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P8ge B 6 The ~lly Senllnel

·)

'Tribe

season finale. "We've got them
18 more ~ and hop~fully
I'll get to pi~ bunch of
them."
Jram~BI
Keith Foulke pitched the
'
deceased mother. It's the ninth for the uve.
same thing that happened
Russdl Bnnyan also homebefore Game 5 of the 1998 · red for the ll)dians.
Alomar, who caught for It
AL championship series,
when he pitched for die New seasons in Cleveland before
Yotk Yankees.
signing with the White Sox as
"Some idiot tried to be a free agent lm winter, got a
cute," said Wells. " It's a shame . standing
ovation . iluring
thar one guy ruins it for pregame introductions from
everybody. I expected it, the 455th consecutive sellout
•
though. You should have at Jacobs Field.
heard it last year when I got . Alomar bowed, tipped his
beat here. It was the biggest cap and got a hug from Slidovation I ever got. It's a per- er, Cleveland's furry mascot,
sona.! thing - them against as the fans roued. Then, the
me.
Indians showed a video of
Ordonez hit a three- run· highlights from Alomar's years
- home r off loser Bartolo · in Cleveland.
Colon" and Konerko had
" That was touching and
three hitS and rwo RBis as the very classy," Alomar said. "It's
White Sox won some more something that I'll remember
respect as well as the first of for the rest of my life."
Ordonez's homer gave the
19 matchups vs. Cleveland
White
Sox a 6-0 lead in the
this seaso n.
·
"I owed tilem something," sixth off . Colon•, tagged for
Wells sa1d of the I nd1ans , who s,even runs and eight hits in
I""' od&lt;d him in On Y"'&gt; seven mnt.ngs.

Reds

••

' from Page ~'
Lopez's fifth-inning drive
· caromed off the black plywood that constitutes the
upper part of the 40-foot wall
in center: As Lopez pulled up
with a double, he was surprised to see second base
umpire Bill Miller twirling' his
right hand in the home run
signal.
The players all knew a ball
had to clear the wall to be a
homer. It became apparent
that at least one umpire. didn't
know the ground rules.
After a mo"m ent's delay,
Lopez headed for home and
Reds manager Bob Boone
· headed for the field. Home
plate umpire Jim Joyce quick-

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from Page 11
tied Bob Knight, \vho ':"on
three championships at Indiana, and now trails Kentucky 's
Adolph Rupp by one. Besides
them, . only UCLA's John
Wooden has more, with 10.
"I tell our guys, ahvays surround yourselves with good
people," Krzyzewski said. " It
may not be your time, but if
you're with them, it happens
to you. I feel that about this
team, and /'lith Shane in particular. lt was like a storybook: I'm glad I was in the
book. [ wasn't th·e main character, but l ' m glad l was in the
· book." ·
•··
Arizona wove an equally
intriguing ta4:.this season·, but
the Wildcats ,\round up one
victory short of a happy endmg.
Loren Woods had 22 points
and .11 rebounds for Arizona,
the team that rebounded from
· a poor star! and dealt ~ith the
death of coach Lute Olson's
wife, Bobbi, on Jan. 1 to re~ch
the champi_onship game.
"All of us seniors this year,
we came to college as boys
and we're leaving as men,"
Woods said. "It's not all about
Coach Olson. It's about
.
growmg up. ,

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Ray Durham singled and
the Indians had Colon intentionally walk- Fnnk Thomas
to get to Ordonez, who
ripped the first pitch ovlor the
w:~ll -in left-center.
"They've been doing that
the last three year.;· Ordonez
said. "You get lised to it. I
guess I just have to make
them respect ·me, just like
every other day."
Notes: The game was a
rematch of the first game in,'\1. history on April 24, 1901 ,
when the Chicago White
Stockings defeated the ·p!mland Blues 8-2 .... Foulke has
converted 13 straight save
chances over two seasons ....
Colon had a six-game winning streak stopped .... Indians
All-Star 3B· Travis Fryman;
who stayed behind in Florida
for extended spring training
with ,, torn elbow ligament,
will return to C leveland and
take grounders and batting
practice on Tuesday. He is eligible to be activated on Saturday.

ly overturned the incorrect Boone said.
Notes: At age 3(j, Burkett
call, sending Lopez back to
was the second-oldest Atlanta
second.
, "! thought everybody knew pitcher to start an opener. Phil
. that it had to go. over it for a _Niekro started one at ·ageA4.
home run," Boone hid. "It ... Burkett has started openers
was in all the newspapers. The . for four clubs. Gaylord Perry
key is to get it right, and they and Bert Blyleven are the
only pitchers to start an opengot it right."
The Reds did few things er for five teams .... Jones is 6right. The bullpen gave up six for-14 career off Reds starter
runs in four innings, Young Pete Harnisch with three
and shortstop Barry Larkin homers . ... Lopez, who broke
had errors, and Ken Griffey Jr. his left index finger on March
took a called third strike in his 13, was 3- for-5 and reached
pinch-hit appeannce.
on Larkin·~ error. He said Jhe
·One of Boone's moves finger didn't bother him at all.
backfired in the eighth, when . .. Boone and 3B Aaron
he had Furcal intentionally Boone became the sixth
manager-player
walked to load the bases and · father-son
. bring up Quilvio Veras. The combination in major league
second baseman doubled - to history.... The Reds sold LHP ·
clear the bases.
Ed Yarnall to the Orix Blue
"It didn't exactly go ·Wave of Japan for $300,000.
a~cording · to the script,"

NCAA .

finishing touches to this vic- rier said. "Loren Woods is such
tory, it was Dunleavy who a great shot blocker, he was
opened the game up with a guarding , me. A "couple of
3~point barrage to help Duke
them bounced my way. .I was
warm up after a 4-for-15 per- able to get my hand on them
forman ce on 3-pointers in and stick them back in ."
the first half
Duke's other AU-American,
Dunleavy was part of that Jason
Williams,
fought
problem, going 1-for-6 in the through foul trouble · and finfirst half as his father, Portland ished with 16 poi~ts on 5Trail Blazers coach Mike for-15 shooting.
Dunleavy, watched from the
Battier added the liinal
sta nds.
Four's most outstanding play" ! was feeling it, and it was er avyard to his national play~r
good tinling, _~ too,'' the · of the year trophy. He finished
yo unger Dunleavy said. "To his career with 131 victories,
do it in the championship tying Kentucky's Wayne
game. Wow. I'm sure. some of Turner, who played from
these guys were thinklng it 1996-99, for . the N C AA
was about time."
record.
· After Dunleavy's streak,
Of course, none of the wins
Arizona went on a 9-0 run, were as sweet as the last. as
capped by a hook shot by ·the final seconds licked down ;
Woods to make it 50-48.
Battier crouched low to. the
Dunleavy answered with floor and soaked it all in.
nine more points, pushing the
':.The national champilea d back to 10 on his last 3- onship is so big, so vast when
pointer with 10:08 to play.
you talk about it," he said. "It's
But Arizona didn't give up. such a different feeling to be
Four times, the Wildcats on the verge of it. Looking up
pulled within three points. at the clock, seeing it tick
Three times, it was Battier down, we're up by 10 points.
who responded from close ·1 just tri~d to enjoy the
range.
moment."
"My jump- shot · wasn't
falling from 3, so I had to look
for other ways to score," Bat-

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"The thing with Duke, you .
pick your poison,:' Olson said.
" Sometimes it's .going to be
one guy, another time it's
going to be someone else.The
mk consistent thing ·is that
·Shane Battier is going to have
a great game t&gt;ecause he just
makes things happen ."'

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The loss kept the Wildcats
(28-8) from matching their
own record of beating three
No. 1 seeds in the NCAA
tournament, as they did when
they won it all in 1997 .

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No
risky
busine$:s.
.........................................................................................

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Duke's two other titles
c:in1e in consecutive years,
and the second in l 992 \Vas
also won at the Metrodomc
after an identical trip through
the tournam e nt - Greensboro, N. C., Philadelphia and
Minneapolis for the Final
Four. ·
While Ha tti er provided th c j

..
Tu11day, April 3,

""' H

s · ScOreboard~
Bdlmore 2, Bolton 1, 111m1ng1
SHalt5, 0.iclolld4

Ulwli*M It S&amp;l&amp;IM..,, 10:30 p.fft.
Wedrltlt ,.,....._

'1'0111¥"1 Go-

.

EMt Dlytakln
L Pel

W

A!lanla
Montreal
Plliladolpllla
New York
Flolfda

1
1
1
0
0

Control

W
0
0

Houston
Pittsburgh
Chicago
Clnc:lmaU
Mltwaukee
St. Louis

9

1.000
0 1.000
0 1.000
0 .000
1 .000
Division
L Pet
0 .000
0 .000

o ' 1 ' .ooo

Cplorado
Los Angeles

0
1 .000
0
1 .000
0
1 .000
Will Dlvtolon
W
L
Pet
1
0 1.000

08

1/2
1
08
1/2
112
112
112
·08

1

0 1.000

San Francisco

1

0 1.000.

Arizona

0

0

.doo

1/2

San Diego

0

1

.000

1

Mi.......,la , _ 12·16) •• Dotrolt
(WN....,11·15), 1:05 p.m.
Anoholm (~- 7-10) at Toxas
(R&lt;&gt;aell 13-13)r 3:05 p.m..
Toronto (Parrio 12·17) at Ta- Bay
(Lopez 11-13), 7:15p.m.
Oald~nd (Zifo 7-1) at SNtlo (HOJema
H ·9), 10:05 p.m.

·

w-,.aoa,_

Oakland (Heredia 15-11) at Seattle
(Sole 17-10), 6:35p.m.
Boslon (Nomo 8·12) at BaKimore (Panson 9-13), 7:05p.m. .
Kansas City (Stein 8·5) at N.Y. Yankots
tpettitte 19·9), 7:05p.m.
Chicago While Sox (Eidrod 10.2) at
Cievelane (Finlay 16·11 ), 7:05p.m.
' Toronto 'IHamMton 2·1) at Tampa Bay
(WHsoo 1-4), 7:15p.m.
Anaheim (RaP!) 9-12) at Texas (Oliver
2-9), 8:05p.m.

ww•;gbt. 7 p.m•
Toronto •t Cle•ltand, 7:30p.m.

~If Dtfoalf. 7:30p.m.
Bboton lit Ofllndo, 7:30p.m.
l'toMa ..
7:30 PJ11.

Cha-.

.,

,,

~0:,'.);

w

L
22
29

PeL
.699
.e97

x-New YMc

'213

30

.589

8

N.Y. Mets (~~~ er 16·8) at Atlanta

Ortando

40

33

.548

11

Boston

33

40

.452

18

Milwaukee (Ha

Naw Jeraey

26

50

.342 26 112

Wash!ngton

18

55

.247

Philadelphia 6. Aorkta 5, 131nolngs
Los Angeles 1, Milwaukee 0

Today'• Gam••

(Giavlne ~ 1 -9) , 3. 5 p.m.

es 12· 13) at Houston

(Eianon 17·7), 5:05p .m.

Welfare
.
easeloads

._,.;,I'

.oa
7 112

33

Cen!rof Division
Philadelphia (PerSon 9·7) at Florida
WLPctOB
(SmHh 6-6), 7:05p.m.
~·
k
48 27 .630
Pittsburgh "{Ritchie 9-8) at Cincinna
· nwau ee
41 32 .se2
5
(O.Femandez 4-3}, 7:05p.m.
har1otte
40 33 .548
6
Ar1zona (Johnson 19·7) at Los Angeles ~od~to
33 40 .452
13
(Gagne 4-6), 10:10 p.m.
. ~ t nita
27
46
.370
19
Wednesdllr'• G1mea
e ro
26 47 .356
20
Montieal (Reames 2·1) at Chicago Cleveland
23 51 .311 23 112
Cubs (Wood 8·7). 2:20p.m.
Manta
12 60 .167 33 112
N.Y. Mots (Reed 11·5) at Atlanta (Mill· Chicago
Waatem Contwence
wood 1D-13), 7:05p.m.
Mldwttll Olvlolon
Philadelphia (Wolf 1, -9) · at Florida
WLPctOB
(Penny 8·7). 7:05p.m.
Pittsburgh (Mulholland 9·9) at Clncln!. · X·San Antonio 51" 22 .699
49 ' 24 .671
2
nati (Reitsma 0·0), 7:05p.m.
o~:=
47
26
.644
4
Milwaukee (Aigdcm 4·4) at Houston Minnesota
43 . 30 .589
8
(Lima 7· 16), 8:05p.m.
H I
40 34 .541 11 1/2
"st. louis (Benes 12-.9) at Colorado
ous on
35 39 .473 161/2
(At18cio 12·9), 9:05 p,m.
Denver
21 53 .284 30 112
Arizona (Schilling 11 ·12) at los Angeles Vancouver
Pacific Dlvlelon
(Orallort 12·9), 10:10 p.m.
,
WLPctOB
San Diego (Jarvls 3-4) at San l="rancisco
x·Sacramento 49 23 .681
(Estes 15-6), 10:15 p.m.
L.A. Lakers
48 26 .649
2
Portland
47 26 .644 2 1/2
Phoenh(
45 27 .625
4
American League
41 34 .547 9112
Seattle
L.A. Clippers
27 47 .365 . 23
E11t Dlvlelon
Golden Stale
17 56 .233 32 112
L
Pel.
.
GB
.-'"
Baltimore
1
0 1.000 ·
X·dinchod playoH spot
New York
1
0 1.000
Sunday'• Oamea
1
0 1.000 .
Toronto
Phlladelp~la 104, Indiana 93
Tampa Bay
0
0 .000
112
Utah 9~ , vancouver 73
Boston
0
1 .000
1
Chertotte 80, Boston 79
central Division
Minnesota
99, Portland 95
W L Pet
GB
Ortando 104, Toronto 101
Chicago
t
o 1.000
New York 79, L.A. Lakell 78
Detroit
0
0 .000
112
NewJeraey
101. Houston 98
112
Minnesota
a . o .000
Detroit 104, Golden Slate 87
Cleveland •
0
1 .000
1
Oallas119, Sacramento 107
Kansas City
0
1 .000
1
Phqanlx
106, Milwaukee 89
w..t Dlvltlon
·
T"*y'oGamoo
W
L Pet
GB
Boston a1 Miami, 7:30p.m.
Seattle
1
0 1.000
Orlando at New York, 7:30 p.m.
0
0 .000
Anaheim
112
Chartone at Now Je,..y, 7:30 p.m.
Oakland
o . 1 .000
1
L.A. Lakers at Utah, 8 p.m.
Texas
0
1 .000
1 '
PhOenix at Indiana., 8 p.m.
Philadelphia at Toronto. 8 p.m.
Sundl)''l Game•
Detroit a1 Chicago, 8:30p.m.
Toronto 8 , Te»ea$ t
oanas at ,Houston, 8:30 p.m.
Monday'• GamH
Seattle at San Antonio. 8:30 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees 7, Kansas City 3
Portland at Denver, 9 p.m.
Chicago While Sox 7, Cleveland 4

·w

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l,~gin

• J

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to rise

·

t1AtiE8ALL
Natlonlll Loqui
· CINCINNATI RED$-Sold LHP f;~
Yarnall to Onx of the JapaneSe Paclft&lt;;
League.
.
..
HOUSTON AsTR05-Piacod OF MOl·
ses Alou on the 15-day disabled U~.
· Recalled RHP Scott Unebrlnk" lrom Now
Orteana ot the PCL Pun:hallld ,fhe ccnlract of INF Orlando Mo!Ctd from New
Orteans. Oeslgnaled RHP Joae Clflrara
for assignment.
·
NEW YORK METS-Piaced RHP Rick
Whlta on the 15-day disabled ~~~ ....,....
. tlve 10 March 31 . Purchased lheconhactof
INF Oesl Relalord tromNortolk of the Inter·
nallonal League. Assigned C VBnc:e Wlson
and LHP Rich Rodriguez .outright to Norfolk.
ST. LOUIS CARDINAL$-AQreod to
terms with C&lt;Mike Matheny on a three-year
contract eklenslon.
BASKETBALL
..
Nlllonol Blskllbllll Aa-llllon :
CHARLOTTE HORNETs-Activated F
Derrick Coleman from the Injured lilt
Placed F Lee Nallon 00 .lhe InjUred IIIII.
FOOTBALL
Nodonlf Football Looaue
JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS"-Signod
OB Jamla Manln, LB ~dward Thomas and
08 Chandler Smllh.
NEW ENGLAND "PATRIOTs-stgn&lt;id
OB Damon Huard, OL Mille ~and
WR David Plllen.
&gt;
PHILADELPHIA · EAGLEs-Named
Dave Toub special tHma qUIItty oonfRlt

coach.

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PllTSBURGH STEELERs--Re·l!gnad

FB Jon Wltmln.
TAMPA BAY IIUCCANEER5-Nomod
Alan WHIIarna defenllve aalllllnt anci
Kevin O'Dea oHenllve aaslatanl
•
WASHINGTON REOSKINS-$1g"ed
KR Winston Octobllf, 00 llerflck Fletclltr,
DE Derrick Ham and DB David Tem1l.

HOCKEY

NolloiWI Hocil8y LMita
•
ATI.ANTA THRASHERB-IIecaltod C
Dan Snyder and D Brtan P - frtll11
Onando of the IHL. Sent RW Horblln Vllll)evs to Orlando.
MINNESOTAWILD-Recaled LW f'll.
cal Dupuis from Cleveland ollhe IHL. •
OTTAWA SENATOR$-Rocallod D
Joel Kwiatkowski from Grand Rapids of the
IHL.
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MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
The Daily Sentinel
Subscribe today • 992-2156

. glllnl or

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BISON Tho
i
for lhoM lirioullbout finding
www.bleon.com ·

Cooh Fot Nowap- CHPiilntO
Vsol MorkeHI Wbrll Form Home.
Wolto: CLIPPINGS, Box 5347
I

:PI··· ...

NEED MONEY IMMEDIATELY?
lnfoomotion on loaM calli

IYirtrdiesl
Dobt

CALL:

of..- Aula

lion. No Clldlt-

·S~ntinel

·I!OD-5!18·11t48., Dopl A

2ledla111'- II Pipe

--· .

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nn18pslper

Is not

contenl Pie..• feel frM

con'tacl our ulaoper.on "' lhiiiiiF!ies~
phc•n• number noted belo!w •111111•11

think~we have to JeriouJly
cotriider it now becau1t of
what I really believe II a
mamifacturing rtceuion
in Ohio."

falls this year and projected shortfalls in
2002 and 2003.
Erasing those shordills is required by
"the Ohio Constitution, but finding new
revenue sources is even more crucial
now because of the need to spend extra
money on an education plan.
"I thi~k we have to seriot,!sly consider it now beouse of what I reilly
believe is a manufacturing recession in
Ohio,"Taft said. "Every day brings additiona! news, whether it's a steel compa· ny going into Chapter 11 or whether it's

..

CommunitY
.
.
.
Association
BY BRIAN
,

.......... Union. A3

PIUHH1Fund.A3

.

10.
.Under .it, workers
presumed
guiltyofcausinganaccidentand·will
be denied wor~erS compensation
unless . they prove their innooence.
Before, .employers coul~ withhold
worker~· . CO!fll'ensation payments

are

·~

.

a

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HIJh:7GI
Low:401
Details, A2 ,

Lotteries

e lOOt

Ohio Vllloy Publlshl"l co.

1..----------~-----------,. ·
•

Jim H1rrt1

.. .

~.

REED

only if ~hey proved th,at workers
were under the influence of drugs or
alcohol when the accident occurred.
·"With this, you're guilty until
you're proven innocent;' "said Jim
Harris, a UAW lobbiest.
The unions claim the new law
violates citizens' guaranteed protec~
tion from unreasonable searches and
seizures because employers can force
any worker injured on the job to
undergo drug and alcohol tests with-

th e state t0.stop workpIace
. Iaw
'/With th's~ you_'re guilty
.until yo11 'rt proven
innocent."

J.

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

MIDDLEPORT - . Fund raising ideas
for July 4 fireworks were presented at the
monthly meeting of the Middleport ~om­
munity Association on Tuesday morning.
The association will meet again on April
10, ~ue to a lack of a quorum required for
voting. The meeting will be held at the Peoples Banking and Trust Co. in M-i ddleport.
ln a general discussion with members
attending, Paul Gerard, president of the
association, suggested that members begin
considering ways to generate funds to pay
for fireworks for July 4.
In the past, the cost of fireworks has been
paid by the Village of Middleport, but village council has indicated that the village
will \le ,unaltle 10 beaf the cost thif year.
Last year, t he fire\yorks cost approximately $5,000, and Mayor Sandy Iannarelli has
contacted the Ohio Lottery Commission,
which has paid for fireworks in other communities, about ·financial assistance for Middleport's fireworks:
Gerard saidhe has also contacted the
commission, but said that Middleport
sJJOuld ·consider asking the communities of
Pomeroy and Mason, W.Va., to join in pay- .
ing for th~ display, which --could then be set
off from a location central to the three
towns, near the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge, for
example.
Other members, however, expressed a
preference for keeping the fireworks in
Middleport, and collecting funds in other
ways to pay for them. Memb.ers suggested
collection cans in local businesses, fund r;~is.­
ing drawings and other fund raising ideas.
Gerard reported that a committee respon. sible for planting flowers has asked that the
:ISsociation make a $300 contribution
toward the flowers, but Gerard said ·the
group will be asked to solicit donated plants
before the association pays for them.
Gerard also suggested that the association
consider a $50 membership in the Southeastern Ohio Regional Council, in an
attempi to promote economic development, and a $50 contribution toward the
costs of the. recent Power Team perfor- .

~=~~:,r~~ medical lnfom'iatlon al!allllbla•Is vital when It comes to getting the right. treatment. That's the

.~oOabuitui!Ma!l.riiSCSii---....:--~A3~ W,VA. 2 3 ·
SportS
B1-3,5.8 o.lr J: + Dlillr •= 5- 2-8-7_
.tWI!e:.~othuus;eLr---...,--LA2w.

r

begins drive

Edjtorjals

'·

layoffi here in Colwnbus - the current
economic news is not good news."
Senate President Richard Finan, on
the other hand, strongly disagrees with
using the state's rainy day fund.
"Once you start in there, in my opinion, when we get i1ftO these cuts, everybody would he saying, 'Just go another
$50 million,just go another $25 million,
and you can take care ·of our problef11;"
Finan said. ~ I think once you start down
that path it's very difficult to stop."

'

'-C.!l0!1Jmwil!.csOL.._.;.-...___~BA4~7 .· 11 1 1, Si 1&amp;-23-25-36-37_ ·.

'J.

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Vial of life

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w.lfe... AJ

Jbdli(l

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Ohio's school-funding system.
· The state mwt meet an Ohio .
· Supreme Court order for a nc:W schoolfunding plan by June 15. Lawmakers .
have until July 1 to pass a tWo-year bu~­
Gov. Bob Tllfl
get, mqch of which depends on how
that plan iS paid for.
Taft, for example, supports. tapping a
"I think there's still soin.e distance small part qf the st.;lte's $1 billion niny
there berween us and the Legislat\_lre:· day fund and a sepante Medicaid rainy
Gov. Bob Taft said.
day fund to make up for budget .s hort-

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·I COLUMBUS (liP) ..-- Stt.. )eAders
' on Thesday admitted to .COn~:ihvi­
sion in the ranks CNer the beSt way to fix

Calendar
AS ·
Classifieds
84-6 OHIO. · ' .' .
.l._.uJ
__III_UJ_lU_ilj_ll.
_ _..._--.~~~ ..... J: 5'-3-6; Pldl4: 4-4-6-3..

ICI..tllfllod . -'dvertlalng.

1
'i12000
iiiiiii.Hii&amp;iiiF!-IIockiiiiii'IUiiiiiiis..-iiiiiiiiiil'iii""ii.·-~~~~~-----"!,,.

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Gollections, increase tax
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credits , for- the . working
P&lt;!or · ~nd · encourage
.
·employer-sponsored &lt;:hild
COLUMBUS (AP)
labor
care.
unions sued ·the state Thesday over
Declining" · caseloads
a new law
the constitutionality
have made politicians
that alloWs employerS to order drug
across . the spectrum look
good, · even as , some. have
and alcohol tests after workplace
cautioned thacchanges to
injuries and presum~ employees
the welfare system will
caused the accidents· if they fail or
refuse 'the tests.
~qt be truly tested until
the economy skids and
The Ohi~AFL-CIO and lJnited
time limits' fcirce some •
Auto Workers filed the lawsuit with
poor people off the rolls.
·, the Ohio Supreme Court asking the
Nationally, the welfare
justices to bar the state from enforcitig the law, which takes drect J\pril

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' lhru Friday
Monday
9:00AM thru 8:00 PM
Saturday
9:00AM thru 5:00 PM

. , J ~""

of

llrblock.com or 1-BDjl-HRBLOCK.

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your home. And help~ you every cent you have coming .

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Pomeroy, OH 45789 ·
740·882·8874

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u· n10ns ·sue

loo.- from lhelllle ol property, and bueln- U8ll of

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having aVIal of Llfa available when emergencies arise. Tfle VIal of Life Is really a sheet of lnforfare department in Ten- ·
·l)iatiOn IMide a small plastic cqntalner placed on the top shelf of the refrigerator or In the glove compartment
nesse'e, where welfare rolls ·
of ~li c;:ar. Tha aheat llsts'med!PBI conditions and medications, allergies, Insurance Information and. persons
ha~e irlcreased 5 --~ percent
to' be contacted ·In caae of an emt~raency. If the storqa place ·Is the refrigerator, then the decal provided with
in, the last year after being .
ti:J~ vial should be pl~d ·9n the, door or window near the main entrance to the home. If It's In the glove ·conr
cut by 11)-0re than half.
· .p~rtment, then It should be pllllped on one of the front windows of the car. Having them both places gives
And .on Capitol Hill, a
addad P,ptectiOn. On Tuesday; members of the Retired Senior Volunteer Program were In Peoples Bank at
group of lawmakers said
Pomeroy distributing tha .v ials an_d lmoriTiatlon aboutt¥Use provided by Wai-Mart Pharmacy. They were also
they ..yere taking welfare
doing tree blood pre!JSUre checks. · Betty Coughenour, right, her husband, Jack, left, and Lee Young, shown
r$:form to the ne(Ct stage as
taking ttle biOQd pressure of Tammy Mash, were· among the RSVP volunteers working on getting the Vials of
t\te}l introduced legislaLife out to senior citizens al']d others. (Charlene Hoeflich l)hoto)
·
tion Tuesday meant to ·
i · ''"'''·•~c;.,,
: improve
chilii-support , ·
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H&amp;ABLOCK

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~re going to be liigg~r;• •
said Paul Ladd of the wei-

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WASHII'fGTON (AP)
.;_The number of Americans on welfare has begun
to rise -in a6out a dozen
states ~nd has stopped
falling in most others,
forcing policy-makers and
politicians alike to rethink
their approach .to aiding
the poor.
Caseloads are still dropping in nearly a dozen
states, and the national
total is still creeping
down, but for most of the
co-unu·y, if appears that the
days of ever-shrinking
welfare rolls have come to
an end.
' State officials, already
anxious about the weakening economy and about
time limits that will soon
oxpire, are re-examining ...
their programs to see what
Gbanges are ·needed to
serve a more .disadvantaged population.
; In
Tennessee,
for
ihstance, the state is offering education and training
thr those who still have
dot found jobs; counseling
fur t~ose with s,e vere
I!roblems; and interest-free _
lpans fo help· those . in
(Ural areas buy cars.
; .:·:we . J:\~ve trapsjtione~
ltlany people off welf;u:e ~ ,
very successfully. Now
s'ome, of, these . chillle11~~ · .,

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For Free Information,
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Ct&gt;nh

Leadl!rs .split "'Ver funding plan

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43

so

Golden-·

NBA

x·Philadelphla
x- Miaml

?an Francisco 3, san Diego 2

Middleport • Pomeroy. Ohio

Apnl 4. 1001 ·Vol . 51 . No . 1111

P.,..,... arllb IIOIA, 8 p.m.
LA. Ctipporlat .,.,__, 10 p.m. - ·
-.t&lt;ealt
10:30p.m.

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E1111rn Conference
Atl1ntlc DMalon

Wednesday

~at

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Mond1y'1 O.mn
A.rianta 10, Cinc:innall 4
)
.
Montreal 5, Chicago Cubs 4, 10 innings
Colorado 8 , St. Louis o

tops River Valley, at

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~ own a bualnl11, doing your ~ laxH may .,.·rllky.

Let our pt~lonallanewer your quHtkint abut

~eigs

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Pomeroy, Middleport, 'Ohio

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Strong~r discrimination laws sought by report
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released Tuesday by the Civil Rights
Project at Harvard University.
With forecasts suggesting even
greater diversity in the future, advoca~
cy groups urged "federal and local goverl\lllents to step up enforcement of
fair-housing regulations and upgrade
education in minority neighborhoods.
Blacks and whites were most likely
to be segregated in the Detroit metro -Asians arr;, located, said the report ·politap area: the study said, while

WASAINGTON (AP) - Segregatioq pe~isted ·in big cities over. the past
decade "-amid the nation's growing
r~cial
ani! ethnic diversity, &amp;aid a report
h
1\J. k d
II
~
t. at pro_yo e
ca s
or stro~ger
.e nforcement of laws against housing
,discrimination.
(4)
Distinc~. living patterns continued ·to
hol&lt;l sway tn large urban centers where
mos~of America's blacks, Hispanics and

whites, Hispanics and Asians were most
likely to live separately iri New York.
·It is "troubling. at a time ·of massive
demographic change, w.h_en the need
for Ame ri cans to conun unicate acrOss
racial and ethnic lines is greater than
ev"e r before, that we are less likely than
ever to live in diverse neighborhoods,"
said Raul Yzaguirre. president of the
National Couhcil of La Raza, a Latinaadvocacy organization.

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The Holzer Medical Center (; .
.
Maternity and Family Center '-V,:;t'J.:.

c Unit
· Experience the Holzer Difference ·
.
in Pediohic Care.

Call;(740) 446•5075

•• •

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HOLZ~R MEDICAL CENTER

Dist'over the Holzer Difference.

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The D~ily Sentjnel

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Ohio

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Pomeroy, llllklllport, Ohio

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'Family of convicted kiter pleads for his life

Ohio weather
Thur8dey, April 5

COLUMBUS (AP) - Jay D. Scott Cleveland delicatessen owner in 1983.
was a child of poverty whose mental ill- The recommendation isn't bjllding. for
ness weiu untreated during his formative Taft, who can reduce the ·sentence, par-'
years, before he turned to Cleveland's don Scott or postpone the ~cution
· streets .and a life of crime, said family wblle evidence is considered.
members trying to spare me condemned . Scott's brother and sister told the
.
.board during a closed hearing that the
killer's life.
A lawyer repre.senting the office that 12 members must consider the i.ninate's
secured his conviction, however, said upbringing before making a recommen~
Tuesday that Scott's case has been dationtoTaft.ScOtt was born into a fam- reviewed thoroughly ·and his death sen- ily of 1 I children and alcoholic parents,
renee should be carried out as scheduled who lo.st a daughter in a fire before
April 17.
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Scott's bird!. .
The two sides presented their argoA brother of Scott was shot to death
ments before the Ohio Parole Board, and another brother paralyzed by gunwhich will recommend this week fire. Another sister was killed by gunfire,
whether Gov. l}ob Taft should grant court records show. Scott has been diag. clemency i'o Scott, 48, or allow the state nosed with schiwphrenia al)d other
to execute· him for the murder of a mental illne~~es; some of which go back

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"We didn't get a chance to exp~
what our life was, growing up in Cleveland with I 0 kids and what our parents
had to gO mrough;' Scott's older brother, George, said after the hearing. "Tbe
mental problems !hat did exist, tliey ~
not recognized eadier in his life and he
wasn't treated for it."

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:Plant issu.es water waming

Authorities await autopsy results

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Agency to aid
. th~ victims

Items found at Wrlpt hom• .·

Trooper ch•rc•d With IISIUit '

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Ex-prosecutor Joins board

~RA ·SPECIAL.

With a Daily Sentinel,

Easter Greeting!

Grand Jury gets murcler.case

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"' HARTFORD, W.Va. - Elsie L. Kenyon, 88, Hallford, died
-•Saturday, March 31, 2001 at Holzer Senior Care in Gallipoli!,.
·'' She was born June 24; 1912 in Bridgewater Township, NJ..
daughte.r -of the late John L. and Matilda Kopf.
t J; S urvtvtng are a son-in-law.• :Dean W. Smith of Hartford; two
·
·&gt;rgrand~:hildren and three great grandchildren; and several
cousins.
•
o . She was also preceded in death by her husband, James Harry
Kenyon; and her daught1=r, Myra Sidna Ohley. .
''" Priv.ite graveside services will be held at Pri:sbytedan Cemetery in Pluckemin, N.J. There will be no calling hours.
Arra11gements are by Fogelsong Funeral Home, Mason,
W.Va. ,•;;,~
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7' ~·~'-_.-H----~-----.--.-ne_a_r_~__6_0__p_ef-,-e-nt__t_o_ft_e_w_e_r__a_v_a_il-ab_l_e_._T_h_a_t-'s__c_o_m_p_a_r-ed---1-0--sa_w__d_ro_p_s_o~f-m__o_re_th
~~~.--w-__a~n--3

e are
.
Al

i.l'Oidm.....,.
111

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.f.Olls

p,;aked in 199.4 at neart)Y' 1 4.~ ,!llillion people, mostBle women and their
!f f'·ly ·sm'IY.r
children. Pushed by tough
, "new niles and ai~ed by the
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strongest
economy m
·a generation, the number of people on welfare had ·fallen by
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than 5.8 million people by
September 2000, according
to da~ that the Department
of Health and Human Services is preparing to release.
But the decline has slowed
dramatically.
Nationally, the number of
recipients fell by less thari l
percent between June and
September, the most · recent
. month for which data are

with a 4 percent decline in .
the preceding three · months ,
and a 3 percent decline diuing the same months in
1999.
The evidence of slowdown
is even dearer when examined by state.
Between June and Sep'tember of 2000, 11 states saw .
their welfare rolls increase by
more than 3 percent, while

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•·,·'"~· ···•· ·"·"··· ··"• '•'••·,·· ,, · •·•·· •· ·· •··•··· •·····-·· ......
,..,.

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... . . .. . . .,

1170t

-·-·· --·· -·····...,..

... .1 ••••... ' . . . . 1•

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TenMaae welfare famlll••
60,000 ····'····-·· .........................-.........................
59,000 ............,_ --·-·-· -~·

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58,000 · - - - -~

11! ;souRCE!·U. 9. DfplrtmMI ol H..lth lrtd Humllr? SIN;oe.

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AP

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Bob Evans - 16l.
BorgWamer - 39~
Champion - 2'• ·
Cliarmlng Shops •-

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RUder Services
- Correction Polley

New• Departments ·

The main num~,er Is 992-~156.
bapa~ment extenllons are.:
•

Ge;;_ril meni!Jir
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Tom Peden Country
1·800·822"0417. (304) 344·5947
•••
. C:hVI'Oh
• lllploy. wv '

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Address ......,.:::-:-;--"--::--......,.;-:----.:._---&lt;
.~one#----~~~~·~------~·~h-'

Ada M~ Be Prepaid

Ext. 12

··

(USPS 213·NO)'

·OhiO Vol lily Pulllohlng Co.

P~llliohed every, altemoon, Monday
lhrough Friday, · 111 Court St .,

4'l.

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City Holding - 8'•
Federal Mogul - 2),
I '•USB- 22'1•
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12l.

OVB -24),
BBl'-,35 ,
'Peoples - 17~
Premier-

6"·

D,aily stock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing
. quotas of the previous
day's transactions, pro·
vided by Smith Part·
ners al Advest Inc. of
Gallipolis.

....btr: The Aaaoc ated Press and.
tt:. Ohio Newspopor Anociatlon.
Poat111111ter: Send addreSs

correc~

tlonato TIMI.Dolly Selllinel, 111 Couri .
St., PO:neroy, Ohio 44769.

Subtcrlptlon rates

· . By oarrt1r o~ motor route'

one-k

$2
$6.70

One month
one.yeor

$104

50 cents

$ubscrlbers not desiring ~o pay 1he

·

mav remn In advance direct to ·
e~i. 14 · carder
or • 1~,,
.. ,
T~ Dally Son~nol. Credit will be given
'::· I
'
carrier each wetk. No·stbscrtptton by
· · .Other servlcN
.mall .polmltted In arooa wl)ere home
, . 'rr . •

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Adv~rtialng

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Ext. 3

Circulation

Ext. 4

Cln~ledAda

Ext. 5

· To sand t-m.ell
dailysentlneiOyahoo.com

earner aeNICa ts available.

,

Mill suhlnl...l~

lnolda M;ipc;,t'my ·· ·
·
$27.30
26 Weeka
'
$53.82
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52 WH/cl

-

· 13 WHkl
26 WH/cl
52 W,H kl

$105.56

ouleldo Mt:lga County
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$29.25:
$56.68
$109.72

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Lands End - 26),
Ltd.- 15% . • .
0Qk Hill Financial -

Pomeroy,
Ohio~
, Second-ctass i
poa1oge paid al Po
oy.
,

Ext. 13 . Oolly

New•

Child's Nil!"&amp;~-"";-:-:-:--'-----.;.:_-_:_
·From :;::::--:+~:.:-_;_.,-------,--'-...!:'·':..._
YourNam•~--~c-----~~-----·~
· ___

I

tpe
Daily
Sentii)el
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Our main concern In all stories Ia
to be accurate. lf1you know of an
error In a story, call the newsroom
at (740) 992·2156.

CalfTQ Scbitduto An

POMEROY -A marriage
license has been issued ·in
· Meigs County Probate Court
to Jack Scott Clark, 23 ,Albany,
and Shavona Irene Gambill,
16, McArthur.

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~ORK AT THE #1 D~\RSHIP·

p.m.; Apdl 19, Salem Center
Elementary, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.;
April 20, Rutland Elementary,
8:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.; April
2.'3 and Z4, Southern Elemen-

·Ucense issued

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LOCAL STOCKS

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t'''~ih~T P~YMENT

. POMEROY .- Dates for
kinilergarten screening have
been set for Meigs County
Schools:
April 9 and 10, Eastern Elementary, 8 a.ll:l • tt2_ 3 p.m.;.
April 11 and 12. Middleport
Elementary, 8 a.m. lo 2:30

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Cunningham •

_ Wonderful opportunltlea are available In Tom
P~an Country. Wa.lira expanding our facll.ltlaa ·
an need mora aal18 people. No experience Ia
re ~red, only a wllllngnau to 118rn,, work aa a
.
\ team, end have strong Initiative.
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PLAN '
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GREAT BENEFITS (INCLUDINQ DEMO Pf!OGRAM) .

processed

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gomery,
said
that
her
office
will
people
from coming to work would wave overhauled the
·rreview the claims ahnd will not under. the inquence of drugs or · state's entire workets compen· ·• ,yet .coh\. me, n,t ..o n t e 1aw.suit's alcohol and to protect other sation system and included a
provision that would have
~~' Piij;A1 :v· !;: merits.•
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· workers.
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. As t)u! bill was debated last
Ohioans already have said enacted the same ·changes as
I' out, probable cause .that the · year in · .the Legislature, ·tpe they don't want a law like this, the hew law.
As for whether the law is
: wor~~·.fJ~ under •the intlu• , llnions adamantly opposed it, AFL-CIO President William
constitutional, Cates 5&lt;1id. that
1 ence at tile, lime
the acct- v~icing their concerns and Burga said.
,,..dept.
. ' ·
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tllte~tenihg ' litigation to no ,
In 1997, voters overwhelm- "everything is constitutional
until the court says it's not.".
•
.According to the.lawsutt, the avail. ·
• ingly defeated Issue 2, which
! :new :\~*' ' i!lso lliol:ites C?Wo'l : "1h'is law is not about
no7fa~l~ · system of, ;workers reducing drugs and alcohol in
·· ~q')Vin,g . the workplace, its about reduc1 compensation·
1
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s:mploye~ ·tO ~ssign b!a/ne and , ing the nu~~er 9f 'workers
jilssume.,j~'-\ injury occurted ·. cc:&gt;mr,e~sati~n d~ms .that a~
Rockwell - 36),
.Gannett - 59),
AEP ..,- 49
.
·J:&gt;ecausf):cthe , worker was :on filed, Hams said. .
Arch Colli~ 29),
General Electric- 39~ Rocl(y Boots - 4 ~
AD Shell- 53~
~gs
alcohol if the Worker • . B:tp..Gary Cates; a Republi- Akzo ...:. 40~.
I&gt;KNLY -10
Sears33
Harley
Davidson
AmTech/SBO43
refuses br. fails the tests.
can from West Chester who
Shoney's -l.
35~.
~land Inc. - 37~. ·
: Joe; die, a . spokesman for sponsored die bill last year, said AT&amp;T-20
Wai-Mart- 49),
Kmart-9%
'Wendy's
- 22),
Kroger
24l.
·
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Bank
One
35
.
· ',·Atto~; Gen~ral Betty Mont" !he law was ena~ted to prevent
Worth:ngton- 9~

Happy Easter!

DAYTON (AP) - A fed- · birth abortipn by opponents ·
eral judge challenged a ;tate -is painful' and cruel to the
attorney Tuesday ·to explain fetus.
how a late.- term abortion
However, 'a doctor trying
pro cedure that Ohio wants . to block the ban claims the
to ban is crueler than anoth- law wauld prevent some
er technique.
women from seeking abor"ls there any evidence 'or tions, force others to. pbtain
argument that the procedure more dangerous medical care
is crueler toward the fetus
and interfere with a doctor's
than one of the alternatives,
which is dismemberment of best medical judgment,
th e fetus in utero?" ·Judge
Strait told ·the judge that
Walter Rice asked Anne the law would restnct only
Strait, ~n assistant . Ohio.•· use of dilation and extraction
a tt~rney general, during dos- and that other procedures are ·
ing arguments in ,a lawsuit not the ~ssue.
.
An alternative, dilation and .
against a new state l;~w.
The state has ' argued that . evacuation, removes the fetus
the dilation and extraction . from . the uterine wall and
procedure - called partial- 'sometimes dismembers it. ·

Dissolutions ·

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57,000

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Barbecue slated

set .

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. ' '' 'U.S. fllmllaa .......... M!lfiiN '
1. 4 -·' .. "·· .. . ·~ iiWp :tee In wenare C81881n the ea:Jy '90s ·
was followed by a~_decli:e. In 2000,
easeloads were leaalhan haH of whet they
· · .were at tl1eir P&lt;Oalc in 1994.
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Artaona welfarelamlll•

;;;~···-th• slide In ••.,,,. ca..- bottomed out?

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Judgl questions on daim
that prOcedure is cn~el ·.

percent.
By . conirast, during the
preceding three months,
from March· to June, only
five states saw their caseloads
increase by 3 percent, while
29 saw drops that large. Similarly, in 1999,just four states
saw their caseloads rise by 3
percent between June and
September, while 34 saw
them drop by that much .

CHESHIRE. Emergency a.m.. to 2:30 p.m.; April 27,
HEAP funds are still available Harrisonville Elementary, 9
· thmugh Gallia-Meigs Com- a.m. to 3 p.m.; April 30 and
May 1, Pomeroy Elenien,tary.
~uniry Action Agency. The
!
program has been extended 8:30 a.m. to 3·p.m.
Parents
should
·
register
by
thmugh April 13, said Sandra
their
respective
Edwards, CAA's emergency calling
schools.
services director.
Regular HEAP, which is
administered in Columbus,
has been extended through
MIDDLEPORT - · Due to
April 30. Households which
the
lack of a quorum at Tueshave not yet applied are
encouraged to send in their day's meeting, the Middleport
applications as soon as possi- Community" Association's
monthly meeting \viii be held
ble.
Emergency HEAP provides on AprillO at 8:30a.m . at.!he
assistance to house holds that Peoples Banking and Trust
have had utilities disconnect- Co. in Middleport. Fund raised. face the threat of discon- ing plans for July 4 fireworks
•
nection, or have .1 0 days or less will Ire .discussed.
of bulk fuel supply.
The program allows a onetime payment of up to S175
per heating season to restore
HOBSON "'""'&gt; · Hobson
or retain home heating ser- Church will have a fimd raisvices. For propane and fuel oil ing dinner on Friday, with
clients, . the . payment was serving from 10 a.m. until 3
recently increased to $275 p.m. The menu includes
because of the increase in fuel homemade chicken noodles,
·
\vith o:&gt;ashed
potatoes, green
pnces.
.
Emergency HEAP eligibili- beans and a roll for $4, two
ty can be for the past three .or hot dogs with chips for $2,
12 m!Jnths.Those not qualify- • and appl~ pie for $1 per slice; .
ihg on three months income . 1Acl~anbyce alliorders may be
are asked to present a full 12- P ace
c ng Faith Hay!\ · ·
p
man at 992-3893 or the
mont afyncome. ocum~ntba~ church at 992"9686 _
twn.ven mg mcome must e
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provided when applying,
along with a copy of the
recent electric bill.
RACINE- Racine VolunBoth Emergency HEAP
teer Fire Department will
and HEAP applications can be
have a chicken barbecue on
completed at the Gallia HEAP
April 8, with serving beginoffice at 322 Second Ave.,
ning at 11 a.m. at the fireGallipolis, and the Meigs house.
·
HEAP office at 186 Mulberry ·
Ave., Pomeroy. Applications
will be taken by appointment
l..,from 9 a.m. until 11 a.m. and
from I to 3 p.m .• Tuesday
through Thursday.
·POME~OY - An action
Appointments
can be for dissolution of marriage has
arrange.d by calling 992-2222 been filed in Meigs County
in Meigs County ai1d 446-· Common Pleas Court by
1018.The toll-free number for Bonnie Rupe, Middleport,
H EA:P inqu,irieS js (800), 282- · a'ld Bobby Rope, Pomeroy.
0'880. .
.
A dissolution has been
, granted to Linda Miller and
,Jeffrey
Miller.
rreptfa~on

·oinnerset

Fund

week's Good START community foru:i1, held at Middleporq Elementary School
fromPegeA1
by the Coalition... for Ohio
'
Appalachian Development
mances.
and the local Good START
·
Gerard said he attended a committee.
recent SEORC meeting in .
Members agreed that disNelspnville, and believes any cussions about the downattempts to attract business to town business district, recreMiddleport will require con- ation, public worRs and other
· · tacts outside the village.
topics which were covered at
G.erard and other associa- last week's public meeting be
·lion members discussed last continued.

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r .uncovers
oveJb•ll'lng

Jail prisoner hangs himseH

Pomeroy. He was a veteran of the U.S. Army during the Viet
Nam Conflict, and .was employed as an auto body repairman
A
ks
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at uto Networ in Ta~pa.
.
SurviVing are his wife, Cheryl Nelson S~th. and a son and
his fiance Jacob Smith and Christina Tone all 0 f '[
A 'da h'.
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· . r,.
ampa,
on ; as .stepmother, Sus•e Snuth ofWtlliamstown, West
Virginia; a brother and sister-in-law, Patrick and Alice Smith
f c 1 b ·
· · T. · s ·
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oL .• daoW:um us; twfSo JSisters,Miem nuhth o~ hColumbus, and
10
arno_1 o t. ames,
ssoun; IS mot er-m-law, Mae
Nelson of Muldleport; and several meces, nephews, aunts and
uncles ·
·
·s · ·.
·ll b.
~
ervtces w1 e held at 1 p.m. on Thursday, A 1 5, 2001
at Fisher-Acree Funeral Home.in Middleport·, witH AI Ha~tffi · ·
son o ICiatmg.
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Fnends may call at the funeral home on Thursday, Apnl 5
2001 fi
II
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f
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'
rom
a.m. unt1 t1me o .serv:ces.

&gt;

Chance of rain later in ·week

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Chris Smith

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• .,, . Su!viVIng in addition to his mother are his wife, Erma Whit•
·
.angton Mulford Hersman; a daughter and son-in-law, Debbie
"r d Ri k. M
fG . .
.
-benniSc d ~re ~ allipolis; two sons and a daughter-m-law, •
. an . am ulford of Huntmgton, Ind., and Jeff Hers11,.man o(Maraon;
two grandsons and four ~at grandchildren· a
.
b h
J h • .
siste D th L D d ·.11 fV '
"' Hersrma,. hojro Yd J. 0 rRI Ho 10tonbo,~ f roMat ~rs, 0 dn H.
r., an ames . ersman
w o
non· an sev·'er::il nieceS and nephe'ws.
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. ·.1• Services will be held at 11 a.m. on Frida A ril 6 2001 at
· McCoy
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F
H
· . v·
Y: h~L R• J · h
, ,&gt;-.
- oore unera1 orne 10 . 10ton, Wit ..,,e ev. o n
"("odwin officiating. Burial will follow at Gravel Hill Cemetery
"''in Chbhire Milita
.d .
. b
d
db h
"•Vinton Arne. .
'Lry ?ravepsl e r1tes WI 11 e con ucte Y t e
ncan egaon ost 16 1 .
.
· ds
all th fi
Fnen
may c . at e uneral home from 2-4 and 6-9 p.m .
Tlrursday. M
· · ·
'If be held on Th ursdayv:at 8 :45
_
_ . asomc services WI
. p.m. by the Vinton F&amp;AM Lodge 13.1. ·
.

.student leaclers appeal decision

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~NTON - Eugene Hersman, 72, Vinton, died Tuesday, · TAMPA, Fla. - .;:hris Smith, 45: of Tampa, died unexc-f-Pril 3~ 200~ U Pleasant Valley Nursing and. Rehabilitation _ pectedly on Stmday,April I, 2001 at Tampa General Hospi.,~nte, m Plltnt Pleasant, W.Va., following a brief illness.
tal in Tampa.
;,: He~ born Dec. 15,1928 in DelaW:are County, son ofBeuHe was born on April 28, 1955 in Warren, son of Fran"
~~n~t Hersman ofM~rion, and the late Rev.John H. Hers- Smith of Williamstown•.'Yest Virginia, and Wanda Keller of

to his youth, his lawyers have said.
He was first incarcerated at age 9 and
had spent nine ~ in adult prison by
the time he was charged with '!rilli1,1g
Vinnie Prince, 74, of Cleveland during a
robbery of her delicatessen.
None of the details ofScott'siUrbulept,
life came out during his ,trW because Ips
then-attorneys did not pRSCnt any supp(&gt;rting eVidence during the senten~g

Swogger, who had to have her arm amputated, spent a
week in intensive care and remains hospitalized in satisfacto0\Jondition.
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KENT (AP) - Kent State University student leaders want
· i"&gt;etective Sgt..Dennis Williams testified during a probable
case hearing that Walker, during. an .interrogation that wasn't to reverse a decision barring funding for this year's commemoration of the 1970. campus shootings that killed four
recorded, said twice thu he had killed his wife.
students and wounded nine,. ·
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
early in the afternoon.
· The Undergraduate Student Senate asked Tuesday that its
Thursday will be partly
Thursday
night .. .Pardy
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allocation committee reconsider a decision not to fund the
ciNCINNATI (AP) _ State Auditor Jim Petro says a ·annual commemoration next month.
cloudy with seasonable tell}- cloudy. Low near 50.
peratures near 70, the NationExte!lded forecast:
Cincinnati company owes the state $358,192 for 'billing
The committee voted overwhelmingly March \9 not to
• ·. a! Weather ServiCe said.
Friday... Partly cloudy. High · Medicaid more •han it should have while providing oxygen fund the commemoration.
·
·
There will · be - a · r.lsl&lt; -or- 70 t-o 75.
equipment. to=12 area nursing homes.
"It will be tough to overcome a 7-1 decision," ·allocation
showers . or thunderstorms
Satur~y... Partly cloudy. A
A Medicaid review conducted by the state auditor's office committee member Mike Chadsey said.
i
later in the week, when the chance of showel'$ from early demanded that Valley Medical Corp. ·reimburse the Ohio
mercury is likely to climb into afternoon on. Low 50 to 55 Department of Job and Family Services, which administers .
the 70s.
and high in t~e mid 7~.
the state's Medicaid program, or risk having the matter
Lows tonight will be near
Sunday... Partly cloudy. A turned over to the Ohio attorney general's office..
HAMILTON (AP) - A man awaiting sentencing ·for
40 under dear skies.
·
chance of showers until 'midJ. Randall Richard!, a lawyer for company owner Grover L. aigravat~a
murder was found hanged in his Buder County
Sunset tonight will be at night. Low in the mid 50s and Davis, said Tuesday that his client has not done anything
jail cell Tuesday, a sheriff's spokesman said. .
7:59, and sunrise on. Thursday high in the lower 70s.
·
wrong and has the documentation to prove it. Davis will not.
Coby Chavis, 31, was convicted last month in the Septemis at 7:10a.m.
Monday... Partly cloudy. A pay the state'tintil he has been given a hearing before state
ber shooting death of Alden Litde. Chavis was_due back in .
Weather forecast:
chance of showers in the after~ Medicaid officials, said Richards.·
Tonight... Mostly 'Clear. Low noon. Low near 50 and high
"I don't believe (state agencies) have authority to conduct court April. 10 for' sentencing.
.Another prisoner was assigned to the cell but was ih anoth.
audits of Medicaid providers," he said. .
near 40. Light nor!heasr wind. in the lower 70s. ·
er part of the jail when Chavis died, sheriff's spokesman Brad
Tuesday. ~. Pardy
cloudy.
·
·
Thursday... Partly · cloudy.
.Kraemer said. kraemer said there were no indications of foul ·
High near 70. Northeast wind Low in the lower 50s and high
play in Chavis' death, which is still under investigation.' .
10 mph becoming southeast near 70.
"All indications are he 'took his own life;· said jail Ward~n
LORAIN (AP) - . Ford Motor Co. told employees at its
Norm
Lewis.
·
Lorain Assembly Plant to stop drinking the water and don't
wash their hands while tests continue on bacteria found in
the water supply.
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RICHMOND DALE (AP) - Authorities weren't saying
The bacteria detected Tuesday hasn't been identified. i'Qrd
what caused, the death of a 21-year-old woman whose body spokesman Ed Miller said it wasn;t the Legionnaires' diseas~
qNCINNATI .(AP) -Investors who lost millions of dolwas found on a bank of the Scioto River until autopsy results bacteria that killed two Ford workers at a Cleveland casting lars in a brokerage w!lose president is accused of taking !heir
were in, but she obviously was murdered.
plapt last month.
.
money are getting help from a watchdog organization run by
"Her hands were tied behind her back," Ross County ProsMoie tem were ordered to identify the bacteria found in the securities industry.
. .
.
ecutor Scott Nusbaum said of Stephanie Evans, whose' par• the water supply, Miller said. He said production wasn't
The WashinJIOn-bued Securities . lnvettor Protection
·
·
·
Corp. said Thesday that it expects to advance more than SS
tially submerged body :..vas found Tuesday morning covered affe,ted.
with rocks on the river's edge.
·
Linda Arnett ofVermilion, whose husblllld and· ion work at million to more than 100 investori who had assets stolen at ·
Pound about )50 feet away wu the woman's 2-year-old the plant, said employees had heard th'at 16 areu were tested Donahue Securities.·
son, who had survived the night's 40-degree temperatures and eight had high levels of bacteria.
"The Donahue case is a textbook illustration of why Con· .
strapped in a car seat. Young Justin Green's temperature was
f 1re11 created SIPC to protect investors at troubled brokeraae
down 93 degrees when taken to a hospital for treatment for
firms," SIPC president Michael Don said. "While outrilht
exposure.
,
theft of this sort is uncommon,,it is important for investon to ,
fishermen found the child. Sheriff's deputies followed a
DAYTON (AP) -A _preliminary archaeological dig at the · know that SIPC is here as a safety net when they need us in .
·
.'
trail of blood from the car seat to the river bank, where they site or the Wright ~rotberl' home has unearthed a button, these situations." '
found the body o( Evans, of Richmond Dale.
·
· ''two nails, a fragment of china and a broken bottle atop;
· The Securities and Exchange Commission hu filed a civil
The piece~ of late 19th-century li(ti emerged from , the complaint against Stephen G. Donahue, former president of
vacant lot Tuesday along with more modern debris such as Donaho~ s~curitiel and S.G. Donahue &amp; Co., accutina him
•
drui(syringes and soda bottles ftom 20th-century life.
·
of using about $6.2 million of customers' money for person·
LEBANON (AP) - A State Highway Patrol trooper was · The"fatnily of aviation pioneers Orville and Wilbur Wright al expenses, such as taxes, a Florida condo and land for a subarrested on charges of assaulting a woman who was involved lived in the home from 1871 to 1914. Orville was born there
in 1871. Wilbur died there in. 1912.
urban Cincinnati home.
in a relationship ""(ith him, the patrol said Tuesday.
Richard. Kelley, 36, of Cincinnati, was arrested Sunday ·o n a · The city-owned lot has been empty since . 1936, when
third-degree felony charge of abduction and first·degree mis- . industrialist Henry Ford moved the Wright house to his
demeanor counts of assault, domestic violence and criminal Greenfield Village museum at Dearborn, Mich. damaging, the patrol said.
Kelley, who is assigned to the Batavia post, was arguing
with the 36-year-old woman, whose name was not released,
around 4 a.1f1. Sund;ay on Interstate 75 near Middletown, the · HAMILTON (AP)- A former assistant prosecUtor will be·
the newest member of the Butler ,County elections b'oard,
patrol said.
Kelley was off-duty in his own' ·vehicle when the alleged repl"ing a member who was removed.
assault took place, the patrol said.
·
:rhe county Democratic Party selected John M. Holcomb
on Tuesday to repla.ce Mark Conese.
Ohio Secretary of Sta:te\ Ken Blackwell . removed Conese
' '
from the boa.rd last mont!\. In a March 20 letter, Blackwell
CANTON (AP) -The ~urder case against a man charged said that he had found dear and convincing evidence that
with fatally shooting his wife· after an argument and maiming Conese tri~d to coerce a board employee into making conher friend has, been referred to .the Stark County grand jury. tri\mtions to the county's Democratic Party. • .
· .
, Municipal Court Judge Mao/ A. Falvey ruled Tuesday that
Conese, a lawyer and former domestic .relations judge, has
there was sufficient cause to believe Dale Junior Walker1 52, repeatedly denied the allegations. He has said that he believes
of Canton, had killed Carol A. Walker and shot her friend, the decision was politically motivated and is consi~ering legal
Wilma Swogger, 55, on March ~4. '
options for challengiqg Blackwell's ruling.

A d•to

LOCAL BRIEFS
tary, 8:30a.m. to 3 p.nl.; April
HEAPMiaiJie 26,
Salisbury Elementary, 8:30

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Pomeroy, llllklllport, Ohio

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'Family of convicted kiter pleads for his life

Ohio weather
Thur8dey, April 5

COLUMBUS (AP) - Jay D. Scott Cleveland delicatessen owner in 1983.
was a child of poverty whose mental ill- The recommendation isn't bjllding. for
ness weiu untreated during his formative Taft, who can reduce the ·sentence, par-'
years, before he turned to Cleveland's don Scott or postpone the ~cution
· streets .and a life of crime, said family wblle evidence is considered.
members trying to spare me condemned . Scott's brother and sister told the
.
.board during a closed hearing that the
killer's life.
A lawyer repre.senting the office that 12 members must consider the i.ninate's
secured his conviction, however, said upbringing before making a recommen~
Tuesday that Scott's case has been dationtoTaft.ScOtt was born into a fam- reviewed thoroughly ·and his death sen- ily of 1 I children and alcoholic parents,
renee should be carried out as scheduled who lo.st a daughter in a fire before
April 17.
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Scott's bird!. .
The two sides presented their argoA brother of Scott was shot to death
ments before the Ohio Parole Board, and another brother paralyzed by gunwhich will recommend this week fire. Another sister was killed by gunfire,
whether Gov. l}ob Taft should grant court records show. Scott has been diag. clemency i'o Scott, 48, or allow the state nosed with schiwphrenia al)d other
to execute· him for the murder of a mental illne~~es; some of which go back

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"We didn't get a chance to exp~
what our life was, growing up in Cleveland with I 0 kids and what our parents
had to gO mrough;' Scott's older brother, George, said after the hearing. "Tbe
mental problems !hat did exist, tliey ~
not recognized eadier in his life and he
wasn't treated for it."

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:Plant issu.es water waming

Authorities await autopsy results

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Agency to aid
. th~ victims

Items found at Wrlpt hom• .·

Trooper ch•rc•d With IISIUit '

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Ex-prosecutor Joins board

~RA ·SPECIAL.

With a Daily Sentinel,

Easter Greeting!

Grand Jury gets murcler.case

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"' HARTFORD, W.Va. - Elsie L. Kenyon, 88, Hallford, died
-•Saturday, March 31, 2001 at Holzer Senior Care in Gallipoli!,.
·'' She was born June 24; 1912 in Bridgewater Township, NJ..
daughte.r -of the late John L. and Matilda Kopf.
t J; S urvtvtng are a son-in-law.• :Dean W. Smith of Hartford; two
·
·&gt;rgrand~:hildren and three great grandchildren; and several
cousins.
•
o . She was also preceded in death by her husband, James Harry
Kenyon; and her daught1=r, Myra Sidna Ohley. .
''" Priv.ite graveside services will be held at Pri:sbytedan Cemetery in Pluckemin, N.J. There will be no calling hours.
Arra11gements are by Fogelsong Funeral Home, Mason,
W.Va. ,•;;,~
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7' ~·~'-_.-H----~-----.--.-ne_a_r_~__6_0__p_ef-,-e-nt__t_o_ft_e_w_e_r__a_v_a_il-ab_l_e_._T_h_a_t-'s__c_o_m_p_a_r-ed---1-0--sa_w__d_ro_p_s_o~f-m__o_re_th
~~~.--w-__a~n--3

e are
.
Al

i.l'Oidm.....,.
111

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.f.Olls

p,;aked in 199.4 at neart)Y' 1 4.~ ,!llillion people, mostBle women and their
!f f'·ly ·sm'IY.r
children. Pushed by tough
, "new niles and ai~ed by the
~ · ,•
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strongest
economy m
·a generation, the number of people on welfare had ·fallen by
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than 5.8 million people by
September 2000, according
to da~ that the Department
of Health and Human Services is preparing to release.
But the decline has slowed
dramatically.
Nationally, the number of
recipients fell by less thari l
percent between June and
September, the most · recent
. month for which data are

with a 4 percent decline in .
the preceding three · months ,
and a 3 percent decline diuing the same months in
1999.
The evidence of slowdown
is even dearer when examined by state.
Between June and Sep'tember of 2000, 11 states saw .
their welfare rolls increase by
more than 3 percent, while

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,~

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•·,·'"~· ···•· ·"·"··· ··"• '•'••·,·· ,, · •·•·· •· ·· •··•··· •·····-·· ......
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1170t

-·-·· --·· -·····...,..

