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Page-l&amp;

Th~

paily Sentinel

Bonds rips
500111 In Glllnts
. !kfory

c

Martins 3,
Braves 2

..

"sf

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a.ti.Mgue

&amp;It~

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Pet.

011

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,..,.,._,.._

.

Mels 4, ExpoS 0

The
Joint·Implant
·center

D·backs 17,·
cardinals 4

Red Sox 10,
Devil Rays 0

Mariners 6,
_Rangers 4

.Taft steps up efforts against cuts
'

I

Our next clinic date Is
Friday, April 27. ·

.

.

'

COLUMBUS (AP) - Gov. Bob Taft on Wednesday lo discuss the dangers of more cuts.
ru:ppuf qp his campaign 1o stop additional budget cuts,
The event toOk place while the Republican-conofti:1ed few specifics on how the cuts could affect trolled House and Senate, which favor mo.., cuts, was
ae -agencies,
on a two-week holiday recess.
. Taft· brought together directon of .several sure
State leaden are struggling to balance the budget and
depQrunents to make the point that budget cutting has pay foJ a oourt-onlered school-funding plan that will
gone as fir as it can.
·
n:quiie an additional $1.4 billion in education spend"We're cutting into bone and tissue and nerve here;· ~Taft said
.
'Thli sai.d his adrniriistration has agreed to cut an addiTaft said essentially \he same thing Monday to tidnal $600 million from the two-year, $45 billion bud~. He repeated the theme Wj:()nesday at a more get proposal he submitted in January. Cu~:~ in.individual

cent, with deeper ellis p&lt;MSible for individual programs.
That leaves a gap of $60 million 1o $80 million to
meet lawmakers' requests fur cuts, Taft said The governor proposes that the money rome flom the sure's Sl
billion I3iny day .fund. Lawmaken oppose using the
fund.
"This is as tar as we responsib!y believe we can go
. without undermining vital priorities that secure Ohio's
future, without jeopardizing public health, public safety
and the fundamental services that the sure provides
and, incidentally, is required to provide by the laws that
public cvmt. with agei.cy directon at his side and ready departments will range from one-half percent to 4 per- the Legislature has enacted,"Taft said

""t

r,_,.

. Angels 1

........ Nc•sp•p•

M•lp Collat(s

•

Athletics 5,

a~

'

MMdlf•-

Twins 6, ·
Royals s

I

Or!! I Kl 5. Anllhlift 1

a

Meigs girls dominate Miller 30-0,

~·­

Blue Javs 6,
YankeeS 5

I

-e.T-4

~·-''"'"• " -

17. St.l.oull4
Cdc&gt;tU&gt; II, San Diogo 5
San Frondoco 3. IJlO Angolel 2

..

Clly ~~ o-2) .. ..,,_
• 10
4 .714
~
Hclula\OI~ppd
•
.667
" ' , _ 1•1), 1:05 'p .lll
TcxoniO
tO
4 .714 ·
2
7
.500
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
Ch:ules Johnson hit a
N.Y. ( - lo• 0.1)· ot
2
YOdC
8
.571
7
.487 21/2
A
llorU
~ 2~). 7:05p.m.
~ Barry Bonds hit his 500ih tiebteaking homer in the sevFlOrida
(Dempster
2.0)
Alllnla
6
8
.429
3
6
.429
Clooolond lCoiOn H) 01 11181111',,.,.,..,..
6
(Gil- H), 1:05 p.m.
r....,. S.y ·
4 10 .2116
bome run on the same .night enth off John Burutt (0-2) ,
5
.385 31/2
Oteu~gou 0.1}. 7:05p.m.
lolonlrul (Vazquol 1·1) 01 N.Y. · ~~Pot
CllicagO Wllllo Sao ~ Q-2) ..
Bobby Bonilla gave up his who struck out a ,f.ateer-high
w L Pet Q8 (T-Q-2), 1' 10p.m.
.
·~-10
3 .769
Dehdl (Halt H), 7:05p.m.
·
tint.
11 in seven innings ~ Adanu.
8
5 .615
~ (Ciwn 1).0 ond - o-2) - · Cl1iCIIgO
3 112
lloOion
j C f l - HI) Ol ~ Boy
., C1bgo c.a CT-' 2-41 and liMo 2- C'""""""'
6
6 .500
8
5 .615
Houston
4 112
n - 2·1), 7:15p.m.
Spbshing his way into histoVladimir
Nunez
( 1- 1)
IJelrOil
5
7 . .417
112
0),
2,
1:20
p.m.
.
,..,._,...
.333 5112 .
8
0
6
.571
Clnclnnall
T - (Davis 1-1)81 Sallllo (Tomloo 0.
4
8
IY• Bonds became the 17th allowed two runs and four hits·
6
8 .429 2112 · Hou11Dn (R~ 1).0) 01 l'iltsbUigh - - . Mllwio.6
112
6).
10:05 p.m.
·~
(Anoyo
H),
7:05p.m.
KarwU
City
4
10
.286
6
8 .429 2112
Stlouis
Qaldond (Lidle Q-1) at Anoo-m
major leaguer to hit 500 home in seven innings at TurneD
Milwaulcee
(Wrtghl
1·2)
at
Cincinnati
woe:,~
Pet
3
5
8 .385
011
lSd'oOeiiO- H), 10:05 p.m.
Pittlbu"'l
runs, hitting a two.Crun, · Field for his first win since
(ttatrOICI1 1·1), 7:05p.m.
.
Arimno(Jollllon 2·1) ot St.I.OUII (l(je Soatde
11 ·
3 .786
w L Pet . aa
eighth- inning drive o!f,Terry ·S ept. 28, 1999.
1•2), 8:10p.m.
Toxu
87
88 .·~ 4112
San
F11111Cisp&gt;
8
5
.615
Cie&gt;oloo)d (.Sabollia 1-o) ot llllolllllllm&lt;noo
..e
5
Adams_ Wt_ werrt · into
Cdc&gt;tU&gt;
{Honlllon
Hl)
II
San
Diogo
AnahMn
•••
1
'ColonldO
7
8 .538
(McElroy
0.0), 3:05 p.m.
7
(Eaton 2.01. 10:05 p.m.
08ldllnd
4 tO .2116
McCovey's Cove beyond the
lOS Angeles . 7
7 .500 1112
N.Y. Y - (Ciom0nl2.0) 01 TaroniO
Los Ange101 (Pill&lt; 2-o) 01 San Francis·
2
San
Diogo
6
7
.4e2
(HaniiiOn 1.0), 7:05p.m.
hght-field sunds.
co (Hornon&lt;IOZ 1-2). 10:15 p.m.
Arilona
6
8 .429· 2112
chieago While Sox (Wolla H) 01
Boslon 4, N.V. Y . . - 1
Th" hom.,r overcame a oneDOiroil
(Woo- 1-21. 7:05 p.m.
·S.IIimo&lt;e 6, Ta.,..,. Boy 2
Bo11on (MartineZ 1.0) at Tampo Boy
run deficit and led the Giants
KansM
Clly
5,
MinrleSCOI
3
Cdc&gt;tU&gt; (Neagle 1.0) at 5o!~ Diogo
Pittsoolgll j , Houston 0
(WiltOn Q-1), 7:15p.m.
SeaniO 9, Taus 7
Par Burrell hit a go-ahead,
( - . . o 1· 1), 5:05 p.m.
over the Los Angeles Dodgers
N.Y. Mats 4. Moooeal3
Oaldand (lito 1·1) at
(Rogols 1O.ICiand8,Anahoim3
Montreal
(Reames
2..0)
at
Florida
Allanla 4, Florida 3
3- 2 Tuesday night.
two-run double in a four- run
0).
6:05
p.m.
(Cklmlltll H), 7:05p.m. • •
Arizona 2. $1. Louis 1
Anaheim (Valdes o-1 ) al Sa- (Gar·
lUHdoy'oO......
Bonds, w~o has homered in ninth at Wrigley Field after Jeff
. Los Angeles (Gagne o-1I at San Fran·
Pnlladelphla at Chicago CubS. 1'!1"1
cia 1.0). t0:05 p.m.
Toronto
6.
N.Y.
Y
5
cisco (Ruotof 2.0). 10:15 p.m.
fh'C' Jtr.light games for the first Fas..,ro (0- t j walked the bases
Cleveland B, BaltimOre 1
time in his career, embraced loaded. Philadelphia stopped
Detroit 7, Chicago WIIMe So• 4
Philadelphia 6. Chicago~ubs 3
Boston 10. Tampa BoyO
Rich Aurilia, who tr!pkd ro Chicago' five-game winning
Cincinnati 3, Milwau\Cee 2
Minnesota 6, Kansas City 5
N.Y.
Mets
4,
Montreal
0
start the inning, and his father, · srre;~k.
·
fotmer major leaguer Bobby
The Cubs loaded the bases
Bonds. Hij lvife Liz ran to his ·w ith one out in the ninth
thdr second straight after they
arms.
against Jose Mesa, who struck
ed Chicago its fou~th sttaight
lost seven in a row. Tb.e
Former Giants Willie Mays out Todd Hundley and Ricky
'J
loss.
'
.
defending AL West champions
and Willie Mc€ovey - both Gutierrez for his fifth save.
•
The Whitt, Sox: who had ·.
ate 4-10.
members of the 500 dub - . Vicente Padilla (1-1) gor the
only three:fosing- streaks of
Anaheim's Ramon Ortiz (2we"' on hand to witness the w 1·n by pitching a scoreless
I M d ·
1 d four or more gaines last year,
Rau
on csJ comp ere
k 4 3 I d . h
. hh
Tim Hudson (2-1) pitched 1) allowed five runs - four
drive offTerry Adams (0-1). . eighth. The game-time tem- the first straight steal of home . toffo Ma -A eda 10 t (el ~)g 1
earned - and seven hits in
Earlier, in St. Louis, Bonilla perature was just 41 with a in Toronto history, and Alex o
art n erson
- .kon into the eighth inning, and
six-plus
innings.
made his major league pitch- wind cliill of 16.
Gonzalez hit a two-run homer RBI singles by Paul Koner o Jason Giambi . doubled twice
for host Oakland.
ing debut and allowed · a
h Bl J
h d d · ·
and Carlos Lee.
~t
batter,
Eru
as
t
e
ue
ays
an
e
vts•rD
.
E
I
.
g1
d
off
The Athletics' victory was
hom"r to his fi
••
ing New York its third straight
lla~~n has(Ot;Yt)slm di~ . If
biel Durazo.
Ke y wunsc
ea ng o
1ass
·
Mondesi
broke
toward
the
bottom
half,
and
Clark
Glendon
Rusch
(1-0)
homered to left-center, the
allowed five hits in seven h on1e Plate J.ust before. New deepest
. part of Comenca
k w, d ll M
dd d
innings and struck out nine, York starter Randy Ke1sler (0agee ~ I e ~
one short of his career high. 1) started his wind up. Keisler's Par · en e
0
Turk Wendell finished the six- pitch was high , an'd there was two-run, two-out tnp e ·
At St. Louis, Luis Gonzalez
no tag as Mondesi stole home Bobby Howry.
hitter at Shea Stadium.
hit his major league-leading
Todd Zeile homered and for the second time in his
I Oth homer and Reggie
caree r.'
·.
Sanders hit a three, ru_n shot in drove in three runs.
Esteban Loaiza (3"0) got his
Montreal has lost six of
the third off Dustin Hermanvictory over the Yansecond
seven. Chris. Peters (1-1) gave
son (1-1), who gave up eight
up three runs and six hits in kees,' and Billy Koch earned
runs and seven hits in 2 1-3
Corey .Koskie hit a gamehis fourth save.
five innings.
inrnngs.
winning, two-run single in the
Armando Reynoso (1 - 2)
ninth inning for his fourth hit
allowed three runs and four
For initial evaluations or .follow-up visits, we offer,
of,the
game as host Minnesota
•
hits in six innings.
beat Kansas City.
office hours at 1423- 3rd Avenue in the Huntington
Cardinals reliever Gene
Jason Grimsley (0-1) gave
Spine Rehab 8c Pain Center.
Stechsch~lte pinch hit and
up his first two ruris of the
Alex Rodriguez's "'turn to
Tomo Ohka (2-0) pitched
Joint
became the 82nd player to
year. Kansas City has three
Seattle
hit
another
bump.
•.
·
s
even
shutout
innings,
and
Implant
homer in his first major league
blown saves this. year and 59
·
Rodriguez
made·
two
errors
Manny
,
Ramirez
homered
Surgeons.
Inc.
at-pat.
since the Sf~rt of the 1999 seain his second game back to twice to lead Boston at Tampa
son.
Call '(614) 221·6331
Safeco Field, while his replace~ Bay.
Bob Wells (1-0) got the last
htent on the Mariners hit a
Ramirez . hit a 451-foot,
for an appointment.
Robert A. Fada, MD, FACS
four
outs for Minnesota.
·
h
two-run
homer
ofr'
Travis
two-run homer 1iues d ay mg t
in Seatde's 6-4 victory, over HaqJer B(0~2) Di': b thhe hfitrst .
·
·
.
·
mnmg. rtan. au ac · 1 a
Juan Uribe hit a bases- the Texas Rangers.
.
two-run shot and Carl Everett
loaded triple and Larry Walker
,
Carlos
Gutllen
homered,
.
fitms
· h e d rh e early barrage
...
.
f:
.
a nvo-run homer as vmong and Manners ans agam. gave . agaimt Tampa Bay's rookie
• •
Colorado overcame. Tony , R.odciguez a rud~ receptwn.
right-hanaer with a three-run
•
Gwynn's first three-htt game
Guillen's homer in the sec- homer that made it 7-0.
••
this season.
· ond inning off Rick Helling
'
Pedro Asracio ·(2-1) drove in (0- 3) was his first rhis season .
t\Vo runs and allowed two runs
Ichiro Suzuki, a seven-time
and five hits in six innings. batting champion in Japan ,
4
Todd Walker htt a solo homer. ' went 4-for--l with a triple and
Gwynn went ~-for-5 ~ an RBI for Seattle, raising his.
missing tlie Padres first cy e batting average to .377 . .
•
Tony Clark hit a go-ahead,
by· a honter - and was strand•
two-run homer in a four-rim
• •
.ed at third base three times,
eighth inning as D"t.roit handincluding after hitting his· first

Cubs3

I

••d.,, April I. 2001

DIAMOND.
AROUND THE
•

triple since 1997. ·

Phillies fi,

•

WIt

•

Agency
promotes
•
•
•
tmmumzatton

.

Health t_-ir

,r
•

Weight I
,
· problem
trash

irprnunization rate of 68
percent for children 24
months old and under,
MeiS' County has a long
way 1o go to achieve the
national objective of a 90
percent immunization rate
for child!'ell in that age
group.
. In an effolt to make the
public more
of . the
need for immunizations, the
MeiS' County Health
Department is joining i'rt
the promotion of next
week's
observance
of
National Infant Inununization Weelc.~
The agency will become
a pan of a national effOrt to
' 'increase the nuinber of chilllren 2 and younger who are

the ordinance was created
Garbage· said
tO protect various streets in
the village that were being
flrm purchases • . damaged
by vehicles of ~e
proportions - namely semis
lighter trnck and
large garbage trucks.

aware

"These vehicles weigh a
considerable amount and have
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
damaged sidewalks, created
POMEROY ·Weight potholes ·. and
destroyed
limits -placed on
streets asphalt," Proffitt said. · "We
have a local traslit collection received many calls from viicompany looking for altema- !age residents who were conrive ways to access customer.&gt;. cerned about the condition of
An ordinance passed in their streets."
February by Pomeroy Village . . He said .the weight limit
Council has set a 24,000- . 011futarice was not ~~ted
, pound (~2-ton) '!"eight. limit to affect companies illl the
on an-~.ets. withif{?the vii- .trash ~oll~L"t!Oil . industry, b~t
!age, except for state highways to mamum the overall condiand . Mulberry Aven"ue. The tions and appearance of vii•ordinance states that there lage roadways.
shall be no exceptions to this
One such business who h:"
limit except for temporary qurckly adhered to the ordiwritten permission granted nance ts Southern Ohto DISby ahd obtained from the . posal. The local trash collecPomeroy Police Deparanent. tion company has recendy
Pplice Chief Mark Proffitt
PleiiH IH U•lt. A3

Br TONY M. lEAcH

v\!lill\'

Rockies-9,

--...1

Padres5

-~(

.

.

·ngen 7,

r·

White Sox4

Is
In
Pl•••l•r
IIIIISSIOIII-It .

(There will be a special edition
on Thursday, May 17th saluting
our Meigs ·County Graduating .
Seniors

-.

I

"Think Ahead For A Healthy Baby"

I
r

If Yo.u r Business
Is Interested In
~Participating In
This Special Section,

toreceln
Inl0nnadan.

m

first
istered
ner200
~
year new illM! ~ Y:lc:.· cines and~ fa~ ·
them·
de\'Clqjled. ' . ·'
A n!!W. "queQI:W polio
vaccine llas. been _intl'9-:.
duced, said Skidmore, who
noted the ·Center ti&gt;r -Disease Control and Pn:vention reconuhe!lds . three,
shots of InactiVated Polio '
Vaccine for children before
their 4th birthd;iy.
·
The nUrse said ' tb.at
nati~Jnwide, vaccinatioils ~ ,
"at an :ill7time bigh and.dis+
eases are at :Ill all-time ' low,
that vaccine preventable dis. eases have been reduced 'by

are

,,

.~

•

Fifth~raders
Br Ctw!M HOEFLICH

explore.Yesteryear'

as a way of instilling in ·young- past and ihen use them to

SENTINEL N~ STAFf .

POMEROY - This ye:l1"'s
·~Yesteryear" is a hit if the
enthusiasm sho:wn by participating fifth-graders is an.y
measqre of success.
'
T~e · uniqut illtergeneration:ll program, giving meaningful
volunteer
service
opportllnities to senior citizens

sters an appreciation for their
heriUge, is in its 16th year.
Held at the Meigs Museum
over a six-weelo: period, 25
seniors in the R tired Senior
Volunteer Prpgram arf .sharing
their talents with studepts who
are encouraged to embrace the
skills and crafts of generations

'

a...:•
Details, A2

211ttl--1· . . . .
o(

.Pleasant Valley
Obstetric Department

- . .-.- - - .

··------ -

\

! lotterdes

Calendar ·
Classifieds

. AS 01110
84-6 Pldt :s: 11-().9; M4: 7·3-6:4

Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports .
Weather

BZ sif-1..181=3+:&amp;24-.31-45
' M --.;0&amp;&amp;&amp;-2-9
A3 W\A
.·
B 1-3.8 Dlillr J: 6-3-1 Dlillr 4: 5-4-1-1
·A2 o 1001 otrio v.11oy Publllhi"' eo..

,

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.••

·· - - - - · - : - · · - .

'·

- -- - - · - -

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-.---- -·-

Br K£VIIil KaJ.y
CNP NEWS EDITOR

RIO GRANDE -

Rio Grande/Rio Grande Community
'
.
College and f}ob Evans• Farms Inc. smce
the company's founding a half-century
"80·
That bond solidified Wednesday when
Rio Grande dedicated its newest building,
Bob Evans Farms H.ill, a rellection of the

·f

,J ,'

('

"

·- - ··

.

'

two-.srory structurti' \vas funded in part by
the state and . donations a d serves as •the
new home for the Emerson E. Evans
School of Business Management, rutll'\ed
for one of the founden ofBEF and father .
of the company's board chairman, Dan
Evans.
.
"This is a. great day for me because this
is the year Bob Ewns Farms is going to .do
PIRH IH UIG, AJ

'

Diagnostic
)

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
I

Discover the HolZJer Dif(erence.
,.~

---- ----~-- - - .--- ·· - · -·

An unobtrusive

link Ita$ existed betwe~ the University of

.

'
'
"public-private par:tnership on wjtich the ·
foundations of this institu~OI\ rest,'' said Dr.
Barry Dorsey, \he·university's president.
"As you know, ' the ~es be'tween Bob
Evans and 'this school are significant;'
added Stewait K. Qwens, BEF's president
and chief executive officer. "The dedication of Bob Evans Farms H:ill is just the
latest.chapter in our intertwined past."
The $5.2 million, 39,326-square foot

avaiioble at the Charles E. HQizer, Jr., M.D. Surg~ry Center.

___ __, __ ..

: (3Q4) 675-1340, Ext. 1230
- - - •·+• · - - - - -

.

'

' .
•.

. ,.............. AJ

TR~~H COIIiEC~TlCIN - Davi(l Rankin, emptOyee~oJ SO!Jth. ern
Disposal, prepares the' business' Toygta plc.li:,-up
for various trash collections. The vehicle compile!!' Wlttr,.l:ur·
rent weight limit standards set. forth by Pomeroy VIllage
Council, which were instituted because of street damage
sustained by much larger semis and garbage trucks. (Tc~ny
M. Leach photo)

·Rio Gfa·nde.dedicate~ ~signature~ building

Hlah:IOI

Sentinel
•

enrich their own lives.
,The RSVP triembers con~
cluct handS-on. )¥Orkshops in
Appalachian crafts· - leather
·and tin punching, embtoidc;ry,
·candle malting, quilting, iiag
basket making, genealogy, and
kitchen skills. The goal is for

"

TDJII(a ·

Debbie Call Ext. 16
or
Dave Harris • Ext. 15
Before May 5, 2001

II'HOIC8-

haYe

Pl•••e.,.Aaii.AJ

Call
992-2155

PI••• Vaii8V HOSPbl

emi

(740) ~6·5354
"

••

., '
'

l

�~

.-

.-

... . '

...

-.

-

0

Ohio

The Diify sennn'el -

PapAl

•

...................1

.

"*'·

Aptl20

~

"'

for

••
•

KY.

.

Inc.

02001

-

CINCINNATI (AP) - State and $2,000 per bu~iness to help, with
Weinstein. 51, said Jooters' tore meral
city officials are stepping up efforts to repairs. Council members said they are gates off the store fiont, cleaned out
find grant or l02n money to repair asking business organizations and fQUO,- imloentory includiog electronic equipdozens of damaged butinesses that were datioDI to c:rea~e a fund to help snick- ment ;mel musical inRtumena, and left
forced to dose because of last week's en stores, ;mel th" city is trying i:o help some smashed imloentory behind.
riots.
-arrange low-interest loans.
,
. Wl!instein, who attende~ City Coun"This is our mor::al duty to help th1!51!
Thl! owner of a ravaged pawn shop . cil's meeting Wednesday, estimated his .
businesses that were ransacked," city said it isn't nearly enough money. losses at SlOO 000. He said he has
Councilman John Cranley said Leonard Weinstein, owner of the ~r's owned the bu~ness for 13 years. He ·
. · Loan Office store, qui!Stioned why ~e ho
to reopen in May. For now, his
Wednesday.
Gov. Bob Taft asked state~l!rgency should have to rake out a loan to repau fi pes 1
re o.ut of work.
personnel to determine whetlte.: the his l&gt;usiness, saying Cincinnati police o~emp 6:'._~ a L ke said'dte city
damaged stores could be eligible for failed to protect it against repeated _ , yoblr
es u : bu .
C.
state or federal funds. The governqr assaults.
_
ISn t a e to compensa
smesses or
eicpl!c~ to get a r~port within days,
The store Is in the Over-the-Rhine all thl!ir los~,
d
h
' ~eighborhood north of downtown,
Some ~1ot~da~ge stores
ave
spokesman Kevin Kellems said.
City Council voted 9-0 Wednesday .one of the areas hardest hit by three reopened 1n histone Findlay Muket tn
to earmarlt $250,000 in community days of ri9ting after police faraUy shot Over-the-Rhme, but others rematned
development funds for grants of up to : an unarmed black nun.
closed and boarded up.

I lllnartlld I41YMrl •

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,,, C()LUM~US (AP]'~ Tl~"~e pretty,, sweeH,mellin~ can~ and bypasses only emse through traffi:c, the srudy group said.
dJ.;s that ar!-' so popular these ·days ca'! .~e deadly. ,
The North South-Transportation Initiative is a CO•opc:raljve
. .
f'looOO$
Soooo .
...
, Candl~ fires are surging in Ohio, n~ore _than . doubling study group formed by the: Miami Valley' Regional Planning
between 1989 and 1999, tht; last year for which ·statistics are Commission and the Ohio- Kentqcky-Indiana Council
,,available, the state fire marshal's office reported.
Governments, also a planning organization.
~
A total -of 538 such fires caused $7 million in da.mage,
Regional priorities have caused some difficulty for the
t,illed f~~r PI'Ople and inJUred 7t.in Oh_~· in ·1999., the office group as it works to develop possible solutions, said Jim
...
·
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said . .
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· Duane, head-of.OKI.
BY•THE ASSOCIAlED PRESS•
around I 0 mph.
While de atits across the country because. of fires are drop.
•
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. The warmup will continue
Frid1f... Pardy cloudy_ .with_ ping OVef?U;the number of deathsf~m c~ndle fires. is on the
acrossthe tri-county area and, a chance of showers. Htgh tn , rise,~~o~.t doubling natiol!ally the pan decade, according to
,
,,,, .,. . ,.
.,
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as o,yas :the case earlier .this the upP.er 60s. South ,wmd 10 .tH!-' Natio'!al Fire Protection&gt;.A5SOC~tion. ,
,
. MANSFIELD (AP) ...,.. A German navy veteran ofWQrld
mon.t h, that means showers · to 20.mph. Chance o£ ,ram 40
.
, War 11 will return· to his birthplace May 20 to dedicate ·a
andsthuhnderstorlms. .
. d pen:F·re•.nda~oy, .n...•_g'h
".t..·. ·~·rdy·c··lou' dy. ;
plaque in honor of27 hom~town men killed in the war. ,
.
' out wester Y ' ' 1 •Wtn s
~·
~. -~ · '~~ -~~5~ ~ ,. . _,_ . .
"I wanted to do somethmg• for ~y : v1Uage and for my
swirling around ' a departing Low, in the mid 50s.. . .
S~D(JSKY (A~) ,..-.J(' Sa~duslt.' J:f1 h School student , comra4es," said,Alfred 'ltudolfl -who errugrated to Canada 10
high pressure center wiU bring
Ex.t ended fore~st.
has been charged wtth threatcrung to kiU fellow black class- 1-954 and to the ltffnii:ed.Srates•three yean later. ·
warm, damp. .winds .into the
Saturday... Partly. -, .cloudy. mat~S;•NOI ~?" w~s harm~ ..._.,~.. II _'!
. L, . :.,. "' " Rudolf deslgned the' stainless s~eel plaque that he will dedregion the next few days.
Htgh near 80.
. .
TeJ~an fl!tckelson, ~8, ~ ar!,"t,gned by y1~e~ ~o?~up itate in Do~bernit:t~ Gerrruny. It will be aruched to an exlstShowen and thunderstorms
.Sunday...Mosdy clear. Low from Jatl Wednesday on felopy c~ of etbntc mqn»\Ut~on ,, ..11
.- ... Itt:. , "',. 11 , .
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will develop ·in. the w~t •later in th!:;;.~~s:ne high 80 t~ and ~n~ud.ng panic and a misdeme~or charge of,a~~ted 0 ~~~~~':~~d RU&lt;tolf volunteered for the Gernun subtonight and move eastward, 85 -M,• ~"· "; ~.3-tt_,''
.
_
.!: ." · marine serVice in 1940 alt'd took•part in three war patrols in
d A ~enact,~- ~e ~ arres~dTu~
_ ~n ay...
}t c1o~ Y- , •.J:ib,clielSOn) a senior, n:n_wned silent duriJlg IW_,i'-~t.algnment the Atlantic. Ht missed a fourth when he was wounded dur- ·
the National Weather Service
said.
chance .ot·shQ\veu,dunng the 11 &amp;om .~o Er1e Counrv JaiLHe !wai .beld qn $25',000 bonli. .,- . .
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td
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The W arnu-ng
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continue, with highs on Friday near 80. , ·. '.:.in(t',t(;'l'~u. who said Nicke~wn ~apparently in~lgp~lf~ his ,
~
near 70, and Saturday and
Tuesday... A 'chance of., own:-&lt;11ame with ,111ore popular- studenu to ~n . f.avorable.,, .
ft _
Sunday near 80.
showers 'd~'ring" tne &amp;y.. .'O th- attention:·~
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Sunset tonight will be at erwise ' pardy douay.TtiW' 55 ._ _ _ _ ~-.'f· ' • '...., __ •., •
• -~ ,..
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MA:SSILtO~ ~~ ~7~ women bound bY the_ de~~hs
8:14, and sunrise on Friday is to 60 and high~ iil th~ lower
w•-'~•ns
' ofa,five-manli"!'encan bclico~tcr crew 32 years ago tnVtetac6:47.a.m . .. , ,,,, 11 , .
70s:'"".:~.~~:· _ c'"' :;· " •
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,.,1,~~plant~~~et~o.r ,tliefirst~meM~y25whenthetrlo~ed
·Weather forecast;
Wednesi'lly.. .P'artlt . cll'llt'dy.
MII5DLETQWN {AP) - Traiupo~tion ~cials from., c;&gt;,nes g~t ~~~~ fU~erals:_
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. Tonight... Pardy
cloudy. Low near so·and high in the Daytop, Ci~!cinnat:i and other areal along the ' Interstate 75 _'Beta~ Stanton of MaSsillon, wliose brother, Rona~d, ':"as
Low 44 . cof; 48. West wind lower 70s.
•. • comd9 r that &lt;;on~ctl the twl:.,Q~iq;~
~t,!li, find kiUe'd m ~!l. crash, and Shayne Henderson of &lt;?at!-inbll;"g,
~;..; ·~ • ~"::!"!"' "
· '' · ,. · '· ''"
'' ' '' tlie'best'~~' tb lol've'ttit'JUghway's congestion anlrdeter~- Tenn., whose husbal!d, Henry Kmght, was a Vtcnm, wiU
. .•
.
.• rati,\Jn .»~
at!en_d a funer::al fo&lt;tbem at Arl!rgton National Cemetery_ in
Meml:ie~Yof:the North'South1hnisportation'lnitiat}~m t. V1f11rili.
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in Middletown on Wednesday to begin considering .~!&gt;ssibl~
Military officials recendy identified their remains, wh~ch
· ~oi.tJMbtJS' '(AP)".::... Homiciae; ~ere'c t~i~hef~ad .• solutions. Tbe gro~p' 'rdled _out a
·bUjlding were '1~tscoyered s~n ye~rs ago. . .
.
• .•· :
no motive or suspects m the shootmg deaths of two young bypasses. Real estate acqul5ltton
cosdy,'
Be~e Stanton sa1d her brother felt 1t was h1s patno.t~ dt)ty
adults whose,bedies were .. found in.31i ·ap~rtlltl:nf.'_~•. ,
., \.
"
Felii;i;L Duiigef and · alvin Daru~y; , bO:in ·,,21. \~re
.,
described by friends as' h-igh school sweethearts fron,t Chita'
go who moved to ColuQtbus four years_ago. The .aNrtmcnt
...,
where .. they. w~r~ found o 1 Wednci~day was hers :' •
:.
•• Relatives s~id' _Dan1ely' dabbled ' 'h dr.l'gs an.d sp'etulated
0~10 ••
that drugs may have been behind the slayings. ·Daniely's. gr~no;llltother, ~mma P.:a,rl Danidy, 59, of;~hica­
. go, toU. J:~~ G,Ql'lmbus Pispatcl\-;;~n 'a leptione1 t'frv(~w
~··
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· chac'*c;·llad iepeif~tl¥ warned him·;.~ta¥7-IW,l\)',..fro~ Q,rugs
IN THESE OHIO LOTTERY
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German ex-sailor'salutes friends

Student CU..._..

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Cincinnati trying to find mQney for stores

Ohlo.weather

11, 2001

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IS -STICL: ........._ IT~.G . TQ BE WON

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Michael Lee 5lilar

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' COLUMBUS (AP) ...... Potenti~ly_ f~.l.l.1W ::blg_ot\"alco~ol
,testing at che ~oll!tp.b'!,s police lab ~Y· have c_~promised
•hunclrtas of tests used in :criminal qses, lawyers saY,·".. •
Fifty~fCiJUr agen~ies, including federal o£\ices, ~o~tract with
che division to h~e ..a v~riety of Jab ,}Y9rk , 4,2m;. incNding
_.....,.__ • . •
·
blood-alcohol and DNA tests.
Deputy Police Chief John R_edcweH -confirmed on Wednesday that an audit of tests -done -by- the crime lab's ,
leading analyzer, ~ark ,Shaw, was tindei' ~;y · but ~o~ld ;not•,
say specifically what the problem was.
"This could be a major deal with far-reaching impact,
d~ending on wha5 exactly this ~riwin":,1~gis_t ;~d that,;w"as;:
improper,''· said attorney· Joe Landusky, wb · specializ.,. in ••
~
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-~
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drunken-dnvmg ~a1es.
. "' ·. ". . ,. -~'A
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surge.
in
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!r~-~ei~.t~: ~~~&lt;;&gt;.'i;tlg~~~1~?r.~·:rJ.i:.~~?Y.,c~?,~!uded.

Limit

lnwn

L o·-c A L B R IE F s

~i4Jir~lion ~

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$50 .................................
1,392
.
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WINNIII WONDIMMID
6.000 ...:...........·................... 1 ' '

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PIIIIT ct U1 CMH
60.000 ................................ 1
10,000 ......... - ..............:.... 2 .
&amp;,000 .................................. 3
1.000 ................................... 3
' 100 .........................:.......... 16
7&amp; ., ____ ......... _ ....; 2.746

.

