge follow-up for patients
said the agency is considering these returning home li'om the ChiUismall centers in Jackson and cothe or Huntington, \v.Va., medPomeroy to eliminate mvel .t ime ical centers, medication adjust•
for Meigs County ve~rans in need ments, and for new enroUces into .
of routine medical. care.
the VA tnedi~ system, processing
Area veterans are now served by of paperwork and ID issuance.
··
an .outpatient clinic. in Athens,
Sullivan said.there migh,t also be ,
where examinations and routine · so~e basic laboratory· work perprocedures are performed. Veterans formed at the centers, as well as the
often must trivel to the hospital in · dispensing ·of routine antibiotics
Chillicothe for treatment.
and other -drugs.
A field service center i.s already
"It seems senseless for a veteran
in operation in Hillsboro.
in Meigs County to drive to
"Our plans with these centers is Athens or to Chillicothe just to
to reacli out in the community to have a prescription renewed," Sulprovide services to veterans where livan said, comparing the centers to
they live, so · they don't have to ~a primary care physician's office.
travel an uncomfortable distance,''
Sullivan also said the :VA hope's
Sulliv;~n said.
these new centers wi\) increase the
In addition· to the Athens facili- number of veterans who take
ty, the VA operates an outpatient
clinic in Portsmouth, and plans are
PIMHHIVA.PIIpAI

Crau'"of•

the Gallia·Meigs Post of the
· Ohio State Highway Patrol.
.In response to these stagge.r ing nur:nbers, National Child ·
Passenger Safety We~k will be
recognized Feb. 13 -1 9c
.
"One of the most ·common
mistakes parents make wberi
restraining children is that they ·
don't understand the different
stages of child restraint use
thro!lghout . a child's growth."
. Grau said.
·
. :'Since many state laws only
require child safety .seat use up
to · age .3, many paren~ assume
'older kids .are .safe in just a seat
belt." ·
·
To be effective, · a car safety
seat must be used correctly. Be
sure to read and follow the
instructions that come with the
safety S!'~
· nd to _!"ead t~e vehicle ow.n s manual for mstallation ins uctions, Grau said.
··

~9,850* .• ~5,450* ~4,350*
• 3800 V~ Power
• Power Windows &amp;Locks
• Till &amp; Cruise

Pomeroy VA center
likely, but not certain
Pomeroy one
.
of several in
.... ·- mmideration ·-.

E111

4 Door Extended

entine

;·

NCAA Dlvlllon 'I
women's action

1999 Ponllao Montana

Dltlills on ,... M

As applicatiom start coming in, CHIP rehabilitation spe"dalist Keith Romine
is also getting the word out about itself.
and housing assistant laura Rawson are
Brochures are being distribut~d to such . available to visit the horne and help in
organizations as the Senior Resource filling out the application, l-loudashelt
·
Center, Galli a' County Ministerial Asso- said.
ciation, ACCESS Head St;lrt, Holzer
· The city has responded with appreciaHome He~lth, Gallia Couniy Dep.art- tion to CHII~ :\nd to help push the proment of Human Services, Gallia County gram along, the permit fee has been
Health Department and WI C.
W'lived for work done on the homes
"This is very much a h·umanit:irian · chosen for rehabilitation or repair. A perkind of program,'' Houdashelt said.
mit' must still be filed with the Code
Applic~tions are available at the CAA Enforcement Office, Houdashelt said.
One-Stop Office at 322 .Second Ave.,
."That helps lis leverage our money
which can be accessed at 446-1018 . for better,'~ she added. ·
more information. For those who cannot
come to the office for an application,
Please see hOUIIftl. ,... AI ·

I

Beaver 75, Rutgers&lt;:amden 69 .
, Charleston, W.Va. 65, Bluelleld St. 68
Clark u . 80, Tufts 73
Dayton 64, La SSIIe 38
Delaware 67, HofSira 57

Highs: 30s Lows: 205

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campaign 2ooo:
How long will
McCain's 'mo' 1ast?

Rematch:
Mich. St top~es

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· :The U.S. Department of Housing and Ut;iJan Develop- .
lli•IT 1
ment provides Small Cities Block Grant f111ids to the state.
' 01'3 ...
The Community Development Division of the; We~ Vir- · ' . . . . ~ ,v
ginia Oevelopment Office ·administers tlj.~s~ furids '
through tbe, Small Citiet B,l ock Grant program, which
, , D.._, • •
sqpports communi!)' development and impro~ment projeFts that provide a suitable living environment ~~d ,
· c' ONo Ylloy' Pot'
.ti~Spand economic opportunities: ,
.
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train our students. This facility will
enhance the lives of everyo-ne here in
· l'OINT PLEASANT,, W.Va.' this ~ounty."
~We liw in· one .large, wired, global
Underwood welcomed new MarC!Jmml!niir, and now; with this center shall. tlniversity President Dan Angel
.
Mason County has joined that com- to West Virginia.
munity," Gov. Cecil Underwood said
Angel, who has been preSident for .
Friday at ',tbe ribbon-cutting ceremo-. five weeks, said,:'What we doing here
ny· for the · new Marshall University · matters to everyone in the area and
· Mid"Ohio Valley Center.
·
everyone involved .should be proud of
A ' standing-rooni-only crowd what you have accomplished. What
gathered at MOVC to listen t&lt;&gt; .the · you are doing here matters to pe6ple
governor and celebnte the facility's now, but will also matter for
to
come."
opening.
"Marshall University will 'serve the
"This beautiful building demon" ~ngdeman~ of this community,'' strates what leadership, teamwork and
!:JI)dei'W!3od ~~. "One grea~ chill- hard work can accomplish in
~ that .w e have al~ys had in this Virgiqia;• said Michael Sellards, exec-·
state .is low college ehrollment rate utive director, Pieasant Valley Hospital:
and we are doing all we can to'change
"It is our goal to help the commu- ·
that. With this center we can extend nity and . this project definitely falls .
~~ die. rural community.
,
. into that category:'
"hs our country ~~forms in~ a . Edward Crose, MU senior vice
~~hnoli?SY natio)l, Marshall Universi- presid~nt, said, ''This is the mo5t
ty pffet"i studentS the opportunity to . sophisticated rechnoiO(!Y buUding that
. c0mpe~ and nOYo( here in . M...,n ·.. we have been able to build and I conCount)' we can the steps we need to gratulate the people of Pqint Pleasant

yean

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and Mason County."
"It's not the beauty of the building :
that will ·make the. difference, but it's :
what happens . on ' the inside that is :
rtant;' said . Dr. Larry !'arsons, :
o County Schools superinten- :
dent. T , chool. system has been ;
involved with · Manhall since. the :
MOVC idea W3l! formed in 199~. r •
Homer Preece, Mid-Ohio . VaUey :
Center director, said, "The quality of •
instructors that we have got~n has :
beep a godsend to us. 1
•
"In 1994, a core of five classes.
originally offered by MOVC. Since :
then, we have grown from a mere 11 :
students to approximately 800 stu- :
dents and foresee those numbers :
sttfadily increasing."
,
Charles W. Manning, chancellor, ·
University System ·of West V.irgitria, :
·said;"J was here in 1994 and
'six :
yean latet, there are 800 students ;
coming here. It shows what, you can ~
do with this kind of comrnitm,eni:' ' '

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