... .1 ••••... ' . . . . 1•

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TenMaae welfare famlll••
60,000 ····'····-·· .........................-.........................
59,000 ............,_ --·-·-· -~·

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58,000 · - - - -~

11! ;souRCE!·U. 9. DfplrtmMI ol H..lth lrtd Humllr? SIN;oe.

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Bob Evans - 16l.
BorgWamer - 39~
Champion - 2'• ·
Cliarmlng Shops •-

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RUder Services
- Correction Polley

New• Departments ·

The main num~,er Is 992-~156.
bapa~ment extenllons are.:
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Ge;;_ril meni!Jir
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Tom Peden Country
1·800·822"0417. (304) 344·5947
•••
. C:hVI'Oh
• lllploy. wv '

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Address ......,.:::-:-;--"--::--......,.;-:----.:._---&lt;
.~one#----~~~~·~------~·~h-'

Ada M~ Be Prepaid

Ext. 12

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(USPS 213·NO)'

·OhiO Vol lily Pulllohlng Co.

P~llliohed every, altemoon, Monday
lhrough Friday, · 111 Court St .,

4'l.

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City Holding - 8'•
Federal Mogul - 2),
I '•USB- 22'1•
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12l.

OVB -24),
BBl'-,35 ,
'Peoples - 17~
Premier-

6"·

D,aily stock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing
. quotas of the previous
day's transactions, pro·
vided by Smith Part·
ners al Advest Inc. of
Gallipolis.

....btr: The Aaaoc ated Press and.
tt:. Ohio Newspopor Anociatlon.
Poat111111ter: Send addreSs

correc~

tlonato TIMI.Dolly Selllinel, 111 Couri .
St., PO:neroy, Ohio 44769.

Subtcrlptlon rates

· . By oarrt1r o~ motor route'

one-k

$2
$6.70

One month
one.yeor

$104

50 cents

$ubscrlbers not desiring ~o pay 1he

·

mav remn In advance direct to ·
e~i. 14 · carder
or • 1~,,
.. ,
T~ Dally Son~nol. Credit will be given
'::· I
'
carrier each wetk. No·stbscrtptton by
· · .Other servlcN
.mall .polmltted In arooa wl)ere home
, . 'rr . •

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Adv~rtialng

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Ext. 3

Circulation

Ext. 4

Cln~ledAda

Ext. 5

· To sand t-m.ell
dailysentlneiOyahoo.com

earner aeNICa ts available.

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Mill suhlnl...l~

lnolda M;ipc;,t'my ·· ·
·
$27.30
26 Weeka
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$53.82
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52 WH/cl

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· 13 WHkl
26 WH/cl
52 W,H kl

$105.56

ouleldo Mt:lga County
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$29.25:
$56.68
$109.72

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Lands End - 26),
Ltd.- 15% . • .
0Qk Hill Financial -

Pomeroy,
Ohio~
, Second-ctass i
poa1oge paid al Po
oy.
,

Ext. 13 . Oolly

New•

Child's Nil!"&amp;~-"";-:-:-:--'-----.;.:_-_:_
·From :;::::--:+~:.:-_;_.,-------,--'-...!:'·':..._
YourNam•~--~c-----~~-----·~
· ___

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Sentii)el
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Our main concern In all stories Ia
to be accurate. lf1you know of an
error In a story, call the newsroom
at (740) 992·2156.

CalfTQ Scbitduto An

POMEROY -A marriage
license has been issued ·in
· Meigs County Probate Court
to Jack Scott Clark, 23 ,Albany,
and Shavona Irene Gambill,
16, McArthur.

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~ORK AT THE #1 D~\RSHIP·

p.m.; Apdl 19, Salem Center
Elementary, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.;
April 20, Rutland Elementary,
8:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.; April
2.'3 and Z4, Southern Elemen-

·Ucense issued

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t'''~ih~T P~YMENT

. POMEROY .- Dates for
kinilergarten screening have
been set for Meigs County
Schools:
April 9 and 10, Eastern Elementary, 8 a.ll:l • tt2_ 3 p.m.;.
April 11 and 12. Middleport
Elementary, 8 a.m. lo 2:30

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Cunningham •

_ Wonderful opportunltlea are available In Tom
P~an Country. Wa.lira expanding our facll.ltlaa ·
an need mora aal18 people. No experience Ia
re ~red, only a wllllngnau to 118rn,, work aa a
.
\ team, end have strong Initiative.
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GREAT BENEFITS (INCLUDINQ DEMO Pf!OGRAM) .

processed

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gomery,
said
that
her
office
will
people
from coming to work would wave overhauled the
·rreview the claims ahnd will not under. the inquence of drugs or · state's entire workets compen· ·• ,yet .coh\. me, n,t ..o n t e 1aw.suit's alcohol and to protect other sation system and included a
provision that would have
~~' Piij;A1 :v· !;: merits.•
.
· workers.
.
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.
. As t)u! bill was debated last
Ohioans already have said enacted the same ·changes as
I' out, probable cause .that the · year in · .the Legislature, ·tpe they don't want a law like this, the hew law.
As for whether the law is
: wor~~·.fJ~ under •the intlu• , llnions adamantly opposed it, AFL-CIO President William
constitutional, Cates 5&lt;1id. that
1 ence at tile, lime
the acct- v~icing their concerns and Burga said.
,,..dept.
. ' ·
· · ' · . .,
tllte~tenihg ' litigation to no ,
In 1997, voters overwhelm- "everything is constitutional
until the court says it's not.".
•
.According to the.lawsutt, the avail. ·
• ingly defeated Issue 2, which
! :new :\~*' ' i!lso lliol:ites C?Wo'l : "1h'is law is not about
no7fa~l~ · system of, ;workers reducing drugs and alcohol in
·· ~q')Vin,g . the workplace, its about reduc1 compensation·
1
·•
s:mploye~ ·tO ~ssign b!a/ne and , ing the nu~~er 9f 'workers
jilssume.,j~'-\ injury occurted ·. cc:&gt;mr,e~sati~n d~ms .that a~
Rockwell - 36),
.Gannett - 59),
AEP ..,- 49
.
·J:&gt;ecausf):cthe , worker was :on filed, Hams said. .
Arch Colli~ 29),
General Electric- 39~ Rocl(y Boots - 4 ~
AD Shell- 53~
~gs
alcohol if the Worker • . B:tp..Gary Cates; a Republi- Akzo ...:. 40~.
I&gt;KNLY -10
Sears33
Harley
Davidson
AmTech/SBO43
refuses br. fails the tests.
can from West Chester who
Shoney's -l.
35~.
~land Inc. - 37~. ·
: Joe; die, a . spokesman for sponsored die bill last year, said AT&amp;T-20
Wai-Mart- 49),
Kmart-9%
'Wendy's
- 22),
Kroger
24l.
·
·
Bank
One
35
.
· ',·Atto~; Gen~ral Betty Mont" !he law was ena~ted to prevent
Worth:ngton- 9~

Happy Easter!

DAYTON (AP) - A fed- · birth abortipn by opponents ·
eral judge challenged a ;tate -is painful' and cruel to the
attorney Tuesday ·to explain fetus.
how a late.- term abortion
However, 'a doctor trying
pro cedure that Ohio wants . to block the ban claims the
to ban is crueler than anoth- law wauld prevent some
er technique.
women from seeking abor"ls there any evidence 'or tions, force others to. pbtain
argument that the procedure more dangerous medical care
is crueler toward the fetus
and interfere with a doctor's
than one of the alternatives,
which is dismemberment of best medical judgment,
th e fetus in utero?" ·Judge
Strait told ·the judge that
Walter Rice asked Anne the law would restnct only
Strait, ~n assistant . Ohio.•· use of dilation and extraction
a tt~rney general, during dos- and that other procedures are ·
ing arguments in ,a lawsuit not the ~ssue.
.
An alternative, dilation and .
against a new state l;~w.
The state has ' argued that . evacuation, removes the fetus
the dilation and extraction . from . the uterine wall and
procedure - called partial- 'sometimes dismembers it. ·

Dissolutions ·

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LOve, Mom ~ Dad

57,000

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Barbecue slated

set .

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t:~
. ' '' 'U.S. fllmllaa .......... M!lfiiN '
1. 4 -·' .. "·· .. . ·~ iiWp :tee In wenare C81881n the ea:Jy '90s ·
was followed by a~_decli:e. In 2000,
easeloads were leaalhan haH of whet they
· · .were at tl1eir P&lt;Oalc in 1994.
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Artaona welfarelamlll•

;;;~···-th• slide In ••.,,,. ca..- bottomed out?

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Judgl questions on daim
that prOcedure is cn~el ·.

percent.
By . conirast, during the
preceding three months,
from March· to June, only
five states saw their caseloads
increase by 3 percent, while
29 saw drops that large. Similarly, in 1999,just four states
saw their caseloads rise by 3
percent between June and
September, while 34 saw
them drop by that much .

CHESHIRE. Emergency a.m.. to 2:30 p.m.; April 27,
HEAP funds are still available Harrisonville Elementary, 9
· thmugh Gallia-Meigs Com- a.m. to 3 p.m.; April 30 and
May 1, Pomeroy Elenien,tary.
~uniry Action Agency. The
!
program has been extended 8:30 a.m. to 3·p.m.
Parents
should
·
register
by
thmugh April 13, said Sandra
their
respective
Edwards, CAA's emergency calling
schools.
services director.
Regular HEAP, which is
administered in Columbus,
has been extended through
MIDDLEPORT - · Due to
April 30. Households which
the
lack of a quorum at Tueshave not yet applied are
encouraged to send in their day's meeting, the Middleport
applications as soon as possi- Community" Association's
monthly meeting \viii be held
ble.
Emergency HEAP provides on AprillO at 8:30a.m . at.!he
assistance to house holds that Peoples Banking and Trust
have had utilities disconnect- Co. in Middleport. Fund raised. face the threat of discon- ing plans for July 4 fireworks
•
nection, or have .1 0 days or less will Ire .discussed.
of bulk fuel supply.
The program allows a onetime payment of up to S175
per heating season to restore
HOBSON "'""'&gt; · Hobson
or retain home heating ser- Church will have a fimd raisvices. For propane and fuel oil ing dinner on Friday, with
clients, . the . payment was serving from 10 a.m. until 3
recently increased to $275 p.m. The menu includes
because of the increase in fuel homemade chicken noodles,
·
\vith o:&gt;ashed
potatoes, green
pnces.
.
Emergency HEAP eligibili- beans and a roll for $4, two
ty can be for the past three .or hot dogs with chips for $2,
12 m!Jnths.Those not qualify- • and appl~ pie for $1 per slice; .
ihg on three months income . 1Acl~anbyce alliorders may be
are asked to present a full 12- P ace
c ng Faith Hay!\ · ·
p
man at 992-3893 or the
mont afyncome. ocum~ntba~ church at 992"9686 _
twn.ven mg mcome must e
•
provided when applying,
along with a copy of the
recent electric bill.
RACINE- Racine VolunBoth Emergency HEAP
teer Fire Department will
and HEAP applications can be
have a chicken barbecue on
completed at the Gallia HEAP
April 8, with serving beginoffice at 322 Second Ave.,
ning at 11 a.m. at the fireGallipolis, and the Meigs house.
·
HEAP office at 186 Mulberry ·
Ave., Pomeroy. Applications
will be taken by appointment
l..,from 9 a.m. until 11 a.m. and
from I to 3 p.m .• Tuesday
through Thursday.
·POME~OY - An action
Appointments
can be for dissolution of marriage has
arrange.d by calling 992-2222 been filed in Meigs County
in Meigs County ai1d 446-· Common Pleas Court by
1018.The toll-free number for Bonnie Rupe, Middleport,
H EA:P inqu,irieS js (800), 282- · a'ld Bobby Rope, Pomeroy.
0'880. .
.
A dissolution has been
, granted to Linda Miller and
,Jeffrey
Miller.
rreptfa~on

·oinnerset

Fund

week's Good START community foru:i1, held at Middleporq Elementary School
fromPegeA1
by the Coalition... for Ohio
'
Appalachian Development
mances.
and the local Good START
·
Gerard said he attended a committee.
recent SEORC meeting in .
Members agreed that disNelspnville, and believes any cussions about the downattempts to attract business to town business district, recreMiddleport will require con- ation, public worRs and other
· · tacts outside the village.
topics which were covered at
G.erard and other associa- last week's public meeting be
·lion members discussed last continued.

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r .uncovers
oveJb•ll'lng

Jail prisoner hangs himseH

Pomeroy. He was a veteran of the U.S. Army during the Viet
Nam Conflict, and .was employed as an auto body repairman
A
ks
'
at uto Networ in Ta~pa.
.
SurviVing are his wife, Cheryl Nelson S~th. and a son and
his fiance Jacob Smith and Christina Tone all 0 f '[
A 'da h'.
·.
.
· . r,.
ampa,
on ; as .stepmother, Sus•e Snuth ofWtlliamstown, West
Virginia; a brother and sister-in-law, Patrick and Alice Smith
f c 1 b ·
· · T. · s ·
·
oL .• daoW:um us; twfSo JSisters,Miem nuhth o~ hColumbus, and
10
arno_1 o t. ames,
ssoun; IS mot er-m-law, Mae
Nelson of Muldleport; and several meces, nephews, aunts and
uncles ·
·
·s · ·.
·ll b.
~
ervtces w1 e held at 1 p.m. on Thursday, A 1 5, 2001
at Fisher-Acree Funeral Home.in Middleport·, witH AI Ha~tffi · ·
son o ICiatmg.
. ·
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Fnends may call at the funeral home on Thursday, Apnl 5
2001 fi
II
·1 ·
f
·
'
rom
a.m. unt1 t1me o .serv:ces.

&gt;

Chance of rain later in ·week

..

Chris Smith

.,

• .,, . Su!viVIng in addition to his mother are his wife, Erma Whit•
·
.angton Mulford Hersman; a daughter and son-in-law, Debbie
"r d Ri k. M
fG . .
.
-benniSc d ~re ~ allipolis; two sons and a daughter-m-law, •
. an . am ulford of Huntmgton, Ind., and Jeff Hers11,.man o(Maraon;
two grandsons and four ~at grandchildren· a
.
b h
J h • .
siste D th L D d ·.11 fV '
"' Hersrma,. hojro Yd J. 0 rRI Ho 10tonbo,~ f roMat ~rs, 0 dn H.
r., an ames . ersman
w o
non· an sev·'er::il nieceS and nephe'ws.
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. ·.1• Services will be held at 11 a.m. on Frida A ril 6 2001 at
· McCoy
" M
F
H
· . v·
Y: h~L R• J · h
, ,&gt;-.
- oore unera1 orne 10 . 10ton, Wit ..,,e ev. o n
"("odwin officiating. Burial will follow at Gravel Hill Cemetery
"''in Chbhire Milita
.d .
. b
d
db h
"•Vinton Arne. .
'Lry ?ravepsl e r1tes WI 11 e con ucte Y t e
ncan egaon ost 16 1 .
.
· ds
all th fi
Fnen
may c . at e uneral home from 2-4 and 6-9 p.m .
Tlrursday. M
· · ·
'If be held on Th ursdayv:at 8 :45
_
_ . asomc services WI
. p.m. by the Vinton F&amp;AM Lodge 13.1. ·
.

.student leaclers appeal decision

u

Eupne...._n
'

~NTON - Eugene Hersman, 72, Vinton, died Tuesday, · TAMPA, Fla. - .;:hris Smith, 45: of Tampa, died unexc-f-Pril 3~ 200~ U Pleasant Valley Nursing and. Rehabilitation _ pectedly on Stmday,April I, 2001 at Tampa General Hospi.,~nte, m Plltnt Pleasant, W.Va., following a brief illness.
tal in Tampa.
;,: He~ born Dec. 15,1928 in DelaW:are County, son ofBeuHe was born on April 28, 1955 in Warren, son of Fran"
~~n~t Hersman ofM~rion, and the late Rev.John H. Hers- Smith of Williamstown•.'Yest Virginia, and Wanda Keller of

to his youth, his lawyers have said.
He was first incarcerated at age 9 and
had spent nine ~ in adult prison by
the time he was charged with '!rilli1,1g
Vinnie Prince, 74, of Cleveland during a
robbery of her delicatessen.
None of the details ofScott'siUrbulept,
life came out during his ,trW because Ips
then-attorneys did not pRSCnt any supp(&gt;rting eVidence during the senten~g

Swogger, who had to have her arm amputated, spent a
week in intensive care and remains hospitalized in satisfacto0\Jondition.
·
·
··
·
KENT (AP) - Kent State University student leaders want
· i"&gt;etective Sgt..Dennis Williams testified during a probable
case hearing that Walker, during. an .interrogation that wasn't to reverse a decision barring funding for this year's commemoration of the 1970. campus shootings that killed four
recorded, said twice thu he had killed his wife.
students and wounded nine,. ·
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
early in the afternoon.
· The Undergraduate Student Senate asked Tuesday that its
Thursday will be partly
Thursday
night .. .Pardy
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I
allocation committee reconsider a decision not to fund the
ciNCINNATI (AP) _ State Auditor Jim Petro says a ·annual commemoration next month.
cloudy with seasonable tell}- cloudy. Low near 50.
peratures near 70, the NationExte!lded forecast:
Cincinnati company owes the state $358,192 for 'billing
The committee voted overwhelmingly March \9 not to
• ·. a! Weather ServiCe said.
Friday... Partly cloudy. High · Medicaid more •han it should have while providing oxygen fund the commemoration.
·
·
There will · be - a · r.lsl&lt; -or- 70 t-o 75.
equipment. to=12 area nursing homes.
"It will be tough to overcome a 7-1 decision," ·allocation
showers . or thunderstorms
Satur~y... Partly cloudy. A
A Medicaid review conducted by the state auditor's office committee member Mike Chadsey said.
i
later in the week, when the chance of showel'$ from early demanded that Valley Medical Corp. ·reimburse the Ohio
mercury is likely to climb into afternoon on. Low 50 to 55 Department of Job and Family Services, which administers .
the 70s.
and high in t~e mid 7~.
the state's Medicaid program, or risk having the matter
Lows tonight will be near
Sunday... Partly cloudy. A turned over to the Ohio attorney general's office..
HAMILTON (AP) - A man awaiting sentencing ·for
40 under dear skies.
·
chance of showers until 'midJ. Randall Richard!, a lawyer for company owner Grover L. aigravat~a
murder was found hanged in his Buder County
Sunset tonight will be at night. Low in the mid 50s and Davis, said Tuesday that his client has not done anything
jail cell Tuesday, a sheriff's spokesman said. .
7:59, and sunrise on. Thursday high in the lower 70s.
·
wrong and has the documentation to prove it. Davis will not.
Coby Chavis, 31, was convicted last month in the Septemis at 7:10a.m.
Monday... Partly cloudy. A pay the state'tintil he has been given a hearing before state
ber shooting death of Alden Litde. Chavis was_due back in .
Weather forecast:
chance of showers in the after~ Medicaid officials, said Richards.·
Tonight... Mostly 'Clear. Low noon. Low near 50 and high
"I don't believe (state agencies) have authority to conduct court April. 10 for' sentencing.
.Another prisoner was assigned to the cell but was ih anoth.
audits of Medicaid providers," he said. .
near 40. Light nor!heasr wind. in the lower 70s. ·
er part of the jail when Chavis died, sheriff's spokesman Brad
Tuesday. ~. Pardy
cloudy.
·
·
Thursday... Partly · cloudy.
.Kraemer said. kraemer said there were no indications of foul ·
High near 70. Northeast wind Low in the lower 50s and high
play in Chavis' death, which is still under investigation.' .
10 mph becoming southeast near 70.
"All indications are he 'took his own life;· said jail Ward~n
LORAIN (AP) - . Ford Motor Co. told employees at its
Norm
Lewis.
·
Lorain Assembly Plant to stop drinking the water and don't
wash their hands while tests continue on bacteria found in
the water supply.
··
'
RICHMOND DALE (AP) - Authorities weren't saying
The bacteria detected Tuesday hasn't been identified. i'Qrd
what caused, the death of a 21-year-old woman whose body spokesman Ed Miller said it wasn;t the Legionnaires' diseas~
qNCINNATI .(AP) -Investors who lost millions of dolwas found on a bank of the Scioto River until autopsy results bacteria that killed two Ford workers at a Cleveland casting lars in a brokerage w!lose president is accused of taking !heir
were in, but she obviously was murdered.
plapt last month.
.
money are getting help from a watchdog organization run by
"Her hands were tied behind her back," Ross County ProsMoie tem were ordered to identify the bacteria found in the securities industry.
. .
.
ecutor Scott Nusbaum said of Stephanie Evans, whose' par• the water supply, Miller said. He said production wasn't
The WashinJIOn-bued Securities . lnvettor Protection
·
·
·
Corp. said Thesday that it expects to advance more than SS
tially submerged body :..vas found Tuesday morning covered affe,ted.
with rocks on the river's edge.
·
Linda Arnett ofVermilion, whose husblllld and· ion work at million to more than 100 investori who had assets stolen at ·
Pound about )50 feet away wu the woman's 2-year-old the plant, said employees had heard th'at 16 areu were tested Donahue Securities.·
son, who had survived the night's 40-degree temperatures and eight had high levels of bacteria.
"The Donahue case is a textbook illustration of why Con· .
strapped in a car seat. Young Justin Green's temperature was
f 1re11 created SIPC to protect investors at troubled brokeraae
down 93 degrees when taken to a hospital for treatment for
firms," SIPC president Michael Don said. "While outrilht
exposure.
,
theft of this sort is uncommon,,it is important for investon to ,
fishermen found the child. Sheriff's deputies followed a
DAYTON (AP) -A _preliminary archaeological dig at the · know that SIPC is here as a safety net when they need us in .
·
.'
trail of blood from the car seat to the river bank, where they site or the Wright ~rotberl' home has unearthed a button, these situations." '
found the body o( Evans, of Richmond Dale.
·
· ''two nails, a fragment of china and a broken bottle atop;
· The Securities and Exchange Commission hu filed a civil
The piece~ of late 19th-century li(ti emerged from , the complaint against Stephen G. Donahue, former president of
vacant lot Tuesday along with more modern debris such as Donaho~ s~curitiel and S.G. Donahue &amp; Co., accutina him
•
drui(syringes and soda bottles ftom 20th-century life.
·
of using about $6.2 million of customers' money for person·
LEBANON (AP) - A State Highway Patrol trooper was · The"fatnily of aviation pioneers Orville and Wilbur Wright al expenses, such as taxes, a Florida condo and land for a subarrested on charges of assaulting a woman who was involved lived in the home from 1871 to 1914. Orville was born there
in 1871. Wilbur died there in. 1912.
urban Cincinnati home.
in a relationship ""(ith him, the patrol said Tuesday.
Richard. Kelley, 36, of Cincinnati, was arrested Sunday ·o n a · The city-owned lot has been empty since . 1936, when
third-degree felony charge of abduction and first·degree mis- . industrialist Henry Ford moved the Wright house to his
demeanor counts of assault, domestic violence and criminal Greenfield Village museum at Dearborn, Mich. damaging, the patrol said.
Kelley, who is assigned to the Batavia post, was arguing
with the 36-year-old woman, whose name was not released,
around 4 a.1f1. Sund;ay on Interstate 75 near Middletown, the · HAMILTON (AP)- A former assistant prosecUtor will be·
the newest member of the Butler ,County elections b'oard,
patrol said.
Kelley was off-duty in his own' ·vehicle when the alleged repl"ing a member who was removed.
assault took place, the patrol said.
·
:rhe county Democratic Party selected John M. Holcomb
on Tuesday to repla.ce Mark Conese.
Ohio Secretary of Sta:te\ Ken Blackwell . removed Conese
' '
from the boa.rd last mont!\. In a March 20 letter, Blackwell
CANTON (AP) -The ~urder case against a man charged said that he had found dear and convincing evidence that
with fatally shooting his wife· after an argument and maiming Conese tri~d to coerce a board employee into making conher friend has, been referred to .the Stark County grand jury. tri\mtions to the county's Democratic Party. • .
· .
, Municipal Court Judge Mao/ A. Falvey ruled Tuesday that
Conese, a lawyer and former domestic .relations judge, has
there was sufficient cause to believe Dale Junior Walker1 52, repeatedly denied the allegations. He has said that he believes
of Canton, had killed Carol A. Walker and shot her friend, the decision was politically motivated and is consi~ering legal
Wilma Swogger, 55, on March ~4. '
options for challengiqg Blackwell's ruling.

A d•to

LOCAL BRIEFS
tary, 8:30a.m. to 3 p.nl.; April
HEAPMiaiJie 26,
Salisbury Elementary, 8:30

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Opinion

1he Daily Sn rtinel

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.SC)CIETY NEWS &amp; . NOTES

The Daily Sentinel

:::'!~~~~~u:!t :!~· ~~~~~~
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111 Court St., Pomllo,, Ohio
740 112-11N • 'Fu: 112-2157

:ANUTHER .

FAITH-BASED
ECONOMIST.

R.SMwn~

IIIMglng Editor

UM

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Charlenl Holllllch

General ........

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OUR VIEW
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Chinese obstinacy will only
worsen current standoff

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TODAY IN HISTORY

RED GREEN'S VIEW

Today is Wednesday, April 4, the 94th day of 2Q01. There
are 271 days left in the year.
·
Today's Highlight in History:
On April 4, 1968, civil rights leader Martin Luther King
Jr., 39, was shot to death in Memphis, Tenn.
On this date:
,
In 18t8; Congress decided the flag l.of the United States
would consist of' 13 red and white stripes and 20 stars, with a
new star to be added for every new state of the-Union.
In t 841, President William Henry Harrison succuVlbed to
pneumonia orte month after' his -inaugural, becoming the first
U.S. chief executive to die in office.
'In 1850, the city of Los Angeles was incorporated.
In 1887, Susah,na Medora Salter became the first ~oman
elected mayot of an American community -Argonia, Kan.
In 1902, British financier Cecil Rhodes left _$10 million in
his.will to provide scholarships for Americans at Oxford University;
.
In 1945, during World War II, U.S. forces liberated the Nazi
·· .
death camp Ohrdruf in Germany. . ·
,In 1949, 12 nations, including the Unite~ States, signed the
·
· ·
North Atlantic T1:eaty.
· In 1975, more than 130 people, most of them children,
were killed when a U.S. Air Fore~ transport plane evacuating
Vietnamese orphans crashed ·sh~rdy after take-off from
Saigon.
·
.
.
In 1981, Henry Cisneros became the first Mexican-American elected mayor of a major U.S. city- San Antonio, Texas.
·Jn 1983, the space shuttle "Challenger" roared it1to orbit
on, its maiden voyage.
·
.
Ten years ago:-sen. John Heinz (R-P"_.) an~ six other people, including tWo children, were killed when a helicopter
collided with Heinz's plane over a schoolyard -in Merion, Pa.

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Avoid tragedy .

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Here's one way to stimulate sluggish eco ·omy .
Bv f\ED GREEN

oddly natural that humans will let things voodoo curse that is disturbing 'its_.um(.'
Tliey keep talking about another reces- slide in liont of friends but will go to great
Meanwhile I'll be living on cold !elision comirtg, so I thought I should come efforts to itnpress people they hardly overs to ·appease the gods.
·
up witlt an idea that would stimulate a know.
·
'Ildk,talk, talk
sluggish economy. •
·
'The magic is gone
Some of us talk more and more as we
I would start with not talking about it.
Like mo~t peopl~, I have a fair bit of get older, and we may not even notice it.
I can remember my mother saying, "Tim technology m my li.fe. A computer and a Here are some signs to watch .for mat
pimple wiD go ·away if you'll just stop TV and a ITllCrowave oven and a DVD . indicate you're talking to
h·
·
thinking about it." And she'd say that player - that kind of thirtg. And also like
• You've had to replaceou::~uthpiece
every 10 minutes or so.
most people, I· get angry when these in
· h
thre . .
b the
·
. yo~ P o;~ _ e times, ut
ear, The other thing we cim do is declare a things don't work.
15
National Reunion Week: This will be a
But I've just realized that this anger is plec~ JUSt e new.
special til[lle set aside when evecyone is unfounded _and probably fraudulent. . : Nusy people avmd you.
.
encouraged to drop in unannounced to When my ITllcrdwave oven doesn't work,
o~ody ~er asks you a quesnon.
visit old friends and acquaintaoces they' for example, 1 p~tend to be angry that a
• Yo~ ve . forgotten the sound of your
haven't seen for at least five years. It .WOuld nlachine like that would j~st stop working . sp~use s vo1ce.
.
.
When you leave someone a vo1ce
come with a Web site of current address- for no reason. 'file truth IS I have no idea
es.
.,how it works in the first.place. Some kind message, you always get' cut off; ·
That'd be the end of the recession. The of waves fly through the space within alit•You pulled a muscle in your~threat of a former crony diopping in de box and. cook my hot dog. That mak~
• l?eople respond to you wjth rwo-word
unexpectedly to see how you're doing no sense to me. It$ magic.
answers- the second word is either"up"
So I can't honestly phone up the .oti"off:'
· ·: .
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·would create a massive_i1pturn in so many
areas of the economy - furniture, paint repairriiim and ScieO!Jil at him that my
(Red Green is the star of "The Red Green ·
and wallpaper, clothing stores, fitness cen- microwave oven ha.s broken down. Show," a teltvisiOII series seen in the US. on
_ters and cosmetic surgery oudets. Even Instead, I'll just plead meekly that the 'PBS t~t~d in Canada on the CBC Network,
real estate..would see an upswing~ people • magic went away and I W9uld appreciate -and the author 'of "The Red Green Book" and
scrambled to move to better homes. Its it if he would come over and remove the "Red Green Talks Call:A Lcve Storj.")

,,
•

"

off in April and focuses ori preventing de.
Bad choices do not always stan with
the use of fake IDs to purchase alcohol,
Dear Editor:
. ,, and operating a motor vehicle after drinking and driving. Obtaining the
On a back road late Saturday night, a underage consumption.
· alcohol is ofien the first p&lt;ior choice a·
teen driver rushes home to make his
The goal is to reduce the number of teen will make. A person under the .age
curfew. He is driving too fast and he has teen alcohol-related crashes and deaths. of 21 who presents a ,false, fictitious or
been drinking. The young man is rapid- Alcohol is involved in one out of every altered ID or driven license when purly approaching the curve in the, road that four fatal crashes in Ohio. Drivers 16- chasing alcohol will also incur severe
will end his life.
20-yean ~ld are consistendy over-repre~ penalties.
A fint offense results in a mandatory
Not too far fiom the crash scene, a sented in Ohio's fatal crashes, and are
mother has been up most . of the night twice as likely as the general population fine of $250-$1,000 and up ~o six
waiting for her son's return when she to be killed in a traffic crash.
months in jail. A second offense results
sees the headlights coming up the driveTo combat this problem, troopers will in a mandatory fine of$500-:$1;000 and
way, she is overcome with relief. Confil- be. visiting schools and conducting safe- jail time ·up to six months and possible
sion and fear overtike her when she ty presentations to educate teen drivers
.
hem the doorbell. She rushes to the · about the consequences ofpoor choices, 60-day license suspension.
Teens that commit a third or subsedoor... taking ·her first step into the Other area law enforcement agencies,
grieving process.
.
state liquor agents, and alcohol retailers quent offense face a mandatory fine of
On the other side of the door stands a also set up collaborative efforts to c.urtail $500-$1,000 and jail time up to six
state trooper, alone with ·his awful the illegal purchase of alcohol and the months, a 90-day license suspension
· with an option .of community· service,
responsibility. The trooper is fully pre- use of fake IDs.
pared to explain how the .crash hapIn 1994, a significant revision to the and a license suspension until age 21.
pened, but cannot aruwer the inevitable, DUI law has enabled law enforcement
Bear in mind, not every teen killed in
"Why?"
to more effectively combat teenage dri- ari alcohol related crash was driving.
This is a story that is repeated too ven who choose to drink. In Ohio, the Sometimes, passengen killed were not
often acrois the state. Inexperience legal blood alcohol concentration (BAC) even drinking. A good choice in avoidbehind the wheel combined with a false limit fur a driver under the age of 21 is ing alcohol can be quickly overshadsense of invincibility and alcohol, a lethal .02 percent, which is significandy lower owed by choosing to ride with somecombination, results in the death of . than the existing limit of. tO percent for body who has been drinking.
individuals age 21 or older.
Remember, when you choose to ride
another teenager.
· ·We are now approaching a time of The charge of operating a !llot?r ~ehi- with somebody, you are putting your life
year when alcohol becomes a greater de after underage _consumption 1~ mde~ their hands. Even though you have
~tor for ~enagen .. Pro~ and gra~ua- penden~ of potential c~ges for illegally ot violated the DUI Jaw,· you may still
non are a time of celebration, and a time purchasmg or consunung the alcohol.
suffer the same tragic consequences as
to make choices. This time of year,
Teens convicted of operating a motor the driver who has
teenagers face some o_f the most impor- vehi~le after underag;e consumption face
1 urge teens to rbe above peer pressure
tant deciSions of the1r lives. There are a license suspension of anywhere
·d niak d
d
'bl d ·
decisions that could affect the rest of between 60 days and rwo years. The ·a.n
e e ucate • responsl e eeltheir lives. Poor decisionS behind the court may also commit a teen to as many Slons. I ~ppeal to _parents_ ~nd educators
as -three days in a certified alcohol and to spen .some_ time \¥,1 • our young .
wheel can result in tragedy.
Troopers work year round to modifY drug addiction program.
~eople d1scussmg these _Issues .. h IS
poor driving behaviors befure they result
Additionally, four points are assessed to Important that, you provtde gu1dance in crashes. In the upcoming weeks, the violator's driving record, and a: reme- and ~ke your expec~ons very clear
troopers will endeavor to help teenagers dial driving course . must be completed wh~n It com~s to the ISSU~ of al~ohol. _I
make good choices, and aggressively before a driver's license will be reissued, mvlte all to JOin the patrol m making this
look for those who do not.
The remedial driving course is required prQm and graduation season a time ·of
The Ohio Department'of Public Safe- to devote a number of instruction hours celebration, not one filled with tragedy.
ty initiated the None for Under 21 pro- in the area of alcohol and drugs as it
Lt. Richard E. Grilu
gram in '1994. This annual effort kicks relates to the operation of a motor vehiGallipolis

BY·THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

•
•

OUR READERS' VIEWS

We look for a peaceful solution to. the staodoff between the
U.S. and China that arose after one of our surveillance planes
collided With a Chinese military jet ow:r the ~ekend:
The situation could be easily resolved except fur one thing.
The Chinese are holding the crew of our plane, forced to land •
on Hainan Island afier the collision. As we said, that happened
ow:r the weekend. As of this writing, our military and diplomatic corps had yet received access to the crew.
.The Chinese are probably still irked at NATO's bombing of
their embassy in Kosovo. Remember, it was a NATO mission,
but somehow it was our fault because our forces were involved.
Given all that and attempll to undentand why the Chinese
are so obstinate about releasing our people and the plane liom
Hainan, it all boils down to one thing.
·
That thing is the Cold War mentality dominating China's
elderly leadenhip as a still avowedly Communist nation tries to
revert liom the agrarian atone age of Mao Tse-lbng's regime to
industrial prominence.
.
The stall the Chinese have put into effect has a miliucy purpose. They want inside the surveillance plane to see what makes
it and othen like it tick - as if they haven't already guessed.
Because of that bit of atrategic infor-mation, the Chinese are
. l:ieitig annoyingly slow about allowipg the crew to see our.oflic~s. They are also practicing an old _
game perfected dbring the ·
negotiations to end the Korean War- stonewalling to get what
.Ll
mey want.
.
· .
,
_
While this attitude may be inherent in the Chinese nature, it's
not the face they want to present to a Wllrld still uneasy with its .
dual goals of making money and remaining loyal to Marx, Mao
or whatever brand of Communism they subscribe to now.
Militarily and diplomatically, there are a lot of obstacles for
China and the U.S. to overcome. Taiwan remains a thorn in the
mainland's side and we would be forfeiting our commitment to
democracy if we abandoned that small OUtpOSt of medom for
political expendiency. .
,
The surveillance· flights are also irksome to the Chinese, but
let us remind them that the plane in question riow was operating in international ainpace, as was the jet it.ran into. The acciden' appears not to have been designed.- It should be recognized
as such, and our craft ·and crew should be released as soon as
ponible.
This latest flare-up between ours~lves ancJ China should not
become the definipg moment a carefully developed relationship. Yet, we do not advocate apologizing for the incident, and
sitnilarly, the Chinese propaganda machine had best tone down
ill criticisms.
·
·
Increasing tension between the U.S. and China c~ only be
disastrous in the long run. Resolve the situation, and let's get on
with addressing the real international problems, such as povertr
and crime.

DROP US ALINE.

111 Coun 111., Po.....-oy, Ohio
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74HtH1H

200 Mlln ~nt P1nnnt, W. VA

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'UlJ'adaardey, Aprtl 4. 2M1

Pregnant woman doesn.,t want
peonle
.to
th
_
ink
wrono
thing
r

' .

Terry and Carol Fetty of
visited
(S
Rudand Fire Deputment met re&lt;:endy at the Martha and Joe Poole ofAlfied.
'
Dear ADD Tc=d=: I -am
&amp;ie=d
fire house.
28 yean old and hM been
Dear Eut Coast: Did )'OU
Anna ~ey was named to solicit donations
WOIISIR
11ieet
engaged
a
year.
although
say
• he talla to his parenll
fiom local businesses and Kimberly Willford will
sometimes rwo and three
- ~ not yet set a wedding
see that the golden egg papers are ready for the 'ALFRED .- A report on a recent diltrjct
date. My fianc.e, "Steve; is 37..
times a day? D9e5 he have
. four age groups and will pick up suckers to hand meeting was given whea the ~ United
·We
have
been
rogetherfor
live
stock
in the phone company?
out to all the lcidt.
Methodist Women mer recently.
)'ears and are very much in
This exceeds normal limits Kim Davis proposed the auxiliary take a
Nina Robinson gave the opening prayer ·
love.
.
.
to put it mildly.
CPR!first aid course at a of$3 each to pay for before the business meeting.~ Martha
· Last week, I discovered I am
_ What is the reason for this
the cards. Action ·was postponed until the next Poole _and Treasurer Osie Mae FOIIrod gave their
ADVICE
pregnant. This was unplanned
man's
.extnordinary insecurimeeting.
reports, which were applO\Ied.
and something of a mystery.
ty? These three-Hiay phone
It was suggested by Willford that the auxiliary
The group reported 104 friendship calls.
because we always use contra- cerned about what people will calls are more about HIS need
prepare handmade cookbooks as a money-makThe group voted to contribute $50 to Meigs
ceptives. Steve loves kids, but say. Steve, "ready" or not, will ~ his concern for his paring proj¢ct. She offered to do all the ryping and County Senior Citizens Center,
he is not ready to start a fami- adore this child, and it will be ents. Has he had any counsel- .
Resources chairman Sarah Caldwell read the
copying of them along with the graphics. Each
ly. He doesn't want me to have a blessing to you both.
ing? Perhaps he should considmember will be responsible for 10 recip~ In the list of churches' receiving reading certificateS for
this baby and has asked me to
Dear Ann Landen: I am er it. Something's out of
categories of main dishes, breads, app~rs. side 2000, noting that Alfred United Methodist
terminate the pregnancy.
dating a 29-year-old man who whack here, and he needs to
dishes, and deserts.
Church had received a certificate.
Ann, I want this child. I lives across the country from figure out what it is.
.Kim .Davis conducted the meeting 'vith WillThelma Henderson, vice president, atid Caldunderstaod Steve's _point of his parents. "Hal" hasn't lived at
Dear Ann Landen: My
ford and Davis presenting the officers' reports. It weD, reported on "UnwrippingYour Gifts;' proview, but the thought of hav- home for over 10 years, how- fiance, "Andrew;· and I decidwas noted that the recent soup super was a sue- gram at the district UMW meeting on March
ing an abortion .is terribly_ ever, he talks to them every ed to take a bac)cpacking trip
cess raising $325. The meeting was called to 24. Mary Jo Barringer read mission news lion1
upsetting to me. I will do it if day, sometimes two or three through Europe this summer.
order by President Kim Davis. Kimberly Will- "Hamburg Express," by Tom and Susan, Shaw.
Steve insists, but I am scared times a day. This seems exces- We mentioned this ro another
ford g;tve the secretaries report, which .were Follrod read Sharon and Tom Craw's rep on ntisan~onfused. A baby is sup- sive to me, but Hal says it is couple, and they interpreted it
approved. Kim Davis reac;l the treasuren report in sions in Mrica.
pose . to be a joyous creation perfecdy OK.
as an "invitation." I have been
Follrod had the prayer calendar and chose
the absence of treasurer Opal Dyer.
be en two people who love
I broke up \vith my previous friends with "Angela" for
In other business. it was reported -Dyer is still Stacy Vanderwerf of Kiev, Ubaine. The gro1,1p
each ~other. I don't understand boyfriend because his mother years, and although I like her a
checking with Larry Montgomery on conces- signed a birthday card for her.
why ~teve can"t find a way to was so controlling, so I may be lot, I don't think the friendship
Pastor Janr Bearti.e brought books for the
sion trailer prices
low: and want this child. We a little sensitive about this could stand that much togeth- .
The traveling prize won by Willford was fur- reading program and a banner for the Alfred disare financially stable and can u closeness." I'll admit, his erness. Also, her boyfriend is
Dished by April Burke.Total collected for travel- play at the Athens District Banner Rally.
well afford to · have a family. mother hasn't said anything terrible with money, and I'm ·
ing prize was $6. Willfurd will furnish it at the
Nellie Parker led the program, "What Does
The only problem is that we that makes me think there is a afraid Andrew and I would
are not married, and I don't p~blem, but you neve_r, know. end up paying for everything.
next meeting. Anna Farley will provide snacks the Lord Require:' Worship ~enter featured
for the April meeting.
- seroUs of First Commandment and Micah 6:8, a
want people to think we got I simply do not understand
How can we teD .Angela
married because I became whyhe has to talk to his par- "no," without ·ruining the
Secret sister gifis were given out. Attending picture of Nehemiah rebuilding the wall of
pregnant.
ent&gt; so oli:en. My boyfriend friendship? ·'besides those . named were Juanita Harmon and Jerusalem, and injustice posters. All inembers ·
Nameleaa
Please · advise immediately. says he loves his family, enjoys Travelen
joined in reading and discussion of col'R!j:ting
·Connie Bales.
Time is . of the essence. hearing their voices and likes
Dear Nameleas: Simply
injustices.
Anonymoua
and
Anxious
to
let
them
know
what
is
say. "This trip is going to be
Charlotte Van Meter was hostess and served
in
a
Dis
Cit)r
going
on
in
his
life.
Tell
me,
just
Andrew and me. Maybe
~a~~dwiches, Bugles, :mc;l oran~ gelaQn. were
• Dear Anonymoua and Ann, is this normal, or should next time it will be a fourALFRED - Recent weekend visitors at the served to those mentioned and to Florence
Anxioua:
Get matried imme- I be worried? Please respond some." Then, change the sub··home of Wilbur and Marilyn Robinson· were Spencer.
diately, and don't be con- soon. ....,, East Cout Girl- ject.
Allen, Lori and Cody Morrison, Larry Ritchie · Pastor Beattie gave the grace.

was planned when the Ladies Au»liary of the

OhiQ Valley Publishing Co.
ChartM W. Go"J
'Publisher

-=.BJ the Bend .

,~1h_en_any_.Sen_tm_·~-~_ _• -

_Page AS

cor

Robinson penonals·

LOCAL
. EVENTS
• ·wiDNUDAY
:"RACINE - Special mllltlng,
1 Melal County Scottllh Rite,
"Weclneedly, 7 p.m, RICine
Muonlc hill.
.
"PAOEVILLE- Scipio Townlhlp
Trulteee, 6:30 p.m. Pegevllle
·lowll hall.
'MIOOLEPORT- Middleport
·LHerary Club, 2 p.m., home of
· :Ida Olehl. Program committee
. ·to lead. cllacuaalon of Oavld
Outerson's 'East of the Moun·
· talna.'

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THURSDAY.
SYRACUSE- Syracuse Village
CouncH, regular meeting, 7 .
p.m., village hall.

Ingell Electa on lee

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... POMEROY- Preeeptor Beta
Beta ·chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority, 6:30 p.m. Thursday,
.. Lutheran Church. Carolyn
Grues11r and Donna Byer, host·
•( 88888.

.

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·· TUPPERS PLAINS- Tuppers
' ·Plains VFW AuxMiluy, regular ·
•meeting, 7 p.m. White elephant
,.sale. ·

•

Noleia ~165

$9999 regular price

- $6Q 0 ~ service rebate*
.... $4QOO
.
Noleta. rebate• ·

' POMEROY - Fibromyalgia
· sell·help course, free, Pomeroy
, Library, every Thursday, 1 to 3
p.m. lor nven weeks beginning
Thuraday. Sponsored by the
~ Ohio University College of
·Oeteopathlc Medicine and the
Central Ohio Chapter of the
·
- Arthritis Program.

Free -Phonal

POMEROY- Junior and Rita
White to present 'Golden
Oldies." 5:30 p.m Thursday at
the Meigs County Senior Cen·
ter. No admission, public·invited.

Thal's a $80 maiWn aanlce rebllte when you sign up
for select AT&amp;T Wireless calling plans at $29.99 monthly and
' Nokia 5165 digital multi-network phone.

upto

PORTLAND - Revlvalser·
- vices, Freedom Gospel Mission,
· Baahan and Stiversville Road, ·
Portland. Rev. Clyde Ferrall,
evangelist, 881VIcea through
·Sunday, 7 p.m. each night, 6Jll·
,clal singing.

.

free minUtes ..
'

.

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otte full year on t\T&amp;T Digital Advantage or AT&amp;T Regional Advantage
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" FRIDAY

POMEROY- Meigs High
School senior plays including
,"Who Am I This Time?' and
· 'The Crazy Mlxed•Up Island of
· Dr. Moreau.' $3 for adults and
$2 for students .

•

.pOMEROY - Meigs County
· ·Chapter PERl 74, Fri, Senior
Citizens Cetner, noon lunclleC?n,
, followed by meting and pro· .•
gram.
SATURDAY
'!TUPPERS PLAINS- Super
· Saturday at Hickory Hills
Church of Christ near Tuppers
Plains. Theme Is •An Amazing
Change." the co~rsion of
Paut. Time machine, puppets,
· classaa, nursery through adult
·· f\eglstration 9 a.m. Prograrg
\, ends at 1:30; lunch provided.

106 North Second
Avenue 740·992·2825

Included
1\nytime .

Additional
Night 8:' Weekend
Minutn.

Mfnutn

5

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Per MQDth
·

·

= 750
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(Every Month,h?r One Year)

3999 400

5

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in an eligible 1\T&amp;T wircltn di&amp;ltal nrtwork. RAu,t do not apply to crc~1tca rd calls. Domettic callmg only. A1rt1mt fo r
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for. additional minutcl vary dcpcndina on the plan ycu choo~Je !!ond arc set forth in your Call1ng Plan brochure. Other
ch.uge•, 1lirchuges and taxcl may appry. Coveraa:e av•i.lable in mott aren Dig1t1l PCS fea~res no~ IVIil1ble in alla.rus.
Subjt C[ to terms of wirelen ICfVICC agreement and callmg plan brochure. M..y not be avaLiilble w 1th other promotional
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8:00 p.m. to 6:59 1.m. Monday through f riday, al'jd weekend' beginning friday 8:00p.m. through Monday 6:.59 a.m.,
· plus New Yur'1 Day, Independenc.e Day, Labor Day, Tka!\ksgiving and Chnstmas. May not be ava ilable with other pmmotiona . Other rettrictioru may •pply. Av•ilable until ol /30101 unless te.,-m1nakd earlier. $60 Mlliil· ln Service Reb1te: Oni
rebite per •criv•tion on • qualifying AT&amp;T Wirelcu c•lling plln of S29.99 a month or more . To be·ellg1ble, phone muat
remain on AT&amp;T suvlc:e for .at lust 30 d~y.s and phone mun be.aaive on AT&amp;T serv!ce at th~ time rebate i~ ~roceslt:~ .
Certlin reatrictioN apply. Set AT&amp;T matl·tn reb.ate coupon for full term! and cond1110ns. Vrud where proh1b11ed. Vahd
, ../1101 • "130/01. Not ava ilable if you receiwd a $60 1ervice credit at activation. Noku• $40 MaU· ln P.el}ate: One reba1e
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~

' .\tllhollttd

AT~.ol , di ·. tl\ • t
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·HARRISONVILLE - Har·
rtaonvllle Lodge 41 1, Saturday,
1:30 p.m. at the temple.
·• Refreshments.

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Opinion

1he Daily Sn rtinel

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.SC)CIETY NEWS &amp; . NOTES

The Daily Sentinel

:::'!~~~~~u:!t :!~· ~~~~~~
W'~

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111 Court St., Pomllo,, Ohio
740 112-11N • 'Fu: 112-2157

:ANUTHER .

FAITH-BASED
ECONOMIST.

R.SMwn~

IIIMglng Editor

UM

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Charlenl Holllllch

General ........

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OUR VIEW
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Chinese obstinacy will only
worsen current standoff

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TODAY IN HISTORY

RED GREEN'S VIEW

Today is Wednesday, April 4, the 94th day of 2Q01. There
are 271 days left in the year.
·
Today's Highlight in History:
On April 4, 1968, civil rights leader Martin Luther King
Jr., 39, was shot to death in Memphis, Tenn.
On this date:
,
In 18t8; Congress decided the flag l.of the United States
would consist of' 13 red and white stripes and 20 stars, with a
new star to be added for every new state of the-Union.
In t 841, President William Henry Harrison succuVlbed to
pneumonia orte month after' his -inaugural, becoming the first
U.S. chief executive to die in office.
'In 1850, the city of Los Angeles was incorporated.
In 1887, Susah,na Medora Salter became the first ~oman
elected mayot of an American community -Argonia, Kan.
In 1902, British financier Cecil Rhodes left _$10 million in
his.will to provide scholarships for Americans at Oxford University;
.
In 1945, during World War II, U.S. forces liberated the Nazi
·· .
death camp Ohrdruf in Germany. . ·
,In 1949, 12 nations, including the Unite~ States, signed the
·
· ·
North Atlantic T1:eaty.
· In 1975, more than 130 people, most of them children,
were killed when a U.S. Air Fore~ transport plane evacuating
Vietnamese orphans crashed ·sh~rdy after take-off from
Saigon.
·
.
.
In 1981, Henry Cisneros became the first Mexican-American elected mayor of a major U.S. city- San Antonio, Texas.
·Jn 1983, the space shuttle "Challenger" roared it1to orbit
on, its maiden voyage.
·
.
Ten years ago:-sen. John Heinz (R-P"_.) an~ six other people, including tWo children, were killed when a helicopter
collided with Heinz's plane over a schoolyard -in Merion, Pa.

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Avoid tragedy .

a

Here's one way to stimulate sluggish eco ·omy .
Bv f\ED GREEN

oddly natural that humans will let things voodoo curse that is disturbing 'its_.um(.'
Tliey keep talking about another reces- slide in liont of friends but will go to great
Meanwhile I'll be living on cold !elision comirtg, so I thought I should come efforts to itnpress people they hardly overs to ·appease the gods.
·
up witlt an idea that would stimulate a know.
·
'Ildk,talk, talk
sluggish economy. •
·
'The magic is gone
Some of us talk more and more as we
I would start with not talking about it.
Like mo~t peopl~, I have a fair bit of get older, and we may not even notice it.
I can remember my mother saying, "Tim technology m my li.fe. A computer and a Here are some signs to watch .for mat
pimple wiD go ·away if you'll just stop TV and a ITllCrowave oven and a DVD . indicate you're talking to
h·
·
thinking about it." And she'd say that player - that kind of thirtg. And also like
• You've had to replaceou::~uthpiece
every 10 minutes or so.
most people, I· get angry when these in
· h
thre . .
b the
·
. yo~ P o;~ _ e times, ut
ear, The other thing we cim do is declare a things don't work.
15
National Reunion Week: This will be a
But I've just realized that this anger is plec~ JUSt e new.
special til[lle set aside when evecyone is unfounded _and probably fraudulent. . : Nusy people avmd you.
.
encouraged to drop in unannounced to When my ITllcrdwave oven doesn't work,
o~ody ~er asks you a quesnon.
visit old friends and acquaintaoces they' for example, 1 p~tend to be angry that a
• Yo~ ve . forgotten the sound of your
haven't seen for at least five years. It .WOuld nlachine like that would j~st stop working . sp~use s vo1ce.
.
.
When you leave someone a vo1ce
come with a Web site of current address- for no reason. 'file truth IS I have no idea
es.
.,how it works in the first.place. Some kind message, you always get' cut off; ·
That'd be the end of the recession. The of waves fly through the space within alit•You pulled a muscle in your~threat of a former crony diopping in de box and. cook my hot dog. That mak~
• l?eople respond to you wjth rwo-word
unexpectedly to see how you're doing no sense to me. It$ magic.
answers- the second word is either"up"
So I can't honestly phone up the .oti"off:'
· ·: .
..
·would create a massive_i1pturn in so many
areas of the economy - furniture, paint repairriiim and ScieO!Jil at him that my
(Red Green is the star of "The Red Green ·
and wallpaper, clothing stores, fitness cen- microwave oven ha.s broken down. Show," a teltvisiOII series seen in the US. on
_ters and cosmetic surgery oudets. Even Instead, I'll just plead meekly that the 'PBS t~t~d in Canada on the CBC Network,
real estate..would see an upswing~ people • magic went away and I W9uld appreciate -and the author 'of "The Red Green Book" and
scrambled to move to better homes. Its it if he would come over and remove the "Red Green Talks Call:A Lcve Storj.")