$ 1.8od ...:........"..................... 1
0'
3
a 0\1\1 ................
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$ """ .................................... 16

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s 76 ·..................................... 819

s 3() .......,••••••••••••• ___,,_, 17,432.

"'

lR IIi 1'111 c•IU LM1

s 10.000 ................................ 1
$, 6.000 .........;• .,.....;..... ,....... 2
• 1,000 ................... -.~ ............ 2
&amp;00 .......... ~............................. 4

s
s 10() ........,...................,.. 1,040'
s 71! '"""'"'''"'""'""'"'"'" 1,014

s&amp;!&gt; ..,...............,.:..,......... 7.284

~ ~31J. ·••••••r••••,•••••,•••r··.,--: 1~Ao

$ ~ .........,.....,.....,........ 22.432

~ ~ ' ' ''"I''''T''''"('''..,;.,.. 24-,.468

HAPPY .........y

s 1100 ........,............................. 9
• 100 ..................................... 34

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From Original 110 or 135 c-41:PI'OCeA rolla.

'· ' '·' ' Siiefle of our cltrka for dliQiftli 'Cif1he
- · "·F.uli-True Color,!111m Cirll. ' .. • ~ •
'. ( ~,' HAVEl ROLLS DINa.OftD7AND'.'""' ' '
GET THI! SI!VI!NTH ROLL DEVELOPED FREE(
· Try ue for all your photoflnllhlng nHCiel

SWISHER • LOHSf
PI-IARMACY

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$ 100 .........................~ ....... 718

Our main concam l~·an slciiesls
10 be accurate. If you knofi'clf an
orror In a story. call !he na~

$150 .................................. 7.827

al(740) 992·2156.

.s715 ...............:..........:......... 268

.

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~"~ ~~

.• 1,~ ................. ,.. ~............... 4
,$ 1,000 ................. ,..... ........... 8

distance l"Fning optiQt}\-~
It will~ hli&amp;•atU&amp;.'bives
~m with "!FRI9.P~~ •.ji-om

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BEF.The 6rm. de&lt;:de:4''Part of
a billion dollars in busini!SS;• the neighboring Bob·· Evans
;~;. RUTI:AND - Mii:had Lee' Siglar, 43, Rutland. died Tu'~ • RA&lt;;IN.E _ Wtlliarn R. Amoa, 79, of Racine, Qied We~es- said Dan Evans, "I get a lot of Farm to the university to instill
• day,Aptil17,2001 in Cabell Runrington HOspital,Huniing~ day, April 18 ,2001. at the extended care unit · ofVeterans creditforthingsldidn'tdo,but a new entnnce 11om Ohio
1
· •ton • W."a
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the 25•000 empl...,.....
,
· Vi •
Memoriall-{mpital
in PoQlemy.
- r - of Bob 588 ' with~ building the first
· L He .'vas ~e so.? of the late IJ~ E!lton an~ NaralieVanawaH~ was borq on SepteJ;Jtber 24, 1921 in Letart Township. son Evans Farms are the ones who sight visitors using the new
gen S1glat, and was employed as a laborer.
.
of the late Otis Arnoa and Bertha Roush Arnott. He was get the job done."
road will spy.
-'•· He i$ sluvived by a d:tllghCct,;Dlana Sip of Pomeroy;,twc) . retired after 39 years of service as~ pipefitter ac Locat No. 162
Th~ building's opening is
\ O~n~ , citing several
R brothers, Ed~ StgUt at Salem Cen_rer, md larry Sigl;ir of 'in Dayton.
the 12th new campus structure insran= of Rio GtJn&lt;!l:'s and
~,~ Columbus; ux 's~ters,,Dollna Laudermilt of t,4lddleport, Linlla ' Ho; was a member of the Antiquity Baptist Church, Ameri- and the, latest ~roduct of ~o BEF's relationship, said the
" ! Sommers, ~rY McKipney an4. C~thy Siglar, all of Rutland.: __can Legion P&lt;lst No. 602,- Raeine, and \Y&gt;S ,. veteran of-the US. . Grande s .captral cam_paJgn road "represents more tl\an a
.,_Judy Se~di!S o.f ,Coluqilius, ~1\4 Lapq Michatl'of Pomeroy; iwo ' Army during World War 11.
.
·
launched m late 1993. The physical link between. our fann
1
granochjl!In;9; a'l_d SeYJ'~ ~~ amtneW~\\15!
and your schooL
•
"
• ' · ' He ~as a member'o£ the na"rrisonville Masol)ic Lodge No, . _ca~n~a1gn, wh1ch exc~ed the
·: .; Servic~~ Wlf••l=&gt;f: ).1_ ~-m:. S:j!\lrday _in" Birchfield ~hera! - 41 1', F8iAJ\.(6hio yalley 'Conm_u~1ery No. 24, Knigh~ Tem- ongmal goal of$6.5_ million by
- "Every joomey•soJtA with a
~ ,;.Ho~e, Rupan_~· ~cuung ~ j&gt;e the ReV! Mark Miclt'ael. plar at Middleport,York Rite Maso,ns. and Harrisonville Chap- more than $3 milli~n, was ·single step ·down a road,"
Burial ,viiJ be tn Mib CemFt~ry, 1\ptbnd. Friends may call at ter No. 255 of Ohio East~rn Sur.
.
. ch:ured by Roger Willtams, _an Owens said. "Your new school
~~ the funeral hpq_te frop1 2~4 and 7-9_· p.m. Prlchy.
. " '' Surviving are his da'uiliter, Connie (Mike) Brothers of alunmus and BEF's execliave of business housed :in Bob ..-~
,,.' Memorialconttibutionsmay'bemadeto~family,incare?f Pomeroy; and two sons, William Otis {Stefanie) Amott of vice president.
Evans Farms Hall is just the
~ Btrcltfield Funer::al Home. to W:ud funeral ~xpehses.
'Racme, and John Lawrence (Patnela Lane) Arnott of New
"Bob Evans Farms HaD is first tentative :srep· t&amp;•dianged
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Haven, W.Va.; six granochildren and three great grandchildren; now the signature building on futures and enriched ·c.u eers
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and a sister and bro'ther-in-law, Violet and Lawrence Bush of our campus," Dorsey said. for your students.
90. Jll:B;ent. _lo~ an .effol't. 10 _ .Racine.
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"Together \vith the alunmi beU
"We haw crossed paths
Bcsid..-s his parents, he was preceded in death by-his wife, tower. which 'viii be dedicated many tinles :inJ'\Ve"J.o'p( such
, it~rease th~ numberofinuuu1
!&gt;·
" - ": •' "J~ hintiqn~. dtc Immu1iization ' Hden V. Sellers Arnott, on March 22, 1998; thrcc-c&lt;isters, Stella in s~-ptcmber, this building will interaction \vill continue tq
~ ',t, ~' p }1?'~1
·~~tloh ' PbH
. 'nl. ·~ht' Dthe . M~!gs 1JylacADurs't, WZelllba TayAior andAWth'lmaARiggs; Janhd scAvcn broCthlcrsk, ~aer t_llhlteo')th~~bofu~~-Rio -Grande .telntarnicy,h," hime~addchaedn.~c the. li'~''' of
~:·
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tu : , ·• ':touiltf
eat
c..'Partntcllt ess rnott, 1 ur rnott, rt ur rnott, o n rnott, ar
••
. . .. .........
' · more than 99•perctntsinte the "'ltas'a childi,ood'imnmnJz.lti'on ' A:rnott, Han~ Arnott an'd Ira Arnott.
·
· "Hob Evans Fanm Hall and
Individual clonors.:w.:«,recServices \Viii be hdd 011 Sarurday, April 21, .200 t at 11 a.m. the beU tower remind us of our ognized during the ceremony,
·' introduc~on of vatcino!s~'-" ' -'•''tlbliC &lt;:Yt;ry 'ftiesday ,~here
• '.' "Infant ' irnmuniza'tion•-is" 'a' i1M1uriliatiotlf are fu:e.l'iirents - ~t Cremceris Funeral Home in Racine, with the Rev. Mark rich heritab'&lt;' :vtd ~present the bc?tl?L&lt;:J:i c:i~~pli\ques
' "'simple and inexp-ensive·way tu•i nUy cm' COilrtrtey S~ at' the 'McCombas and the Rev. Lawreilce Bush officiating. Burial will future potential ' of this instini- and fly' cl;llsiaotM MiHid! for
· protect children from · 10 Healtli A&lt;E&gt;epartment, 992- follow at Ltitart FaDs Cemetery: friends may call at the funeral tion as '""celebrate the 125th them. They indude Morris E. ·
r.otentiallr. · deadly infectious 6626.
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home on Friday, April 20, 2001 from 7-9 p.m.
anniwrsary of Rio Grande Haskins.'Marsh:rll T ' ~eynolds.
;.~ise~ '!;d.:f!!f!~~llk: =: ~ 1f9kMi:tty co1\!iltisMilitary graveside senjces will be conducted by Racine during aU of 2001,'' Dorsey the late Mary M : Martin in
. memory bf 'Hemuii'Mattin,
spent on inmmnizations, as sioners Jim Sheets and Mick American Legion Post No. 602, and Stewart-Johnson Post of added.
·:•cmui:h as• $2~ c~n ~ Wit~•. in • ·'Davenport :ngn~ ~ proclama-· the Veterans of Foreign Wat;S No. 9926, Mason, W1!5t Virginia.
The building, highlighted . John H. McConnell,j:Tinr and
- ·.direct •or ' 1ndire¢t medical n ben dedmng1tpril 22-28' as
'';i~.
by its rotunda, includes class- · Betty Evans,' R:aytitolt~ 'E!'and
costs.'• ' 11' ;., ;:;,: 1 ,r, 11 • a,r·,nNarional , Infant~ lfnlmunization
.·
. ·
r." ..
ro01us, computer labs, faculty Margaret' 1 M3scin / ~clnl~ E.
•'': James . E:, Witherell. M.D.\" ~~ek.
and administntive offices, an and Doris Ann P0\1/Cli 'Harri'!1 Me~ Ceurity Health Depart~• .. ,. 'f.he . 1.two , commissioners
·
auditorium seating up to 175, son, Dan Evahs, the lit.,: C3rrol
ment medical . director, .,Said .,, expreued ,their .:oncem about ·
business mining and confer- H. "Casey'' Ml:~el!zrb~· ~nd
-L rnany people.. do .ne&amp; .under~-'· •the. low rare-of immunization AEP-50
•
Gamett-65
•
RockyBools-4~
ence rooms, and an instruc- RogerWillianisc' " '' , .,,..,
·
_,,_~
All:lleo.l-34•
GenerttiEJectric-4n. RD Shen-sn.
, .. , "·' _.,,, .. ,.,
·J,Stand why.· vaccine .schedules ... in Meigs . County and caucu · Nczo-44 ·.
GKNLY- 11
sears-37\
change fiom year to year.
JJpon families to participate,in· AmTecii/SIIC - ·41\
Halley Davidson - 45
Shoney's _,,
Harper, co-owner•:ofi·tbei;col. ti · "They think,, .the .public . reaching a goal of raising the - ~ ~-- 42\
9~).
~:.:.:
lection facility in RockSprings.
io j health community.. i~ being . •,,rate-from (ill peR:ent to 90 pc;rBank dne-38
Landa End-29'1.
Wor1hington-10,,
"Our existing customers ; in
:. ,intentionally confusing,"-With- . &lt;rent this year.
·' Bob E'MIS- 1n
L1d.- 15), .
Daily stock reports are
·
Pomeroy
can have pea~c' " of
Page A1
• erell said."That.is.no_trlle~c2Se. : .. , -~:i'~~f. ~ :need to edu" , =~f"'
~~~al-13 ~!t8! J~
at aU. The'-schedule changes are cate parents and . caregivers • Charmil)g ShoPs....:"" aar- 35lt
day's transactions, pro- purchased a late .modd Toyota mind knowing• -that&lt; I 'their
part of. an. ot:J.gOine: effort to • abouc the imoortance of early · city HOlding - ·al.
Peoples- 11
llidiKI by 511!1111 Part· pick-up to better access the garbage can be 'coUectt!d while
come u~' ~tlf-'Ule 't'Q"s~!! idr~~nWt~rif~· encourage . 'FederaiM'l0"'-3
Premler- ..s,,
nere at Advesi Inc. ol smaUer streets and alleyways preserving the streetS at the
·
h d I
h a1 h
·
-d
USB- 22~
Bockwell - 44'·
Gallpolis.
which were assigned new same time." · , ··~· ••.fl ( lf r ..
,rJ ,nhil~dresc ;, u_e_ t(), 1'1?«.\~~ ou[ ,1 , e t J.'.ca~ (; -~rdovt e~ - to
Harpet said' ·the cc'lmp~ny is
tmprove access an constStency
,c
n.
.
weight limits.
·
in
the process ·of puttbasilig a
; J
While the rate of immuniza- . '
irnriluniution ser:vices, and
• ·
•
.
"We fuUy undersrand the
!t.tilet,+aBix\,d
" ~nons in 'M~i~
~- "seek lorig-term ~
· !icy chanReS
concerns of village residents smaU
.
d
h..
'8
th
"
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. increase ~ ,.,1 , pen;ent an e ,,tna .'YlU ensure
munuruza·
and feel that our stnaller truck
~: 1
two. ·yeaTS, it'"' is · Jill' fa~ '-Jl{tiOn' Status tOr
children by
•
can maneuver the streets and
stay within the new wl'ight
.. ......
limit ordinance," said Michelle ·
,.., PPMEROY Racine
kindergarten &lt;ttgistration' wiD be
. held Monday and Tuesday
" begin'ning'at!8:30 a.m.
'
Those
children
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Publlshell every oltemoon, Monday
through:_ Friday. 1~1 Court St.,
Pomero,,
Ohio.
second-olass
l!(lolage!&gt;lld at Pomti'Oy.
-- = l l Tho Alooo~raas
and
!he 0
No-r 1
tlon.
Poot
or. Send ...,ress corrac-

11on01o The Daly Sentinel, tit Court.
st., Ponproy, Ohio o5'1ell. •

The main number Is 992·215~.
Department extentions ~re: "" .. ~•
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Ohl~ Vllloy Publlohlng Co •

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Suuacrlptl~i\ ratea

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BY!carrier or motOr route

One ~

One ...,.lh

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.• so
.
Subijnbers not d~slnng to pay the

carrier raay remll in advance direct to
The Dail) Sentinel. Cioodit,wiU be given

carrier

.ell

week. N(!AtbSOrlpllon by

mal pennltted In areas wtiere home
carrier urvlce is a"JaMable.
•

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11

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26 WHIII

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$53.82

$105.~6

, [!!) Farmers Bank
We're Your

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02001

-

CINCINNATI (AP) - State and $2,000 per bu~iness to help, with
Weinstein. 51, said Jooters' tore meral
city officials are stepping up efforts to repairs. Council members said they are gates off the store fiont, cleaned out
find grant or l02n money to repair asking business organizations and fQUO,- imloentory includiog electronic equipdozens of damaged butinesses that were datioDI to c:rea~e a fund to help snick- ment ;mel musical inRtumena, and left
forced to dose because of last week's en stores, ;mel th" city is trying i:o help some smashed imloentory behind.
riots.
-arrange low-interest loans.
,
. Wl!instein, who attende~ City Coun"This is our mor::al duty to help th1!51!
Thl! owner of a ravaged pawn shop . cil's meeting Wednesday, estimated his .
businesses that were ransacked," city said it isn't nearly enough money. losses at SlOO 000. He said he has
Councilman John Cranley said Leonard Weinstein, owner of the ~r's owned the bu~ness for 13 years. He ·
. · Loan Office store, qui!Stioned why ~e ho
to reopen in May. For now, his
Wednesday.
Gov. Bob Taft asked state~l!rgency should have to rake out a loan to repau fi pes 1
re o.ut of work.
personnel to determine whetlte.: the his l&gt;usiness, saying Cincinnati police o~emp 6:'._~ a L ke said'dte city
damaged stores could be eligible for failed to protect it against repeated _ , yoblr
es u : bu .
C.
state or federal funds. The governqr assaults.
_
ISn t a e to compensa
smesses or
eicpl!c~ to get a r~port within days,
The store Is in the Over-the-Rhine all thl!ir los~,
d
h
' ~eighborhood north of downtown,
Some ~1ot~da~ge stores
ave
spokesman Kevin Kellems said.
City Council voted 9-0 Wednesday .one of the areas hardest hit by three reopened 1n histone Findlay Muket tn
to earmarlt $250,000 in community days of ri9ting after police faraUy shot Over-the-Rhme, but others rematned
development funds for grants of up to : an unarmed black nun.
closed and boarded up.

I lllnartlld I41YMrl •

-

.

,,, C()LUM~US (AP]'~ Tl~"~e pretty,, sweeH,mellin~ can~ and bypasses only emse through traffi:c, the srudy group said.
dJ.;s that ar!-' so popular these ·days ca'! .~e deadly. ,
The North South-Transportation Initiative is a CO•opc:raljve
. .
f'looOO$
Soooo .
...
, Candl~ fires are surging in Ohio, n~ore _than . doubling study group formed by the: Miami Valley' Regional Planning
between 1989 and 1999, tht; last year for which ·statistics are Commission and the Ohio- Kentqcky-Indiana Council
,,available, the state fire marshal's office reported.
Governments, also a planning organization.
~
A total -of 538 such fires caused $7 million in da.mage,
Regional priorities have caused some difficulty for the
t,illed f~~r PI'Ople and inJUred 7t.in Oh_~· in ·1999., the office group as it works to develop possible solutions, said Jim
...
·
•
-- •·
said . .
• j
·
• . . •
· Duane, head-of.OKI.
BY•THE ASSOCIAlED PRESS•
around I 0 mph.
While de atits across the country because. of fires are drop.
•
·
. The warmup will continue
Frid1f... Pardy cloudy_ .with_ ping OVef?U;the number of deathsf~m c~ndle fires. is on the
acrossthe tri-county area and, a chance of showers. Htgh tn , rise,~~o~.t doubling natiol!ally the pan decade, according to
,
,,,, .,. . ,.
.,
.
as o,yas :the case earlier .this the upP.er 60s. South ,wmd 10 .tH!-' Natio'!al Fire Protection&gt;.A5SOC~tion. ,
,
. MANSFIELD (AP) ...,.. A German navy veteran ofWQrld
mon.t h, that means showers · to 20.mph. Chance o£ ,ram 40
.
, War 11 will return· to his birthplace May 20 to dedicate ·a
andsthuhnderstorlms. .
. d pen:F·re•.nda~oy, .n...•_g'h
".t..·. ·~·rdy·c··lou' dy. ;
plaque in honor of27 hom~town men killed in the war. ,
.
' out wester Y ' ' 1 •Wtn s
~·
~. -~ · '~~ -~~5~ ~ ,. . _,_ . .
"I wanted to do somethmg• for ~y : v1Uage and for my
swirling around ' a departing Low, in the mid 50s.. . .
S~D(JSKY (A~) ,..-.J(' Sa~duslt.' J:f1 h School student , comra4es," said,Alfred 'ltudolfl -who errugrated to Canada 10
high pressure center wiU bring
Ex.t ended fore~st.
has been charged wtth threatcrung to kiU fellow black class- 1-954 and to the ltffnii:ed.Srates•three yean later. ·
warm, damp. .winds .into the
Saturday... Partly. -, .cloudy. mat~S;•NOI ~?" w~s harm~ ..._.,~.. II _'!
. L, . :.,. "' " Rudolf deslgned the' stainless s~eel plaque that he will dedregion the next few days.
Htgh near 80.
. .
TeJ~an fl!tckelson, ~8, ~ ar!,"t,gned by y1~e~ ~o?~up itate in Do~bernit:t~ Gerrruny. It will be aruched to an exlstShowen and thunderstorms
.Sunday...Mosdy clear. Low from Jatl Wednesday on felopy c~ of etbntc mqn»\Ut~on ,, ..11
.- ... Itt:. , "',. 11 , .
•
•
.
•
1
will develop ·in. the w~t •later in th!:;;.~~s:ne high 80 t~ and ~n~ud.ng panic and a misdeme~or charge of,a~~ted 0 ~~~~~':~~d RU&lt;tolf volunteered for the Gernun subtonight and move eastward, 85 -M,• ~"· "; ~.3-tt_,''
.
_
.!: ." · marine serVice in 1940 alt'd took•part in three war patrols in
d A ~enact,~- ~e ~ arres~dTu~
_ ~n ay...
}t c1o~ Y- , •.J:ib,clielSOn) a senior, n:n_wned silent duriJlg IW_,i'-~t.algnment the Atlantic. Ht missed a fourth when he was wounded dur- ·
the National Weather Service
said.
chance .ot·shQ\veu,dunng the 11 &amp;om .~o Er1e Counrv JaiLHe !wai .beld qn $25',000 bonli. .,- . .
.
.
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llrend
will
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ht
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"'50
t
55
nd
high
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h•d~ri'"''"'"'
td
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au
ratd
at
the
German
sub
base
m
Lonent,
ranee..
.
The W arnu-ng
~
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o
a
ntsnamewasont e 1asto
U~.MateQ.,.:wl-."'"' ~ta'-t:;P - lfJj
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1.
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.
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continue, with highs on Friday near 80. , ·. '.:.in(t',t(;'l'~u. who said Nicke~wn ~apparently in~lgp~lf~ his ,
~
near 70, and Saturday and
Tuesday... A 'chance of., own:-&lt;11ame with ,111ore popular- studenu to ~n . f.avorable.,, .
ft _
Sunday near 80.
showers 'd~'ring" tne &amp;y.. .'O th- attention:·~
• ·
""' "'" · .
1•cll• !$•&lt;'-- ,, ·
•
:. , .,
,.
. .•
.
.
•
Sunset tonight will be at erwise ' pardy douay.TtiW' 55 ._ _ _ _ ~-.'f· ' • '...., __ •., •
• -~ ,..
•
MA:SSILtO~ ~~ ~7~ women bound bY the_ de~~hs
8:14, and sunrise on Friday is to 60 and high~ iil th~ lower
w•-'~•ns
' ofa,five-manli"!'encan bclico~tcr crew 32 years ago tnVtetac6:47.a.m . .. , ,,,, 11 , .
70s:'"".:~.~~:· _ c'"' :;· " •
~ .
~
:'"rTr", ?\~'':"'
,.,1,~~plant~~~et~o.r ,tliefirst~meM~y25whenthetrlo~ed
·Weather forecast;
Wednesi'lly.. .P'artlt . cll'llt'dy.
MII5DLETQWN {AP) - Traiupo~tion ~cials from., c;&gt;,nes g~t ~~~~ fU~erals:_
.
.
·
,
. Tonight... Pardy
cloudy. Low near so·and high in the Daytop, Ci~!cinnat:i and other areal along the ' Interstate 75 _'Beta~ Stanton of MaSsillon, wliose brother, Rona~d, ':"as
Low 44 . cof; 48. West wind lower 70s.
•. • comd9 r that &lt;;on~ctl the twl:.,Q~iq;~
~t,!li, find kiUe'd m ~!l. crash, and Shayne Henderson of &lt;?at!-inbll;"g,
~;..; ·~ • ~"::!"!"' "
· '' · ,. · '· ''"
'' ' '' tlie'best'~~' tb lol've'ttit'JUghway's congestion anlrdeter~- Tenn., whose husbal!d, Henry Kmght, was a Vtcnm, wiU
. .•
.
.• rati,\Jn .»~
at!en_d a funer::al fo&lt;tbem at Arl!rgton National Cemetery_ in
Meml:ie~Yof:the North'South1hnisportation'lnitiat}~m t. V1f11rili.
'
I
·
. .
,
~~"": • . . .
.
in Middletown on Wednesday to begin considering .~!&gt;ssibl~
Military officials recendy identified their remains, wh~ch
· ~oi.tJMbtJS' '(AP)".::... Homiciae; ~ere'c t~i~hef~ad .• solutions. Tbe gro~p' 'rdled _out a
·bUjlding were '1~tscoyered s~n ye~rs ago. . .
.
• .•· :
no motive or suspects m the shootmg deaths of two young bypasses. Real estate acqul5ltton
cosdy,'
Be~e Stanton sa1d her brother felt 1t was h1s patno.t~ dt)ty
adults whose,bedies were .. found in.31i ·ap~rtlltl:nf.'_~•. ,
., \.
"
Felii;i;L Duiigef and · alvin Daru~y; , bO:in ·,,21. \~re
.,
described by friends as' h-igh school sweethearts fron,t Chita'
go who moved to ColuQtbus four years_ago. The .aNrtmcnt
...,
where .. they. w~r~ found o 1 Wednci~day was hers :' •
:.
•• Relatives s~id' _Dan1ely' dabbled ' 'h dr.l'gs an.d sp'etulated
0~10 ••
that drugs may have been behind the slayings. ·Daniely's. gr~no;llltother, ~mma P.:a,rl Danidy, 59, of;~hica­
. go, toU. J:~~ G,Ql'lmbus Pispatcl\-;;~n 'a leptione1 t'frv(~w
~··
.
.
'
'
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· chac'*c;·llad iepeif~tl¥ warned him·;.~ta¥7-IW,l\)',..fro~ Q,rugs
IN THESE OHIO LOTTERY
bc
~~~.,v
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'
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· rn"d·.ay
W
. armer, ·rain

German ex-sailor'salutes friends

Student CU..._..

threat

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Cincinnati trying to find mQney for stores

Ohlo.weather

11, 2001

'

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IS -STICL: ........._ IT~.G . TQ BE WON

•

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: ,!

Michael Lee 5lilar

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' COLUMBUS (AP) ...... Potenti~ly_ f~.l.l.1W ::blg_ot\"alco~ol
,testing at che ~oll!tp.b'!,s police lab ~Y· have c_~promised
•hunclrtas of tests used in :criminal qses, lawyers saY,·".. •
Fifty~fCiJUr agen~ies, including federal o£\ices, ~o~tract with
che division to h~e ..a v~riety of Jab ,}Y9rk , 4,2m;. incNding
_.....,.__ • . •
·
blood-alcohol and DNA tests.
Deputy Police Chief John R_edcweH -confirmed on Wednesday that an audit of tests -done -by- the crime lab's ,
leading analyzer, ~ark ,Shaw, was tindei' ~;y · but ~o~ld ;not•,
say specifically what the problem was.
"This could be a major deal with far-reaching impact,
d~ending on wha5 exactly this ~riwin":,1~gis_t ;~d that,;w"as;:
improper,''· said attorney· Joe Landusky, wb · specializ.,. in ••
~
f
-~
~
drunken-dnvmg ~a1es.
. "' ·. ". . ,. -~'A
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candle ,fir•s
surge.
in
Ohio
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!r~-~ei~.t~: ~~~&lt;;&gt;.'i;tlg~~~1~?r.~·:rJ.i:.~~?Y.,c~?,~!uded.

Limit

lnwn

L o·-c A L B R IE F s

~i4Jir~lion ~

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$50 .................................
1,392
.
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26 ..·..............................J •• . 7.492:

s

WINNIII WONDIMMID
6.000 ...:...........·................... 1 ' '

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PIIIIT ct U1 CMH
60.000 ................................ 1
10,000 ......... - ..............:.... 2 .
&amp;,000 .................................. 3
1.000 ................................... 3
' 100 .........................:.......... 16
7&amp; ., ____ ......... _ ....; 2.746

.

$ 1.8od ...:........"..................... 1
0'
3
a 0\1\1 ................
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s 3() .......,••••••••••••• ___,,_, 17,432.

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lR IIi 1'111 c•IU LM1

s 10.000 ................................ 1
$, 6.000 .........;• .,.....;..... ,....... 2
• 1,000 ................... -.~ ............ 2
&amp;00 .......... ~............................. 4

s
s 10() ........,...................,.. 1,040'
s 71! '"""'"'''"'""'""'"'"'" 1,014

s&amp;!&gt; ..,...............,.:..,......... 7.284

~ ~31J. ·••••••r••••,•••••,•••r··.,--: 1~Ao

$ ~ .........,.....,.....,........ 22.432

~ ~ ' ' ''"I''''T''''"('''..,;.,.. 24-,.468

HAPPY .........y

s 1100 ........,............................. 9
• 100 ..................................... 34

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From Original 110 or 135 c-41:PI'OCeA rolla.

'· ' '·' ' Siiefle of our cltrka for dliQiftli 'Cif1he
- · "·F.uli-True Color,!111m Cirll. ' .. • ~ •
'. ( ~,' HAVEl ROLLS DINa.OftD7AND'.'""' ' '
GET THI! SI!VI!NTH ROLL DEVELOPED FREE(
· Try ue for all your photoflnllhlng nHCiel

SWISHER • LOHSf
PI-IARMACY

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.
,
.
s:.~~oitlal "1"6.11'
Reade .·. ~..~ "~"

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Correctlbn·1'oll41l ; ;

$ 100 .........................~ ....... 718

Our main concam l~·an slciiesls
10 be accurate. If you knofi'clf an
orror In a story. call !he na~

$150 .................................. 7.827

al(740) 992·2156.

.s715 ...............:..........:......... 268

.