,,
•

"

off in April and focuses ori preventing de.
Bad choices do not always stan with
the use of fake IDs to purchase alcohol,
Dear Editor:
. ,, and operating a motor vehicle after drinking and driving. Obtaining the
On a back road late Saturday night, a underage consumption.
· alcohol is ofien the first p&lt;ior choice a·
teen driver rushes home to make his
The goal is to reduce the number of teen will make. A person under the .age
curfew. He is driving too fast and he has teen alcohol-related crashes and deaths. of 21 who presents a ,false, fictitious or
been drinking. The young man is rapid- Alcohol is involved in one out of every altered ID or driven license when purly approaching the curve in the, road that four fatal crashes in Ohio. Drivers 16- chasing alcohol will also incur severe
will end his life.
20-yean ~ld are consistendy over-repre~ penalties.
A fint offense results in a mandatory
Not too far fiom the crash scene, a sented in Ohio's fatal crashes, and are
mother has been up most . of the night twice as likely as the general population fine of $250-$1,000 and up ~o six
waiting for her son's return when she to be killed in a traffic crash.
months in jail. A second offense results
sees the headlights coming up the driveTo combat this problem, troopers will in a mandatory fine of$500-:$1;000 and
way, she is overcome with relief. Confil- be. visiting schools and conducting safe- jail time ·up to six months and possible
sion and fear overtike her when she ty presentations to educate teen drivers
.
hem the doorbell. She rushes to the · about the consequences ofpoor choices, 60-day license suspension.
Teens that commit a third or subsedoor... taking ·her first step into the Other area law enforcement agencies,
grieving process.
.
state liquor agents, and alcohol retailers quent offense face a mandatory fine of
On the other side of the door stands a also set up collaborative efforts to c.urtail $500-$1,000 and jail time up to six
state trooper, alone with ·his awful the illegal purchase of alcohol and the months, a 90-day license suspension
· with an option .of community· service,
responsibility. The trooper is fully pre- use of fake IDs.
pared to explain how the .crash hapIn 1994, a significant revision to the and a license suspension until age 21.
pened, but cannot aruwer the inevitable, DUI law has enabled law enforcement
Bear in mind, not every teen killed in
"Why?"
to more effectively combat teenage dri- ari alcohol related crash was driving.
This is a story that is repeated too ven who choose to drink. In Ohio, the Sometimes, passengen killed were not
often acrois the state. Inexperience legal blood alcohol concentration (BAC) even drinking. A good choice in avoidbehind the wheel combined with a false limit fur a driver under the age of 21 is ing alcohol can be quickly overshadsense of invincibility and alcohol, a lethal .02 percent, which is significandy lower owed by choosing to ride with somecombination, results in the death of . than the existing limit of. tO percent for body who has been drinking.
individuals age 21 or older.
Remember, when you choose to ride
another teenager.
· ·We are now approaching a time of The charge of operating a !llot?r ~ehi- with somebody, you are putting your life
year when alcohol becomes a greater de after underage _consumption 1~ mde~ their hands. Even though you have
~tor for ~enagen .. Pro~ and gra~ua- penden~ of potential c~ges for illegally ot violated the DUI Jaw,· you may still
non are a time of celebration, and a time purchasmg or consunung the alcohol.
suffer the same tragic consequences as
to make choices. This time of year,
Teens convicted of operating a motor the driver who has
teenagers face some o_f the most impor- vehi~le after underag;e consumption face
1 urge teens to rbe above peer pressure
tant deciSions of the1r lives. There are a license suspension of anywhere
·d niak d
d
'bl d ·
decisions that could affect the rest of between 60 days and rwo years. The ·a.n
e e ucate • responsl e eeltheir lives. Poor decisionS behind the court may also commit a teen to as many Slons. I ~ppeal to _parents_ ~nd educators
as -three days in a certified alcohol and to spen .some_ time \¥,1 • our young .
wheel can result in tragedy.
Troopers work year round to modifY drug addiction program.
~eople d1scussmg these _Issues .. h IS
poor driving behaviors befure they result
Additionally, four points are assessed to Important that, you provtde gu1dance in crashes. In the upcoming weeks, the violator's driving record, and a: reme- and ~ke your expec~ons very clear
troopers will endeavor to help teenagers dial driving course . must be completed wh~n It com~s to the ISSU~ of al~ohol. _I
make good choices, and aggressively before a driver's license will be reissued, mvlte all to JOin the patrol m making this
look for those who do not.
The remedial driving course is required prQm and graduation season a time ·of
The Ohio Department'of Public Safe- to devote a number of instruction hours celebration, not one filled with tragedy.
ty initiated the None for Under 21 pro- in the area of alcohol and drugs as it
Lt. Richard E. Grilu
gram in '1994. This annual effort kicks relates to the operation of a motor vehiGallipolis

BY·THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

•
•

OUR READERS' VIEWS

We look for a peaceful solution to. the staodoff between the
U.S. and China that arose after one of our surveillance planes
collided With a Chinese military jet ow:r the ~ekend:
The situation could be easily resolved except fur one thing.
The Chinese are holding the crew of our plane, forced to land •
on Hainan Island afier the collision. As we said, that happened
ow:r the weekend. As of this writing, our military and diplomatic corps had yet received access to the crew.
.The Chinese are probably still irked at NATO's bombing of
their embassy in Kosovo. Remember, it was a NATO mission,
but somehow it was our fault because our forces were involved.
Given all that and attempll to undentand why the Chinese
are so obstinate about releasing our people and the plane liom
Hainan, it all boils down to one thing.
·
That thing is the Cold War mentality dominating China's
elderly leadenhip as a still avowedly Communist nation tries to
revert liom the agrarian atone age of Mao Tse-lbng's regime to
industrial prominence.
.
The stall the Chinese have put into effect has a miliucy purpose. They want inside the surveillance plane to see what makes
it and othen like it tick - as if they haven't already guessed.
Because of that bit of atrategic infor-mation, the Chinese are
. l:ieitig annoyingly slow about allowipg the crew to see our.oflic~s. They are also practicing an old _
game perfected dbring the ·
negotiations to end the Korean War- stonewalling to get what
.Ll
mey want.
.
· .
,
_
While this attitude may be inherent in the Chinese nature, it's
not the face they want to present to a Wllrld still uneasy with its .
dual goals of making money and remaining loyal to Marx, Mao
or whatever brand of Communism they subscribe to now.
Militarily and diplomatically, there are a lot of obstacles for
China and the U.S. to overcome. Taiwan remains a thorn in the
mainland's side and we would be forfeiting our commitment to
democracy if we abandoned that small OUtpOSt of medom for
political expendiency. .
,
The surveillance· flights are also irksome to the Chinese, but
let us remind them that the plane in question riow was operating in international ainpace, as was the jet it.ran into. The acciden' appears not to have been designed.- It should be recognized
as such, and our craft ·and crew should be released as soon as
ponible.
This latest flare-up between ours~lves ancJ China should not
become the definipg moment a carefully developed relationship. Yet, we do not advocate apologizing for the incident, and
sitnilarly, the Chinese propaganda machine had best tone down
ill criticisms.
·
·
Increasing tension between the U.S. and China c~ only be
disastrous in the long run. Resolve the situation, and let's get on
with addressing the real international problems, such as povertr
and crime.

DROP US ALINE.

111 Coun 111., Po.....-oy, Ohio
..
74HtH1H

200 Mlln ~nt P1nnnt, W. VA

"''"
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'UlJ'adaardey, Aprtl 4. 2M1

Pregnant woman doesn.,t want
peonle
.to
th
_
ink
wrono
thing
r

' .

Terry and Carol Fetty of
visited
(S
Rudand Fire Deputment met re&lt;:endy at the Martha and Joe Poole ofAlfied.
'
Dear ADD Tc=d=: I -am
&amp;ie=d
fire house.
28 yean old and hM been
Dear Eut Coast: Did )'OU
Anna ~ey was named to solicit donations
WOIISIR
11ieet
engaged
a
year.
although
say
• he talla to his parenll
fiom local businesses and Kimberly Willford will
sometimes rwo and three
- ~ not yet set a wedding
see that the golden egg papers are ready for the 'ALFRED .- A report on a recent diltrjct
date. My fianc.e, "Steve; is 37..
times a day? D9e5 he have
. four age groups and will pick up suckers to hand meeting was given whea the ~ United
·We
have
been
rogetherfor
live
stock
in the phone company?
out to all the lcidt.
Methodist Women mer recently.
)'ears and are very much in
This exceeds normal limits Kim Davis proposed the auxiliary take a
Nina Robinson gave the opening prayer ·
love.
.
.
to put it mildly.
CPR!first aid course at a of$3 each to pay for before the business meeting.~ Martha
· Last week, I discovered I am
_ What is the reason for this
the cards. Action ·was postponed until the next Poole _and Treasurer Osie Mae FOIIrod gave their
ADVICE
pregnant. This was unplanned
man's
.extnordinary insecurimeeting.
reports, which were applO\Ied.
and something of a mystery.
ty? These three-Hiay phone
It was suggested by Willford that the auxiliary
The group reported 104 friendship calls.
because we always use contra- cerned about what people will calls are more about HIS need
prepare handmade cookbooks as a money-makThe group voted to contribute $50 to Meigs
ceptives. Steve loves kids, but say. Steve, "ready" or not, will ~ his concern for his paring proj¢ct. She offered to do all the ryping and County Senior Citizens Center,
he is not ready to start a fami- adore this child, and it will be ents. Has he had any counsel- .
Resources chairman Sarah Caldwell read the
copying of them along with the graphics. Each
ly. He doesn't want me to have a blessing to you both.
ing? Perhaps he should considmember will be responsible for 10 recip~ In the list of churches' receiving reading certificateS for
this baby and has asked me to
Dear Ann Landen: I am er it. Something's out of
categories of main dishes, breads, app~rs. side 2000, noting that Alfred United Methodist
terminate the pregnancy.
dating a 29-year-old man who whack here, and he needs to
dishes, and deserts.
Church had received a certificate.
Ann, I want this child. I lives across the country from figure out what it is.
.Kim .Davis conducted the meeting 'vith WillThelma Henderson, vice president, atid Caldunderstaod Steve's _point of his parents. "Hal" hasn't lived at
Dear Ann Landen: My
ford and Davis presenting the officers' reports. It weD, reported on "UnwrippingYour Gifts;' proview, but the thought of hav- home for over 10 years, how- fiance, "Andrew;· and I decidwas noted that the recent soup super was a sue- gram at the district UMW meeting on March
ing an abortion .is terribly_ ever, he talks to them every ed to take a bac)cpacking trip
cess raising $325. The meeting was called to 24. Mary Jo Barringer read mission news lion1
upsetting to me. I will do it if day, sometimes two or three through Europe this summer.
order by President Kim Davis. Kimberly Will- "Hamburg Express," by Tom and Susan, Shaw.
Steve insists, but I am scared times a day. This seems exces- We mentioned this ro another
ford g;tve the secretaries report, which .were Follrod read Sharon and Tom Craw's rep on ntisan~onfused. A baby is sup- sive to me, but Hal says it is couple, and they interpreted it
approved. Kim Davis reac;l the treasuren report in sions in Mrica.
pose . to be a joyous creation perfecdy OK.
as an "invitation." I have been
Follrod had the prayer calendar and chose
the absence of treasurer Opal Dyer.
be en two people who love
I broke up \vith my previous friends with "Angela" for
In other business. it was reported -Dyer is still Stacy Vanderwerf of Kiev, Ubaine. The gro1,1p
each ~other. I don't understand boyfriend because his mother years, and although I like her a
checking with Larry Montgomery on conces- signed a birthday card for her.
why ~teve can"t find a way to was so controlling, so I may be lot, I don't think the friendship
Pastor Janr Bearti.e brought books for the
sion trailer prices
low: and want this child. We a little sensitive about this could stand that much togeth- .
The traveling prize won by Willford was fur- reading program and a banner for the Alfred disare financially stable and can u closeness." I'll admit, his erness. Also, her boyfriend is
Dished by April Burke.Total collected for travel- play at the Athens District Banner Rally.
well afford to · have a family. mother hasn't said anything terrible with money, and I'm ·
ing prize was $6. Willfurd will furnish it at the
Nellie Parker led the program, "What Does
The only problem is that we that makes me think there is a afraid Andrew and I would
are not married, and I don't p~blem, but you neve_r, know. end up paying for everything.
next meeting. Anna Farley will provide snacks the Lord Require:' Worship ~enter featured
for the April meeting.
- seroUs of First Commandment and Micah 6:8, a
want people to think we got I simply do not understand
How can we teD .Angela
married because I became whyhe has to talk to his par- "no," without ·ruining the
Secret sister gifis were given out. Attending picture of Nehemiah rebuilding the wall of
pregnant.
ent&gt; so oli:en. My boyfriend friendship? ·'besides those . named were Juanita Harmon and Jerusalem, and injustice posters. All inembers ·
Nameleaa
Please · advise immediately. says he loves his family, enjoys Travelen
joined in reading and discussion of col'R!j:ting
·Connie Bales.
Time is . of the essence. hearing their voices and likes
Dear Nameleas: Simply
injustices.
Anonymoua
and
Anxious
to
let
them
know
what
is
say. "This trip is going to be
Charlotte Van Meter was hostess and served
in
a
Dis
Cit)r
going
on
in
his
life.
Tell
me,
just
Andrew and me. Maybe
~a~~dwiches, Bugles, :mc;l oran~ gelaQn. were
• Dear Anonymoua and Ann, is this normal, or should next time it will be a fourALFRED - Recent weekend visitors at the served to those mentioned and to Florence
Anxioua:
Get matried imme- I be worried? Please respond some." Then, change the sub··home of Wilbur and Marilyn Robinson· were Spencer.
diately, and don't be con- soon. ....,, East Cout Girl- ject.
Allen, Lori and Cody Morrison, Larry Ritchie · Pastor Beattie gave the grace.

was planned when the Ladies Au»liary of the

OhiQ Valley Publishing Co.
ChartM W. Go"J
'Publisher

-=.BJ the Bend .

,~1h_en_any_.Sen_tm_·~-~_ _• -

_Page AS

cor

Robinson penonals·

LOCAL
. EVENTS
• ·wiDNUDAY
:"RACINE - Special mllltlng,
1 Melal County Scottllh Rite,
"Weclneedly, 7 p.m, RICine
Muonlc hill.
.
"PAOEVILLE- Scipio Townlhlp
Trulteee, 6:30 p.m. Pegevllle
·lowll hall.
'MIOOLEPORT- Middleport
·LHerary Club, 2 p.m., home of
· :Ida Olehl. Program committee
. ·to lead. cllacuaalon of Oavld
Outerson's 'East of the Moun·
· talna.'

..

THURSDAY.
SYRACUSE- Syracuse Village
CouncH, regular meeting, 7 .
p.m., village hall.

Ingell Electa on lee

I

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... POMEROY- Preeeptor Beta
Beta ·chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority, 6:30 p.m. Thursday,
.. Lutheran Church. Carolyn
Grues11r and Donna Byer, host·
•( 88888.

.

"

·· TUPPERS PLAINS- Tuppers
' ·Plains VFW AuxMiluy, regular ·
•meeting, 7 p.m. White elephant
,.sale. ·

•

Noleia ~165

$9999 regular price

- $6Q 0 ~ service rebate*
.... $4QOO
.
Noleta. rebate• ·

' POMEROY - Fibromyalgia
· sell·help course, free, Pomeroy
, Library, every Thursday, 1 to 3
p.m. lor nven weeks beginning
Thuraday. Sponsored by the
~ Ohio University College of
·Oeteopathlc Medicine and the
Central Ohio Chapter of the
·
- Arthritis Program.

Free -Phonal

POMEROY- Junior and Rita
White to present 'Golden
Oldies." 5:30 p.m Thursday at
the Meigs County Senior Cen·
ter. No admission, public·invited.

Thal's a $80 maiWn aanlce rebllte when you sign up
for select AT&amp;T Wireless calling plans at $29.99 monthly and
' Nokia 5165 digital multi-network phone.

upto

PORTLAND - Revlvalser·
- vices, Freedom Gospel Mission,
· Baahan and Stiversville Road, ·
Portland. Rev. Clyde Ferrall,
evangelist, 881VIcea through
·Sunday, 7 p.m. each night, 6Jll·
,clal singing.

.

free minUtes ..
'

.

Get up to 1000 fNe n._ and weektnd .mlnutu • IIWHtlli for
otte full year on t\T&amp;T Digital Advantage or AT&amp;T Regional Advantage
plans at $29.99 monthly and above.

" FRIDAY

POMEROY- Meigs High
School senior plays including
,"Who Am I This Time?' and
· 'The Crazy Mlxed•Up Island of
· Dr. Moreau.' $3 for adults and
$2 for students .

•

.pOMEROY - Meigs County
· ·Chapter PERl 74, Fri, Senior
Citizens Cetner, noon lunclleC?n,
, followed by meting and pro· .•
gram.
SATURDAY
'!TUPPERS PLAINS- Super
· Saturday at Hickory Hills
Church of Christ near Tuppers
Plains. Theme Is •An Amazing
Change." the co~rsion of
Paut. Time machine, puppets,
· classaa, nursery through adult
·· f\eglstration 9 a.m. Prograrg
\, ends at 1:30; lunch provided.

106 North Second
Avenue 740·992·2825

Included
1\nytime .

Additional
Night 8:' Weekend
Minutn.

Mfnutn

5

Total Min\ltl!l
Per MQDth
·

·

= 750
+ 11'000 = 1400

2999 250 + 500

(Every Month,h?r One Year)

3999 400

5

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plans with no roaming charge's across your multistate ~e colling area and no domeJdc long distance
chlrges across 50 states. Additional plans available.

C 2001 AT&amp;T. Wirele11 AT&amp;T Wireleu C.lli.ng Plana requil'l! credit approval, US activatio n fee, annual contract, a cancellation tee of up toS120 1nd • Dl&amp;ital multi·nctwork phone. End user's principal residence m.•Y bc.n:quirtd ~~with ·
in an eligible 1\T&amp;T wircltn di&amp;ltal nrtwork. RAu,t do not apply to crc~1tca rd calls. Domettic callmg only. A1rt1mt fo r
eath. celf 11 rounded up to the ne;~~t full minute. Included minutes nMOt be carried over to any other month . Charges
for. additional minutcl vary dcpcndina on the plan ycu choo~Je !!ond arc set forth in your Call1ng Plan brochure. Other
ch.uge•, 1lirchuges and taxcl may appry. Coveraa:e av•i.lable in mott aren Dig1t1l PCS fea~res no~ IVIil1ble in alla.rus.
Subjt C[ to terms of wirelen ICfVICC agreement and callmg plan brochure. M..y not be avaLiilble w 1th other promotional
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• mlnutel. Included and promotional ~lnutn tannct be carried over to any other month. Promotional minutes apply only
to airtime used !n ybur Home Calling Aru; applicabLe lop&amp; distance charges additior.al, If you migrate to another .:J J[.
lng pl.an during the flrtt year of u.rvl~e, yqu m•y lqte your eligibility for the additional minutes. Night airtime is from ·
8:00 p.m. to 6:59 1.m. Monday through f riday, al'jd weekend' beginning friday 8:00p.m. through Monday 6:.59 a.m.,
· plus New Yur'1 Day, Independenc.e Day, Labor Day, Tka!\ksgiving and Chnstmas. May not be ava ilable with other pmmotiona . Other rettrictioru may •pply. Av•ilable until ol /30101 unless te.,-m1nakd earlier. $60 Mlliil· ln Service Reb1te: Oni
rebite per •criv•tion on • qualifying AT&amp;T Wirelcu c•lling plln of S29.99 a month or more . To be·ellg1ble, phone muat
remain on AT&amp;T suvlc:e for .at lust 30 d~y.s and phone mun be.aaive on AT&amp;T serv!ce at th~ time rebate i~ ~roceslt:~ .
Certlin reatrictioN apply. Set AT&amp;T matl·tn reb.ate coupon for full term! and cond1110ns. Vrud where proh1b11ed. Vahd
, ../1101 • "130/01. Not ava ilable if you receiwd a $60 1ervice credit at activation. Noku• $40 MaU· ln P.el}ate: One reba1e
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~

' .\tllhollttd

AT~.ol , di ·. tl\ • t
1

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·HARRISONVILLE - Har·
rtaonvllle Lodge 41 1, Saturday,
1:30 p.m. at the temple.
·• Refreshments.

.,

•

,.,

••

�~.

SOCIETY NO.TES
...._ aiaove •.,.., ·

These are the third-. fourth- and fi~ade class poster design winners in the tobacco absti•
·

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Third-grader wins tobacco poster contest
POMEROY - An illuscrnThe Tar Uflrs
tion of. the · positive effects of
program IVas given
nor ·using tobacco won a SI00
gift certiticate for Victoria Free- to all third-:,fOJtrtlrman in a · coun~ide contest
and fifth-grade
sponsored by the Meigs Coun- ·
ty Health Department as a pan
classes in Meigs
of the "Tar Wars" tobacco
absti.
Couuty.
nence program.
Victoria is a third-grader at schools were Chris Shouldis,
Syracuse. The Tar Wars program Carleton; Jenna Kaup, Shawn
was given to all chin!-, founh- Hawley, Edge! Goble, Salisbury;
and fifth-grade classes in Meigs Victoria .Freeman, Chelsea
County. About 500 students Pape, and Lindsey Buzzard,
participated by designing Syracuse; Ashley Krider, Bobby
posters following the presenta- Shelton, Pordand; . ~yla Grations. Judging was done on the ham, Kori Priddy, Rudand;
illustration, message, creativity, Michael E. King, Kayla Dill, and
·
and artwotk.
Brittany Preast, Harrisonville;
The posters are now being Dakota Collins, Kimberly Mindisplayed around Meigs Coun- ear, Dan:i Bissell, Hannah West,
ty, said Tracy O 'Dell who heads Jade Nutter, Casey · Hannum,
up the program.
Cassie 'Hauber, Sarah Wachter,
Winners in their respective and Lindsey Grate.
.

.

COUNTY WINNER - Victoria ·Freeman, a third-grader at
Syracuse Elementary School, was given a gift certificate for
$100 for her winning poster illustrating the PoSitive effects
of not using tobacco. Here she receives her prize from
Tracey O'Dell of the Meigs County Health Department

.

'

lOur .1 099 for the Year 2000
.

'

.

BY VAUtEA TIIOMPION · "·
SOCIAL SECURITY MANAGER/ATHENS

If you arc a Social Security beneficiary, you
: probably have received your Social Sec.urity
:~efit Statement'for Tax Year 2000 (SSA: 1099). Social Security mailed out more than 48
: million of these forms .
Some people who get Social Security have
: to pay taxes on their b.enefits. Form SSA-1 099
: shows the total ambum of benefits you
: received in the previous year. You use it when
: you complete your federal income tax return
: 't o 'find out if any of your benefits are subject to

. We.

: If you Jose or don't receive ·your SSA-1099,
• you can request a replacement online from
: Social ·
Security's
· website,
at

https:/ /s3abaca.ssa.gov/pro/1099/1099home.s
html.You will need your name as it appears on
benefit checks and/or letters and your Social
Security number.You may also .need yonr date
and place of birth ·and your mother's maiden
name (to help identify you).
'
If you request a replacement on behalf of a
deceased beneficiary, you will need the beneficiary$ name and '•his or her Social Securiry
number. (You may only request on behalf of a
deceased beneficiary if you have received benefits on the same record.)
·
For information on taxation of Social Security benefits, call the Internal Revenue Sorvice's
roll-free number, 1-800-829-3676, to ask for
publication 554, Tax Information for Older
Americans.
•

How to mak~ changes go easier
When employers make a
present partial explanations.
; change in \vork procedures,
These. will make the manager.
: employees may become resislose credibility.
: tant. Tn;s may be because they
• Develop a situation where.
. : like things che · way they
everyone wins. Show the
; already are, think it will cake
employees how the change
• too much time co learn the
will· benefit them. Let them
: new way, or,be afraid that they
know that not only will the
: won't be as successful with the
organization profit from the
ADVICE
: innovation. Managers can help
move, but they will, too.
: make change easier for their
• Encouroge and support
: colleagues by trying the fol- organization. Incorporate their
associates. Provide assistan.ce
. lowing suggestions:
suggestiqns and recommenda- and training early on to help
, • Promote a positive atmos- tions to make ~hings better.
decrease frustrn tion and resis: phere. If there is inurual trust,
• Speak truthfully. Gather tance. Allow · co-w0 ckers to '
· the workers will know the accurate informatio.n and give
make mistakes and learn from
; manager has their best interests the facts to the associates far in them.
· at heart. This sense 'of team- advan(:e of che change. Don:t
(Becky Baer is a. Meigs Couuti
: work will help carry them hide . things from them nor
extmswn agent.)
.. · through the trnnsition.
· . • Explain why the change
: needs to be made and its
effects on them. Be up-front
:with co-work~rs about how
the change will affect them. If
they understand the reason for •
the change, they will be more
willing to coqperate. Establish
a feeling or urgency so colleagues will want to make an
..
immediate change.
• Include employees in the
1. Hearing Aid
decision to change. Those who
Dispensing &amp; Service .
help devel9p the changes are
Sarah
more cpmmitted to seeing .
Jane Ann Karr Aanestad
2. Clinical Audiological
&amp; Aoxan"" G~. Audiologists
them incorporated.
Services
• Prepare for the change.
Plan thoro11ghly for imple3. Balance Thsting 1..:.1~1~1,_
mentation
of the new method
,
• by. empathizing with the
4. Hearing Aid Repair
workers. How will they per5. Hearing Aid Batteries
ceive the change.? What barri'
ers will they indicate? How
411 Alcltllnd AVIIIUI, Alhtna
•
can 'these problems be dn:um~
"'-lim·
..._llondll· F""""
vr-"1' • " " ' " ' ,.,.,,
vented? Give plenty of time
J Ullr Hourt by Appl
for the change to occur.
(7~ 594
1800) 451·9806
• Foster improvement. · '
Encourage colleagues to find
ways to improve skills ancl'
techniques in their personal
work, as well as that of the
\

Becky
Baer ·

"Serving You
Since 1984"

. CHESTER ~ Jeanie
and' FloY-d Ridenour ·of
Chester al).nounce the
birth of a daughter, Katherine Noel, born Dec. 12 at
Camden Clark Hospital in
Parkersburg, W.Va.
The infant weighed
seven pounds, 12 ounces.'
Mr. ·and ·Mrs . Ridenour
have a son , Casey Lane,' I .
1
three.
·
Paternal grandparents are ·,
Keith and Lila Ridenour, '
of Chester
and the paternal I,
•
great- grandmother · .. is ,
Lucille Ridenour of Tuppers Plains.
Maternal · grandparents
are · Elmer and Darlene
· Newell and the m~ternal
great-grandmother is lnzy
Newell, all of Chester.

em

.1

.

,,

l-'

uqJ~tR9Y

eel randomly.
School District No. 203 in
Napcrville,'Ill., west of Chicago, edged out all other com. petiton in science and came in
sixth worldwide in math. The
. average math scores of
Naperville srudents were ju~t
behind those of students in five
Asian natiom.
Jodi Wirt, who oversees secondary school curriculum and
instruction in Naperville, said
early exposure to hands-on sci. ence lessons gives their students

REEDSVILLE -There will be 211 auction and benefit .dinner
for the .Beth Murphy family a~rked Run Sportsman Club, Satunlay, 1 to 3 p.m. with a chickentlatbecue dinner served liom. 2
~ to 6 p.m. for $5 donation.
·
· ,
' All proceeds wjll go to the Murphy family. Beth is the mother
of young children and the daughter ofrom and Su!! Hayman. S~e
. is·in rehabilitatioq due to. complications liom surgery.-.
. ·
Donated auction items ate co be taken to the Forked' Run Club
house c;m Curtis Hollow Road before noon. Contact Jim Werzy,
949,-2746, for infonnation.

edge.

uney're aware of the scientitic process and they're consandy asked to explain_. their
reasoning," she said. ''That
whole way of teac~JP.g students
begins very early
our district."
·
Wut also said the district is
unwual ;,· ~uiring most of its
students to take algebra b5'
eighth grade. It's also located
near five coOeges· and SCYeralreseart:h facilities.
The Academy School District No. 20 in Colorado
Springs, Colo., sCored nt.ir the
cop in science and well aho.e
the world -average in math. .
Alisabeth Holm, the district's
assessment director, said ic helps
to have the U.S. Air Fon:e
Academy located within the
school district.
"A lot of our students have
opportunities to participate in
activities that p!Pmoce science
and .math achievement," she
said. Several high-tech compa- ·
nies are also · nearby, and most
students have computers in
their homes, Holm said.
Tl)e srudy, which tested
50,000 srudents in all, is a project of the International Associarion for the Evaluation of
Educational ' Achievement, an
independent . international .
cooperative of national resean:h
institutions· and government
agencies. It was created in 1959
and has conducted more than
15 such studies.

m

grams.
The Senate 'planned to vote Wednesday on.a provision by Sen.Tim Johnson, .
D-S.D.,, that would shrink Bush's tax
reduction by $88 . billion. Democrats
would use the funds instead· to 'provide
elqr:a aid ~ the next decade to farmers, who in recent yean have been hit by
low crop prices and losses .from
droughts.
·
"Rural America has not prospered
over this past decade in the way the rest
of our nation has," Johnson said Tuesday.

Napster continues
fight for online
.
'

WASHINGTON (AP) - Embatded
music trading service Napster asked
Congress on Tuesday to force pub~shers to o.ffer their catalogs . onlinc;o, as
hundreds of its users., ·and pop singers
Aianis Morissette and Don Henley, sat
in.
There is a "failure in . the marketplace," Napster in~rim chief Hank
Barry cold the Senate Judiciary Comrnittee. He said compulsory licenses
would provide consumers more than
the smatiering 9f songs now available
. online and simultaneously assure that
publishers and artists are compensated
for their work:
"Congress has repeatedly used such
licenses to advance public policy goals
in the context of new and frequendy

'

'

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•
i'
•

I

'

.

fiPrll 5th. 6th ·. &amp; 7th

·

Old Time

Chicken·Breast

'

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•

.

.Shop Vaaghan\, For·OICI Tim' Valae On Old Time Prodacts ·

your

55

\

DAYS(??. . 5

M

'.•.
,.

...

Dairy -La-ne

Suga·r

Dell Fried Chicken
S]tt a pes.

.. · '

I

Bob Evans

Time

2°/o. or Chocolate MUk

41b.bag

. .,. .

$199 . Gallon

•

Fmlllakft

Italian Bread

69(

49e

Ohlnme

QldTIIH

Tomato Juice

:

JfC.
.

'

Gene H. Abels, M.D., board certified in 'internal medicine; accepting
new patients; practice limited to heart disease, hypertension, lipid
abnorJD~Iities (cholestero• abnormalities), and any assochited
diabetes. Special
interest in congestive heart failure.
'
'

46 oz.· can

Old Time

Old Time

Bleach

.Salad Dressing

Old Time

Okl Time

99e.: 32 oz. jar

79e· Gallon
•

•

Green·Beans. Corn. Macaroni &amp; Cheese
or SWeetPeas
4/$100
-

· QidTIIH

.

00 15 oz. CGn
'I .

Old Time

Old Time

~hettl
.7 e Z6 oz.Sauccl
jar.

Cereal • fluortecl Yclrletla
2~]00 .

79(. 2401.

Oki111H

Old TIM

Old Time

Ketchup

Pork &amp;Beans
4/$100 16 oz. can
.Old Time

Gra

Jelly

32 01.
Old Time

· Scallo~ Potatoes Sandwich Cookies Chunk Dog Food Dlshwashlng
79e 32 01.
SJ99 11 lb. bag
2/S]OO 32 oz. ·

.

'

Balusamy Subbiah, M;D., board certified in internal medicine and
pulmonary disease; accepting new patients; · practice .limited to
chronic lung disease, asthma, emphysema,
black lung, asbest~sis.,. ..
.

,

Pop • Assorted Vclrkltles
2 Uter ·

'.

Thomas Price, M.D. board certl(led in. obstetrics and gynecology;
accepting new patients; practice limited office gynecology, yearly
exam; ~elvlc. e:~~;ams, pap tests, and mammogra~s,
. .

Loaf

Old Time

:1'9(.

'

.

'

~

! •

.,•

I

'

Gerald E. V-llee_, M.D. board certified In intemal. medicine and
pulmonary disease.
~ ,•

407 Pearl Street

.,l,

On site x-ray; EKG, ult~SQ.unds, s~s ~tingJlone J~nsity testing,
pulmonary
function
testina and extensive laboratbryle.stlng. .
.
.

tlddlepart;, OhJo • (litO) fR·J471
'•
ROUNDYS Member Store

'

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'.,

I

.'

•

UPS • W.stern Union

-·

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t

." sgc

Fresh

I

I

Pop • Assorted Varieties Fresh Pork Spareribs
$149. 12 PGck .
lb.

$14' lb.'

. church's
I
Easter
here ·.
can
-Debbie
. ..
.

.

committee's senior · Democrat, said
ther~ is some support in the House and
Senate for compulsory online licensing. But Chairman Orrin H atch, R- ·
Utah, seemed cool to the idea, saying
compulsory licenses might violate
international treaties.
Hatch floated his own idea, however:
Offer record labels tax incentives. to
encourage them to put their catalogs
online.
"We know we're going into a new
age," Hatch said. But, he said, "It seems
to me very slow in the making."
Legislators were starstruck by Henley .
and Morissette, who said artists' concerns have been ignored during the
past year's legal batdes between recording labels and Internet companies .

-·-

Boneless Skinless
, To advertise

inefficient marketplaces," Barry testi lied. "Comp11lsory licenses with clear
payment structures have encouraged
beneficial new technologies and
responded effectively to particular market failures. Music on the radio works
because of what is functionally a compulsory license."
. Representatives for major music
labels and Jack Valenti of the Motion
Picture Association of America panned
the idea. Hilary Rosen, who represents
the music publish~rs' _trade group,
called the possibility of compulsory
federal licenses a disaster for the music
industry.
.•.
,
'•
"Government price-fixing never
works," Valenti told the committee.
Sen. Patrick Leahy of Vermont, the

-

the¥

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&lt;II

''

t

•

1

With Vice President Dick Ch~ney
already having 6roken his 'first tie vote
in the Senate, GOP leaders have
promised that by week 's end they will
pwh the budget through the c hamber,
which ' is divided 50-SO between the
two parties.
,
Congress' budget, which does not
need the president's signature, sets overall spending and tax targets. Later bills
·enact actual changes in taxes and spending and 611 in the details.
Even so, both sides want the budget co
reflect their priorities - and to signal
that important constituencies will be
· d
h
th
well treate
. Farmers ave. reached at
.
level m recent years, haVIng won $25
billi'
·
·a1 'd
h 1
h
onti m spec1
a1 over t e ast t ree
C
yean rom ongress.

'·

I.

' ..il '

Republicaru · were
countering with :in
alce.r natiw by Senate
Finance · Committee
Chairman
Charles
Grassley. R-Iow.a, that
would provide $64
billion in additional
farm
assistance.
llulll
Rather ~ cormng
from Bush s W: cue,
the funds would come fiom proJected
federal surpluses_. The_ maneuve~ng
came as the Senate conunued de~a~ng
a Republican-drafted ~1. 94 . trt,ll1on
budget for 2002 that outlines Bush s fis· ·
. d-10
.
cal VISIOn
o f 1ower taxes and rean~
.
federal spending. The House approved a
s1·milarpac ka ge· las twee k .

''

The ~lnel welcomes )lOUr J)hot~aphs. Here are a feW
fc .-. guidelines for submissions:
j¥
. . • Color photographs are accepted, provided they are In focus
· and have gopd contrast. Negat[ves also are accepted; hOWEM!r, ,
.
I~
please Include a print along with the negative.
• Black-and-photographs are accepted, provided they are l.n
focus and have good contrast. Negatives also are accepted; hOW'
ever, please Include a print alol)g with th.e negative;'
are In focu~ '
• Standard-size slides are accepted, provided
and have good contrast
~
·•
• Submitted photos should be no smaller than standard W&lt;!~ ·
let size and .no larger than 8 x 10.
.

Jn

WASHINGTON (AP) Senate
Democrats are continujng their drive to
'shrink Pmldent Bwh's cherished $1.6
trillion, 10-year tax cut proposal With
efl'orts to shift some of the money to
farmers, schools and other populat pro-

·- ---

your photos!·:

MEDICAL ASSOCIATES OF GALLIPOLIS :
PRACTICING AT THE MEDICAL PLAZA
936 State Route 160
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
telephone: 740-44e~9620.

.

...
r

were

Benefit planned

.

Newanival

· WASHINGTON (AP) '
Eighth-gr:aden in suburban
Chicago
md
Colorado
Spring~, Colo., scored alllOng
the best in the -world in a teSt of
math and science knowledge.
bn the whole, though, students
. in the United State scored just
abcwe avenge. lagging behind
16 otbcr countries.
·
ResultS of the tests
to
be released Wedriescby. All 50
srms did not participace, so
broad comparisons between
them cannot be made, Also, the ·
United States' results are only
representative of the participating states md not students
throughout the country.
This is the first time states
.and school districts have been
allowed to ~ompare their stu· ' dents to those in other nations.
The tesis were given voluntarily in 1999 in 38 countries,
13 States and 14 school districts
,or groups. The eighth-graders
who took the test were select-

"months ·in which to plan a dedication ceremony. Arrangements ·
are being made to form the dedication committee and plans m , .
moving forwanl to have the marker in ·place for the ceremony
sometime this summer.
,
It was noted during the meeting that tickets on a quilt to be
used in a fund raiser for the Ohio Association of Garden Oubs
!m.e arrived.The club voted ro purehase the tickets and then use
the quilt for a dub money-raising project should it be won. Three
dub members attended the WSAZ Home and Garden Club held
recendy.
.
An open mel:ting \\'2! held in March at the Rutland Firehouse.
Maureen Burns used a tea party theme for the social hour. Carol
Mahr spoke on the new science lah co be in che new M eigs Elementary School and the Jade Junior Garden Club members
talked on past projects.
·
Debbie Bullington, president, conducted the meeting which
opened with the club collect. Willfonl gave devotions entided
"After the Winter GodS Sends the Spring" by Helen Steiner
Rid-.
Hal Kneen, presented a program· on "Natural Pest Controls".
He handed one papers on th~ dilferent types of natural enemies,
integrated pest management for the home vegetable garden and
sources on where you can purchase ganlen pest control material.
Kneen was presented a planter containing_spring bulbs.
Reports were given by Willford, secretary, and Margaret
. Edwards, treasurer.
The traveling prize ·donated by Rosemary Eskew was won by
Karen Ha[t. Bullington presented an education demonstration on
making a · basic vertical design flower amngeinent. She used
leatherleaf, boxwood and red roses in a homemade vase.
·
' Refreshments were severed and secret pal gifts were exchanged.

We "ant

The O.lly SenUnel • P8ge A 7

·Democrats continue drive to shrink Bush tax cut

RlJIL\ND - IWI. plaus for securing an Ohio !llitoriQI
Society nWirer dedica•ed to Dr. Brewster Higley. desceodmt of
one of RUtland's pioneer liunilies and author ofwHome on the
Range" are being made by the Rudaitd Friendly Gardeners.
Meeting - d t at Kimbedy Wdlfonl's hoine, a lerrer fiom the
Historiw Society was read along with a copy of the text to be
appror.oed by the sponsorinJ group. The text approv.d ?"terial
along with the loQ! slwe of fimdin$ for the marker 1S to ~
returned to the HistoriW Society. After that the club has 3 112

·OTHER CLASS WINNERS : nence program "Tar Wars.·

llldcllport, Ohio

Public FAX • F9deral Express
VIdeo Rental • Catering Service

-·-

�~.

SOCIETY NO.TES
...._ aiaove •.,.., ·

These are the third-. fourth- and fi~ade class poster design winners in the tobacco absti•
·

.

.

' •

Third-grader wins tobacco poster contest
POMEROY - An illuscrnThe Tar Uflrs
tion of. the · positive effects of
program IVas given
nor ·using tobacco won a SI00
gift certiticate for Victoria Free- to all third-:,fOJtrtlrman in a · coun~ide contest
and fifth-grade
sponsored by the Meigs Coun- ·
ty Health Department as a pan
classes in Meigs
of the "Tar Wars" tobacco
absti.
Couuty.
nence program.
Victoria is a third-grader at schools were Chris Shouldis,
Syracuse. The Tar Wars program Carleton; Jenna Kaup, Shawn
was given to all chin!-, founh- Hawley, Edge! Goble, Salisbury;
and fifth-grade classes in Meigs Victoria .Freeman, Chelsea
County. About 500 students Pape, and Lindsey Buzzard,
participated by designing Syracuse; Ashley Krider, Bobby
posters following the presenta- Shelton, Pordand; . ~yla Grations. Judging was done on the ham, Kori Priddy, Rudand;
illustration, message, creativity, Michael E. King, Kayla Dill, and
·
and artwotk.
Brittany Preast, Harrisonville;
The posters are now being Dakota Collins, Kimberly Mindisplayed around Meigs Coun- ear, Dan:i Bissell, Hannah West,
ty, said Tracy O 'Dell who heads Jade Nutter, Casey · Hannum,
up the program.
Cassie 'Hauber, Sarah Wachter,
Winners in their respective and Lindsey Grate.
.

.

COUNTY WINNER - Victoria ·Freeman, a third-grader at
Syracuse Elementary School, was given a gift certificate for
$100 for her winning poster illustrating the PoSitive effects
of not using tobacco. Here she receives her prize from
Tracey O'Dell of the Meigs County Health Department

.

'

lOur .1 099 for the Year 2000
.

'

.

BY VAUtEA TIIOMPION · "·
SOCIAL SECURITY MANAGER/ATHENS

If you arc a Social Security beneficiary, you
: probably have received your Social Sec.urity
:~efit Statement'for Tax Year 2000 (SSA: 1099). Social Security mailed out more than 48
: million of these forms .
Some people who get Social Security have
: to pay taxes on their b.enefits. Form SSA-1 099
: shows the total ambum of benefits you
: received in the previous year. You use it when
: you complete your federal income tax return
: 't o 'find out if any of your benefits are subject to

. We.

: If you Jose or don't receive ·your SSA-1099,
• you can request a replacement online from
: Social ·
Security's
· website,
at

https:/ /s3abaca.ssa.gov/pro/1099/1099home.s
html.You will need your name as it appears on
benefit checks and/or letters and your Social
Security number.You may also .need yonr date
and place of birth ·and your mother's maiden
name (to help identify you).
'
If you request a replacement on behalf of a
deceased beneficiary, you will need the beneficiary$ name and '•his or her Social Securiry
number. (You may only request on behalf of a
deceased beneficiary if you have received benefits on the same record.)
·
For information on taxation of Social Security benefits, call the Internal Revenue Sorvice's
roll-free number, 1-800-829-3676, to ask for
publication 554, Tax Information for Older
Americans.
•

How to mak~ changes go easier
When employers make a
present partial explanations.
; change in \vork procedures,
These. will make the manager.
: employees may become resislose credibility.
: tant. Tn;s may be because they
• Develop a situation where.
. : like things che · way they
everyone wins. Show the
; already are, think it will cake
employees how the change
• too much time co learn the
will· benefit them. Let them
: new way, or,be afraid that they
know that not only will the
: won't be as successful with the
organization profit from the
ADVICE
: innovation. Managers can help
move, but they will, too.
: make change easier for their
• Encouroge and support
: colleagues by trying the fol- organization. Incorporate their
associates. Provide assistan.ce
. lowing suggestions:
suggestiqns and recommenda- and training early on to help
, • Promote a positive atmos- tions to make ~hings better.
decrease frustrn tion and resis: phere. If there is inurual trust,
• Speak truthfully. Gather tance. Allow · co-w0 ckers to '
· the workers will know the accurate informatio.n and give
make mistakes and learn from
; manager has their best interests the facts to the associates far in them.
· at heart. This sense 'of team- advan(:e of che change. Don:t
(Becky Baer is a. Meigs Couuti
: work will help carry them hide . things from them nor
extmswn agent.)
.. · through the trnnsition.
· . • Explain why the change
: needs to be made and its
effects on them. Be up-front
:with co-work~rs about how
the change will affect them. If
they understand the reason for •
the change, they will be more
willing to coqperate. Establish
a feeling or urgency so colleagues will want to make an
..
immediate change.
• Include employees in the
1. Hearing Aid
decision to change. Those who
Dispensing &amp; Service .
help devel9p the changes are
Sarah
more cpmmitted to seeing .
Jane Ann Karr Aanestad
2. Clinical Audiological
&amp; Aoxan"" G~. Audiologists
them incorporated.
Services
• Prepare for the change.
Plan thoro11ghly for imple3. Balance Thsting 1..:.1~1~1,_
mentation
of the new method
,
• by. empathizing with the
4. Hearing Aid Repair
workers. How will they per5. Hearing Aid Batteries
ceive the change.? What barri'
ers will they indicate? How
411 Alcltllnd AVIIIUI, Alhtna
•
can 'these problems be dn:um~
"'-lim·
..._llondll· F""""
vr-"1' • " " ' " ' ,.,.,,
vented? Give plenty of time
J Ullr Hourt by Appl
for the change to occur.
(7~ 594
1800) 451·9806
• Foster improvement. · '
Encourage colleagues to find
ways to improve skills ancl'
techniques in their personal
work, as well as that of the
\

Becky
Baer ·

"Serving You
Since 1984"

. CHESTER ~ Jeanie
and' FloY-d Ridenour ·of
Chester al).nounce the
birth of a daughter, Katherine Noel, born Dec. 12 at
Camden Clark Hospital in
Parkersburg, W.Va.
The infant weighed
seven pounds, 12 ounces.'
Mr. ·and ·Mrs . Ridenour
have a son , Casey Lane,' I .
1
three.
·
Paternal grandparents are ·,
Keith and Lila Ridenour, '
of Chester
and the paternal I,
•
great- grandmother · .. is ,
Lucille Ridenour of Tuppers Plains.
Maternal · grandparents
are · Elmer and Darlene
· Newell and the m~ternal
great-grandmother is lnzy
Newell, all of Chester.

em

.1

.

,,

l-'

uqJ~tR9Y

eel randomly.
School District No. 203 in
Napcrville,'Ill., west of Chicago, edged out all other com. petiton in science and came in
sixth worldwide in math. The
. average math scores of
Naperville srudents were ju~t
behind those of students in five
Asian natiom.
Jodi Wirt, who oversees secondary school curriculum and
instruction in Naperville, said
early exposure to hands-on sci. ence lessons gives their students

REEDSVILLE -There will be 211 auction and benefit .dinner
for the .Beth Murphy family a~rked Run Sportsman Club, Satunlay, 1 to 3 p.m. with a chickentlatbecue dinner served liom. 2
~ to 6 p.m. for $5 donation.
·
· ,
' All proceeds wjll go to the Murphy family. Beth is the mother
of young children and the daughter ofrom and Su!! Hayman. S~e
. is·in rehabilitatioq due to. complications liom surgery.-.
. ·
Donated auction items ate co be taken to the Forked' Run Club
house c;m Curtis Hollow Road before noon. Contact Jim Werzy,
949,-2746, for infonnation.

edge.

uney're aware of the scientitic process and they're consandy asked to explain_. their
reasoning," she said. ''That
whole way of teac~JP.g students
begins very early
our district."
·
Wut also said the district is
unwual ;,· ~uiring most of its
students to take algebra b5'
eighth grade. It's also located
near five coOeges· and SCYeralreseart:h facilities.
The Academy School District No. 20 in Colorado
Springs, Colo., sCored nt.ir the
cop in science and well aho.e
the world -average in math. .
Alisabeth Holm, the district's
assessment director, said ic helps
to have the U.S. Air Fon:e
Academy located within the
school district.
"A lot of our students have
opportunities to participate in
activities that p!Pmoce science
and .math achievement," she
said. Several high-tech compa- ·
nies are also · nearby, and most
students have computers in
their homes, Holm said.
Tl)e srudy, which tested
50,000 srudents in all, is a project of the International Associarion for the Evaluation of
Educational ' Achievement, an
independent . international .
cooperative of national resean:h
institutions· and government
agencies. It was created in 1959
and has conducted more than
15 such studies.

m

grams.
The Senate 'planned to vote Wednesday on.a provision by Sen.Tim Johnson, .
D-S.D.,, that would shrink Bush's tax
reduction by $88 . billion. Democrats
would use the funds instead· to 'provide
elqr:a aid ~ the next decade to farmers, who in recent yean have been hit by
low crop prices and losses .from
droughts.
·
"Rural America has not prospered
over this past decade in the way the rest
of our nation has," Johnson said Tuesday.

Napster continues
fight for online
.
'

WASHINGTON (AP) - Embatded
music trading service Napster asked
Congress on Tuesday to force pub~shers to o.ffer their catalogs . onlinc;o, as
hundreds of its users., ·and pop singers
Aianis Morissette and Don Henley, sat
in.
There is a "failure in . the marketplace," Napster in~rim chief Hank
Barry cold the Senate Judiciary Comrnittee. He said compulsory licenses
would provide consumers more than
the smatiering 9f songs now available
. online and simultaneously assure that
publishers and artists are compensated
for their work:
"Congress has repeatedly used such
licenses to advance public policy goals
in the context of new and frequendy

'

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committee's senior · Democrat, said
ther~ is some support in the House and
Senate for compulsory online licensing. But Chairman Orrin H atch, R- ·
Utah, seemed cool to the idea, saying
compulsory licenses might violate
international treaties.
Hatch floated his own idea, however:
Offer record labels tax incentives. to
encourage them to put their catalogs
online.
"We know we're going into a new
age," Hatch said. But, he said, "It seems
to me very slow in the making."
Legislators were starstruck by Henley .
and Morissette, who said artists' concerns have been ignored during the
past year's legal batdes between recording labels and Internet companies .

-·-

Boneless Skinless
, To advertise

inefficient marketplaces," Barry testi lied. "Comp11lsory licenses with clear
payment structures have encouraged
beneficial new technologies and
responded effectively to particular market failures. Music on the radio works
because of what is functionally a compulsory license."
. Representatives for major music
labels and Jack Valenti of the Motion
Picture Association of America panned
the idea. Hilary Rosen, who represents
the music publish~rs' _trade group,
called the possibility of compulsory
federal licenses a disaster for the music
industry.
.•.
,
'•
"Government price-fixing never
works," Valenti told the committee.
Sen. Patrick Leahy of Vermont, the

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1

With Vice President Dick Ch~ney
already having 6roken his 'first tie vote
in the Senate, GOP leaders have
promised that by week 's end they will
pwh the budget through the c hamber,
which ' is divided 50-SO between the
two parties.
,
Congress' budget, which does not
need the president's signature, sets overall spending and tax targets. Later bills
·enact actual changes in taxes and spending and 611 in the details.
Even so, both sides want the budget co
reflect their priorities - and to signal
that important constituencies will be
· d
h
th
well treate
. Farmers ave. reached at
.
level m recent years, haVIng won $25
billi'
·
·a1 'd
h 1
h
onti m spec1
a1 over t e ast t ree
C
yean rom ongress.

'·

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Republicaru · were
countering with :in
alce.r natiw by Senate
Finance · Committee
Chairman
Charles
Grassley. R-Iow.a, that
would provide $64
billion in additional
farm
assistance.
llulll
Rather ~ cormng
from Bush s W: cue,
the funds would come fiom proJected
federal surpluses_. The_ maneuve~ng
came as the Senate conunued de~a~ng
a Republican-drafted ~1. 94 . trt,ll1on
budget for 2002 that outlines Bush s fis· ·
. d-10
.
cal VISIOn
o f 1ower taxes and rean~
.
federal spending. The House approved a
s1·milarpac ka ge· las twee k .

''

The ~lnel welcomes )lOUr J)hot~aphs. Here are a feW
fc .-. guidelines for submissions:
j¥
. . • Color photographs are accepted, provided they are In focus
· and have gopd contrast. Negat[ves also are accepted; hOWEM!r, ,
.
I~
please Include a print along with the negative.
• Black-and-photographs are accepted, provided they are l.n
focus and have good contrast. Negatives also are accepted; hOW'
ever, please Include a print alol)g with th.e negative;'
are In focu~ '
• Standard-size slides are accepted, provided
and have good contrast
~
·•
• Submitted photos should be no smaller than standard W&lt;!~ ·
let size and .no larger than 8 x 10.
.

Jn

WASHINGTON (AP) Senate
Democrats are continujng their drive to
'shrink Pmldent Bwh's cherished $1.6
trillion, 10-year tax cut proposal With
efl'orts to shift some of the money to
farmers, schools and other populat pro-

·- ---

your photos!·:

MEDICAL ASSOCIATES OF GALLIPOLIS :
PRACTICING AT THE MEDICAL PLAZA
936 State Route 160
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
telephone: 740-44e~9620.

.

...
r

were

Benefit planned

.

Newanival

· WASHINGTON (AP) '
Eighth-gr:aden in suburban
Chicago
md
Colorado
Spring~, Colo., scored alllOng
the best in the -world in a teSt of
math and science knowledge.
bn the whole, though, students
. in the United State scored just
abcwe avenge. lagging behind
16 otbcr countries.
·
ResultS of the tests
to
be released Wedriescby. All 50
srms did not participace, so
broad comparisons between
them cannot be made, Also, the ·
United States' results are only
representative of the participating states md not students
throughout the country.
This is the first time states
.and school districts have been
allowed to ~ompare their stu· ' dents to those in other nations.
The tesis were given voluntarily in 1999 in 38 countries,
13 States and 14 school districts
,or groups. The eighth-graders
who took the test were select-

"months ·in which to plan a dedication ceremony. Arrangements ·
are being made to form the dedication committee and plans m , .
moving forwanl to have the marker in ·place for the ceremony
sometime this summer.
,
It was noted during the meeting that tickets on a quilt to be
used in a fund raiser for the Ohio Association of Garden Oubs
!m.e arrived.The club voted ro purehase the tickets and then use
the quilt for a dub money-raising project should it be won. Three
dub members attended the WSAZ Home and Garden Club held
recendy.
.
An open mel:ting \\'2! held in March at the Rutland Firehouse.
Maureen Burns used a tea party theme for the social hour. Carol
Mahr spoke on the new science lah co be in che new M eigs Elementary School and the Jade Junior Garden Club members
talked on past projects.
·
Debbie Bullington, president, conducted the meeting which
opened with the club collect. Willfonl gave devotions entided
"After the Winter GodS Sends the Spring" by Helen Steiner
Rid-.
Hal Kneen, presented a program· on "Natural Pest Controls".
He handed one papers on th~ dilferent types of natural enemies,
integrated pest management for the home vegetable garden and
sources on where you can purchase ganlen pest control material.
Kneen was presented a planter containing_spring bulbs.
Reports were given by Willford, secretary, and Margaret
. Edwards, treasurer.
The traveling prize ·donated by Rosemary Eskew was won by
Karen Ha[t. Bullington presented an education demonstration on
making a · basic vertical design flower amngeinent. She used
leatherleaf, boxwood and red roses in a homemade vase.
·
' Refreshments were severed and secret pal gifts were exchanged.

We "ant

The O.lly SenUnel • P8ge A 7

·Democrats continue drive to shrink Bush tax cut

RlJIL\ND - IWI. plaus for securing an Ohio !llitoriQI
Society nWirer dedica•ed to Dr. Brewster Higley. desceodmt of
one of RUtland's pioneer liunilies and author ofwHome on the
Range" are being made by the Rudaitd Friendly Gardeners.
Meeting - d t at Kimbedy Wdlfonl's hoine, a lerrer fiom the
Historiw Society was read along with a copy of the text to be
appror.oed by the sponsorinJ group. The text approv.d ?"terial
along with the loQ! slwe of fimdin$ for the marker 1S to ~
returned to the HistoriW Society. After that the club has 3 112

·OTHER CLASS WINNERS : nence program "Tar Wars.·

llldcllport, Ohio

Public FAX • F9deral Express
VIdeo Rental • Catering Service

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Nation •

The dilly Sentinel~
••

WASHINGTON (AP) - The House is aiming to finish the
1112jor pieces. of Pmident Bush's Sl.6 trillion ·tax cut package
with a measure that would diminate the 'jState tax in 2011,
which critics say is unnecessary and too cosdy.
The House was scheduled Wednesday to debate and vote on
the plan to repeal the taX at a cost of$193 billion over the 10f
year plwe-&lt;&gt;ut period. L.ike other Bush tax cuts, the measure
could undergo significant change in the Sen:ate - but sponsors
are optimistic the tax will eventually end.
"This is the official start of the funeial proccu.ion of the death
tax," said Rep. Jennifer Dunn, R ~Wash .
.
The tax affects estates of only about 2 percent of people who
die each year, largely due to a $675,000 exemption that will rise
to $1 million in 2006. But avoiding,the taX, which tops out at 55
percent, requires cosdy insurance and estate planning, and it causes particular problems for many farmers and smaU businesses who
are often forced to seU assets.

Congress eyes postal problems

•
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&lt;;&gt;

9

WASHINGTON (AP) - Women strengthened their
foothold in 't he business world during the 1990s, aided by the
decade's stlong economy and gains in education, a Census
Bureau report
.
. showed.
Women-owned firms generated $818.7 billion in revenue in
1997, up 33 percent from 1992,' according to the Census Bureau
report being released
. Wednesday. The .nurriber . of
. businesses
by
owned
women mcreased 16 percent to 5.&lt;1 million over the
same five-year span.

.'

The data was based on a survey separate from the 2000 census,
h ]
vail bl D · ·
· tr· ·
an d was t e atest or a e. esptte Its age, tt one~ a pronusmg
glimpse into the state of women-owned firms today, said Carolyn
Elman, executive director of th.e Kansas City; Mo.-based American BuSiness Women's Assoctatton.
"What we've seen in the last five to 10 years is there
is a. ·lot of
, .
(government) support out there for women starnng thelf own
businesses, almost to the point where there's too much;' Elman
said. "It makes logical sense."

·Disputed survey finds inequities
'

HAIKOU, Chin:a (AP) - President
Jiang Zemin on Wednesday de1112nded
an American apology for a collision
between a U.S. Navy spy plane and a
Chinese fighter jet.
President Busb on Tuesday warnc;d that
ties with Beijing could suffer unless it
quickly releases the EP-3E plane and the
24 crew members. China didn't respond
to the request.
·
But Jiang saidWashington "should bear
aU responsibilities for the collision incident," according to the · official Xinhua
News Agency. "The U.S. side should
apologize to the Chinese people."
Jiang, speaking before leaving on an
official tour of Latin America , demanded
that . the United States "do something

favoralile to the smoot:J! development of
China-IJ.S. relations, rather than nuke
renurks that confuse ·right and wrong,
and are harmful to the relations:· Xinhua
said.
'
U.S. diplomats were allowed to see the
crew for the first time l~re Tuesday on
lhinan island in the South China Sea,
where they nude an emergency landing
after the collision Sunday. The diplomats
said there was no inQication when they
could see the 21 men and three women
again.
The diplomats were preparing for a
long stay on the tropical island, a popufar
tourist destination. They visited local
stores to buy .the crew soap, laundry
detergent, underwear and other supplies.

~·

But they said there was no indication
when they could deliver them.
"Nothing scheduled today," Mark
Canning, one of four ~erican diplomats waiting on Hainan, said Wednesday.
Jiang on Tuesday demanded that the
United States end its surveillan~e flights
off China's coast:
The U.S. military says the EP-3E was
flying in international airspace
when it
.
collided with one of rwo Chinese· F-8
fighters sent up. to track it.
A Pentagon spokesman, Rear Ac!J_n.
Craig Quigley, said in Washington that
the United States was unlikely to stop
such flights. They are meant tQ gather
information on Ch.ina's military by
recording radio, radar a[\d other signals.

.

.

drunken driving charges while in Adanta to meet with police and
setup filming of an ,episode of the reality series. .
An officer stopped Murray Jordan, 64, for making an illegal left
turn in Adanta 's Buckhead section Monday riight, police said. · ·
The officer smelled alc~hol on Jordan's breath, acconling to
police.
Police said Jordan tried and failed three times to recite the
alphabet, could not ·hold his leg up for more than a second and ·
did not follow directions when officers asked him to walk heelto-toe.

SChool removes Davis portrait

"""lks renewecl ami"d battleS
.

LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) -Transylvania Univers'ity remwed a
portrait of alumnus and Confederate Pr~ident Jefferson Davis
IG
from a residence hall after racial 'slurs were found scrawled oq;a
GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip (AP)- Israelis and Palestinians cradbl k d • d
·
'
ac stu ent s oor.
.·
. .·
·
· 1 · ed mortar fire Wednesday in the Gaza Strip, while the two sides
Uruv.eruty Prestdent Char.les.L. Shearer dectded to rem.~ t.he also held their highest-level political contacts since Prime Minisr.
J enerson
tr
Davts Hall 1ast week a1ter
~
porttatt &amp;rom
meetmg Wtth ter Arie.l Sharon took power last month.
d
h
by h
t. e act.
. .
. Afi:era day of violen. ce Tuesday in Gaza, the Palestinians fired
stu•• ents ~ o were. upset
If you have Afrtcan-Amencan stu dents w ho Jive m th at haD,', four mortar shells on the Jewish settlement of Netzarim in the
an d we do ... 1 can understand how t hat wouJd nu ke th em fceeJ, . early hours ofWednesday, but no one was hurt, Israel's army said.
Shearer said.
Th
d d
h
f b fi
·h
ra1
.
.
.
.
e army respon e to t e source o t e re Wit seve mor·•. Last Thursday, a black student who lives m the dornutory dis- tar rounds of its own targeting a nearby Palestinian security base.
covered a racial slur written on the door with a marker On Sun1 li F · Mi. ·
Shi
n
dn da
·.L
·
·
·
srae
oretgn
mster
mon ceres met We es y wtu•
da~ another slur was scratched on the same door.
·
· Pal · ·
Iii ials 1 · · · ·
bil. h h
'
two semor.
esnman o c : P anmng Mimster Na S aat
:and ~egonator Saeb Ere kat, m Athe~, Greece. A three-way
-r~
,meettng wtth the. Uru~ed Srates ':"as e~ected Wedpesday rught
•'TLANT'•
(AP) - Thepro ducerof"C ops.. wasarrested on
. . ·.
or Thunday,
n
n
th · officials
d 1 ·ftom both
. stdes satd,
. but· they declined· to
·
. ·
.
e ttme an P ace.
·

dtecl
fo
.
DUI
P . ucer
r.

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.

.

.

Are .stocks

wmtlt·

WASHINGTON (AP) -The averagewrnn111t'\Votldng~bn .r'
US. government contract job is paid 72, cents for every dollar a
map earns, a disputed Labor Department survey of federal contraqors found.
,,.., .
-..&lt;1u ,: ~
U~¥.
~
The woman gets 82 cents if she has the same position and 89
cents if she has equal 'tenure and experience at the 'same compaNEW YORK (AP) :~ As
ny, the srudy reported.
.
stock prices keep plunging,
· The draft study was released Tuesday by Sen. Torn Harkin, D- there's a'nagging question on
Iowa, and quickly got tangled in politics. The Labor Department Wall Stteet: Are companies
said the report, commissioned by Harkin, has not been issued really · worth so much less
officially because of accuracy questions that arose during the tllan they were a year ago?
Clinton administration.
They are if the market says
"The methodology and the d~ta that was used in the study was so.
severely flawed:' said Stuart Roy, spokesman for Labor Secretary . "There is just .no reason 'to
Elaine Chao. Another study is being prepared, he said.
be a buyer," said Richard E.
Cripps, chief market strategist for Legg Mason of Balti-·
more. "Even tho)lgh stock
DETROIT (AP) -A former Navy sailor convicted of killing p,rices are low. Investors don't
a prostitute has been sentenced to life in prison without parole. feel they are low enough."
When given the chance .to apologize to the family of victim
It was one thing when
Wendy Jordan, John E. Armstrong stood with · his back to the Internet stocks, long on debt
family and said, "No."
and short on profits, began to
The victim's sister told Armstrong she hopes he suffers.
crumble. But no on,e expect"I watched you in conrt as if you hadn't done a thing;· Bonnie ed the safe havens of the old
Jordan said Tuesday. "You are a sick predator, and are worse than economy - drugs, consumer
an animaL An animal kills to live, and you live to kjll."
products and banking - to
fall so hard.
·
What a difference a year
has made on Wall Street with
.BOCA RATON, Fla. (AP) -A jury has ordered the owners many stocks' prices slashed in
of a defunct nigrt club to pay $10.5 million to the family of a half or more and investors
man who was left a quadriplegic after a bar-promoted fight.. ' · still not buying. In fact, this
Club Boca .had argued that Carlos E. Silva signed a waiver year the selloffs spread to the ·
before stepping into· the boJ9ng ring on Nov. 4, 1997.
broader market as safet blue
Silva's parents said their son was seriously injured the first chips issued profit warnings,
minute into the mati:h •when he hit his head against a wooden restruc!uring efforts and lay, .
stage, but the fight wasn't stopped until he beqme unconscious off announcements of their
• , in the third round.
own, making the fir$! three
A blood clot in SilVo!'s brain prompted emergency surgery that months of 2001 one of Wall
left him unable to speak, communicate or move. ·
Street's . worst quarters in
decades.
j
"The negativism that is out
•I
there is so thick you can cut
, TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) - Four foniter American Express it with a knife," · said Alari
employees are among 14 people charged with stealing credit card Ackerman: executive vice
numbers from corppany files and using them to spend at least $2 president of ·Fahnestock &amp;•
million on cars and other items.
'
·
Co.
'
American Express fired six employees after it discovered "susInvestors· are deeply dispicious activities" at its Fort Lauderdale call center in June 1998, tressed by a seemingly nevera company spokeswoman said Tuesday. She said the company ending string of earnings
-cooperated with state investigators during a two-year probe.
waniings from big names,
. The former workers.allegedly stole account numbers and per- like American Express on
sonal information from ISO peopl8. with good credit histories. Monday, and a: .litany of bad
· . The information was used to get Take driver's licenses ~-;i,id opei1. news like that fron1 · Procter
,new accounts, state officials said.
&amp; Gamble, which said last ·
The accou~ts were allegedly used to buy high-priced mer- month it would cl)t 9,600
•chandise, sometimes for resale.
job cuts.
• •
Some investors say the .stalwarts of corporate America
- which are still very .prof'
COLUMBUS, Ind. (AP) - Baby products maker Cosco Inc . itable despite th~ir warnings
has agreed to pay S1.3 million to settle charges it delay.,d report- - don't deserve the . same
ing safety defects that led to hundreds of injuries and the deaths lashing from Wall Street that
of two children.
·
the dot-com shares got. Yet
· The Consumer Product Safety C6mmission had alleged that AmEx, for example, which
Cosco redesigned or relabeled five products after receiving traded at the $63 level six
reports of more than 300 injuries but faile~ to notify the agency mohths ago, is now down to
,as requi.red by .law, The W.1shington Post .and USA Today report- $38, a drop of nearly 4p pered )Vednesday.
cent.
-1)1,

.......d.,., . . . . . 2001

Chinese pfesident demands apology

WASHINGTON (AP) - A Postal Service battered by slowing business and billions in projected losses might eliminate Sat'
urday mail delivery and dose or consolidate some post offices and
facilities.
The agency also claimed Cosco failed to inform i' of 24 cases
Congress wants to knmv. what went wrong to make such pos- in '.llhich infants were trapped in misassembled cribs over a two
sible service cuts nect.""Ssary, especially since a rat~ increase went year-period before an 8-month-old child died of asphyxiation,
into effect in January.
the newspapefs said. . .
·
"We need to know what happened here;• Rep. Dan Burton,
The other death involved a toddler bed, company spokes'R-Ind., said in a statement, noting that the Postal Service was woman Carol Dingledy said in an interview Tuesday njght with
projecting big gains entering the holiday season last year.
The Associated Press. In both cases, the products were misused or
"The Postal Service can't continue to run this way without misassembled, she said. Both products were recalled. : .
serious harm to the affordable mail service the American people
deserve," he said.

BusineSs women making gains

Page AI .

so'·-· 11111e?

AMERIWOOD

··

Easlem
dominates
Melsonvllle-Yolt
.
.

CINCINNATI (AP) - Moments after his
new-look Pittsburgh Pirates had lost their
opening game, rookie manager Lloyd
McClendon gathered his players in the club- .
house ahd
a little pep talk.
The message was succinct: Nice try.
The Pirates mounted one threat after
another, but. ~ouldn't get a ~it with runnen in
scormg poSition Thesday rught. Barry Lark1p
doubled home a pair of runs .and the Cincinnati Reds withstood another wild showing
by their bullpen, holding on for a 3-2 victory.
"I told my club that was a hell of a game,"

gave

' NELSONVILLE - Tlie
Eastern softball team seemed·
to be on the bases all day long
in the Eagles 34-1 victory
over Nelsonville-York Tues=
.day.
. The Eagles, who led 11-1 at
• !he end of rwo innings of play,
doubled their score in. the
third as Eastern batted around
in three different innings.
Eastern batters were walked
21 times.
.
Kristen Chevalier, Juli Bailey, Amanda Yeager and
rammy Bissell each had
f!'iples for the Eagles (3-1).
, The Buckc:Yes were held to
rwo hits by Bailey, the Eagles
starting pitcher.
Eastern will be at Belpre
today, before playing host to
South Gallia Thursday.

McClendon said, sipping . from a bottle of
water.."lf we batde like we batded tonight,
we'll win our share of games. I hope we play
like that the entire year."
. Reds manager Bob Boone hopes his
bullpen gets its act together soon. For the second straight game, relievers Dennys Reyes
and Scott Williamson had their new manager
wearing a path across the hard-and-fast
infield grass.
·
·· ·
Osvaldo Fernandez turned a 3-0 lead over
to the bullpen in the seventh, but Reyes

GOT IT - Reds third baseman Aaron Boone makes the play

PIHH ... Rids, 82

on a ground ball in the Reds win Tuesday. (AP) .

Meigs eams. tough win

SOFTBALL

BY DAVE HARRII

ROCK SPRINGS . . Meigs jumped out ·a big
lead, and then held off a
furious come back attempt
by River Valley to defeat
the Raiders, 12-11 , in a
· non-conference contest
Tuesday at Meigs High
SchooL
Meigs held a 5-1 lead
after
the first _inning, and
. TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - Darheld a 12-4 lead heading
ryl St~awberry told his probainto
the ~op of the seventh,
tjon officer be spent .the four
but River Valley made
'la,.ys he was missing doing
things interesting, plating
col:aine with a female friend
seven runs before Meigs
lmd armed men who took his
was able to hold on for the
jewelry and abandoned him
wm.
iil' a motel room.
Riv~r Valley took a 1~0
· Florida probation offici~s
lead
in the top of the first
said that Strawberry tested
·inning, ·Nolan singled and
positive for cocaine use and
later scored on a ground
violated the terms of his
out off the bat of Craycraft.
hoqse .arrest in his four-day
Meigs came' back in tlie'
absence ~m · a drug rehab
bottom of the i~n~ by
center:
.,
· . plating fiye runs to ·take a
. The 'report carne
Straw· 5-1 ' lea&amp; Zach Bolin dou- · ,
berry remalti.e d in . psychibled, h\! ~scored when Nick
atric ward at St. Josepli's Hos'
Dettwiller
singled: Eric
. pital while doctors evaluated
RunYt&gt;n singled and John
him. He will be sent to the .
Stanley
walked, Matt Stewtlillsborough County Jail and
art then slammed a two
held without bail once docrun home run to center
tors declare him men,tally stafield
to give the host team ·
ble.
.
the four rim lead.
. The probation report is the
Meigs added three more
first officia) accounting of
runs in the bottom of the
Strawberry's Thursday night
fourth
inning, Stanley
disappearance from the drug
reached .. on . a fielders
trea.trnent center where he
choice, Stewart walked and
was serving rwo years'. house.
Knapp reached on
Darrick
arrest.
.
,.
a Raider error. Derek
Strawberry said he was
Johnson
and Josh Napper
picked up at the center by a
followed with back-to·woman from an Alcoholics
hack singles.
Anonymous program named
THROWIN' MARAUDER- Meigs pitcher Buzzy Fackler puts everything Into this pitch
Beverly, who was supposed to
Melp..B:s . HARD
against
River Valley. (Dave Harris)
·
l;tke him to the meeting.

. Strawbeny
went on cocaine

BY

NOW:

: KNOXV.ILLJ!, Tenn. (AP) ·
- Buzz Peterson wi.ll be
iiuroduced as Tennessee's 17th
·ooach on Wednesday.
Peterson resigned as Thlsa'i
coach after leading the Golden Hurricane to the NlT
championship last week.
· Former coach Jerry Green ·
resigned March 20 after the
Volunteers' fourth straight
J'\ICAA appeat;mce. 'tennessee
lost in the first round and had
trouble winning big games.

~64.99

•'•

· ·' Griffin lines
\ . Seton Hall
..
'

.NJ.

.

.· : SOUTH ORANGE,
(AP) - Eddie Griffin, the Big
East Conference .rookie of the
year, is leaving Seton. Hall
after one season to enter the
NBA draft. .
' Or I .
RACINE - · Scoring 11
runs
in the third illfli~g •
• The decilion: 'by the shotblocking power · forward
Southern rolled to a 21-3\:ri.
umph over South Gallia, Tho:s~pmes less than a week after
day in ·non~eague' softball.
Jommy Amaker resigned . as
SoutheJn (1-4) popnded
f~e Pirates' coach to take the
out
13 h.its led by ~chel
~!&gt;b. at. Michigan.
·
Chapman who had a home
. Griffin led the nation in
run, triple and four· RBI.
blocked shots with 4. 5 per ·
Seni9r Tammy Fryar had rwo
'liame. He led the Pirates in
triples and fOur runs scored,
· , scoring and rebounding, avcr' while senior Macyn EJ;Vin
a_ging 17.8 points and 10.8
sin~ed twice. Senior ,Katie
reboundf,.
I
. . (if'

I '

'

••

- __ ...,

........

;-.

---

HARRIS

ROCK
SPRINGS
River Valley slipped past
Meigs 8-6 in non-conference
softball
~action ·
Tuesday
evening at Meigs High
School.
The Raiders scored in their
first at bat, Baird singled
moved up on a ground out
and scored on a single off the
bat of Ward for a 1-0 River
VaHey lead.
.
Meigs took a 2-1 lead in
the bottom of the inning,
Lindsay Bolin 'and Kayte
Davis both walked and they
later scored on singles by
Abby Harris and Mindy
Chancey.
The Raiders took a 4-2
lead in the second inning.
Lawson and Watkins both singled, after two ground outs,
Hood walked and Baird followed with a single.
The Raiders added a couple more ru~ in the third
inning for a 6-2 lead. Ward
reached on a Marauder error,
after a ground out Lawson
and Watkins both singled.
· Another Marauder error
aided the Raider cause.
A single run without the
benefit of a hit in the top of
the fourth gave the Raiders a
7- 2 advantage. Three walks
and a ground out plated the
run.
Meigs scored four runs in
the boitom of the inning,
Abby Harris doubled and
Chancey followed wi1h a
walk, one out later back-coback walks forced in a run
and loaded the bases. A single
by Bolin plated two mns and
the fourth run of the inning
came in on a ground out
The RaiderS closed out the
scoring in the fifth inning.
Watkins singled and moved
up on a ground out, she then
scored when Minnis singled
for an 8-6 Raider lead which
is the way it ended.
McFann picked up the win,
she scattered five hits, struck
out five and walked seven.
Watkins and Lawson both
went 3-for-4 at the plate, all

Southern puts
down
Rebel
revolt
.

.
.
BY ScoTT WOLFE .
Clary reached on an error, then CaldOVP.CORRESPONDENT
•
well and Halley each walked, and E.
RACINE - ·. Scoring six runs. in the Lamp her reached on an error.
first inning, Southern survived a South
Josh Duty then doubled home the
Gallia scare to claim a 16-6 non-league final run·s of the inning for a· 6-4 score.
·win over the Rebels at Star MiU Park In the Southern third, Ohlinger walked
Monday. ·
. and scored on a Justin Allen ground
In the first inning, Southern went up out.
4-0 when Chad.Hubbard singled, Matt
Southern (3-2) saw South Gallia pull
.Ash singled, Brandon Pierce singled, to within 7-6 in the fourth inning.
and Aaron Ohlinger doubled and.. H;illey reached on a fielder's choice,
1
. nee
. Hill
ad vance d on an ert?r. B
. t hen'';, Lampher singled, duty singled' and K.
doubled home Jusnn Allen With the ).ap1pher reached on an error in right
finalrun, 6-0.
. .field.
·
. Southern. watched the Re~els come . Southern puUe.d away to .10-6 in the
nght back m the second mmng. Zach 1hird when Ash singled, Pierce doubled

DAVE

OVP CORRESPONDENT

blnp

Petelson

.·

Ra·iders
shade
·Meigs

OVP CORRESPONDENT _.

•

Cosco to pay settle.ment

•

Red legs hold off Pirates.to
· pick up first win of .2001 .

HIGHLIGHTS

·

KlfCHEN HlJfCH

•

j .
'
••

w.dnesd.y. Apfll t, 2001

Tenn•see hires

..

..

Page 8.1

Mi.e ...

..

.•

'Ar!Jund the .Majors, Page B2
Reds Notebook, Page BJ . .
'NBA roundup, Page 83
Earnhardt photo update, Page 85

as

Damages given to family

,l

The Daily Sentinel

•

a

Ex-sailor convided in slaying

.

·'

him home, and Brandon Hill singled.
Dally Hill reached on an error in left
field that allowed Brandon Hill to
score.
Southern followed up with three
runs in the fifth, then added two more
in the sixth.
Brandon Hill picked up the win with
relief from Chad Hubbard, Brice Hill
· and Ash. They combined to walk ten,
and strike out six. South Gallia walked
six and fanned six.
Starter Brandon Caldwell suffered the
'Joss with relieffi:om Rick Clary.
Southern goes to Vinton County
today.

Pl~se

...

..

... Softbtll, BJ

sOuthem girls roll past soUth .Gallia, ] 1-3

1

---·--

__

{~

-

I

Cummins ;Singled and doubled, Katie Sayre singled
twice, Brigette Barnes singled, and Ca:rolyn Bentz singled.
Stephanie Evanich ·led ·the
Rebels (0~2) with a 2-for-3
night,,while Stacy White singled and ·A~ singled.
Besides helping lead the
tea~;n in hitting Rachel Chapnun earned the win on the
mound with a three strike-

.

put, six walk effort in scattering four hits. Robyn Harrison and White combined in
the loss' with five strikeout&lt;
and 15 walks.
·
South Gallia took a 1-0 lead
when Stacy White singled and
scored on an Evanich single in
Southern went
the first.
down without a score, then
Chapman held South Gallia
in the second. Southern plated rwo in the second when

Fryar tripled and scored on an er's head.
error, then Katie Sayre scamThe flood gates opened,
pered hoine on a passed ball starting with an ~rvin single,
• to give SHS a 2- 1 lead.
.three walks, and a double by
South Gallia tied the score Cummins ,' and triples by
in the third inning when . Chapman and Fryar, Ervin
White walked and scored 'on and Sayre also added singles in
an Evanich single. Kati Cum- the drive, the score 13- 2 .
"mins .led tff the third when
Southern went on to score
she reached on · an errqr, one in the fifth and seven in
Barnes singled, then Chap- the sixth to secure the game.
man haminered a three-run
Southern goes to Vinton
home run over the lefr field- County tonight.

••

'I
I

I

..

'

�••

. --;-;-'

•

•

'

Nation •

The dilly Sentinel~
••

WASHINGTON (AP) - The House is aiming to finish the
1112jor pieces. of Pmident Bush's Sl.6 trillion ·tax cut package
with a measure that would diminate the 'jState tax in 2011,
which critics say is unnecessary and too cosdy.
The House was scheduled Wednesday to debate and vote on
the plan to repeal the taX at a cost of$193 billion over the 10f
year plwe-&lt;&gt;ut period. L.ike other Bush tax cuts, the measure
could undergo significant change in the Sen:ate - but sponsors
are optimistic the tax will eventually end.
"This is the official start of the funeial proccu.ion of the death
tax," said Rep. Jennifer Dunn, R ~Wash .
.
The tax affects estates of only about 2 percent of people who
die each year, largely due to a $675,000 exemption that will rise
to $1 million in 2006. But avoiding,the taX, which tops out at 55
percent, requires cosdy insurance and estate planning, and it causes particular problems for many farmers and smaU businesses who
are often forced to seU assets.

Congress eyes postal problems

•
,.

&lt;;&gt;

9

WASHINGTON (AP) - Women strengthened their
foothold in 't he business world during the 1990s, aided by the
decade's stlong economy and gains in education, a Census
Bureau report
.
. showed.
Women-owned firms generated $818.7 billion in revenue in
1997, up 33 percent from 1992,' according to the Census Bureau
report being released
. Wednesday. The .nurriber . of
. businesses
by
owned
women mcreased 16 percent to 5.&lt;1 million over the
same five-year span.

.'

The data was based on a survey separate from the 2000 census,
h ]
vail bl D · ·
· tr· ·
an d was t e atest or a e. esptte Its age, tt one~ a pronusmg
glimpse into the state of women-owned firms today, said Carolyn
Elman, executive director of th.e Kansas City; Mo.-based American BuSiness Women's Assoctatton.
"What we've seen in the last five to 10 years is there
is a. ·lot of
, .
(government) support out there for women starnng thelf own
businesses, almost to the point where there's too much;' Elman
said. "It makes logical sense."

·Disputed survey finds inequities
'

HAIKOU, Chin:a (AP) - President
Jiang Zemin on Wednesday de1112nded
an American apology for a collision
between a U.S. Navy spy plane and a
Chinese fighter jet.
President Busb on Tuesday warnc;d that
ties with Beijing could suffer unless it
quickly releases the EP-3E plane and the
24 crew members. China didn't respond
to the request.
·
But Jiang saidWashington "should bear
aU responsibilities for the collision incident," according to the · official Xinhua
News Agency. "The U.S. side should
apologize to the Chinese people."
Jiang, speaking before leaving on an
official tour of Latin America , demanded
that . the United States "do something

favoralile to the smoot:J! development of
China-IJ.S. relations, rather than nuke
renurks that confuse ·right and wrong,
and are harmful to the relations:· Xinhua
said.
'
U.S. diplomats were allowed to see the
crew for the first time l~re Tuesday on
lhinan island in the South China Sea,
where they nude an emergency landing
after the collision Sunday. The diplomats
said there was no inQication when they
could see the 21 men and three women
again.
The diplomats were preparing for a
long stay on the tropical island, a popufar
tourist destination. They visited local
stores to buy .the crew soap, laundry
detergent, underwear and other supplies.

~·

But they said there was no indication
when they could deliver them.
"Nothing scheduled today," Mark
Canning, one of four ~erican diplomats waiting on Hainan, said Wednesday.
Jiang on Tuesday demanded that the
United States end its surveillan~e flights
off China's coast:
The U.S. military says the EP-3E was
flying in international airspace
when it
.
collided with one of rwo Chinese· F-8
fighters sent up. to track it.
A Pentagon spokesman, Rear Ac!J_n.
Craig Quigley, said in Washington that
the United States was unlikely to stop
such flights. They are meant tQ gather
information on Ch.ina's military by
recording radio, radar a[\d other signals.

.

.

drunken driving charges while in Adanta to meet with police and
setup filming of an ,episode of the reality series. .
An officer stopped Murray Jordan, 64, for making an illegal left
turn in Adanta 's Buckhead section Monday riight, police said. · ·
The officer smelled alc~hol on Jordan's breath, acconling to
police.
Police said Jordan tried and failed three times to recite the
alphabet, could not ·hold his leg up for more than a second and ·
did not follow directions when officers asked him to walk heelto-toe.

SChool removes Davis portrait

"""lks renewecl ami"d battleS
.

LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) -Transylvania Univers'ity remwed a
portrait of alumnus and Confederate Pr~ident Jefferson Davis
IG
from a residence hall after racial 'slurs were found scrawled oq;a
GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip (AP)- Israelis and Palestinians cradbl k d • d
·
'
ac stu ent s oor.
.·
. .·
·
· 1 · ed mortar fire Wednesday in the Gaza Strip, while the two sides
Uruv.eruty Prestdent Char.les.L. Shearer dectded to rem.~ t.he also held their highest-level political contacts since Prime Minisr.
J enerson
tr
Davts Hall 1ast week a1ter
~
porttatt &amp;rom
meetmg Wtth ter Arie.l Sharon took power last month.
d
h
by h
t. e act.
. .
. Afi:era day of violen. ce Tuesday in Gaza, the Palestinians fired
stu•• ents ~ o were. upset
If you have Afrtcan-Amencan stu dents w ho Jive m th at haD,', four mortar shells on the Jewish settlement of Netzarim in the
an d we do ... 1 can understand how t hat wouJd nu ke th em fceeJ, . early hours ofWednesday, but no one was hurt, Israel's army said.
Shearer said.
Th
d d
h
f b fi
·h
ra1
.
.
.
.
e army respon e to t e source o t e re Wit seve mor·•. Last Thursday, a black student who lives m the dornutory dis- tar rounds of its own targeting a nearby Palestinian security base.
covered a racial slur written on the door with a marker On Sun1 li F · Mi. ·
Shi
n
dn da
·.L
·
·
·
srae
oretgn
mster
mon ceres met We es y wtu•
da~ another slur was scratched on the same door.
·
· Pal · ·
Iii ials 1 · · · ·
bil. h h
'
two semor.
esnman o c : P anmng Mimster Na S aat
:and ~egonator Saeb Ere kat, m Athe~, Greece. A three-way
-r~
,meettng wtth the. Uru~ed Srates ':"as e~ected Wedpesday rught
•'TLANT'•
(AP) - Thepro ducerof"C ops.. wasarrested on
. . ·.
or Thunday,
n
n
th · officials
d 1 ·ftom both
. stdes satd,
. but· they declined· to
·
. ·
.
e ttme an P ace.
·

dtecl
fo
.
DUI
P . ucer
r.

•r..-1 rod

.

.

.

Are .stocks

wmtlt·

WASHINGTON (AP) -The averagewrnn111t'\Votldng~bn .r'
US. government contract job is paid 72, cents for every dollar a
map earns, a disputed Labor Department survey of federal contraqors found.
,,.., .
-..&lt;1u ,: ~
U~¥.
~
The woman gets 82 cents if she has the same position and 89
cents if she has equal 'tenure and experience at the 'same compaNEW YORK (AP) :~ As
ny, the srudy reported.
.
stock prices keep plunging,
· The draft study was released Tuesday by Sen. Torn Harkin, D- there's a'nagging question on
Iowa, and quickly got tangled in politics. The Labor Department Wall Stteet: Are companies
said the report, commissioned by Harkin, has not been issued really · worth so much less
officially because of accuracy questions that arose during the tllan they were a year ago?
Clinton administration.
They are if the market says
"The methodology and the d~ta that was used in the study was so.
severely flawed:' said Stuart Roy, spokesman for Labor Secretary . "There is just .no reason 'to
Elaine Chao. Another study is being prepared, he said.
be a buyer," said Richard E.
Cripps, chief market strategist for Legg Mason of Balti-·
more. "Even tho)lgh stock
DETROIT (AP) -A former Navy sailor convicted of killing p,rices are low. Investors don't
a prostitute has been sentenced to life in prison without parole. feel they are low enough."
When given the chance .to apologize to the family of victim
It was one thing when
Wendy Jordan, John E. Armstrong stood with · his back to the Internet stocks, long on debt
family and said, "No."
and short on profits, began to
The victim's sister told Armstrong she hopes he suffers.
crumble. But no on,e expect"I watched you in conrt as if you hadn't done a thing;· Bonnie ed the safe havens of the old
Jordan said Tuesday. "You are a sick predator, and are worse than economy - drugs, consumer
an animaL An animal kills to live, and you live to kjll."
products and banking - to
fall so hard.
·
What a difference a year
has made on Wall Street with
.BOCA RATON, Fla. (AP) -A jury has ordered the owners many stocks' prices slashed in
of a defunct nigrt club to pay $10.5 million to the family of a half or more and investors
man who was left a quadriplegic after a bar-promoted fight.. ' · still not buying. In fact, this
Club Boca .had argued that Carlos E. Silva signed a waiver year the selloffs spread to the ·
before stepping into· the boJ9ng ring on Nov. 4, 1997.
broader market as safet blue
Silva's parents said their son was seriously injured the first chips issued profit warnings,
minute into the mati:h •when he hit his head against a wooden restruc!uring efforts and lay, .
stage, but the fight wasn't stopped until he beqme unconscious off announcements of their
• , in the third round.
own, making the fir$! three
A blood clot in SilVo!'s brain prompted emergency surgery that months of 2001 one of Wall
left him unable to speak, communicate or move. ·
Street's . worst quarters in
decades.
j
"The negativism that is out
•I
there is so thick you can cut
, TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) - Four foniter American Express it with a knife," · said Alari
employees are among 14 people charged with stealing credit card Ackerman: executive vice
numbers from corppany files and using them to spend at least $2 president of ·Fahnestock &amp;•
million on cars and other items.
'
·
Co.
'
American Express fired six employees after it discovered "susInvestors· are deeply dispicious activities" at its Fort Lauderdale call center in June 1998, tressed by a seemingly nevera company spokeswoman said Tuesday. She said the company ending string of earnings
-cooperated with state investigators during a two-year probe.
waniings from big names,
. The former workers.allegedly stole account numbers and per- like American Express on
sonal information from ISO peopl8. with good credit histories. Monday, and a: .litany of bad
· . The information was used to get Take driver's licenses ~-;i,id opei1. news like that fron1 · Procter
,new accounts, state officials said.
&amp; Gamble, which said last ·
The accou~ts were allegedly used to buy high-priced mer- month it would cl)t 9,600
•chandise, sometimes for resale.
job cuts.
• •
Some investors say the .stalwarts of corporate America
- which are still very .prof'
COLUMBUS, Ind. (AP) - Baby products maker Cosco Inc . itable despite th~ir warnings
has agreed to pay S1.3 million to settle charges it delay.,d report- - don't deserve the . same
ing safety defects that led to hundreds of injuries and the deaths lashing from Wall Street that
of two children.
·
the dot-com shares got. Yet
· The Consumer Product Safety C6mmission had alleged that AmEx, for example, which
Cosco redesigned or relabeled five products after receiving traded at the $63 level six
reports of more than 300 injuries but faile~ to notify the agency mohths ago, is now down to
,as requi.red by .law, The W.1shington Post .and USA Today report- $38, a drop of nearly 4p pered )Vednesday.
cent.
-1)1,

.......d.,., . . . . . 2001

Chinese pfesident demands apology

WASHINGTON (AP) - A Postal Service battered by slowing business and billions in projected losses might eliminate Sat'
urday mail delivery and dose or consolidate some post offices and
facilities.
The agency also claimed Cosco failed to inform i' of 24 cases
Congress wants to knmv. what went wrong to make such pos- in '.llhich infants were trapped in misassembled cribs over a two
sible service cuts nect.""Ssary, especially since a rat~ increase went year-period before an 8-month-old child died of asphyxiation,
into effect in January.
the newspapefs said. . .
·
"We need to know what happened here;• Rep. Dan Burton,
The other death involved a toddler bed, company spokes'R-Ind., said in a statement, noting that the Postal Service was woman Carol Dingledy said in an interview Tuesday njght with
projecting big gains entering the holiday season last year.
The Associated Press. In both cases, the products were misused or
"The Postal Service can't continue to run this way without misassembled, she said. Both products were recalled. : .
serious harm to the affordable mail service the American people
deserve," he said.

BusineSs women making gains

Page AI .

so'·-· 11111e?

AMERIWOOD

··

Easlem
dominates
Melsonvllle-Yolt
.
.

CINCINNATI (AP) - Moments after his
new-look Pittsburgh Pirates had lost their
opening game, rookie manager Lloyd
McClendon gathered his players in the club- .
house ahd
a little pep talk.
The message was succinct: Nice try.
The Pirates mounted one threat after
another, but. ~ouldn't get a ~it with runnen in
scormg poSition Thesday rught. Barry Lark1p
doubled home a pair of runs .and the Cincinnati Reds withstood another wild showing
by their bullpen, holding on for a 3-2 victory.
"I told my club that was a hell of a game,"

gave

' NELSONVILLE - Tlie
Eastern softball team seemed·
to be on the bases all day long
in the Eagles 34-1 victory
over Nelsonville-York Tues=
.day.
. The Eagles, who led 11-1 at
• !he end of rwo innings of play,
doubled their score in. the
third as Eastern batted around
in three different innings.
Eastern batters were walked
21 times.
.
Kristen Chevalier, Juli Bailey, Amanda Yeager and
rammy Bissell each had
f!'iples for the Eagles (3-1).
, The Buckc:Yes were held to
rwo hits by Bailey, the Eagles
starting pitcher.
Eastern will be at Belpre
today, before playing host to
South Gallia Thursday.

McClendon said, sipping . from a bottle of
water.."lf we batde like we batded tonight,
we'll win our share of games. I hope we play
like that the entire year."
. Reds manager Bob Boone hopes his
bullpen gets its act together soon. For the second straight game, relievers Dennys Reyes
and Scott Williamson had their new manager
wearing a path across the hard-and-fast
infield grass.
·
·· ·
Osvaldo Fernandez turned a 3-0 lead over
to the bullpen in the seventh, but Reyes

GOT IT - Reds third baseman Aaron Boone makes the play

PIHH ... Rids, 82

on a ground ball in the Reds win Tuesday. (AP) .

Meigs eams. tough win

SOFTBALL

BY DAVE HARRII

ROCK SPRINGS . . Meigs jumped out ·a big
lead, and then held off a
furious come back attempt
by River Valley to defeat
the Raiders, 12-11 , in a
· non-conference contest
Tuesday at Meigs High
SchooL
Meigs held a 5-1 lead
after
the first _inning, and
. TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - Darheld a 12-4 lead heading
ryl St~awberry told his probainto
the ~op of the seventh,
tjon officer be spent .the four
but River Valley made
'la,.ys he was missing doing
things interesting, plating
col:aine with a female friend
seven runs before Meigs
lmd armed men who took his
was able to hold on for the
jewelry and abandoned him
wm.
iil' a motel room.
Riv~r Valley took a 1~0
· Florida probation offici~s
lead
in the top of the first
said that Strawberry tested
·inning, ·Nolan singled and
positive for cocaine use and
later scored on a ground
violated the terms of his
out off the bat of Craycraft.
hoqse .arrest in his four-day
Meigs came' back in tlie'
absence ~m · a drug rehab
bottom of the i~n~ by
center:
.,
· . plating fiye runs to ·take a
. The 'report carne
Straw· 5-1 ' lea&amp; Zach Bolin dou- · ,
berry remalti.e d in . psychibled, h\! ~scored when Nick
atric ward at St. Josepli's Hos'
Dettwiller
singled: Eric
. pital while doctors evaluated
RunYt&gt;n singled and John
him. He will be sent to the .
Stanley
walked, Matt Stewtlillsborough County Jail and
art then slammed a two
held without bail once docrun home run to center
tors declare him men,tally stafield
to give the host team ·
ble.
.
the four rim lead.
. The probation report is the
Meigs added three more
first officia) accounting of
runs in the bottom of the
Strawberry's Thursday night
fourth
inning, Stanley
disappearance from the drug
reached .. on . a fielders
trea.trnent center where he
choice, Stewart walked and
was serving rwo years'. house.
Knapp reached on
Darrick
arrest.
.
,.
a Raider error. Derek
Strawberry said he was
Johnson
and Josh Napper
picked up at the center by a
followed with back-to·woman from an Alcoholics
hack singles.
Anonymous program named
THROWIN' MARAUDER- Meigs pitcher Buzzy Fackler puts everything Into this pitch
Beverly, who was supposed to
Melp..B:s . HARD
against
River Valley. (Dave Harris)
·
l;tke him to the meeting.

. Strawbeny
went on cocaine

BY

NOW:

: KNOXV.ILLJ!, Tenn. (AP) ·
- Buzz Peterson wi.ll be
iiuroduced as Tennessee's 17th
·ooach on Wednesday.
Peterson resigned as Thlsa'i
coach after leading the Golden Hurricane to the NlT
championship last week.
· Former coach Jerry Green ·
resigned March 20 after the
Volunteers' fourth straight
J'\ICAA appeat;mce. 'tennessee
lost in the first round and had
trouble winning big games.

~64.99

•'•

· ·' Griffin lines
\ . Seton Hall
..
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.NJ.

.

.· : SOUTH ORANGE,
(AP) - Eddie Griffin, the Big
East Conference .rookie of the
year, is leaving Seton. Hall
after one season to enter the
NBA draft. .
' Or I .
RACINE - · Scoring 11
runs
in the third illfli~g •
• The decilion: 'by the shotblocking power · forward
Southern rolled to a 21-3\:ri.
umph over South Gallia, Tho:s~pmes less than a week after
day in ·non~eague' softball.
Jommy Amaker resigned . as
SoutheJn (1-4) popnded
f~e Pirates' coach to take the
out
13 h.its led by ~chel
~!&gt;b. at. Michigan.
·
Chapman who had a home
. Griffin led the nation in
run, triple and four· RBI.
blocked shots with 4. 5 per ·
Seni9r Tammy Fryar had rwo
'liame. He led the Pirates in
triples and fOur runs scored,
· , scoring and rebounding, avcr' while senior Macyn EJ;Vin
a_ging 17.8 points and 10.8
sin~ed twice. Senior ,Katie
reboundf,.
I
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........

;-.

---

HARRIS

ROCK
SPRINGS
River Valley slipped past
Meigs 8-6 in non-conference
softball
~action ·
Tuesday
evening at Meigs High
School.
The Raiders scored in their
first at bat, Baird singled
moved up on a ground out
and scored on a single off the
bat of Ward for a 1-0 River
VaHey lead.
.
Meigs took a 2-1 lead in
the bottom of the inning,
Lindsay Bolin 'and Kayte
Davis both walked and they
later scored on singles by
Abby Harris and Mindy
Chancey.
The Raiders took a 4-2
lead in the second inning.
Lawson and Watkins both singled, after two ground outs,
Hood walked and Baird followed with a single.
The Raiders added a couple more ru~ in the third
inning for a 6-2 lead. Ward
reached on a Marauder error,
after a ground out Lawson
and Watkins both singled.
· Another Marauder error
aided the Raider cause.
A single run without the
benefit of a hit in the top of
the fourth gave the Raiders a
7- 2 advantage. Three walks
and a ground out plated the
run.
Meigs scored four runs in
the boitom of the inning,
Abby Harris doubled and
Chancey followed wi1h a
walk, one out later back-coback walks forced in a run
and loaded the bases. A single
by Bolin plated two mns and
the fourth run of the inning
came in on a ground out
The RaiderS closed out the
scoring in the fifth inning.
Watkins singled and moved
up on a ground out, she then
scored when Minnis singled
for an 8-6 Raider lead which
is the way it ended.
McFann picked up the win,
she scattered five hits, struck
out five and walked seven.
Watkins and Lawson both
went 3-for-4 at the plate, all

Southern puts
down
Rebel
revolt
.

.
.
BY ScoTT WOLFE .
Clary reached on an error, then CaldOVP.CORRESPONDENT
•
well and Halley each walked, and E.
RACINE - ·. Scoring six runs. in the Lamp her reached on an error.
first inning, Southern survived a South
Josh Duty then doubled home the
Gallia scare to claim a 16-6 non-league final run·s of the inning for a· 6-4 score.
·win over the Rebels at Star MiU Park In the Southern third, Ohlinger walked
Monday. ·
. and scored on a Justin Allen ground
In the first inning, Southern went up out.
4-0 when Chad.Hubbard singled, Matt
Southern (3-2) saw South Gallia pull
.Ash singled, Brandon Pierce singled, to within 7-6 in the fourth inning.
and Aaron Ohlinger doubled and.. H;illey reached on a fielder's choice,
1
. nee
. Hill
ad vance d on an ert?r. B
. t hen'';, Lampher singled, duty singled' and K.
doubled home Jusnn Allen With the ).ap1pher reached on an error in right
finalrun, 6-0.
. .field.
·
. Southern. watched the Re~els come . Southern puUe.d away to .10-6 in the
nght back m the second mmng. Zach 1hird when Ash singled, Pierce doubled

DAVE

OVP CORRESPONDENT

blnp

Petelson

.·

Ra·iders
shade
·Meigs

OVP CORRESPONDENT _.

•

Cosco to pay settle.ment

•

Red legs hold off Pirates.to
· pick up first win of .2001 .

HIGHLIGHTS

·

KlfCHEN HlJfCH

•

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w.dnesd.y. Apfll t, 2001

Tenn•see hires

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Page 8.1

Mi.e ...

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'Ar!Jund the .Majors, Page B2
Reds Notebook, Page BJ . .
'NBA roundup, Page 83
Earnhardt photo update, Page 85

as

Damages given to family

,l

The Daily Sentinel

•

a

Ex-sailor convided in slaying

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him home, and Brandon Hill singled.
Dally Hill reached on an error in left
field that allowed Brandon Hill to
score.
Southern followed up with three
runs in the fifth, then added two more
in the sixth.
Brandon Hill picked up the win with
relief from Chad Hubbard, Brice Hill
· and Ash. They combined to walk ten,
and strike out six. South Gallia walked
six and fanned six.
Starter Brandon Caldwell suffered the
'Joss with relieffi:om Rick Clary.
Southern goes to Vinton County
today.

Pl~se

...

..

... Softbtll, BJ

sOuthem girls roll past soUth .Gallia, ] 1-3

1

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__

{~

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I

Cummins ;Singled and doubled, Katie Sayre singled
twice, Brigette Barnes singled, and Ca:rolyn Bentz singled.
Stephanie Evanich ·led ·the
Rebels (0~2) with a 2-for-3
night,,while Stacy White singled and ·A~ singled.
Besides helping lead the
tea~;n in hitting Rachel Chapnun earned the win on the
mound with a three strike-

.

put, six walk effort in scattering four hits. Robyn Harrison and White combined in
the loss' with five strikeout&lt;
and 15 walks.
·
South Gallia took a 1-0 lead
when Stacy White singled and
scored on an Evanich single in
Southern went
the first.
down without a score, then
Chapman held South Gallia
in the second. Southern plated rwo in the second when

Fryar tripled and scored on an er's head.
error, then Katie Sayre scamThe flood gates opened,
pered hoine on a passed ball starting with an ~rvin single,
• to give SHS a 2- 1 lead.
.three walks, and a double by
South Gallia tied the score Cummins ,' and triples by
in the third inning when . Chapman and Fryar, Ervin
White walked and scored 'on and Sayre also added singles in
an Evanich single. Kati Cum- the drive, the score 13- 2 .
"mins .led tff the third when
Southern went on to score
she reached on · an errqr, one in the fifth and seven in
Barnes singled, then Chap- the sixth to secure the game.
man haminered a three-run
Southern goes to Vinton
home run over the lefr field- County tonight.

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The Daily Sentinel
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Ventura's power
stroke carries
Mets past Braves

_.,..
MontiOII
New York
Allanw

Florida

EMI

L PeL
0 1.000
0 1.000
0 1.000
1
I .500
0
2 .000
C.OO.I DMolan

G8

W
2
1
1

W

L

Pet

1
0 1.000
Clnclnnsti
1
1 .500
Chiclgo
0
1 .000
Pillot&gt;urgh
1 .000
0
, St. LOuis
0
1 .000
Mltwauk"!'
2 .000
0
w..t Dfvlalon
W
L
Pet
Arizona ·
I
0 1.000
Colorado
I
0 1.000
San Fran&lt;:ioco
I
0 1.000
Los Angeles
I
I .500
San Diego
0
1 .000

112
1/2
1
2

T.......,.oa.Houaton 11, ...,.,., ... 3
N.Y. -8.-~.101nn1ngo
Cincinnati 3, P~ 2
f'f1llodolphia ~. 3
A~zcna 3,

too Angolos 2

e ', ncn2.Etoleon 1,11 ~

1A11 oukM ( - ~~ It -

T - Bay 8, Toronto 1

Todly'oMontreal (FieamU 2·1) at CNcago
CW. (Wood 8-7), 2:20 p.m.
·~
GB
N.Y. (Ajlplor 15-11) II ....
(Millwood 10.13), 7:05 p.m.
W
L PeL
112
Philadelphia (Chen 7-7) at florida lloltlmore
1
0 1.000
1, (Peony 8·7), 7:05p.m.
-York .
I
0 1.000
t
Pitlsbufljh (Mullx&gt;lland 8-.9) at Clncln- Tompe Boy
1
0 I .000
I
nau (ReMsma G-0), 7:05p.m.
Toronto
1
1 .500
t 112
Milwaul&lt;ee (Rigdon 4,-4) at Hooston Bolton
0
1 .000
(Uma 7·16), 8:05p.m.
·
C..W OMolon
GB
St. LOUis (Boneo 12·9) at Colorodo
W
l
Pet
(AI!aelo 12-9), 9:05p.m.
· Chlccgo
1
0 1.000
Anzona (Sctitllng 11-121 at Los Ange- M I . ·I
0 1.000
les (Drelton 12·9), 10:10 p.m.
0 ' I .000
e-nd
1/2
San Otego (JaiVIs ~~ 11 San Francis- tJe1t011
0
1 .000
I
co (Rueter 11·9), 10:15 p.m.
- . City
0
I .000
WoiiDivlalan
Thurwdoy'o Garnoo
W
L Pet
P~lsburgh (Olivares 4-6) at Cinclnnatl
oatcland
1
I .500
4, 10 . (Dessens 11·5), 12:35 p .m.
Saanle
I
I .500
Montreal (Annas Jr. 7·9} al Chicago Texas
1
I .500
Cubs (Tapanl8·12), 2:20p.m.
Anaheim
0
I .000

Oal&lt;llnd

Gl

s. Seattle 1

T....,.o_
O.ldond (He- 15-11) II
(SM 17-10), &amp;:35 P·"'-

.,

Dodgers 2

lfs ·s, Mariners 1

.

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Ran-rs 3,
Anp 2

Devil Ra.JS 8,
Blue JaySl 1

Is it a record or not?

j :

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Astros 11,
Brewers 3

..

Seedfl
Gra11

3, ngers 2

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Sto!Uo

-(NMIO&amp;-t2)11Ba•-&lt;Pan-

oor; 9-13), 7:05p.m.

D·backs 3,

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Texos3.--Z

$1500REWARD .
Offered fo.r the arrest &amp;
conviction of the person or
persons ~responsible for the
shootlnQ of·Mike SIQler.
· Contact SIQier Family
'742-2279 -

I

Af*

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NBA

no .

z

Son Diogo ( - 11~ It SOn Froncllc:o (Ortiz 14-12).10:15p.m.

fnwn

'

REDS · NOTEBOOK

'nnJ J'IO...
Mime50!1 3, Detroit

The Ddt S1ntinel • ~B 3

•

Stackhouse on a
for
Pi•ns, Mavs on upswing

~I,OUnH

(Mior &amp;4). l:o&amp; p.m.
""""'" ( - 11·7) It Lol Angello (Aotiby 12· 1~). 10:10 p.m.

..Reels

•
'

Aprl•, 2001

•

ATtANTA (AP) - Robin
IWIIOI City ( - H) II N.Y. YlnVentura didn't ~aste any &lt;tjme
112
k - ( P - 19-91, 7:05p.m.
1
CNcago Wllllo Sox (EldNd IG-2) ot
in his last two at-bats against
~ (Firlrf 111-11), 7:05p.m.
•
the Athnta Braves.
Gl
~ 2-1) 01 ~lily
{WIIIOn t-4), 7:15p.m.
·
Ventura hit a two-run
Brian Hunter scored the- goAnahoim (Aii&gt;P 8-12) at T - (~Jtio!er
homer on John Rocker's tim ahead run from second base
2·9), 8 :05p.m.
1
piich in the eighth inning and on a sacrifice fly in the sevI
~·a..,
aAd
Philadelphia
hit Kerry Ligtenberg's first enth,
Toronto (Ca_.tor 10.12) It T1J1110
offering for another two~run notched its second consecuMondoy'o Oomeo
Bay (Rekar7-t0),12:15 p.m.
GB
Atlanta 10, Cincinnati •
Mimeooll (Miton 13·10) at Detrbi1.
shot in the I Oth to give the tive orie-run victory ar home.
Montreal 5, · Chicago Cubs
(Moehler 12·8), 1:05 p.m.
Hunter led off the seventh
New York Mets a 6-4 win in
Innings
Kansas City (Reichert 8·10) 11 N,Y.
the Braves' home openerTues- with a single off reliever
Colorado 8, 51. louis 0
.
112 Yankees (Mu88ina 11-15), 1:05 p.m.
San Francisco 3~ San Diego 2
Boston (CastiHo 10·5) at Baltimore
St. Louis (Morns 3·3) at Colorado
day night.
Braden Looper (0-1) and stole
Philadelphia 6 , Florida 5, 13 innings
(Neagle 15·9), 3:05p.m.
(Johnson 1-10), 7:05p.m.
.
Mondoy'o Oomeo
"I swung at a lot of first second. Doug Glanville hit a
Los Angeles 1, Milwaukee 0
N.Y. Mets (Appier 15·11) at Atlanta
AnaheiOI (Ontz B-6) at Toxu (Glynn 5N.Y. Yankees-7, Kansas City 3
pitches, which is pretry unusu- drive that center fielder Prei), 8:05 p.m.
•
(Perez 0-0), 7;35 p.m.
Chicago Whfto Sox 7, Cleveland 4
r
a! for me,"Ventura said.
ston Wilson caught while
The Mets third baseman was sprinting toward the walL
0-for-5 in his career against Hunter tagged up at second,
Rocker and had never faced 'never hesitated rounding third
Pirates manager: Three-fifths
Ligtenberg.
and narrowly beat the throw
of his starting rotation went
"I missed my spot and got it home.
on the disabled list duri1,1g
up and over the middle,''
Chris Brock {1-0) earned
spring training, leav,lng Todd
PapB1
ligtenberg said. '' If I make niy the win with 1 1-3 scoreless
Ritchie to start the opener..
pitch, maybe it's different. But innings for the Phillies, who
He did all right, allowing
walked the only batter he
I didn't Some nights, you get got a solo homer from Mike·
faced to load the bases. On four hits and four runs in six
away with mistakes. Unfortu- Lieberthal:
·
came
Williamson, who let in a innings. Larkin's slicing dounately, tonight John and. I did- · Eric Owens became the first
run with a wild pitch and ble to the warning . track ip
n 't."
playet ro homer in his first two
•
later
forced in another run by right field di:ove in .two t'W)s
In other NL games, Hous- games with Florida. Cliff
hitting Jason Kendall wi!h the in the iecond, and Alex
ton beat Milwaukee 11-3; Floyd also homered for the
bases loaded.
· Ochoa's fly to the base of the
Cincinnati edged Pittsburgh second time in as many games.
one'
point,
Boone
At
wall turned eluded center
3.-2; Philadelphia defeated
brought trainer Greg · Lynn ' fielder Adrian Bro'l"n and
Florida 4-3; and Arizona
with
him to visit Williamson, turnc:d into an RBI triple in
topped Los Angeles 3-2.
who's got a tender elbow. the four!h.
.
Tsuyoshi Shinjo, the second
Williamson said he was fine,
it WliS just enough to ruin_ a
Japanese position player to
Kendall
in
tlte
back
then
hit
big
day for McClendon, who
sign a major league contract,
· Randy Johnson a·nd Luis
on an 0-2 pitch.
made his major league debut
singled with one out in the
Gonzalez teamed to make AriThat
was
it
for
Wl[liamson,
as an outfielder with .! he Rech
I Oth off Ligtenberg.
zona manager Bob Brenly's
who
threw
a
club-record
21
in
1987 and was making hjs
After anomer out, Ventura,
debut a winning one.
wild pitches last season, when managerial debut in the same .
who went 2-for-5, hit LigtenJohnson allowed two runs in
the
Reds set a major league stadium.
berg's first pit~h into the rightseven innings while sttiking
record with 96 overall.
"'it was OK," McClendon
field .seats to lead the Mets to
out
10,
and
Go!ez
hit
a
"The ball slipped out of his said without much enthuSivictory in their season opener.
two-run homer s Arizona
hand,
the one that hit asm. "I wish we'd have won.
''I'd be lying if I said it didopened its season ·th a victo- ROCKIN' ROBIN - Robin Ventura had two homers against the Kendall," Boone said.
That would have felt a lot
n't feel like a playoff game;•
Braves. (AP)
ry at Los Angeles.
John Riedling got Brian better. It's always nice to co'*e
said Braves third baseman
Jose Nunez, the third
·
Giles tO fly out, leaving !he back."
Chipper Jones, who went 2Dodgers pitcher, was stung in
bases loaded and the ·Pirates
'Notes: The Pirates wore
for-4 and drove· in Adanta's
his big-league debut, allQwing pitches.
a losing cause.
down 3-2. Pittsburgh also got black sleeves with !heir gny
first run. ,
a double to Mark Grace to
"I've dorie that before,"
Radke, starting a S3.6 · mil- two runners aboard iii the road uniform vests, reintroThe Braves tied it at 4 in the
start the seventh before Gon- Howe said. "I've pulled guys lion, four-year
contract, ninth against Danny Graves duced this season. fittsburgh
eighth off relievers John Fra~
zalez homered to put the Dia- out with no-hitters. It would- allowed , his only run on before Giles lined out, ending
co and Turk Wendell, scoring
also wore sleeveles~ upifor~s
mondbacks ahead 3-2. ' •
Bobby Higginson's RBI' dou" the game.
n't have been the first time."
on RBI hits by Rafael Furcal
from 1957-69 . ... It. was !he
~ In aU, Pittsburgh was 0-for- fine time the Pirates opened
lchiro Suzuki, Seatde's new . ble in the fourth.
and Brian Jordan.
leadoff hitter and a seven-time
II with runners in scoring the season against Cincinnati
"They've had a lot of success
batting
champion
·
in
Japan,
position.
against us, especially here,''
since ' -t963, when · !he Reds'
was
0-for-3
with
a
strikeout
·
.
•
"We
hit
some
balls
hard,
Ventura said. "To be up and for
Jim O'Toole won a 572 dec,i;
SEATTLE (AP) - The against Zi.to.
S
just right at people," said
them to come back and then
Seattle Mariners couldn't solve ' Miguel Tejada's grand slam; a
."
GUes, who stranded seven sion over Earl Francis.... SS
for us to come back is nice."
Jack Wilson, the only rookie
Zito.
41,3-foot
shot
in
the
third
off
,
Alex
Rodriguez
struck
out
runners
..
''We
couldn't
put
Barry
It was the first of 19 games
Zito, die second part of Halama, gave Zito a 4-0 lead three times and singled in ·his back-to-b~ck hits together. position player on the, Pirat~~·
between the· dubs this season.
roster, doubled for his first big
first home game for Texas, and · We let them off the 'ho&lt;?k."
Oakland's dynamic' starting to work with.
The Mets and Braves played
duo behind Tim Hudson, held
"That was a bomb," Howe. the Rangers beat Anaheirfi: in
The Redsl bullpen got league hit and made the be~t
13 times last season, and
the Mariners scoreless for said. "To hit it out of this ball- their home . opener before rocked in a 10-4 loss to defensive play of th~ gam.e,
Adanta won the series 7-6.
in the hole to get JasQ~
s~ven innings in a. 5-1 victory park in this cold weather, that 49,512, a. regul~r-season Atlanta ,on Monday, giving up diving
Since 1998 ~the Braves hold a
LaRue's grounder and..throvvwas a pop."
record at The · Ballpar~ ·- in six runs. It did just well
29-15 edge, 18-4 at Turner Tuesday night.
ing
him out. ... CF ~r,n GrifSeattle didn't get a hit until
The A's, who lost. 5-4 on Arlington.
.
, "
enough ·on Tuesday to ·get
Field, including 3-0 in the
Mike Cameron singled up the opening
night · to the · Kenny Rogers w&lt;;&gt;n•· the Boone ·his fi~t win as !he fey Jr. missed his second ~
1999 postseason.
with a sttained hamstrin~.
middle with two outs in the Mariners, made it 5-0 and Rangers' home opener for the Reds manager.
Javy Lopez hi~ a solo homer
. Michael Tucker s~rted tn
· knocked out Halama in the second straight season, and
"I hope they're not all that
in the seventh off New York sixth.
"I'd like to see a few of &lt;Jur fourth' on Johnny Damon's Tim Crabtree got out of a easy," Boone said jokingly. "I center again. He's 1-for-7 lJ,l
starter AI Leiter to tie it at 2
hitters start swinging the bats, . RBI single.
bases-loaded jam with no outs know the team has worked his two g~mes. ... Batting
before an announced crowd of
leadoff, Larkin has reach&lt;:d
42,117, which was closer to but 'it's too early to get con- · Without Alex Rodriguez, in the ninth to convert his first hard for it. I've worked hard base in six of his eight plate'
cerned,'' Mariners manager who signed a $252 inillion save opportunity for Texas.
for it. I'll sleep easier tonight."
30,000 due to a steady rain
contract with Texas as a free
McClendon hasn't had' appearances- three singles;-a
Lou Piniella said.
and
thunderstorms
that
double and two walks.
While Zito and Hudson agent during the winter, the
many peaceful days as the
delayed the start3 hours and 3
have turned in solid 'perfor- Mariners have 13 hits, 12 sin--------------------"--minutes.
mances in the first two games gles, in their first two games.
..
J,.eiter also gave up a· run in of the series between last seaThe Mariners scored their
,
the first on three hits - the
son's two divisi&lt;in playoff run in the eighth off Jeff Tam
Albie Lopez scattered seven
last an RBI single by Jones. teams, Seattle's starters have on John Olerud's sacrifice fly. hits in eight innings, and Ben
Leiter went seven innings,
.,
been disappointing.
· Zit 0 , . 22, Oakland's first- Grieve hit a two-run \l'iple in
gave up six hits', two runs and
KINGSTON,
N.Y.
(AP)
pemens'
total
_
was
recognized
"It's very important to get to round draft choice in 1999, his Tampa- Bay debut to 'lead
struck out six.
.;
their starterS because they have was 7-4 with a 2. 72 ERA in the Devil Ra}'S to . ;,; season• Roger Clemens broke Walter as the record.
Mike Piazza hit a two-run such a solid bullpen;' A's man- 14 starts as a rookie for the A's opening victory over Toronto. Johnson's American League
homer in the first off Adanta ager Art Howe said. "You last season. The left-bander
Lopez, who began last sea- strikeout recotd in !he New .--.starter Tom Glavine. Glavine don't waiu to get behind to was called up from Triple-A son in the bullpen, walked York YankeeJ;' season opener
allowed three hits and three
Sacra.mento .last July 9.
three and struck out six to -or did he?
their short guys."
runs in 7 t-3'innings.
Total Baseball, the official
"I felt good," Zito said. move past Rolando Arrojo for
John Halama, a 14-game
winner for the Mariners last "Sometimes you just know the most victories. in Devil _ chronicle of Major League ·
Baseball, says Johnson struck
season, lasted only 3 · 1-3 how you're going to do. T.he Rays history (22).
out . 3,509 - orie more !han
innings.
thou$ts you think are very - Shannon Stewart's second
· Zito, Ill his 15th 'career start, impor nt. If you think you homer of the season, a solo the record book has stated for
picked up where he left off last have h right stuff, nine times shot in the third, accounted decades - and remains tied
~tjl the RQcket.
.
. .
Daryle Ward, subbing for se?.son.
for the visiting Blue Jays' run.
injured Moises AJou hi~ his
Everyone 1s questlomng us out of I 0 you do."
Other sources, including the
Steve Parris, obtained by
Halama allowed fi'!C runs on
first career grand siam and using him as a No. 2 pitcher,"
National Baseball Hall of
seve!\, hits and a \Valk, with Toronto from Cincinnati in an
Fame and Museum and the
drove in a care-er-high six runs , Ho~e said. :·He showed the.m
offseason trade, .allowed four sport'S offici:ll statisticians at
in Houston's season-opening tomght. He s a quality pttch- two strikeouts.
runs on nine hits in four Elias Sports Bureau, list John'
victory over Milwaukee.
er.
,
i[lnings in his AL debut.
son's ca'r eet strikeouts at
Ward's homer, which keyed
In other AL games, Mm- 1\vift$
'
3,508. Rich L~vin, baseball's ·
,1 six-run third inning, was nes!Ota beat De_
tro1t 3-2; Texas
0
Detroit's
first
opening-day
NOW AYA
chief
spokesman,
said
only the second opening-day edged AnaheJm 3-2; and
J'OR81'1UN .
grand slam in Astros· history. Tampa Bay defeatell Toronto complete game in 12 years
.
PLANTING
eriough
for
the
Tigers
wasn't
The second opening day at ll- I.
.
,
Enron Field drew 36,526,
Zito gave up th~ee smgles to overcnme Brad Radke in
short of the ballpark's capacity and Walked four, ~Vlth a wild Comerica Park's first season
. .
of 40,950.
pttch. and ~ve smk~oun . He opener.
Radke
limited
Detroit to
Craig Biggio returning wasn t rhmkmg no-hmer.
'
line"• one run in eight innings, and
from offseason knee
surgery,
."Th at's aII .~tght •.that's
.
went 5-for-5 to tie an Astros Ztto sa.!d. ,No-hmers are DaVid Ortiz homered to lead
record
bonuses.
. Minnesota over Detroit.
Mih~aukee got solo homers Howefisaidhhe wou;~n'thh~ve Before a capacity crow&lt;\ of
from Jose Hern)ez and let Ztto tms . eve" 1 e _a a 40,104 , Jeff Weaver pitched a
1-304 773-1113
six;hitter and struck out fo11r
·
.
no-hmer
gomg 10 thefi mnth
.
0.
J eromy Burn!tz.
Zlto was taken out a ter 1 2 for his third complete game in

Phillles 4,
Marlins 3

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Wedna1 day,

•

AROUND
THE
..