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··l- 1Jl~~R~~f~y Sfntmel .~
~"~ ~~

.• 1,~ ................. ,.. ~............... 4
,$ 1,000 ................. ,..... ........... 8

distance l"Fning optiQt}\-~
It will~ hli&amp;•atU&amp;.'bives
~m with "!FRI9.P~~ •.ji-om

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"' tionat'l:'li~!Si~ong

BEF.The 6rm. de&lt;:de:4''Part of
a billion dollars in busini!SS;• the neighboring Bob·· Evans
;~;. RUTI:AND - Mii:had Lee' Siglar, 43, Rutland. died Tu'~ • RA&lt;;IN.E _ Wtlliarn R. Amoa, 79, of Racine, Qied We~es- said Dan Evans, "I get a lot of Farm to the university to instill
• day,Aptil17,2001 in Cabell Runrington HOspital,Huniing~ day, April 18 ,2001. at the extended care unit · ofVeterans creditforthingsldidn'tdo,but a new entnnce 11om Ohio
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· •ton • W."a
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the 25•000 empl...,.....
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Memoriall-{mpital
in PoQlemy.
- r - of Bob 588 ' with~ building the first
· L He .'vas ~e so.? of the late IJ~ E!lton an~ NaralieVanawaH~ was borq on SepteJ;Jtber 24, 1921 in Letart Township. son Evans Farms are the ones who sight visitors using the new
gen S1glat, and was employed as a laborer.
.
of the late Otis Arnoa and Bertha Roush Arnott. He was get the job done."
road will spy.
-'•· He i$ sluvived by a d:tllghCct,;Dlana Sip of Pomeroy;,twc) . retired after 39 years of service as~ pipefitter ac Locat No. 162
Th~ building's opening is
\ O~n~ , citing several
R brothers, Ed~ StgUt at Salem Cen_rer, md larry Sigl;ir of 'in Dayton.
the 12th new campus structure insran= of Rio GtJn&lt;!l:'s and
~,~ Columbus; ux 's~ters,,Dollna Laudermilt of t,4lddleport, Linlla ' Ho; was a member of the Antiquity Baptist Church, Ameri- and the, latest ~roduct of ~o BEF's relationship, said the
" ! Sommers, ~rY McKipney an4. C~thy Siglar, all of Rutland.: __can Legion P&lt;lst No. 602,- Raeine, and \Y&gt;S ,. veteran of-the US. . Grande s .captral cam_paJgn road "represents more tl\an a
.,_Judy Se~di!S o.f ,Coluqilius, ~1\4 Lapq Michatl'of Pomeroy; iwo ' Army during World War 11.
.
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launched m late 1993. The physical link between. our fann
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granochjl!In;9; a'l_d SeYJ'~ ~~ amtneW~\\15!
and your schooL
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• ' · ' He ~as a member'o£ the na"rrisonville Masol)ic Lodge No, . _ca~n~a1gn, wh1ch exc~ed the
·: .; Servic~~ Wlf••l=&gt;f: ).1_ ~-m:. S:j!\lrday _in" Birchfield ~hera! - 41 1', F8iAJ\.(6hio yalley 'Conm_u~1ery No. 24, Knigh~ Tem- ongmal goal of$6.5_ million by
- "Every joomey•soJtA with a
~ ,;.Ho~e, Rupan_~· ~cuung ~ j&gt;e the ReV! Mark Miclt'ael. plar at Middleport,York Rite Maso,ns. and Harrisonville Chap- more than $3 milli~n, was ·single step ·down a road,"
Burial ,viiJ be tn Mib CemFt~ry, 1\ptbnd. Friends may call at ter No. 255 of Ohio East~rn Sur.
.
. ch:ured by Roger Willtams, _an Owens said. "Your new school
~~ the funeral hpq_te frop1 2~4 and 7-9_· p.m. Prlchy.
. " '' Surviving are his da'uiliter, Connie (Mike) Brothers of alunmus and BEF's execliave of business housed :in Bob ..-~
,,.' Memorialconttibutionsmay'bemadeto~family,incare?f Pomeroy; and two sons, William Otis {Stefanie) Amott of vice president.
Evans Farms Hall is just the
~ Btrcltfield Funer::al Home. to W:ud funeral ~xpehses.
'Racme, and John Lawrence (Patnela Lane) Arnott of New
"Bob Evans Farms HaD is first tentative :srep· t&amp;•dianged
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Haven, W.Va.; six granochildren and three great grandchildren; now the signature building on futures and enriched ·c.u eers
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and a sister and bro'ther-in-law, Violet and Lawrence Bush of our campus," Dorsey said. for your students.
90. Jll:B;ent. _lo~ an .effol't. 10 _ .Racine.
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"Together \vith the alunmi beU
"We haw crossed paths
Bcsid..-s his parents, he was preceded in death by-his wife, tower. which 'viii be dedicated many tinles :inJ'\Ve"J.o'p( such
, it~rease th~ numberofinuuu1
!&gt;·
" - ": •' "J~ hintiqn~. dtc Immu1iization ' Hden V. Sellers Arnott, on March 22, 1998; thrcc-c&lt;isters, Stella in s~-ptcmber, this building will interaction \vill continue tq
~ ',t, ~' p }1?'~1
·~~tloh ' PbH
. 'nl. ·~ht' Dthe . M~!gs 1JylacADurs't, WZelllba TayAior andAWth'lmaARiggs; Janhd scAvcn broCthlcrsk, ~aer t_llhlteo')th~~bofu~~-Rio -Grande .telntarnicy,h," hime~addchaedn.~c the. li'~''' of
~:·
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--:-. t. ,"' ~'',bl
tu : , ·• ':touiltf
eat
c..'Partntcllt ess rnott, 1 ur rnott, rt ur rnott, o n rnott, ar
••
. . .. .........
' · more than 99•perctntsinte the "'ltas'a childi,ood'imnmnJz.lti'on ' A:rnott, Han~ Arnott an'd Ira Arnott.
·
· "Hob Evans Fanm Hall and
Individual clonors.:w.:«,recServices \Viii be hdd 011 Sarurday, April 21, .200 t at 11 a.m. the beU tower remind us of our ognized during the ceremony,
·' introduc~on of vatcino!s~'-" ' -'•''tlbliC &lt;:Yt;ry 'ftiesday ,~here
• '.' "Infant ' irnmuniza'tion•-is" 'a' i1M1uriliatiotlf are fu:e.l'iirents - ~t Cremceris Funeral Home in Racine, with the Rev. Mark rich heritab'&lt;' :vtd ~present the bc?tl?L&lt;:J:i c:i~~pli\ques
' "'simple and inexp-ensive·way tu•i nUy cm' COilrtrtey S~ at' the 'McCombas and the Rev. Lawreilce Bush officiating. Burial will future potential ' of this instini- and fly' cl;llsiaotM MiHid! for
· protect children from · 10 Healtli A&lt;E&gt;epartment, 992- follow at Ltitart FaDs Cemetery: friends may call at the funeral tion as '""celebrate the 125th them. They indude Morris E. ·
r.otentiallr. · deadly infectious 6626.
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home on Friday, April 20, 2001 from 7-9 p.m.
anniwrsary of Rio Grande Haskins.'Marsh:rll T ' ~eynolds.
;.~ise~ '!;d.:f!!f!~~llk: =: ~ 1f9kMi:tty co1\!iltisMilitary graveside senjces will be conducted by Racine during aU of 2001,'' Dorsey the late Mary M : Martin in
. memory bf 'Hemuii'Mattin,
spent on inmmnizations, as sioners Jim Sheets and Mick American Legion Post No. 602, and Stewart-Johnson Post of added.
·:•cmui:h as• $2~ c~n ~ Wit~•. in • ·'Davenport :ngn~ ~ proclama-· the Veterans of Foreign Wat;S No. 9926, Mason, W1!5t Virginia.
The building, highlighted . John H. McConnell,j:Tinr and
- ·.direct •or ' 1ndire¢t medical n ben dedmng1tpril 22-28' as
'';i~.
by its rotunda, includes class- · Betty Evans,' R:aytitolt~ 'E!'and
costs.'• ' 11' ;., ;:;,: 1 ,r, 11 • a,r·,nNarional , Infant~ lfnlmunization
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ro01us, computer labs, faculty Margaret' 1 M3scin / ~clnl~ E.
•'': James . E:, Witherell. M.D.\" ~~ek.
and administntive offices, an and Doris Ann P0\1/Cli 'Harri'!1 Me~ Ceurity Health Depart~• .. ,. 'f.he . 1.two , commissioners
·
auditorium seating up to 175, son, Dan Evahs, the lit.,: C3rrol
ment medical . director, .,Said .,, expreued ,their .:oncem about ·
business mining and confer- H. "Casey'' Ml:~el!zrb~· ~nd
-L rnany people.. do .ne&amp; .under~-'· •the. low rare-of immunization AEP-50
•
Gamett-65
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RockyBools-4~
ence rooms, and an instruc- RogerWillianisc' " '' , .,,..,
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_,,_~
All:lleo.l-34•
GenerttiEJectric-4n. RD Shen-sn.
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·J,Stand why.· vaccine .schedules ... in Meigs . County and caucu · Nczo-44 ·.
GKNLY- 11
sears-37\
change fiom year to year.
JJpon families to participate,in· AmTecii/SIIC - ·41\
Halley Davidson - 45
Shoney's _,,
Harper, co-owner•:ofi·tbei;col. ti · "They think,, .the .public . reaching a goal of raising the - ~ ~-- 42\
9~).
~:.:.:
lection facility in RockSprings.
io j health community.. i~ being . •,,rate-from (ill peR:ent to 90 pc;rBank dne-38
Landa End-29'1.
Wor1hington-10,,
"Our existing customers ; in
:. ,intentionally confusing,"-With- . &lt;rent this year.
·' Bob E'MIS- 1n
L1d.- 15), .
Daily stock reports are
·
Pomeroy
can have pea~c' " of
Page A1
• erell said."That.is.no_trlle~c2Se. : .. , -~:i'~~f. ~ :need to edu" , =~f"'
~~~al-13 ~!t8! J~
at aU. The'-schedule changes are cate parents and . caregivers • Charmil)g ShoPs....:"" aar- 35lt
day's transactions, pro- purchased a late .modd Toyota mind knowing• -that&lt; I 'their
part of. an. ot:J.gOine: effort to • abouc the imoortance of early · city HOlding - ·al.
Peoples- 11
llidiKI by 511!1111 Part· pick-up to better access the garbage can be 'coUectt!d while
come u~' ~tlf-'Ule 't'Q"s~!! idr~~nWt~rif~· encourage . 'FederaiM'l0"'-3
Premler- ..s,,
nere at Advesi Inc. ol smaUer streets and alleyways preserving the streetS at the
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h d I
h a1 h
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-d
USB- 22~
Bockwell - 44'·
Gallpolis.
which were assigned new same time." · , ··~· ••.fl ( lf r ..
,rJ ,nhil~dresc ;, u_e_ t(), 1'1?«.\~~ ou[ ,1 , e t J.'.ca~ (; -~rdovt e~ - to
Harpet said' ·the cc'lmp~ny is
tmprove access an constStency
,c
n.
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weight limits.
·
in
the process ·of puttbasilig a
; J
While the rate of immuniza- . '
irnriluniution ser:vices, and
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"We fuUy undersrand the
!t.tilet,+aBix\,d
" ~nons in 'M~i~
~- "seek lorig-term ~
· !icy chanReS
concerns of village residents smaU
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d
h..
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th
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. increase ~ ,.,1 , pen;ent an e ,,tna .'YlU ensure
munuruza·
and feel that our stnaller truck
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two. ·yeaTS, it'"' is · Jill' fa~ '-Jl{tiOn' Status tOr
children by
•
can maneuver the streets and
stay within the new wl'ight
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limit ordinance," said Michelle ·
,.., PPMEROY Racine
kindergarten &lt;ttgistration' wiD be
. held Monday and Tuesday
" begin'ning'at!8:30 a.m.
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Those
children
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Publlshell every oltemoon, Monday
through:_ Friday. 1~1 Court St.,
Pomero,,
Ohio.
second-olass
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and
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11on01o The Daly Sentinel, tit Court.
st., Ponproy, Ohio o5'1ell. •

The main number Is 992·215~.
Department extentions ~re: "" .. ~•
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We're Your

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The Daily Set~

lhe Daily Sentiriel.

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DEAR .ABBY: The letter from

Ohio V~ley Publishing Co.
CbMel w. Gowy

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Dea·r
Abby

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A. ShiWn Lftla

~Eclltor

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OUR VIEW

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At .last· _
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If anything positive ·is to come out of the energy dilenu'na, it

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Music seminar set

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','.,':· ,.··,,"·KQ.bJ.PRl\CKE;S VIEW

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will probably be (hat coal is coming back into prominence as a
so1,1rce of cheap power.
.,
' '' The''Ui'Di'ed States
Chirii 'hands
'
lions urging IOC rejection of China, b11t
For this region, which has liVed on. illl coal re5er:ves for' .
surveillalice&lt;-p~e ·episdde,
now that the spy-plane hostage drama is
decades, that's gooi:l news. Even better is that legislators such as.
and .tKe JJ~ administr:i!iffli Sh!IU!il lljakc
over, ·the administration may decide it's
U.S. Sen. George Voinovich, R-Ohio, are giving it serious consuie 'the Whole world knOWs it 'by putting
wise not to weigh in with the IOC, at least
sideration in a discussion of an energy policy.
out all the'fac;&amp; iln the :iit collision~ the
not publicly.
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It's about time. ·
Sdtlth Chiiia' Sea.
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Two bigger decisions concern arms for
.Coal's decline has been reversed by. an unfortunate turn of
·Aisumillg the evidence ~~t:i~es
Taiwan and renewal of normal trade relaevents in the energy business, but with reserves still at healthy
that'retldds;flyingbyChina'slostp~9twas
·K·o_ _3__1_..:. rions With China. As soine experts point
levels. coal has ·assumed 'new luster as We look what is avail-,
' iiide~ 'tb)'idns~
·b
' die 'ctasb, fWI dis-'•
IJUI.CKAC out, China has made such an issue of sell~
abl~ and, shall we say, plentiful on the domestic leveL
·
· clbswe'YJoOld onstinite 'de facto'retracing the Aegis anti-missile system to-Taiwan
· .. The goal of a national energy policy, w~ich Voinovich said is
-'• ridn 'of any ·hin ofa U.S.. ap\&gt;logy fur the .
COWMNIST
that the United States is free to make any
in a development stage on Capitol Hill, is to reduce depenilitidenr!·':" •·
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weapons trarisfer short of that.
dence on oil or overseas energy sourees. 'Reallsocally,'
rna~
'~· lnJa~,' 'the administl'ition.did nb~ . use ,,
· Onepossibleformulawouldbetodefer
never be
of OPEC and illl price structure'as' far as oil is
the \Vord "apologize:'"'aS ;:~iJ¥ by Free , Asia, which . broadcasts to China the Aegis sale, which would take eight
concerned, ·aes~ite t~e move to drill on previously exempt
China, in exchange,for the ti:hlm'bfthe' tlu!!cliasjUdioFreeEuropedidto,Eastern • y~ars to .complete, and. mstc:ad otf~r . up
wilderness.
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,
creW of the EP-3 surv9JWe J1lane that :rE\nop&lt;rduring the CEoldWar. . ,, .. . ,ll:i~d-cla.o;s des,troyers.a nd Patrtot.J rmssiles,
But beYond gasolme 'coilcerns, the need to incre:Ue· electric
wa{~ ~ and .fdit-di! \lbr: Iand on ' China is free enough that RFA ·cur- whtchmaybemoreusefultoT:uwan,anypower has been dr:unanzed by California's experience. ProducH~~AJ&gt;ril 1:'.\l:!.''!lt&lt;.I:L
· • · . rently answers 1,000 phone calls a month . way.
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tion of aff~.~b\e ,electt:\~ ~urces are emerging )Is a pritrlar}\
t;MW:t~ c~
Uruted "'Wm ' ~hinese ·lisreners· who ofterl •comDepnvmg China. of normal !:fade status
concern·in the energy discussion because new power plants are
~~· ~ of,the wolds"~. sorry" as the P~' ;abo!lt their Pm1ment and report wo~d be .a devastating blow to u.s..it! short supply. What we have, in some areas 9f the ~ountry,
equivalent of art expression of !ifipOtl$ibil- , local unrest. But it· could 6eld ;;'0,000 calls , China relations ._,. a.declaratiOn that. this
isn't enough to meet the dernaJ}d.
ity for the incident, bu,r that ploy should be ~ month if it had adequate resources, RFA country does not want China to grow and
Voinovicb 's visit •to• the••Gavin power.•plaijt, the•largest· coal-:
' '"expOOw
'"1 ' '1~-' ' by' ' a full ro n:o,UtOl,
-' " " rili'
' " ..._, · ••• ,\Q flj-'-'"
prospef,.::;~-: •...• ;r~..:.~·~
·•
.-. e~~ence
\ilCWi5ay. 1)111•'.~ ,, ; , . , .
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burning generating station in Ohio and second biggest in
· ·Moreover, the Busb , administration
Last year c;:ongress authorized ,a S99
Moreover, t.t ":'milo unif~rmme . the
American Electric Power's system, highlights the coal issue
.. ~ re~d t.o , a'icede to' c~:s. :d.enwtP that ' rnillio~, twO.-year. in~ for .broa4casting stra~ ·of subvertmg the punese co~­
becau§e pf.AJJ.~~.~~rt5_t9&gt;e~nform t9"~~~~ ~.:rii\i~o~ : . it c~cel(UIIjre surveill3fl~~;tJigb~-!?W~~he ,,!P,,China,by;Rl'A and tbeV?tce o£.AlnerJ " munist: . ~ctato~p by spreading capttalist
Selective· catalytic reduction (SCR) reclmOJ'JiY kM:at."Ki&amp;South Gbiqa Sea. To thF1cqrlt;J;ilcy,,ofij.&lt;;ials , .,tea, buJ en~ up appropnatmg JUSt $5" and men~c values,
~
. .
gen oxide emission,s by a significant level goes on ~e at)gayin
~ve. ~¢4 that~ ,fl!gh~ .will c~!inue, ;, ~on more for the current fiscal,yeat. ·.. ·:There IS a n~ that trade a?d. capttalism
in a fe""!.,W!!elq. t~ s"!cce~. WJ1 be a .ba~m;~~ t , ~·rest _£ ~e
c~Wf' ~ .bj:en I"' ' f;)r. 2002. RFA 'pur in for a $6. million \1~ ' make ".China . econormaally strong
. .. So,.\h,Qst
industry that ·b urns coal can gauge t make • h'e!f·•plants 'eiiVl"h~li" by the :Wcident. ,-;:,stan;ing. , increase ,to improve its abilicy to penefr.!te . •wtthout convet;tmg tt to democracy., hence
ronmenially sound, 'prol~ng their life a nd put . c.oal back UltO
with the editors of the co,nseor;~tive Week- Chinese jarmning. The Bush budget pro- ~atmg a hostile ~uperpower m Asta. Bur
the forefront of.a&lt;Jcessible·,~,and acceftable ..,.energy s&lt;i~es ..
' ly .StaWla1P ., .. are sin)ply, w,rong., 1 ' ,.
' ' yjped ~nly ap, addjtional Sl million, hqwItS ·.a ortsk 'the Umted States . sh~uld· take,
It will also play ll• role: ~rii what VQ1ndY~,.popes ~ a
., . , ,'r he, W'~Y Stan~ 1 ~111S 1:0pYinced ever. President Bush· should ~ his" ."':bile r;efuSmg. to let China get a~ With
compromise, an agreed-upon set of co~p~onents duf' ~ , tha~ China.and the U!V~t:cl Spies, ~. 1\es- request, or Congress should do it for him-, any; ,~haV!or .m the human rights or
resolve a large part of the eroblem.
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, tined ,to~..,-infact,Jllw;tQy,~ii" ~\lilte&lt;;;~~l!IX1'9~;~dedoverwhether strategtc.realniS. , .' .
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"We have to get pe/;ple-to work toge'tn~ ••~tead of m·~.J
. gic , :u!Ymarles and .~~ly,, ;~l~tc~\i!lntry the ·:iift;jifi!OO:lt:!on sh6Wd ,try: to prevent '• .' The ~ush admi~trauon alsl), has to fig: ing stones,";he said at the conclusion of 1he Gavin tou ·
enemies. '
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Beijil)lJht 2~~~~en to host the • " ure.,~u~hm.&gt; .roavotdencouragmgChina,
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, , ..T.hat.. ,may happen. ; ~~ ,.(actj,Qns of 2008 Olympic t;;ames.
· • RIISSla, North Korea, Iraq and Iran .from
: We couldn't agree ~ore. The evidence that an enersr.~isis , .Cbina:s 1'l!ilitary cet'tli111y, ,~ . p!:lnning ori ' '''"'There's little ;question that the' Interna- for??ng _ an ~nholy strategtc alliance
· is looming is all around us. What we do now and in the ~e-. , it, ~utJ.],S, .nrategy sh.Q.uiQ ~.de&lt;lical'(d to " tiona! Olympic Committee shoul~· refuse , agamst the U~tep Stal~· ·, · . . .
diilte
future keeps us out of a subservient·
~~
iilon
to .I'~gn
S~ at: the end of the ~t w_ung of
simultaneously dererriPg,Chio~ ~ 1 Chlna's· bid based ' on 'a dismal human
,
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mterests.
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sivehess and converting its pojitical system ' rights record, which includes torture of Bush s. high:-stak.es game Wlth China, t?~
Coal may not assume the' throne t ,fiJ;C~:in this~cil'lln­
to democracy.
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dissidents and ~gious persecu~on, b1,1t scon: ts \!ruted States I, ~hina 0. But Its
try, but it's n~ poise,d,_~,be ~n it\f~~!llber t&lt;it·~e
It's a diflicult task requiring shrewd some experts think overt U.S. pressure loo~g like a game that will go mto extta
court.
Let us setze the
ODMrturuty.
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One key method of pro~otuig democ- the hands of the commumst regrrne. ·
(Morton Kondradu! Is e;&gt;;l!CUtn,oe ed1tor of Roll
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Congress undoubtedly will pass resolu- Call, the newspaper of Capitol Jtill.) '
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....,.HER SHO.ES. ·

Alumni feUQi.Op · .
tiCkets:On sale .

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·L OCAL ' HAPPENINGS

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of the Counc~ on Mlnlatrin lor
. the West Oh1o Conflr1nc1 1:11 ~
POMEROY-- Meigs County
United Methodist Church, will be
Retired T.eachers , Saturday,
at the .Racine UnHad Methodist
noon, Trinity Church;s Bethany ' CHurch Sunday from 2 to • p.m.
building. Leah Jean Ord to preHe wiH be available to, anewer\
sent 'The Underground Railroad , ,any q~eatlona concemlng the.. .
in Meigs County Hi~lory.' AN
~hJ.tJ'9h ~nd iiS mlniat!le';'~ ' ', '' .
retired teachers lnv1ted to attend.
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Call992-3214 or 949-26011or
luncheon reservations.

fun night, Grange hall. ,

THURSDAY
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POMEROY - Hysell Run Holi-'
ness Church rev1yal Thursday,
Friday and Saturday at the
church, 7 p.m. each evening.
Chuck Stensberry, speaker;
Mat!)' O'BrYa.nt, song le!!d!lr. · .
PubliC inVited.
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~~,~;:; ~Yiinif01n11ngi:~eauca.tibn ·isfl'f,._a ,: pip·e. dream.

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MIDDLEPORT - The Southeast
The ~nt •viii be in the cafeteria at
'Meigs High School. The social hour \viii
District of the Ohio Music Teachers AssoFROM STAFF REJI9RTS
Born in Pyburn, Tenn.,
ciation 'viii bold its spring conference SatMail it to: Community Nt!11115, begin at 5:30 p.m. and the dinner will be
POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va.
Worley
came by niusic natuurday at 9 a.m . at the Ohio University The Daily Sentinel, 111 Covrt served at 6:30 p.m, A dance will' fOllow
. School of Music, Athens. .
St, Pomeroy Ohio 45769.. • with George Hall at the orgaiuPhotos of - Nashville recording artist rally. His mother sang in
·Darryl Worley will be the final church every Sunday and his
Professor Jean Barr fiom the Eastman
~laSsl!S wiD be taken in the interperformer at the 2001 Mason grandfather . would play a
School of Music will present a lecture
val between the dinner and dance.
County Fair.
banjo cin the front porch.
from 9 to 10 a.m. on "Developing Strong
U·S~OftS..
~in, previous years,alun,mi are permit, , Sight Reading Skills" and will hold a mas992-2156 ",, I • ' ,ted,~ !lith~ ~e,sts to dthdanefe!!nionsa~5 tickh- ' Wotley, an· up · ~nd com.i.ng "He used to .tell us, 'learn to
ter class on accompanying fiom 1O: 15
. , ,, . , etuor e dinner an
ce are ., tac .
singer/songwriter; will take to play an instrument, because
a.m. to 12:15 p.m. .
·Reservations should be ll)ade by May 21.
nothing is as relaxing as com~
the stage·at 9 p.m. Aug. 1 l.
Barr is co-chairman of the new cham&amp;--&amp;.. • •. '
Again this year, scholarships are offered
"We feel vety fortunate to ing home and playing a few
" ber music department and a professor of
to students who are either a child ' or
have contracted Darryl Worley chords. It settles you and realpiano accompanying and chamber music
.grandchild of a PHS graduate. The' deadas the dosing aC\ of the 2001 ly puts your roots. back on the
.. at Eastman School of Music. She is in res. line to submit an application is May 18.
fair;• said Vice President Brian ground,"'Worley said. ·
POMEROY _: April was the th~ of · The~ are ,Ill&gt; official applipation forms.
idence at Ohio University as a Rufus PutDrawing on influences that
Billings. "With highlighting
nam visiting pl'()fessor.
the program presented by Vicki ·oS'lJith, Th()se applymg are to ~n~ a resum~, trancountry music during the fair, range from Merle Haggard, .
Barr is the first keyboard artist in the lecturer, at a recent meeting 'o f, '~tar .scnpt, letter of a~plicatton, ~ cu~rent
including.Andy Griggs, Keith . George Jones and Keith Whit-_
United Stares to be awarded "' doctoral Grange 778.
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photo and mformatlon on relatlonshtp to
Urban, Bobby Bare and Wor- ley to Gene Watson, Willie
' degree in accompanying. She lias lectun;d
Readings included "Spring" by Mike·· a Po~eroy . g_raduate, to the Pomeroy
ley, we believe the music will Nelson, Vern Gosdin, Jim
'' and given master classes in Austria, Japan, Macomber; an Easter aevotional ~nd facts AI~ Assocutt~n, Box 202, ~omeroy,
appeal to coUntry fans of all Reeves, Roger Miller, the
·• Korea, the Netherlands, Poland, Switzer- on eggs by Sm.i.th, "Husbands and Hats'' O)lto 45769. , ...
ages.
Eagles and Lefty FrizzeU,Worland, the United Kingdom, and tb~ugh- by Ida Kearns; and·"Remember ·J:yy Gar" · · · ' ·
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"Tbe Easters on Thursday .ley is washed in the blood of
o.ur United States.
olyn Gardner. Members then participated
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will truly touch the audience country music.
as well with their southern
The real deal from both
Registradon and welcome will begin at in a contest.
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.. Master Patt/Dyer p~sided-at theo meet•L I ' ' 0~.,..,
' ' gospeC "tli'e' ·l ai': ' ' boaril is "birth and e~perienc ~. he
ing with final plans being made for1a con- · POMEROY ~ A' free 6brontyalgia
pleased with the entertainers returns the genre to its roots
signment sale April28.Anyone with itenu s~lf-li'elp course will be offered at
we \Viii be bringing in this in the way that is utterly fresh
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to constgn for the sale are to contact. Opal Po.meiOY. Ppblic Library ever;y, We&lt;lnesday.
,, .year;'..BiUinf!S added.. .
and •vita){ •
Dyer, 742-2805. Auctioner \villf..be ' Dan',:, f!')tl1 -6 tti 18 ~.ik for a seveii.!\Wek"~eriod
Smith.
b~ginning May 16.
POMEROY - Those il)terested in. Legislative discussion was on th" poten-· ', Th~ p'rogull\ is sponso~,d by' · rhe
r history, fashions or costumes 'viii want to rial changing ofVeterm'ts Day, ca~b~tori·; iib'ratt: Ohio · :UniversitY 'Coll.e'~' of
· participate in a program on hinorical cos.- every foflr years. Members were renund- Osteopjithic M~dicine, and the Central
" tun~es s~onso.red by, the Metgs County ed the Mo:igs County Grange Banquet Ohio Chapte,r of the Arthritis Program; HI
•. Ohto Btcem~nmal Comnmtee .and Ohto . will be April 27 . Tickets rlre to be pur- with fiuids froip the Ohio l;)ep:imlient of
' State Umvers1ty E&gt;.'lenSIOll; Metgs &lt;;:oun- chased by Sunday and are av:\ilallle from · Health, Bureau ·of Health l'roinorion and
.. ty.
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. any M~igs County Grange master or by Risk Ro:duction.
Sarah McG~\V, ·spokcs\Vtllllan (&lt;?r ' the
, - :The llmt• pennd bcn~g presented IS contacting Dyer. Next meeting (v'ill be
r. from 1803 (statehood) until .the end of the Saturday, 6:30p.m.
Coll~ge &lt;»'Osteopathic Medicine, said, the
Ctvil · War. The senunar, conduc.ted by
, .,.
course has been proven io reduce pain
Becky Baer, . r.ot~tgs County. fanuly and
'~nd stiffncss;ma,ke 6bromyalgia easier to
consumer scto:nces/comn~umty develop-,.
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'manage, ·and itlcrease the potentiitl for a · .,.
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1\\C:Ilt CXtenSIOll.Jgent,. \\&gt;til be at 7 p.m.
healthier Jife.
,. Tuesday in the County Annex (basement
' · " '
She said each participant wiU be given
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of the fopner county ,hom~).
P0!\1EROY .-Ticke.ts for the ann~~al .. "The Fibrotuyalgia Helpbooki' There are
There 1s no cost. Q.uesttons should be ., P-omeroy Htgh SGbool Ahuun1 As!octa- only iS sp~ce; ava~ble and 'reSistrlttions.
non banquet and dance May 26 are .now are now beitig ttk.Cn at 593-2518 ..
'' directed xo 'Baer at 740-992-6696.
on sale. The pckl'ts may be purchased at

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· . ·,BuS.h needs:a snreWder.poliy toward .China
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.COMMUNITY
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Energy -~h~rtages:p~t (Q(.lt.
back·in .apositive light

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c.rat diamond sells . for aro und
$10,000.
DEAR .~BY: My hu sba nd
works in die construction trade and
refu.es to bathe more than once a
week. lle"h~s. at' times, gone more
than two weeks without a shower. .
Am I unreasonable to expect him
to shower at least every two to three
days? - SLEEPING ALONE IN
OREGON

her diu~h!n not to accept . aa wiiuld be in, the minim~ ·salary
told her daughters she would nor
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enp~ent riag unless it was ~- "Mether" would accept is' $1j75,000
least ~carat is blatantly sexist. lt is
rear. Granted,~~ wou)d buy an
give her approval for marriage unless
the C""".... leor.a{ a. father telling m. .. ~wfullor of"neeessities.':...
they received a one-carat diamond
~...... marry any woman witli
engagement ring, reminded me of a
not;,ro"Mother" may believe s e ts not
situation in my family years ago.
less than a 3S:Inch buR. Such a reachiq her dauN'J'=~ ro focus .on
My sister became engaked to a' felfather' \t'OIIId be ~bing his son to the ring. but she sure as heck Is not
low we all liked
much. My parview .,0111en
"sex objects.'' teaching them to lookat thing5 such
ents hosted an engagement partr in
ADVICE ,
. ."Mprh§r" ~ teac)Una her daugluen . as tenderness, companionship or
their borne and invited aU their !'!!Ia' · ~ . • to view tbi!p as ·: succ.ess objecli:' · . tidcliry.. I guess MaJJU&gt;· figures
DEAR .SI EEPING ALONE:
rives and frie,nds.
jeWel."
.
. ,, In,-~~· to._ lu:r deferue~ ~ . $675,000 would make for a "comThe young man had recently bc;en
My sister and her husband wert! • she's teaChiili:'lier:-daOghters to -fociB : 'fi&gt;r.table'·' divorce . settlement. ,...... You are ·not unreasonable. Yo u're in
discharged from the.:Army and had happily matried for more. thai) 4S QP,i)i&gt;w well i:hr nfan· tould"p~di! · - GEORGE IN RAYTOWN, MO. touch \Vith )rour sense of smell. ·
n,o money, therefore'; there. was no years. He was sqccessful in his pro- the · nccessiCies;· lc!t me shalt. .cb~ . • . D~ GEORGE: Your letter is . You don't say how long you haw
engagement ring._At the party, two ' f&amp;ion. My sister·received more dia-· result!~ 'o f my.own' research.
•.
a hoot, but yOiir nun\bers' doh'! add been married, but I am amazed that
guests, in critical. and judgmental . monds and material things, t~an .
~fP!ying the "De~rers Stan&lt;iard," qp,,ar least according to my calcula- you have been able to live with thJS.
tones, said to my mother, "We don't most wives.- JERRY IN HUNT- '~ch sugge~.: thac· the diat11011d . tiom. Also, I don't know what jC\vel- For the sake . of his health and the
see a diamond ring on your daugh- lNGToN, N.Y.
·