Houston

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.Aptt 4.2001

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CINCINNATI (AP) - A C:lll.'ldian Cltuen to play for on opening day and had a
BYTHEASSOCIATEDPRESS
"Now we can focus on
nasty wind slicing in off !he the Reds and · one of the two-run double and a pait of ' Detroit's Jerry Suckhouse something else," Mavs coach
Ohio River. A few flurries biggest baseball stories out of walks in ·a 3-2 victory over and !he Dallas Mavericks are Don Nclsoo said. "We're
llo dusting' !he night air. Chris Calgary. Reporten from his Pitaburgh on Tuesday night. .
soaring.
happy !he W2Y we clinched it
Reitsma won't mind at all if hometown ~re in Cincinn;&gt;ti
When he got on )&gt;ase, he
Stackhouse looked Jonlan- and we can build fiom here.
-:.Iris nnjor league debut is like a to cover his fint game in the followed Boone's orders and esque Tuesday rught, scoring We're playing the .best ..ie'vc
., );Vintcr; ,wonderland.
majon.
·
· played it safe - no steal an NBA season-high 57 points played all year."
"Whenever you actrially do attempts":
He's used to it.
in the Pistons' 110-83 victory
A place iit the postseason
1, Reitsma grew up
and make it, !hey like to malce a
"It feels a little tighter than over tht. Chicago Bulls.
was not enough to satisfy
"It feels great to be in that some Mavcricks.
·-.~side$, in Calgary, Canada, big deal out of it;• Reitsma it did in Florida, but it's pretty
"Sure, turning it around is
where his days of Babe Ruth Bid. "If you'~ a hockey playc:r . good," Larkin said. " I have spe- kind of company as a scorer,"
said
Stackhouse,
who
eclipsed
rewarding.
But it's something
1-baseball were often spent try- breaking into . the NHL, you cific instructions not. to get
ing to stay warm. He hopes it's might get a little (story) on the too excited on the basepaths." Mic-hael Jordan's United Cen- we all expected," said guard
like that when he starts side of the page. But not too
It might not be until the ter single-game scoring record Steve Nash, who had . 16
' Wednesday night for the many baseball players com~ weather warms in May that of 53 points, set it March points. "The media never put
1996. "It's the most points· I've as much pressure on us as we
, ,pncinnati Reds.
out of Calgary."
.
Larkin is ready to go all-out.
put on ounelves. We thought
"I was telling (manager)
Eleven Canadian-born pl:iy- · "When I don't feel it, that's scored in my whole li(e."
-&lt;Bob Boone that I hope_it's as ers- opened the season on when I'll start doing some
Dallas parlayed a 109-97 all along we'd go to !he play,
, ,rold·as possible," he said Tues- major league rosters. Reitsma more things," Larkin said. victory over the Houston offi."
Cuttino Mobley scored 28
day. ''I don't mind that ball was born in Minneapolis, but "When that is, I don 't know Rockets arid San Antonio's
-tieing nice and cool in my · grew up in Calg.iry and has yet. I'm sure it's probably 107-89 win over Seatde into points, .Maurice Taylor had 16
'
going to coincide with spme its tim playoff berth in 11 and H akeem Olajuwon 15 for
hand. I'm used to it. I think dual citizenship.
·.whenever it's real cold, it's an · With all of the attention, he warmer weather."
years:
the Rockets 1~ho lost for the
"It's a great feeling;· Dallas' sixth time in eight games.
. ~dvanti\ge for the pitchers, I figures the most important
Boone will trust Larkin's
feel comfortable in the cold:' t[:ling is to stay calm.
judgment.
Celtics 82; Heat 77
Dirk NO\vitzki said. "My first
'~ Temperatures are expected "I'll just have the attitude "Ht's goin'g to come ·out' two years, we were close, but Paul Pierce had 33 points as
' 'fa be 11'1 the low 50s or upper that I belong here, and I'll be one &lt;lay and feel real good and we didn't make it. Just to visiting Boston dealt Miami its
·~40s
for his start against the aggressiv:e," he _said. "If I'm you're going ~p be able to know that we're in the playoffs third loss in four games since
1
is a great feeling."
· Alonzo Mourning's return
'Pittsbutgh Pirates. A dozen tentative and. think too -much tell," Boone said.
..
Stackhpuse. shot 21-for-36 froin a kidney disease.
relatives and friends will be in about it - am I supposed to . JUNIOR OUT AGAIN:
Pierce scored 20 points as
:..the stands, cheering his unex- be here? - I'll get in trouble. Ken, Griffey Jr. hit a ball off from th~ field and 11-of-13
from
th~
·
line
to
eclipse
his
the
Celtics ·e~sed a 12-point
·:p-ected 'breakthrough.
·
I'm sure the game-ti'!le jitters the facing of the upper deck
· '.' Whc!n · the right-hander are going to be there."
during batting practice Tues- previous career high of 46 d~ficit in the fourth quarter.
'broke 'his right elbow while · Bobne doesn't have any dai. but was out of the starting · points, sf:t against the . Lakers Antoine Walker finished with
·' itu'owing · a pitch during a deep advice.
.
line'up for a ' second ~ game on March IS , and break Kelly 20 points.
/ minor £eague game in 1998,
"The le,ss said, the better;• because his str.ained left ham- . Tripucka 's team record ' of 56 ·Anthony Mason led Miami
Jhe 'feared his career was over. Boone said. "I found out a string still prevents him fiom points, set in. 1984 against the with 16 points, and Brian
,. "It's a miracle I'm· throw- long tim~ ago that with -p itch- running hard.
Bulls .
Grant added 14.
· Stackhouse's performance is
Mourning had 11 points,
'·i'ng;' he' said.
ers, the less thinking they do,
Michael Tucker started in
"' Beritr yet, he's throwing for the better off they are." ·
center field . .for the Reds the NBA's highest single- four rebounds and three
LARKIN BEING CAU- again.Thcker is 1-fot-7 in two game total since Los Angeles' blocked shots in 23 minutes.
a big-league team .. Reitsma,
Shaquille O'Neal had 61
Knicks 94, Magic 82
'" 23, got over the injury and TIOUS: Shortstop Barry games filling in for Griffey.
•:made it to Double-A last sea- Larkin is being careful with • ': .
·
points against the Los Angeles
Marcus Camby had 23
·~on, where he started ' 14 the groin strain that sidelined .,,.
Clippers on March 6, 2000. points. and 20 rebounds as
Philadelphia's Allen Iverson New York won for the ninth
' 'games. ~e ~ so impressive him for most of spring train~
' in spring trainipg that Boone ing.
i.
time in 10 home games.
scored 54 earlier this season.
' ebosdrim as the third starter.
He went 3-for-4 and· scored
A perceived insult from
The Knicks capitalized on
He'll,
become
the
lith
a
run
in
a
I
0-4
loss
to
Adanta
abse11ce of Orlando's Tracy
Bulls
coach
Tim
Floyd
ignited
the
,._
Stackhouse..
,
McGrady, who left the game
- L.
"Ron Arrest told me at the with 5:35 left in the first half
'
beginning of the game that due to strained muscle.
coach Floyd said he didn't
Mikl' Miller. finished with
respect my game and he was- 27 points for the Magic.
n't going to double-team me,"
Hornets 103, Nets 88
. '•:", ' (
Stackhouse said. "Mayl:ie next
Jam~ Mas~ burn sfored 31
) ,,
1 ,
,,,1
·1! ·" '
''
1
time."
·
·
·
,.
points,
and PJ Brown added
'(&amp; ·~
~AW HARRII ;I ' ' lead.
,
-Walked and Patton hit a one
Floyd did not address S~ck- 19 points and 12 rebounds as
• n·
ovp,' CORRESP!:JNDENT
, Meigs ·~t~rted their ·come- out double to puU the "Cats 1'
house's
accusations. Instead, he visiting Charlotte beat New
. c!: GLOliST.ER·'-Johri Stim- back in the top of the · fourth to· within one, but that was as
placed the blame for Stack- Jersey for. the third time this
'ley arilt' lj.aam' Btillip[tton hit . inning. With one out aulling- dose as it would get.
house's
scoring barrage on the season and fi&gt;r the 14th time
'llack"to-back home runs in a ton .'reached on a Trimble
Andy Davis picked up the Bulls .
in 17 games.
~four r\in fifth inning, to lead error, Zach Bolin and Andy win in a route going perfor"We
had
·
a
pathetic
perforJohnny Newman scored- 26
:q.e M\!igs Marauders to a 5-4 Davis then followed with sin- mance, Davis scattered seven
mance,
and
it
started
in
the
points
at)d Keith Van Horn 25
win over Trimble in TVC gles with B~;~llington 5coring hits, walked four and struck
lim
five
minutes,"
Floyd,
said.
for New Jeney.
11'aseball
action
Friday• .at on Davis's single for a 3-1 out two. Stanley and Bulling? .
'
'
obviously
didn't
do
a
"We
·
Lakers 96, Jazz 88
'&lt;:ilouster.
_
Trimble lead.
ton had the home runs to lead . good job on Stackhouse.
Shaquille
O'Neal scored 31 ·
; ' Mei~ ~rased a 3-0 defiCit
That set the stage for the big Meigs, Stewart, Bolin and Couldn't guard h;m . I
points and .reserve Robert
i:'arly 0 n tpe game with a sin- fifth in!)ing for Meigs. Nick Davis each chipped in with
thought,
refused
to."
Horry
added 20 for visiting
Jtle rilil 'iQ the fourth and the Dettwiller walked to lead off singles. ·
In
·
Houston,
Nowitzki
Los Angeles, which was withllig fifth in:ning. Stanley's was a the inning. One .out later Matt
Downs was the loser in a scored 20 points to · help the
out
the injured Kobe Bryant
·three run shot, followed by Stewart reached on a Tomcat route going performance, he
Mavs
to
their
fifth
vi'Ctory
in
for the sixth rime in seven
'Bullin~o':l's solo shot . one mis~ue, Stanley then launched gave up five hits, struck out
six
games,
11th
in
14
and
the
games.
pitch late,r. .
his first long ball of the season, five and walked two. Patton team's first playoff berth in
'Karl Malone led Utah with
· J •Trin1ble took a 3-0 lead in a three run hpme run to give
had a pair of doubles to lead more than a de cade.
31 points, while John Stock'tfie ~bird inning Patton led off Meigs the 4-3 lead. · On the Trimble, Guinther added a
tile Tn'n'iiig \vlth , a doubie, 11ext pitch Bullington went single and double and Faires a
'Shust walked and Guinther deep for his first of the year pair of singles. Shust also had a
Thllqwe'd with another two and a 5-3 Meigs advantage.
single.
k liagget'. Two 'outs later Faires Triflll&gt;b: ;tdded .a solo run in
~mgled'
for the 3-0 Tomcat the sixth inning when Steir
.,..
l:,- r.•
•

Meigs battles past Trimble
'iY

\

ton scored 19.
Plicen 85, SliD• 8 t
Jalen Rose and Tnvis Best
each scored 18 points as hos~ ·
Indiana snapped the Suns'
seven-game winning streak.
. Reggie Miller finished with
16 points, while Jermaine
O'Neal had 15 rebounds for
!he Pacers.
Shawn Marion scored 20
points_for Phoenix ~·
Raptors 100, 76ers 85
Vince Carter scored 26
points as Toronto won for the
filth rime in six games.
'
· Alvin Williams 'added 14
points and 13 assisr. for tbe
Raptors, who led by as many
.as 3 5 points. .
Allen lvenon scored 18
points for the Philadelphia,
which has lost five straight ·
road games.
Spurs 107, Sonics 89
Tim Duncan had 30 points
and 14 rebounds as host San
Antonio ended Seattle's fourgame winning streak ..
Derek' Anderson added 16
points for the Spurs, \vho have
the NBA 's best record at 5222.
Gary Payton and Rashard
Lewis each scored 23 for Seattle, which lost for just the second tilnein 12 games.
Nuggets 94, Blazers 92
Robert Pack had a seasonhigh 26 points for host Denver.
Kevin Willis added 19 points
and 18 rebounds, and George
McCloud scored 20 for the
Nuggets, who played without
leading scorer and rebounder
Antonio McDyess (dislocated
kneecap) and suspepded guard
Nick Van Exel.
Damon Stoudamire and
Steve Smith each finished
with 17 points for Portland.
Le~ding Trail Blazers s;orer .
Rasheed Wallace was suspende&lt;\,for inappropriate on-court
behavior in a loss to Minnesota on Sunday.
Bucks 107, Kings 101
Sam Cassell sc'ored six of his
33 points in the final 90 seconds as Milwaukee squan- .·
dered a 24-point lead, but rallied to win at Sacramento.
Ray Allen scored 20 points,
and Glenn Robinson had 18
points and 11 rebounds for the
Bucks.
Chris Webber had 28 points
and 11 rebounds, and Peja
Stojakovic scored 23 points
for Sacramento.

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Me•gs·
_..,..,..11
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Meigs made' it i 10-1 lead
in the bottom of the fourth.
tit..unyoi1 walked and Buzzy
Fackler singled. Bullington
then cleared the bases by
slamming a pitch off the
.r~ght-c~nter .field'.'fen~e for a
· double, a, · Bullington was
thrown, ~ut trying w _stretch
tile hit. into a tnple. ··
:, Ihe ·. Raid.ers pulled to
within -~10-3 in the top ·of ·the
fifth l~ning. 'Fisher and
Thompson' both singled to
lead o~tpe inning, with two
Juts Thevenir singled and
Craycr~ :·· reached on a
Marauder error.
\ Meigs scored in ,the fifth
iqning on a s10gle to Andy
Qavis, a v.'alk and a ·fielders
.-l.oice; ·fhe
Raiders pulled
'-It•
•• "_}
f hto
within .1-4 10 the top o t e
sixth ir':~ing ' on
Marauder
0

~~;.

I '

a

PICKI

MAlON,

w.vA. _

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error, a walk and a single by
Thompson.
Meigs added what looked
like an 'insurance run in the
. ·bottom of the ·sixth inning,
but it prov~d to be the winning run. Fackler, Stewart and
Bullington all singled to plate
the run for a 12-4lead.
But· here came the R:liders
in the bottom of the inning.
Craycraft and Marcum both
walked with 'o ne out, 1;\aker
'singled, one out later Fisher
and Thotnps&lt;ln both walked.
Gibbs . then singled to bring
Davis to the mound in relief
~f Fackler.
Gibbs greeted him with a
single, and _Nolan then
launched a three run home
run over the left field fence
and sudde.;Jy it was · a 12-11
contest. Davis finally recorded
the last O\!t on a pop-up to
third and end the Marauders
three game losing streak.
·Stanley picked up the win,
with help from Fackler and

Davis, J?avis is credited" with
the save. The trio combined
to give up 11 hits, struck out
six and walked seven while
hitting a batter.
Stewart had a single and a
home run to lead Meigs,
Bullington added a double
and single. Runyon and PackJer each had a pair of singles,
Bolin a double and ·Napper,
Johnson, Davis and Dettwiller
each added a single.
·
Gibbs. was the . starting
pitcher and the loser for the
Raiders, Baker also saw
mound 'duty for River Valley.
The two combined to give up
13 hits, strike out three and
walk four.
Nolan led the hitting
parade with, a single and a
home run, Thevenir, ·Baker,
and Thompson each had a
· pair of singles, Craycr~ft , Fisher and Spaulding each added a
single.
Meigs (5-).) will . play host
to Federal Hocking today.

' Ashley Burbridge was the .Meigs, Bolin, Chancey · and
starting pitcher and was Jaynce Davis each added sintagge4 with the loss, Jeffer,~ gle.
.
Meigs (4-4) will play · host
went the final three and two
third$ innings, The two com~ to Federal Hocking today.
bined to give up 12 hits, strike
one and walked four.
\
Stephani~ Wigal and Harris ·
I,
each had a double to ; lead
. (

' i' •
'

Special Guest
Chad Pennington
Chad will be signing autographs for
the public from 8:30a.m. to 10:30 a.m.
Enter to w.ln autographed 11UI(Chandlse.

e Saturday, April 21, 2001 (Sfgn-up deadline is Aprll6)
e Ordnance fields · Rain or shine ·
• Individual trophies to top three finjshlng teams

e Games begin at 8 a.m. • Double ellminatlo~
e $50 entry fee per team (8 men &amp;_8 womer')
e Must be 18 or older to play

Fer men lnllnalll•:

e Register at the PVH.Wellness C~nter
(3041 815-1222
e Make all checks payable to "Make-A-Wish Foundation"

1-.

•

A member ofGfJTUJSis Hospital System

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Page 82

The Daily Sentinel
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Ventura's power
stroke carries
Mets past Braves

_.,..
MontiOII
New York
Allanw

Florida

EMI

L PeL
0 1.000
0 1.000
0 1.000
1
I .500
0
2 .000
C.OO.I DMolan

G8

W
2
1
1

W

L

Pet

1
0 1.000
Clnclnnsti
1
1 .500
Chiclgo
0
1 .000
Pillot&gt;urgh
1 .000
0
, St. LOuis
0
1 .000
Mltwauk"!'
2 .000
0
w..t Dfvlalon
W
L
Pet
Arizona ·
I
0 1.000
Colorado
I
0 1.000
San Fran&lt;:ioco
I
0 1.000
Los Angeles
I
I .500
San Diego
0
1 .000

112
1/2
1
2

T.......,.oa.Houaton 11, ...,.,., ... 3
N.Y. -8.-~.101nn1ngo
Cincinnati 3, P~ 2
f'f1llodolphia ~. 3
A~zcna 3,

too Angolos 2

e ', ncn2.Etoleon 1,11 ~

1A11 oukM ( - ~~ It -

T - Bay 8, Toronto 1

Todly'oMontreal (FieamU 2·1) at CNcago
CW. (Wood 8-7), 2:20 p.m.
·~
GB
N.Y. (Ajlplor 15-11) II ....
(Millwood 10.13), 7:05 p.m.
W
L PeL
112
Philadelphia (Chen 7-7) at florida lloltlmore
1
0 1.000
1, (Peony 8·7), 7:05p.m.
-York .
I
0 1.000
t
Pitlsbufljh (Mullx&gt;lland 8-.9) at Clncln- Tompe Boy
1
0 I .000
I
nau (ReMsma G-0), 7:05p.m.
Toronto
1
1 .500
t 112
Milwaul&lt;ee (Rigdon 4,-4) at Hooston Bolton
0
1 .000
(Uma 7·16), 8:05p.m.
·
C..W OMolon
GB
St. LOUis (Boneo 12·9) at Colorodo
W
l
Pet
(AI!aelo 12-9), 9:05p.m.
· Chlccgo
1
0 1.000
Anzona (Sctitllng 11-121 at Los Ange- M I . ·I
0 1.000
les (Drelton 12·9), 10:10 p.m.
0 ' I .000
e-nd
1/2
San Otego (JaiVIs ~~ 11 San Francis- tJe1t011
0
1 .000
I
co (Rueter 11·9), 10:15 p.m.
- . City
0
I .000
WoiiDivlalan
Thurwdoy'o Garnoo
W
L Pet
P~lsburgh (Olivares 4-6) at Cinclnnatl
oatcland
1
I .500
4, 10 . (Dessens 11·5), 12:35 p .m.
Saanle
I
I .500
Montreal (Annas Jr. 7·9} al Chicago Texas
1
I .500
Cubs (Tapanl8·12), 2:20p.m.
Anaheim
0
I .000

Oal&lt;llnd

Gl

s. Seattle 1

T....,.o_
O.ldond (He- 15-11) II
(SM 17-10), &amp;:35 P·"'-

.,

Dodgers 2

lfs ·s, Mariners 1

.

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Ran-rs 3,
Anp 2

Devil Ra.JS 8,
Blue JaySl 1

Is it a record or not?

j :

j:

Astros 11,
Brewers 3

..

Seedfl
Gra11

3, ngers 2

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Sto!Uo

-(NMIO&amp;-t2)11Ba•-&lt;Pan-

oor; 9-13), 7:05p.m.

D·backs 3,

. '·

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Texos3.--Z

$1500REWARD .
Offered fo.r the arrest &amp;
conviction of the person or
persons ~responsible for the
shootlnQ of·Mike SIQler.
· Contact SIQier Family
'742-2279 -

I

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NBA

no .

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Son Diogo ( - 11~ It SOn Froncllc:o (Ortiz 14-12).10:15p.m.

fnwn

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REDS · NOTEBOOK

'nnJ J'IO...
Mime50!1 3, Detroit

The Ddt S1ntinel • ~B 3

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Stackhouse on a
for
Pi•ns, Mavs on upswing

~I,OUnH

(Mior &amp;4). l:o&amp; p.m.
""""'" ( - 11·7) It Lol Angello (Aotiby 12· 1~). 10:10 p.m.

..Reels

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Aprl•, 2001

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ATtANTA (AP) - Robin
IWIIOI City ( - H) II N.Y. YlnVentura didn't ~aste any &lt;tjme
112
k - ( P - 19-91, 7:05p.m.
1
CNcago Wllllo Sox (EldNd IG-2) ot
in his last two at-bats against
~ (Firlrf 111-11), 7:05p.m.
•
the Athnta Braves.
Gl
~ 2-1) 01 ~lily
{WIIIOn t-4), 7:15p.m.
·
Ventura hit a two-run
Brian Hunter scored the- goAnahoim (Aii&gt;P 8-12) at T - (~Jtio!er
homer on John Rocker's tim ahead run from second base
2·9), 8 :05p.m.
1
piich in the eighth inning and on a sacrifice fly in the sevI
~·a..,
aAd
Philadelphia
hit Kerry Ligtenberg's first enth,
Toronto (Ca_.tor 10.12) It T1J1110
offering for another two~run notched its second consecuMondoy'o Oomeo
Bay (Rekar7-t0),12:15 p.m.
GB
Atlanta 10, Cincinnati •
Mimeooll (Miton 13·10) at Detrbi1.
shot in the I Oth to give the tive orie-run victory ar home.
Montreal 5, · Chicago Cubs
(Moehler 12·8), 1:05 p.m.
Hunter led off the seventh
New York Mets a 6-4 win in
Innings
Kansas City (Reichert 8·10) 11 N,Y.
the Braves' home openerTues- with a single off reliever
Colorado 8, 51. louis 0
.
112 Yankees (Mu88ina 11-15), 1:05 p.m.
San Francisco 3~ San Diego 2
Boston (CastiHo 10·5) at Baltimore
St. Louis (Morns 3·3) at Colorado
day night.
Braden Looper (0-1) and stole
Philadelphia 6 , Florida 5, 13 innings
(Neagle 15·9), 3:05p.m.
(Johnson 1-10), 7:05p.m.
.
Mondoy'o Oomeo
"I swung at a lot of first second. Doug Glanville hit a
Los Angeles 1, Milwaukee 0
N.Y. Mets (Appier 15·11) at Atlanta
AnaheiOI (Ontz B-6) at Toxu (Glynn 5N.Y. Yankees-7, Kansas City 3
pitches, which is pretry unusu- drive that center fielder Prei), 8:05 p.m.
•
(Perez 0-0), 7;35 p.m.
Chicago Whfto Sox 7, Cleveland 4
r
a! for me,"Ventura said.
ston Wilson caught while
The Mets third baseman was sprinting toward the walL
0-for-5 in his career against Hunter tagged up at second,
Rocker and had never faced 'never hesitated rounding third
Pirates manager: Three-fifths
Ligtenberg.
and narrowly beat the throw
of his starting rotation went
"I missed my spot and got it home.
on the disabled list duri1,1g
up and over the middle,''
Chris Brock {1-0) earned
spring training, leav,lng Todd
PapB1
ligtenberg said. '' If I make niy the win with 1 1-3 scoreless
Ritchie to start the opener..
pitch, maybe it's different. But innings for the Phillies, who
He did all right, allowing
walked the only batter he
I didn't Some nights, you get got a solo homer from Mike·
faced to load the bases. On four hits and four runs in six
away with mistakes. Unfortu- Lieberthal:
·
came
Williamson, who let in a innings. Larkin's slicing dounately, tonight John and. I did- · Eric Owens became the first
run with a wild pitch and ble to the warning . track ip
n 't."
playet ro homer in his first two
•
later
forced in another run by right field di:ove in .two t'W)s
In other NL games, Hous- games with Florida. Cliff
hitting Jason Kendall wi!h the in the iecond, and Alex
ton beat Milwaukee 11-3; Floyd also homered for the
bases loaded.
· Ochoa's fly to the base of the
Cincinnati edged Pittsburgh second time in as many games.
one'
point,
Boone
At
wall turned eluded center
3.-2; Philadelphia defeated
brought trainer Greg · Lynn ' fielder Adrian Bro'l"n and
Florida 4-3; and Arizona
with
him to visit Williamson, turnc:d into an RBI triple in
topped Los Angeles 3-2.
who's got a tender elbow. the four!h.
.
Tsuyoshi Shinjo, the second
Williamson said he was fine,
it WliS just enough to ruin_ a
Japanese position player to
Kendall
in
tlte
back
then
hit
big
day for McClendon, who
sign a major league contract,
· Randy Johnson a·nd Luis
on an 0-2 pitch.
made his major league debut
singled with one out in the
Gonzalez teamed to make AriThat
was
it
for
Wl[liamson,
as an outfielder with .! he Rech
I Oth off Ligtenberg.
zona manager Bob Brenly's
who
threw
a
club-record
21
in
1987 and was making hjs
After anomer out, Ventura,
debut a winning one.
wild pitches last season, when managerial debut in the same .
who went 2-for-5, hit LigtenJohnson allowed two runs in
the
Reds set a major league stadium.
berg's first pit~h into the rightseven innings while sttiking
record with 96 overall.
"'it was OK," McClendon
field .seats to lead the Mets to
out
10,
and
Go!ez
hit
a
"The ball slipped out of his said without much enthuSivictory in their season opener.
two-run homer s Arizona
hand,
the one that hit asm. "I wish we'd have won.
''I'd be lying if I said it didopened its season ·th a victo- ROCKIN' ROBIN - Robin Ventura had two homers against the Kendall," Boone said.
That would have felt a lot
n't feel like a playoff game;•
Braves. (AP)
ry at Los Angeles.
John Riedling got Brian better. It's always nice to co'*e
said Braves third baseman
Jose Nunez, the third
·
Giles tO fly out, leaving !he back."
Chipper Jones, who went 2Dodgers pitcher, was stung in
bases loaded and the ·Pirates
'Notes: The Pirates wore
for-4 and drove· in Adanta's
his big-league debut, allQwing pitches.
a losing cause.
down 3-2. Pittsburgh also got black sleeves with !heir gny
first run. ,
a double to Mark Grace to
"I've dorie that before,"
Radke, starting a S3.6 · mil- two runners aboard iii the road uniform vests, reintroThe Braves tied it at 4 in the
start the seventh before Gon- Howe said. "I've pulled guys lion, four-year
contract, ninth against Danny Graves duced this season. fittsburgh
eighth off relievers John Fra~
zalez homered to put the Dia- out with no-hitters. It would- allowed , his only run on before Giles lined out, ending
co and Turk Wendell, scoring
also wore sleeveles~ upifor~s
mondbacks ahead 3-2. ' •
Bobby Higginson's RBI' dou" the game.
n't have been the first time."
on RBI hits by Rafael Furcal
from 1957-69 . ... It. was !he
~ In aU, Pittsburgh was 0-for- fine time the Pirates opened
lchiro Suzuki, Seatde's new . ble in the fourth.
and Brian Jordan.
leadoff hitter and a seven-time
II with runners in scoring the season against Cincinnati
"They've had a lot of success
batting
champion
·
in
Japan,
position.
against us, especially here,''
since ' -t963, when · !he Reds'
was
0-for-3
with
a
strikeout
·
.
•
"We
hit
some
balls
hard,
Ventura said. "To be up and for
Jim O'Toole won a 572 dec,i;
SEATTLE (AP) - The against Zi.to.
S
just right at people," said
them to come back and then
Seattle Mariners couldn't solve ' Miguel Tejada's grand slam; a
."
GUes, who stranded seven sion over Earl Francis.... SS
for us to come back is nice."
Jack Wilson, the only rookie
Zito.
41,3-foot
shot
in
the
third
off
,
Alex
Rodriguez
struck
out
runners
..
''We
couldn't
put
Barry
It was the first of 19 games
Zito, die second part of Halama, gave Zito a 4-0 lead three times and singled in ·his back-to-b~ck hits together. position player on the, Pirat~~·
between the· dubs this season.
roster, doubled for his first big
first home game for Texas, and · We let them off the 'ho&lt;?k."
Oakland's dynamic' starting to work with.
The Mets and Braves played
duo behind Tim Hudson, held
"That was a bomb," Howe. the Rangers beat Anaheirfi: in
The Redsl bullpen got league hit and made the be~t
13 times last season, and
the Mariners scoreless for said. "To hit it out of this ball- their home . opener before rocked in a 10-4 loss to defensive play of th~ gam.e,
Adanta won the series 7-6.
in the hole to get JasQ~
s~ven innings in a. 5-1 victory park in this cold weather, that 49,512, a. regul~r-season Atlanta ,on Monday, giving up diving
Since 1998 ~the Braves hold a
LaRue's grounder and..throvvwas a pop."
record at The · Ballpar~ ·- in six runs. It did just well
29-15 edge, 18-4 at Turner Tuesday night.
ing
him out. ... CF ~r,n GrifSeattle didn't get a hit until
The A's, who lost. 5-4 on Arlington.
.
, "
enough ·on Tuesday to ·get
Field, including 3-0 in the
Mike Cameron singled up the opening
night · to the · Kenny Rogers w&lt;;&gt;n•· the Boone ·his fi~t win as !he fey Jr. missed his second ~
1999 postseason.
with a sttained hamstrin~.
middle with two outs in the Mariners, made it 5-0 and Rangers' home opener for the Reds manager.
Javy Lopez hi~ a solo homer
. Michael Tucker s~rted tn
· knocked out Halama in the second straight season, and
"I hope they're not all that
in the seventh off New York sixth.
"I'd like to see a few of &lt;Jur fourth' on Johnny Damon's Tim Crabtree got out of a easy," Boone said jokingly. "I center again. He's 1-for-7 lJ,l
starter AI Leiter to tie it at 2
hitters start swinging the bats, . RBI single.
bases-loaded jam with no outs know the team has worked his two g~mes. ... Batting
before an announced crowd of
leadoff, Larkin has reach&lt;:d
42,117, which was closer to but 'it's too early to get con- · Without Alex Rodriguez, in the ninth to convert his first hard for it. I've worked hard base in six of his eight plate'
cerned,'' Mariners manager who signed a $252 inillion save opportunity for Texas.
for it. I'll sleep easier tonight."
30,000 due to a steady rain
contract with Texas as a free
McClendon hasn't had' appearances- three singles;-a
Lou Piniella said.
and
thunderstorms
that
double and two walks.
While Zito and Hudson agent during the winter, the
many peaceful days as the
delayed the start3 hours and 3
have turned in solid 'perfor- Mariners have 13 hits, 12 sin--------------------"--minutes.
mances in the first two games gles, in their first two games.
..
J,.eiter also gave up a· run in of the series between last seaThe Mariners scored their
,
the first on three hits - the
son's two divisi&lt;in playoff run in the eighth off Jeff Tam
Albie Lopez scattered seven
last an RBI single by Jones. teams, Seattle's starters have on John Olerud's sacrifice fly. hits in eight innings, and Ben
Leiter went seven innings,
.,
been disappointing.
· Zit 0 , . 22, Oakland's first- Grieve hit a two-run \l'iple in
gave up six hits', two runs and
KINGSTON,
N.Y.
(AP)
pemens'
total
_
was
recognized
"It's very important to get to round draft choice in 1999, his Tampa- Bay debut to 'lead
struck out six.
.;
their starterS because they have was 7-4 with a 2. 72 ERA in the Devil Ra}'S to . ;,; season• Roger Clemens broke Walter as the record.
Mike Piazza hit a two-run such a solid bullpen;' A's man- 14 starts as a rookie for the A's opening victory over Toronto. Johnson's American League
homer in the first off Adanta ager Art Howe said. "You last season. The left-bander
Lopez, who began last sea- strikeout recotd in !he New .--.starter Tom Glavine. Glavine don't waiu to get behind to was called up from Triple-A son in the bullpen, walked York YankeeJ;' season opener
allowed three hits and three
Sacra.mento .last July 9.
three and struck out six to -or did he?
their short guys."
runs in 7 t-3'innings.
Total Baseball, the official
"I felt good," Zito said. move past Rolando Arrojo for
John Halama, a 14-game
winner for the Mariners last "Sometimes you just know the most victories. in Devil _ chronicle of Major League ·
Baseball, says Johnson struck
season, lasted only 3 · 1-3 how you're going to do. T.he Rays history (22).
out . 3,509 - orie more !han
innings.
thou$ts you think are very - Shannon Stewart's second
· Zito, Ill his 15th 'career start, impor nt. If you think you homer of the season, a solo the record book has stated for
picked up where he left off last have h right stuff, nine times shot in the third, accounted decades - and remains tied
~tjl the RQcket.
.
. .
Daryle Ward, subbing for se?.son.
for the visiting Blue Jays' run.
injured Moises AJou hi~ his
Everyone 1s questlomng us out of I 0 you do."
Other sources, including the
Steve Parris, obtained by
Halama allowed fi'!C runs on
first career grand siam and using him as a No. 2 pitcher,"
National Baseball Hall of
seve!\, hits and a \Valk, with Toronto from Cincinnati in an
Fame and Museum and the
drove in a care-er-high six runs , Ho~e said. :·He showed the.m
offseason trade, .allowed four sport'S offici:ll statisticians at
in Houston's season-opening tomght. He s a quality pttch- two strikeouts.
runs on nine hits in four Elias Sports Bureau, list John'
victory over Milwaukee.
er.
,
i[lnings in his AL debut.
son's ca'r eet strikeouts at
Ward's homer, which keyed
In other AL games, Mm- 1\vift$
'
3,508. Rich L~vin, baseball's ·
,1 six-run third inning, was nes!Ota beat De_
tro1t 3-2; Texas
0
Detroit's
first
opening-day
NOW AYA
chief
spokesman,
said
only the second opening-day edged AnaheJm 3-2; and
J'OR81'1UN .
grand slam in Astros· history. Tampa Bay defeatell Toronto complete game in 12 years
.
PLANTING
eriough
for
the
Tigers
wasn't
The second opening day at ll- I.
.
,
Enron Field drew 36,526,
Zito gave up th~ee smgles to overcnme Brad Radke in
short of the ballpark's capacity and Walked four, ~Vlth a wild Comerica Park's first season
. .
of 40,950.
pttch. and ~ve smk~oun . He opener.
Radke
limited
Detroit to
Craig Biggio returning wasn t rhmkmg no-hmer.
'
line"• one run in eight innings, and
from offseason knee
surgery,
."Th at's aII .~tght •.that's
.
went 5-for-5 to tie an Astros Ztto sa.!d. ,No-hmers are DaVid Ortiz homered to lead
record
bonuses.
. Minnesota over Detroit.
Mih~aukee got solo homers Howefisaidhhe wou;~n'thh~ve Before a capacity crow&lt;\ of
from Jose Hern)ez and let Ztto tms . eve" 1 e _a a 40,104 , Jeff Weaver pitched a
1-304 773-1113
six;hitter and struck out fo11r
·
.
no-hmer
gomg 10 thefi mnth
.
0.
J eromy Burn!tz.
Zlto was taken out a ter 1 2 for his third complete game in

Phillles 4,
Marlins 3

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Wedna1 day,

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AROUND
THE
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Houston

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.Aptt 4.2001

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CINCINNATI (AP) - A C:lll.'ldian Cltuen to play for on opening day and had a
BYTHEASSOCIATEDPRESS
"Now we can focus on
nasty wind slicing in off !he the Reds and · one of the two-run double and a pait of ' Detroit's Jerry Suckhouse something else," Mavs coach
Ohio River. A few flurries biggest baseball stories out of walks in ·a 3-2 victory over and !he Dallas Mavericks are Don Nclsoo said. "We're
llo dusting' !he night air. Chris Calgary. Reporten from his Pitaburgh on Tuesday night. .
soaring.
happy !he W2Y we clinched it
Reitsma won't mind at all if hometown ~re in Cincinn;&gt;ti
When he got on )&gt;ase, he
Stackhouse looked Jonlan- and we can build fiom here.
-:.Iris nnjor league debut is like a to cover his fint game in the followed Boone's orders and esque Tuesday rught, scoring We're playing the .best ..ie'vc
., );Vintcr; ,wonderland.
majon.
·
· played it safe - no steal an NBA season-high 57 points played all year."
"Whenever you actrially do attempts":
He's used to it.
in the Pistons' 110-83 victory
A place iit the postseason
1, Reitsma grew up
and make it, !hey like to malce a
"It feels a little tighter than over tht. Chicago Bulls.
was not enough to satisfy
"It feels great to be in that some Mavcricks.
·-.~side$, in Calgary, Canada, big deal out of it;• Reitsma it did in Florida, but it's pretty
"Sure, turning it around is
where his days of Babe Ruth Bid. "If you'~ a hockey playc:r . good," Larkin said. " I have spe- kind of company as a scorer,"
said
Stackhouse,
who
eclipsed
rewarding.
But it's something
1-baseball were often spent try- breaking into . the NHL, you cific instructions not. to get
ing to stay warm. He hopes it's might get a little (story) on the too excited on the basepaths." Mic-hael Jordan's United Cen- we all expected," said guard
like that when he starts side of the page. But not too
It might not be until the ter single-game scoring record Steve Nash, who had . 16
' Wednesday night for the many baseball players com~ weather warms in May that of 53 points, set it March points. "The media never put
1996. "It's the most points· I've as much pressure on us as we
, ,pncinnati Reds.
out of Calgary."
.
Larkin is ready to go all-out.
put on ounelves. We thought
"I was telling (manager)
Eleven Canadian-born pl:iy- · "When I don't feel it, that's scored in my whole li(e."
-&lt;Bob Boone that I hope_it's as ers- opened the season on when I'll start doing some
Dallas parlayed a 109-97 all along we'd go to !he play,
, ,rold·as possible," he said Tues- major league rosters. Reitsma more things," Larkin said. victory over the Houston offi."
Cuttino Mobley scored 28
day. ''I don't mind that ball was born in Minneapolis, but "When that is, I don 't know Rockets arid San Antonio's
-tieing nice and cool in my · grew up in Calg.iry and has yet. I'm sure it's probably 107-89 win over Seatde into points, .Maurice Taylor had 16
'
going to coincide with spme its tim playoff berth in 11 and H akeem Olajuwon 15 for
hand. I'm used to it. I think dual citizenship.
·.whenever it's real cold, it's an · With all of the attention, he warmer weather."
years:
the Rockets 1~ho lost for the
"It's a great feeling;· Dallas' sixth time in eight games.
. ~dvanti\ge for the pitchers, I figures the most important
Boone will trust Larkin's
feel comfortable in the cold:' t[:ling is to stay calm.
judgment.
Celtics 82; Heat 77
Dirk NO\vitzki said. "My first
'~ Temperatures are expected "I'll just have the attitude "Ht's goin'g to come ·out' two years, we were close, but Paul Pierce had 33 points as
' 'fa be 11'1 the low 50s or upper that I belong here, and I'll be one &lt;lay and feel real good and we didn't make it. Just to visiting Boston dealt Miami its
·~40s
for his start against the aggressiv:e," he _said. "If I'm you're going ~p be able to know that we're in the playoffs third loss in four games since
1
is a great feeling."
· Alonzo Mourning's return
'Pittsbutgh Pirates. A dozen tentative and. think too -much tell," Boone said.
..
Stackhpuse. shot 21-for-36 froin a kidney disease.
relatives and friends will be in about it - am I supposed to . JUNIOR OUT AGAIN:
Pierce scored 20 points as
:..the stands, cheering his unex- be here? - I'll get in trouble. Ken, Griffey Jr. hit a ball off from th~ field and 11-of-13
from
th~
·
line
to
eclipse
his
the
Celtics ·e~sed a 12-point
·:p-ected 'breakthrough.
·
I'm sure the game-ti'!le jitters the facing of the upper deck
· '.' Whc!n · the right-hander are going to be there."
during batting practice Tues- previous career high of 46 d~ficit in the fourth quarter.
'broke 'his right elbow while · Bobne doesn't have any dai. but was out of the starting · points, sf:t against the . Lakers Antoine Walker finished with
·' itu'owing · a pitch during a deep advice.
.
line'up for a ' second ~ game on March IS , and break Kelly 20 points.
/ minor £eague game in 1998,
"The le,ss said, the better;• because his str.ained left ham- . Tripucka 's team record ' of 56 ·Anthony Mason led Miami
Jhe 'feared his career was over. Boone said. "I found out a string still prevents him fiom points, set in. 1984 against the with 16 points, and Brian
,. "It's a miracle I'm· throw- long tim~ ago that with -p itch- running hard.
Bulls .
Grant added 14.
· Stackhouse's performance is
Mourning had 11 points,
'·i'ng;' he' said.
ers, the less thinking they do,
Michael Tucker started in
"' Beritr yet, he's throwing for the better off they are." ·
center field . .for the Reds the NBA's highest single- four rebounds and three
LARKIN BEING CAU- again.Thcker is 1-fot-7 in two game total since Los Angeles' blocked shots in 23 minutes.
a big-league team .. Reitsma,
Shaquille O'Neal had 61
Knicks 94, Magic 82
'" 23, got over the injury and TIOUS: Shortstop Barry games filling in for Griffey.
•:made it to Double-A last sea- Larkin is being careful with • ': .
·
points against the Los Angeles
Marcus Camby had 23
·~on, where he started ' 14 the groin strain that sidelined .,,.
Clippers on March 6, 2000. points. and 20 rebounds as
Philadelphia's Allen Iverson New York won for the ninth
' 'games. ~e ~ so impressive him for most of spring train~
' in spring trainipg that Boone ing.
i.
time in 10 home games.
scored 54 earlier this season.
' ebosdrim as the third starter.
He went 3-for-4 and· scored
A perceived insult from
The Knicks capitalized on
He'll,
become
the
lith
a
run
in
a
I
0-4
loss
to
Adanta
abse11ce of Orlando's Tracy
Bulls
coach
Tim
Floyd
ignited
the
,._
Stackhouse..
,
McGrady, who left the game
- L.
"Ron Arrest told me at the with 5:35 left in the first half
'
beginning of the game that due to strained muscle.
coach Floyd said he didn't
Mikl' Miller. finished with
respect my game and he was- 27 points for the Magic.
n't going to double-team me,"
Hornets 103, Nets 88
. '•:", ' (
Stackhouse said. "Mayl:ie next
Jam~ Mas~ burn sfored 31
) ,,
1 ,
,,,1
·1! ·" '
''
1
time."
·
·
·
,.
points,
and PJ Brown added
'(&amp; ·~
~AW HARRII ;I ' ' lead.
,
-Walked and Patton hit a one
Floyd did not address S~ck- 19 points and 12 rebounds as
• n·
ovp,' CORRESP!:JNDENT
, Meigs ·~t~rted their ·come- out double to puU the "Cats 1'
house's
accusations. Instead, he visiting Charlotte beat New
. c!: GLOliST.ER·'-Johri Stim- back in the top of the · fourth to· within one, but that was as
placed the blame for Stack- Jersey for. the third time this
'ley arilt' lj.aam' Btillip[tton hit . inning. With one out aulling- dose as it would get.
house's
scoring barrage on the season and fi&gt;r the 14th time
'llack"to-back home runs in a ton .'reached on a Trimble
Andy Davis picked up the Bulls .
in 17 games.
~four r\in fifth inning, to lead error, Zach Bolin and Andy win in a route going perfor"We
had
·
a
pathetic
perforJohnny Newman scored- 26
:q.e M\!igs Marauders to a 5-4 Davis then followed with sin- mance, Davis scattered seven
mance,
and
it
started
in
the
points
at)d Keith Van Horn 25
win over Trimble in TVC gles with B~;~llington 5coring hits, walked four and struck
lim
five
minutes,"
Floyd,
said.
for New Jeney.
11'aseball
action
Friday• .at on Davis's single for a 3-1 out two. Stanley and Bulling? .
'
'
obviously
didn't
do
a
"We
·
Lakers 96, Jazz 88
'&lt;:ilouster.
_
Trimble lead.
ton had the home runs to lead . good job on Stackhouse.
Shaquille
O'Neal scored 31 ·
; ' Mei~ ~rased a 3-0 defiCit
That set the stage for the big Meigs, Stewart, Bolin and Couldn't guard h;m . I
points and .reserve Robert
i:'arly 0 n tpe game with a sin- fifth in!)ing for Meigs. Nick Davis each chipped in with
thought,
refused
to."
Horry
added 20 for visiting
Jtle rilil 'iQ the fourth and the Dettwiller walked to lead off singles. ·
In
·
Houston,
Nowitzki
Los Angeles, which was withllig fifth in:ning. Stanley's was a the inning. One .out later Matt
Downs was the loser in a scored 20 points to · help the
out
the injured Kobe Bryant
·three run shot, followed by Stewart reached on a Tomcat route going performance, he
Mavs
to
their
fifth
vi'Ctory
in
for the sixth rime in seven
'Bullin~o':l's solo shot . one mis~ue, Stanley then launched gave up five hits, struck out
six
games,
11th
in
14
and
the
games.
pitch late,r. .
his first long ball of the season, five and walked two. Patton team's first playoff berth in
'Karl Malone led Utah with
· J •Trin1ble took a 3-0 lead in a three run hpme run to give
had a pair of doubles to lead more than a de cade.
31 points, while John Stock'tfie ~bird inning Patton led off Meigs the 4-3 lead. · On the Trimble, Guinther added a
tile Tn'n'iiig \vlth , a doubie, 11ext pitch Bullington went single and double and Faires a
'Shust walked and Guinther deep for his first of the year pair of singles. Shust also had a
Thllqwe'd with another two and a 5-3 Meigs advantage.
single.
k liagget'. Two 'outs later Faires Triflll&gt;b: ;tdded .a solo run in
~mgled'
for the 3-0 Tomcat the sixth inning when Steir
.,..
l:,- r.•
•

Meigs battles past Trimble
'iY

\

ton scored 19.
Plicen 85, SliD• 8 t
Jalen Rose and Tnvis Best
each scored 18 points as hos~ ·
Indiana snapped the Suns'
seven-game winning streak.
. Reggie Miller finished with
16 points, while Jermaine
O'Neal had 15 rebounds for
!he Pacers.
Shawn Marion scored 20
points_for Phoenix ~·
Raptors 100, 76ers 85
Vince Carter scored 26
points as Toronto won for the
filth rime in six games.
'
· Alvin Williams 'added 14
points and 13 assisr. for tbe
Raptors, who led by as many
.as 3 5 points. .
Allen lvenon scored 18
points for the Philadelphia,
which has lost five straight ·
road games.
Spurs 107, Sonics 89
Tim Duncan had 30 points
and 14 rebounds as host San
Antonio ended Seattle's fourgame winning streak ..
Derek' Anderson added 16
points for the Spurs, \vho have
the NBA 's best record at 5222.
Gary Payton and Rashard
Lewis each scored 23 for Seattle, which lost for just the second tilnein 12 games.
Nuggets 94, Blazers 92
Robert Pack had a seasonhigh 26 points for host Denver.
Kevin Willis added 19 points
and 18 rebounds, and George
McCloud scored 20 for the
Nuggets, who played without
leading scorer and rebounder
Antonio McDyess (dislocated
kneecap) and suspepded guard
Nick Van Exel.
Damon Stoudamire and
Steve Smith each finished
with 17 points for Portland.
Le~ding Trail Blazers s;orer .
Rasheed Wallace was suspende&lt;\,for inappropriate on-court
behavior in a loss to Minnesota on Sunday.
Bucks 107, Kings 101
Sam Cassell sc'ored six of his
33 points in the final 90 seconds as Milwaukee squan- .·
dered a 24-point lead, but rallied to win at Sacramento.
Ray Allen scored 20 points,
and Glenn Robinson had 18
points and 11 rebounds for the
Bucks.
Chris Webber had 28 points
and 11 rebounds, and Peja
Stojakovic scored 23 points
for Sacramento.

,

••

•

•

Me•gs·
_..,..,..11
.
•

•

'

'

Meigs made' it i 10-1 lead
in the bottom of the fourth.
tit..unyoi1 walked and Buzzy
Fackler singled. Bullington
then cleared the bases by
slamming a pitch off the
.r~ght-c~nter .field'.'fen~e for a
· double, a, · Bullington was
thrown, ~ut trying w _stretch
tile hit. into a tnple. ··
:, Ihe ·. Raid.ers pulled to
within -~10-3 in the top ·of ·the
fifth l~ning. 'Fisher and
Thompson' both singled to
lead o~tpe inning, with two
Juts Thevenir singled and
Craycr~ :·· reached on a
Marauder error.
\ Meigs scored in ,the fifth
iqning on a s10gle to Andy
Qavis, a v.'alk and a ·fielders
.-l.oice; ·fhe
Raiders pulled
'-It•
•• "_}
f hto
within .1-4 10 the top o t e
sixth ir':~ing ' on
Marauder
0

~~;.

I '

a

PICKI

MAlON,

w.vA. _

'

&lt;II

''

error, a walk and a single by
Thompson.
Meigs added what looked
like an 'insurance run in the
. ·bottom of the ·sixth inning,
but it prov~d to be the winning run. Fackler, Stewart and
Bullington all singled to plate
the run for a 12-4lead.
But· here came the R:liders
in the bottom of the inning.
Craycraft and Marcum both
walked with 'o ne out, 1;\aker
'singled, one out later Fisher
and Thotnps&lt;ln both walked.
Gibbs . then singled to bring
Davis to the mound in relief
~f Fackler.
Gibbs greeted him with a
single, and _Nolan then
launched a three run home
run over the left field fence
and sudde.;Jy it was · a 12-11
contest. Davis finally recorded
the last O\!t on a pop-up to
third and end the Marauders
three game losing streak.
·Stanley picked up the win,
with help from Fackler and

Davis, J?avis is credited" with
the save. The trio combined
to give up 11 hits, struck out
six and walked seven while
hitting a batter.
Stewart had a single and a
home run to lead Meigs,
Bullington added a double
and single. Runyon and PackJer each had a pair of singles,
Bolin a double and ·Napper,
Johnson, Davis and Dettwiller
each added a single.
·
Gibbs. was the . starting
pitcher and the loser for the
Raiders, Baker also saw
mound 'duty for River Valley.
The two combined to give up
13 hits, strike out three and
walk four.
Nolan led the hitting
parade with, a single and a
home run, Thevenir, ·Baker,
and Thompson each had a
· pair of singles, Craycr~ft , Fisher and Spaulding each added a
single.
Meigs (5-).) will . play host
to Federal Hocking today.

' Ashley Burbridge was the .Meigs, Bolin, Chancey · and
starting pitcher and was Jaynce Davis each added sintagge4 with the loss, Jeffer,~ gle.
.
Meigs (4-4) will play · host
went the final three and two
third$ innings, The two com~ to Federal Hocking today.
bined to give up 12 hits, strike
one and walked four.
\
Stephani~ Wigal and Harris ·
I,
each had a double to ; lead
. (

' i' •
'

Special Guest
Chad Pennington
Chad will be signing autographs for
the public from 8:30a.m. to 10:30 a.m.
Enter to w.ln autographed 11UI(Chandlse.

e Saturday, April 21, 2001 (Sfgn-up deadline is Aprll6)
e Ordnance fields · Rain or shine ·
• Individual trophies to top three finjshlng teams

e Games begin at 8 a.m. • Double ellminatlo~
e $50 entry fee per team (8 men &amp;_8 womer')
e Must be 18 or older to play

Fer men lnllnalll•:

e Register at the PVH.Wellness C~nter
(3041 815-1222
e Make all checks payable to "Make-A-Wish Foundation"

1-.

•

A member ofGfJTUJSis Hospital System

\

'

,, ,....

. I

'

�•
~ Apltl4. 2Q01

•

tor Rant

•·

-Top-=

Wlnlld to luy

Ill

.- ·
Gol!l tGinl. 1'10011111.u.i
Dltoroondl.
CioN 1114tao. U.8. CurroMy,·

•

II.T.I . COlli ....... 'Ill - . GllfiiiOIII, 7~
I •.'

I

~

~

I

•

•

1.

•

f ••

~

t

110

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

110

···c··II

In flli:lno.S¥racuH
oru. Sind - - t o P.O. Bo1
215. . , . _, Ohio 4577f. ClotMUll -

Don'tmlas

Pleasant \\&amp;y Holpitll

c:urraedy .... opeaiD&amp;I
for: .....
R'lletendN~~~tfor

*lnaludll miiiDII,

005.

12,000 WIIKLYI 111111"1 UO
Drochurtal Satlallctlon Gollr•
lftflldl Pooflal ....... 1110Yidodl Ruoh Boii·Ailtl~lld
I ' - d en..topol otCO:•DUT
8, 801 t 131. ANTIOCH, TN.
37011·1431Stlrtliiii 1 $ '):

FREE SEARCH!

-.81NGL!S.oom .
IIOIIANCI
fOR
YOUIII
1·100·773·220 E,J&lt;ttnllon e741
12.89 Ptr Minute, Mull Bt tl
..... ~ (11.,111!1 1134
START

OATINO

1117 .II WEI!KLYI rroaooalng
HUOIFHA
NO
iiPtrllncallorlglgl
llaqullld.
ForFIIEE
lnlollllltlon Calll-..ol.eua

-1300.

30 AniiOUIIOIIMIIII

'"ACCEII TO A COIIPUTER?I'ul • 10 -·1251hr·l75/llr. "'
I'T. Filii lnlo. 100-871- . ..
101 . . ..- - . . . . . .

-To'bl Tlrfl ......

8-8lrnlon.7-11411
tllty clotlllng aftd houtlhofd
omo. $1.00 biG 11'- Mry
Mondlr lllnr ......,
.

A NEW CAREER, Eam 11011- l'aotll JoDI. Up to I 11.351
hour. Banaflta/Ptnaion. 1·111•
721o101311701

.

-----

ADIOIUIOI~ Frae Inial lntornat
U11,. Wontod. $2,000· 15,0001

OhiO
Biglool Con,.ronce,
Sllurdoy April 7tll Spm·tOtom,
Nowcomero Town lllddlt loflool
(177. 31 Erdt) , .
Adn , · M, lntD (740)411 1171

AI80WTILY FREE INFO
UIOII Wontocl.
I2000-teOCKI'mo

GIVMII.,.

-

Frtt to good home In country,
ana yeor old apoyed blactc lab
i

"""· "'-"" • ~ 740-M-

eo

.. .IIIDiz.MI

AN UNUSUAL OPPOIITUNITYtl
Work
from home wUh no bo111
VIlli -.dontworryborlch.nat
or

. 31t8.

CIIIOD-21J1.2801

"nompoilne, 'll'uctc T-1 .... A
Ford Rongtr, llk:rowa... Ping·
Pan~ Tobie Aftd A Den,
(740)251 1100

t.o.t a

...,.,.11'1'.-

AIIYONI CAN 00 ITI 12111711
11 1.-.
17-.ThlltllllgDaltrl DDill

Found

REWAfiO. L08T· -

AIIIIIBLY liT HOIIIII Crolla,
Toya, Jtwolry, Wood, Stwlftg,
~o..., Poyt CALL 1-100ElttaOt (:Min)
ATTENTION: If yoiJ to wortl,
Work from homo. 120 to sso hr.
PUFt. A'M OetaUI.
....tttiUCCOII.com

...... w1

shoulder llrap AI Cllnla
Thuroday, Morell attll. ~ AM
CUll, I JUII-1 Till c...Bocl! . .............. - . . . , . , . .
That Con't Bt AepiiCid
(304)57&amp;-D48 .

Loll: lllactc "'"'- Dobermlft, 11110 'Doable', 1W
ATTENTION: OWN A COMPUT·
Llll on Tllul Aold, Mldclt- EA? Mtll·order/E·Commerce.
port.-coi741H42-11111.
1522+/WHk PT. 11000·14.000/
- " FT. lui "nllnlng. flit Book·
Loet - - - dOO.., 1 let. www.cr11ttcream11 ft.com
(100) . , _
•Auolfft'. 1.111 -ft Tlhll lid., :::::..:.::.;:::;:....._...,._ _
Mlcldllflon. P1MM C111740-741- ATTENTION: WORK ' FROM
1332.
HOME moll ordor/E oommerco
lUll- 11.500·17 .aoo month
70
,lnfoflllllloft: 1·100-

lana.... .

•

•

pro- ur-. - •
v.d....
0

"'"
.
.
.
_..,...,.IOOIId

114474

PS;all

oom

All~

To lw ar Ill.
ll*tly ..... 1104471-fGI.

AIIOHI

. lVlclnlly
3 Famttr Yard II'- . . 4-H
201 ..1/ll - - "'lloar
Afie1, CMr 3,GOO 1ldtg C.W,
BIMDII I . , _ . , 1'0011,
c-. Fumlltn a A 1.11111n
ttomt. . . - a 11111111

CAIIIEII OI'I'OIITUNITYI Earn
_ . _ lftooOM. laay cllhlll
PNIIIII"f. Ptll hlnlng . ...._
PC reqtrlrld. Coli Phyalclln l
- - OtwiiOfiiMIIII lOll•

(740)1. 0118

,..Int.

Come Ont CON AI, loiMIIII'I
For
Low, LOW 1'11011,
Ono MHo , _ - l h iflill

e..,_,

On Stale lloute 110, lalti.Aprl7th, H

.

-~---~--CIIII
All CDL DrMrl. Good
401K,,

'lio 111-

ount-.
HolM •-no•. cau
(7.......1411

-

.

.... on Canler. Wist VI,......

Jo"-'1,.,., M• 11ot1t 1!
Thutldlr· lllfllllr. TrUitlltttl
From Colum'G •t, Tllpet, ....._

-....-.land .........

I

..-..-.,ea..

,._Cfl

••

lletlate(ld Hurtt UCtftll Ill·
......... llfnfrNim - - filii·
""" Or IQUIYIIent E•PirllnCt
Nllrtlng ...,.milan llequtrod.
~Pill. Wtll VIrginia Ll·
Tt
l'eloll PlotHIII Contor, Oontala
lldlt ea... ..... llouttt liN, flo.
1M I , lol ut, l'olnt Pl1111n1,
'11'111110 1101.

Drtvww: P.~.M . 'll'lnopon. No II·

• ' '1part
l Vlolufty

•'

...... Of ......... Inter-

Hugo- . . . . . . . . . .
3pM, Cloltlnl. I dip
()ur.
tllnl, Kftlctci118011, LIIIIIIOit,
20&amp; lroad ltrMI. C.•ulll,
WIICII""'IIgno.
1

llg ylrd ..... lift: llh. Ht40
BredDury lid. Old giiiiiiCCoy,
"-'iton. Cllblon . . . . loll ol
booka, canning jill, qui". roo·
much 10 lot. LGc* lor .....

*

Frldly &amp; So....,, II IIUIIIIId !'lit
· Sllllon. 3 flo-My,
Clarogo oolt· 4th, 51h, 8th, 314
milt on Now Ll. . lid., llutllnd.
Dolfi, Ellfll lttmt, Doya 11
monlhl 10 2T oftd ._. 740-741·
27t8.

lltlitnct nttdad , 2 waek. COL
trolntng . 134,000/yr. ~~~; pluo
'ull lanelltl I Ptld Trtlntng.
DrMKI bllld In Mftlwnf. 1-177·
110·1002. Sunday 81m·5pm.
Mort.·l'rl. 11m lpm.
IARN 125,000 TO 150,000/yr.
Mecl~nouranoo liNing. Nttd•
ICI I
IIIIIVI Homo Computll
N11d1d. FRE! lntarnat, t·IOO·

at-4113 Dept • toe

Ytrd and blkt · 1111, April 5·1,
8:00·? Lang Bon.om Community
Building.

Pt. Plelunt

Ho•pital

&amp; VIcinity

Pleuan~ Valley Hospital

3 FamMy 0111111 8111, 11m- 4Ptn,
Rhtercreat LIM, WMt Columbia,
April 5th I llh, Thuroday 1 Frl•
dty. Orgon To Otvuway, rrom
Qowna, Gullet, Stereo, ltwlng
Mtchlna. &lt;;lothtl, Avon Slit,
1.011 of Mloc.. Pl"m ole MW

80

.
•

Auction
and Flel Marlett

Rk:~

Purson Auollon Compony,
lull tlmt IUCIIOnltr, COiflllltll
auction urvlct. Llctnlld
tee,Ohlo &amp; Woll Vlrglnfl, 304·
n:l-5785 Clf 304-773-&amp;147.
Rlvtralde Auction

lt,n,

lilt

Evary Stturday Night 11 8p.m.,
Aucllonter Raymond Jal'lnaon
(740)2&amp;8-e919

'.
•

90

Wanted ·2 ·!50 10111 of land locll·
td In thl Meigs County artt, tm.
mod tatt POIIOIIIOn 740·849·
2644.

'

W1nled to Buy

Hllpuamlkel
dlffwence liy

BOipllll

Aftd RV'a. Contact Ron At
(7401448-CJIIt -.or.331~,&amp;-ot50 . II

NO-'-•

do•··•a..ra.

recruiting~

mtVdqk

ovw the phone for

Pl. Pin nat; WV 255541

... ruao

(3M) 6'7Ut75.

AM!OE

lnvot.~e

"

NO PUNDRAISINQI ·

Wtnted: AgglltiiYtllilm Play.
.. - · - 1 1 1 - l n l l u l
ptced, grotrlh orlonltd, llllbltlh04 lniUIIIICI Aglftey. MUll
bl
PIOqlt,
- · ~.
Sotary/
ComCorntntniU·

Clllltei'UC11Ian ~to
.... ,,.............wt

..t. ifttll .....lftd - ...
Send 10 aa. .lA 23, 200
. Mlln Strttl, Pt. Pl1111nt, WV
25!ieO

----

1 888 475-7223
ext.1101 .

l!i00-$1 ,500 Mo. Full Ttnoe
FI\ID VACATIONS
1-I00-480-30t9

IAIIN IXTIIA IIONEY
Dol..., T...,.,.,,. Bookl In
- . Molgl. Muon And
Jackson Countlrlt. Call Bwtnwn

120

U5, Aprll-.1-~

Sltultlonl

11830 Of (419)1188-1280

W.nted

EASY WORK! GREAT PAYI Earn
1500 Plus 1 Wl•k Aooembtlng
Productl .. Homo. No ~ ...
Ntctlllty. Coli Toll Fill I -801l287·3Mhl31

Approved OhiO Mtdlcold PtiWICIor looking lor lndMdullllln nttd
ol Hom• HIIHh Clro Servk:la . .
Elplllonoo at MROO loflool ond
.ouuom tlllropy. HI.- ,.,.nell.
(740)441 - 8518 or amoll hanry.203eOIU.tdu

~~~;~-:~~~~
Floral Dostgner;

-.Point-.

1b .11102, 200-.
WI/ 255GO

140

EIPirltnctd Carotoltor Nlldld
.... 2417 U.. In C.. .... Etderir
Womtn In Point Pltllt'nt,
(aG4)17WIII3AIIIrlpm

IIIOtiCII

OHIO VALI.IY I'UIUIHINO CO.
•-mmenda 11111 you dO bull·
.... _ , . you ...... ond
NOT 1 0 IIVOIIgh 1111
rnot~you
-tlgltld
...
---..

"=

Bualnell
Training

Col.

Gtllll!allt c..r
(CaMiriCIOIOToHomo).

.. _,....._Ad
a
........
_ -.llfaiOn,

EARN 1500-1800 Pll tn
-..........
-·
6
lllppora.
Low
fn.
1·100-272.0113. -

........,....

Elm 110:000 YEARLY -Iring,
NOT llptaclng, Long cracks In
Wlndahltkll. Flit vldlo 1-100·
121111123 ~ ....glllolnldWD:..GDift

GET YOUR FORTUNE IN ' MO·
TtONr Elm IIDO-StiOOidttlty p1w
_ , No hypo! No conlllllonl
No ••~net noctllltyl Wt'll
train. Not MLM. A - t coot;

_ _ _ _ or ........

......................
..,--..to
_..,

•• , ' :ar

a .,,,

a

•••

1hll

. . nol

loiDilltW . . . .

. . . . .l&amp;tlatllrNIII-lolntl I. ;al . .
. ..... 01r.-oi . . . . . .

310 HOIIMIS for Slle
IO 00\VN HOMESI GOV'T •
BANK FORECLOSURES! LOW
OR NO MONEY DOWN! OK
CREDm FOR LISTINGS! CALL
t-100-3:11-00201111.11111
1 112 1101\'. 3 ..... bath, big
kltchon, now!~ ltmodlled, on I

ICII ol fond w/2 ltory garogo,
Dytmllo Rd., $55,000, 740·742·
2284.
By O.not, Cotonlalllrlctc Rlnch,

HUD HOII)tl. Payments Baaed
On Income. Limited Tlrnt- Hurryl
(740)448-3384
":-"":-:---:---:-:--MUll Soot Bllullful 3 Sodroom, 2
CIA. FR With Fireplace. 2

EXT 050 www.buelneaa-atar·

New Root, Retrlgerator,

1..51"""· OW. Llrga 2 Car Garage,
Large Rooms, Lots 01
·ston A 'll'lvtl Agency: Rtclivo =-~·.:"'"'RIIocatlng Out Of State,
· . Cali (304)773-5391
li'olnlng, Buolno11 Support, Your
own Travel. Webaltl and Travel

Homl.aom

Remolded 3 Bedroom, Wood

Floors, f.t/2 Bath, Beautiful
FlrtlfliiOI, 2 car Garage, $73,000
(7.00)38H151

v_..

•. -•.em.

.

· Call for

Now
Flaatwood,
lidO,
118-.00, SIt I
2 1111. I •
m -m-4110.

GQ"

Hauling Opportunity. (740)44tr
-

-lYing. I

Ona bedroom.- .. ... ••• 1 1 . . .. NOD oc.n. ..

-

~~- -'Pwlmtntlln .........
port. 127H341. Call 740192·5014. Equot Hauling o,opor.

........ 74NIIU187.

330 Fermi for ....
By Olllar
Wlh 1500 llq.FMI, 3Bttlloom, I·

.. Aero Fonn For -

ond dfYI&lt;,

c:urrenllyhu openlnp
for:

l'tleciiCII
lteceptloallt/Medlcal
Alllltaata aad ·

IP..SI'rletk:ll

NIII"M
for Pbyslc:IIJI Offices
Excoltent pay IJid

benefttl.
Send naume to:
"n=•~ValeJ
llelpltll

c/o BUilD a-rc.
2!20
Dr.
Pt.I'MMit,

Farm - · -.a~u~y lllmCIOld, 2883 8qUIN Fall. 17 - . _
Pond, ln·ground Pool. 8-ral
Simi, Otroga, FrUit 'llMI, Cltll
To Holmr. $215.000. (740)4414ZIO
.

orl'u to

675-D75.

350 Loti l Acrtllge
t 3 ACIII With Btlutlful Lolto .
VI. . Slttl 150,000. 18 Acr11
With Lorgo Llkt, MaDill Home
Willi Add On · $78,500. 011111

~.

(304)576-3)58

4.77 ACIII Ntat lntllllellon 01
Wataon Rood Aftd Rodney Pllto.
Outet, Prlvetl With Stm, Crook,
Wooda, Duol Highway Accoaa.
tO Minutia From Hoaplfll,
Pharmocy, Btnk, Oroc:ory, TIIM·
tar, Etc. S40,000 (~)878·4222
Afllr8pm!fJtt' . . .
Friend!~

Rldgo lid. Crown City
(740)388 0914 or {740)318 1111 ·
Looking To Bur A Now Home?
Don't Lind'/ we 00111 Hurry
Only 101.011 Lift. 304-731-'12115.

Hom••

o

I

'

470

Quality 8llclr Angtrt lull, IOD0-

'*·

Sl&gt;llng
- 1:00pm,
Col ~8lttrnlttl'
April 7th,
AcOipt·
td Allar 4pm On l'rldly. Houllng
AVIIIIbfl. All Contlgnmontl
Welcome.
(740)502- 2322
(740)1118 11131

Hly l .Grlln .

For ...._-com, 14.00 por
tOOt: around- com. 11.00
per td'o•: cob mill 14.00 PI'
t oot; plut toolto. Coli 740-742·
2455 cr 740-742-2MD.

7fO.,, Aufoa;for .,S.Itt•c,'' ,

-

WMted to Rent

490

FREE lnlorlllltlon 1·100·571·
13113 El!T..:ICMHJ

Full BtiYIOI Rtlfluront Avelllblo
In VlfttOft. County, Ohio. Hal
Bllrl Wine Llctnto. Equlpmont
lncludtttl In Ltall. Sioto 80 In
Olnlng. Loou Long Tarm II 500
.... (740171CHJDD7
1,1£ HI IIMJIIf',[

1510 · · · Houuhok' ·
. Goodl '
Appllonc:ea:
Rtcondttlonad
Wollilll, Drytro, lllngll. lllllf.
firiiOII. Up To 80 Doya ,Outt'
--'we
Sol MorfiO Ape
pllnatt, Fronah Ctty M,.Ytag,

.

For Ball: R-ftdiUonld - h ·
111, dryoro and rtlrtgorotoro.
Thomptont Appllonce. 3407
- - - - (:104)178-r.... .

GOOD . ·UIID A"LIAIICII

I
I

· Waolloro. t1ry1rt. rolrlglriiOro,
............ Appll-1. 71
VIne
740-441-1111,
I. . . .INIII.

.-."Coli

Lllllar lall.l.lllfilllftll, .....

-.175.

·IIIII Cot...... UOO; ..... 0111
(74611• ....,

MOllobon CarPtt, . aoa Cllrk

Cllaptl, lid, - · OH. , _ ....
or 10 diVI
11011
Hboy
Cllh. VIII, Mol~

"'*""'•

-'""'"""""

Aocepfld, (740)44e-7444 or 1·

177. . .1.

0r1Ye, 1kM11o, NY 14125.

-

-..rut,1100 Sq. Foot. Rtttortd
2nd Floor Apartment In Hlltorlc
Dlltrlct. ldool For Prolaulonal
Couple. All Modlrn Amonltlta. 3
llttlloorrit: $piCIOUI Living; 1-112
Solllo, Rtar Doell. tf'/AC. 11001
mo.- Plus Utilltlll. Security And
- Olpotl. No 1'111. Roftorancts
Roqulrod. (740)448,4425 Or
(740)111 3131

.

...,., .._

mort opttont. Mlfttlllcluror ol
otwmlla, tclatro oftd lliftltlo,.,
NORWOOO lNDUBTAIEB H2

Forl.ene

7-1788.

13.7lil. -

bermite 2000, larger CIPU'dts.

Cbrtatlan. couple looking for
hOUH to rant, no pots, no ~Ida ,
Jim 740-8112-3187.

..

.

(301)171-1422
515Mitft_,_......,.

a ~ '"""""

Ntw 2Nlril
~1101 LIYingiOOm lu~H.
$399. Buy. Ball,-·
New And Ulld Furniture ltoro
Balow Hotldly .'Inn. Kanauge. WI
Soil Orovl Monumtnfl :Aif!f
\lutl. (740)146-4712

1530

Antlquaa

120 Pockot WltCIIII In Good
Oondltlon And Wooden Bookl
For Solo, fihone (740)445- 18t5,
422
Otlllpolll
Juy 01 ooH. lll.. flnt AntlqUtl,
1124 11t1n on SA 124 I. Po- · 740-111~2121 or 740·192·
t539. Mctn. ·

2nd-·

540 MleoelllniDIII .

MutllndiM
For Stlt• 7 graws, _ - ComoUiry, call 41H17-o!MII.
.
OWE THE BEAUTY olavor ty vartatllo of Orogon OIMM It
your lrlonds, ramtty, Jolilllfl. Villi
Ul Ohnp~l'trq.~oom .
'

10 ODWN CAASI POLICE IM·
POUNDS &amp; IIEPOSI HONDA'S,
CHEVY'S. ~EEP'S. LOW AS l2tl
MO, 24 MO'B el8.8"'. FOil
UBTINGS. CALL 1-IOD-461-ooiO
•~:ct~12

1871

1!1; ·~ ...

aona.-

lng 94.000. t.M.-, . 810v1.171(74011•

Steel BUildings, Ntw Mual loll.
30K40112 Wll 1!0,100 now
$8,980, 40180•12 was .16,400
now 110,871 . ~O~t00x18 Wll
S27.e90 now SIUIO. 801200111
IIIII $58,780 now $42,910. 1·100401-5128.

" lt's wrong. It's false. It's
incorrect or any cxher ·adjeclive I can we," Rumberger
,Ud. "They bad DO i.nfiuence
on 6ling it or trying•to seal it."
Teresa Earnhardt asked a
iudgc to seal the autopsy piJo..
tos four days after her husband
·died Feb. IS during a crash on
the bst lap of the paytona

500.

The" Orlando, Sentinel;
which wanted. t6 view the
photO. . for an investigation
into NASCAR safety, challenfed the judge's decision .
The Sentinel bas suggested in
its ulicles that several
EamPwdc case.
NASCAR deaths could have
·. Julin is ~presenting the been pmrented if the racing
Gainwille-bued
student circuit ~quired drivers to
llll 1 newspaper, The Independent wear a head~and-neck
Florida Alliptor, in its effortS restninin&amp;.device.
to view the photos. A hearing . Auorneys Cor the Sentinel
on the motioru is scheduled and Teraa Earnlwdueached a
1111111
compromise that allowed an
p$J • Cor Thunc!ay.
"These
c:ircumnances independent medical expert
strongly
suges~
that to look at the photos and
Nt\SCAR, motivated bY ia write a report on Earnhardt's
own fear of a lawsuit for cause of death.
I
WIOngful death ... UJFd TeleCalling the compromise
sa Earnl!ardt to 6Pe this Suit 10 "illegal", the Volusia County
seal the: photographs at issue · medical examiner's office,
because ~ of what they might which has custody of the
~"Julin said in the mem· images, bas asked that it be
~moved fiom the agzeement,
orandmn,
NASCAR spo!t:Csman John and the president of a ._bsite
Griffin said he w.em't aware if has appealed the agreement
.his company played a role in and the sealing of the photos
Teresa Earnhaplt's decision. to an appeUate court.
Her · attorney, Thorn Rum,
Autopsy photos- in Florida
beJFr,
strongly
denied were public records until Gov.
NASC.AR influenced her Jeb Bush signed into law last
decision.
week legiSlation malting it a

~~

.

,.._

.......
..
c

felony for a medic:aJ examioer
to release autopsy phOtos
without a court's permislioll.
The Sentinel and
South
Florida Sun-Sentinel. which is
·based in Fort Lauderdale, have
c:baiJen&amp;ed
new law in
Bmwatd County. claiming it

me

me

violates me Rorida Conscirution and the Fine .Amendment
in the U.S. CoallitutiOn.
NASCAR's medical expert,'
Dr. ~ . 8ohmnoa, Viewed
the autoply
·the day
before they wete seaJ,.LA few

imaaes

clays
later,
Bohannon
announced at a NASCAR.sponson:d . news confe~nce
that Earnhardt's seat belt
broke.
If
NASC.Aft
learned
through Bohannon's examination that Earnhardt died from
injuries preven1ab!e by a head
and neck mcnint, it could be
held liable by 1eresa Earnhardt, Julin said in the memo-

randum.
Julin said it'• unknown

whether NASCAR conlacted
1Cresa Eanehardt aftcl' Bohan- .
DOD viewed me phoiDI.
"It also is not known if
NASCAR's !awyen and med-

ic:al penonnd made

rq~raen­

tatioos to EamPwdt about
what the auioply pbotopaplu
showed repniina
cause of
Dale EanePwdt's c!ea~." Julin
said. "Bilt r:- an: distinct
poaibilitia that CIDDot and
should not be discounted."

me

l

8

Duke-Arizona draws good TV numbers

s
s
I

f
I'""
f
D

s

NEW. YORK (AP) - A ~ to tfrhn Media
tiabt tide pme between pre- Releude.
season cooteoden fiom oppo- '1V radnp fix me eM I i
site coas11 hdped _
the NCAA onahip pme bad dec!inecl
men's baslcetball tournament each of me ·~·iow dine
stem its recent TV rating~ yean. mirmriDB me treod ol
· slide.
.
dropping vie-.wnhip fix moat
· CBS Sports' ·broadcast · ·o~ ,, major· sports evena. _ ·
Duke's 82-72 victory over
Arizona on Monday night
drew a.15.6 national rating.
The good news for _the net1lo"'rk is that it's a 10.5 pe~eent '
inaease owr last year's record
low. The bad news: Monday\
·raqlllil! ranks as the secQnd
!ownt since · at · least I 975,

The 2 112-weelt tournament finished with an ~
rating of 6.5, up llighdy fiom
2000's 6.4, the low !1Wk in
the 20 yean CBS bas televised
the event. Each rating . point
represents a little more than I
million U.S. television house-

holds.

CBS . . . - in 1999 to
..... dle . . . lbrdleduee-rt ....
• "' paying
16 'ii'O. b • U-,ar conu.ct. A . h ..... el'ect in
2.003, Tlee da1 -shiY
thi "n die Ml-k\ per-')'l:ar

..Ace
, a. 5 1

10

CBS. 42 mil-

lioe ' ' Jl .....: iD fOr at
·
vi Monday'!
paw. And dlt uP ult drew
U .pera• ,...,r _ratings
am . . . 11-49 than did
che 21100 ch• •liotllhip game
betwwn Michipri State and
Aarilla.

last ria

I

SUN'SAND'SURF, White IIndy

!!Ill I

s suuua

beaches, fabulous sunaetal De·

Jug rooms!kllchenttltl I bllco·
nile ovorloOI&lt;Ing thl guH of Mallco. Island I An Beach . Resort,
Treasure Island, FLA.' 800·2"·
9980 ·www.lslandlnnreaorl.com.

Noar St. -~~~-

Watarllne SPICIII: 314 200 PS'I,
$21.95 Ptr 100; 1' 200 PSI
$37.00 Ptr tOO: All Brill Com.,......, Flltfnga In Stoclr
liON IVANl INTIRPIIIIEI'
- · 01110. 1-800-1137-9528
Wooden· Tobit With Bonchel
And Chllrl SUO; Bawtng MaChine In A Coblnot $50; Bat 01
Chlldrona. Croll Enctctopadlt
$100; Brond NtW KIIDy, NIYir
Uald $1100, 1M2 8ulitlru 1500;
(740)111 4. .

15150 .

All

1yp11 ol

ur - . . . .

C&amp;C Oontrol HolM ttnonct· Pointing, vfllrllfdlttt.
ctrpo;;IIJ. - . illr d - ....,

- . . . """"lnd-.. .
-

..-

1323.

..... Cflll. 7. . . . .

BuHdlng
Are

Dei.Ona't Grocm Bhop, GroominG
Aft Dog IIIICII, 7-t·ttoll.
llaglolarod Whllt Pomaronlan
Malt, Nautorad, All Sholl.
HOUIIbiO~Ift 1200 , (740)3712140

,.

.

'
UKC Black tnd ton, Ftmtlt, 5
monlhl ottl, Good ~ lint. PKC
Mlltblelteo. (740)3811-8293

Prulll 1

;.cu....

. , _1116117
.
liuiiWWl•eiD 11M !If
'WD&amp;Jid JIOU . . . . -~

1197 Oldt Achlovo, 81 ,000 mlloo,
15100, Bluo Book Vtlut ..17800,
(740l44e-2e24

l -~·n~d~d~riY~.n~E~~H:'"':"':":'~·"

95 Chovy 4xl e-Ft Bad. PSIPS/
A/C. Cullom lnt-rtor/ Paint.
117,000. 89 Chivy Cavallor,
Good Condition . Good Starter Ctr
For Tllno. $1 ,000 (304)875·4210
(304)875-2285
88 Chovy Cavaltar. 2 door, Au·
tomallc/Ovtrdrlvt, Power Locka
lftd mirrors, till, CIUIII , IPOIItr,
Aluminum whe'lll. lln1ed· gl111,

810 P1rm Equipment
Cultl· Gotor Htrrow, 12h, Stoo:
JD Wheel Disk, 10ft 1800; NH
478 HayDtno, 8ft t3500; NH Hey
llaka. 251. $1200; Sporty· ·NH
~. 151, t4ft,lt200; Ktaton
Sl ..p Wagon w/ Avco· Nl Gear
St200 (304)578·9009
•

Cheyonnt Rod , U ,800 mtlat,
$1000 OBO (710)2118-1011

_... '

.

19 Orond Am OT, - · tidy Cllfo
von, qno ownor. 11,000 mltaa.
loaded, ••canent oonattloft. Ill
tor poyofl. Cafll~ll2 ' W llltr
• :OO!Im -kdlyt, onyttmt ktndl Strf0141nquir111 orliy.

No piOIIIMn... ,au . . J!IIIWIIOWI . . t11tl4tor.

· CALL ·

790
88 I Ton Dodgo With Ullllly Bad
And Rockl, 380 Automatic With
Mlt~hlng Utility Slyla li'tlltr. All
Doors 6 .Locka War~ On The
Truck And Trailer, $3000.
(740)441- 9319
89 Rd Ford Bronco II , E•cellont
Condition, Ctll For More lniOrmo·
lion (140)387· 7872 .
'

no

Vant &amp; 4-WDI

1979 Qodgo Vtn Wllh Hydrtullc
Whootchalr Lift, 318, V-8 Englnl',
Geed Condition, 13.000 OBO
(304)875-2231
71 Fonl 414, SUIPinofan Lift. Ntw
WhHII, To Mony Now Plrll To
11~ Cal (740)245-40fll
Aitro 1114 ConvoriiOft Yan,
L - . t10,000 111111. 1 OMtar,
. . . To .... (101)171-1110 . .
174

740

II? a;! I

aao ••••
..... ru.
(740)11.
• ..... . .

)

1·888-974-JOBS
TOOAVI

Campa,. &amp;
Motor Home•

1991 Coleman Pop-up, AIC, Bike
Rack , mini Condition, $2900
(740)245r5978
Palomino Tent Camper, AJC, Ae·
lrlgerator. Stove, Sink, Pori Ponte,
Ou11n Bad, Sleeps 6, EMctUent

Condition, $3000 (3041576·2933

111

churchll, .f.am·lly,
frltndl, nalghbOra .for
vltltt, pr1yero,
01rde, flowera,
IIIIIIIOrllll

17111111'11

..•

Pleasant Valley Hoapital

C1rd of The¥•

'The' Nod "J"
family th

..,

clurlnt

llln111 · and

1........ -..,,.,..

..... .., ""

Plusant Vll!ey Prlv•te Duty ....
immediate opealnp for pel'IODII cere
aldetlnunlna Ullstantlhl ..
G.W., Metp'u cl Muon eou.Ue..
Exc:elleDt pi)' ud tiexlble Khedullna.
For 1110re Information contlct .n• Wooten
1t (304) 675-7400 or 1·800-746·0076 or
·
1pply In penon at
1011 VIand St. Pt. Pleasant, WV 25550
AAIEOE
. •'

J,

'
•

17
'WDuld you . . . . . . . .
' rnpeotlllllyau IIIIIFM't
'Ate~ looldng far liP,... .. Ill
when alhlr pliO II 1111?
Don, fit ..... you . . Jiow7

t885 Ford Tturua BHO , grion
with .groy lootflar lntarlor, powtr
sunroof, 5 IPitd, ornllrn/CD, atr,
13100. 741).949-2944.

Pa~oll

fi\llf11 O•lll'l' lll ,
1'. II VI', HICK

fll lllln~IIIJ .. I

1885 Chrysler Sobrlng , Solow
Book. (740~2t09

till Tcrch Aad Fl,.blrd, 43,000
mllll, All
. T·tOP.• Owned

DELICIOUS IDAHO ORGANIC
YELLOW POTATOES. Btkora
ind 8111me11 IVIIIIbll. 142.00
par 40 lb. bo• pluo thlpplng. To
order Cell' toll trot 1•111•125·
5030 or http/lwww.kolllymtorgin·
ltforml.com

II I I Ill. 7

Do'=yeu . . . .

1114 Corsica, 'Loldtd. Ukt Now,
•ut5, 1194 &amp; t813 Orond Am.
a 'ul 'ltoaded Pelllneu, Malt· V·l, 13.885, 1198 Asngar, 10K,
All Whllo, 'l'tlnlll, lrown With $3,785, 1894 9·10. $3,485, OlhaiiCii Milk. tmo. Old, E•-n• . era In Stock, Trade ·lna 4ccJptWith Children. To Good Homa, od, COOK IIOTOIII (740)445·
175.00 IIOh Or 1120 Both Ot03
.. \1
(101)17HI88
1114 Dcdgt Shadow. GoOd Con•
3,.,..., pUflplll, IIIII lhotl dltton, 115,ooo mtlos, 1aeoo,
and wormed, 0111 740·742·1103 Smith Eltctrlc Oulttr, 11000. coli
-lpm.
11&amp;\0"1 (301)817rQI78

rl)

=...

!RAM OPPQRWNI'I'l'!

llloclt, llrlak. plpaa, windilftlllt. 11C. ~Win-;
RIO Oroftdl, OH Call 740-148·
ltlt.

1180

m

~Fr.. '""""'H· . . . . . 81 •tulllld

SuppiiM

_vqet~bl••

=

,

*'·

Downtown Second Avenue Nur

.

. I

Hoppta
' . .April
_ dllut
""
1111,
Frfdltr
13, -2001, 7:30
pm ohlrp. Foyeno County Folr·
. , _ , 8tlllng 200 Hlld, Jtno
Fob. BliiQWI ind Ollto. Top Ton
Pigs in OIIMI COunty Every
Frod HoPIIII i 740)336-7314,
Fnnr Luoot (137)1111-2:1111

DWI, Anchara, Water H1111r1 ,

Courthouoe And City .Building.
~k:lly,~afli!, ~ .. .~ R-•
Sulltl'! By IIIIH. 441 2ftd lwt.
(140)1411 lle39

-·110M-

,.

Canlllld
-·
IIMtlr
""' plr:liup,
171.00Eacll.
Col
(31M)81N571

----)lip,

For Sale: 10.152 Acre• on

*" ._.,

-

Coody,

-·

t~~~~-~~~ta:ctc:t:op:_R:o:l~d,
·37·tl2 .A crtl Of Bottom Lond.
$55,000· Sondhlll Rood· ·RIIflor

Folr Plgt. 1om In -

Plumbing &amp; Eltctllcll Plllo, Fur• Clood Ill... Hay For Batt. Dollno Jlckton Form 1304)175-1743
Weal 2 Bedroom Townhouse nac11 &amp; Heat Pumps. Blnnena
Apartments. Includes Woter Mobllo Home Supply, 740· 441· ' (7.00)441-1104
8owogt, Troah, 1350/Mo., 741). M18www.orvb.comlblrlnln
Hay For Sale, S1 0 Round Soft,
4410001
NEW ANO UIEO ITEEL Stttl $1 .25 Square Bolt. Strlngi 1ft
Ona bedroom ~~ter~rttom . $225 Balml, P/pt lllblr For Concroll. Good~ (740)446-elfll
month plua uttllllta &amp; dopoatt, Anglo, Chonntl, Flat Bar, Staol
Third 8tr111. Racine, 740-247· Grotlng For Drtlno, Drlvewoya &amp; Hay For Salt, 45 Round Btflo,
And 250 Squore Boles. can
Wolkwtyl. L&amp;L Scrap Metalo (740)448-G115 or (740)448(740)441-7300
7143 Alii&lt; 8:00pm.
Rlvtr Band Ploc:o AcOipllng
Applic:lltont tor I Blclroom Hud NEW BRAND NAME COMPUT·
, _ . bttlto. good ...... hll&lt;• .,
Subtlclld ApaAmtlll lor Elclorlr
ER8- - · a..ryono opprovoil ...... """' In blm . . _ Filii.
and Disabled, EOH, (304)612· with
10 clown! Low. monlfltr PlY· nulbt.-.1. 740-8112·7281.
3121 Of ~)8112-3274
-1-.17-3171-330.
Tara Townhouse Aptrtmtntt. Nlal
u.Od ~ Cal Hoy &amp; Bright Wtra Jlt - · 'IMr
· Very Spacious, 2 Badrooma, 2 Anytime, 1740)448-t004 Or 'Roul)d DoiiYory I Volumo Olo·
count AYIIItbllr. Horllago Form.
.Floors, CA. t t/2 flatl;, Fuly Car· (140)41&amp;--6275
(aG4)871-5724.
poled, Adult PoOl 6 Btby Pool,
Patio, Start $385/Mo. No Polo, Ohla Vlllty Mlmory .- .
Lease Plus s.a,ny Oepoan Ill-. 2 Orovo Loll, In Clardono 01
qutrtd, Dayo: 740·448· 3481; Chrlalos. 2 8urlal Voulta· Call Tob-o Plonta For Solo. Coli
Evenings: 740·387.0502, 740· ~.(740)888 85081lonnl
(7411)441-:7813
446-0101.
Organ, air conditioner. prom Tobocco Plofttl· Ordar Now To
Ellljl Sl&gt;llng Plarllrlfll.
lWtn Rlver'l'owra now • 2U9
- · cofiM moltor, toullr &amp; lncroaoe Alotrnontl Moan 111111
ll)flll&lt;lltor•lor'l SA.
--.740-742-2392.
Pllnll. Thllllk 'lllu For 'll:lUr - .
neaa.
P•ll Oan.ny Oewhurtt·
HUD
· - -opl.lar_,.
and dilllllld.
EOH. (301)875Loa.. M111age (304)185·3740
8178.
'
80%081 Of (304)1115-3788
12 Sur
460 Space for Ren7
TH ANSf'O Hl AT I Or&lt;

=

'

Hugolrowntory, Dllcounl Ptletl,
On Vinyl SklrUng, Dooro, Wlftd.

Now Toklng Appllcotlcna- .35

l

..........

......... ow...

me

Fatr Dllt 11tdy to go; _ , .
~:· 740411-201701

1140

North Third. Mltldllp011· 2 room
on~c~~ncy, .. ..,.... dlpotn &amp; ,.,.
. -.740 IIIQ Otfll.

....--.

...... cr101• ""

no pall, tlapOIIt 1 ..,_

Nk:l1a2bldroom--ill.
equipped kltchlftt. AIC, illllllll
Included, ......,.. aftd tlopollt
roqiiiiiCI. Pilant 7 - - 1 ,.
.l!prn.

Coi111Jd.-if7~7.

a e...

.. 1 ; 11tdli1l l ...biMII Dlltrblkw,
Col ""' Ptoduct·Of Opportunity.
(140)141- 1112

--.740811!0115.

lngl

or

1200 Lbl, Cummings Angut
F11ma. Bolllhlidl wv (304)17118241

NIW HIVIft, One bldi'OOIII lUI•
nlahld oportmenl, hot wuhor

1/2 Balli Homo WKh Ook Trim,
And K -. Hal A 1.11a1
Ooragt Aftd Barn Willi 40+ Tilf..
tbll ACIII. E•collont Location
Noar Ala Grandt. Alklng
$128,800. (740)310-oGut e-.

ao

ond 2.-

~ M Vllllgo - l l l c l

I

Start Your Buolheaa Today... 320 Mobile Home•
360 R..IIEitlte
Primo Shopping Ctftttr Space
for Slle
• Available At Affordable Rate .
E•PII'Itllcfd"«lii•Ntr (304)185·
1-t00-21~!12.
Wlllted
Yallo'f 'PIIZI. CaH 741)c141. I 2150 MoDtlo Homo. Now Kitch3103 ~. ·rz. __.:.Ato::!:fi90.05-::::::;;:::..::'Z1;:;48:::;,._ _ Sl&gt;llnll
010t .
en, New Bathroom. New Floors, Real 111111 n n - l'om.lorctd
EIPI•Itncod. ''i"fuc~ · Macllonlc l50
$chOOII
out ol my hoUH for highwl~ ill)·
WORK FROM HOME ... EARN 16:c8 COvered Porch, Ce,l)tral Air, provemont. Looking lOr old farm
NHdtd, 40t K R•tlromont, -~
$5,000
(740)441-9319
.
$1500 PI'T mil $!000 FIT·monlflttl
ctl, Dental a Vision tnourond.
1n1tructlon,
house In Malga County with
CALL TOOAY f.801l-885-o319 or I4X70 Bayview, New Since 97, Cl acraogo, coH .740-787·8303, 740Vacation Pev Baaact On ExperlOllCI. ca1 (740)2141-14113
5·STAR
PROFESSIONAL www.-tromhoml247.oom
A, W8ter·Haather, Furnace. Price 992-9132.
TRUCK DRIVING SCHOOL now WOIIK FIIOII HOIIE ... Earn lncludea Stove, Refrigerator,
Government Jollie $11.00- olftrl a t4 day COL TRAININCl
flENlAL ~,
133.00 per hour potentltl .. Ptld . PROGRAM . lmmtdlate Open· $500·$7000/month PTIFT. Full Porch, Shtd a Wooden' Fonoo,
Training/Full Bontllto. For mort ings. $38,000+ 1st year. Non e •• Training. Free Information. Call 17200 Call (304)875-3008 Balora
3pm
lnlormatton calf can 1-888·874· perltnced: 1·800·441•8881. E•· Nowlt·I00-210-8914
41Ci Hou. . for Rent
81!50 111. 3234
t4x70 Southern Dream, fi'H D•
parlonced wiCOL t-800·858· www.att.llnufttl'elf.cam
!Ivory
free
Setup
ontr
$9895
1·
23e3.
t ·3 Bedroomo · Foroctotod
GROWING BUSINESS NEEDS
230 Profeulonll
HELP! Work from homo! Mal-or· B~ACKSTONE
-From
1 1 - . 4"' .Down.
PARALEGAL
Servlcn .
VItro If 1.8"' APR. For Lilt·
a.r/E·Commorco. S m • - PT STUDIES. Home Study. Ap·
1971 Schult For . Sate, .N.,. 30
$t000·$40001w~ FT. 800·82t·
proved, ANordaDio, COiflllrthtn· $ FR~E CASH NOW$ from Furnoct l lnautotlon. $3,000 lnga, 8D0-3tf.3323 Ell. 1709.
H39 ...... lflllr!l2blllt.com
slve, legal training since 1880. -lthy flmllfll un-.g mililani (740)317- 7052- 4pin
t. llttlloom, $200imo plwlllpoofl
of dallara, 10 flllp minimize their
andu-.~......_,
Hllp Wlntodln ICiuft (IIOUp homo, FREE Catalog : 100·828·8221.
tans. Wrlto Immediately: WINO. . 1880 14170 3 Bedroom . H/2 . In "" Cky ol Gtolipollo, (740)216dey lllcl night shUt, coli 740-192· - : P.O. 119&gt;&lt; 701449, 01111. TX
FALLS. 3010 WILSHIRE BLVD. 8111\, $8000 (304)578-2818
75370
NA
or
http://www.lllaaklto51123.
lfllt
'
11141, LOS IINOELES, CALIFOR·
f\Oiaw.com.
1115 14170 With I hi E•poftdo, 2 Badrom HOUH, 15 Milt South
NIAIOOJO
3 Sodroom, Contrtl Air, Mull So ,On 7, EYintnga Allor 7pm, Dt·
EARN 'fOUR COLLEGE DEGREE
- . (740)381 8002
QUICKLY, Bacholort, Mtlftrl, II NEED A LOAN?
POll! I Roftronctl, (740)441-ny Otbt Conoolldtllonl
Doctorate , by eorr11ponctence
1917
1989
Sunlhtno
'll'olltr,
14178,
3
Cut Pormtnfs Up To 80%..
•·
based upon prior education and
Badroomo, 2 Baths, Heat Pulflll, 2 8adroorn ~ tn Eu..u FoiSlmo Dey Approve~~
Jtwlty Banchllllft· Rtptlr, Sir· short otudy couroe. For FREE In·
Nfw Carptt In Living Room a
t·m·7111Htfll.
lng, ..... Sotlng 01 Fllto . - . ,. formation boo~lat phona CAM·
1300 Por Month, 1300 0.
Khchon, Calfltdrll Cttlloga, COli• Ront.
BRIDGE
STATE
UNIVERSITY
I·
pollt, No I'W, Call Aftll' 5:00 pm
Futl·t- tmmodtato Opening.
$$$ NEED CASH?? we PI~ orld Porch, Alroody Stt Up On (740)311 21!eo
'
Apply At AcqultldOnl, Flnt lfOO.fl84.8318.
cuh for remaining p.,.,..nta on Rontod Lot, Con Be Moved.
Ill ltcond Avonu•,
~)87s-nee
Proporty Sold! . . . . _ , Annul·3 SA, 2 Iiiii homo lor 11001
tllll Sttllemtntaf · fmmadlate
mo. lllcl 3 SA, 1 - homo1982
14110,
3
811.
2
Bath,
u
a..-111 "Nobtxxy • • 0111 prfc.
far 15501 mo. CloH·Ia - · All·
L.I.W.. ieN, · o r - td11. • Nottonol Contrtct Buytre ACIOI 01 Llftd. Pond, Barn, Ana 111nooa
-and dtpoalt required.
--31flcMnpor""""
Glllgo.l43,000 (740)441-4302
(100)
480-0781
1111.
101
....
·
Wiseman Roof Eatatt, tnc.
l a r - - * Y b l l l d - - High lcllool
If Noino. tlol-.,_..oom
(740)118 3114
..., fiiOIIIIII'· Must how ·~
Utlld
l'riYite Schocf. - · CASH LOANS 12000·$5000. 1193, 3 Bedroom, 2 Solfl, 14170
WOIIttng wKh If llok IeOni 81oft
Unique, Feet Progrtni, FIIIUII•
Four Houoe, 52 011..
Proof, Lowest Tuldon, Collage Canso!- to 1200.GOO. Bid/ -~~ Homo, On Ronfld Lot on Blrlll. phono (140)111 3115
ond
lllo Bind
AI~ tINI ..... hOurS.
~·
Boftdhlll
Rd.,
DOll
Not
Nold
'l'lo
Crtdlt.
Clldii•CIIdl,
MOrt•
Gulli-. Call Flit Howl l'rH
112--gogao. For Information: 1·100· Movod, Now CorPit. . Notitr Oolllpolta, 750 3rd AYI., Sl80
. UOOIIBI3if7.
Drl... Pomoroy, Ohio 45718. by Bmolctd In 1•1 Born Building Month, t Ill, I Bath, Prame
331-7812.3llll
April 10, 200t . Equti .Opportunlty
o-.
Porclloa, Wolf Moln· ~. OIIHtat.Nol"ttta.W..
180 Wanted To Do
........,~
CONIOLIDATI YOUII WAY tllnld -lllcl out, (304)175- _....,(7~14
OP DIITl ...... 1tt01111t1y 7311 lloftdlr· Friday, 1:30 to
Maturo DIDYIIKII wamld In my 168 Counttrucllan, llooflng, OUT
poymonto. ,., one Dlllllllonth. 5:00, (740)115·1144 Allor 5:00 o.~~po~~o, 751 3111 - - . . aoo
Siding &amp; Concrolt. lntorfor I
homo, - · two~- 5
and ..,• •
,.,..., ,33 COOin,tllllh,,....
6 1. Soma houaokaeplng end E•ttrlor Pointing. All Phi- 01 EASY to gil lflrted. Flnanclol
Homo
Repairs
For
A
Frao
Froodom
Christian
Counotllng,
NouN, 011 Hall. No ...... w..
COOking, 740-Mf.24M .
Eltlmtte. Call (304)875·7731 800·14f.8757,
Ill.
CC'3 1,M 7 Asd:acid Halnl. 2 lldroom. - . , . . , . . (740)4414111
I IIIII 14170, Groat Corltlllloft.
www.-.arv (Non-,..).
Nudtd Elparltncod Crew for Afttr 5 pm.
. Cal ~)175-ato,., lpm
'
'1101 Program lltttlirt NHdld.
Sanlng t~d Flnllhlng Soctlonal
Oavlct'a
General
Contractors
..
CREDIT
'AOILEM8?
CALL
THE
(301)731-71118
•
Housing. lind Pricing lnfarmotlon
2,
3,
I,
5
bldro6m~
poymontt
and txperlanc:t to: Southern Plumbing, Electric , Ptlntlng CREDIT EXPERTS. LICENSIEDI onlltoomo, .7 40410-tiZI. · PIIOI l'rogrom, llonflra Nootltd,
Hcmta, PO So• 829, Jtckaon , Dtckl, MIIC. Work, All Homt Ro· BONOED CORRECT/RE!IIOVE
:101-731-'11118.
polro , ~awn Ctrt. Ctll (740)2fllBAD
CREDIT,
SANKRUPTCY,
OH48140
MUll loll- lrlftd 8373 Or Coli Phono 1·304·833· LAWSUITS, JUOGMENTS. ~AA ADIOIUIIIY
3 BRI 2 atth Doubllwtdt With
.
RATING. 1-181-811-0902,
Mobile
OTA diiYer OHCIItl lor owner op- 8215
Dotlvtry. Btt·up, A1C I Skilling
for Rent
llllor, 110 HIIOOII~ homt • • Dopondtbla Man will mow ond
From
$2171
Monlfl
Only
e
Ook·
''eo ·
kondt, tome through the waok. trll1l lawn. Frto Eatlmatu Dtvorot
woctl- Gd._,oll (140)US.I!III
Bankruptcy
$185
14110, I ~. CIA, Allltcno orientation. Appty today, ttart
Adoption 1225
Country Living. Doubltwldo On J IIIC, ·WI1l, On Ill, NO 1'111, .......
tomorJow. Cal 7404el2·1!$14, Nno (304)875-2101
Not do·k·youlll!f-kltl
·
.,..., tiM "IIIIQI
.
Wooded Acrn $2500 ·a M-· lnGI
Ewperlenceel ltl!mst(aaa can
.
.·
t044 1100 DtPOitt (740)251·
CALL 1-800·283·0503 for FREE ln.
(740)446-3170
do- window treatmlntt, aome lntormttlan. Bankruptcy nit In TN/
Own A Compulo(l
bidding, ptllowo, btdlklrtt, a tl· KY '
,
2 bedroom mobllo hOmo tor ront, ·
Put "To Workl
flrallon
on moot tttma, cttl Btncty
no Pill. 74Hfl.11181. ·
128- 17U.r. PTIFT
Frto Money Nowl 11'1 Trutl No
740·192·3220.
t -881-81111-4325
r1payment. Gu1r1niHd. For par.._.
'llllllr 'for lllnt
www.l&gt;hapl.oom
ooar&amp;u Portable l!owmllt, don't oontl n.aeds. taucanon, bust·
lolow Gall~ Loatca On IIIII
houl your toga 10 thl mill just cal nooa. t •I00-724-e017 (24)
lloufl7110uih. (740)44HIIt.l
Foclory Gaol 3.2180 110,GOO Oil·
Now 304·875·t957.
.
train~
count
ontr
11000.00
Down,
Dt·
NEED AN EARLY PAYDAY?? Up
Ont I two bldroom, $245·1880
dty~
Olvo pltno losaont at home. Ia· to 1500 Instantly by pncntt 1. llvtry, tnd Ntup poid by Foctory PI' month, walar 1 garbage In·
t·f100-611t-e7n
glnntll • adults: 1110 .filch 877-EARLYPAY. Ucf 75G005, 111
clt*d, 710-8H·It17.
chord)ng
I tranapotlng .&amp; ~DVANCJ FREEl
POITAL JOlt 148.500/Yrl Now rhl'fhn11: 740.192·1!403.
FACTORY OVERSTOCKII .Nolll Small 2 Bldroom 'll'lltar In "nllltr
Hl~ng . No EIPI~tnco. Ptld natnNo FIIIIBIIVIOI Chlrgot
Doubtt Wldl Only $1.510 .00
,Irk, RtlertftCI I DIIIOtlt
lngiGraat Bonollta. Call t · BOO· Hardworking, Rallablo Drug Froo 1n NHd·ol Flnancllt Allllllnco?
Down And $318.00 Par Month . Rtquflld, (740)441-1101
•
218·t87t 111.731 .
28 VIII Old Matt With C'IIIIA Pluto Call U1 Toll Froo 1·188· Flit Dtllvtry
And
Bttup
Foclory &amp;Woronouoe El: 513-1181 24hr
t•ll88-828-342'e
440 APirtnlenta
POSTAL JOBS to 11 U51hr· CDL'I,
Ptrltnco Looldng For A Fulf.tlmo
WILOLlFE JOBS to $2U01hr In· Long·tarm
for Rent
'I'UIINID IIQWN ON·
Final Deys. Nttlonwldt lrwontory
Job . Coli Aatm At
cludol B•ntllto. No E•porltnce (304)etS·3417
SOCIAL IICUIIITY~ A?
AldUCIIOnl (304)736-3409
•
t ond a -.om IPtllmlml fur·
Ntcuoary. For Appllctdon end
No FH Unllu We Wlnl
Elam Info, call t · 800·992·7054 · Lown Mower Ana Smtll Engine ·
Land homl p~tekigaa, no money nlthtd tnd u~furnlollld, ...Urn,
f·BII-N2·334a ··.
dopotlt raqulrad, no ptto 740·
1201 M·f 1:30-S:GOpm
Jloptlr; frH Plcll;up And Dlllv·
doWn. 740-310-9423. '
192·2218.
•
·try
Within
1
o
Mllto.
2t
nara
HI
i\1
I
:,f
J\11
·Still PotltlonFuii·Timt, Ewparlancl . Call Mike At
Llmttod Or No Crodtt? Clovarnt Bedroom Aptttmont, ~~o~r~go 11 •
Llfo.l fylt Furnlturo, No Phone
mtnl Btnk Finance Only At Oak·
'.
Calla, Apply In Por1on. see (740)446-7804
wood In Boroouravllll , WV 304· tor. Aango, AIC lftcludod, tnt
Third A.-nuo, OIHipolli, OhiO.
:!':..:f.otll 6 ll•ltronco . HUD
Homn for Slle
Mobile Home Painting. D11count 31
731-3409.
(740)141-1511
Ia
Sonloro
.
Colt
(740)441-1543
.
Somoont lo mow lawn with your tor Fro Esttrnall
Lot model cturance, sova up to
3
Bldloom·
1
Bltn,
Newly
RtmOequlpmont. (140)245-8393
.dlted, Hlghwor 12· 3 Milts Put $1,125 with ony home, chactc Ul Fer rant· ono bldtoom hrrniMount's
11'11
Barvlca
'TM
TrH
wert ~llllog. C:olt't Mobllt IPirlmont In Midd!IPort, coli 140lomoonl To War~ AI Car Lot, Proltulona" • Buokot Truck Laon 138.000 Rttltor (304)571· cut
192·11231.
.
us eo. E••· Alfie,, On.
Hamil,
.
.
'
OIIIIPOIII !, l\llddltpOrt Alii , Sorvlco· Top· 'll'lm· Romovtt· 3058
tcowwlt.,t ur Auto llot*'l Sol- Stump Ortftdlng. , _ IIUmllll,
MUST SELL! 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath
B
·
·
3111· a&amp;tttn On 5 Home. No Old ConfliCt To AI· t adroom Apt CIOIO to Wtl•
Ing. RIIIIDII I Hontll. l"ttrl·llmo Fully lntured. Wororo Camp. ltautlhrl
Reduced
For
Quick
Salo
375
sumo. Jult A Rtlloblt Porty To Mort. '
-Pir month. All utllhloa
Of ,..1. (740,....172
llldwtl. 0»1. Call
t-100- It ti,GOO Btnclhlll ~Old. 1 1 1740)24&amp;-855&amp;
Moka
Monthly
Payment
t
·Ill·
lncloDd.
Owntr: po4)17W1111
_8211
__818:-5:-·~-·=~:----:- I t Bldloom "J&gt;trtmtnt Fot lltnl In
7
RIO Orondl. Wal~lng Dtallntit To
lr1Dk
·
3 ltd 00111· 2 ..... :-:
II I II d ... 8111 $81,GOO- Olfl. Now t4 It wlda 1481. down only Collage. All Ulllltltl Ptld . tO%
WIH la.,alt Ill _, ......
pollt l'elry, lllaltor. (104)578· lUi. par man . coli now •·800· Dlocounl On Ftrtt Montha lltnt
ltt-e.m .
(740)24Htoo

.

Comt:utlq: WE FINAHCE OEi.L
COMrUTEIIII E..n Willi IIH
tnon Plrtocl crldHI 1·100-417·
1011. Coda ACI4 - ·tlan.oom
I!ZPEIM.COM. 1M up 10on ALL Pt1 r; II " •• ond pllll. lnctudlna IIMrt(llrd, lnlll·
coptor, Frontlfno, morotll FREE
Ill liPPING. Ol'dlr onlnl-.11·
..... , """'1- 114 14117

1ft~. Equal

Etcllrly Aftd Hot dl

Folr Plgllar Salt. Bam In County. (7401441(1411)o141412

•·-,._- 1141 '

~==..:~ ~

DAYTONA BEACH, Aa.
-:- NASCAR might
coavinced Dale Earnlwdtls widoW to haw the raeing scar's autopSy pbotoa sealed
to protect itself against a
wrongful dea~ lawsuit, an
attorney for a newspaper -kins access to
imaJes auggated Tuesday.
Aupmey Tom Julin, In a
memonndum 6Ped in Volusia
County ·CiiCUit Court, also
upCd that legislation pUted
last 'ii!eek .;estricting public
acc:• to ~ autopsy photos is
unhmstjr:utional and can't be
applied ~troactively to the

C.......... Dr... Club Pig Slfl,
Fayette
Co.
Foi. .OUOCII,
Wolilllnglon Coun houM Frld tr
April 1111 AI 7pm. 110.- 0 1
And Glllo, For Moll lnlo,
Cal""*- {740)91W!115

Brand &amp;cny PiiYifltlan 2.
1100010. ... ,.-....._ 1

7

Lhlwklcll

....
And - For Cia
lng Hoga
8111.Pigo,
lily,- ......·
- - - (740,.._

1-t00-oii1-EILCMI7

Furnished 2 l 3. Room APIII·
Ckoon. No ...... No 8molltng, llelt11nca• 6 DlpooH flo.
qulrod. Utllltlll Furnished.
(!40)448-tS.I t
01111..._ , •··rtmonto, NOll
...,..,

Flu 1 ccn11110. a 1111'1! Dill

ontr $119.118,., .tloiiiL7408111 .131l'.

- ·-Our

830

~Cilw(I,JIIptl
"-Collar t.-.,

-1run11 .
- ..· ctar--c.t
..o l dllnow.

-141001·177·n7·
.......00
3 Badrooma IIIIi.
4110

-

MEDICAL BILLING !.lfllmittd In·
come potentltl. No up,rltnca
neco111ry. Fru lnlormatton &amp;
CO.ROM. l....lmtm 1!0rn $2495:
Financing available. (100) :122·
1139, .

Otocountii/Ptrkl. Etrn Big US .
Nomlnol Sllrfl41 Colli 1-111-619·
OIIOt or www.EarnBuckaFrom-

740-tf~M117.

~

Car. ~~)l71-0131

-.sno.

par-.

Pte-·
man. ... -

IF YOU MUST WORK, WORK
AT HOME! Build your own IUC•
CIIIIUI bualntll. MIII·Oidtr/E·
Commorct 11000·$7000 PT/FT.
Fro lniOrmotfon. www.Foc1110n·
.Fr-.comi00-731-2331.

~.com

•

Ntw 1001
3 llr. , 2
-... Homl
· . . up
In
Till
Courllry .....
-.,...,to - l i t ,
SttB.M
New dOUDII wtil. S br. I Dl. ·
$811.00 dOwn OIIIY IJII. 1111

lli,. £111111, 3 Badrooma, 2 FuH
Bllhl. 2 C. Otroge
FORECLOSEO GOV'T HOMES!
IO OR LOW DOWN I . TAX
REPO'S .&amp; BANKRUPTCIES! OK
CREO!Tr FOR LISTING! CALL 1•
3
100-SOI·tm Ill 8Bt .
HOMES FROM $199.30/Mo. 1·
3BR Rtposl Follclosuroa, fee,
4% down. For LlltingoiPaymtnt
Ottals.t·I00-7t9-300t i 1185

Toll 11111-877~ ;

1·

to . . . . ...., .........
$ ' I fJI cllaitmlnlllaft

Fin-

7 llilllont. loblil' ......... ""'*'G
- . ...... IIIOOIIWI or liP'
. .. ... ..,..., 740-317-11112.

coli -

F...-.

Mllllll_.......,.ln
loUjtotto
tJI1 _ _ _ .......

A VENOINO OOLOMINE·ACT
NOWIIItcblftll ..ftd Htrlhty
.::~:-e:nd•a•,.ua..,
coftdy AND phone Clrdt. (U&amp;I
.,.. , le ..,., ......
milt. U.S.) Elm $1001/WUj. Work
_...__
H lin/Wk. Orut -~ 100- . ,_ _
.......
____,_ _ _•
15t-1775. fiW, rtq.
I·
..__~lar-

.

-..m.

""" $27G. ... -

No-.'Will _ _ _ _ _

-• r- . _._lll?to ...

o.-

Oa- IIIII. a. .... I..._
7th And 8th, 71 • - llold,
Otllipolltt

Sead resume 10:

........ v.o.,

hMith ~ . .
. TlleM PDIIIIona

In your 1111. Coli for rnor. lntor•
matlon . t · IOO-ROMANCE, 011.
1738.

40

ror.u11oon

· - . 401(10
......... plln

-tlons.

TONIGHT!

:004:00.

Lie. Pa wt":e' Nane'•

nrtoUe nan pn&gt;nt

H.,.. fun IIIHtlng ellgllllo lfngltt

~u.....,.

ICCU

....... vlllon

Pel'loniM

Aftd IIV'I . ConiiCI Ron AI
(7'01448-CJI51 ot 33t-0150. II

210 - Bu*Opportunlty

Pleaant V.Uey
Haepital

_,. . _.,..._..., __

w.- - . -

f ',/, ' ,( '·'

0

•Full-lhs• evtn!!'IO
lhlft • Exoellent .......
piCbge
It

180 w.nlld To Do

' " ' - Aprl 11, 2001.

8onueM

MIIJ''ltrJI'f r.11 rn,

..........

Applicallano . . pollllon "'
s.,riCUH.. Ractne Wille Wlllf
Trutmont pllftt or• baing ac·
ooptld. wllroqllirl Ob:
talnlng Ct111 11 Waate Wat•r
Traatm•nt Operalora LicenH.

thla
opportunity•••
~ Up to 17,.., +

.•

,

---11.- . _ Ton NI ~
,.,.. · I - - ar, 2 Ton Coil. 1 Lfftl 1101. tn·
~, 1215 + lll!oolfll• lllllld. 12.295, S I ,000 Bodl,
-(7~ .
llo4iilrtd. 11215
Nil - , . Cal ..... CC....On Ollar. · - - . - n A T If You 00n1 Coli Ill. WI
IU.lACK• ,.,_,.__,
I·? - · - - I -EUATII,
5••
1 " - ..,...._,
~ - 1 0 2111lflOP a Coli 740-441- 39 114' ·ond 314 ...,_...,.
25M.Eqoalaa-.Oppcl!bifty.
tng 111111. 1 tumtng-. wOod
Chrtatr'• FomtJy LIYtng, 33140
7-LJrnalld.,-.ONo.740- _ , _ . . . . .
742·7403.--- -lllcl ,..........,_, ......

•

-T..,. __,Or
I;OOpm

-.eae

....... CJMII75-IIIJ Otpolil

,

•

lloC..OIO .. "' ~
._.,...,
far lilillngL
· -·1777Ext..tl

----~
•~
~- . . _ -

•

•

.. DOMIHOIIES

Bl

AttonJeY ~~ NA5
covering.ils own backside

• - o a t - • 41, aa- - . 11.1, . _ llocf;,
C187)17~-

lllln:lwldlel

1- 1 , . , _ , 0..
111._ 6 _ , _ lrt-

•

Pamei'OJ, ~Ohio

;._~;,~,,;,~,=--===r..
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.
•

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tor Rant

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Ill

.- ·
Gol!l tGinl. 1'10011111.u.i
Dltoroondl.
CioN 1114tao. U.8. CurroMy,·

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I •.'

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110

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

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In flli:lno.S¥racuH
oru. Sind - - t o P.O. Bo1
215. . , . _, Ohio 4577f. ClotMUll -

Don'tmlas

Pleasant \\&amp;y Holpitll

c:urraedy .... opeaiD&amp;I
for: .....
R'lletendN~~~tfor

*lnaludll miiiDII,

005.

12,000 WIIKLYI 111111"1 UO
Drochurtal Satlallctlon Gollr•
lftflldl Pooflal ....... 1110Yidodl Ruoh Boii·Ailtl~lld
I ' - d en..topol otCO:•DUT
8, 801 t 131. ANTIOCH, TN.
37011·1431Stlrtliiii 1 $ '):

FREE SEARCH!

-.81NGL!S.oom .
IIOIIANCI
fOR
YOUIII
1·100·773·220 E,J&lt;ttnllon e741
12.89 Ptr Minute, Mull Bt tl
..... ~ (11.,111!1 1134
START

OATINO

1117 .II WEI!KLYI rroaooalng
HUOIFHA
NO
iiPtrllncallorlglgl
llaqullld.
ForFIIEE
lnlollllltlon Calll-..ol.eua

-1300.

30 AniiOUIIOIIMIIII

'"ACCEII TO A COIIPUTER?I'ul • 10 -·1251hr·l75/llr. "'
I'T. Filii lnlo. 100-871- . ..
101 . . ..- - . . . . . .

-To'bl Tlrfl ......

8-8lrnlon.7-11411
tllty clotlllng aftd houtlhofd
omo. $1.00 biG 11'- Mry
Mondlr lllnr ......,
.

A NEW CAREER, Eam 11011- l'aotll JoDI. Up to I 11.351
hour. Banaflta/Ptnaion. 1·111•
721o101311701

.

-----

ADIOIUIOI~ Frae Inial lntornat
U11,. Wontod. $2,000· 15,0001

OhiO
Biglool Con,.ronce,
Sllurdoy April 7tll Spm·tOtom,
Nowcomero Town lllddlt loflool
(177. 31 Erdt) , .
Adn , · M, lntD (740)411 1171

AI80WTILY FREE INFO
UIOII Wontocl.
I2000-teOCKI'mo

GIVMII.,.

-

Frtt to good home In country,
ana yeor old apoyed blactc lab
i

"""· "'-"" • ~ 740-M-

eo

.. .IIIDiz.MI

AN UNUSUAL OPPOIITUNITYtl
Work
from home wUh no bo111
VIlli -.dontworryborlch.nat
or

. 31t8.

CIIIOD-21J1.2801

"nompoilne, 'll'uctc T-1 .... A
Ford Rongtr, llk:rowa... Ping·
Pan~ Tobie Aftd A Den,
(740)251 1100

t.o.t a

...,.,.11'1'.-

AIIYONI CAN 00 ITI 12111711
11 1.-.
17-.ThlltllllgDaltrl DDill

Found

REWAfiO. L08T· -

AIIIIIBLY liT HOIIIII Crolla,
Toya, Jtwolry, Wood, Stwlftg,
~o..., Poyt CALL 1-100ElttaOt (:Min)
ATTENTION: If yoiJ to wortl,
Work from homo. 120 to sso hr.
PUFt. A'M OetaUI.
....tttiUCCOII.com

...... w1

shoulder llrap AI Cllnla
Thuroday, Morell attll. ~ AM
CUll, I JUII-1 Till c...Bocl! . .............. - . . . , . , . .
That Con't Bt AepiiCid
(304)57&amp;-D48 .

Loll: lllactc "'"'- Dobermlft, 11110 'Doable', 1W
ATTENTION: OWN A COMPUT·
Llll on Tllul Aold, Mldclt- EA? Mtll·order/E·Commerce.
port.-coi741H42-11111.
1522+/WHk PT. 11000·14.000/
- " FT. lui "nllnlng. flit Book·
Loet - - - dOO.., 1 let. www.cr11ttcream11 ft.com
(100) . , _
•Auolfft'. 1.111 -ft Tlhll lid., :::::..:.::.;:::;:....._...,._ _
Mlcldllflon. P1MM C111740-741- ATTENTION: WORK ' FROM
1332.
HOME moll ordor/E oommerco
lUll- 11.500·17 .aoo month
70
,lnfoflllllloft: 1·100-

lana.... .

•

•

pro- ur-. - •
v.d....
0

"'"
.
.
.
_..,...,.IOOIId

114474

PS;all

oom

All~

To lw ar Ill.
ll*tly ..... 1104471-fGI.

AIIOHI

. lVlclnlly
3 Famttr Yard II'- . . 4-H
201 ..1/ll - - "'lloar
Afie1, CMr 3,GOO 1ldtg C.W,
BIMDII I . , _ . , 1'0011,
c-. Fumlltn a A 1.11111n
ttomt. . . - a 11111111

CAIIIEII OI'I'OIITUNITYI Earn
_ . _ lftooOM. laay cllhlll
PNIIIII"f. Ptll hlnlng . ...._
PC reqtrlrld. Coli Phyalclln l
- - OtwiiOfiiMIIII lOll•

(740)1. 0118

,..Int.

Come Ont CON AI, loiMIIII'I
For
Low, LOW 1'11011,
Ono MHo , _ - l h iflill

e..,_,

On Stale lloute 110, lalti.Aprl7th, H

.

-~---~--CIIII
All CDL DrMrl. Good
401K,,

'lio 111-

ount-.
HolM •-no•. cau
(7.......1411

-

.

.... on Canler. Wist VI,......

Jo"-'1,.,., M• 11ot1t 1!
Thutldlr· lllfllllr. TrUitlltttl
From Colum'G •t, Tllpet, ....._

-....-.land .........

I

..-..-.,ea..

,._Cfl

••

lletlate(ld Hurtt UCtftll Ill·
......... llfnfrNim - - filii·
""" Or IQUIYIIent E•PirllnCt
Nllrtlng ...,.milan llequtrod.
~Pill. Wtll VIrginia Ll·
Tt
l'eloll PlotHIII Contor, Oontala
lldlt ea... ..... llouttt liN, flo.
1M I , lol ut, l'olnt Pl1111n1,
'11'111110 1101.

Drtvww: P.~.M . 'll'lnopon. No II·

• ' '1part
l Vlolufty

•'

...... Of ......... Inter-

Hugo- . . . . . . . . . .
3pM, Cloltlnl. I dip
()ur.
tllnl, Kftlctci118011, LIIIIIIOit,
20&amp; lroad ltrMI. C.•ulll,
WIICII""'IIgno.
1

llg ylrd ..... lift: llh. Ht40
BredDury lid. Old giiiiiiCCoy,
"-'iton. Cllblon . . . . loll ol
booka, canning jill, qui". roo·
much 10 lot. LGc* lor .....

*

Frldly &amp; So....,, II IIUIIIIId !'lit
· Sllllon. 3 flo-My,
Clarogo oolt· 4th, 51h, 8th, 314
milt on Now Ll. . lid., llutllnd.
Dolfi, Ellfll lttmt, Doya 11
monlhl 10 2T oftd ._. 740-741·
27t8.

lltlitnct nttdad , 2 waek. COL
trolntng . 134,000/yr. ~~~; pluo
'ull lanelltl I Ptld Trtlntng.
DrMKI bllld In Mftlwnf. 1-177·
110·1002. Sunday 81m·5pm.
Mort.·l'rl. 11m lpm.
IARN 125,000 TO 150,000/yr.
Mecl~nouranoo liNing. Nttd•
ICI I
IIIIIVI Homo Computll
N11d1d. FRE! lntarnat, t·IOO·

at-4113 Dept • toe

Ytrd and blkt · 1111, April 5·1,
8:00·? Lang Bon.om Community
Building.

Pt. Plelunt

Ho•pital

&amp; VIcinity

Pleuan~ Valley Hospital

3 FamMy 0111111 8111, 11m- 4Ptn,
Rhtercreat LIM, WMt Columbia,
April 5th I llh, Thuroday 1 Frl•
dty. Orgon To Otvuway, rrom
Qowna, Gullet, Stereo, ltwlng
Mtchlna. &lt;;lothtl, Avon Slit,
1.011 of Mloc.. Pl"m ole MW

80

.
•

Auction
and Flel Marlett

Rk:~

Purson Auollon Compony,
lull tlmt IUCIIOnltr, COiflllltll
auction urvlct. Llctnlld
tee,Ohlo &amp; Woll Vlrglnfl, 304·
n:l-5785 Clf 304-773-&amp;147.
Rlvtralde Auction

lt,n,

lilt

Evary Stturday Night 11 8p.m.,
Aucllonter Raymond Jal'lnaon
(740)2&amp;8-e919

'.
•

90

Wanted ·2 ·!50 10111 of land locll·
td In thl Meigs County artt, tm.
mod tatt POIIOIIIOn 740·849·
2644.

'

W1nled to Buy

Hllpuamlkel
dlffwence liy

BOipllll

Aftd RV'a. Contact Ron At
(7401448-CJIIt -.or.331~,&amp;-ot50 . II

NO-'-•

do•··•a..ra.

recruiting~

mtVdqk

ovw the phone for

Pl. Pin nat; WV 255541

... ruao

(3M) 6'7Ut75.

AM!OE

lnvot.~e

"

NO PUNDRAISINQI ·

Wtnted: AgglltiiYtllilm Play.
.. - · - 1 1 1 - l n l l u l
ptced, grotrlh orlonltd, llllbltlh04 lniUIIIICI Aglftey. MUll
bl
PIOqlt,
- · ~.
Sotary/
ComCorntntniU·

Clllltei'UC11Ian ~to
.... ,,.............wt

..t. ifttll .....lftd - ...
Send 10 aa. .lA 23, 200
. Mlln Strttl, Pt. Pl1111nt, WV
25!ieO

----

1 888 475-7223
ext.1101 .

l!i00-$1 ,500 Mo. Full Ttnoe
FI\ID VACATIONS
1-I00-480-30t9

IAIIN IXTIIA IIONEY
Dol..., T...,.,.,,. Bookl In
- . Molgl. Muon And
Jackson Countlrlt. Call Bwtnwn

120

U5, Aprll-.1-~

Sltultlonl

11830 Of (419)1188-1280

W.nted

EASY WORK! GREAT PAYI Earn
1500 Plus 1 Wl•k Aooembtlng
Productl .. Homo. No ~ ...
Ntctlllty. Coli Toll Fill I -801l287·3Mhl31

Approved OhiO Mtdlcold PtiWICIor looking lor lndMdullllln nttd
ol Hom• HIIHh Clro Servk:la . .
Elplllonoo at MROO loflool ond
.ouuom tlllropy. HI.- ,.,.nell.
(740)441 - 8518 or amoll hanry.203eOIU.tdu