shoUld eq~ two months' salary, a et: you consulted in Kansas City, but health of your rnarriagc, your huster's finge~.'.' Mother · smiled .and
DEAR JERRY: I admire your · one ':(iii rat ring wiD cost .an awrage pf :tcc.o rding to .diamond specialist band .should sc hedule pc·rsonal
called the young man from across mother's values. Predictably, that let- S28, 125 in the ,K2i153S Ciry are~. f. James Kersey at Harry Winston in hygiene on a daily basis.
Drar AM&gt;y is u•rittcu by Pmdiflc
the room. When he cam.: over, sh" ter generated more mail. Read on:
nut\..•Yho makes that mu·c h it) 1\"i) .. B&lt;'Verly Hills (nothing but the best
.P"il/ips
amlqau)!ht&lt;'r}t•auflc Phillip;.
s&lt;~id to the guests, '.'THiS is , ou.r
DEAR ABBY: Th~ a~yicc givett momb$'-\ vitH)fif!&amp; home S331,5tKl' li'lr Ill)' 'readers), a "very.[hice" one-

740 112-2151 • Fa: 112-21,57

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...........,. Aptll1t. 2001

,.
liy "M~ther in Hampton, Ga.·," to per' year. Figuring the raxbrac ket he

~ "Mother in Hampton, Ga.:•, who

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111 Cola'tSI., ~.Ohio

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Daughter engaged to gem·did nqt not ~~~.for diamond

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BU~t_lef_Ld~----~h~p~AS

; The Daily Sentinel

11.2111

0

Cheltilne Hoellldl
Gene! II 1111111111

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FRIDAY
POMEROY-- Meigs County
Arthritis Support GfllUP,
to
' 11:30 a.m. a~ . the Meigs ~nty
, · Senior CHizena Center,
' Pomeroy. ·or. Wayne Amendt, an
orthopedic surgeon from ·Holzer'
. Medical Clllltel, will speak on
.1 lnpati8rit, oi.dpa,lenl. a~d olli9e
, ·· orthopedic treatment of arthfi118.

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The.Communlty p.!l111clllr le
publlahld •• 1 11'11 Mrvlce to

non-profit

wlahlng to

111nou•
illg1 I~ apeclll ewnta.
ce~cllr II
not dellgned ~ . promoteMiea
Ol''fU!Id-iiiMr'!l,ot ~ny type.
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Expectation .

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DANVILLE -- A free pond clinic
aponaored by The OSU Exten·
slon, Meigs $WCD and NRC$
will take place on Satu~y 'r0111•
9:30a.m. till12 p.m. at the Cur·
tis Dahhaser Farm on Briar. ,·. •
.Ridge Road.
For more information. call 9924282.

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· SATURDAY
•, SALEM CENJER ...., Star
. SUNDAY
'! Grarige 778 and ~r, Junlor
Grange 878, potluck ,upp11r and RACINE -.Stan Ling, director '

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The Daily Set~

lhe Daily Sentiriel.

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DEAR .ABBY: The letter from

Ohio V~ley Publishing Co.
CbMel w. Gowy

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Dea·r
Abby

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If anything positive ·is to come out of the energy dilenu'na, it

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','.,':· ,.··,,"·KQ.bJ.PRl\CKE;S VIEW

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will probably be (hat coal is coming back into prominence as a
so1,1rce of cheap power.
.,
' '' The''Ui'Di'ed States
Chirii 'hands
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lions urging IOC rejection of China, b11t
For this region, which has liVed on. illl coal re5er:ves for' .
surveillalice&lt;-p~e ·episdde,
now that the spy-plane hostage drama is
decades, that's gooi:l news. Even better is that legislators such as.
and .tKe JJ~ administr:i!iffli Sh!IU!il lljakc
over, ·the administration may decide it's
U.S. Sen. George Voinovich, R-Ohio, are giving it serious consuie 'the Whole world knOWs it 'by putting
wise not to weigh in with the IOC, at least
sideration in a discussion of an energy policy.
out all the'fac;&amp; iln the :iit collision~ the
not publicly.
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It's about time. ·
Sdtlth Chiiia' Sea.
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Two bigger decisions concern arms for
.Coal's decline has been reversed by. an unfortunate turn of
·Aisumillg the evidence ~~t:i~es
Taiwan and renewal of normal trade relaevents in the energy business, but with reserves still at healthy
that'retldds;flyingbyChina'slostp~9twas
·K·o_ _3__1_..:. rions With China. As soine experts point
levels. coal has ·assumed 'new luster as We look what is avail-,
' iiide~ 'tb)'idns~
·b
' die 'ctasb, fWI dis-'•
IJUI.CKAC out, China has made such an issue of sell~
abl~ and, shall we say, plentiful on the domestic leveL
·
· clbswe'YJoOld onstinite 'de facto'retracing the Aegis anti-missile system to-Taiwan
· .. The goal of a national energy policy, w~ich Voinovich said is
-'• ridn 'of any ·hin ofa U.S.. ap\&gt;logy fur the .
COWMNIST
that the United States is free to make any
in a development stage on Capitol Hill, is to reduce depenilitidenr!·':" •·
'' ''"' ·'" '· ' .. •
,
weapons trarisfer short of that.
dence on oil or overseas energy sourees. 'Reallsocally,'
rna~
'~· lnJa~,' 'the administl'ition.did nb~ . use ,,
· Onepossibleformulawouldbetodefer
never be
of OPEC and illl price structure'as' far as oil is
the \Vord "apologize:'"'aS ;:~iJ¥ by Free , Asia, which . broadcasts to China the Aegis sale, which would take eight
concerned, ·aes~ite t~e move to drill on previously exempt
China, in exchange,for the ti:hlm'bfthe' tlu!!cliasjUdioFreeEuropedidto,Eastern • y~ars to .complete, and. mstc:ad otf~r . up
wilderness.
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,
creW of the EP-3 surv9JWe J1lane that :rE\nop&lt;rduring the CEoldWar. . ,, .. . ,ll:i~d-cla.o;s des,troyers.a nd Patrtot.J rmssiles,
But beYond gasolme 'coilcerns, the need to incre:Ue· electric
wa{~ ~ and .fdit-di! \lbr: Iand on ' China is free enough that RFA ·cur- whtchmaybemoreusefultoT:uwan,anypower has been dr:unanzed by California's experience. ProducH~~AJ&gt;ril 1:'.\l:!.''!lt&lt;.I:L
· • · . rently answers 1,000 phone calls a month . way.
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tion of aff~.~b\e ,electt:\~ ~urces are emerging )Is a pritrlar}\
t;MW:t~ c~
Uruted "'Wm ' ~hinese ·lisreners· who ofterl •comDepnvmg China. of normal !:fade status
concern·in the energy discussion because new power plants are
~~· ~ of,the wolds"~. sorry" as the P~' ;abo!lt their Pm1ment and report wo~d be .a devastating blow to u.s..it! short supply. What we have, in some areas 9f the ~ountry,
equivalent of art expression of !ifipOtl$ibil- , local unrest. But it· could 6eld ;;'0,000 calls , China relations ._,. a.declaratiOn that. this
isn't enough to meet the dernaJ}d.
ity for the incident, bu,r that ploy should be ~ month if it had adequate resources, RFA country does not want China to grow and
Voinovicb 's visit •to• the••Gavin power.•plaijt, the•largest· coal-:
' '"expOOw
'"1 ' '1~-' ' by' ' a full ro n:o,UtOl,
-' " " rili'
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prospef,.::;~-: •...• ;r~..:.~·~
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\ilCWi5ay. 1)111•'.~ ,, ; , . , .
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burning generating station in Ohio and second biggest in
· ·Moreover, the Busb , administration
Last year c;:ongress authorized ,a S99
Moreover, t.t ":'milo unif~rmme . the
American Electric Power's system, highlights the coal issue
.. ~ re~d t.o , a'icede to' c~:s. :d.enwtP that ' rnillio~, twO.-year. in~ for .broa4casting stra~ ·of subvertmg the punese co~­
becau§e pf.AJJ.~~.~~rt5_t9&gt;e~nform t9"~~~~ ~.:rii\i~o~ : . it c~cel(UIIjre surveill3fl~~;tJigb~-!?W~~he ,,!P,,China,by;Rl'A and tbeV?tce o£.AlnerJ " munist: . ~ctato~p by spreading capttalist
Selective· catalytic reduction (SCR) reclmOJ'JiY kM:at."Ki&amp;South Gbiqa Sea. To thF1cqrlt;J;ilcy,,ofij.&lt;;ials , .,tea, buJ en~ up appropnatmg JUSt $5" and men~c values,
~
. .
gen oxide emission,s by a significant level goes on ~e at)gayin
~ve. ~¢4 that~ ,fl!gh~ .will c~!inue, ;, ~on more for the current fiscal,yeat. ·.. ·:There IS a n~ that trade a?d. capttalism
in a fe""!.,W!!elq. t~ s"!cce~. WJ1 be a .ba~m;~~ t , ~·rest _£ ~e
c~Wf' ~ .bj:en I"' ' f;)r. 2002. RFA 'pur in for a $6. million \1~ ' make ".China . econormaally strong
. .. So,.\h,Qst
industry that ·b urns coal can gauge t make • h'e!f·•plants 'eiiVl"h~li" by the :Wcident. ,-;:,stan;ing. , increase ,to improve its abilicy to penefr.!te . •wtthout convet;tmg tt to democracy., hence
ronmenially sound, 'prol~ng their life a nd put . c.oal back UltO
with the editors of the co,nseor;~tive Week- Chinese jarmning. The Bush budget pro- ~atmg a hostile ~uperpower m Asta. Bur
the forefront of.a&lt;Jcessible·,~,and acceftable ..,.energy s&lt;i~es ..
' ly .StaWla1P ., .. are sin)ply, w,rong., 1 ' ,.
' ' yjped ~nly ap, addjtional Sl million, hqwItS ·.a ortsk 'the Umted States . sh~uld· take,
It will also play ll• role: ~rii what VQ1ndY~,.popes ~ a
., . , ,'r he, W'~Y Stan~ 1 ~111S 1:0pYinced ever. President Bush· should ~ his" ."':bile r;efuSmg. to let China get a~ With
compromise, an agreed-upon set of co~p~onents duf' ~ , tha~ China.and the U!V~t:cl Spies, ~. 1\es- request, or Congress should do it for him-, any; ,~haV!or .m the human rights or
resolve a large part of the eroblem.
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, tined ,to~..,-infact,Jllw;tQy,~ii" ~\lilte&lt;;;~~l!IX1'9~;~dedoverwhether strategtc.realniS. , .' .
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"We have to get pe/;ple-to work toge'tn~ ••~tead of m·~.J
. gic , :u!Ymarles and .~~ly,, ;~l~tc~\i!lntry the ·:iift;jifi!OO:lt:!on sh6Wd ,try: to prevent '• .' The ~ush admi~trauon alsl), has to fig: ing stones,";he said at the conclusion of 1he Gavin tou ·
enemies. '
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Beijil)lJht 2~~~~en to host the • " ure.,~u~hm.&gt; .roavotdencouragmgChina,
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, , ..T.hat.. ,may happen. ; ~~ ,.(actj,Qns of 2008 Olympic t;;ames.
· • RIISSla, North Korea, Iraq and Iran .from
: We couldn't agree ~ore. The evidence that an enersr.~isis , .Cbina:s 1'l!ilitary cet'tli111y, ,~ . p!:lnning ori ' '''"'There's little ;question that the' Interna- for??ng _ an ~nholy strategtc alliance
· is looming is all around us. What we do now and in the ~e-. , it, ~utJ.],S, .nrategy sh.Q.uiQ ~.de&lt;lical'(d to " tiona! Olympic Committee shoul~· refuse , agamst the U~tep Stal~· ·, · . . .
diilte
future keeps us out of a subservient·
~~
iilon
to .I'~gn
S~ at: the end of the ~t w_ung of
simultaneously dererriPg,Chio~ ~ 1 Chlna's· bid based ' on 'a dismal human
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mterests.
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sivehess and converting its pojitical system ' rights record, which includes torture of Bush s. high:-stak.es game Wlth China, t?~
Coal may not assume the' throne t ,fiJ;C~:in this~cil'lln­
to democracy.
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dissidents and ~gious persecu~on, b1,1t scon: ts \!ruted States I, ~hina 0. But Its
try, but it's n~ poise,d,_~,be ~n it\f~~!llber t&lt;it·~e
It's a diflicult task requiring shrewd some experts think overt U.S. pressure loo~g like a game that will go mto extta
court.
Let us setze the
ODMrturuty.
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~t q:ni*rp~ucti~ and phty int? t~n~.
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One key method of pro~otuig democ- the hands of the commumst regrrne. ·
(Morton Kondradu! Is e;&gt;;l!CUtn,oe ed1tor of Roll
~ · ~ &lt; ,. ; ..I.(,$
r7 '· sz ~ bl¢k"' t
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racy is to increase the bUdget .of Radii?
Congress undoubtedly will pass resolu- Call, the newspaper of Capitol Jtill.) '
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....,.HER SHO.ES. ·

Alumni feUQi.Op · .
tiCkets:On sale .

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·L OCAL ' HAPPENINGS

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of the Counc~ on Mlnlatrin lor
. the West Oh1o Conflr1nc1 1:11 ~
POMEROY-- Meigs County
United Methodist Church, will be
Retired T.eachers , Saturday,
at the .Racine UnHad Methodist
noon, Trinity Church;s Bethany ' CHurch Sunday from 2 to • p.m.
building. Leah Jean Ord to preHe wiH be available to, anewer\
sent 'The Underground Railroad , ,any q~eatlona concemlng the.. .
in Meigs County Hi~lory.' AN
~hJ.tJ'9h ~nd iiS mlniat!le';'~ ' ', '' .
retired teachers lnv1ted to attend.
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Call992-3214 or 949-26011or
luncheon reservations.

fun night, Grange hall. ,

THURSDAY
,
POMEROY - Hysell Run Holi-'
ness Church rev1yal Thursday,
Friday and Saturday at the
church, 7 p.m. each evening.
Chuck Stensberry, speaker;
Mat!)' O'BrYa.nt, song le!!d!lr. · .
PubliC inVited.
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~~,~;:; ~Yiinif01n11ngi:~eauca.tibn ·isfl'f,._a ,: pip·e. dream.

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reunion
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Pharmacy and Francis

$elf.belp COUrse
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oar~T11vorleY ;doses
out 2001 Mason fair

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MIDDLEPORT - The Southeast
The ~nt •viii be in the cafeteria at
'Meigs High School. The social hour \viii
District of the Ohio Music Teachers AssoFROM STAFF REJI9RTS
Born in Pyburn, Tenn.,
ciation 'viii bold its spring conference SatMail it to: Community Nt!11115, begin at 5:30 p.m. and the dinner will be
POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va.
Worley
came by niusic natuurday at 9 a.m . at the Ohio University The Daily Sentinel, 111 Covrt served at 6:30 p.m, A dance will' fOllow
. School of Music, Athens. .
St, Pomeroy Ohio 45769.. • with George Hall at the orgaiuPhotos of - Nashville recording artist rally. His mother sang in
·Darryl Worley will be the final church every Sunday and his
Professor Jean Barr fiom the Eastman
~laSsl!S wiD be taken in the interperformer at the 2001 Mason grandfather . would play a
School of Music will present a lecture
val between the dinner and dance.
County Fair.
banjo cin the front porch.
from 9 to 10 a.m. on "Developing Strong
U·S~OftS..
~in, previous years,alun,mi are permit, , Sight Reading Skills" and will hold a mas992-2156 ",, I • ' ,ted,~ !lith~ ~e,sts to dthdanefe!!nionsa~5 tickh- ' Wotley, an· up · ~nd com.i.ng "He used to .tell us, 'learn to
ter class on accompanying fiom 1O: 15
. , ,, . , etuor e dinner an
ce are ., tac .
singer/songwriter; will take to play an instrument, because
a.m. to 12:15 p.m. .
·Reservations should be ll)ade by May 21.
nothing is as relaxing as com~
the stage·at 9 p.m. Aug. 1 l.
Barr is co-chairman of the new cham&amp;--&amp;.. • •. '
Again this year, scholarships are offered
"We feel vety fortunate to ing home and playing a few
" ber music department and a professor of
to students who are either a child ' or
have contracted Darryl Worley chords. It settles you and realpiano accompanying and chamber music
.grandchild of a PHS graduate. The' deadas the dosing aC\ of the 2001 ly puts your roots. back on the
.. at Eastman School of Music. She is in res. line to submit an application is May 18.
fair;• said Vice President Brian ground,"'Worley said. ·
POMEROY _: April was the th~ of · The~ are ,Ill&gt; official applipation forms.
idence at Ohio University as a Rufus PutDrawing on influences that
Billings. "With highlighting
nam visiting pl'()fessor.
the program presented by Vicki ·oS'lJith, Th()se applymg are to ~n~ a resum~, trancountry music during the fair, range from Merle Haggard, .
Barr is the first keyboard artist in the lecturer, at a recent meeting 'o f, '~tar .scnpt, letter of a~plicatton, ~ cu~rent
including.Andy Griggs, Keith . George Jones and Keith Whit-_
United Stares to be awarded "' doctoral Grange 778.
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photo and mformatlon on relatlonshtp to
Urban, Bobby Bare and Wor- ley to Gene Watson, Willie
' degree in accompanying. She lias lectun;d
Readings included "Spring" by Mike·· a Po~eroy . g_raduate, to the Pomeroy
ley, we believe the music will Nelson, Vern Gosdin, Jim
'' and given master classes in Austria, Japan, Macomber; an Easter aevotional ~nd facts AI~ Assocutt~n, Box 202, ~omeroy,
appeal to coUntry fans of all Reeves, Roger Miller, the
·• Korea, the Netherlands, Poland, Switzer- on eggs by Sm.i.th, "Husbands and Hats'' O)lto 45769. , ...
ages.
Eagles and Lefty FrizzeU,Worland, the United Kingdom, and tb~ugh- by Ida Kearns; and·"Remember ·J:yy Gar" · · · ' ·
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"Tbe Easters on Thursday .ley is washed in the blood of
o.ur United States.
olyn Gardner. Members then participated
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will truly touch the audience country music.
as well with their southern
The real deal from both
Registradon and welcome will begin at in a contest.
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' ·8:30 a.m~
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.. Master Patt/Dyer p~sided-at theo meet•L I ' ' 0~.,..,
' ' gospeC "tli'e' ·l ai': ' ' boaril is "birth and e~perienc ~. he
ing with final plans being made for1a con- · POMEROY ~ A' free 6brontyalgia
pleased with the entertainers returns the genre to its roots
signment sale April28.Anyone with itenu s~lf-li'elp course will be offered at
we \Viii be bringing in this in the way that is utterly fresh
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to constgn for the sale are to contact. Opal Po.meiOY. Ppblic Library ever;y, We&lt;lnesday.
,, .year;'..BiUinf!S added.. .
and •vita){ •
Dyer, 742-2805. Auctioner \villf..be ' Dan',:, f!')tl1 -6 tti 18 ~.ik for a seveii.!\Wek"~eriod
Smith.
b~ginning May 16.
POMEROY - Those il)terested in. Legislative discussion was on th" poten-· ', Th~ p'rogull\ is sponso~,d by' · rhe
r history, fashions or costumes 'viii want to rial changing ofVeterm'ts Day, ca~b~tori·; iib'ratt: Ohio · :UniversitY 'Coll.e'~' of
· participate in a program on hinorical cos.- every foflr years. Members were renund- Osteopjithic M~dicine, and the Central
" tun~es s~onso.red by, the Metgs County ed the Mo:igs County Grange Banquet Ohio Chapte,r of the Arthritis Program; HI
•. Ohto Btcem~nmal Comnmtee .and Ohto . will be April 27 . Tickets rlre to be pur- with fiuids froip the Ohio l;)ep:imlient of
' State Umvers1ty E&gt;.'lenSIOll; Metgs &lt;;:oun- chased by Sunday and are av:\ilallle from · Health, Bureau ·of Health l'roinorion and
.. ty.
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. any M~igs County Grange master or by Risk Ro:duction.
Sarah McG~\V, ·spokcs\Vtllllan (&lt;?r ' the
, - :The llmt• pennd bcn~g presented IS contacting Dyer. Next meeting (v'ill be
r. from 1803 (statehood) until .the end of the Saturday, 6:30p.m.
Coll~ge &lt;»'Osteopathic Medicine, said, the
Ctvil · War. The senunar, conduc.ted by
, .,.
course has been proven io reduce pain
Becky Baer, . r.ot~tgs County. fanuly and
'~nd stiffncss;ma,ke 6bromyalgia easier to
consumer scto:nces/comn~umty develop-,.
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'manage, ·and itlcrease the potentiitl for a · .,.
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1\\C:Ilt CXtenSIOll.Jgent,. \\&gt;til be at 7 p.m.
healthier Jife.
,. Tuesday in the County Annex (basement
' · " '
She said each participant wiU be given
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of the fopner county ,hom~).
P0!\1EROY .-Ticke.ts for the ann~~al .. "The Fibrotuyalgia Helpbooki' There are
There 1s no cost. Q.uesttons should be ., P-omeroy Htgh SGbool Ahuun1 As!octa- only iS sp~ce; ava~ble and 'reSistrlttions.
non banquet and dance May 26 are .now are now beitig ttk.Cn at 593-2518 ..
'' directed xo 'Baer at 740-992-6696.
on sale. The pckl'ts may be purchased at

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· . ·,BuS.h needs:a snreWder.poliy toward .China
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.COMMUNITY
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Energy -~h~rtages:p~t (Q(.lt.
back·in .apositive light

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c.rat diamond sells . for aro und
$10,000.
DEAR .~BY: My hu sba nd
works in die construction trade and
refu.es to bathe more than once a
week. lle"h~s. at' times, gone more
than two weeks without a shower. .
Am I unreasonable to expect him
to shower at least every two to three
days? - SLEEPING ALONE IN
OREGON

her diu~h!n not to accept . aa wiiuld be in, the minim~ ·salary
told her daughters she would nor
r
enp~ent riag unless it was ~- "Mether" would accept is' $1j75,000
least ~carat is blatantly sexist. lt is
rear. Granted,~~ wou)d buy an
give her approval for marriage unless
the C""".... leor.a{ a. father telling m. .. ~wfullor of"neeessities.':...
they received a one-carat diamond
~...... marry any woman witli
engagement ring, reminded me of a
not;,ro"Mother" may believe s e ts not
situation in my family years ago.
less than a 3S:Inch buR. Such a reachiq her dauN'J'=~ ro focus .on
My sister became engaked to a' felfather' \t'OIIId be ~bing his son to the ring. but she sure as heck Is not
low we all liked
much. My parview .,0111en
"sex objects.'' teaching them to lookat thing5 such
ents hosted an engagement partr in
ADVICE ,
. ."Mprh§r" ~ teac)Una her daugluen . as tenderness, companionship or
their borne and invited aU their !'!!Ia' · ~ . • to view tbi!p as ·: succ.ess objecli:' · . tidcliry.. I guess MaJJU&gt;· figures
DEAR .SI EEPING ALONE:
rives and frie,nds.
jeWel."
.
. ,, In,-~~· to._ lu:r deferue~ ~ . $675,000 would make for a "comThe young man had recently bc;en
My sister and her husband wert! • she's teaChiili:'lier:-daOghters to -fociB : 'fi&gt;r.table'·' divorce . settlement. ,...... You are ·not unreasonable. Yo u're in
discharged from the.:Army and had happily matried for more. thai) 4S QP,i)i&gt;w well i:hr nfan· tould"p~di! · - GEORGE IN RAYTOWN, MO. touch \Vith )rour sense of smell. ·
n,o money, therefore'; there. was no years. He was sqccessful in his pro- the · nccessiCies;· lc!t me shalt. .cb~ . • . D~ GEORGE: Your letter is . You don't say how long you haw
engagement ring._At the party, two ' f&amp;ion. My sister·received more dia-· result!~ 'o f my.own' research.
•.
a hoot, but yOiir nun\bers' doh'! add been married, but I am amazed that
guests, in critical. and judgmental . monds and material things, t~an .
~fP!ying the "De~rers Stan&lt;iard," qp,,ar least according to my calcula- you have been able to live with thJS.
tones, said to my mother, "We don't most wives.- JERRY IN HUNT- '~ch sugge~.: thac· the diat11011d . tiom. Also, I don't know what jC\vel- For the sake . of his health and the
see a diamond ring on your daugh- lNGToN, N.Y.
·
shoUld eq~ two months' salary, a et: you consulted in Kansas City, but health of your rnarriagc, your huster's finge~.'.' Mother · smiled .and
DEAR JERRY: I admire your · one ':(iii rat ring wiD cost .an awrage pf :tcc.o rding to .diamond specialist band .should sc hedule pc·rsonal
called the young man from across mother's values. Predictably, that let- S28, 125 in the ,K2i153S Ciry are~. f. James Kersey at Harry Winston in hygiene on a daily basis.
Drar AM&gt;y is u•rittcu by Pmdiflc
the room. When he cam.: over, sh" ter generated more mail. Read on:
nut\..•Yho makes that mu·c h it) 1\"i) .. B&lt;'Verly Hills (nothing but the best
.P"il/ips
amlqau)!ht&lt;'r}t•auflc Phillip;.
s&lt;~id to the guests, '.'THiS is , ou.r
DEAR ABBY: Th~ a~yicc givett momb$'-\ vitH)fif!&amp; home S331,5tKl' li'lr Ill)' 'readers), a "very.[hice" one-

740 112-2151 • Fa: 112-21,57

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...........,. Aptll1t. 2001

,.
liy "M~ther in Hampton, Ga.·," to per' year. Figuring the raxbrac ket he

~ "Mother in Hampton, Ga.:•, who

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111 Cola'tSI., ~.Ohio

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Daughter engaged to gem·did nqt not ~~~.for diamond

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BU~t_lef_Ld~----~h~p~AS

; The Daily Sentinel

11.2111

0

Cheltilne Hoellldl
Gene! II 1111111111

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FRIDAY
POMEROY-- Meigs County
Arthritis Support GfllUP,
to
' 11:30 a.m. a~ . the Meigs ~nty
, · Senior CHizena Center,
' Pomeroy. ·or. Wayne Amendt, an
orthopedic surgeon from ·Holzer'
. Medical Clllltel, will speak on
.1 lnpati8rit, oi.dpa,lenl. a~d olli9e
, ·· orthopedic treatment of arthfi118.

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The.Communlty p.!l111clllr le
publlahld •• 1 11'11 Mrvlce to

non-profit

wlahlng to

111nou•
illg1 I~ apeclll ewnta.
ce~cllr II
not dellgned ~ . promoteMiea
Ol''fU!Id-iiiMr'!l,ot ~ny type.
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Expectation .

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DANVILLE -- A free pond clinic
aponaored by The OSU Exten·
slon, Meigs $WCD and NRC$
will take place on Satu~y 'r0111•
9:30a.m. till12 p.m. at the Cur·
tis Dahhaser Farm on Briar. ,·. •
.Ridge Road.
For more information. call 9924282.

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· SATURDAY
•, SALEM CENJER ...., Star
. SUNDAY
'! Grarige 778 and ~r, Junlor
Grange 878, potluck ,upp11r and RACINE -.Stan Ling, director '

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Pomeroy, lllddleport, ONo

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months old. Hepatitis B
should be given before 2
months, then again by 4
months and one bc,tween 6
and 18 months. Hib inQ&lt;:ulalions are necessary at 2, 4 and
6 months and 12 to 15
months.
Chi,kenpox just requires
ADVICE
one dose between I and 1~'
years of age. These vaccines
and 4 months old.
may be given ~t the same time
Then two doses of oral without severe side effects or
polio vaccine drops at 12 to 18 decreasing the immunization's
months and 4 to 6 years of disease-preventing properties.
age. Children should have four
If a child has missed some
doses
of inoculations or started late, he
diphtheria/tetanus/pertussis ' or she can catch up, but any
(OPT) at 2, 4. and 6 months of delays may result in less proag~. then between 15 and 18 tection.
months. One inoculation of
To make sure childre1l
measles/mumps/rubella
. receiw their required vaccina(MMR) v;tccinc is required at tions, parent' should contact
12 to 15 months.
their health cart' provider or
lmmuni2ations for mt.lVirus, th&lt;•. Meigs County Health
hepatitis B, H lnfluen zae type Department at 740-991-M&gt;26
b (Hib) and chi cke npox can to schedule inununizations.

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Becky
Baer

furth~r Jirc-vent dise,lSt' .md illnow reconuue nd t\VO shots of · IH' SS. Rot1virus n.·quin:s three
tht; polio vaccine at 2 months \";'lCcin;ltions -1 at 2, 4 and 6

ease C ontrol and Pn•vention

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~omeroy

foifeiti~

bonds

Roxanna Divincenzo, New Haven,

Those fined were:

" W.Va .. $82, speed; Eric W. Miller,
Lewis, W.Va., $85, speed; Sheila A.
Whaley, Shade, $86, speed; Justin
W. Scribner, Albany, $86, speed;
C.ystai 1Jewell, De~ter, $84, SJM!ed;
Pamela. T&lt;hein, Syracuse, ~89,

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speed; Kevin Griffith, Westerville,
$9t , speed; Di;tna 0 . Pryor, E)exley,
S83, speed: Jennifer K. Johnson,
Racine, $87, speed; Amber L. Well,
Pomeroy, $98, traffic control device;
Brenda K. Deeter, Coolville, $8t ,
speed; Terry R. Kaylor, Cinclnatti,
$83, speed: Barbara Whittington,
Pomeroy, $85, backing/starting with-'
out safety; Christopher Streetman,
Leon, W.Va., $98, lo~ering .

..

Those

ry

court cases settled

POMEROY - A number
of individuals forfeited bonds
and others wc;re fined in court
recently by Magistrate l. Scott
. Pow~l! in Pomeroy mayor's
court.
were:

•

. {Becky Bncr is n .Ht·!~-' Ct•uu-

Ashley Hoover, Pomeroy, $49 and
costs, speed; David P. Tiemeyer.
Pomeroy, $200 and costs, five days
jail suspended, two years probation,
underage. c;onsumption, $100 and

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cosls, disorderly by into~ication;
Bobbi A Shamblin, Mason, W.ya.,
$49 and cosls, speed, $50 and costs,
R.
expired
license;
David
Collingsworth, Pomeroy, $48 and
cosls, speed; Patricia Williams, Bel'
pre, $63 and costs, traffic control
device; Jessica Chapmail, .Pomeroy,
$48 and costs, speed; James Council, Racine, $37 and costs, speed;
Glenna Ingels, Pomeroy, .costs only,
expired registration; Eric Smith,
Pomeroy, costs only, disorderly;
James Morten, Pomeroy, $50 and
costs, backing/starting without safety:
Steven D. Swann, Pomeroy, $100
and costs, $865 forfeited to Pomeroy
Lew Enforcement Trust Fund, reckless operation.

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·County·Court·cases processeO:
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POMEROY
Meigs
Co11nty Cour.t Ju~ge Steven
I
L. Siory . processed ' a number
of.cases last week.
'· ' Fined were:
Lester' R. MCGrew; Mason,&gt;W!Va ..
and costs, ovenosd: Timothy P.
RooJOh
and costs, 10

one, resisting

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·~jail sentence and

suspended

;Jupon completion of RTP School, dri·
' "" ving under lhe influence, $25• aod
•' costs, lett of center; G~
;, Pomeroy, $100 and .cos!S,.~~y
:;. conduct; Roben· M! KaUlft ' l!$cii)e,
•' $100 and costs, =/0 daytltl'iil~ $ijs•: pended, one yea! J.lro,flafi9nj'-llft aild
;.run; S251!1ld cosll.--fllllur~ ~!,Xllltlol,
•• $30 ~·'Costs, &amp;eat beltt ISraeii L:
;. Phillips, flfutiaild, $20' ll!)d qosts, ~t
•; belt;~ R.: f'Uttk. MiddleP?rl· $25
:. and,.,...... 01'1 each count, threordays
&lt;. jli~ on each count, r08titu·
;~ U!");~_loufJ:qunts of Pa:alng
,. chtcks; Michelle ~"':-1dh~l t,
•: $25. and costs, 0114~ ~181klu&gt;,
•. reatotutlon, passing bad chect&lt;s;
; Shawn E. Dailey,~~ln.t ·,S30.,and
~ c~ts, seat bejt; Andr8'a [j~ !:jill,
~ Pqmeroy, ~~! COM6t • speed;
' David L. rrm, 1\ill,dQiei)Qr!..,$1,000

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and costs, 30 days jail suspsnded to one year probation, disorderly' con·
10, one .year license suspension, two duct.
·
Dana M. Haning, Middleport, $20,
years prob~tion. 90 day immobiliza·
tron, driving under the influence, $100 and costs, window tint; Roger Hysell,
and costs, 30 days jail suspended to Racine, $30 and costs, oeat bell;
10 Concurrent with DUI, driving under Juanite Lane, Reedsville, $75 and
suspension.
costs, 10 days )ali suspended to time
Donald ''!:·Ortman, 'Wellston, •$250 served, one year probation, disorderand costs, overload; Wilham M. ly conduct; Dawn M. Yost, Rutland,
Smith, Sr.. Jackson, $250 and costs, $20 and costs. failure to con trol;
·
Thomas E . Spurling, James P. Broderick, Pomeroy, $30
. ~nd costs. speed, $30 and. costs.
seat belt; ~ason E, &lt;i:ounts, Syracuse,
$30 and eosls. seat belt; Patrie~ D.
Wheeler, Beaver, $30 and costs