~~~;~-:~~~~
Floral Dostgner;

-.Point-.

1b .11102, 200-.
WI/ 255GO

140

EIPirltnctd Carotoltor Nlldld
.... 2417 U.. In C.. .... Etderir
Womtn In Point Pltllt'nt,
(aG4)17WIII3AIIIrlpm

IIIOtiCII

OHIO VALI.IY I'UIUIHINO CO.
•-mmenda 11111 you dO bull·
.... _ , . you ...... ond
NOT 1 0 IIVOIIgh 1111
rnot~you
-tlgltld
...
---..

"=

Bualnell
Training

Col.

Gtllll!allt c..r
(CaMiriCIOIOToHomo).

.. _,....._Ad
a
........
_ -.llfaiOn,

EARN 1500-1800 Pll tn
-..........
-·
6
lllppora.
Low
fn.
1·100-272.0113. -

........,....

Elm 110:000 YEARLY -Iring,
NOT llptaclng, Long cracks In
Wlndahltkll. Flit vldlo 1-100·
121111123 ~ ....glllolnldWD:..GDift

GET YOUR FORTUNE IN ' MO·
TtONr Elm IIDO-StiOOidttlty p1w
_ , No hypo! No conlllllonl
No ••~net noctllltyl Wt'll
train. Not MLM. A - t coot;

_ _ _ _ or ........

......................
..,--..to
_..,

•• , ' :ar

a .,,,

a

•••

1hll

. . nol

loiDilltW . . . .

. . . . .l&amp;tlatllrNIII-lolntl I. ;al . .
. ..... 01r.-oi . . . . . .

310 HOIIMIS for Slle
IO 00\VN HOMESI GOV'T •
BANK FORECLOSURES! LOW
OR NO MONEY DOWN! OK
CREDm FOR LISTINGS! CALL
t-100-3:11-00201111.11111
1 112 1101\'. 3 ..... bath, big
kltchon, now!~ ltmodlled, on I

ICII ol fond w/2 ltory garogo,
Dytmllo Rd., $55,000, 740·742·
2284.
By O.not, Cotonlalllrlctc Rlnch,

HUD HOII)tl. Payments Baaed
On Income. Limited Tlrnt- Hurryl
(740)448-3384
":-"":-:---:---:-:--MUll Soot Bllullful 3 Sodroom, 2
CIA. FR With Fireplace. 2

EXT 050 www.buelneaa-atar·

New Root, Retrlgerator,

1..51"""· OW. Llrga 2 Car Garage,
Large Rooms, Lots 01
·ston A 'll'lvtl Agency: Rtclivo =-~·.:"'"'RIIocatlng Out Of State,
· . Cali (304)773-5391
li'olnlng, Buolno11 Support, Your
own Travel. Webaltl and Travel

Homl.aom

Remolded 3 Bedroom, Wood

Floors, f.t/2 Bath, Beautiful
FlrtlfliiOI, 2 car Garage, $73,000
(7.00)38H151

v_..

•. -•.em.

.

· Call for

Now
Flaatwood,
lidO,
118-.00, SIt I
2 1111. I •
m -m-4110.

GQ"

Hauling Opportunity. (740)44tr
-

-lYing. I

Ona bedroom.- .. ... ••• 1 1 . . .. NOD oc.n. ..

-

~~- -'Pwlmtntlln .........
port. 127H341. Call 740192·5014. Equot Hauling o,opor.

........ 74NIIU187.

330 Fermi for ....
By Olllar
Wlh 1500 llq.FMI, 3Bttlloom, I·

.. Aero Fonn For -

ond dfYI&lt;,

c:urrenllyhu openlnp
for:

l'tleciiCII
lteceptloallt/Medlcal
Alllltaata aad ·

IP..SI'rletk:ll

NIII"M
for Pbyslc:IIJI Offices
Excoltent pay IJid

benefttl.
Send naume to:
"n=•~ValeJ
llelpltll

c/o BUilD a-rc.
2!20
Dr.
Pt.I'MMit,

Farm - · -.a~u~y lllmCIOld, 2883 8qUIN Fall. 17 - . _
Pond, ln·ground Pool. 8-ral
Simi, Otroga, FrUit 'llMI, Cltll
To Holmr. $215.000. (740)4414ZIO
.

orl'u to

675-D75.

350 Loti l Acrtllge
t 3 ACIII With Btlutlful Lolto .
VI. . Slttl 150,000. 18 Acr11
With Lorgo Llkt, MaDill Home
Willi Add On · $78,500. 011111

~.

(304)576-3)58

4.77 ACIII Ntat lntllllellon 01
Wataon Rood Aftd Rodney Pllto.
Outet, Prlvetl With Stm, Crook,
Wooda, Duol Highway Accoaa.
tO Minutia From Hoaplfll,
Pharmocy, Btnk, Oroc:ory, TIIM·
tar, Etc. S40,000 (~)878·4222
Afllr8pm!fJtt' . . .
Friend!~

Rldgo lid. Crown City
(740)388 0914 or {740)318 1111 ·
Looking To Bur A Now Home?
Don't Lind'/ we 00111 Hurry
Only 101.011 Lift. 304-731-'12115.

Hom••

o

I

'

470

Quality 8llclr Angtrt lull, IOD0-

'*·

Sl&gt;llng
- 1:00pm,
Col ~8lttrnlttl'
April 7th,
AcOipt·
td Allar 4pm On l'rldly. Houllng
AVIIIIbfl. All Contlgnmontl
Welcome.
(740)502- 2322
(740)1118 11131

Hly l .Grlln .

For ...._-com, 14.00 por
tOOt: around- com. 11.00
per td'o•: cob mill 14.00 PI'
t oot; plut toolto. Coli 740-742·
2455 cr 740-742-2MD.

7fO.,, Aufoa;for .,S.Itt•c,'' ,

-

WMted to Rent

490

FREE lnlorlllltlon 1·100·571·
13113 El!T..:ICMHJ

Full BtiYIOI Rtlfluront Avelllblo
In VlfttOft. County, Ohio. Hal
Bllrl Wine Llctnto. Equlpmont
lncludtttl In Ltall. Sioto 80 In
Olnlng. Loou Long Tarm II 500
.... (740171CHJDD7
1,1£ HI IIMJIIf',[

1510 · · · Houuhok' ·
. Goodl '
Appllonc:ea:
Rtcondttlonad
Wollilll, Drytro, lllngll. lllllf.
firiiOII. Up To 80 Doya ,Outt'
--'we
Sol MorfiO Ape
pllnatt, Fronah Ctty M,.Ytag,

.

For Ball: R-ftdiUonld - h ·
111, dryoro and rtlrtgorotoro.
Thomptont Appllonce. 3407
- - - - (:104)178-r.... .

GOOD . ·UIID A"LIAIICII

I
I

· Waolloro. t1ry1rt. rolrlglriiOro,
............ Appll-1. 71
VIne
740-441-1111,
I. . . .INIII.

.-."Coli

Lllllar lall.l.lllfilllftll, .....

-.175.

·IIIII Cot...... UOO; ..... 0111
(74611• ....,

MOllobon CarPtt, . aoa Cllrk

Cllaptl, lid, - · OH. , _ ....
or 10 diVI
11011
Hboy
Cllh. VIII, Mol~

"'*""'•

-'""'"""""

Aocepfld, (740)44e-7444 or 1·

177. . .1.

0r1Ye, 1kM11o, NY 14125.

-

-..rut,1100 Sq. Foot. Rtttortd
2nd Floor Apartment In Hlltorlc
Dlltrlct. ldool For Prolaulonal
Couple. All Modlrn Amonltlta. 3
llttlloorrit: $piCIOUI Living; 1-112
Solllo, Rtar Doell. tf'/AC. 11001
mo.- Plus Utilltlll. Security And
- Olpotl. No 1'111. Roftorancts
Roqulrod. (740)448,4425 Or
(740)111 3131

.

...,., .._

mort opttont. Mlfttlllcluror ol
otwmlla, tclatro oftd lliftltlo,.,
NORWOOO lNDUBTAIEB H2

Forl.ene

7-1788.

13.7lil. -

bermite 2000, larger CIPU'dts.

Cbrtatlan. couple looking for
hOUH to rant, no pots, no ~Ida ,
Jim 740-8112-3187.

..

.

(301)171-1422
515Mitft_,_......,.

a ~ '"""""

Ntw 2Nlril
~1101 LIYingiOOm lu~H.
$399. Buy. Ball,-·
New And Ulld Furniture ltoro
Balow Hotldly .'Inn. Kanauge. WI
Soil Orovl Monumtnfl :Aif!f
\lutl. (740)146-4712

1530

Antlquaa

120 Pockot WltCIIII In Good
Oondltlon And Wooden Bookl
For Solo, fihone (740)445- 18t5,
422
Otlllpolll
Juy 01 ooH. lll.. flnt AntlqUtl,
1124 11t1n on SA 124 I. Po- · 740-111~2121 or 740·192·
t539. Mctn. ·

2nd-·

540 MleoelllniDIII .

MutllndiM
For Stlt• 7 graws, _ - ComoUiry, call 41H17-o!MII.
.
OWE THE BEAUTY olavor ty vartatllo of Orogon OIMM It
your lrlonds, ramtty, Jolilllfl. Villi
Ul Ohnp~l'trq.~oom .
'

10 ODWN CAASI POLICE IM·
POUNDS &amp; IIEPOSI HONDA'S,
CHEVY'S. ~EEP'S. LOW AS l2tl
MO, 24 MO'B el8.8"'. FOil
UBTINGS. CALL 1-IOD-461-ooiO
•~:ct~12

1871

1!1; ·~ ...

aona.-

lng 94.000. t.M.-, . 810v1.171(74011•

Steel BUildings, Ntw Mual loll.
30K40112 Wll 1!0,100 now
$8,980, 40180•12 was .16,400
now 110,871 . ~O~t00x18 Wll
S27.e90 now SIUIO. 801200111
IIIII $58,780 now $42,910. 1·100401-5128.

" lt's wrong. It's false. It's
incorrect or any cxher ·adjeclive I can we," Rumberger
,Ud. "They bad DO i.nfiuence
on 6ling it or trying•to seal it."
Teresa Earnhardt asked a
iudgc to seal the autopsy piJo..
tos four days after her husband
·died Feb. IS during a crash on
the bst lap of the paytona

500.

The" Orlando, Sentinel;
which wanted. t6 view the
photO. . for an investigation
into NASCAR safety, challenfed the judge's decision .
The Sentinel bas suggested in
its ulicles that several
EamPwdc case.
NASCAR deaths could have
·. Julin is ~presenting the been pmrented if the racing
Gainwille-bued
student circuit ~quired drivers to
llll 1 newspaper, The Independent wear a head~and-neck
Florida Alliptor, in its effortS restninin&amp;.device.
to view the photos. A hearing . Auorneys Cor the Sentinel
on the motioru is scheduled and Teraa Earnlwdueached a
1111111
compromise that allowed an
p$J • Cor Thunc!ay.
"These
c:ircumnances independent medical expert
strongly
suges~
that to look at the photos and
Nt\SCAR, motivated bY ia write a report on Earnhardt's
own fear of a lawsuit for cause of death.
I
WIOngful death ... UJFd TeleCalling the compromise
sa Earnl!ardt to 6Pe this Suit 10 "illegal", the Volusia County
seal the: photographs at issue · medical examiner's office,
because ~ of what they might which has custody of the
~"Julin said in the mem· images, bas asked that it be
~moved fiom the agzeement,
orandmn,
NASCAR spo!t:Csman John and the president of a ._bsite
Griffin said he w.em't aware if has appealed the agreement
.his company played a role in and the sealing of the photos
Teresa Earnhaplt's decision. to an appeUate court.
Her · attorney, Thorn Rum,
Autopsy photos- in Florida
beJFr,
strongly
denied were public records until Gov.
NASC.AR influenced her Jeb Bush signed into law last
decision.
week legiSlation malting it a

~~

.

,.._

.......
..
c

felony for a medic:aJ examioer
to release autopsy phOtos
without a court's permislioll.
The Sentinel and
South
Florida Sun-Sentinel. which is
·based in Fort Lauderdale, have
c:baiJen&amp;ed
new law in
Bmwatd County. claiming it

me

me

violates me Rorida Conscirution and the Fine .Amendment
in the U.S. CoallitutiOn.
NASCAR's medical expert,'
Dr. ~ . 8ohmnoa, Viewed
the autoply
·the day
before they wete seaJ,.LA few

imaaes

clays
later,
Bohannon
announced at a NASCAR.sponson:d . news confe~nce
that Earnhardt's seat belt
broke.
If
NASC.Aft
learned
through Bohannon's examination that Earnhardt died from
injuries preven1ab!e by a head
and neck mcnint, it could be
held liable by 1eresa Earnhardt, Julin said in the memo-

randum.
Julin said it'• unknown

whether NASCAR conlacted
1Cresa Eanehardt aftcl' Bohan- .
DOD viewed me phoiDI.
"It also is not known if
NASCAR's !awyen and med-

ic:al penonnd made

rq~raen­

tatioos to EamPwdt about
what the auioply pbotopaplu
showed repniina
cause of
Dale EanePwdt's c!ea~." Julin
said. "Bilt r:- an: distinct
poaibilitia that CIDDot and
should not be discounted."

me

l

8

Duke-Arizona draws good TV numbers

s
s
I

f
I'""
f
D

s

NEW. YORK (AP) - A ~ to tfrhn Media
tiabt tide pme between pre- Releude.
season cooteoden fiom oppo- '1V radnp fix me eM I i
site coas11 hdped _
the NCAA onahip pme bad dec!inecl
men's baslcetball tournament each of me ·~·iow dine
stem its recent TV rating~ yean. mirmriDB me treod ol
· slide.
.
dropping vie-.wnhip fix moat
· CBS Sports' ·broadcast · ·o~ ,, major· sports evena. _ ·
Duke's 82-72 victory over
Arizona on Monday night
drew a.15.6 national rating.
The good news for _the net1lo"'rk is that it's a 10.5 pe~eent '
inaease owr last year's record
low. The bad news: Monday\
·raqlllil! ranks as the secQnd
!ownt since · at · least I 975,

The 2 112-weelt tournament finished with an ~
rating of 6.5, up llighdy fiom
2000's 6.4, the low !1Wk in
the 20 yean CBS bas televised
the event. Each rating . point
represents a little more than I
million U.S. television house-

holds.

CBS . . . - in 1999 to
..... dle . . . lbrdleduee-rt ....
• "' paying
16 'ii'O. b • U-,ar conu.ct. A . h ..... el'ect in
2.003, Tlee da1 -shiY
thi "n die Ml-k\ per-')'l:ar

..Ace
, a. 5 1

10

CBS. 42 mil-

lioe ' ' Jl .....: iD fOr at
·
vi Monday'!
paw. And dlt uP ult drew
U .pera• ,...,r _ratings
am . . . 11-49 than did
che 21100 ch• •liotllhip game
betwwn Michipri State and
Aarilla.

last ria

I

SUN'SAND'SURF, White IIndy

!!Ill I

s suuua

beaches, fabulous sunaetal De·

Jug rooms!kllchenttltl I bllco·
nile ovorloOI&lt;Ing thl guH of Mallco. Island I An Beach . Resort,
Treasure Island, FLA.' 800·2"·
9980 ·www.lslandlnnreaorl.com.

Noar St. -~~~-

Watarllne SPICIII: 314 200 PS'I,
$21.95 Ptr 100; 1' 200 PSI
$37.00 Ptr tOO: All Brill Com.,......, Flltfnga In Stoclr
liON IVANl INTIRPIIIIEI'
- · 01110. 1-800-1137-9528
Wooden· Tobit With Bonchel
And Chllrl SUO; Bawtng MaChine In A Coblnot $50; Bat 01
Chlldrona. Croll Enctctopadlt
$100; Brond NtW KIIDy, NIYir
Uald $1100, 1M2 8ulitlru 1500;
(740)111 4. .

15150 .

All

1yp11 ol

ur - . . . .

C&amp;C Oontrol HolM ttnonct· Pointing, vfllrllfdlttt.
ctrpo;;IIJ. - . illr d - ....,

- . . . """"lnd-.. .
-

..-

1323.

..... Cflll. 7. . . . .

BuHdlng
Are

Dei.Ona't Grocm Bhop, GroominG
Aft Dog IIIICII, 7-t·ttoll.
llaglolarod Whllt Pomaronlan
Malt, Nautorad, All Sholl.
HOUIIbiO~Ift 1200 , (740)3712140

,.

.

'
UKC Black tnd ton, Ftmtlt, 5
monlhl ottl, Good ~ lint. PKC
Mlltblelteo. (740)3811-8293

Prulll 1

;.cu....

. , _1116117
.
liuiiWWl•eiD 11M !If
'WD&amp;Jid JIOU . . . . -~

1197 Oldt Achlovo, 81 ,000 mlloo,
15100, Bluo Book Vtlut ..17800,
(740l44e-2e24

l -~·n~d~d~riY~.n~E~~H:'"':"':":'~·"

95 Chovy 4xl e-Ft Bad. PSIPS/
A/C. Cullom lnt-rtor/ Paint.
117,000. 89 Chivy Cavallor,
Good Condition . Good Starter Ctr
For Tllno. $1 ,000 (304)875·4210
(304)875-2285
88 Chovy Cavaltar. 2 door, Au·
tomallc/Ovtrdrlvt, Power Locka
lftd mirrors, till, CIUIII , IPOIItr,
Aluminum whe'lll. lln1ed· gl111,

810 P1rm Equipment
Cultl· Gotor Htrrow, 12h, Stoo:
JD Wheel Disk, 10ft 1800; NH
478 HayDtno, 8ft t3500; NH Hey
llaka. 251. $1200; Sporty· ·NH
~. 151, t4ft,lt200; Ktaton
Sl ..p Wagon w/ Avco· Nl Gear
St200 (304)578·9009
•

Cheyonnt Rod , U ,800 mtlat,
$1000 OBO (710)2118-1011

_... '

.

19 Orond Am OT, - · tidy Cllfo
von, qno ownor. 11,000 mltaa.
loaded, ••canent oonattloft. Ill
tor poyofl. Cafll~ll2 ' W llltr
• :OO!Im -kdlyt, onyttmt ktndl Strf0141nquir111 orliy.

No piOIIIMn... ,au . . J!IIIWIIOWI . . t11tl4tor.

· CALL ·

790
88 I Ton Dodgo With Ullllly Bad
And Rockl, 380 Automatic With
Mlt~hlng Utility Slyla li'tlltr. All
Doors 6 .Locka War~ On The
Truck And Trailer, $3000.
(740)441- 9319
89 Rd Ford Bronco II , E•cellont
Condition, Ctll For More lniOrmo·
lion (140)387· 7872 .
'

no

Vant &amp; 4-WDI

1979 Qodgo Vtn Wllh Hydrtullc
Whootchalr Lift, 318, V-8 Englnl',
Geed Condition, 13.000 OBO
(304)875-2231
71 Fonl 414, SUIPinofan Lift. Ntw
WhHII, To Mony Now Plrll To
11~ Cal (740)245-40fll
Aitro 1114 ConvoriiOft Yan,
L - . t10,000 111111. 1 OMtar,
. . . To .... (101)171-1110 . .
174

740

II? a;! I

aao ••••
..... ru.
(740)11.
• ..... . .

)

1·888-974-JOBS
TOOAVI

Campa,. &amp;
Motor Home•

1991 Coleman Pop-up, AIC, Bike
Rack , mini Condition, $2900
(740)245r5978
Palomino Tent Camper, AJC, Ae·
lrlgerator. Stove, Sink, Pori Ponte,
Ou11n Bad, Sleeps 6, EMctUent

Condition, $3000 (3041576·2933

111

churchll, .f.am·lly,
frltndl, nalghbOra .for
vltltt, pr1yero,
01rde, flowera,
IIIIIIIOrllll

17111111'11

..•

Pleasant Valley Hoapital

C1rd of The¥•

'The' Nod "J"
family th

..,

clurlnt

llln111 · and

1........ -..,,.,..

..... .., ""

Plusant Vll!ey Prlv•te Duty ....
immediate opealnp for pel'IODII cere
aldetlnunlna Ullstantlhl ..
G.W., Metp'u cl Muon eou.Ue..
Exc:elleDt pi)' ud tiexlble Khedullna.
For 1110re Information contlct .n• Wooten
1t (304) 675-7400 or 1·800-746·0076 or
·
1pply In penon at
1011 VIand St. Pt. Pleasant, WV 25550
AAIEOE
. •'

J,

'
•

17
'WDuld you . . . . . . . .
' rnpeotlllllyau IIIIIFM't
'Ate~ looldng far liP,... .. Ill
when alhlr pliO II 1111?
Don, fit ..... you . . Jiow7

t885 Ford Tturua BHO , grion
with .groy lootflar lntarlor, powtr
sunroof, 5 IPitd, ornllrn/CD, atr,
13100. 741).949-2944.

Pa~oll

fi\llf11 O•lll'l' lll ,
1'. II VI', HICK

fll lllln~IIIJ .. I

1885 Chrysler Sobrlng , Solow
Book. (740~2t09

till Tcrch Aad Fl,.blrd, 43,000
mllll, All
. T·tOP.• Owned

DELICIOUS IDAHO ORGANIC
YELLOW POTATOES. Btkora
ind 8111me11 IVIIIIbll. 142.00
par 40 lb. bo• pluo thlpplng. To
order Cell' toll trot 1•111•125·
5030 or http/lwww.kolllymtorgin·
ltforml.com

II I I Ill. 7

Do'=yeu . . . .

1114 Corsica, 'Loldtd. Ukt Now,
•ut5, 1194 &amp; t813 Orond Am.
a 'ul 'ltoaded Pelllneu, Malt· V·l, 13.885, 1198 Asngar, 10K,
All Whllo, 'l'tlnlll, lrown With $3,785, 1894 9·10. $3,485, OlhaiiCii Milk. tmo. Old, E•-n• . era In Stock, Trade ·lna 4ccJptWith Children. To Good Homa, od, COOK IIOTOIII (740)445·
175.00 IIOh Or 1120 Both Ot03
.. \1
(101)17HI88
1114 Dcdgt Shadow. GoOd Con•
3,.,..., pUflplll, IIIII lhotl dltton, 115,ooo mtlos, 1aeoo,
and wormed, 0111 740·742·1103 Smith Eltctrlc Oulttr, 11000. coli
-lpm.
11&amp;\0"1 (301)817rQI78

rl)

=...

!RAM OPPQRWNI'I'l'!

llloclt, llrlak. plpaa, windilftlllt. 11C. ~Win-;
RIO Oroftdl, OH Call 740-148·
ltlt.

1180

m

~Fr.. '""""'H· . . . . . 81 •tulllld

SuppiiM

_vqet~bl••

=

,

*'·

Downtown Second Avenue Nur

.

. I

Hoppta
' . .April
_ dllut
""
1111,
Frfdltr
13, -2001, 7:30
pm ohlrp. Foyeno County Folr·
. , _ , 8tlllng 200 Hlld, Jtno
Fob. BliiQWI ind Ollto. Top Ton
Pigs in OIIMI COunty Every
Frod HoPIIII i 740)336-7314,
Fnnr Luoot (137)1111-2:1111

DWI, Anchara, Water H1111r1 ,

Courthouoe And City .Building.
~k:lly,~afli!, ~ .. .~ R-•
Sulltl'! By IIIIH. 441 2ftd lwt.
(140)1411 lle39

-·110M-

,.

Canlllld
-·
IIMtlr
""' plr:liup,
171.00Eacll.
Col
(31M)81N571

----)lip,

For Sale: 10.152 Acre• on

*" ._.,

-

Coody,

-·

t~~~~-~~~ta:ctc:t:op:_R:o:l~d,
·37·tl2 .A crtl Of Bottom Lond.
$55,000· Sondhlll Rood· ·RIIflor

Folr Plgt. 1om In -

Plumbing &amp; Eltctllcll Plllo, Fur• Clood Ill... Hay For Batt. Dollno Jlckton Form 1304)175-1743
Weal 2 Bedroom Townhouse nac11 &amp; Heat Pumps. Blnnena
Apartments. Includes Woter Mobllo Home Supply, 740· 441· ' (7.00)441-1104
8owogt, Troah, 1350/Mo., 741). M18www.orvb.comlblrlnln
Hay For Sale, S1 0 Round Soft,
4410001
NEW ANO UIEO ITEEL Stttl $1 .25 Square Bolt. Strlngi 1ft
Ona bedroom ~~ter~rttom . $225 Balml, P/pt lllblr For Concroll. Good~ (740)446-elfll
month plua uttllllta &amp; dopoatt, Anglo, Chonntl, Flat Bar, Staol
Third 8tr111. Racine, 740-247· Grotlng For Drtlno, Drlvewoya &amp; Hay For Salt, 45 Round Btflo,
And 250 Squore Boles. can
Wolkwtyl. L&amp;L Scrap Metalo (740)448-G115 or (740)448(740)441-7300
7143 Alii&lt; 8:00pm.
Rlvtr Band Ploc:o AcOipllng
Applic:lltont tor I Blclroom Hud NEW BRAND NAME COMPUT·
, _ . bttlto. good ...... hll&lt;• .,
Subtlclld ApaAmtlll lor Elclorlr
ER8- - · a..ryono opprovoil ...... """' In blm . . _ Filii.
and Disabled, EOH, (304)612· with
10 clown! Low. monlfltr PlY· nulbt.-.1. 740-8112·7281.
3121 Of ~)8112-3274
-1-.17-3171-330.
Tara Townhouse Aptrtmtntt. Nlal
u.Od ~ Cal Hoy &amp; Bright Wtra Jlt - · 'IMr
· Very Spacious, 2 Badrooma, 2 Anytime, 1740)448-t004 Or 'Roul)d DoiiYory I Volumo Olo·
count AYIIItbllr. Horllago Form.
.Floors, CA. t t/2 flatl;, Fuly Car· (140)41&amp;--6275
(aG4)871-5724.
poled, Adult PoOl 6 Btby Pool,
Patio, Start $385/Mo. No Polo, Ohla Vlllty Mlmory .- .
Lease Plus s.a,ny Oepoan Ill-. 2 Orovo Loll, In Clardono 01
qutrtd, Dayo: 740·448· 3481; Chrlalos. 2 8urlal Voulta· Call Tob-o Plonta For Solo. Coli
Evenings: 740·387.0502, 740· ~.(740)888 85081lonnl
(7411)441-:7813
446-0101.
Organ, air conditioner. prom Tobocco Plofttl· Ordar Now To
Ellljl Sl&gt;llng Plarllrlfll.
lWtn Rlver'l'owra now • 2U9
- · cofiM moltor, toullr &amp; lncroaoe Alotrnontl Moan 111111
ll)flll&lt;lltor•lor'l SA.
--.740-742-2392.
Pllnll. Thllllk 'lllu For 'll:lUr - .
neaa.
P•ll Oan.ny Oewhurtt·
HUD
· - -opl.lar_,.
and dilllllld.
EOH. (301)875Loa.. M111age (304)185·3740
8178.
'
80%081 Of (304)1115-3788
12 Sur
460 Space for Ren7
TH ANSf'O Hl AT I Or&lt;

=

'

Hugolrowntory, Dllcounl Ptletl,
On Vinyl SklrUng, Dooro, Wlftd.

Now Toklng Appllcotlcna- .35

l

..........

......... ow...

me

Fatr Dllt 11tdy to go; _ , .
~:· 740411-201701

1140

North Third. Mltldllp011· 2 room
on~c~~ncy, .. ..,.... dlpotn &amp; ,.,.
. -.740 IIIQ Otfll.

....--.

...... cr101• ""

no pall, tlapOIIt 1 ..,_

Nk:l1a2bldroom--ill.
equipped kltchlftt. AIC, illllllll
Included, ......,.. aftd tlopollt
roqiiiiiCI. Pilant 7 - - 1 ,.
.l!prn.

Coi111Jd.-if7~7.

a e...

.. 1 ; 11tdli1l l ...biMII Dlltrblkw,
Col ""' Ptoduct·Of Opportunity.
(140)141- 1112

--.740811!0115.

lngl

or

1200 Lbl, Cummings Angut
F11ma. Bolllhlidl wv (304)17118241

NIW HIVIft, One bldi'OOIII lUI•
nlahld oportmenl, hot wuhor

1/2 Balli Homo WKh Ook Trim,
And K -. Hal A 1.11a1
Ooragt Aftd Barn Willi 40+ Tilf..
tbll ACIII. E•collont Location
Noar Ala Grandt. Alklng
$128,800. (740)310-oGut e-.

ao

ond 2.-

~ M Vllllgo - l l l c l

I

Start Your Buolheaa Today... 320 Mobile Home•
360 R..IIEitlte
Primo Shopping Ctftttr Space
for Slle
• Available At Affordable Rate .
E•PII'Itllcfd"«lii•Ntr (304)185·
1-t00-21~!12.
Wlllted
Yallo'f 'PIIZI. CaH 741)c141. I 2150 MoDtlo Homo. Now Kitch3103 ~. ·rz. __.:.Ato::!:fi90.05-::::::;;:::..::'Z1;:;48:::;,._ _ Sl&gt;llnll
010t .
en, New Bathroom. New Floors, Real 111111 n n - l'om.lorctd
EIPI•Itncod. ''i"fuc~ · Macllonlc l50
$chOOII
out ol my hoUH for highwl~ ill)·
WORK FROM HOME ... EARN 16:c8 COvered Porch, Ce,l)tral Air, provemont. Looking lOr old farm
NHdtd, 40t K R•tlromont, -~
$5,000
(740)441-9319
.
$1500 PI'T mil $!000 FIT·monlflttl
ctl, Dental a Vision tnourond.
1n1tructlon,
house In Malga County with
CALL TOOAY f.801l-885-o319 or I4X70 Bayview, New Since 97, Cl acraogo, coH .740-787·8303, 740Vacation Pev Baaact On ExperlOllCI. ca1 (740)2141-14113
5·STAR
PROFESSIONAL www.-tromhoml247.oom
A, W8ter·Haather, Furnace. Price 992-9132.
TRUCK DRIVING SCHOOL now WOIIK FIIOII HOIIE ... Earn lncludea Stove, Refrigerator,
Government Jollie $11.00- olftrl a t4 day COL TRAININCl
flENlAL ~,
133.00 per hour potentltl .. Ptld . PROGRAM . lmmtdlate Open· $500·$7000/month PTIFT. Full Porch, Shtd a Wooden' Fonoo,
Training/Full Bontllto. For mort ings. $38,000+ 1st year. Non e •• Training. Free Information. Call 17200 Call (304)875-3008 Balora
3pm
lnlormatton calf can 1-888·874· perltnced: 1·800·441•8881. E•· Nowlt·I00-210-8914
41Ci Hou. . for Rent
81!50 111. 3234
t4x70 Southern Dream, fi'H D•
parlonced wiCOL t-800·858· www.att.llnufttl'elf.cam
!Ivory
free
Setup
ontr
$9895
1·
23e3.
t ·3 Bedroomo · Foroctotod
GROWING BUSINESS NEEDS
230 Profeulonll
HELP! Work from homo! Mal-or· B~ACKSTONE
-From
1 1 - . 4"' .Down.
PARALEGAL
Servlcn .
VItro If 1.8"' APR. For Lilt·
a.r/E·Commorco. S m • - PT STUDIES. Home Study. Ap·
1971 Schult For . Sate, .N.,. 30
$t000·$40001w~ FT. 800·82t·
proved, ANordaDio, COiflllrthtn· $ FR~E CASH NOW$ from Furnoct l lnautotlon. $3,000 lnga, 8D0-3tf.3323 Ell. 1709.
H39 ...... lflllr!l2blllt.com
slve, legal training since 1880. -lthy flmllfll un-.g mililani (740)317- 7052- 4pin
t. llttlloom, $200imo plwlllpoofl
of dallara, 10 flllp minimize their
andu-.~......_,
Hllp Wlntodln ICiuft (IIOUp homo, FREE Catalog : 100·828·8221.
tans. Wrlto Immediately: WINO. . 1880 14170 3 Bedroom . H/2 . In "" Cky ol Gtolipollo, (740)216dey lllcl night shUt, coli 740-192· - : P.O. 119&gt;&lt; 701449, 01111. TX
FALLS. 3010 WILSHIRE BLVD. 8111\, $8000 (304)578-2818
75370
NA
or
http://www.lllaaklto51123.
lfllt
'
11141, LOS IINOELES, CALIFOR·
f\Oiaw.com.
1115 14170 With I hi E•poftdo, 2 Badrom HOUH, 15 Milt South
NIAIOOJO
3 Sodroom, Contrtl Air, Mull So ,On 7, EYintnga Allor 7pm, Dt·
EARN 'fOUR COLLEGE DEGREE
- . (740)381 8002
QUICKLY, Bacholort, Mtlftrl, II NEED A LOAN?
POll! I Roftronctl, (740)441-ny Otbt Conoolldtllonl
Doctorate , by eorr11ponctence
1917
1989
Sunlhtno
'll'olltr,
14178,
3
Cut Pormtnfs Up To 80%..
•·
based upon prior education and
Badroomo, 2 Baths, Heat Pulflll, 2 8adroorn ~ tn Eu..u FoiSlmo Dey Approve~~
Jtwlty Banchllllft· Rtptlr, Sir· short otudy couroe. For FREE In·
Nfw Carptt In Living Room a
t·m·7111Htfll.
lng, ..... Sotlng 01 Fllto . - . ,. formation boo~lat phona CAM·
1300 Por Month, 1300 0.
Khchon, Calfltdrll Cttlloga, COli• Ront.
BRIDGE
STATE
UNIVERSITY
I·
pollt, No I'W, Call Aftll' 5:00 pm
Futl·t- tmmodtato Opening.
$$$ NEED CASH?? we PI~ orld Porch, Alroody Stt Up On (740)311 21!eo
'
Apply At AcqultldOnl, Flnt lfOO.fl84.8318.
cuh for remaining p.,.,..nta on Rontod Lot, Con Be Moved.
Ill ltcond Avonu•,
~)87s-nee
Proporty Sold! . . . . _ , Annul·3 SA, 2 Iiiii homo lor 11001
tllll Sttllemtntaf · fmmadlate
mo. lllcl 3 SA, 1 - homo1982
14110,
3
811.
2
Bath,
u
a..-111 "Nobtxxy • • 0111 prfc.
far 15501 mo. CloH·Ia - · All·
L.I.W.. ieN, · o r - td11. • Nottonol Contrtct Buytre ACIOI 01 Llftd. Pond, Barn, Ana 111nooa
-and dtpoalt required.
--31flcMnpor""""
Glllgo.l43,000 (740)441-4302
(100)
480-0781
1111.
101
....
·
Wiseman Roof Eatatt, tnc.
l a r - - * Y b l l l d - - High lcllool
If Noino. tlol-.,_..oom
(740)118 3114
..., fiiOIIIIII'· Must how ·~
Utlld
l'riYite Schocf. - · CASH LOANS 12000·$5000. 1193, 3 Bedroom, 2 Solfl, 14170
WOIIttng wKh If llok IeOni 81oft
Unique, Feet Progrtni, FIIIUII•
Four Houoe, 52 011..
Proof, Lowest Tuldon, Collage Canso!- to 1200.GOO. Bid/ -~~ Homo, On Ronfld Lot on Blrlll. phono (140)111 3115
ond
lllo Bind
AI~ tINI ..... hOurS.
~·
Boftdhlll
Rd.,
DOll
Not
Nold
'l'lo
Crtdlt.
Clldii•CIIdl,
MOrt•
Gulli-. Call Flit Howl l'rH
112--gogao. For Information: 1·100· Movod, Now CorPit. . Notitr Oolllpolta, 750 3rd AYI., Sl80
. UOOIIBI3if7.
Drl... Pomoroy, Ohio 45718. by Bmolctd In 1•1 Born Building Month, t Ill, I Bath, Prame
331-7812.3llll
April 10, 200t . Equti .Opportunlty
o-.
Porclloa, Wolf Moln· ~. OIIHtat.Nol"ttta.W..
180 Wanted To Do
........,~
CONIOLIDATI YOUII WAY tllnld -lllcl out, (304)175- _....,(7~14
OP DIITl ...... 1tt01111t1y 7311 lloftdlr· Friday, 1:30 to
Maturo DIDYIIKII wamld In my 168 Counttrucllan, llooflng, OUT
poymonto. ,., one Dlllllllonth. 5:00, (740)115·1144 Allor 5:00 o.~~po~~o, 751 3111 - - . . aoo
Siding &amp; Concrolt. lntorfor I
homo, - · two~- 5
and ..,• •
,.,..., ,33 COOin,tllllh,,....
6 1. Soma houaokaeplng end E•ttrlor Pointing. All Phi- 01 EASY to gil lflrted. Flnanclol
Homo
Repairs
For
A
Frao
Froodom
Christian
Counotllng,
NouN, 011 Hall. No ...... w..
COOking, 740-Mf.24M .
Eltlmtte. Call (304)875·7731 800·14f.8757,
Ill.
CC'3 1,M 7 Asd:acid Halnl. 2 lldroom. - . , . . , . . (740)4414111
I IIIII 14170, Groat Corltlllloft.
www.-.arv (Non-,..).
Nudtd Elparltncod Crew for Afttr 5 pm.
. Cal ~)175-ato,., lpm
'
'1101 Program lltttlirt NHdld.
Sanlng t~d Flnllhlng Soctlonal
Oavlct'a
General
Contractors
..
CREDIT
'AOILEM8?
CALL
THE
(301)731-71118
•
Housing. lind Pricing lnfarmotlon
2,
3,
I,
5
bldro6m~
poymontt
and txperlanc:t to: Southern Plumbing, Electric , Ptlntlng CREDIT EXPERTS. LICENSIEDI onlltoomo, .7 40410-tiZI. · PIIOI l'rogrom, llonflra Nootltd,
Hcmta, PO So• 829, Jtckaon , Dtckl, MIIC. Work, All Homt Ro· BONOED CORRECT/RE!IIOVE
:101-731-'11118.
polro , ~awn Ctrt. Ctll (740)2fllBAD
CREDIT,
SANKRUPTCY,
OH48140
MUll loll- lrlftd 8373 Or Coli Phono 1·304·833· LAWSUITS, JUOGMENTS. ~AA ADIOIUIIIY
3 BRI 2 atth Doubllwtdt With
.
RATING. 1-181-811-0902,
Mobile
OTA diiYer OHCIItl lor owner op- 8215
Dotlvtry. Btt·up, A1C I Skilling
for Rent
llllor, 110 HIIOOII~ homt • • Dopondtbla Man will mow ond
From
$2171
Monlfl
Only
e
Ook·
''eo ·
kondt, tome through the waok. trll1l lawn. Frto Eatlmatu Dtvorot
woctl- Gd._,oll (140)US.I!III
Bankruptcy
$185
14110, I ~. CIA, Allltcno orientation. Appty today, ttart
Adoption 1225
Country Living. Doubltwldo On J IIIC, ·WI1l, On Ill, NO 1'111, .......
tomorJow. Cal 7404el2·1!$14, Nno (304)875-2101
Not do·k·youlll!f-kltl
·
.,..., tiM "IIIIQI
.
Wooded Acrn $2500 ·a M-· lnGI
Ewperlenceel ltl!mst(aaa can
.
.·
t044 1100 DtPOitt (740)251·
CALL 1-800·283·0503 for FREE ln.
(740)446-3170
do- window treatmlntt, aome lntormttlan. Bankruptcy nit In TN/
Own A Compulo(l
bidding, ptllowo, btdlklrtt, a tl· KY '
,
2 bedroom mobllo hOmo tor ront, ·
Put "To Workl
flrallon
on moot tttma, cttl Btncty
no Pill. 74Hfl.11181. ·
128- 17U.r. PTIFT
Frto Money Nowl 11'1 Trutl No
740·192·3220.
t -881-81111-4325
r1payment. Gu1r1niHd. For par.._.
'llllllr 'for lllnt
www.l&gt;hapl.oom
ooar&amp;u Portable l!owmllt, don't oontl n.aeds. taucanon, bust·
lolow Gall~ Loatca On IIIII
houl your toga 10 thl mill just cal nooa. t •I00-724-e017 (24)
lloufl7110uih. (740)44HIIt.l
Foclory Gaol 3.2180 110,GOO Oil·
Now 304·875·t957.
.
train~
count
ontr
11000.00
Down,
Dt·
NEED AN EARLY PAYDAY?? Up
Ont I two bldroom, $245·1880
dty~
Olvo pltno losaont at home. Ia· to 1500 Instantly by pncntt 1. llvtry, tnd Ntup poid by Foctory PI' month, walar 1 garbage In·
t·f100-611t-e7n
glnntll • adults: 1110 .filch 877-EARLYPAY. Ucf 75G005, 111
clt*d, 710-8H·It17.
chord)ng
I tranapotlng .&amp; ~DVANCJ FREEl
POITAL JOlt 148.500/Yrl Now rhl'fhn11: 740.192·1!403.
FACTORY OVERSTOCKII .Nolll Small 2 Bldroom 'll'lltar In "nllltr
Hl~ng . No EIPI~tnco. Ptld natnNo FIIIIBIIVIOI Chlrgot
Doubtt Wldl Only $1.510 .00
,Irk, RtlertftCI I DIIIOtlt
lngiGraat Bonollta. Call t · BOO· Hardworking, Rallablo Drug Froo 1n NHd·ol Flnancllt Allllllnco?
Down And $318.00 Par Month . Rtquflld, (740)441-1101
•
218·t87t 111.731 .
28 VIII Old Matt With C'IIIIA Pluto Call U1 Toll Froo 1·188· Flit Dtllvtry
And
Bttup
Foclory &amp;Woronouoe El: 513-1181 24hr
t•ll88-828-342'e
440 APirtnlenta
POSTAL JOBS to 11 U51hr· CDL'I,
Ptrltnco Looldng For A Fulf.tlmo
WILOLlFE JOBS to $2U01hr In· Long·tarm
for Rent
'I'UIINID IIQWN ON·
Final Deys. Nttlonwldt lrwontory
Job . Coli Aatm At
cludol B•ntllto. No E•porltnce (304)etS·3417
SOCIAL IICUIIITY~ A?
AldUCIIOnl (304)736-3409
•
t ond a -.om IPtllmlml fur·
Ntcuoary. For Appllctdon end
No FH Unllu We Wlnl
Elam Info, call t · 800·992·7054 · Lown Mower Ana Smtll Engine ·
Land homl p~tekigaa, no money nlthtd tnd u~furnlollld, ...Urn,
f·BII-N2·334a ··.
dopotlt raqulrad, no ptto 740·
1201 M·f 1:30-S:GOpm
Jloptlr; frH Plcll;up And Dlllv·
doWn. 740-310-9423. '
192·2218.
•
·try
Within
1
o
Mllto.
2t
nara
HI
i\1
I
:,f
J\11
·Still PotltlonFuii·Timt, Ewparlancl . Call Mike At
Llmttod Or No Crodtt? Clovarnt Bedroom Aptttmont, ~~o~r~go 11 •
Llfo.l fylt Furnlturo, No Phone
mtnl Btnk Finance Only At Oak·
'.
Calla, Apply In Por1on. see (740)446-7804
wood In Boroouravllll , WV 304· tor. Aango, AIC lftcludod, tnt
Third A.-nuo, OIHipolli, OhiO.
:!':..:f.otll 6 ll•ltronco . HUD
Homn for Slle
Mobile Home Painting. D11count 31
731-3409.
(740)141-1511
Ia
Sonloro
.
Colt
(740)441-1543
.
Somoont lo mow lawn with your tor Fro Esttrnall
Lot model cturance, sova up to
3
Bldloom·
1
Bltn,
Newly
RtmOequlpmont. (140)245-8393
.dlted, Hlghwor 12· 3 Milts Put $1,125 with ony home, chactc Ul Fer rant· ono bldtoom hrrniMount's
11'11
Barvlca
'TM
TrH
wert ~llllog. C:olt't Mobllt IPirlmont In Midd!IPort, coli 140lomoonl To War~ AI Car Lot, Proltulona" • Buokot Truck Laon 138.000 Rttltor (304)571· cut
192·11231.
.
us eo. E••· Alfie,, On.
Hamil,
.
.
'
OIIIIPOIII !, l\llddltpOrt Alii , Sorvlco· Top· 'll'lm· Romovtt· 3058
tcowwlt.,t ur Auto llot*'l Sol- Stump Ortftdlng. , _ IIUmllll,
MUST SELL! 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath
B
·
·
3111· a&amp;tttn On 5 Home. No Old ConfliCt To AI· t adroom Apt CIOIO to Wtl•
Ing. RIIIIDII I Hontll. l"ttrl·llmo Fully lntured. Wororo Camp. ltautlhrl
Reduced
For
Quick
Salo
375
sumo. Jult A Rtlloblt Porty To Mort. '
-Pir month. All utllhloa
Of ,..1. (740,....172
llldwtl. 0»1. Call
t-100- It ti,GOO Btnclhlll ~Old. 1 1 1740)24&amp;-855&amp;
Moka
Monthly
Payment
t
·Ill·
lncloDd.
Owntr: po4)17W1111
_8211
__818:-5:-·~-·=~:----:- I t Bldloom "J&gt;trtmtnt Fot lltnl In
7
RIO Orondl. Wal~lng Dtallntit To
lr1Dk
·
3 ltd 00111· 2 ..... :-:
II I II d ... 8111 $81,GOO- Olfl. Now t4 It wlda 1481. down only Collage. All Ulllltltl Ptld . tO%
WIH la.,alt Ill _, ......
pollt l'elry, lllaltor. (104)578· lUi. par man . coli now •·800· Dlocounl On Ftrtt Montha lltnt
ltt-e.m .
(740)24Htoo

.