speed; Gary Smi,tli, Reedsviilp, $30 •
~ end costs,. _ , belt; Tona F. Cheva·
ier, Tupper'S P.(aths; $20 and costs,
to fictitious plates; David L. Masshl, Gal·
&lt;jay~ j~li · llpolls, $30 . an~ costs, seat bell;
8" Nalrd Harley E. f.lcDonakf, Middleporl,'$1)5
I
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-6iJ;oi'llllors imd costs-, disorderly tonduct;-Cindy
license; Jeremy, Higginboltham, 'Pt. Smilh , Middleport, $30 and cos'ts,
Pleasant. W.V~ .. $30 and costs, seat belt; Cassandra ~ . Will ,
· speed; Claren"' W. Hatfield, Rut· Pomeroy, $30 and costs. speed, ~~a
land, $30 ~n~ costs, seat bell; and cosls, seat bel~ Robert South·
Th~mas Wilso~e.Jr. , . Mexia, Texas, 'ern, Jr., Middlep~lt. $30 and j:l:lets,
$30 and costs, !speed ; Et.isha ·Dick· seat belt: $25 and costs , c'hild
ens, M•iJdle~ort, $tOO and 9osts, 30 restraint: Annette L. Cade. Rutla~d,
days JO&gt;I s,usp'!,nded to .three, one , $30 and costs, speed; Steve Simp· ~'
year prqbaU~n •.,jaii sentence sus· klns, Ewlngton, $60 and costs, lflegill· •
pendod UJ&gt;0!11 proo"'ql valid license ly taking deer: James R. BIB!J!&lt;well , :·'
within 00 days, ng: operators'license: Racine, $200 and costs, · six .months ·
Ronald 1.. Snade&lt;a, Albany, $200 and jail suspended , to 30 days, tour
costs:-"'h~ da~ jail and ,$100 sus· months house arrest, resisting arrest;
penciea """'·~ of a valid license Ga.y L. Haning, Pomeroy, $20 jl(ld j"
within ~J,IWtOfle year probation, costs, fishing without a license;
n~ operal0/i'llolri8e; Kevin L. Bush, · James M. Smith, Reedsville, . $100
Moddleport, $100. and costs, thres and costs, fine suspended to $25 and
days Jill ~uspended upon proof ot a costs, failure to transfer, o$30 and
valtd·operators Utense. one year pr"' costs each 1 two seat belt violations
. batlon, no operators llcen~~; Tony ~. , ~1QO ~nd co~ts, ,$75 suspended if tint •
Rood , Reedsville, $15 and' coats, 10 Is removed within .seven days, win· '
days )811 suspef'\Ped to time ••rv•d, dnw •no . '
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2001

The Daily Sentinel

·Solving the-cas~ of (h~adache and
hoi ears' may ·. n~t be e~sy ·

National Immunization rnek coming up

Ajnil ~-28 bas \&gt;(m $p~ified aJ' Natiotbllnfant l~1munization Week.
·
This designation is to
- encourage parents of children
• 2 and under to be vaccinated
o against preventable diseases,
disabilities and death .
·' Immunizations are so cffec' rive that some diseases have
been reduced by 99 percent.
· Just because vaccine-preventab)e ·diseases are· at an aU' time low, parents must not
·· procTa.~tinate when it comes to
"' their child's immunizations.
.. Eighty percent of the inoculalions need to be given during
.. the first two years of life,
·' reqi1iring about five visits to
; , the doctor, clinic or health
·, department.
Rescarohers are co nst.mdv
coming up with new vaccine
schedules, tryi ng to find the
most cffectiw timer.1 blcs. For
instance, the Centers fi,. Dis-

Thu~y. Aprl119,

p.s.

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Energy search may aid Jeb Bush
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Bush administration's hunt
for new sources of oil and natural gas may end up pitting the
president against his brother Jeb, and .it could affect the florida
governor politicaUy.
.
.
Jeb Bush renewed his plea Wednesday with a ne.w letter asking the administration not to extend offshore oil and gas
drilling to the Eastern Gulf of Mexico, closer to his state's
beaches.
·
Interior Secretary' Gale Norton recently notified the Florida
governor that she planned to proceed with a proposal to auc-.
tion oil and gas development leases in a large tract in the eastern Gulf, some of which comes withiu 30 miles of the western
tip of the Florida Panhandle.
"I ntiJSt consider our nation's energy needs and appropriate
management of the American public's natural resources" Norton wrote Btish on March 9, noting that the proposed lease area
is believed to hold substantial amounts of natural gas and oil.

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NEW YORK (AP) - The
Federal Reserve's unexpected .
interest-rate cut ~ve Wall Street
a triple-digit raUy and one of its
strongest performances tiUtyear.
But the real news nuy be, that
tlu! bulls are re-emerging:·
After_months of unc~rtainty
about \~here stocks are headed, a
growing number of analysts
believe the worst nla)' be, over for
the markets. · '
"While we may see some puBback because this has been such.a
big day, I do think the trend is
upward fiom here,~ said Matt
Brown, head of eqmty management at Wilmington Trust.
"There's a st:Iong correlation
between aggressive Fed action
.
_ perand 1mproved
stock n......
...nu;t
form:utce."
· .
The optimism comes desp1te
expectations that corporate
earning; will continue to be,
weak for months and a Fed statement Wednesday indicating it is
quite concert;ted about the econoiny.

;' , Analysts say stocks will dennitely slide again, but what's
I, change(\ is their confidence.
convinced than
,,•'• They're more
.
d
,, ever that the stock market-· an
the economy, albeit at a slower
' pace - are starting to improve.
"As far .as the kind of devastation we· saw in 2000, the worst is
~.· over. We might test our lows
• again but as far as the free-fall we
..~1, saw:, ;hat has con1e to an end,"
' ' said Charles Pradilla, chief invest",. ment stra:tegist at SG Cowen
Securities. ''This is not the end of
:: the market's problems, b~1t th~
~ beginning of its healing process.
;;., The Fed said It was cutting ·
rates for the fourth time this y&lt;&gt;ar .
because of "rising uncertainty
• about the business oudook,''
among other concerns. But
;. those \VOrries- and the fact the
• Fed took the unusual step of act' ing between regularly scheduled
•;' meeting; --. failed to dampen
;
Wednesday's enthusiasm.
1
·•
[mteston. sent the Dow Jones
. industrials up nearly 400 points,

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~-- «;all Ext. 16 ·

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Da"e Harris • Ext. 15
.-afOre Pt1ay 5, 200·1~.:'
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DALLAS (AP) - A man who pleaded with his 6-year-old
son to shoot him died Wednesday, three days after a gun went
off as Ronald Moore and the boy held the gun to Moore's
head.
·
Moore, 42, had been in critical condition since Sunday night's
shooting at the family's south Oak Cliff home. A spokeswoman
at Methodist Medical Center said he died Wednesday afternoon.
A polict report said Moore held the .22-caliber derringer in
his 6-year-old son's hands Sunday and pleaded with the boy to
shoot him. The boy resisted, but the report said the weapon discharged as they both held the gun. Moore was struck in the left
temple.
The report did not say who pulled the trigger, but the boy
later told his mother and im·estigators, "My .daddy made me
shoot him."

11·year·old girl abducted
SLIDELL, La. (AP) - An 1 1-year-old girl bicycle rirling
with her yo'unger sister was abducted by a man who asked for
directions, police said.
Authorities believe the man drove Lisa Bruno away in a dirty
white minivan.
Lisa and her 6-year-old sister, Angelina Reyes, were riding
their bicycles in the parking lot of their apartment complex in
Slidell, a New Orleans suburb, on Monday when they decided
to go into a wooded area ro look for blackberries, police said.
A man stopped them to ask for directions to the complex
office, and Lisa volunteered to show him. Angelina entered the
woods and returned a short time later to find her sister's bicycle, investigators said.

while the N a;;da q composite
index - which n:mains in a
bear market - rose 156 and the
Sr.1 nd1rd &amp; Poor's 500 it'ldex
gained 46.
h
k
I&lt; •
"T e· stoc mar ets rec~wry
bc,fore' the .econo-

my's;' said Jeff Hirsch, publisher
of d1e Stock Trader's Almanac.
He said that since 1949, the average gain re.Wzed from ,between
the time the Dow bottom&lt;'il to
an end of; recession was about
24.5 percent.

g ecretaries .2&gt; ay Is April 25. ·

eJ/ey BosseS:
They keep you
organiz~.

they keep you
·informed, and
tl)ey keep ' •
things running,
soshow'em
how much
you ~re.

Monte Cllrlo

fla811dance

Doullle Reclining Sofa &amp;
Matching DoUble

•c11nlne .....,....,

Double RICIInln.
Sectional
Prlcttl Start At

'164981

'145985

ShowYourThankSToYour Secr~ry
With A Thank You Ad In The April 25
Edition Of The Dally Sentinel.

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Shooting takes bizaiTe tum

F~dis
interest rate cut highlights
bulls' return
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Teen gets so years in killing

Deputy Undersecretary of Defense
Peter F. Verga; leader of the eight-member U.S. team, sounded a positive note
after the meeting ended.
"We covered aU the items that were on
the agenda, and I found today's session to
be productive,"Verga said.
The U.S. Embassy would not say what
Prueher told Chinese officials. But a
White House· spokeswoman said
Wednesday that he would convey a
warning that the talks could fail without
''productive discussion" about the return
of the spy plane.
·
During the first day of talks, the top
Chinese negotiator said China had "sufficient evidence" to prove the United
States was to blame, the st~te newspaper
China Daily said Thursday.

North Port as the flame~ spread south, Aaron s~id. i-f'c said the
fire had burned one home, two roofs and several vehicles in the
area.
Two firefighters were treated for exposure to chemical Oame
retardant.

New arsenic standards planned

•

. ~·

Christie Whitman, administrator of the Environmcnta.l Protection Agency, s.1id she was asking the National Academy of
Scierces to examine the impact of a range of possible reductions. The new standard could be higher or lower than that set
by Clinton.
President Bush drew heavy criticism from environmentalists
and others last month when his EPA killed a Clinton administration' regulation that would have tightened the standard to nu
more than 10 parts of arsenic per billion in drinking water. The
current standard, set in 1942, is 50 parts per billion.
·
Whitman said she wanted a panel of scientists at the academy
to examine ~ standard in the range of three; to 20 parts per billion.
"

Crews battle Sarasota wildfire

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refused to say whether the talks were
finished, or give other details.
China has held the U.S. Navy EP-3E
surveillance plane, worth some $80 million, since it made an emergency landing
April 1 on Hainan island in the South
China Sea. The 24 crew members were
released only after 11 days of protracted
negotiations.
China wants the United States to take
sole blame for the plane's collision with
a Chinese fighter jet, whose pilot is missing and presumed dead. Beijing also
wants an end to American surveillance;
fligh? near the Chinese coast.
Talks resumed Thursday only after
US. Ambassador Joseph Prueher won a
promise from Chinese officials to rliscuss
the rewrn nf the American plane.

WASHINGTON (AP) - The government is set to relax a
restriction against two television networks belonging to a sinEBENSBURG, Pa. (AP) - A teen-age boy who was pres" gle company - a change that would allow CBS and the fledg- sured by his lover into killing the father of her two children has
ling UPN network to remain in the same family.
been sentenced to up to 50 years in prison .
This also marks the beginning of what analysts expect to be . Robert Hudson was 15 when ' he ambushed and shot Robert
a wave of decisions under the new GOP leadership at the Fed- Hawks, 35, in the attic of MicheUe ,Clark's home on March 11,
eral Communications Commission to ease regulations on 1999.
media businesses. Such actions ultimately could aUow compaHudson, now 17, told police that Clark, 32, seduced him and
nics to grow in size and scope and impact what Americans see, threatened to abandon him if he did not help her kill Hawks.
: hear and read.
.
:
Hudson had been the children's baby-sitter.
The pl~n before the FCC on Thursday would aUow one of
"I'm sqrry.... I wish I could do something about it. Some- ·
. the four major TV networks -ABC, CBS, NBC or Fox - to · .times I wish I could take his place,". Hudson. told Cambria
be owned by the same company as a smaUer, emerging network County Judge Thomas Swope before htS sentencmg Wednesday.
such as UPN or the WB, which is owned by AOL Time Warner.
But the commission, widely expected to approve the proposSARASOTA, Fla. (AP) - A wildfire that was started as a
al, stiU would retain a prohibition on any two of the four major
controlled
burn in a county reserve spread to 4,500 acres,.
,, networks combining.
burned one home and forced the evacuation of a residential
neighborhood, officials said Thursday.
.
Tne fire had been set on Tuesday to clear about 550 acres in
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Bush administration, under the Carlton Reserve, but strong winds fanned it across a 4 112
fire for scrapping former President Clinton's standard for mile area, said Jeff Aaron, Sarasota County's puqlic information
·
arsenic in drinking water, ann&gt;;&gt;unced plans Wednesday to set a officer.
As
many
as
40
people were told 'leave a neighborhood near
new standard within nirie months.
·:...,

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BEIJING (AP) - U.S. and Chinese
negotiators ended two days of talks with
no sign of agreement Thursday on the
return·ofanAmerican spy plane or Beijing's demand to end surveillance flights
near its coast.
The chief U.S. negotiator described
the second day of talks Thursday as productive ·but neither side would give
details.The Americans had threatened ro
break 'off the meeting Wednesday, saying
Chinese negotiators wouldn't seriously
discuss the rerum of the U.S. plane.
"The sides have agreed to keep in
touch, and future calks will be held at a
1
I time and place to be determined
through diplomatic channels," Chinese
Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Zhang
1Qiyue told reporters. The U.S. Embassy

.

FCC looks to relax rules

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'lllurscl.y'. Aprlllt. :1001

U.S., China wr~p up talt&lt;s over spy plane

Presi-

WASHINGTON (AP) - Stealing ~ quiet moment,
dent Bush paused before an ever-burning Oame at the
Holocaust Memoria,l Museum ~nd bowed his head.
,
Later, he told friends and.tguests that the United States must
'"always remember both the cruelty of the guilty, and the
courage and innocence of their victims."
\
Bush toured the museum Wednesday night, in prepar.~tion fl r
a speech he planned to give at a Holocaust Memorial D~y event
at nOOf! on Thursday; The special day i$ ~rked on the Jewis\1
C2lendar, commemorating the 6 million people killed in deatlt
camps by Nazi Germany during World War II.
Bush arrived at the museum with his wife, Laura, in a cold
drizzle, the weather seeming to mirror the mood. In somber
tones, he spoke to nearly 300 guests from a central staircase in
the museum.
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PageA7

Nation • World

Bush pays tribute to victims\

Question: ·For the past .
'
year I have been having days
with symptoms that keep me
from feeling well. My aches
migrate from joint to jointone time it will be my thighbones, and the next week it
may be my elbow. I feel tired
John C. Wolf, D.O.
.even whe·n I've slept well. I
57
AModate
also have my e;&gt;rs· get hot for
of FamDy Medicine
no apparent reason, and when
this happens I freque~dy get
a h~adache. What could be sympto'ms. Many people can cause fl~shing as can a
causmg these problems?
l lliln't undentlt!l'i that tbis is
idll ·,ange ..pf1 flt#cription
Answe~: The symptoms often a lengthy process medicines.
~•
you descrtbe can be caused reqmnng repeated tnps to
The headache jou experi- .
by a number of, Illnesses. the lab, X-ray or hospital for enco: at the same time you ·
Con_sequemly, I cant tdl you additiona l studies. After a cor., have hot ears makes me susspecifically what ts causmg rect diagnosis has been ~stab- picious that the blood vessels
you to feel thiS w~y. What I Jished, the p'roper treatment supplying yo,u r braitf are also
ca n do, hmwwr, IS explam tan be started. I· know that having some change from the
the approach )'OUt doctor this entire . process sounds normal pattern of blood flow.
. wtll ta~e tu help you find om complicated, and it is.
Both symptoms may actually
the nature of your malad)'·
No\v .. to address vour be a form: of migraine
. . The first step \~e .lphysi- symptoms: The fatigue ·you headache. An alternative
ctans take 111 d~termln,mg the report ca n be produced from explanation is that they both
nature of any til ness IS to hs- alniost any ailment from result from some more gentcn to the patient. I know -. allergies to cancer - with eralized cirrulatory Co'nrlition
some of us arc better at thts non-life threatening illnesses that also has increased blood
than .others. As part of that 'being far-and-away the most pressure. They could even be
hstemng process, we must ask common. The " on again-off the consequence of eating
a. host of"do~tor-type" q11es- again" a.;hing in your' bones MSG.
ttom to find out about your and joints is a less common
It is possible that you nave
medtcallustory. .
' complaint. 'J;'~er; are several · '!I)O~c: ;•thal] ·e •~e condition
These lf!!ght. mclude the types of arthritis .d)at can do producing your combination
way your symptoms began, this, but so can simple condi- of symptoms, ··although since
how they are now, what you tions such as fatigue, muscle they aU started together it is
do to feel better, what .you do overuse and depression.
logical to think th!t there is a
Elephants") have large' ears single common cause. I think
that mak~s you feel worse,
and quemons, about medical to help cool their bodies. you are beginning to see why
problems you ve .had m ~he African elephants have larger I said that this process of fig.past. Wtth thts mformanon ones than Indian ele'phants uring out the cause of a
your doctor IS ready to do a because of the hotter African group. Of symptoms is comphysi~al_ ex.amination. After climate. We humans have a plicated. In fact, I think it. is
combmmg thformattoll frot~I rich blood supply to our ears,: · sufficiently complicated that
yo~r htstory and your physt- ' too, althongh it is insufficient you should make another
cal·'examination , your. d_octor to contribute substantiaUy to appointment to see your doc- .
will comptle' ~ 1 short list of body temperature regulation. tor.
· a~lments that. could possibly· Despite this, when we get hot
. "Family Medidite'' is a weekproduce your cqrpbination of (or when we blush) there is ly colu11111. To submit questious,
. .Mrmal and abnormal · find- increased blood flow through write to John C. J«Jif, D. 0.,
mgs.
' ' '' " ·•' ,. .
our ears. Yours apparently•·' O!tio Uuiversitr €1.&gt;1/ege of
Tests are ordered to deter- "get hot" at times other than Osteopmlric Mediciue, Grosve11or
mine which of the ailments these. Drugs can cause this. Hall, Atlrens, Olrio 45701 . Past
on the short lis!' of 1 pb~sibili- t..Nonprescripti"' ~ .... ~ • li·~~oiH"'"s re--'t111rtilabl... ~nline at
tj_es is the actual cause .of yoUT niacin, aspirin and ibuprofen wwwJitradio.oiJi!fiu .

Prom-

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To Annie Grey
bouquet tO !IllY thank vn11 I
Keep up the good work!
Your boss,
Ed Williams
ABC Wldaets
10 Main Street
Little town

DeadiiN Is
Monday, Aprt113, :zoot

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Sectional With
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DOUble
Sofa With snuggle
Recliner Chair

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Greeting:

can~eron

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Mall or Bring In Your Entry Form to the

Dally Sentinel

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111 Court S1reel, Pomeroy, Ohio 45789

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�..... A a •The o.lly SelltMel
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Pomeroy, lllddleport, ONo

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months old. Hepatitis B
should be given before 2
months, then again by 4
months and one bc,tween 6
and 18 months. Hib inQ&lt;:ulalions are necessary at 2, 4 and
6 months and 12 to 15
months.
Chi,kenpox just requires
ADVICE
one dose between I and 1~'
years of age. These vaccines
and 4 months old.
may be given ~t the same time
Then two doses of oral without severe side effects or
polio vaccine drops at 12 to 18 decreasing the immunization's
months and 4 to 6 years of disease-preventing properties.
age. Children should have four
If a child has missed some
doses
of inoculations or started late, he
diphtheria/tetanus/pertussis ' or she can catch up, but any
(OPT) at 2, 4. and 6 months of delays may result in less proag~. then between 15 and 18 tection.
months. One inoculation of
To make sure childre1l
measles/mumps/rubella
. receiw their required vaccina(MMR) v;tccinc is required at tions, parent' should contact
12 to 15 months.
their health cart' provider or
lmmuni2ations for mt.lVirus, th&lt;•. Meigs County Health
hepatitis B, H lnfluen zae type Department at 740-991-M&gt;26
b (Hib) and chi cke npox can to schedule inununizations.

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Becky
Baer

furth~r Jirc-vent dise,lSt' .md illnow reconuue nd t\VO shots of · IH' SS. Rot1virus n.·quin:s three
tht; polio vaccine at 2 months \";'lCcin;ltions -1 at 2, 4 and 6

ease C ontrol and Pn•vention

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~omeroy

foifeiti~

bonds

Roxanna Divincenzo, New Haven,

Those fined were:

" W.Va .. $82, speed; Eric W. Miller,
Lewis, W.Va., $85, speed; Sheila A.
Whaley, Shade, $86, speed; Justin
W. Scribner, Albany, $86, speed;
C.ystai 1Jewell, De~ter, $84, SJM!ed;
Pamela. T&lt;hein, Syracuse, ~89,

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speed; Kevin Griffith, Westerville,
$9t , speed; Di;tna 0 . Pryor, E)exley,
S83, speed: Jennifer K. Johnson,
Racine, $87, speed; Amber L. Well,
Pomeroy, $98, traffic control device;
Brenda K. Deeter, Coolville, $8t ,
speed; Terry R. Kaylor, Cinclnatti,
$83, speed: Barbara Whittington,
Pomeroy, $85, backing/starting with-'
out safety; Christopher Streetman,
Leon, W.Va., $98, lo~ering .

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Those

ry

court cases settled

POMEROY - A number
of individuals forfeited bonds
and others wc;re fined in court
recently by Magistrate l. Scott
. Pow~l! in Pomeroy mayor's
court.
were:

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. {Becky Bncr is n .Ht·!~-' Ct•uu-

Ashley Hoover, Pomeroy, $49 and
costs, speed; David P. Tiemeyer.
Pomeroy, $200 and costs, five days
jail suspended, two years probation,
underage. c;onsumption, $100 and

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cosls, disorderly by into~ication;
Bobbi A Shamblin, Mason, W.ya.,
$49 and cosls, speed, $50 and costs,
R.
expired
license;
David
Collingsworth, Pomeroy, $48 and
cosls, speed; Patricia Williams, Bel'
pre, $63 and costs, traffic control
device; Jessica Chapmail, .Pomeroy,
$48 and costs, speed; James Council, Racine, $37 and costs, speed;
Glenna Ingels, Pomeroy, .costs only,
expired registration; Eric Smith,
Pomeroy, costs only, disorderly;
James Morten, Pomeroy, $50 and
costs, backing/starting without safety:
Steven D. Swann, Pomeroy, $100
and costs, $865 forfeited to Pomeroy
Lew Enforcement Trust Fund, reckless operation.

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·County·Court·cases processeO:
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POMEROY
Meigs
Co11nty Cour.t Ju~ge Steven
I
L. Siory . processed ' a number
of.cases last week.
'· ' Fined were:
Lester' R. MCGrew; Mason,&gt;W!Va ..
and costs, ovenosd: Timothy P.
RooJOh
and costs, 10

one, resisting

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·~jail sentence and

suspended

;Jupon completion of RTP School, dri·
' "" ving under lhe influence, $25• aod
•' costs, lett of center; G~
;, Pomeroy, $100 and .cos!S,.~~y
:;. conduct; Roben· M! KaUlft ' l!$cii)e,
•' $100 and costs, =/0 daytltl'iil~ $ijs•: pended, one yea! J.lro,flafi9nj'-llft aild
;.run; S251!1ld cosll.--fllllur~ ~!,Xllltlol,
•• $30 ~·'Costs, &amp;eat beltt ISraeii L:
;. Phillips, flfutiaild, $20' ll!)d qosts, ~t
•; belt;~ R.: f'Uttk. MiddleP?rl· $25
:. and,.,...... 01'1 each count, threordays
&lt;. jli~ on each count, r08titu·
;~ U!");~_loufJ:qunts of Pa:alng
,. chtcks; Michelle ~"':-1dh~l t,
•: $25. and costs, 0114~ ~181klu&gt;,
•. reatotutlon, passing bad chect&lt;s;
; Shawn E. Dailey,~~ln.t ·,S30.,and
~ c~ts, seat bejt; Andr8'a [j~ !:jill,
~ Pqmeroy, ~~! COM6t • speed;
' David L. rrm, 1\ill,dQiei)Qr!..,$1,000

,bgft!*IY·

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and costs, 30 days jail suspsnded to one year probation, disorderly' con·
10, one .year license suspension, two duct.
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Dana M. Haning, Middleport, $20,
years prob~tion. 90 day immobiliza·
tron, driving under the influence, $100 and costs, window tint; Roger Hysell,
and costs, 30 days jail suspended to Racine, $30 and costs, oeat bell;
10 Concurrent with DUI, driving under Juanite Lane, Reedsville, $75 and
suspension.
costs, 10 days )ali suspended to time
Donald ''!:·Ortman, 'Wellston, •$250 served, one year probation, disorderand costs, overload; Wilham M. ly conduct; Dawn M. Yost, Rutland,
Smith, Sr.. Jackson, $250 and costs, $20 and costs. failure to con trol;
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Thomas E . Spurling, James P. Broderick, Pomeroy, $30
. ~nd costs. speed, $30 and. costs.
seat belt; ~ason E, &lt;i:ounts, Syracuse,
$30 and eosls. seat belt; Patrie~ D.
Wheeler, Beaver, $30 and costs
speed; Gary Smi,tli, Reedsviilp, $30 •
~ end costs,. _ , belt; Tona F. Cheva·
ier, Tupper'S P.(aths; $20 and costs,
to fictitious plates; David L. Masshl, Gal·
&lt;jay~ j~li · llpolls, $30 . an~ costs, seat bell;
8" Nalrd Harley E. f.lcDonakf, Middleporl,'$1)5
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-6iJ;oi'llllors imd costs-, disorderly tonduct;-Cindy
license; Jeremy, Higginboltham, 'Pt. Smilh , Middleport, $30 and cos'ts,
Pleasant. W.V~ .. $30 and costs, seat belt; Cassandra ~ . Will ,
· speed; Claren"' W. Hatfield, Rut· Pomeroy, $30 and costs. speed, ~~a
land, $30 ~n~ costs, seat bell; and cosls, seat bel~ Robert South·
Th~mas Wilso~e.Jr. , . Mexia, Texas, 'ern, Jr., Middlep~lt. $30 and j:l:lets,
$30 and costs, !speed ; Et.isha ·Dick· seat belt: $25 and costs , c'hild
ens, M•iJdle~ort, $tOO and 9osts, 30 restraint: Annette L. Cade. Rutla~d,
days JO&gt;I s,usp'!,nded to .three, one , $30 and costs, speed; Steve Simp· ~'
year prqbaU~n •.,jaii sentence sus· klns, Ewlngton, $60 and costs, lflegill· •
pendod UJ&gt;0!11 proo"'ql valid license ly taking deer: James R. BIB!J!&lt;well , :·'
within 00 days, ng: operators'license: Racine, $200 and costs, · six .months ·
Ronald 1.. Snade&lt;a, Albany, $200 and jail suspended , to 30 days, tour
costs:-"'h~ da~ jail and ,$100 sus· months house arrest, resisting arrest;
penciea """'·~ of a valid license Ga.y L. Haning, Pomeroy, $20 jl(ld j"
within ~J,IWtOfle year probation, costs, fishing without a license;
n~ operal0/i'llolri8e; Kevin L. Bush, · James M. Smith, Reedsville, . $100
Moddleport, $100. and costs, thres and costs, fine suspended to $25 and
days Jill ~uspended upon proof ot a costs, failure to transfer, o$30 and
valtd·operators Utense. one year pr"' costs each 1 two seat belt violations
. batlon, no operators llcen~~; Tony ~. , ~1QO ~nd co~ts, ,$75 suspended if tint •
Rood , Reedsville, $15 and' coats, 10 Is removed within .seven days, win· '
days )811 suspef'\Ped to time ••rv•d, dnw •no . '
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2001

The Daily Sentinel

·Solving the-cas~ of (h~adache and
hoi ears' may ·. n~t be e~sy ·

National Immunization rnek coming up

Ajnil ~-28 bas \&gt;(m $p~ified aJ' Natiotbllnfant l~1munization Week.
·
This designation is to
- encourage parents of children
• 2 and under to be vaccinated
o against preventable diseases,
disabilities and death .
·' Immunizations are so cffec' rive that some diseases have
been reduced by 99 percent.
· Just because vaccine-preventab)e ·diseases are· at an aU' time low, parents must not
·· procTa.~tinate when it comes to
"' their child's immunizations.
.. Eighty percent of the inoculalions need to be given during
.. the first two years of life,
·' reqi1iring about five visits to
; , the doctor, clinic or health
·, department.
Rescarohers are co nst.mdv
coming up with new vaccine
schedules, tryi ng to find the
most cffectiw timer.1 blcs. For
instance, the Centers fi,. Dis-

Thu~y. Aprl119,

p.s.

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Energy search may aid Jeb Bush
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Bush administration's hunt
for new sources of oil and natural gas may end up pitting the
president against his brother Jeb, and .it could affect the florida
governor politicaUy.
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Jeb Bush renewed his plea Wednesday with a ne.w letter asking the administration not to extend offshore oil and gas
drilling to the Eastern Gulf of Mexico, closer to his state's
beaches.
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Interior Secretary' Gale Norton recently notified the Florida
governor that she planned to proceed with a proposal to auc-.
tion oil and gas development leases in a large tract in the eastern Gulf, some of which comes withiu 30 miles of the western
tip of the Florida Panhandle.
"I ntiJSt consider our nation's energy needs and appropriate
management of the American public's natural resources" Norton wrote Btish on March 9, noting that the proposed lease area
is believed to hold substantial amounts of natural gas and oil.

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NEW YORK (AP) - The
Federal Reserve's unexpected .
interest-rate cut ~ve Wall Street
a triple-digit raUy and one of its
strongest performances tiUtyear.
But the real news nuy be, that
tlu! bulls are re-emerging:·
After_months of unc~rtainty
about \~here stocks are headed, a
growing number of analysts
believe the worst nla)' be, over for
the markets. · '
"While we may see some puBback because this has been such.a
big day, I do think the trend is
upward fiom here,~ said Matt
Brown, head of eqmty management at Wilmington Trust.
"There's a st:Iong correlation
between aggressive Fed action
.
_ perand 1mproved
stock n......
...nu;t
form:utce."
· .
The optimism comes desp1te
expectations that corporate
earning; will continue to be,
weak for months and a Fed statement Wednesday indicating it is
quite concert;ted about the econoiny.