Comt:utlq: WE FINAHCE OEi.L
COMrUTEIIII E..n Willi IIH
tnon Plrtocl crldHI 1·100-417·
1011. Coda ACI4 - ·tlan.oom
I!ZPEIM.COM. 1M up 10on ALL Pt1 r; II " •• ond pllll. lnctudlna IIMrt(llrd, lnlll·
coptor, Frontlfno, morotll FREE
Ill liPPING. Ol'dlr onlnl-.11·
..... , """'1- 114 14117

1ft~. Equal

Etcllrly Aftd Hot dl

Folr Plgllar Salt. Bam In County. (7401441(1411)o141412

•·-,._- 1141 '

~==..:~ ~

DAYTONA BEACH, Aa.
-:- NASCAR might
coavinced Dale Earnlwdtls widoW to haw the raeing scar's autopSy pbotoa sealed
to protect itself against a
wrongful dea~ lawsuit, an
attorney for a newspaper -kins access to
imaJes auggated Tuesday.
Aupmey Tom Julin, In a
memonndum 6Ped in Volusia
County ·CiiCUit Court, also
upCd that legislation pUted
last 'ii!eek .;estricting public
acc:• to ~ autopsy photos is
unhmstjr:utional and can't be
applied ~troactively to the

C.......... Dr... Club Pig Slfl,
Fayette
Co.
Foi. .OUOCII,
Wolilllnglon Coun houM Frld tr
April 1111 AI 7pm. 110.- 0 1
And Glllo, For Moll lnlo,
Cal""*- {740)91W!115

Brand &amp;cny PiiYifltlan 2.
1100010. ... ,.-....._ 1

7

Lhlwklcll

....
And - For Cia
lng Hoga
8111.Pigo,
lily,- ......·
- - - (740,.._

1-t00-oii1-EILCMI7

Furnished 2 l 3. Room APIII·
Ckoon. No ...... No 8molltng, llelt11nca• 6 DlpooH flo.
qulrod. Utllltlll Furnished.
(!40)448-tS.I t
01111..._ , •··rtmonto, NOll
...,..,

Flu 1 ccn11110. a 1111'1! Dill

ontr $119.118,., .tloiiiL7408111 .131l'.

- ·-Our

830

~Cilw(I,JIIptl
"-Collar t.-.,

-1run11 .
- ..· ctar--c.t
..o l dllnow.

-141001·177·n7·
.......00
3 Badrooma IIIIi.
4110

-

MEDICAL BILLING !.lfllmittd In·
come potentltl. No up,rltnca
neco111ry. Fru lnlormatton &amp;
CO.ROM. l....lmtm 1!0rn $2495:
Financing available. (100) :122·
1139, .

Otocountii/Ptrkl. Etrn Big US .
Nomlnol Sllrfl41 Colli 1-111-619·
OIIOt or www.EarnBuckaFrom-

740-tf~M117.

~

Car. ~~)l71-0131

-.sno.

par-.

Pte-·
man. ... -

IF YOU MUST WORK, WORK
AT HOME! Build your own IUC•
CIIIIUI bualntll. MIII·Oidtr/E·
Commorct 11000·$7000 PT/FT.
Fro lniOrmotfon. www.Foc1110n·
.Fr-.comi00-731-2331.

~.com

•

Ntw 1001
3 llr. , 2
-... Homl
· . . up
In
Till
Courllry .....
-.,...,to - l i t ,
SttB.M
New dOUDII wtil. S br. I Dl. ·
$811.00 dOwn OIIIY IJII. 1111

lli,. £111111, 3 Badrooma, 2 FuH
Bllhl. 2 C. Otroge
FORECLOSEO GOV'T HOMES!
IO OR LOW DOWN I . TAX
REPO'S .&amp; BANKRUPTCIES! OK
CREO!Tr FOR LISTING! CALL 1•
3
100-SOI·tm Ill 8Bt .
HOMES FROM $199.30/Mo. 1·
3BR Rtposl Follclosuroa, fee,
4% down. For LlltingoiPaymtnt
Ottals.t·I00-7t9-300t i 1185

Toll 11111-877~ ;

1·

to . . . . ...., .........
$ ' I fJI cllaitmlnlllaft

Fin-

7 llilllont. loblil' ......... ""'*'G
- . ...... IIIOOIIWI or liP'
. .. ... ..,..., 740-317-11112.

coli -

F...-.

Mllllll_.......,.ln
loUjtotto
tJI1 _ _ _ .......

A VENOINO OOLOMINE·ACT
NOWIIItcblftll ..ftd Htrlhty
.::~:-e:nd•a•,.ua..,
coftdy AND phone Clrdt. (U&amp;I
.,.. , le ..,., ......
milt. U.S.) Elm $1001/WUj. Work
_...__
H lin/Wk. Orut -~ 100- . ,_ _
.......
____,_ _ _•
15t-1775. fiW, rtq.
I·
..__~lar-

.

-..m.

""" $27G. ... -

No-.'Will _ _ _ _ _

-• r- . _._lll?to ...

o.-

Oa- IIIII. a. .... I..._
7th And 8th, 71 • - llold,
Otllipolltt

Sead resume 10:

........ v.o.,

hMith ~ . .
. TlleM PDIIIIona

In your 1111. Coli for rnor. lntor•
matlon . t · IOO-ROMANCE, 011.
1738.

40

ror.u11oon

· - . 401(10
......... plln

-tlons.

TONIGHT!

:004:00.

Lie. Pa wt":e' Nane'•

nrtoUe nan pn&gt;nt

H.,.. fun IIIHtlng ellgllllo lfngltt

~u.....,.

ICCU

....... vlllon

Pel'loniM

Aftd IIV'I . ConiiCI Ron AI
(7'01448-CJI51 ot 33t-0150. II

210 - Bu*Opportunlty

Pleaant V.Uey
Haepital

_,. . _.,..._..., __

w.- - . -

f ',/, ' ,( '·'

0

•Full-lhs• evtn!!'IO
lhlft • Exoellent .......
piCbge
It

180 w.nlld To Do

' " ' - Aprl 11, 2001.

8onueM

MIIJ''ltrJI'f r.11 rn,

..........

Applicallano . . pollllon "'
s.,riCUH.. Ractne Wille Wlllf
Trutmont pllftt or• baing ac·
ooptld. wllroqllirl Ob:
talnlng Ct111 11 Waate Wat•r
Traatm•nt Operalora LicenH.

thla
opportunity•••
~ Up to 17,.., +

.•

,

---11.- . _ Ton NI ~
,.,.. · I - - ar, 2 Ton Coil. 1 Lfftl 1101. tn·
~, 1215 + lll!oolfll• lllllld. 12.295, S I ,000 Bodl,
-(7~ .
llo4iilrtd. 11215
Nil - , . Cal ..... CC....On Ollar. · - - . - n A T If You 00n1 Coli Ill. WI
IU.lACK• ,.,_,.__,
I·? - · - - I -EUATII,
5••
1 " - ..,...._,
~ - 1 0 2111lflOP a Coli 740-441- 39 114' ·ond 314 ...,_...,.
25M.Eqoalaa-.Oppcl!bifty.
tng 111111. 1 tumtng-. wOod
Chrtatr'• FomtJy LIYtng, 33140
7-LJrnalld.,-.ONo.740- _ , _ . . . . .
742·7403.--- -lllcl ,..........,_, ......

•

-T..,. __,Or
I;OOpm

-.eae

....... CJMII75-IIIJ Otpolil

,

•

lloC..OIO .. "' ~
._.,...,
far lilillngL
· -·1777Ext..tl

----~
•~
~- . . _ -

•

•

.. DOMIHOIIES

Bl

AttonJeY ~~ NA5
covering.ils own backside

• - o a t - • 41, aa- - . 11.1, . _ llocf;,
C187)17~-

lllln:lwldlel

1- 1 , . , _ , 0..
111._ 6 _ , _ lrt-

•

Pamei'OJ, ~Ohio

;._~;,~,,;,~,=--===r..
;;;,,==c,=·=t=au=•~~.==---====~=~~=1~
.
•

•

'

�WJ Jla

I

Po:ilwoy, Middleport. Ohio

•

NBA Croa•word Puzzle
PHtLLIP ·

AlpER

•

P/1

t:' .
I

. Trucklnl

"rc' -. 0111o 41771

•Newttomea

740 88Wet8 • Glrqtl
COIKIE1t/II.IIM • Comjll ...

Uonel, MTH,

·r--.w..,.,..

a Is

RotW....

r ''· • w.lm

~·st...::

c.... rno ....· ,

.

Sa ... Olllo . . w.v.
WVIU17U

'

.AIIeed In

K-Une,

a

. 740 892·1871 .

CUSTOM SCIIBI

.......

-....,. n

H
bux

n~

r.1.cllileport

lpt) l\qr

Qh,, ·l)' uil

.......

--·

IDUYIU

•--

Q1' 1

•

KENSINGTON

Alto Upllolstery· Plus, Inc.
Rutland, Ohio
Truck seats, car seats, headliners, truck Uups,
convertible &amp; vinyl tops, Four wheeler seats,
motorcycle seats, boat covers,~:arpets, etc.

ULTRAYIOLET RAYS
FACTORY DIRECT

992·2975'

Guttera-Down
Spout

•GrsveiSud•
'ThJIIGII • Flli Dirt

FfN fit/"""'

111t10 St Rt 7 Strorff&gt;.l

Plu.,.lng

•Muidl

( 949-1405

Bulldozer Services

591-:5011

992-3470

• Roam 'ddlllo..,..
Remadlllng
• New GaragM

'

Air

Serving customers 11 'yeara

a- a 1111en1e Fink, owner

YOV fAY YOU .tMVf F:l&gt;VCATIONAL
.,.
. · . fXPf,lfftiGfl

eMPL.OY..

MeNT

'

Toll Free 1 8811 913-8595

' .

•

.;

•

• . , _ I I PlUmbing

• VInyl Siding

I

• Patio llld

1..:--------

Free Estimates

Pomerov. OH

V. C. YOUNG Ill

-...01110

Public Notice

•

I

t

•

••.'

THE BORN J.OSF.R

Tree Sei'VIce

FUU. Tll-.wcOIIlnY·~--. EC1AJRE .. IUV
Wt1W • WI ElatAa
1'-'

992·6215

FREl • HOa IITIIAlU · · - • ......,._.. •'fMai:Mn

lOIII'· .

.,,.

YES··.l'Vf lftftl
FlrfO fF:Vf,A£.
TIMfS AS A .
&amp;..ESSON TO '
TO OTtlf!lS.

·l&gt;ePT.

'

Month's
I
I.tlThis
Cll•ll'- ttl_. flltlr I Lilli
·-iu•o.....,.
a·Polnllng . I
Porch-

WINDOW·
SYSTEMS

.

\
Ucln18d • lnaured
TlwM •'a.nttral• TJMnillll loflll• UnnoX

CARPENTER . "Wtllllln
VIMih Produc:ll'
•All Oillln Stock:-1
____
..., ___
SERVICE

OUAL.ITY

TATER -- LET'S ME AN' YOU
PULL THIS OL' WISHBONE

IEIIIII&amp;

YOUNG'S

PRICING

·· BARNEY

W9 ServiC9 All MakfiS"
Warner lieatlng &amp; Cooling, Inc. .
Under new ownership it Is now

' '

OF DAMAGING

· 1-8()()..291-5600 •

_Roofing· Home

,..AAVe: '1'00 1'&gt;101\C£.11 P..U. TilE. "'!·
~1#6 UKE:. IH~ P."V£ ~"''
II.W~ ~ ~ 'N u..m.'l'r
fi.WNl.~ ~· f&lt;lV- f.I.IOOTt\11'1&amp;!

lT

• Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump &amp;rlndlng
• Bucket Truck

....

0C NO.I Tf\IK&lt;:&gt; 'I'OU ~'

....,

.U\f.~'LL e&gt;(. N" ~~ ~

f~ Tf\E. IDT ~Niw.&gt; ~'10!

BISSELL
BUILDI!RI INC.
Now!J-.•V:ayl

Sldlai • Now Ganaa
·Ro~meat

Wladowo • Room
Public Notice

Public Notice

PROIIATE COURT

ahoutd not ba
granted
ahou ld
appear and Inform
the Court. The Court
locahld at Malga
County Court Hou.., ·
Second
Straat,
P~, OH 4117S9.

Of' 111!108 COUNTY,

OHIO
I!STATE 01' JUNE
OPAL JOHNION,
DECI!AIED

'

Cue No. 31,750

'

Addltleou • Roollaa

.

CONCRETE
CONNECTION

/

· Adverti~e your
message.·

Quality Drlveweya,

$8.00 column Inch weekdays
$10 ..00 column Inch Sundays

PatiOI, Sidewlllkl. ,.
25 yen IXptritnc:l
ffll Ellllllllll .
740-742-8015 Or

Reserve Your
(740) 949-7039
or
(740) 992·3203

Advertise·.your business
on this pa for one

J

'

. .,

....

Welded Fnime it
Sash 0·1 01 Unlled '
' Inches

$10.00 Installed

J&amp;L
992-2772

•~ t •

'

In this

Racine
Mower

v

Clinic ·-

''

\

9&amp;2804

'f'OU1RE LUCK'( IT

~

'

Pomeroy

. ~~~~~~~

I

'

;• ~~~~~~~~~~~

3IS--

Is belter than a
finesse
Pass me my glasses
.,- Robert C. Peterson, Greenwood, S.C.
· Here is. a second
deal shown io me by
Rabbi. Leonard Helman, from Santa Fe,
N.M. Again, it features real-life (read
"imperfect") bidding
and play. But we learn
more from mistakes
than from accuracy.
And . this time, most
declarers in the duplicate paid no attention
to West's bidding.
Five Souths went
down in four ·spades
by messing up their
entries and not reillizing that East rated to
be long in spades
when West announced
a two-suiter..They lost
one spade, two diamonds and one club .
In this auclion,
North should double
five clubs. And if ·
South gets a heart ruff,
the contract goes four
down for plus 800.
In five spades,
South won the first
trick with her heart
ace, played. a spade to
the ki.ng, and· filnessed

• STEADY

740-985-4212

•..,.,.

11-~~

Htll't Self

High &amp; Dry
Self·SJorage

28870 8nhln Rolli

7~992-5232
Pli 1 mo.

Racine, Ollto
41771
7~9-2217

Slzn5'
x 10'
I

to 10' x30'
Hours

7:00 AM • I:OQ PM

a
•

:11

Dalll IIWI

Q llounUIIn

liOn

c.--- 41 llctlar'a

.....

COl rm .
41 ..........

21 .....

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• Conlpllt
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ladlaa

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41 bltftb . .

23 Tiny
..-1
. 24 l.umpl
21 Upon
• II~' at;

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

They say that a

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....

bUll

- -·

10 .Weight

520ollpag
54 O..lhlll

10 ~~ac~ ,....

IIF- .

tu 12 r.ftlitrt
-~~-

poet

obllgldlon

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lull Campo•
CII •111y Clphor Cl)pi&lt;IVr!mO aro cru!ad lnlm quatallanl by lamouo
people. puln

- '·Each-In tho cipher standi lor.-.

TOIMy'ICiue: l equ.ll M
OWTMT
EX
0
ICCN

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PCR

JGKO

MTGHHP
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PCR

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WGXK'O

JMI!OOTK
PTO,
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LRXO
JMEOT
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OCKE

LCIIMEXCK

·
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'There's nothing to wfll\~g .. ~~ ~J!U ilo
II tit dowil 'l llha l)lplwrltar and open a vein.• - W1118r Red'

-_..::;Srn;:.:llll~----~-~-~----···-~·-

::::

I

::::!·:;::~-::;:·~~-=~·,_;t·
C E E I N1 ·

Il-3...,1.---.l-:4-rl

king and disqarded a
diamond on the club,
but bad to lose two
diamond tricks.

1...

,..

:=·:;::!-

;_r--1

The pretty play is a L.
::;~·;=:;:~
low diamond to' the ,.
jack at trick three.
R I GE V ~
West wins and exits a
~
My brother 11as be.en a pessi-.
with a heart to dum'3
mist all his .life. He thinks things
my's king. But pow . - - - - - - - - _ , d o get belter with every day, but
Iget even worse in the - -- - - - -.
declarer calls for the 1· . I N R E 0 T
diamond nine. If it
7
Campl~te . tho &lt;hu~kl.e quoted
wins the trick, the
. .
_ .
bv fllhnv In the """"'~~ wards
.
vau develop tram slop No. 3 belaw.
spade finesse is taken.
However, if East covPRINT NUMBERED lETTERS.
IN THESE SQUARES
ers the diamond nine
with her king, declarer
UNSCRAMBlE .lETTERS TO
GET ANSWER
'
wins with the ace,
returns to dummy with
SCRAM-LnS ANSWERS.
a diamond to the eight,
and tales the marked
Volume • Pulse - Irate - Genius - OURSELVES
I shpuldn't be so hard on myself lor not losing weight.
trump finesse. In both
cases,. 11 tricks are . 'fhe hardest promises to keep are the ones we make to
OURSELVES.
raked in.

r I' I

I: e

6

I

Celllli Pint Or We Both Lolel

...Ask For Mike'Hindle ·· ·
1•800-171-5178

Thur..Iay, April 5, 2001
Fonunntely. you' n: a good
slodenl who profi" from your

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

• PROVEN
• DEPENDABLE

3~
Gadon

. 42 "Yoo'-1"

1 I I I .

,,

'lire.
RCIIId

~ ......
loot

• 12 --allmb 4 FE_.I
33 Coo 111 1
_.,
lionI -Tin T1n

I

month.

"Serving Hundreds of Satisfied
Customers For Over22 H:ars!"

..

,

i

PIDN'T CAUSE A

'

Locally owned anti, operated by
' JACK &amp; LINDA PROVENCE
39563 Sumner Road

open
.. 33795 Hiland Rd.
Mon-Frl9-5:30 P~meroy, Oh.io
Sat 9-1 ·

~40)

........ ..

$50 per.

A·J MINI·STORAGE
992-6396
992·2272

•

=~of
...,

I

ME?

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

space for :r-~n;;;;;;;;;-..::-::::1

Now Reatilg

Phone,
992·2155

YOU U!.T SEEt1ED
SO SAD .

... r

ruilr

2 Ad«

AiiiEia

41 flll*la
110111111

0

.

.._.,_.,.
-.......u.,.~! ~~~~51

•F IF I * "· •Tn PI llflilfilllt '

J &amp; L SANITATION

155N2nd •
Mlddlepor1

:,

~&gt;ELL...

,

--~~Double Hunc,r
Replacement
Windows

.

•'

Advertise ·

New Homes, Room
Addilions, Garages,
1 Pole Buildings,
Siding, Dec:ks,
Kitchens, Drywall &amp;
More
We Can Make Your
· Dream A Reality!
. 740-742;3411
FREE ESTIMATES!
I'

21 , _

11 Pod 111m
21 ljl IIIII

fGIIW

Ru In

her club toward dum·
1~11oo1 lor CIAY a. POLlAN
my, West going in with
Roarrange letters of the
four tcramblad words bethe ace. Now . West
low to form lour tlmple words.
exited quietly with the
heart jack. Declarer
F ) ·v R y E
won with dummy's h-1-,r2 .;.,1~1'"..,.,·1,......,1.--1

G.o ,·

WITH

1

~;!~~~: d~~~r l~~ '::!:t:~· S@ \\4\1 }A-~ t.trs·

..

1-877-353-7022.
Sunset Ho1110
Conslruct1on

!

e

-~---

..
VOUB
'

Judith R. Sinon
(4) 4, 2001

.. .. ·..-

.....
""' .........
,. ,.
....,....
_...

the spade jack sue•

:Z:'VE IEEN WA'n:HINIO'
'ltlv ALL WEEJ&lt;. ~lNG
'TO Fl NO " !&gt;ATE .TO
THE . PAII:TYJ ANI&gt;... .

Uhrollt
DOWN

...._..~

VulaenMa: Noriii.SOUU.

'''I

CCII I!IOollwllllimiAI
FREE ESTIMAT.ES
740~992-7599
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

pUBUCATION OF

Nonce

••
........,_

peek
•

?

-11 "Gnlll"
atlrt
20 Do•

BY Ptl:LLIP Awt:R
IMlE

=...

--

t7Art'

Listening

comic flllture.

......
11 J--.

r-·

•CU t

• f J J_
• ll t I
• t ·f l l

Opoolofj- • Q

Malntenanc.

Dalers

WINDOWS HEA1
. .ROR TECHNOLOGY
KEEPS THE
SU•EIITIIIE HEAT
BLOCKS OUT 111.0.

'

dinglnllhl
milinfumwd ,.. ,_..

GRAVELY TRACTOR

Wrltesel

-

I liM

11 Cllt.
. ..
nncld
11"--. . 17Tcl •
tuact or
11 Lilla

' I I J I

•• •••J II t

I Mlebyeg~MID •

REAL DEAL On f MW lewn trector,
lawn mover or Wltd trimmer/

SellS &amp; service .
204 Condor St.
Pomeroy

......

11
14T••

• A JII JI I

...

H0wardL.

All Malia nactor &amp;
. Equl,_t Puts
FlctOI)' Authoruid
Cue-1Hi&gt;u1a

OUT AND WINTER
TIME HEAT IN

•

•.,.

~.-.a.

Every Spring Tune-Up
I
get a FRE!: Blade Sherpanl!'ll·
N.w equlpmtnf arrlv/"11 ally
See Manning, W1yne or Jim

l.oclll 843-5284

I!UI1I: MECHANICAL CON11!.ACTORS

(740) 742-8888
1-888-521..(1916 .

.......,....

~oflhla
[lfol.n~e~ltioned)

"""""""

Mon·Frl 8:30 • 5:00
Over 4Ci yrs experience

~~

or

.
.
=
...... can
•

;:..~-"::'
1'lapillll

.... ...

f;Q JJI14
• Ill I
f-.ACI J III

of ille tlcilol ...
(Manly) d*lcter
In . . tnt [lnillll)

lfJ.!

WVto517'

Interior

FREE ESTIIIA'f£8

't:((

ri'fl

Liatnhad.........

'fw-

nt

Medicare Supplement; Ufc Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; College,
Retirement, .
Emergency Funds; Mortgage;
Major Medical • Nursing Home
~

G.W., ~ IUid Molp Counlill

®it for -fou"

740-985-4180

PIIIIJIIIG

l -3f4..f7S.7a24
1......250-9077
Pri I 'I I C
cial New CDMtnldioa
SUo Serrice .-o.llon
S.• ,•..._ iD 5I*' Mdllllluctwerk
"Trone' Salol a Serrice ror

· • .IE I I
\

MONUMENTAL U~ INSURANCE CO.

Ptllllsls-

.,..
~

;,,...,.,.,... Lee -

SIMIII C.,. .... ..tpwl SU0/50
,.. c..w. $5.25
,
1M.~ ~~ids S41S/SU. .
SHADE RIVER AG. SERVICE

&amp; Accessories
0, HO, &amp; N Guage
Estei Rockets

FREE ESliiATES

"Take tiN poilo out

.n..,,...u
·211._, ....... ,...Sl7~
-nn.... ,M. ... WSS.W50

Atheam, Atlas, Bachmann

AMiadlllng .
tMop Compere

PAINTING

••rvtae•
· v•.-SUSII•

463M 5t.llt. 241 Chutar, Ohio
(740) 98!1-3301

Q 11n1t

...._ .

UNDA'S

BAUM LUMBER CO.

COIIIACRIIS, IIC.

ACR088

CANCER (June 21-July 22 )

lessons, because your experi~

24'hour . . .
Marathon Service Center

ences from lhe past, both the
biller and the sweet, can be put
10 advanlageous uses in the
year ahead.
ARIES (March 21 -April19)
·• Sornelime during the day, 1r
co-worker miJhllry 10 engage
~ou ih a lillie one-upmanship
same-playing. Don.'l fall for

420 W. Main St.
Pomeroy, OH 45769
jiCI'OIIfrom Pizza Hut) ... •; .

his or her muneuverins tactic1i,

keep on doins your produclive
work. Know where to look for
romance and you'll find II. The
As.tro-Oraph Matchmaker
instanlly reveals which sisns .
are romantically perfect for
you. Mail $2.7S to Matchmaker, c/o lhia ncwsp~per. P.O. Box
1758, Murray Hill Slllion, ·
New York, NY IOIS6.
TAURUS (April ·20·May
20) •. Pomys into lhe unknown
could be an exercise in futility.
Stay within familiar territory
\"here you' ve been lucky pre·
vlously. Thai's where your suc·
ceSI will be found today.
GEMINI (May 21 -J,une 20)
-· There's a good chance thut
people with whom you "II he
involved today could &lt;1penue

(7 40) 992•1393
Full service auto center

·Cellular .
eff War,ner
Ins.
'
'

.- 992-5479

on a lower level thun you.

\

Don'l let lhCm influcnc.c: you .
Maintain your usual high standord!i. and idras.

I)

••••

•t

-- You won't fail today becau!le

of a lack of being capable to
perce ive the way things should

get done, it' ll he hccau"' of
when it come~ time to implement them you could have a

memory loss.
LEO (July 2J' Aug. 22) ..,
Even though you have the
wherewilhal to manage diffi·
cull developmeniS in both
career and finincial mailers
loday, chances are you 'll nol
· utilize these assets prudently.

VIRGO (Aug. 2l·Sept. 22)
-- Skillfully usina your wi1111d
charm to accomplish your
ambitious objectives will come
·nulurally to you today. However, this gifl· mia.~t desert you
if you gel omolionalln'\.relatlonship.
.LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct 23) ·
- Don't illempl to embellish
any peninent facts with someone with whom you're affiliated loday, because lhis person
will detect your unvuths and
lose all ,faith in you. Tell il
strnighl.
1
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) .. oon't lel a person '!' finn

with whom you've done bl!siness over a long period of time

. mke you for grunted todoy and
nol handle things as they
.&lt;hould for you. Make themtoe
the line.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·
De~. 21) -- It's u•uall y you who
does nil you c'n to k~~p re lation ships running snmothl y,

but today it might hen frequent

offender who is actually more

thoughtful than you.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan.
19) •• Be very careful who you
tell whal to. or if somebody
could be eavesdropping.

••

There's a chance whtU you say'
might be later used ::~gainM by
a devious person.

AQUARIUS (Ian. 20.Feb.
19) -- Avoid mannging "'me-

,.

one else bu!ii iness for them

1odoy. Allhough you might he
capable hanqling of your nwn
· affairs, it doesn'l hold lrue I hut
you will do equally well for
another.

PISCES (Feb. 20-Marc h 20)
-- Even though you naturally
are a kind, giving and compos·
sionate person, today for whatever reason, you rilight tum

your back on the very person
who has done so much for you.

I

�WJ Jla

I

Po:ilwoy, Middleport. Ohio

•

NBA Croa•word Puzzle
PHtLLIP ·

AlpER

•

P/1

t:' .
I

. Trucklnl

"rc' -. 0111o 41771

•Newttomea

740 88Wet8 • Glrqtl
COIKIE1t/II.IIM • Comjll ...

Uonel, MTH,

·r--.w..,.,..

a Is

RotW....

r ''· • w.lm

~·st...::

c.... rno ....· ,

.

Sa ... Olllo . . w.v.
WVIU17U

'

.AIIeed In

K-Une,

a

. 740 892·1871 .

CUSTOM SCIIBI

.......

-....,. n

H
bux

n~

r.1.cllileport

lpt) l\qr

Qh,, ·l)' uil

.......

--·

IDUYIU

•--

Q1' 1

•

KENSINGTON

Alto Upllolstery· Plus, Inc.
Rutland, Ohio
Truck seats, car seats, headliners, truck Uups,
convertible &amp; vinyl tops, Four wheeler seats,
motorcycle seats, boat covers,~:arpets, etc.

ULTRAYIOLET RAYS
FACTORY DIRECT

992·2975'

Guttera-Down
Spout

•GrsveiSud•
'ThJIIGII • Flli Dirt

FfN fit/"""'

111t10 St Rt 7 Strorff&gt;.l

Plu.,.lng

•Muidl

( 949-1405

Bulldozer Services

591-:5011

992-3470

• Roam 'ddlllo..,..
Remadlllng
• New GaragM

'

Air

Serving customers 11 'yeara

a- a 1111en1e Fink, owner

YOV fAY YOU .tMVf F:l&gt;VCATIONAL
.,.
. · . fXPf,lfftiGfl

eMPL.OY..

MeNT

'

Toll Free 1 8811 913-8595

' .

•

.;

•

• . , _ I I PlUmbing

• VInyl Siding

I

• Patio llld

1..:--------

Free Estimates

Pomerov. OH

V. C. YOUNG Ill

-...01110

Public Notice

•

I

t

•

••.'

THE BORN J.OSF.R

Tree Sei'VIce

FUU. Tll-.wcOIIlnY·~--. EC1AJRE .. IUV
Wt1W • WI ElatAa
1'-'

992·6215

FREl • HOa IITIIAlU · · - • ......,._.. •'fMai:Mn

lOIII'· .

.,,.

YES··.l'Vf lftftl
FlrfO fF:Vf,A£.
TIMfS AS A .
&amp;..ESSON TO '
TO OTtlf!lS.

·l&gt;ePT.

'

Month's
I
I.tlThis
Cll•ll'- ttl_. flltlr I Lilli
·-iu•o.....,.
a·Polnllng . I
Porch-

WINDOW·
SYSTEMS

.

\
Ucln18d • lnaured
TlwM •'a.nttral• TJMnillll loflll• UnnoX

CARPENTER . "Wtllllln
VIMih Produc:ll'
•All Oillln Stock:-1
____
..., ___
SERVICE

OUAL.ITY

TATER -- LET'S ME AN' YOU
PULL THIS OL' WISHBONE

IEIIIII&amp;

YOUNG'S

PRICING

·· BARNEY

W9 ServiC9 All MakfiS"
Warner lieatlng &amp; Cooling, Inc. .
Under new ownership it Is now

' '

OF DAMAGING

· 1-8()()..291-5600 •

_Roofing· Home

,..AAVe: '1'00 1'&gt;101\C£.11 P..U. TilE. "'!·
~1#6 UKE:. IH~ P."V£ ~"''
II.W~ ~ ~ 'N u..m.'l'r
fi.WNl.~ ~· f&lt;lV- f.I.IOOTt\11'1&amp;!

lT

• Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump &amp;rlndlng
• Bucket Truck

....

0C NO.I Tf\IK&lt;:&gt; 'I'OU ~'

....,

.U\f.~'LL e&gt;(. N" ~~ ~

f~ Tf\E. IDT ~Niw.&gt; ~'10!

BISSELL
BUILDI!RI INC.
Now!J-.•V:ayl

Sldlai • Now Ganaa
·Ro~meat

Wladowo • Room
Public Notice

Public Notice

PROIIATE COURT

ahoutd not ba
granted
ahou ld
appear and Inform
the Court. The Court
locahld at Malga
County Court Hou.., ·
Second
Straat,
P~, OH 4117S9.

Of' 111!108 COUNTY,

OHIO
I!STATE 01' JUNE
OPAL JOHNION,
DECI!AIED

'

Cue No. 31,750

'

Addltleou • Roollaa

.

CONCRETE
CONNECTION

/

· Adverti~e your
message.·

Quality Drlveweya,

$8.00 column Inch weekdays
$10 ..00 column Inch Sundays

PatiOI, Sidewlllkl. ,.
25 yen IXptritnc:l
ffll Ellllllllll .
740-742-8015 Or

Reserve Your
(740) 949-7039
or
(740) 992·3203

Advertise·.your business
on this pa for one

J

'

. .,

....

Welded Fnime it
Sash 0·1 01 Unlled '
' Inches

$10.00 Installed

J&amp;L
992-2772

•~ t •

'

In this

Racine
Mower

v

Clinic ·-

''

\

9&amp;2804

'f'OU1RE LUCK'( IT

~

'

Pomeroy

. ~~~~~~~

I

'

;• ~~~~~~~~~~~

3IS--

Is belter than a
finesse
Pass me my glasses
.,- Robert C. Peterson, Greenwood, S.C.
· Here is. a second
deal shown io me by
Rabbi. Leonard Helman, from Santa Fe,
N.M. Again, it features real-life (read
"imperfect") bidding
and play. But we learn
more from mistakes
than from accuracy.
And . this time, most
declarers in the duplicate paid no attention
to West's bidding.
Five Souths went
down in four ·spades
by messing up their
entries and not reillizing that East rated to
be long in spades
when West announced
a two-suiter..They lost
one spade, two diamonds and one club .
In this auclion,
North should double
five clubs. And if ·
South gets a heart ruff,
the contract goes four
down for plus 800.
In five spades,
South won the first
trick with her heart
ace, played. a spade to
the ki.ng, and· filnessed

• STEADY

740-985-4212

•..,.,.

11-~~

Htll't Self

High &amp; Dry
Self·SJorage

28870 8nhln Rolli

7~992-5232
Pli 1 mo.

Racine, Ollto
41771
7~9-2217

Slzn5'
x 10'
I

to 10' x30'
Hours

7:00 AM • I:OQ PM

a
•

:11

Dalll IIWI

Q llounUIIn

liOn

c.--- 41 llctlar'a

.....

COl rm .
41 ..........

21 .....

. onllr1y
• Conlpllt
• Ill
ladlaa

tua 1111y

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7 .....

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•• Ulaclly
~-

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41 bltftb . .

23 Tiny
..-1
. 24 l.umpl
21 Upon
• II~' at;

... 1ul
......
Mllllllllldlr
..........

They say that a

==t '

....

bUll

- -·

10 .Weight

520ollpag
54 O..lhlll

10 ~~ac~ ,....

IIF- .

tu 12 r.ftlitrt
-~~-

poet

obllgldlon

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lull Campo•
CII •111y Clphor Cl)pi&lt;IVr!mO aro cru!ad lnlm quatallanl by lamouo
people. puln

- '·Each-In tho cipher standi lor.-.

TOIMy'ICiue: l equ.ll M
OWTMT
EX
0
ICCN

'ED
PCR

JGKO

MTGHHP
I R0

IITGA

ITT K
PCR

EO

oc

WGXK'O

JMI!OOTK
PTO,
OWTK
LRXO
JMEOT
EO.'-

OCKE

LCIIMEXCK

·
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'There's nothing to wfll\~g .. ~~ ~J!U ilo
II tit dowil 'l llha l)lplwrltar and open a vein.• - W1118r Red'

-_..::;Srn;:.:llll~----~-~-~----···-~·-

::::

I

::::!·:;::~-::;:·~~-=~·,_;t·
C E E I N1 ·

Il-3...,1.---.l-:4-rl

king and disqarded a
diamond on the club,
but bad to lose two
diamond tricks.

1...

,..

:=·:;::!-

;_r--1

The pretty play is a L.
::;~·;=:;:~
low diamond to' the ,.
jack at trick three.
R I GE V ~
West wins and exits a
~
My brother 11as be.en a pessi-.
with a heart to dum'3
mist all his .life. He thinks things
my's king. But pow . - - - - - - - - _ , d o get belter with every day, but
Iget even worse in the - -- - - - -.
declarer calls for the 1· . I N R E 0 T
diamond nine. If it
7
Campl~te . tho &lt;hu~kl.e quoted
wins the trick, the
. .
_ .
bv fllhnv In the """"'~~ wards
.
vau develop tram slop No. 3 belaw.
spade finesse is taken.
However, if East covPRINT NUMBERED lETTERS.
IN THESE SQUARES
ers the diamond nine
with her king, declarer
UNSCRAMBlE .lETTERS TO
GET ANSWER
'
wins with the ace,
returns to dummy with
SCRAM-LnS ANSWERS.
a diamond to the eight,
and tales the marked
Volume • Pulse - Irate - Genius - OURSELVES
I shpuldn't be so hard on myself lor not losing weight.
trump finesse. In both
cases,. 11 tricks are . 'fhe hardest promises to keep are the ones we make to
OURSELVES.
raked in.

r I' I

I: e

6

I

Celllli Pint Or We Both Lolel

...Ask For Mike'Hindle ·· ·
1•800-171-5178

Thur..Iay, April 5, 2001
Fonunntely. you' n: a good
slodenl who profi" from your

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

• PROVEN
• DEPENDABLE

3~
Gadon

. 42 "Yoo'-1"

1 I I I .

,,

'lire.
RCIIId

~ ......
loot

• 12 --allmb 4 FE_.I
33 Coo 111 1
_.,
lionI -Tin T1n

I

month.

"Serving Hundreds of Satisfied
Customers For Over22 H:ars!"

..

,

i

PIDN'T CAUSE A

'

Locally owned anti, operated by
' JACK &amp; LINDA PROVENCE
39563 Sumner Road

open
.. 33795 Hiland Rd.
Mon-Frl9-5:30 P~meroy, Oh.io
Sat 9-1 ·

~40)

........ ..

$50 per.

A·J MINI·STORAGE
992-6396
992·2272

•

=~of
...,

I

ME?

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

space for :r-~n;;;;;;;;;-..::-::::1

Now Reatilg

Phone,
992·2155

YOU U!.T SEEt1ED
SO SAD .

... r

ruilr

2 Ad«

AiiiEia

41 flll*la
110111111

0

.

.._.,_.,.
-.......u.,.~! ~~~~51

•F IF I * "· •Tn PI llflilfilllt '

J &amp; L SANITATION

155N2nd •
Mlddlepor1

:,

~&gt;ELL...

,

--~~Double Hunc,r
Replacement
Windows

.

•'

Advertise ·

New Homes, Room
Addilions, Garages,
1 Pole Buildings,
Siding, Dec:ks,
Kitchens, Drywall &amp;
More
We Can Make Your
· Dream A Reality!
. 740-742;3411
FREE ESTIMATES!
I'

21 , _

11 Pod 111m
21 ljl IIIII

fGIIW

Ru In

her club toward dum·
1~11oo1 lor CIAY a. POLlAN
my, West going in with
Roarrange letters of the
four tcramblad words bethe ace. Now . West
low to form lour tlmple words.
exited quietly with the
heart jack. Declarer
F ) ·v R y E
won with dummy's h-1-,r2 .;.,1~1'"..,.,·1,......,1.--1

G.o ,·

WITH

1

~;!~~~: d~~~r l~~ '::!:t:~· S@ \\4\1 }A-~ t.trs·

..

1-877-353-7022.
Sunset Ho1110
Conslruct1on

!

e

-~---

..
VOUB
'

Judith R. Sinon
(4) 4, 2001

.. .. ·..-

.....
""' .........
,. ,.
....,....
_...

the spade jack sue•

:Z:'VE IEEN WA'n:HINIO'
'ltlv ALL WEEJ&lt;. ~lNG
'TO Fl NO " !&gt;ATE .TO
THE . PAII:TYJ ANI&gt;... .

Uhrollt
DOWN

...._..~

VulaenMa: Noriii.SOUU.

'''I

CCII I!IOollwllllimiAI
FREE ESTIMAT.ES
740~992-7599
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

pUBUCATION OF

Nonce

••
........,_

peek
•

?

-11 "Gnlll"
atlrt
20 Do•

BY Ptl:LLIP Awt:R
IMlE

=...

--

t7Art'

Listening

comic flllture.

......
11 J--.

r-·

•CU t

• f J J_
• ll t I
• t ·f l l

Opoolofj- • Q

Malntenanc.

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CANCER (June 21-July 22 )

lessons, because your experi~

24'hour . . .
Marathon Service Center

ences from lhe past, both the
biller and the sweet, can be put
10 advanlageous uses in the
year ahead.
ARIES (March 21 -April19)
·• Sornelime during the day, 1r
co-worker miJhllry 10 engage
~ou ih a lillie one-upmanship
same-playing. Don.'l fall for

420 W. Main St.
Pomeroy, OH 45769
jiCI'OIIfrom Pizza Hut) ... •; .

his or her muneuverins tactic1i,

keep on doins your produclive
work. Know where to look for
romance and you'll find II. The
As.tro-Oraph Matchmaker
instanlly reveals which sisns .
are romantically perfect for
you. Mail $2.7S to Matchmaker, c/o lhia ncwsp~per. P.O. Box
1758, Murray Hill Slllion, ·
New York, NY IOIS6.
TAURUS (April ·20·May
20) •. Pomys into lhe unknown
could be an exercise in futility.
Stay within familiar territory
\"here you' ve been lucky pre·
vlously. Thai's where your suc·
ceSI will be found today.
GEMINI (May 21 -J,une 20)
-· There's a good chance thut
people with whom you "II he
involved today could &lt;1penue

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on a lower level thun you.

\

Don'l let lhCm influcnc.c: you .
Maintain your usual high standord!i. and idras.

I)

••••

•t

-- You won't fail today becau!le

of a lack of being capable to
perce ive the way things should

get done, it' ll he hccau"' of
when it come~ time to implement them you could have a

memory loss.
LEO (July 2J' Aug. 22) ..,
Even though you have the
wherewilhal to manage diffi·
cull developmeniS in both
career and finincial mailers
loday, chances are you 'll nol
· utilize these assets prudently.

VIRGO (Aug. 2l·Sept. 22)
-- Skillfully usina your wi1111d
charm to accomplish your
ambitious objectives will come
·nulurally to you today. However, this gifl· mia.~t desert you
if you gel omolionalln'\.relatlonship.
.LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct 23) ·
- Don't illempl to embellish
any peninent facts with someone with whom you're affiliated loday, because lhis person
will detect your unvuths and
lose all ,faith in you. Tell il
strnighl.
1
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) .. oon't lel a person '!' finn

with whom you've done bl!siness over a long period of time

. mke you for grunted todoy and
nol handle things as they
.&lt;hould for you. Make themtoe
the line.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·
De~. 21) -- It's u•uall y you who
does nil you c'n to k~~p re lation ships running snmothl y,

but today it might hen frequent

offender who is actually more

thoughtful than you.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan.
19) •• Be very careful who you
tell whal to. or if somebody
could be eavesdropping.

••

There's a chance whtU you say'
might be later used ::~gainM by
a devious person.

AQUARIUS (Ian. 20.Feb.
19) -- Avoid mannging "'me-

,.

one else bu!ii iness for them

1odoy. Allhough you might he
capable hanqling of your nwn
· affairs, it doesn'l hold lrue I hut
you will do equally well for
another.

PISCES (Feb. 20-Marc h 20)
-- Even though you naturally
are a kind, giving and compos·
sionate person, today for whatever reason, you rilight tum

your back on the very person
who has done so much for you.

I

�•

.• . •
•

...... I • The Dilly Sentinel
• ••

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•

~.lllddllport,

Wednrt1

Ohio

NHL ·

r.

.
Aprl4, 2001

SPOilS: Meigs County prep diamond notes, ••

•

Roclltpel:

Gibson naused assistant
Mountaineer coach

was:

•

....
-

. '

Golfers ar-en't
:I

•

the

•'

only

'

.

We love it when P!!Opl~ say
~orld and The New York Times
nice things about us.
. called us "..• some of the best
'
fflJlf Digest recently listed
public golf on earth."
Robert Trent Jones
Golf Magazine listed THE ·
.Alabama's
.
. Golf
.Trail among the top 50 golf
SENATOR course ~t our new Capitol
destinations in 'the world.!
Hill location among its top new
And in its current Places to , ,. courses in the countzy anc;l. THE
Play ratings, Golf Dige.st gave
LEGISLAroR course in the top 25 .
most of the Trail's 21 courses
newcomers. And wait until you
4 stars-and some even got 4'lz.
see THE JUDGE!
Not bad when you consider,that
So, we hope you11 understand
5 stars only go to those once~in­
when, like aU good golfers, we
a-lifetime
courses. And aU' of the
like to brag apout our scores.
.
Trail's courses got top honors for
Can today to book your golf
service.
..
. . and hotel package and get ready
Frequ~nt flyer Magazine listed
for one of the best golf trips in
us among its top 10 trips in the
the world.

I

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.
:~

love

about t h

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scores. ·

April

&gt;

s1

2001 ·Vol

~

Middleport • Pomeroy. Ohio

No 182

'

mires can be ·p~perly collected:
SEHT1HEI.tnS STAFf'
The ·~is being performed as a
POMEROY -A deadline for sur- coDaboratm: effort by the ~ on
vey questionnaires designed to devel- the Future of Pomeroy Comnuttee
op economic developmental strate- (FFPC) and the Corporation ofOhio
gies for Pomeroy's ~idena and busi- Appalachian Development (COAD).
nesses has been extended.
It asks questiom about shopping
• Mayor John Blaettnar said the turn- inteft:Sis~ health and professional serin deadline of l\llarcb 31 has been vices, preferences for llllrious commuextended until the middle of ,next · nity ckvdopment ideas and civic prowei!:k so that all distributed question- j~. and ideas that could help the
•

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SILVER LAKES

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38Hou:e

. . HOLES

.OXMOOR VALLEY

GRAND NATIONAL

introduce
voucher
program ,
. : COLUMBUS (AP)
Public education should
follow the law of the marketplace says a Cleveland
resident who uses a school
voucher p_rogram to pay
for two of his children to
attend a Catholic elemenracy school. ·
Tony Kaloger, 40, a professional iUustrator, was ·
helping drum up support .
for a package of school
choice bills that Republican lawmakers introduced
WednCsday. ·
. · The state woul4 spend
more money on Gleveland's voucher experiment
and creare a nl::w.libard":to '
monitor c~arter ' sdibols
~~~~er th~ b~.
"Just give us the rights to
make decisions for our- ·
Jelve,s , and spend the
IJlOne)' that's already been
designated for the child,
and trUst me, enough as a
· parent to make ·good
,choices:• Kaloger said.
The State Scholarship
' P~gram
Act
would
Increase the antount of
inoney that the voucher
program ~pends . ori chil-dren, from $2,500 t\) the
current per-pupil sp~nding
amount, or about $4,200,
this~' .
.
'. Federal .c:Outts have twice
ruled the voucher progratn
unconstitutional. ·The program gives vouchers to i
needy families with child~n
in
kindergarten
through sixth grade.
· The Community School
Enhancement ' Act would
create 1 a State Bo~rd of
~bmm~nity Schools to
n'Onsot ~d- monitor chill'~
tet schools, called commu~
:Uity schools in Ohio.' ·

agreement·
Wildlife management
affects Meigs lands
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11..11#
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s·e ntinel

De!Aiils, A2

Lotteries

~-illii-IMII-111-•------~

Pick :S: H..Q; l'lcU: 9-0-7-2

Edjtorjals"

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:~oClllomwoicsaL--------.IIIB":-7 'SI!PJrLaiac"3-19-26-29-34'39

M

WASHINGTON (AP) - The House
vote ~esday to ~;epeal the estate tax over
decade capped a legislative blitz in which
Repubfican leadet:s pushed through the
; major components of President Bush:s $1.6
trillion. tax cut just 75 days into his·term.
"It l!:a5 been a good s!art,'' said Rep. J. C.
Watts of Oklahoma, · the follrth-rank:ing
House Republican. "We hope the Senate
will follOw suit."

a

'

0 1001 Ohio Yllloy Publlthln&amp; Co.

•·

CAPITOL HILL
Prton.ille

·EState tax vote pushes Bush plan.forward

' Low:Ms

.•'

.

54 HOLI8

'

Alabama'
. a Robert lmtt Joaea 'Golf Tml 378 holes of world·cltUs golf on eight sites

.. ..
•

Carellac

•

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Discover the Holzer Di{ferenee.
/

'
•

growth."
"Today's vote is an important step toward
restoring fairness in the tax code ~y eliminating the double and tripll! raxation that
results &amp;om the death tax," ' the president
said. "I look forward to continuing to work ·
with members of Congress from both parties to enact real and meaningful tax relief
for the American people:·

·available at the Charles'E. Holzer, Jr., M.D. Surgery Center.

www.rtjgoif.com

.

ry for .fairness and a vote for economic

Services

1.800.949.4444

'

By a 27 4-154 vote, the House passed a
measure that would gNdually. reduce and
then repeal the tax in 2011 at a cost of
$185.5 billion. Fifty-eight . Democrats
joined nearly all House Republicans · in
favor of the legislation that was similar to a
rep~al then-President. Clinton vetoed last
year.
· A.t the White House, Bush issued a written .statement that called the vote a "victo-

•

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FROM STAFF REPORTS

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Doiolio•

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Boy . .~cout
Troop , 235
planted :; 175
pine trees ' at Reedsville's
Forked
State -Park earlier this week as a co~hcity
project. The scouts are · m
the .ReedsVille and TuJ?eers
~lains area. Right ::-: J~es .
D~ey of tqng Bottom is
pictured ·pla~t:ihg; one of ~e
trees, w'hile, ' Top ·- Scout
Leader Mike M09re ins~cts
other scouts during the Rtoject. (Submitted photos) ·

~SpoJHU.rtsli....,---·&amp;B1.L:·:..2"'",5~.8 D1ly :s: ~7-2 D1ly 4: 1-H-7

Gru,.•Uie

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POMEROY - Mead Corp. and the Ohio
Department of Natural Resources have
signed a new wildlife management agreement covering 75,000 acres of Mead's' forest
land, including sites in Meigs County.
Mead-'s Paper Division and ODNR have
cooperated since 1961 to provide opportunities for hunters, anglers and ot~er wildlife
enthusiasts.
Besides its forest land in Meigs County,
Mead owns land in Adams, Athens, Gallia,
Highland, Hocking, Jackson, Lawrence,
Meigs, Pike, Scioto, Ross, Vinton and Washington c.oua~es.
. ·- · • 1
·tJnder I the new two-year agreement,
Meaq, with the assistance of the Division of
Wildlife, will continue to manage the _lands
to enhance the overall health and well-being
of the forest ecosystem, including wildlife
populations of both game and non-game
species.
The agreement is a key component of
M~ad's , long-standing commitment to protecting the environment and conserving natural resources. Hunting rights on Mead land
not included in this agreement will be available for leasing to the public.
A new area map has been developed by
Mead, which includes Mead-owned ' land
available for use by ·the public. The map .also
contains' areas that are open to the public and
· owned by the U.S. F~rest Service and
ODNR's Divisions ofWildlife, Forestry and
Recreation.
.
· New maps can be obtained through contact with the Division of ',Vildlife at 5942211 , or by calling 1-888-609-TREE.
.The Division of Wildlife may ·enforce
Ohio Revised Code and associated regulations on agreement lands. As a part of the
agreement, ODNR Division ofWildlife will
assist Mead in the· control of litter, off-road
vehicle ·use, vandalism; timber trespass,
boundary line delineation and camping.
The agreement will be reviewed after two
years.

·community project_

JOQbwmituaallllneu'""s------LlA3~ W.VA. .

HIOHLA~D OAKS

community · take advantage of the
expected ~ within the region,
namely the Athens-Darwin project,
the Ravenswood Connector project,
and the development ·of'a new river-

Mead,
ODNR'reach

Caljndar .
A5
~CI8M~'s~'ifl~ed~s--~~~B4-~6 OH~

OptliU/A.*..."'

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CAMBRIAN RIDGE

bHJinus "t!o&gt;ple .who fjpe
• .p • . c----"arul work tn Mtrgs ounty.

lionr marina.
community life in the Pomeroy area.
COAD is an Athens-based nonBlaettnar said members of Boy
profit organization serving rural, Scout Troop 249 'wiU be going liom
mosdy Appalachian, counties in east- house to house on Saturday in an
em and southern Ohio. ·.
attempt to collect the remaining surThe FFPC consists of a group of vey queytionnaires. which were delivintercsted citizens and business people ered to households by village meter
who live and work in Meigs County. readers on March 20. ~
The committee's goal is ro work . " We have extended the ,deadline
towards improving cooperative efforts because a number of questtonn:ures
to maintain and improve business and
PIJWH . . Sul'"f, AS

leaders

JIJdiJWI -1!1 . . . .
HAMPTON COVE

•

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Tlu FFPC consists pj a
group of interuteJ citizens

' 1tr TollY M.l..ual '

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e

Mn'pcc:cr
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MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (AP) Halfway dirougb
•
spring drills, Rich Rodriguez knows this about hH playen:
They're too nice.
·
"They might be guys )UU wmt to date ")UUC daughter,
,. but I want guys wbo chan~ their personality on the field,"
the Mountaineers' head coach said Monday. "I want JekvllHyck guys on the field and off the iield. ... They cad be
nice when practice is over.
I!Y lliE ASSOCIATED PRESS
ray said. "At one point, we wen: 12 poiqts as Aorida won at Philacklpbia.
"Some of our guys just don't get it. It's dangerous;• he
Playoff hopefuls Carolina, Phoenix and behind Vancouver and seven or eight or
Michal Sykora scored for the Ayen,
said after the first practice since spring break enckd. "If )UU
Los An~les managed just two goals each. nine behind Phoenix, and yre dosed the who remained one point behind Buffalo
play passively, you'll get hurt. They need to understand
They all escaped with a much-needed gap."
,
. for fourth place and home-i&lt;;e advanta~
that."
.
point in th_e standings.
lrbe was at Jm best in overtime, stop- in the first round of the Eastern ConferIn particular, Rodriguez has his eye on safety Shawn
Carolina, behind Arturs lrbe's fine play ping Keith Tkachuk, skating alongside ence playo£15.
Hackett, offensive lineman · Brad Knell and linebacker.
in goal, earned a 2-2 tie at St. Louis:That Pavol Demitra on a 2-on-none break.
Aorida, who gut 39 saves from Trevor.
Grant Wiley, who went through his first practice Monday
point w:as good enough to draw the Hur- lrbe also thwarted Scott Young on a Kidd, is unbeaten in five road games (3- .
since breaking Jm leg at the Music City Bowl.
ricanes even with Boston -· with three break-in with 43 seconds to go.
0-2). It was Kidd's fint start in seven
Those three, ·coincickntally, are the only players who
games remaining for.each- in the EastThe Blues, limping toward the playo£15, games.
Rodtiguei says are "pretty solid" starters among 22 posiern Conference playoff race.
got a -third-period goal from Chris
Blue Jackets :!, Red Wmp 1·
tions.
"We're still in control," said defenseman Pronger to end a three-game losing
Ron Tugnutt tied the reconl for wins
Rodriguez is aware of the talent of middle linebacker
. David Tanabe, who scored his sixth goal streak. lrbe kept the l'lurricanes, who by an expansion goalie, and Mike
Kyle Kayden, running back Avon Cobourne, safety Ric~­
for Carolina. ''We know that Boston is were outshot 14- 5 in die thirdand6-1 in ·Maneluk scored the go-ahead goal with
Sherrod and defensive linemen Antwan . Lake and Davad
going m go out and play weU, and they're overtime, froin losing the ·game.
7:26left as Columbus beat Detroit.
Upchurch. He's. not yet willing to say that any of them \viii
m~re than likely to \~!~;' their games, so. · The Blues will be the fourth seed in
Tugnutt, who made 35 saves, improved
be starters . ..
we ve got to wm ours.
·
the Western Conference and \VIll play to 21-24-5, tymg the mark set by Cesare
The team's annual Gold-Blue Game - the traditional
Carolina, with more victories, has · a either San Jose, Edmonton, Los Angeles, Maniago in 1967-68 with Minnesota,
end of spring drills and a benefit for West Virginia Univertiebreaker edge over the Bruins. HowL-v- Vancouver or Phoenix in the first round. and Florida's John Vanbiesbrouck in
sity Children's Hospital- is set for Saturday, April 14.
Devils 6, Capitals 4
1993-94.
er, they both could make the NHL play' o£15 if they could catch seventh-place
Patrik Elias had his second hat trick in
Columbus won its third straig~t at
Toronto, which is two points ahead.
10 games as New Jersey beat Washington home.
The Phoenix Coyotes a11d Los ~ngeles in a matchup of division champions.
The Red Wings, who already clinched
Kings, in a five-team fight for four playoff Martin . Brodeur made 22 saves to the Central Division title, won all four
spots out West, faced off against each become only the third NHL goalie with previous meetings - including two .in
MORGANTOWN, W.Va . (AP) -Tony Gibson, a forother and came away with a 2:2 tie of three 40-win seasons. Brodeur, who had Columbus in overtime.
mer. assistant football coach at Glenville State Colle~ and
·
43 wins in 1997-98 and last season en
. Thrashers 5, Senators :!
West Virginia University Tech, is following hH former boss
their own.
The Kings have 89 points, one more .r oute to the Stanley Cup, joined Terry
Patrik Stefan's goal with 2:16 to play
to Wesc:Virginia University.
.
.•
than Vancouver and Phoenix; which are Sawchuk and jacques Plante.
brpke a tie and lifted Atlanta over Otta\va. .
Gibson will become an assistant coach working with the
tied for the last berth: Los Angeles, in sevThe _Devils won 'for the 17th time in -19. The Senators feU two points behind
Mountaineers' secondary, head coach Rich Rodriguez
enth place, trails Edmonton and San Jose gaines in their bid for the No. I playoff New Jersey for first place in the Eastern
announced Tuesday.
by one point.
seed in the Eastern Conference. New Jer- Conference.
' Gibson played for RodrigUe! ·at Glenville State as a
"~oming in here, it
just huge to sey has won eight straight on the road.
Atlanta's Milan Hnilicka, benched in
defensive back from 1991 ro 1994 and was part of .two
get the one point and ·stay a point ahead
Bobby Holik; Bob Corkum and February during a slump, stopped 31
WVIAC championship teams.
·
of them," said Kings defenseman Mathieu _Alexander Mogilny also scored for the shots and has won three of four starts.
A native ofVan, he began Jm coaching career at Gilmer
Ottawa was 0-for-7 on the power p4y
County High School, where he was named athletic direrSchneider, who s~ored the tying goal Devils, who scored four straight goals
with 3:34 left in regulation. "It really felt ' after falling behind 3-2 in the second against the Thrashers; the league's wont
, tor in 1995.
. .
period.
'
penalty killing team (77 .5). .
He joined Rodriguez's staff at Glenville in 1996, coachlike a win."
. The Coyotes lose all tiebreakers with
Sergei Gonchar, Trevor Linden, An~i
In their final home game of the season,
ing the defensive backs and kickoff teams, then moved on .
~e teams they are chasing. Los Angeles Nikolishin and Steve Konowalchuk the Thrashers ended an 11-game winless
to Cumberland University, where he was defensive back
.has been surging since the Kings acquired scored for the Capitals, who have won streak there (0-8-3).
.. coach and recruiting coordinator.
·
goalie Felix Potvin in a trade with Van- just twice in 10 games~
In 1999, Gibson become defensive coordinator and assiscouver.
Panthers 2, Flyera 1
tant head coach ofWest Virginia University Tech.
Pavel Bure scored hi$ team-record 59th
'
He arrived at WVU in January as a ·graduate assistant for
: "We have the guod fortune to play the
teams that are competing with us for goal, and Len Barrie added the gamethe Mountaineer defense.
•
playoff position;' Kings coach Andy Murc winner midway through die third period

'

•

-:o.-

•

Hunicanes, Coyotes, Kings
keep playoff hopes aliVe

'

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                <text>04. April</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="24014">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="24013">
              <text>April 4, 2001</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="2066">
      <name>hersman</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="5536">
      <name>kenyon</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="5537">
      <name>kopf</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="7">
      <name>smith</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