;' , Analysts say stocks will dennitely slide again, but what's
I, change(\ is their confidence.
convinced than
,,•'• They're more
.
d
,, ever that the stock market-· an
the economy, albeit at a slower
' pace - are starting to improve.
"As far .as the kind of devastation we· saw in 2000, the worst is
~.· over. We might test our lows
• again but as far as the free-fall we
..~1, saw:, ;hat has con1e to an end,"
' ' said Charles Pradilla, chief invest",. ment stra:tegist at SG Cowen
Securities. ''This is not the end of
:: the market's problems, b~1t th~
~ beginning of its healing process.
;;., The Fed said It was cutting ·
rates for the fourth time this y&lt;&gt;ar .
because of "rising uncertainty
• about the business oudook,''
among other concerns. But
;. those \VOrries- and the fact the
• Fed took the unusual step of act' ing between regularly scheduled
•;' meeting; --. failed to dampen
;
Wednesday's enthusiasm.
1
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[mteston. sent the Dow Jones
. industrials up nearly 400 points,

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~-- «;all Ext. 16 ·

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Da"e Harris • Ext. 15
.-afOre Pt1ay 5, 200·1~.:'
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DALLAS (AP) - A man who pleaded with his 6-year-old
son to shoot him died Wednesday, three days after a gun went
off as Ronald Moore and the boy held the gun to Moore's
head.
·
Moore, 42, had been in critical condition since Sunday night's
shooting at the family's south Oak Cliff home. A spokeswoman
at Methodist Medical Center said he died Wednesday afternoon.
A polict report said Moore held the .22-caliber derringer in
his 6-year-old son's hands Sunday and pleaded with the boy to
shoot him. The boy resisted, but the report said the weapon discharged as they both held the gun. Moore was struck in the left
temple.
The report did not say who pulled the trigger, but the boy
later told his mother and im·estigators, "My .daddy made me
shoot him."

11·year·old girl abducted
SLIDELL, La. (AP) - An 1 1-year-old girl bicycle rirling
with her yo'unger sister was abducted by a man who asked for
directions, police said.
Authorities believe the man drove Lisa Bruno away in a dirty
white minivan.
Lisa and her 6-year-old sister, Angelina Reyes, were riding
their bicycles in the parking lot of their apartment complex in
Slidell, a New Orleans suburb, on Monday when they decided
to go into a wooded area ro look for blackberries, police said.
A man stopped them to ask for directions to the complex
office, and Lisa volunteered to show him. Angelina entered the
woods and returned a short time later to find her sister's bicycle, investigators said.

while the N a;;da q composite
index - which n:mains in a
bear market - rose 156 and the
Sr.1 nd1rd &amp; Poor's 500 it'ldex
gained 46.
h
k
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"T e· stoc mar ets rec~wry
bc,fore' the .econo-

my's;' said Jeff Hirsch, publisher
of d1e Stock Trader's Almanac.
He said that since 1949, the average gain re.Wzed from ,between
the time the Dow bottom&lt;'il to
an end of; recession was about
24.5 percent.

g ecretaries .2&gt; ay Is April 25. ·

eJ/ey BosseS:
They keep you
organiz~.

they keep you
·informed, and
tl)ey keep ' •
things running,
soshow'em
how much
you ~re.

Monte Cllrlo

fla811dance

Doullle Reclining Sofa &amp;
Matching DoUble

•c11nlne .....,....,

Double RICIInln.
Sectional
Prlcttl Start At

'164981

'145985

ShowYourThankSToYour Secr~ry
With A Thank You Ad In The April 25
Edition Of The Dally Sentinel.

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Shooting takes bizaiTe tum

F~dis
interest rate cut highlights
bulls' return
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Teen gets so years in killing

Deputy Undersecretary of Defense
Peter F. Verga; leader of the eight-member U.S. team, sounded a positive note
after the meeting ended.
"We covered aU the items that were on
the agenda, and I found today's session to
be productive,"Verga said.
The U.S. Embassy would not say what
Prueher told Chinese officials. But a
White House· spokeswoman said
Wednesday that he would convey a
warning that the talks could fail without
''productive discussion" about the return
of the spy plane.
·
During the first day of talks, the top
Chinese negotiator said China had "sufficient evidence" to prove the United
States was to blame, the st~te newspaper
China Daily said Thursday.

North Port as the flame~ spread south, Aaron s~id. i-f'c said the
fire had burned one home, two roofs and several vehicles in the
area.
Two firefighters were treated for exposure to chemical Oame
retardant.

New arsenic standards planned

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Christie Whitman, administrator of the Environmcnta.l Protection Agency, s.1id she was asking the National Academy of
Scierces to examine the impact of a range of possible reductions. The new standard could be higher or lower than that set
by Clinton.
President Bush drew heavy criticism from environmentalists
and others last month when his EPA killed a Clinton administration' regulation that would have tightened the standard to nu
more than 10 parts of arsenic per billion in drinking water. The
current standard, set in 1942, is 50 parts per billion.
·
Whitman said she wanted a panel of scientists at the academy
to examine ~ standard in the range of three; to 20 parts per billion.
"

Crews battle Sarasota wildfire

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refused to say whether the talks were
finished, or give other details.
China has held the U.S. Navy EP-3E
surveillance plane, worth some $80 million, since it made an emergency landing
April 1 on Hainan island in the South
China Sea. The 24 crew members were
released only after 11 days of protracted
negotiations.
China wants the United States to take
sole blame for the plane's collision with
a Chinese fighter jet, whose pilot is missing and presumed dead. Beijing also
wants an end to American surveillance;
fligh? near the Chinese coast.
Talks resumed Thursday only after
US. Ambassador Joseph Prueher won a
promise from Chinese officials to rliscuss
the rewrn nf the American plane.

WASHINGTON (AP) - The government is set to relax a
restriction against two television networks belonging to a sinEBENSBURG, Pa. (AP) - A teen-age boy who was pres" gle company - a change that would allow CBS and the fledg- sured by his lover into killing the father of her two children has
ling UPN network to remain in the same family.
been sentenced to up to 50 years in prison .
This also marks the beginning of what analysts expect to be . Robert Hudson was 15 when ' he ambushed and shot Robert
a wave of decisions under the new GOP leadership at the Fed- Hawks, 35, in the attic of MicheUe ,Clark's home on March 11,
eral Communications Commission to ease regulations on 1999.
media businesses. Such actions ultimately could aUow compaHudson, now 17, told police that Clark, 32, seduced him and
nics to grow in size and scope and impact what Americans see, threatened to abandon him if he did not help her kill Hawks.
: hear and read.
.
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Hudson had been the children's baby-sitter.
The pl~n before the FCC on Thursday would aUow one of
"I'm sqrry.... I wish I could do something about it. Some- ·
. the four major TV networks -ABC, CBS, NBC or Fox - to · .times I wish I could take his place,". Hudson. told Cambria
be owned by the same company as a smaUer, emerging network County Judge Thomas Swope before htS sentencmg Wednesday.
such as UPN or the WB, which is owned by AOL Time Warner.
But the commission, widely expected to approve the proposSARASOTA, Fla. (AP) - A wildfire that was started as a
al, stiU would retain a prohibition on any two of the four major
controlled
burn in a county reserve spread to 4,500 acres,.
,, networks combining.
burned one home and forced the evacuation of a residential
neighborhood, officials said Thursday.
.
Tne fire had been set on Tuesday to clear about 550 acres in
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Bush administration, under the Carlton Reserve, but strong winds fanned it across a 4 112
fire for scrapping former President Clinton's standard for mile area, said Jeff Aaron, Sarasota County's puqlic information
·
arsenic in drinking water, ann&gt;;&gt;unced plans Wednesday to set a officer.
As
many
as
40
people were told 'leave a neighborhood near
new standard within nirie months.
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BEIJING (AP) - U.S. and Chinese
negotiators ended two days of talks with
no sign of agreement Thursday on the
return·ofanAmerican spy plane or Beijing's demand to end surveillance flights
near its coast.
The chief U.S. negotiator described
the second day of talks Thursday as productive ·but neither side would give
details.The Americans had threatened ro
break 'off the meeting Wednesday, saying
Chinese negotiators wouldn't seriously
discuss the rerum of the U.S. plane.
"The sides have agreed to keep in
touch, and future calks will be held at a
1
I time and place to be determined
through diplomatic channels," Chinese
Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Zhang
1Qiyue told reporters. The U.S. Embassy

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FCC looks to relax rules

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'lllurscl.y'. Aprlllt. :1001

U.S., China wr~p up talt&lt;s over spy plane

Presi-

WASHINGTON (AP) - Stealing ~ quiet moment,
dent Bush paused before an ever-burning Oame at the
Holocaust Memoria,l Museum ~nd bowed his head.
,
Later, he told friends and.tguests that the United States must
'"always remember both the cruelty of the guilty, and the
courage and innocence of their victims."
\
Bush toured the museum Wednesday night, in prepar.~tion fl r
a speech he planned to give at a Holocaust Memorial D~y event
at nOOf! on Thursday; The special day i$ ~rked on the Jewis\1
C2lendar, commemorating the 6 million people killed in deatlt
camps by Nazi Germany during World War II.
Bush arrived at the museum with his wife, Laura, in a cold
drizzle, the weather seeming to mirror the mood. In somber
tones, he spoke to nearly 300 guests from a central staircase in
the museum.
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PageA7

Nation • World

Bush pays tribute to victims\

Question: ·For the past .
'
year I have been having days
with symptoms that keep me
from feeling well. My aches
migrate from joint to jointone time it will be my thighbones, and the next week it
may be my elbow. I feel tired
John C. Wolf, D.O.
.even whe·n I've slept well. I
57
AModate
also have my e;&gt;rs· get hot for
of FamDy Medicine
no apparent reason, and when
this happens I freque~dy get
a h~adache. What could be sympto'ms. Many people can cause fl~shing as can a
causmg these problems?
l lliln't undentlt!l'i that tbis is
idll ·,ange ..pf1 flt#cription
Answe~: The symptoms often a lengthy process medicines.
~•
you descrtbe can be caused reqmnng repeated tnps to
The headache jou experi- .
by a number of, Illnesses. the lab, X-ray or hospital for enco: at the same time you ·
Con_sequemly, I cant tdl you additiona l studies. After a cor., have hot ears makes me susspecifically what ts causmg rect diagnosis has been ~stab- picious that the blood vessels
you to feel thiS w~y. What I Jished, the p'roper treatment supplying yo,u r braitf are also
ca n do, hmwwr, IS explam tan be started. I· know that having some change from the
the approach )'OUt doctor this entire . process sounds normal pattern of blood flow.
. wtll ta~e tu help you find om complicated, and it is.
Both symptoms may actually
the nature of your malad)'·
No\v .. to address vour be a form: of migraine
. . The first step \~e .lphysi- symptoms: The fatigue ·you headache. An alternative
ctans take 111 d~termln,mg the report ca n be produced from explanation is that they both
nature of any til ness IS to hs- alniost any ailment from result from some more gentcn to the patient. I know -. allergies to cancer - with eralized cirrulatory Co'nrlition
some of us arc better at thts non-life threatening illnesses that also has increased blood
than .others. As part of that 'being far-and-away the most pressure. They could even be
hstemng process, we must ask common. The " on again-off the consequence of eating
a. host of"do~tor-type" q11es- again" a.;hing in your' bones MSG.
ttom to find out about your and joints is a less common
It is possible that you nave
medtcallustory. .
' complaint. 'J;'~er; are several · '!I)O~c: ;•thal] ·e •~e condition
These lf!!ght. mclude the types of arthritis .d)at can do producing your combination
way your symptoms began, this, but so can simple condi- of symptoms, ··although since
how they are now, what you tions such as fatigue, muscle they aU started together it is
do to feel better, what .you do overuse and depression.
logical to think th!t there is a
Elephants") have large' ears single common cause. I think
that mak~s you feel worse,
and quemons, about medical to help cool their bodies. you are beginning to see why
problems you ve .had m ~he African elephants have larger I said that this process of fig.past. Wtth thts mformanon ones than Indian ele'phants uring out the cause of a
your doctor IS ready to do a because of the hotter African group. Of symptoms is comphysi~al_ ex.amination. After climate. We humans have a plicated. In fact, I think it. is
combmmg thformattoll frot~I rich blood supply to our ears,: · sufficiently complicated that
yo~r htstory and your physt- ' too, althongh it is insufficient you should make another
cal·'examination , your. d_octor to contribute substantiaUy to appointment to see your doc- .
will comptle' ~ 1 short list of body temperature regulation. tor.
· a~lments that. could possibly· Despite this, when we get hot
. "Family Medidite'' is a weekproduce your cqrpbination of (or when we blush) there is ly colu11111. To submit questious,
. .Mrmal and abnormal · find- increased blood flow through write to John C. J«Jif, D. 0.,
mgs.
' ' '' " ·•' ,. .
our ears. Yours apparently•·' O!tio Uuiversitr €1.&gt;1/ege of
Tests are ordered to deter- "get hot" at times other than Osteopmlric Mediciue, Grosve11or
mine which of the ailments these. Drugs can cause this. Hall, Atlrens, Olrio 45701 . Past
on the short lis!' of 1 pb~sibili- t..Nonprescripti"' ~ .... ~ • li·~~oiH"'"s re--'t111rtilabl... ~nline at
tj_es is the actual cause .of yoUT niacin, aspirin and ibuprofen wwwJitradio.oiJi!fiu .

Prom-

•

••

To Annie Grey
bouquet tO !IllY thank vn11 I
Keep up the good work!
Your boss,
Ed Williams
ABC Wldaets
10 Main Street
Little town

DeadiiN Is
Monday, Aprt113, :zoot

~-------------~~--------,
JTh:
I

TOrino
Sectional With
Chaise Lounge

DOUble
Sofa With snuggle
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. , • • • •5

PriCH Start At
81

I

Greeting:

can~eron

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Mall or Bring In Your Entry Form to the

Dally Sentinel

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111 Court S1reel, Pomeroy, Ohio 45789

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·--•

�v

t'. . Aif• \heu.tytieldh'WI

Mississippi River flood
peaking 1n Wisconsin
'

"
P'R:AlRIE
DU CHrEN,
W is. J'lP) - The muddy
waters of the Mississippi River
engulfed homes and pushed
sandbas. WallS to the limit afier
c • gshort of predictions 60
ntileS ~ri~m at~ Crosse.
Dorothy and AI R.eed
mOved furniture o ut of their
home in this southwest W isconsin river town Wednesday,
then ·spent ' the night in the
two-stbr)' Structure despite
water that fiUed the basement
and covered a porch . .

said he had asked Federal
Emergency
Managem ent
Agency Director Joe A.llbaugh
to place the agency o n alert
status. FEMA staff were
expected in IO.Va as eady as
Thursday ro assess the situation.
"Their quick response could
make the difference for thousands oflowa families," Harkin

said.
ln downtown Dave nport,
pump generators droned as
do zens 9f.adults and children
scooped sand into ba"!;S and
Natio nal Guard · me mbers
wqrked with hoses .co keep

u ll:'s ·tiot easy .to watc h your
•

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house go under water,'' .
Dorothy R eed said. "It's aU
yo u 0\vn, you don 't have any
choi.cc. It giws you a sick fed - watt:r out o f the streets. Earthen and sandbag dikes rose ;IS
ing ./n your sto mach."
Her huslmtd planned to st.1y, high as 6 1/2 feet above River
she said, "bur if it gets on our Drive., with water ad,-ancing
regulat ,liloor..s. I'm !.caving. toward the bac k side.
On still- dry .streets. ciw
That's ;;10re ihan I can· take."
The Mississi ppi' crested at workers marked with pink
16.4 I feet Wednesday mo rn~ paint where the water would
ing at .La C rosle, a foot and a reac h 19 feet, 20 feet and
hal'- \lclo.w the record set in beyond.
Apdl :.l9ts: b..fficiais said it Anin1als were evac uated
could (ake weeks for the rive r fiom an area Hurll.ane Society,
to slip back into its panks and and the rising floodwaters
below the Hood suge of 12 ·forced the closing of Rhythm
feet.
·
City, one of the ~rea's four ,
"Our dikes are still holding; ' riverfront casinos.
said Pat Glffrey, public works
The Mississippi had topped
director in La Crosse. "Our 18 feet by early Thursday near
biggesl 'Concern is the weather
Davenport, 3 feet above flood
forecast."
st:lge. It was expected to crest
A chance of showers or
30
miles
upstream · at
storms -&lt; was forecast for the
Comanche on Monday or
region from Thursday night
Tuesday somewhere between
into early next week, though
the rain ' wasn't expected to· be 23 and 24 feet; the river
reached 22.98 feet there in
heavy.
,j

1993.

Scores of homes in Wisconsin, Minnesota . and Iowa are
already surrounded by water
or partly Hooded, ana residents
further
downstream
are
watching the river rise as they
wait for the crest, expected in
Iowa over the next week.
Sen. Tom Harkin, D-lowa,
.,

•

I

Elsewhere, flooded tracks
'blocked Amtrak passenger
between Chicago and Minneapolis and delayed freight
train trallic, and .. stretches of
the Mississippi were expected
to remain closed to barges for
several·mt?re days .

'

Inside:

&amp;seW mund, ~ B2
.

·•

"Tire NAACP will not give
up itJ fight-to rernove from
public propnty any and all
syuibols that c~lebrate tire ·
twist~d philosopiJy of bigotry
aud hatrtd in this c.ountry., ·

JACKSON, Miu. ,(J\P) - Wj th the
possibility o f an economic boycott
looming, Confederate heritage groups
caUed on people to accept M ississippi's
decision to keep its state flag with the
R ebel emblem .
"The voice of the people has been
heard. The people o(_Mississippi do not
want anoth.e r flag. Miuissipp,ians are
proud of their families, this state and its
rich history." William Earl Faggert, a
leader of the state Sons of Confederate
Veterans, said Wednesday.
The NAACP raised the threat of a
boycott Wednesday after voters overwhelmingly rejected a proposal that
would have replaced the Confederate
symbol on the flag with a cluster of 20
stars signifying Mississippi's admission
lS the 20th state.
Euge ne Bryant, president of the Mississippi chapter of the National Associ3tion fo r !he Advancement of 'olorcd
People, said a decisio n on a boycott
could be made by May. The national
organi za tion used the tactic against'

over the flag.
•
'" We would hate a boycott certainly,"
:
Wilson said.
Miuissippi's touri$rn-related busi~test:
es employ 94,000 people a11d pumped
S6.09 billion into the economy in .
2000. Gambling aJ J() st:lte-rtgulate~
casinos accounted for $2.62 billion of

...........

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South Carolina, where a Confederate
flag flew for decades atop the St:~te­
house dome until it was moved to the
front of the builrling.
"T-he NAAC P will not give up its
fight to remove fropt public property
any and aJI symbols that celebrate the
twiSle d philosophy of bigotry and
hatred in this country," Kweisi Mfume,
NAACP national president and ' chief
exec utive. said in a statement Wednesday.
Darienne Wilson, Mississippi's director of to urism development, said she
doesn 't know if officials would try to
dissuade the NAACP from boycotting

.\ThuRsoo's

IIY DMI! ,_,. Ill
OW CORRESPONDENT

Bush off to fast start contentious enviromental record

~

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WASHINGTON (AP) - Just in
another one totnor-· ·~fOnptent
have come in ,re~ction to :
.
time for Earth Day on Sunday, President
ro\v."
spate of rules released in the closing daf!
1
Bush )X)pped out a double dose of gaod
Business, for its part, ~f the Clinton administration. Jmmedi!
news for environmentalists this week.
is not happy with · all ately after his inauguration, Bush SI!S~
But it will take more than ,his moves
of Bush's decisions, pended the rules until he h~d rime to
to enforce new rules on wetlands
but remains plea~ed review them.
,. •
:
preservation and lead contamination to
with
his
overall
Now, he's letting some cake effect anCJ
reassure conservationists, who complain
approach.
. pul!ing others. b~~k.for more study.
they've been steamrolled by a string of
"They're looking at
He has allowed Clinton requiremen~
industry-friendly actions from the Bush
some of these · issues to go forward for -cleaner engjnes an4
administra.tion.
. the way we think !hey fuel for rlie~el trucks '.!ll!i·rbuses, ne\\1
They focus on a recent one-month ought to be looked at, which is one at a protections for- wetlands '~pd bett~
span in which Bush puUed back new time and case by case," said Mike
f ·
·
1
.
reporting o. ·· lead contarnin~lion an'!
arsenic standards for drinking water, Baroody, executive vice president of the
•
abandoned a campaign promise to. National Association of Manufacturers. tougher energy efficiency .standards fo:
reduce carbon dioxide emissions from "It's also suggestive of a focus not just washing machines and water heaters. ~
power plants, suspended new cleanup on the politics of the environment but
At the same time, he's putting th~
requirements for mining companies and ' on the science that ought to underlie brakes on new arseni£ :~nd. rnininji
r(\jeeted a treaty on global warming.
the policy."
"'
.
cleahup st:lndards and scaling,down the
" We started the year really believing
Likewise, Bill Kovacs, a lls. Chamber scope of n'ew .energy. efficie'!-oy;rules fo':
that this was an administrat.ion that was of Commerce vice president, ~aid of air' conditioners and heat pumps.
'• ·
going to look for some balance and try · Bush's rulings: "He needs· to continue
Many in the environmentll move~
·to find unity, and it's been everything pursuing the course that he's on- reg- ment complain that "goOd'· n~" nowac
but that," said Bill Meadows, president ulations based on sound sCience - and days means ·a •day when the sl!atus qut;l
of the Wilderness Society. "The list goes we would be pleased with that."
. survives r:i.ther than taking an~ther hi\
on and on. I'm just !]oping there's not
Many of Bush's moves on the envi~ '' f1:9m Bush. 1·.'
'
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BY DAilE HARRIS

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Tests were .c onoucted at
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agency saill it did 1,11 i tests,
on athletes in 3(l. sports. Four
of the tesll op ;u.S. athletes
found traces of prohibited
stimulants and the fifth (ound ·
a .stetoid. Their names and
sports were. not i:lisdbsed.
•. , '

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mlis pa.Joffs
. PHOENIX .(AP) - Penny
Hardaway won join the
'Phoenix Suns for the-playoffi.
After practicing · twice, Hardaway decided his sur!Pcally
repaired left..llnee isn't IStrong
enough.
•
'
'
Haroaway played in only
four games in January before·
he
sidelin~d by extreme
soreness in the knee. He
missed '22 games last seasoh
. with foot injury.

was:

a

~~

~:

•..

U.S.athletll··.&lt;

.

•.. '

-

' .. ,Bailey,in firing her mas' te~pjece, walked four and
IUt' one ,batter to go · along
'".Witlf.lt~ 11~'strike outs.
~liM,. ' CaJiaway~h3d a pair of singles
lead the way, Lodof' • ·
'wick added her triple,
Hensley
double, and
COLOMIJO SPRINGS,
Wiggins and PoweU added
Colo. (.AP) - Five athletes en
singles. .
U.S. national teams and two .
··LIFwellY,n was the losing
' fiom otlier riations tested pos-'
pitcher
fQr the Spari:ans: ;"
itive for banned drugs during
Eaatern will host 'frimble
• the first ·quatter of. 2001, the
oii..'Oiuiiday
: u.s. .t\Jiti-Doping 'Agency , conte5t. in a maJee:.I!P.·
reported.
•· ·• '''.7

COOLED DOWN ...- Cincinnati's Pokey Reese bobbles ' the ball a~ )elfr~y Hammonds
steals second base during the Reds 7-4 loss to the Brewers·Wednesday. (AP)
·

·.

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a.·

dou,ble d

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. J
. ·zlClNCINNATI (AP). The fastball si:ied m, and jos~ Hernandez fouled it off.
:rh~ cut fastball baoked~own and away, and
Hernandez got a.. piece of it, too.
·J:Ilo matter what Pete Harnisch threw, the
Milwaukee JJie wers sho~top' managed to
flick it awa): Every fastbaU, cut1!astball and
slider turned il)to 'a fah souvenir and pro~
lon~ed the at-l;&gt;at.
.
Fmally, on ·the 12th p1tch, Hernandez
guessed right and got the Milwaukee Brew.ers out of their season•long slump on the
rqad, H.is three-run homer ,Wednesday night
set up a 7-4 victory over the Cincinnati
R.eds, tht: Nils ho~e$t teWJ. 1 '
••
·
"I' figured We'd Win at least one before the
season was over with;' manager Davey

'

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Lopes said with a vJry grin. "It was just a
matter·of time."
·
1'We ~t-hat ~hat changed the game took a
long time. c
The.:Qrewers 'were ahead 2-1 and had two
rutmers aboard when Hernandez came to
bat in the fotlfth. Harnisch (1-2) went to a
2- 2 count, then threw just about everything
at Hernandez trying to get on e more past
him.
He couldn't. , .
Herpandez fouled off five consecutive
pitches, took baD three, th en fouled off one
more as players oo both teams marveled.
"He just kept ticking it," Reds manager

.............. . s

. hot hltti!Jg .liJts Tomadoes tO ';Vin

" -. • - DY ...... u

.

WOLF!

• ;!)

:h

,

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I

by D""y ':fill ·with three singles and a \he. third, SHS went up 9- 3 gn singles '

. OVP CORR~SPO~DENT .
.
double. Brandon Hill singled twice,
. R.hCINE-9~mg4-5 on the,mg?t, ,I;Jrandqn Pi~rce &amp;ingle ,and tripled, and
m a red-hot h1ttmg rage, ?ally Hill . Chad Hubbard singled twice, and Matt
emerged as one of the· ga?te s scars and Shain singled.
Adam Van Dyke led Nelsonville-York
also emerged Wlth the wmnmg run as
\the ~outhe~n Tornadoes edged the Nel- (8-5, 5-3) with a double and two sin~n~ille-Yark Buckey~s 1~-12 m ~~~t gles, Steve ' Blair singled twice, and
mmngs Wednesday mght 1.n. 00_Y,S Trl- Jasper Bateman doul;lled. Josh St~der,
Valley ~onference lnterPi_VISI~n~ play, . Chas&lt;;, .EUio~t, ,:}{. Hii~ess, and Matt
With one. out and )'fe)so~~e ace Hill eal:h singled~
··I
Josh Stalder on the mound, Hill smgled
Th ... .
.
30
to right field and weqt to third b&lt;!se
VenDyvtsttkors '!"eglnt up h- fion .a ~voh
.t\
Ohl'
· · h d
run a
e sm e m t e rst mmng,
w en_ aron d ;,;.s~r reac e on ~~~ then Southern took a 4~3 lead when
error at Osehlc~n . It] runnersd oBn t e Pierce knockeq home Hubbard and
corqers,
mger sto e secon . atter
, .
.
.
a t .i Matt Ash With a two-run tnple. Hill
J ustin .Alien went in the hole un•l.
" ' 1"',
• .;.1~ ho
h
h
-h
2 count, then hit one back tO Stalder
llnwo-~
m4 a run, t en t ree str:i.lg t
·
·
'
·
·
aJk
r: · ·d h
h r:
h
·h
Hill sprmted home and Stalder With- w s .orce orne t e lOUrt run Wit
·
Sha'10 tt'
h R.BI
h · ·
out esttatlon madvertendy went .tq
. _ ge mg t e . ·
.
fiJ1t base as Hill crossed the plate with ,, . r1erce and Dallx Hill had R.BI smgles
the winning run, 13-12. ,
m the second and Brandon Hill had an
Southern (9c2, ,7-2) llit.ters were led ,RBI triple to give SHS a 6-3 lead. In
I

RACINE - · Hurling a 194
no-hitter, sophomore
Rachel Chapman held the
NelsonviUe-York Buckeyes ~
(1-7) at bay as the Southern
Tornadoes rolled to a huge
Tri-VaUey
interdivisional
Conference mercy rule win
Wednesday.
Southern (5-8) also had a
good offensive night led by
senior Kati Cummins. who
hammered a two-run home
run fur the winners. Sophomore Brigette Barnes pounded-o.»t th~e hits in a, perfect
3~J.r nigltt, 'Ienior · l'ammy
Fryar went 2-2 in a perfect
night with two walks, Carol}'!! Bentz (3 RBI) had a
double and single, and Deana
Pullins . singled. Emily Hill
continued to lead the team· in
walb
a freshman, walking
twice to push her season total
to eighteen.
' Senior Macyn Ervin walked
twice and Katie Sayre walked
three times and scored three
times as did. Rachel Chapman.
The big story of the night
was Chapmanis best pitching
effort of her career. Chapman
had control of her . pitches
early ..and was in command
with three .. p~rfect innings.
Chapman faced .nine batters
and retired nine batters with
foqr strike6uts in the mix.
Chapman went on to struggle
in the fourth inning with her
conii'Pt' but rebounded to
stti)c:eo\Jt the last barter to end
the inning bet'~re marching
on to the well-pitched no-hit
wtn.
Southern took a 5-0 lead in
the first inning when Cummins, Ervin, Sayre, and Fryar
each walked to plate a run . .
Pullins then slammed a two
ril11 single, and Carolyn Bentz
slammed a two-run double.
Chapman,
Walks
to
Sayre,and Fryar set up an atbat for PuUins who reached
on an error to score two runs.
Bentz then followed with an
R.Bl single, the score 9-0.
Chapman meanwhile was
in a groove, setting the Buckeyes down 1-2-3 each of the
first three innings.
Southern scored four more
in th'e third when Hill walked
and Cummins · slammed a
two- run home run to right
center fi eld. Chapman then
walkt!d, Barnes had an R.Bl
single and Fryar had .an RB{
single, the score 13-0.
Southern then fell upon
rough
times.
Chapman
walked her first batter to start
the inning, then got a ground
out. Whitlatch then hit one
back to Chapman ·and she
muffed it off Iter glove tand
tfien Fox tricklea one down
the line that Chapman also
booted, and was unable to

"as

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$]T.~:::~~:Hs:~s~l~·. ··mwn ~.· fuo
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10, Mlnerat~jdg8(1) 12

'

IIY Scon Wou:E
OVP CORRESPONDENT

Sandy Poi.veU singled. Janet

L .. 2 6

•

,

Buckeyes

OVP CORRESPONDENT

' 21: Str
Coi.CrilWford(4)
reached
on run
an
-s~:Frahl&lt;r (t79
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another
Co
as
nul'
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and
IGSS
LodWick
~leared
•
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the bases WJID a triple to

4 Cil. Ft.

Garage
· Pac~g-- ·
'

Southem

4,Jerorn8fMIIeHIIIsdale24" • ' ' SanT~h~~Ladep. E gl bl
5,Kansaslakota(1)
24
·, e
Y a es. ew
6, PortsnlOI.itbWest · . 16 .. : ·,. the .~~ vy1.d e ope.n m th~,
7,Sprlng.Northeastem 15 ~ ~ . fifih ItUitn.g'b.y platmg-four ,
8,Loui!NilleAgulnas 14
runs. :Wit~ two outs,
9,MarionEigili ·
. 11
, ,Chevalier reached on·
.10 AkronSI. V-St.Ma
~othe~ Spartan error, Car'
ry 9 ' '• ne "W1ggms walked and

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LAmCEPANEL

I

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EAST MEIGS - Juli
Bailey fired a no hitter and
struck out 11 as Eastern
DIVISION II
defeated Alexander 6-0 in
1,KentonAidge(3)
39
TVC
softball
action
2, PomeroyMeigs
23
Wednes~. Eastern, who is
· 3, Con~aut(1)
19
~ed ninth in the latest
4, Tallmadge
16
J?ivision IV coaches poD, is
5, BuckeyeValley
15·
lJOW 10-1 overall and 9-0
6, VermHion
14 .
in the TVC. Alexander
7, Hebronlakewood 10
drops to 6-4 overall and 5~. Dover ·
.9
3 ,i n the :rye.
9, Belle.Benjaminlogan6
Eastern took a 1-0 lead
ByesvilleMeadowbrciok 6
in the bottom of the first
inning. ~Cfispn•. Chev;al,ier
1 ,. . ,, • .
,. ·
~II .. . '""
reached on a Spartan ·error,
' 1,CrestonNorwayne(4)58 '
··~c!jd pn a ground out, '
2,LaGrangeKeystone(1 )41 . stole third and scored on a
3,AkronM,a~er 38 ~ , ,ground out off the bat of

Premium Klta-

·259
.
Each

.

with a two run double.
The Falcons tied the game in the .
HEMLOC K - Meigs broke a bottom of the inning. Cook sinfive game losing streak by defeating gled, Nelson doubled with one out
Miller 16-6 in a TVC • contest and Keller singled in Nelson for a
·.
Wednesday.
2-aU gam~.
M eigs scored a pair ofru~
Meigs made it a 7-'}. game in the
first inning, Nick ])c:itvvilJll
second inning 1zy plating 6ve runs.
Adam Bullington was hit by a
gled, one out.~;;_~~~~· ~
walked. John :.1
'
PIJsss ... Msrasd•,BI
pitch and Darrick Kjl.a pp

Bailey

5, Hilliard0$vidson
36
6, Pickerington
· 23
7, Fairfield
15
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11
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.OVP CORRESPONDENT

1

3, N.CantonHoover(1) 59
4, Celina( 1)
45

Store ~B~lldlngJ~U~, ·W·' .,

CCA PRESSURE TREATED,

Marauder boys beat Miller

''

DIVISION I
1,Youngs.Boardman(5)72
2, Spring.South(1)
66

!

.-t·f)t.

third. /

·r olls

·.

. hitter. On Monday in a 14-2 win over

Nelsoriville- York, Jeffers, Ashley Burbridge, Shannon Price and Jaynee
Davis hurled a one hitter.
Lindsay Bolin cbntinued her torrid
hitting. Bolin coming off a five for five
performance against Nelsonville-York
went three for three Wednesday, all
singles. Stephanie Wigal added a si~gle
and a double, lUyte Davis, Jaynee
Davis and Abby Harris each added a
pair of sirigles,Alicia Werry had a dou. Kati~effcrs, J~ee DaYJs and Car- hie, and Shannon Price, Mindy
tie .t\bbqn combmed to p1tch a one
. hitter. Th'F second straight game the
PIE"S . . . . . . . . . . .

penods.
are

~

e1

Marauders pitcher have pitched a o ne
•

~OCK - .Meigs ban~ out
16 hits, and combmed tha!: With 21
w.dks ~ the M~udt:r coasted to a
30-;0 ~ over Miller m TVC sofiball
acuon Wednesday.
.
The Marauders, who this week
moved up to second in the state in
Division II despite ~eir 9-5 record,
~o~ three runs m the ~ two
llln11lgll·~d. erupted for 12 runs m the

COLUMBUS Meigs
jumped up to No. 2 in this .
week's !wociated Press Division II state softball ratings
this week.
.
The
Marauders
were
ranked No. 6 in last week's
poll. Meigs accumulated 23
points in this week's voting.
County neighbor Eastern
fell from No.8 to No. 9 in the
Division · IV poll. Th!: Ellgles1,
earned 19 points' in this
week's voting.
This is the second of seven
t;ating
The weekly
poDs
voted on by a 'panel
of statewide spo~riters.

..

.

.

••

Cl-ran

.HIGHLIGHTS

A coaliti()ll of business leaders, acad~
mics and civil rights groups had pushea
for a new flag, saying the Confederate
X hurts Mississippi's image.
...
" We thou~rj~ was the rjgbt thing to
do," said Andy, Bourland, rlirector of till:
Mississippi Gaming Association.
University of Georgia historian Jamct
Cobb - whose l992 book, "The Mosi
Southern Place on Earth," explorea
social divides in the Mississippi Del!l
- said the state's hold on the Rebe
flag could put it at a disadvantage i~
economic development. '
..
"Mississippi will be die last Confect;
erate State - that will be th~ rallyinR
cty for some;' Cobb said.
:
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111&amp; dl'f..... 1t. 21181

.

that.

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&amp;tern bays jaU to Alexander; Page B8

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3"x5":ic8'
....

The Daily Sentinel ,

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··,1

by Shain and !'hibbard and two errors.
Nelsonville-York came back with
seven in tl]e fourth inning to take a 109 lead. Southern starter Brice Hill was
knocked out of the box with Justin
Allen coming on in relief. Bateman and
VanDyke had RBI doubles In the mix
as Allen finaUy got the final two 'outs to
end the inning.
Southern came back tq take an 11 - 10
lead when Jasper Bateman came on in
reliefofRuss~ll Fox and 'M att Hall The
.
HiD boys, Brandon and Dally, had backto-hack singles and each ·scored on
respective ground outs b Sh ·
d
B . H -ll
~
am an
nee 1 • .
H bb d
h d
·
d
u ar reac e on an error an
A
d '
1 II
d B
scure on an error t 1at a owe
randon Pierce to reach safely: That gave
SHS .an l2- l 0 lead.
·

PIRH ue'lbmadoel, BS

......... Sui(i..........

�v

t'. . Aif• \heu.tytieldh'WI

Mississippi River flood
peaking 1n Wisconsin
'

"
P'R:AlRIE
DU CHrEN,
W is. J'lP) - The muddy
waters of the Mississippi River
engulfed homes and pushed
sandbas. WallS to the limit afier
c • gshort of predictions 60
ntileS ~ri~m at~ Crosse.
Dorothy and AI R.eed
mOved furniture o ut of their
home in this southwest W isconsin river town Wednesday,
then ·spent ' the night in the
two-stbr)' Structure despite
water that fiUed the basement
and covered a porch . .

said he had asked Federal
Emergency
Managem ent
Agency Director Joe A.llbaugh
to place the agency o n alert
status. FEMA staff were
expected in IO.Va as eady as
Thursday ro assess the situation.
"Their quick response could
make the difference for thousands oflowa families," Harkin

said.
ln downtown Dave nport,
pump generators droned as
do zens 9f.adults and children
scooped sand into ba"!;S and
Natio nal Guard · me mbers
wqrked with hoses .co keep

u ll:'s ·tiot easy .to watc h your
•

.

•

'

•

house go under water,'' .
Dorothy R eed said. "It's aU
yo u 0\vn, you don 't have any
choi.cc. It giws you a sick fed - watt:r out o f the streets. Earthen and sandbag dikes rose ;IS
ing ./n your sto mach."
Her huslmtd planned to st.1y, high as 6 1/2 feet above River
she said, "bur if it gets on our Drive., with water ad,-ancing
regulat ,liloor..s. I'm !.caving. toward the bac k side.
On still- dry .streets. ciw
That's ;;10re ihan I can· take."
The Mississi ppi' crested at workers marked with pink
16.4 I feet Wednesday mo rn~ paint where the water would
ing at .La C rosle, a foot and a reac h 19 feet, 20 feet and
hal'- \lclo.w the record set in beyond.
Apdl :.l9ts: b..fficiais said it Anin1als were evac uated
could (ake weeks for the rive r fiom an area Hurll.ane Society,
to slip back into its panks and and the rising floodwaters
below the Hood suge of 12 ·forced the closing of Rhythm
feet.
·
City, one of the ~rea's four ,
"Our dikes are still holding; ' riverfront casinos.
said Pat Glffrey, public works
The Mississippi had topped
director in La Crosse. "Our 18 feet by early Thursday near
biggesl 'Concern is the weather
Davenport, 3 feet above flood
forecast."
st:lge. It was expected to crest
A chance of showers or
30
miles
upstream · at
storms -&lt; was forecast for the
Comanche on Monday or
region from Thursday night
Tuesday somewhere between
into early next week, though
the rain ' wasn't expected to· be 23 and 24 feet; the river
reached 22.98 feet there in
heavy.
,j

1993.

Scores of homes in Wisconsin, Minnesota . and Iowa are
already surrounded by water
or partly Hooded, ana residents
further
downstream
are
watching the river rise as they
wait for the crest, expected in
Iowa over the next week.
Sen. Tom Harkin, D-lowa,
.,

•

I

Elsewhere, flooded tracks
'blocked Amtrak passenger
between Chicago and Minneapolis and delayed freight
train trallic, and .. stretches of
the Mississippi were expected
to remain closed to barges for
several·mt?re days .

'

Inside:

&amp;seW mund, ~ B2
.

·•

"Tire NAACP will not give
up itJ fight-to rernove from
public propnty any and all
syuibols that c~lebrate tire ·
twist~d philosopiJy of bigotry
aud hatrtd in this c.ountry., ·

JACKSON, Miu. ,(J\P) - Wj th the
possibility o f an economic boycott
looming, Confederate heritage groups
caUed on people to accept M ississippi's
decision to keep its state flag with the
R ebel emblem .
"The voice of the people has been
heard. The people o(_Mississippi do not
want anoth.e r flag. Miuissipp,ians are
proud of their families, this state and its
rich history." William Earl Faggert, a
leader of the state Sons of Confederate
Veterans, said Wednesday.
The NAACP raised the threat of a
boycott Wednesday after voters overwhelmingly rejected a proposal that
would have replaced the Confederate
symbol on the flag with a cluster of 20
stars signifying Mississippi's admission
lS the 20th state.
Euge ne Bryant, president of the Mississippi chapter of the National Associ3tion fo r !he Advancement of 'olorcd
People, said a decisio n on a boycott
could be made by May. The national
organi za tion used the tactic against'

over the flag.
•
'" We would hate a boycott certainly,"
:
Wilson said.
Miuissippi's touri$rn-related busi~test:
es employ 94,000 people a11d pumped
S6.09 billion into the economy in .
2000. Gambling aJ J() st:lte-rtgulate~
casinos accounted for $2.62 billion of

...........

'

Page 81

.

South Carolina, where a Confederate
flag flew for decades atop the St:~te­
house dome until it was moved to the
front of the builrling.
"T-he NAAC P will not give up its
fight to remove fropt public property
any and aJI symbols that celebrate the
twiSle d philosophy of bigotry and
hatred in this country," Kweisi Mfume,
NAACP national president and ' chief
exec utive. said in a statement Wednesday.
Darienne Wilson, Mississippi's director of to urism development, said she
doesn 't know if officials would try to
dissuade the NAACP from boycotting

.\ThuRsoo's

IIY DMI! ,_,. Ill
OW CORRESPONDENT

Bush off to fast start contentious enviromental record

~

.

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•

WASHINGTON (AP) - Just in
another one totnor-· ·~fOnptent
have come in ,re~ction to :
.
time for Earth Day on Sunday, President
ro\v."
spate of rules released in the closing daf!
1
Bush )X)pped out a double dose of gaod
Business, for its part, ~f the Clinton administration. Jmmedi!
news for environmentalists this week.
is not happy with · all ately after his inauguration, Bush SI!S~
But it will take more than ,his moves
of Bush's decisions, pended the rules until he h~d rime to
to enforce new rules on wetlands
but remains plea~ed review them.
,. •
:
preservation and lead contamination to
with
his
overall
Now, he's letting some cake effect anCJ
reassure conservationists, who complain
approach.
. pul!ing others. b~~k.for more study.
they've been steamrolled by a string of
"They're looking at
He has allowed Clinton requiremen~
industry-friendly actions from the Bush
some of these · issues to go forward for -cleaner engjnes an4
administra.tion.
. the way we think !hey fuel for rlie~el trucks '.!ll!i·rbuses, ne\\1
They focus on a recent one-month ought to be looked at, which is one at a protections for- wetlands '~pd bett~
span in which Bush puUed back new time and case by case," said Mike
f ·
·
1
.
reporting o. ·· lead contarnin~lion an'!
arsenic standards for drinking water, Baroody, executive vice president of the
•
abandoned a campaign promise to. National Association of Manufacturers. tougher energy efficiency .standards fo:
reduce carbon dioxide emissions from "It's also suggestive of a focus not just washing machines and water heaters. ~
power plants, suspended new cleanup on the politics of the environment but
At the same time, he's putting th~
requirements for mining companies and ' on the science that ought to underlie brakes on new arseni£ :~nd. rnininji
r(\jeeted a treaty on global warming.
the policy."
"'
.
cleahup st:lndards and scaling,down the
" We started the year really believing
Likewise, Bill Kovacs, a lls. Chamber scope of n'ew .energy. efficie'!-oy;rules fo':
that this was an administrat.ion that was of Commerce vice president, ~aid of air' conditioners and heat pumps.
'• ·
going to look for some balance and try · Bush's rulings: "He needs· to continue
Many in the environmentll move~
·to find unity, and it's been everything pursuing the course that he's on- reg- ment complain that "goOd'· n~" nowac
but that," said Bill Meadows, president ulations based on sound sCience - and days means ·a •day when the sl!atus qut;l
of the Wilderness Society. "The list goes we would be pleased with that."
. survives r:i.ther than taking an~ther hi\
on and on. I'm just !]oping there's not
Many of Bush's moves on the envi~ '' f1:9m Bush. 1·.'
'
'"
1\i)

LANDSCAPE TIMBERS

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BY DAilE HARRIS

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.••

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14-0-446-2002

Tests were .c onoucted at
U.S. competitions and at random during training. The
agency saill it did 1,11 i tests,
on athletes in 3(l. sports. Four
of the tesll op ;u.S. athletes
found traces of prohibited
stimulants and the fifth (ound ·
a .stetoid. Their names and
sports were. not i:lisdbsed.
•. , '

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mlis pa.Joffs
. PHOENIX .(AP) - Penny
Hardaway won join the
'Phoenix Suns for the-playoffi.
After practicing · twice, Hardaway decided his sur!Pcally
repaired left..llnee isn't IStrong
enough.
•
'
'
Haroaway played in only
four games in January before·
he
sidelin~d by extreme
soreness in the knee. He
missed '22 games last seasoh
. with foot injury.

was:

a

~~

~:

•..

U.S.athletll··.&lt;

.

•.. '

-

' .. ,Bailey,in firing her mas' te~pjece, walked four and
IUt' one ,batter to go · along
'".Witlf.lt~ 11~'strike outs.
~liM,. ' CaJiaway~h3d a pair of singles
lead the way, Lodof' • ·
'wick added her triple,
Hensley
double, and
COLOMIJO SPRINGS,
Wiggins and PoweU added
Colo. (.AP) - Five athletes en
singles. .
U.S. national teams and two .
··LIFwellY,n was the losing
' fiom otlier riations tested pos-'
pitcher
fQr the Spari:ans: ;"
itive for banned drugs during
Eaatern will host 'frimble
• the first ·quatter of. 2001, the
oii..'Oiuiiday
: u.s. .t\Jiti-Doping 'Agency , conte5t. in a maJee:.I!P.·
reported.
•· ·• '''.7

COOLED DOWN ...- Cincinnati's Pokey Reese bobbles ' the ball a~ )elfr~y Hammonds
steals second base during the Reds 7-4 loss to the Brewers·Wednesday. (AP)
·

·.

,

.

..

1

a.·

dou,ble d

.,

.

I

.

~

'

. , • . , .~. ·

. J
. ·zlClNCINNATI (AP). The fastball si:ied m, and jos~ Hernandez fouled it off.
:rh~ cut fastball baoked~own and away, and
Hernandez got a.. piece of it, too.
·J:Ilo matter what Pete Harnisch threw, the
Milwaukee JJie wers sho~top' managed to
flick it awa): Every fastbaU, cut1!astball and
slider turned il)to 'a fah souvenir and pro~
lon~ed the at-l;&gt;at.
.
Fmally, on ·the 12th p1tch, Hernandez
guessed right and got the Milwaukee Brew.ers out of their season•long slump on the
rqad, H.is three-run homer ,Wednesday night
set up a 7-4 victory over the Cincinnati
R.eds, tht: Nils ho~e$t teWJ. 1 '
••
·
"I' figured We'd Win at least one before the
season was over with;' manager Davey

'

'

•

1

,

'

•

Lopes said with a vJry grin. "It was just a
matter·of time."
·
1'We ~t-hat ~hat changed the game took a
long time. c
The.:Qrewers 'were ahead 2-1 and had two
rutmers aboard when Hernandez came to
bat in the fotlfth. Harnisch (1-2) went to a
2- 2 count, then threw just about everything
at Hernandez trying to get on e more past
him.
He couldn't. , .
Herpandez fouled off five consecutive
pitches, took baD three, th en fouled off one
more as players oo both teams marveled.
"He just kept ticking it," Reds manager

.............. . s

. hot hltti!Jg .liJts Tomadoes tO ';Vin

" -. • - DY ...... u

.

WOLF!

• ;!)

:h

,

.

I

by D""y ':fill ·with three singles and a \he. third, SHS went up 9- 3 gn singles '

. OVP CORR~SPO~DENT .
.
double. Brandon Hill singled twice,
. R.hCINE-9~mg4-5 on the,mg?t, ,I;Jrandqn Pi~rce &amp;ingle ,and tripled, and
m a red-hot h1ttmg rage, ?ally Hill . Chad Hubbard singled twice, and Matt
emerged as one of the· ga?te s scars and Shain singled.
Adam Van Dyke led Nelsonville-York
also emerged Wlth the wmnmg run as
\the ~outhe~n Tornadoes edged the Nel- (8-5, 5-3) with a double and two sin~n~ille-Yark Buckey~s 1~-12 m ~~~t gles, Steve ' Blair singled twice, and
mmngs Wednesday mght 1.n. 00_Y,S Trl- Jasper Bateman doul;lled. Josh St~der,
Valley ~onference lnterPi_VISI~n~ play, . Chas&lt;;, .EUio~t, ,:}{. Hii~ess, and Matt
With one. out and )'fe)so~~e ace Hill eal:h singled~
··I
Josh Stalder on the mound, Hill smgled
Th ... .
.
30
to right field and weqt to third b&lt;!se
VenDyvtsttkors '!"eglnt up h- fion .a ~voh
.t\
Ohl'
· · h d
run a
e sm e m t e rst mmng,
w en_ aron d ;,;.s~r reac e on ~~~ then Southern took a 4~3 lead when
error at Osehlc~n . It] runnersd oBn t e Pierce knockeq home Hubbard and
corqers,
mger sto e secon . atter
, .
.
.
a t .i Matt Ash With a two-run tnple. Hill
J ustin .Alien went in the hole un•l.
" ' 1"',
• .;.1~ ho
h
h
-h
2 count, then hit one back tO Stalder
llnwo-~
m4 a run, t en t ree str:i.lg t
·
·
'
·
·
aJk
r: · ·d h
h r:
h
·h
Hill sprmted home and Stalder With- w s .orce orne t e lOUrt run Wit
·
Sha'10 tt'
h R.BI
h · ·
out esttatlon madvertendy went .tq
. _ ge mg t e . ·
.
fiJ1t base as Hill crossed the plate with ,, . r1erce and Dallx Hill had R.BI smgles
the winning run, 13-12. ,
m the second and Brandon Hill had an
Southern (9c2, ,7-2) llit.ters were led ,RBI triple to give SHS a 6-3 lead. In
I

RACINE - · Hurling a 194
no-hitter, sophomore
Rachel Chapman held the
NelsonviUe-York Buckeyes ~
(1-7) at bay as the Southern
Tornadoes rolled to a huge
Tri-VaUey
interdivisional
Conference mercy rule win
Wednesday.
Southern (5-8) also had a
good offensive night led by
senior Kati Cummins. who
hammered a two-run home
run fur the winners. Sophomore Brigette Barnes pounded-o.»t th~e hits in a, perfect
3~J.r nigltt, 'Ienior · l'ammy
Fryar went 2-2 in a perfect
night with two walks, Carol}'!! Bentz (3 RBI) had a
double and single, and Deana
Pullins . singled. Emily Hill
continued to lead the team· in
walb
a freshman, walking
twice to push her season total
to eighteen.
' Senior Macyn Ervin walked
twice and Katie Sayre walked
three times and scored three
times as did. Rachel Chapman.
The big story of the night
was Chapmanis best pitching
effort of her career. Chapman
had control of her . pitches
early ..and was in command
with three .. p~rfect innings.
Chapman faced .nine batters
and retired nine batters with
foqr strike6uts in the mix.
Chapman went on to struggle
in the fourth inning with her
conii'Pt' but rebounded to
stti)c:eo\Jt the last barter to end
the inning bet'~re marching
on to the well-pitched no-hit
wtn.
Southern took a 5-0 lead in
the first inning when Cummins, Ervin, Sayre, and Fryar
each walked to plate a run . .
Pullins then slammed a two
ril11 single, and Carolyn Bentz
slammed a two-run double.
Chapman,
Walks
to
Sayre,and Fryar set up an atbat for PuUins who reached
on an error to score two runs.
Bentz then followed with an
R.Bl single, the score 9-0.
Chapman meanwhile was
in a groove, setting the Buckeyes down 1-2-3 each of the
first three innings.
Southern scored four more
in th'e third when Hill walked
and Cummins · slammed a
two- run home run to right
center fi eld. Chapman then
walkt!d, Barnes had an R.Bl
single and Fryar had .an RB{
single, the score 13-0.
Southern then fell upon
rough
times.
Chapman
walked her first batter to start
the inning, then got a ground
out. Whitlatch then hit one
back to Chapman ·and she
muffed it off Iter glove tand
tfien Fox tricklea one down
the line that Chapman also
booted, and was unable to

"as

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$]T.~:::~~:Hs:~s~l~·. ··mwn ~.· fuo
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10, Mlnerat~jdg8(1) 12

'

IIY Scon Wou:E
OVP CORRESPONDENT

Sandy Poi.veU singled. Janet

L .. 2 6

•

,

Buckeyes

OVP CORRESPONDENT

' 21: Str
Coi.CrilWford(4)
reached
on run
an
-s~:Frahl&lt;r (t79
)66-""
,, l' errorto pia~
another
Co
as
nul'
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and
IGSS
LodWick
~leared
•
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1
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the bases WJID a triple to

4 Cil. Ft.

Garage
· Pac~g-- ·
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4,Jerorn8fMIIeHIIIsdale24" • ' ' SanT~h~~Ladep. E gl bl
5,Kansaslakota(1)
24
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6, PortsnlOI.itbWest · . 16 .. : ·,. the .~~ vy1.d e ope.n m th~,
7,Sprlng.Northeastem 15 ~ ~ . fifih ItUitn.g'b.y platmg-four ,
8,Loui!NilleAgulnas 14
runs. :Wit~ two outs,
9,MarionEigili ·
. 11
, ,Chevalier reached on·
.10 AkronSI. V-St.Ma
~othe~ Spartan error, Car'
ry 9 ' '• ne "W1ggms walked and

818ndan1 tot. ......,.. .,.tillable primed aiding
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· . . .I. •' ·
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t

LAmCEPANEL

I

.

.

EAST MEIGS - Juli
Bailey fired a no hitter and
struck out 11 as Eastern
DIVISION II
defeated Alexander 6-0 in
1,KentonAidge(3)
39
TVC
softball
action
2, PomeroyMeigs
23
Wednes~. Eastern, who is
· 3, Con~aut(1)
19
~ed ninth in the latest
4, Tallmadge
16
J?ivision IV coaches poD, is
5, BuckeyeValley
15·
lJOW 10-1 overall and 9-0
6, VermHion
14 .
in the TVC. Alexander
7, Hebronlakewood 10
drops to 6-4 overall and 5~. Dover ·
.9
3 ,i n the :rye.
9, Belle.Benjaminlogan6
Eastern took a 1-0 lead
ByesvilleMeadowbrciok 6
in the bottom of the first
inning. ~Cfispn•. Chev;al,ier
1 ,. . ,, • .
,. ·
~II .. . '""
reached on a Spartan ·error,
' 1,CrestonNorwayne(4)58 '
··~c!jd pn a ground out, '
2,LaGrangeKeystone(1 )41 . stole third and scored on a
3,AkronM,a~er 38 ~ , ,ground out off the bat of

Premium Klta-

·259
.
Each

.

with a two run double.
The Falcons tied the game in the .
HEMLOC K - Meigs broke a bottom of the inning. Cook sinfive game losing streak by defeating gled, Nelson doubled with one out
Miller 16-6 in a TVC • contest and Keller singled in Nelson for a
·.
Wednesday.
2-aU gam~.
M eigs scored a pair ofru~
Meigs made it a 7-'}. game in the
first inning, Nick ])c:itvvilJll
second inning 1zy plating 6ve runs.
Adam Bullington was hit by a
gled, one out.~;;_~~~~· ~
walked. John :.1
'
PIJsss ... Msrasd•,BI
pitch and Darrick Kjl.a pp

Bailey

5, Hilliard0$vidson
36
6, Pickerington
· 23
7, Fairfield
15
8, HlllllV(JOarby
11
VandaltaButler
·11
10, Elyria
10

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Features stainable Texture"''-11 siding. ·
lnc:ludes window.
.
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10'x12' .
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BK81P."""""""""'
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·

BY DAVE IIAIIIIIs

.OVP CORRESPONDENT

1

3, N.CantonHoover(1) 59
4, Celina( 1)
45

Store ~B~lldlngJ~U~, ·W·' .,

CCA PRESSURE TREATED,

Marauder boys beat Miller

''

DIVISION I
1,Youngs.Boardman(5)72
2, Spring.South(1)
66

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third. /

·r olls

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. hitter. On Monday in a 14-2 win over

Nelsoriville- York, Jeffers, Ashley Burbridge, Shannon Price and Jaynee
Davis hurled a one hitter.
Lindsay Bolin cbntinued her torrid
hitting. Bolin coming off a five for five
performance against Nelsonville-York
went three for three Wednesday, all
singles. Stephanie Wigal added a si~gle
and a double, lUyte Davis, Jaynee
Davis and Abby Harris each added a
pair of sirigles,Alicia Werry had a dou. Kati~effcrs, J~ee DaYJs and Car- hie, and Shannon Price, Mindy
tie .t\bbqn combmed to p1tch a one
. hitter. Th'F second straight game the
PIE"S . . . . . . . . . . .

penods.
are

~

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Marauders pitcher have pitched a o ne
•

~OCK - .Meigs ban~ out
16 hits, and combmed tha!: With 21
w.dks ~ the M~udt:r coasted to a
30-;0 ~ over Miller m TVC sofiball
acuon Wednesday.
.
The Marauders, who this week
moved up to second in the state in
Division II despite ~eir 9-5 record,
~o~ three runs m the ~ two
llln11lgll·~d. erupted for 12 runs m the

COLUMBUS Meigs
jumped up to No. 2 in this .
week's !wociated Press Division II state softball ratings
this week.
.
The
Marauders
were
ranked No. 6 in last week's
poll. Meigs accumulated 23
points in this week's voting.
County neighbor Eastern
fell from No.8 to No. 9 in the
Division · IV poll. Th!: Ellgles1,
earned 19 points' in this
week's voting.
This is the second of seven
t;ating
The weekly
poDs
voted on by a 'panel
of statewide spo~riters.

..

.

.

••

Cl-ran

.HIGHLIGHTS

A coaliti()ll of business leaders, acad~
mics and civil rights groups had pushea
for a new flag, saying the Confederate
X hurts Mississippi's image.
...
" We thou~rj~ was the rjgbt thing to
do," said Andy, Bourland, rlirector of till:
Mississippi Gaming Association.
University of Georgia historian Jamct
Cobb - whose l992 book, "The Mosi
Southern Place on Earth," explorea
social divides in the Mississippi Del!l
- said the state's hold on the Rebe
flag could put it at a disadvantage i~
economic development. '
..
"Mississippi will be die last Confect;
erate State - that will be th~ rallyinR
cty for some;' Cobb said.
:
'
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111&amp; dl'f..... 1t. 21181

.

that.

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&amp;tern bays jaU to Alexander; Page B8

•

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3"x5":ic8'
....

The Daily Sentinel ,

;.

··,1

by Shain and !'hibbard and two errors.
Nelsonville-York came back with
seven in tl]e fourth inning to take a 109 lead. Southern starter Brice Hill was
knocked out of the box with Justin
Allen coming on in relief. Bateman and
VanDyke had RBI doubles In the mix
as Allen finaUy got the final two 'outs to
end the inning.
Southern came back tq take an 11 - 10
lead when Jasper Bateman came on in
reliefofRuss~ll Fox and 'M att Hall The
.
HiD boys, Brandon and Dally, had backto-hack singles and each ·scored on
respective ground outs b Sh ·
d
B . H -ll
~
am an
nee 1 • .
H bb d
h d
·
d
u ar reac e on an error an
A
d '
1 II
d B
scure on an error t 1at a owe
randon Pierce to reach safely: That gave
SHS .an l2- l 0 lead.
·

PIRH ue'lbmadoel, BS

......... Sui(i..........

�Page&amp;~

The Daily Sentinel

T

I , ••

18, 200t

Ohio

""! ......
..,

~

[he Daily Sentinel
encourages yaur
support of these· area
buSinesses
who make
.
,this~.page pc;&gt;s~ible~
..

"

BOnds homers in
sixth straight' garlle

AROUND THE DIAMOND

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·

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Winston Cup Series

I

. B~bby Bonilla filled in picely for Mark McGwire, hjtting
a home run and an RBI dou. ble as St. Louis averted • threegame sweep at Busch Sta&lt;;lium.
; McGwire was placed o.n the
15~y di~bled list before the
lf.une because
of·
in
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CaU,lbe,, Oaily,~,Sentinel for detaihl
Dave Harris.or .Debbie Call

992~21 55

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.world' and The New York Times
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. .. .
called us H.·•• some of the best.
. Golf Digest re,cm;\tly.listed .:~· public golf on earth."
Alabama's Robert T.'Jlt Jones Golf
Golf Magazine listed THE
Trail. among the to~· SO golf·· '
SENATOR course at our new Capitql
destinations in the world!
Hill location among its top new
. And in. its ~u.rrent Pl.aces to
courses in the country and THE
Play ratings, Golf.Digest.gave
LEGIS~OR course in the top 25
most of the Trail's '21 courses
newcomerS... Arid wait until you
4 stars.::_and some even got 4p. . · see THE JUDGE!
Not bad when you cronsider that
So, we hope you11 understand
5 stars only·go to those once-inwhen, like all good ·golfers; we ·
a-lifetime c9U:tse~•,,A~d' all of the · lik~ ,to·,
about opr scor~s. . ..,
Tr~~s courses go~}Pg,, ~onors· ~?r.
;.~~lll;t~tCla~r,~to· bo~k:::your golf
SeMce• . . . . . I
antf'tiotel"Pal:ka!Je and get ready
Frequent fJy~r ~4ga,zine listed for
'of
trips in
us among
it'S:to'p,;.lO:'tnps in the· . the wor;ld!'"
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26.1997
'lokoloheo
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sttuc~out ~six .and ~!irfld 13
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COMING UP ON THE CIRCUIT

c
·-•

Padres o

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

.....

�Page&amp;~

The Daily Sentinel

T

I , ••

18, 200t

Ohio

""! ......
..,

~

[he Daily Sentinel
encourages yaur
support of these· area
buSinesses
who make
.
,this~.page pc;&gt;s~ible~
..

"

BOnds homers in
sixth straight' garlle

AROUND THE DIAMOND

•

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•

191!7

•

~

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~

I

·

I

Winston Cup Series

I

. B~bby Bonilla filled in picely for Mark McGwire, hjtting
a home run and an RBI dou. ble as St. Louis averted • threegame sweep at Busch Sta&lt;;lium.
; McGwire was placed o.n the
15~y di~bled list before the
lf.une because
of·
in
. ,._ sorenqss
'
IW surgically re_paired ;right

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Alabama's Robert T.'Jlt Jones Golf
Golf Magazine listed THE
Trail. among the to~· SO golf·· '
SENATOR course at our new Capitql
destinations in the world!
Hill location among its top new
. And in. its ~u.rrent Pl.aces to
courses in the country and THE
Play ratings, Golf.Digest.gave
LEGIS~OR course in the top 25
most of the Trail's '21 courses
newcomerS... Arid wait until you
4 stars.::_and some even got 4p. . · see THE JUDGE!
Not bad when you cronsider that
So, we hope you11 understand
5 stars only·go to those once-inwhen, like all good ·golfers; we ·
a-lifetime c9U:tse~•,,A~d' all of the · lik~ ,to·,
about opr scor~s. . ..,
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601 wwwlahomlblz am

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Glrloll
Elcltingll
Pao&amp;iOna ..ll Toll&lt; To ·om Uvoll
HI00·329 8130 Ell 7338 $3 tt

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Big Kilchon w!Costom OM Calli·
nolO From s-·s Cabinets OR.

1800 Square Foot Home 10
Minutea From Ho~tal, Located
On A Beautiful. Private 1- 112
Aero Lot 3 llodroorn: 2 112 Batloo.
LA wltias Loo FJreplac:e. Front
l'llrch &amp;2· 112 Cor Garogo Quali-

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$135.000 c•n (740)446-451~
trom 11-5, Y.F, Or (740~
Afltr 5pm

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WiH Repair Automobiles, lawn
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lowest Rates In Town Cerhl•ed
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lneruna up to 311e Pay roltl
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845-9380.

COflllrUCIOd, $Ingle Story

Newly

3 BedroOm Horne. HardWood

75 Foot Lot, Gallipolis

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A NEW CAREER, Exam lnlorma·

Genueman Seeking While Fe
male Over 50 Years For WalkS
And Friendship Reply To 553
2nd Avenue Gallipolis Oh1o

45631 . Aparlmonlol03

START

DATING

TONIGHfl

Have fun meellng tbg1.., singles
in your area Call For More lntor·
mat10n 1·800 R'OMANCE ext

1736

Sian dallng lon&lt;ghl! Play tho OOio

tion· Postal Jobs Up to $18 351
hour Beneflls/Pens,on 1·888·
72tJ..9083 x1701
Accepllng AppiiCIIIOnl For
CNA.'s And ln· home Worfl:ers
Througholf,t Mason County
Applications May Be Picked Up
At Mason Co Action Group In
Home Serv1ces 221-112 Matn
Street.
Point
Pleasant

1304}875·3300. MCAG Inc Is
EOE,Mif:NA

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perlence needed 2 week COL

Training S3• 000/yr plus Full
bonoflts &amp; Paid Traonl"tt DriV811
baltd 1n midwest 1·87:7·230--1
6002 Sunaay 91a)-5pm Mon ·Frl

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Medical lnouronce BHimg NOid·
oa lmmodlaiOiyl Homo CompuiOr
Nuded FAEE Internet, 1·800·

291-&lt;1113 DePt 1109

Ov•rbrook C~nter, 333 Page
SlrHt Mlddlopoil, It ,_ IOCOPI·

Oatrng Game Call tol tree 1-800-

OHIO VALLEY PUBUSHING CQ
'recommends that you do business wllh people you know and •

Available
C1nter.

on ~xpoll·

Vocaflon Pay BIHd

Kitchen Bulld1ngs tnctude A
'Large earn And Garap Excel·
-LOcltlonl

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tiJilsl No experfencel Weekly
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adgn, or 1J1Y ~lllt!lloi•IO
mekt IJIY ouch,. .......

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2-4 Bedroom House Fbr Sale tn
Bidwell. Includes 2 Lots

(7ol0)441-o420

1your bathrobe 4 slipper• Low ln-

IWO•

VOitme~t. 1-800·2~2·0193

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2 Bedroom Full Basement. Large
Lot. Park Drive. 116 Liberty.
$48,500 ~ppolnl'l'tn! Only
(7ol0)374-4122

Government ' Joll~ 1111 00·
na 00 per hour potonllol. paid
Tr~jni)I~IF~II BtneJ)Ia. For )IIOro
lntorlhaiiOii coil cal! i liiH·674·
9150txl 3234

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GROWING BUSINESS NEEDS
HELP! Work lrPI!l hO~I """'l·or·
dor/E-c;o'"'""rce $522+!1&lt;1Hk PT
$1000·$40001wk FT o600·921 •

Golf Brown Bo•tr, Black Face,
P.lease Return No auesUons

Asked (7ol0)245-5747

70

Yard

--C!'ft\-lly.

8MB
Help -

Art you warm, Cf,rlng~ and compaallonalt? It 10, you oro ~rlect
lor our team OvertlrOOI&lt; c.n..r It
looking lor STNAI, LPNo and

MISSING From ' Indian

Slle -·

www buaintll·ttar~
iiorll,T....t Agoncy. Receive
Training, BUsiness support Your
own Travel Webslle ' and Travel

caring for ._

Daro1 Group Homo,

Dlooou~to/Por~s Earn big US
No!rjnal SIOrtup ~OJ1I 1·1188-6990901 or www EatnBuckaF~om­

n"''' PaYing

mlnlrilutn wade new lhlfls 1 ?am·
3pm, 7om-5pjl&gt;, •·11pm; 11pm-

RNa to provide quality care lor
our realdenta Come join the
OVerbrook Family For mort ln!or·
marion, please contact Krlstle

Madden at 7ol0 992 8&lt;172 or arop
by 333 Page Strut1o tm out en

apfl!lcatlon E 0 E

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Thur-y 4/18 4 Friday 4120, 35
Grape Stteet. 9 00·5 oo, 4 Family,
Someone To Remove ~ ~~rge

Pomeroy,
Mlddlaport
&amp; VIcinity
Moving

230 Proleaalonal
. ' ' Service•

rand::::l::'m'' corp •··~~
ij~""" lor ctid·•
lcaled lla!btll~it(J .... Northern lndlana •.CIII.Btuca.800·1151 •
11057 or Norlhorn Qhlo·arn call
Bob 600.531·'7125 -.llllllcom ,

$. FREE CASH NOWl trorn
..._hh&lt;( llmllifa unloedlng mii&lt;Ons
ql, t!911irs, to help mihlmlzt lhtlr
14KOS wma ]mmadlately WIND·
FALLS, 3010 WILSH1f16 BLVD
188 LOS ANGELES CALIF'OR·
Nll\90010

Strolllngs
ras ldanea New Hope Rd
Chester Furniture and mote
Yard sate- 463 Grant Street, Middleport, 9am-3pm Friday &amp; Sa!Ur·

URGEim.M' NEEDED· plume
d0no10, nm $45 to f110 lor tor 3
hOUIO weekly Call Slri·TtC 740S92 6651'
t fl
'- 1

sell t4x70 1hree tilidrooma: tw~
baths, HO 9&lt;19-!!0.0!.altor Ji1!111

$$ NEED A LbAN7
1IJi Dobl ConiOIIdltlonl
Cui PtymenlliJp To eo%
Some Day Approvall

www na·
,

gagea For informauon. 1·800·
338-7812:oll 3622

CAREER OPPORTUNITY! Eorn
Alck Pearson Auc;tlon Company,
full lime aucllonet!lr complete
auction
service
L1cenaed
188,0hlo &amp; West V1rglnla 304

a•cellar'ft Income Easy claims
processing Full training \ HomePC required Call Physician &amp;
Htllthcare nevelopments lOll·

Rlvtralde Auction Barn, Sale
Every Saturday Night al 6p m
Auctioneer Raymond Johnson

2~)h

Wanted to Buy

Absolute Top Dollar

~

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Gokf Coins Proofsets, Diamonds,

Gold Rings. U S Currancy,M T S Coin Shop tst Second
Avenue, GeH!JollS 7ol0 448-21142
Er~PLOYMFNf

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Opporrunlly Employer eneourag

IIIAITENTIONIII
International Company Expanding
Work From Home 01' Olflce S500·
$6000/mo fiTIFIT Mall Orderfln
ternet Patd TratninWVacatiOfls

510

2538

SHes For Rent 00 Ka·
nawha Anter, 8 mtleJ from Paint
Pleasant, electric only (304)6751722, (304)875-41 .. Afltr 5pm

Equlvalonl,

81~1Zjhrt,

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310 Home• lor Sale

Class AlB COL Drl\lttrs Good
Pay Stmellts 401 K Vacallon In·
surance Home Evenings Call

CashOnTheTable com

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On Income Lfml!ed Tlmt· Hurryl
(740)446--:138.1

(740),88-1483

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For Sate Reconditioned waahers dryers and rtfrlgeratora
Thompson• Applianca 3407
Jacbon AvtJroe (304}875-7388

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

Washers, dryers. ntft~geratora.
ranges. Skaggs Appliances 78
Vine Street Call 740.448 7398,

1·1188-6111'0128

992·9132

New And Ulld Furnuura Store
Below Holiday Inn, Kanauga We
Sell Grave Monuments And

v-

2 Bedrocm House For Rent In
Bidwell
Includes 2 Lots

(740)4.46-4782

Norge Frost Free Refrigerator,
Soars Stove Both While $75 00
Each 3 Weshera Sao 00 Each. 2

(740)44 Hl420

4 Bedroom 2 Ba!h tlouse For
Rent, (740}245-9128

Dryers $50 00 Each, (740}4469088

Tan And Brown Couch And love
St.at Burgundy Recliner $125
For All ThrH, (7oi0)4CI-Q108

Skeot, phone (7ol0}44&amp;.31145
304 736 7295

Toss Bacll Pitching Or Goll Not,
Usea 3 Times S60 (740)388·
8234, ~!lOr flpm
Uood Window
Unit Air
Condlttonoro. 90 Day Guorontto,
(7ol0}888-'7531 (7o10188&amp;-0047

520

Sporting

GoOds
2 Bedroom $3001 Month 3
Se~room 13251 Month In Vinton.
Available May 1st, (740}3889984
:2 Bedroom Ail Electric Trailer
$300 month No Pa11(740)367061t

neraville, $300/mo each reduced
rent for ~anes,y pereon who can
mow the grass In the park, 614

81,8.1881

3 bedroom mobile home In Mid
dlepor~ no pel&amp; 740 992·51!58. ,

Furnac.a, Oil Furnaces, 12 Seer
Heat Pump &amp; Air Conditioning
Sytteml Frte 8 Vear WJnanty
Bonnetll Healing &amp; Cooling. 1·

-

800·112·51187 -

orvb ccmlben-

Royal Oak Membership with
Coast lq Coast and cnlldrtfn's

Renters wanted call 740 380·

Smotl 2 Bt&lt;lroom Trailer ln Trollol
Park, Atlt(enct I Deposit
RoquirOd (7ol01+411-1104 1

Farma for Rent

AltenUon Stanley Home

STEEL BUILDINGS NOW, Must
Sill 30KoiOKI2 Wll $10,200 now
$8,990 40•60K12 was St 6.400
now $10.911 50x100l18 was
S27 590 now $19,990 8Ql200xt8
woo 158.760 now $&lt;12,990 t .fOO.
4015-51~

992·2218

beaehas, fabulous sunsets! De·
luxe roomafkltcheneltes &amp; baleD·
nifs overlooking the GuW ot MOKI·
co 111and Inn Beach Rtaort,
Treasure Island. FLA 800·241·
8910 www islandlnnreaort com
Near 5I PtiOrlllUfll

810Ck, brick, nwer plpel, wlndQWI, tin••• etc' Claude Winlers,

Rio Granao OH Call 740·245·
5121

580

$1,000 BACK 2 Ton Air Condl·
tlonor 2 Ton Coil, 1 Line Sot. In·
otaltod $2 295, St.OOO Back.
$1295 Not Price Free Eollmotoa
Call For Quotes On Olhtf SiltS
II You ' Don'! c•n Ul, We
Bo!h Loae! Mot&gt;!.. Homto OUr
Speciality 1-7•0·448·6306 1-800.
291-otltl

Months Old SIIIO (7401245-5887

first ohols csll740·742·1103 et
tor5pm

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Or 8ualntll

Air

Purltlctlon SyaiOm NO Colt Or
Obligation, Fttl 3 Day Trial Mtl
Rou (304}675-3379

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Blue heeler pupa, wormed and

Arl

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Peta for

SO DOWN HOMES
No CrOdH 01&lt;1 HUO. VA
FHA Col lor Noftngt
HIOQ-501· tm Ell 11818

Stverll MIIC bloplay Radio 27
Foot~ $1'tlmmlng Pool, 1972
Handfl CB 350 r.totorcyclo, Udllty
Wagon (to Pull ilo~ln~ Lawn
Tractor} '"' lnfor...tton Coli
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{740\4*-T.IIt
ASTHMA ALLIAOV NIEDED,
10.15 PEOPLE Who Dtslre
"""*"IOte Rotlef To Tl)l Evalualt
A NEW Compocl Slolo Of Tho

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PAIC~S AT JACK ·
SON ESTATES, 52 W&amp;s lwood
Drive !rom $297 10 $383 Walk lo
shop &amp; movies C~i 740·448·

Building

Suppllel

Papora,$250(740)448-0495

Mirrored Becka, Worll: Stn~h

MITOB 'Jibil poo.OO

Jack Ruuell Terrier Male, 4

570

Mualcal
lnatrumenta

Acoustic
Acoustic

Guitar
Electric

$12HO,
Guitar

$159 (10 (7ol0)245-11199

•;tJPI'llf',
&amp; LIVESTOCK

FAHf~

610 Farm Equipment
1997 Terramilt T6C, tow hours

very good conditio•. 16500 Call
HUntington (;l04}738-4800
Culti- G11or Harrow 1211 $800,
JD Wheel Disk, t Ott $100, NH
09 Haybme 911 $3500 K11ten
Silage Wagon wl Avco· Nl Gear

$1200 (304}57fi.g0()9
~

Ford 2800 Oltso! Tractor 3000
Dloaol, 4800 DieHl, 11152 18 N
(740)26-22
La ... Ueod lqlllponeniOwlr 40 Farm Tractora, Over 40
lawn Tractors Hay Equipment 2
Auctloneera. 2 RinG• Don'l Be
LATE! 11am Saturday, April 21St
Carmlchltl s ~arm &amp; Lewn
1740}4AW412 1·800-594-1 It I

-Call lor~,

820 w•"ted to Buy

Century Corgo Cover, Fill tfi9
Or 2000 Shorlbed Chevy Color·
Black Gonoloc ~ 000 Wall
(7ol0}446-2350
Gru~bs Plano· Tuning I Ropalra
ProD!omo? Neoa Tuned? Cell The
Piano Dr 740,..8-4528

710 Autoe for Sale "
SO DOWN CARSI POLICE IM·
POUNDS &amp; REPOS! HONDA'S,
CHEVY'S JEEPS LOW AS $291
MO'S 0 19 9% FOR LISTINGS,
CALL 1 800 •5 t ·0050 Oll C·
9612

1980's &amp; 1980'1 45 33 RPM
Records DJ. SIOrt Stock
Collocllona (937)875-29:10 Alter
800pm

•

Good Ulld Hot Tub And Older

Camplng'Tnlller (740}245--5!85

4

tdWt- ......,._ JMrr. Due

was

midony • through

Because a

resrnctive device on
the carburetors robs the cars of
throttle response and added asr
foils create more downforce, 11 is
nearly impossrble to break away
fiont even :1 small pack of can
''It's totally three- and fourwide aU the hme, ~ scnes leader
Dale Jarrett satd ofTalladega. "To
ask 43 guys n&lt;jt to nu~ any tlll£ukn or ~~ 11~1pat1cllltn 500 nules
Is asking a whole lot "
He says , the sm of the pack
m~aru there's less chance chose
behrnd a spm or crash can av01d 11.
Jeff Burton thinks about that, as
did Richard Petty and the other
stan 32 years ago when they
refused to race at Talladega
because they satd the tun were
dangerous Unlike that Sunday m
1969, when NASCAR founder
Bill France repbced the drivers
with a field of unknowns who
avo1ded mayhem, Burton and hiS
brethren wtll be out there
" That's our JOb and we're going
to do tt,': he s:ud " But I have to
admit I have a little more trouble
sleepmg the rught before TaUadega
than I do at other races"
NASC.~R
mandated
the
restrictor plates at 2 1/2-mile
Daytona atld 2 66-ntile Talladega

bst

season

adding a metal lip to the top of the
rear ~er and a strip of meullli a bxicab sign - across the
top of the cars. That put the slmgsbot pass back tnto racmg, a llowmg any car m the field to Jump
mto the btg hole in the au created
by the c~r ahead and be vutualh·
sucked up ro the rear bumpcr
"You JUSt feel ltke the air grabs
you and you fly up through there,·
s:ud Daytona winner M1chael Wa ltrip. "You can ptck up I 0 poslllons
at a wne tf you ptck the nglu
hole."

th;h;:!:~r'-re:~~e~:;~~~" .of
races 111 NASCAR history, as well

as a feeling of trepulatmn that
\VOD't go 3\YaY
Elhott Sadler remembered the
2000 Daytona 500 as a bonng race
nobodyli~d

"E"'verybody fussed about the
level of compeCttion, so NASCAR
fixed tt and really gave us a compenhon level that everybody IS
gomg to ltke," he sa1d
But the tradeoff- partic ularly
after the deaths at other tracks last
season of NASCAR dnvers Adam
Petty, Kenny lrwm and Tony
Roper - ts constd~rable scrutmy
for the racmg cucult

-·many

8.
lldriJ.IOI! - ·
$8500, 740-992..017 '
'

t973 Volkswagon Bug. Runt 730 Vans &amp; 4-WQs
Gooa . Nooas work $1200 · ~~~:-=~~~-:-:c:-''-:':-::":'
(304}1185-37~7
"
.1tH Chtvy HI T9P Von. rod &amp;
1979 Z 28 Camero N - WOO., ~roy outside, II'W ,ljllltlor tnlkll,
Now Tires &amp; Roms ' 1100 ~~=..::::",:.,:!i
(304}875-8888
IHII. 59.000 mllll, 1-llont condition,
$1 I 300. 740-9912-2418
1986 Tran1-Am, 85K 1 Like New
$3895. 19118 Lu..,., 14895 1993
Motorcyclee
CavaiMir $2195 1993 Grarld-Am. 1740
V·6 13895, 1991 Ctvalltr. •· 1999 Horlay DoviiOII 1ZCKI CueDoor. 12095. We TokJ tradtl. tom, 8700 Mlloa, LOll or Chrllml
C DOIC MOTORS, (7•0}.48- Prlca $10.000 {7:10)319-2188
1
su1ca
I71Cf'8qlllf. _..,
Will Make EICCollenl, Derby Cor,
lor Sale
$250 C.U (304}695-3878
t Man Bqal Bau tjunltr With
1988 Subaru G( 4WO Wagon I-~- /7o10}U• Mil
Many Now Parts. 11800. 1917
Fool ••umtnurn Bau -...,, ••
Cavalier Z·24. 11200 OBO 18
~
"'"' (7ol0}388-ot13
HP M&lt;orcury Motor, Trolling Mo·
, tor. Traitor &amp; All Extrol 1.2795.
1989 Dodge Aries, Yory Cltan, f(:..7..:40;:.}3:..7H7011.:....;~--~~"::-':'
Very Good Condition. DePjlnd·
able, Mull Sao To Apprecllttlf 17' Marl&lt; 1Woln With Walk
Evenonga. {7ol0}245--92311
Through ~lndJhleld, It 5 HP,
Mercurv Moror, Aun• Oood,
1980 Lincoln LSC Vtly Good $t000{7ol0!?87;7235

~.:

~~a lt~r'o.:d8lln:

Reds

good"

It was all that the Bre\vers needed tn
Bob Boone sa~d
After a few laiC swmgs early m the break their 0-5 road mark. Milwaukee
at-bat,l;iernanaez managed to get the was the last team m the maJors to wm
one away from home
ttnung of Harmsch's p1tches
,
"That was one of the best at-bats
"He land df got nte hvinging lard at
one or two pttches, then I made some you're gomg to see," Lopes satd "That
adjustmencs," Hernandez satd "I start- was a class1c We don 't see too many
ed fighung off every jmdi he threw battles hire that dunng the course of a
me. Pmally, he left one nght there and season That was a great at-bat"
JameyWnght (2-2) pitched 11110 the
I took a chance"
He guessed correctly that the next seventh . and Curtis Leskamc came on
pttch - the j 2th of rhe at- bat - was m the mnth W)th a 7-2 lead to hold
gomg to be a fauball. Hernandez lut 11 He almost finnbl&lt;d tt away - Aaron
over the 14-foot wall m left-e&lt;nter Boone led off wllh a homer, a nd
and the flood wall for th&lt;' new sladt- Lcskamc lut pmc h-hmer Ken Gn!Tey
um beyond, a dnv1.· cstunat&lt;•d at 418 Jr on the leg w1th an 0-2 pitch to load
the bases
feet .

q!\l';.

2 Man 'oat Btu Tracktr Ban·
tam 31(, e.-r ~.Troll·
1991 Dodge Stealth RT, lWin Tur· lng Motor, Poddlt, Rod &amp; Flth
bo Komatsu Rod 300HP,' 5 IIOic (7~411 9548
Speed, AWD AW5, Loaded,
Super Sharp. S7IOO• 0BO. 760 Auto Plrtl &amp;

'

ACCIMICii1ea

~7ol0}44t-ot38

1992 Plymouth Voyagar, Loidtd,
Excellent Condition. •12800 Fkm
(7o10}245-!848 A!Wt5pm
1993 Buick Skylark Grand Spon,
••cellon! condlllon $3800, 740.
742·2375
1993 Spirit ~uto, A.,, Rod
112 000 MilOs Very Cloon, $2100
ceo (7ol012155-'6877 •
·

Tomadoes

4·285175 Ate GOOdY8ar A/8 on
1998 ~Ram 11100 Aluminum

Stock Whoolo $400 {740)843mt (74111534-25811

fromPapBl

lu-l_ol P•lotd Tronomloolon•
All , Typll Acctn To Ovor
10,QOO Tronamlnlona Tronalot
Cases, 740•245•51177, (:ell 33t3755

710

19114 ChOV)' camord, v.e, 2 Oojlr.
81 K, T·Tops Full Loaded,

Campers&amp;

Motor Mom..
E&lt;eollont Condition, $6,0001
(304}675-2881
•
11118 Chlmplon LllaiiO 1 4 ' -

1998 Dodge Intrepid ES, Con•
dyapplo Rod Loaded, ttal~tr.
Alloy Whoola, Highway Milot,
$8200 080 (7oi0)4Ct-0135

home, cl•il• A~ 111epa 1. ttll•
conlalntd very good co~dltlon,

1997 Codlllac Sedan Deville,
Loadt&lt;l It 4.900 o•y (30~}875·

$13 500
Can
Hunllngron
(3041736-il800
e&lt; Dutchl...n Campor, ' 31 h Whh
Expando Room Air Conditioning,
Mnlr&lt;Q (7ol0)44t-t631

9 f Oldsmobile Cferro 79,000

Sl H•ICt ,

~2! (304}89!j·32~7

Milea. Good Condition, 4 Door,
$3500 OC!Q (740)441..0172

91 Plymouth ~ollant $2000 91
Grand Am $'1 900 Bolh Hovt
High Mllll 82 Gto Metro 5
Spotd $700 Firm (304}197 ·
5927

t2 DODGE
(7ol0}2(5--5877

"It wasn't a very good pttch," Harnisch sud "It was 3-2, and I JUSt kind
of steered It 10 there trymg to throw a
stnke 1 didn't thmk he htt It that

frumPapBl

CondiUon, New Tranamlsslon,

RAil

12200.

Spbllorl Ont OW&lt;*. MttleuiO!Jaty
Mslntolnod E.co!ltnt CondR!On,
Rotlll 16360, Stlt For $8800
(740)245-1-5&amp;48 I

!r01ot lnlpOIJndt &amp; Repool
I·-1-oello Ext. Ctlt 7

TR A 'lSPO RT/1 Tl (J ll

96 Mu1t8ng, 82K1 Plclflc Green.

'Ttoy Bu"l Till.,, 7HP, Runs Good
..75, Cell {7o10)24&amp;-621 I

·~.()hlvy'l, .lHpll

Loavo M&lt;osaago {304}195·3740
Or (304)885-3188

(7oi0}367-Qt84

SUN'SAND'SUAF While sandy

AKC Bos!OII Terrier Puppies,
4 Ftmalea, 2 Males, Shots &amp;.

Antique Stlltrs Cabinet Wllh
Ctromol ColOred Gla11 In E"""l·
lent Condition. Antiquo Stcrotarv
With Curved GlaiO. Antiquo
Round Oak Tobie With Four
Chairs Antiquo Chell 01 Dlaw·
oro 2 Cuotom Buill Oak DIIPI~y
C1101 With GIUI ShtiVU And

1 and 2'bedroom apartments fur·
nlshed lnd\ unlurnlshed, securtiy '
depoe It requited no pets 740·

Prq~

duct• And Fuller 8rJjth AvallaD!o,
To Orllor Producll, Aoqutlt Cot·
alogl Call (304}675-e903

50 Verda Forroll Carpet &amp; Pad,
Slue Recllntr TWo town Mowertl.
Ono _
.... (740)388-8997

• lor Rent

1·800·578~

550

Antlquea

MerchandiH

11423

FREE lnlormallon
I 363 EXT 200-U

530

540 Mlacellaneoua

On Rented Lol In Galllpoilo. 17«1}
448-1409

New double wide 3 or 2 ba
$998 00 down o~ly $295 per (t&lt;Q)..G-1519

Tappan HI Et!lclency 90% Gas

Remington 870 20 Gauge, 18
Gauge, 12 G~uga, 12 Qaugo
Mtg, Savage 223 with scope.
(7ol0)2-522

For Rent1Or Land Contract 2
Bedroom, Natural Gas Heat, AJC,

(740}446-1143

'92 Mutlang GT. 5 - " 5 0 V·

Anytime, (740}446-too• Or
(7ol0}44&amp;.&amp;275

Wattrllno Special 31• 200 PSI
121.95 Ptr I 00, I' 200 PSI
137 00 Por ioo; All Breas Com·
prtllion Flttinge In SIOCII
RON EVANS ENTIRPIIIIEI
Jackson, OOio. 1.eoo-537·9528

120 Pockot WalChli In Good
oondlllon For Solo, P~ono
(740)446-1615 422 21111 ,O.vtnuo,
GtlllpOIIs ,
Buy or iell Riverine Antlquet,
t t24 Eut Main on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740 992·2528 or 740-992·
t 539 Ruu Moore, ~·

2. bedroom mobile home or 600
sq h olllet apaoe AM!rpark Ml

Tobacco Plants For Slle Call

RIIIIDEHilAL HOME DWIIERS

Celt

(304}675-1422
Sawmill $3.895 New ~ Lum515 Mllin SlrotL Point P-Ill
bermall 2000, larger capacities
more option• Manufacturer of
NOW &amp; Uaed F,.nnure
tdgera and akiddera
Now 2 l'*:o-~lvlng&lt;i&gt;om Sultel, I tawmills,
NORWOOD !~OUSTRIEli , 252
S3lt IIW. Soil. 111110
SO!)wll Ortvt, - . NY 142ll8.

RENTAlS

650 Sead &amp; Fertilizer

OTIS Forklllt, Gas Powered
$1200 {7oi0}441H15711

Fumlluro

lilocl

rig1'41. 11000 937·3416-2110

Main Slrtot Furrnture•

Furnished 2 &amp; 3 Room Apart
ments Clean No Pets, No Smok
lng, Refe rences &amp; Det:~oslt Re
qulred
Ullli ltes Furn jahed

Hay
&amp; flt9l1
Woro &amp;TitVolume
- · O•s·
'Round
Delivery

SO DOWN CARSI POLICE IM·
POUNDS &amp; AEPOSI HONDA'S,
CHEVY'S JEEP'S LOW AS $291
MO'S 0 I 9.fl'lt. FOR LISTINGS,
CALL 1·800·11~1·6777 t&gt;l C•
11814

Nice

740-418-77115.

Real estate wanted· 1am forced
out ot rrf'l house tor fllghway im·
provamenl Lookl"g for Cld farm
house In Meigs County with
acreage call 740-797 9303 7-'0·

New 14 It wide S499 dow!:) PiliY ;Fo::r-::re::n71·"'o"'n-o...be-d"'roo
_ m_l"ur_n_
lsh_e_d
199
mon call now 1 800 apartment In Middleport call 740
~2 5231

mon call now 1-800-691 6n7

NEW BRANO NAME COMPUT
ERS· Almoll evoryone approwd
with $0 down! Low monthly pay·
morut 1 8Q0.8t7 3478 oxt.330

pliances French City Maytag,

Real Eatate
Wanted

2568 Eq alt-1 1
u ous ~ portunlty
Christy s Family Living 33t40
New Uma Rd , Rulland Ohio 740·
Lot modtt ciearanoe lfvt up to 742 7403 Apartment, heme and
$8 625 'ft'ltr, anv hOme ch..
tck_....:t rrauer rent•!• Commercial store·
out were dealing Coles
lronts 8\lailebl., for lease VacanHomes, US 50 £aat Athens.
cles now

800-1191 ·6777

NEW AND UIEO &amp;TEEt Steel
· Channel,
Pipe - Flat
fOrSar,
ConcteiO,
Angle,
Steel
Grittng For Oralno, Ortvowayo &amp;
Walkways L&amp;L Scrap Molals
(7«1)446-7300

gratora. Up To 90 Oayo Guar·
anteodl we S.M NOW Moytag Ap-

(7ol0)«6-~70

New 16 fl wid&amp; $499 per mon
only $270 per mon call now 1

Ao--

RENT....S

Appliances
Recondftloned
Washers, Dryers. Ranges, Refri-

Ga!Hpoila(7ol0~3093

mtnt Benk Finance Only At Qak
wood In Barboursville WV 304
736-3409

No Pats

_..,.,.,_idltr,mmgotl'lllllll.....,
1.81JD.3054272 Ext 16
ARCADIAN
VACATION

Goodt

Camp

29x80 3
$345 oo Per, Jltonlh,99'1t. Flud
1n10rostRMt ,...., ~

7f43- 8:00pm

Tobacco Planls- OrGer Now To
- I E " ( ( y Sorlnll ~
lriCfUH AIIOimontl - · Exlnl
Tennl1 Courts, Color TellwltkJn . PIOniO Thank 'lt&gt;U For Yow - ·
~ ness Call Oflnny O.whurstTollphono

Back Of New Hawn On Un1on

430

'l!i:t

Ion~
~ tracks, Talbdega
md ~ lntematioo.al SpeedW2y,'' have nude racc:i at chose
venues "nsc,spccacubr and- in
the cue of the Daytona 500 tragi(..
"lc's not necessarily something I
look fonV3rd to," sard Jeff Gordon,
who \\'IJ'n ~e Talladega race last
spring under the old rules. ''It's a
very, very stnmpous rxe."
Jusc how s~nuous?
"Last lime I \v.rs here:, nry q~­
balls hurt," Gordon urd. "When
the race was over, my head hurt
JUSt because I was havrng to use
my concentraCton levd so much.
It's JUSt amaztng what goc;s on here
\VIth 43 can and the \vaf wr're
stac~d up."
He is amortg nuny dr~Wn who
don't like the rulc:i changn that
have bu.nched the can even closer
than they were before last fall. But
he nukes hii car as safe as poss1blr
and goe5 racing
"We have to race With the rules
that we have," he said
That's a fnghtenmg prospect,
because spectacubr, multiple-car
accidencs are commonplace at
Daytona and Talbdega. Three
months ago, a 19-,car crash in Daytona produced no serious injuries.

Vacation Renlall Ocean Front or

r.1EHCHANDISE

fc' il.flro:; ;JOflly 440 .''Apat'fm~"

Absolutery Muat Sill· Brand New
3 BRI 2 Bam Ooubtowlae Willi

LAIN

Roqulrod (740}406-.. 25 Or
(7ol0}446-3936

':?!"I

Llmllad Or No Crtdlt7 Govaln·

WV 25550 Or Fa&gt; (3041523 ·

Call I 800 228.0317

01

'

Final Days Na!lonwlde Inventory
Reducllonl(304)738--3409
No FooliStrvlct Cht'll"a
In Need ot l(nanclal Aulalanco?
Pie~•• can us ton Frto 1·888

lpg workplace dMirslly

Must Be 18 Years Old EJ!p&amp;rl·
ence With Preschoo ~ Chlldr•n
Preferred Send Re,um~ To
Children s Village Mhon Co
Vo Tech At2 4 8 Point Pleasant

Hllp Wanted

1996 t~xio Mobllo Homo Vinyl
Siding, Shingled lloot Canlr~~l A~
Cathedral Clolllng Through Olft
Throe Bedroom, 2 Full Balha
Mull Movll, Call Allor 5pm
(7ol0)448-8308.
.. ·~r: ' ~

In

high schools students 3P·1 IP
Jnttrestltl candldattl lhOuJd .apply 1o Rocksprings Rthtb eenttr. 1: ~r!~
36759 Roekopringo Road, Pof!llr• I i
oy Oh io 45789 conltots ore
Sandy Bowen or Judy Hart Equal

D jp)om~

1982 14•70 fl~fi'Ont TO¥f~h0Ult
2 bedroom, t ••me ba!h with heat
pump &amp; ale, f7;SOO 740·591 ·
4043 or 740-!19:1 0$18
"

For

Kay Otpotjt

Country Living~ Doublewide On '
Wooded Acres $2500 &amp; Move-

SHklng candidates who are carIng, compaulonate and want to 1 , ~·.~~~;'
be a mtmber of a great team , .
Clau will be evening houri for

Tlmo HS

740·420·1823. 740·1149·2123 tor
morolnlormtfton ebOUC It

Delivery, Soi·UP AIC &amp; Sklrllng
From $2871 Monlll Only 0 Oak·

Ing Claae Is schtdultd tor May 7·
tor 100 bod oklllod !tclllly

Chlidcare Center located In
Point Pleasant W'J Teacher At
slttants-1 Fun Time &amp; 3-4 Part

Sf-f1V)rf',

'

1977 Cameron Skyline, 12x5Q 2
bedroom good cond1tlon, Racine
on Willow Lane. $3,000 ~ call 1.,-

wood

Certified Nursing Assistant Train-

10

CRI!DIT PROBLEMS? ~LL Tht£
CREDIT EXPERTS LICENSED/
BONDED CORRECTIIIEMOVE
BAD CREDIT BANKRUPTCY
tAWSU1T,S . J)JD=TS AAA
RATING 1-888.&amp; L1
f ~ '•

kH 1 1100-772 5033 Oil 2070

n:J-5785 Or 304·773-5447

(70Q)2~989

I 888 9211-3428
(740)446-0822

d$~ LOANS l2000·S5000 ,
eonootldatlon 10 $200,000 Bad/
Nli t::rodit" Crtdlt CaJUJ Morl·

- Sualnea•-;
Tr~lnlng

Underpinning

gas Heat, Remodeled. $3700

11111 Settlemtntat lmm•dlatt
Quotoaltt 'Nobody boola our priC
•• • National Contract Buyers

•80·0731 oxt 101
lionlle&lt;lntllcti)Uytn ccm

16 WldO I Only $195 DO Per
Monlh ~ 99% Fl•aa 1n1eres1, A4to
I 972 Winchester 1?•50, lljptural

1·877·769·8188
ISS NEED CASH?? WE j&gt;SY
Clfh fpr rtmalnlng paymenta on
PIOfltrly Soldl Morlgagosl Annul

(800}

14)170 SoUthern Drum, tree10.
livery lrao,S•tuP only $9995 t.
688 928-3428 - •

And

2nd Row 1·• Condos
and Conogts Pools, Whirlpools.

Otstnct Ideal For ProftlliOI'\81

Gampground Road (304)882·

Pilot Program, Renters Nuded,

Floors H/2 Bath Boau!llul
Flroploco, 2 'car Gerage, 173.000

Air

Thliler lot for rent In Uiddleport,
$125-700-llll2311l4

T-rOd (304}897-!illil7

Remolded 3 Bedroom, Wood

With

MYATlE BaCH. SC

..

NASCAR otdeml lut fall for tCS the danger ofT~~ga

(304}875-572•

Couple All Modern - t i e l 3
Bedrooms. Spaclout LIVing. 1-112
Baths, Aoor Dock HVAC $6001
mo Pluo Utilities Sacurlly And

Mason County, Natural Spring
C&lt;ly W-. A Creek At The Bot
tom, Aslttng $50,000 Already

Four Rp_orn Houae, 52 Ollvt

Aerodyn:uruc

counl Avadabte Heritage Farm

2nd Floor Apar-nt In HistoriC

80 Acres Developed Land In

Neighborhood, Large Yord GOOd
Condlllon. Won't Last tall 800
Make Otter (304}675·1618

99 mobile home for salt, must

Trash Pile ')'rlh ' Nogbtlablo
(7ol0)446-&amp;588

"'PI'

sa~IUrday,

Handyman Sptctal In Eaccellenl

Home'"""'
J(740}388-9t5t
1! (.' ,
Sl~rl Your Buslnoae Today
erlme,Shopplng Cantor Sp~~· Two car1 garage/apartment In
Ava~oblo At Allordlblo Aale
Middleport, two bedrooms. full
Spring Vallav Plaza, CaN 740·«&amp;- balh, LA. ki\Ch~n ,wit~ oloctrlq
0101
range, central air. 740-985·3650
,•
WORK , FROM HOME I Earn or 7ol0 1192 2795
$500·S7 000/month PTIFT Full
Training Free Information Call 320 Mobile H011111
Nowll-800-290-891~
for Sale ' ,
www anai\t.n:dreama.oom

7am. cal 740-9112·5023

Linens, Clothes &amp; Mise

FOAECLOSED GOV T HOMES!
SO OR LOW ' DOWN! TAX
REPO'S &amp; BANKRUPTCIES! OK
CREDIT! FOR LISTING! CALL 1·
800·501·1777 ... 11813

Annutl Btntloy P1g

Hoy ~r Sate, 45 Round lloiea,
And 250 Square 8alo1 Call
{740}..8-Q115 or (7~0}..8-

{7~

a-.lfui,18110Sq Feet -

I •

•

Uaytag Dryer $100. Ken1110re
F r - $225, AICC 8oaton TMri• ~ Rudy May IlL $250

460 Space for Rent

490

350 Lota &amp; Acreage

360

EARN $500·$900 por week In

.--~pool.-­
$300; 7 - 1412.

nace1 I Heat Pumps 8ennena

lootung To Buy A New Home?
Don'l Have Land? We Doll! Hurry
0 Only I 0 Lola loft 304-738·7295

30 Announcement•

9 oo-e oo

---·-··50;

21t~

Sale. f&lt;IClly, Ap&lt;ft 20ih 7 30pm
Fayette
Co
Fairground5.
Walhlngton Courthoulo. ~
200 Hod Of Barrowl I GIHI.
Con•tgnerl Roger Benller.
{937}514-2311. Ltror Yrridl •
Fidyfl37)710 ·=r

MObile Home Supply, 740 .. 6.
9418---

9 Acres. Small Pond, 3-112 Moles

wll not

_ lk"""""""'
o r .accopl
,.._

A VENDING GOLDMINE·ACT

New To You Thrift Shoppe
9 West Stlnioon. Athens
740-592 I 842
Quality clolhmg and household
itema 11 00 bag sale every
Thursday Monday thru Saturday

tor I -00111 Hud

The

Huge lnwnlory, Oiscount Prical.' Tobacco Plugl For Sale. TM90 &amp;
NC3, Locally Grown. (740)245ows. Anchors. Water Heaters.. 5193
Plumbing &amp; Etoc:trical Partl, Fur·

$215,000 i7ol0)446-

4230

1:130

cr.-

•

afteupeeds went beyond 210 mph
and
Bobby Allison i car became
~the~stM,
kiUCd when ~·embed mto airborne and neuly ent~red the
che wall on che fim1 lap while ~dstmd herem 1987. But the
runmng at the fiont of a hgbt racing became less excmng
because there was ' ltttle passmg,
pack.
Mmy drtven a~teJdy were particubrly in recent years at Dayune»y about the rumung at the tona.
To remedy that, NASCAR
two tncb. Earnhardt's death has
changn made them even more aW2re of nude two ae~ynanu' c h anges

Ab. (AI)
RxiOg ar Deady 200 mpli surrounded by roos olbtaYy meal is
~ toUgb way ' to m.tlc.: a living.
Domg it at che Talbdep Superspeedway is e¥e11 riskier.
On SUDday. 43 W&amp;nltoll Cup
driven will be takinB that .risk in
the T3lladcp 500.

on Vinyl Skttl&lt;ng. Doors. Wind·

Farm House, 8eaupfulty AemoSquare Feet, 17 Act·
es, Pond ln1J&lt;OUIIII Pool. Several
Barno Garage,' F&lt;uH Trees Cion

To -

10811\etiiM•anypt........
111 lta:U liNl or dlla'lmllllllort
baled an ,.., cokJr. ralglan,

ycho&lt;kal Everyth•ng
auppiiOdl
1

Call

No ollllgoliono.

{7«1}441-1112

Polio, Start S3115/Mo No Per...
Laa11 Plus Sacunly llll!oail Requlrod, Oayo 7~0 ..8·3411.
Evtllmgs 740 387·0502 740·
448-0101

FARM FOR SALEII Wt Hovt
~ovod And Are Soiling Our
Farm 3 -.om Home Hal High
Ceilonga. Dak Tnm, And A Largo

tho-flirl-.gAd

Dl1968--lilogll

ca"!fY ,AND phone cards (2 5el
m1n u s }Earn $800+/wkly Wort&lt;
e 9 hialwk Great locations! 800.
f859-1n5·1nv req Fin avail

cal. Oentat I Vlaton Insurance.

8296

~---.gin
tills-~~ Uljec:IIO

___,_

t ,OOO:~EEI\tl'! 'Wolle 11 hOme
rp!;tUing IUIOtljoJivt PI'"•

NOW! Machines vend Hershey

E•porlonced Truck . M&lt;ochanl~
Ntfdt&lt;l, oiOIK Rotiroment, Modi·

lndopondtnl- ~.
Call For Producf Or O!Jpor1unily.

CoUJIH55-11180

Tara Townhouu ApariNfttl.
Vtry Spoclo,.., 2 Bedrooms. 2
Floots, CA, I 1/2 8111. Fully Cor·
~ted , Adult Poot &amp; !lolly Pool.

Farm With COWl
And Some Machinoty {740}256-

223 Aero Oaory

- · 2963

NOT to send money through 1t1o

_IYIIOml_,

$3 99 Per Minute Must Be 18
Years S.V·u {819)645 8434

Opportunity

Own a PC? Put &lt;I to World For a
free call 800-429 5853 or

EARN WHILE YOU LEARN!

Now Taking Applications- 35
We11 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments, Includes Water

~lOIII

330 FIII'II'IS for Sale

(7oi0)31MHl259

BualneSI

-800-!551 3f75

HORIEII:!OEINO,
c.rtil~
Ftrritr, F&lt;Od au- (740)256-

Sublldt&lt;l Apartment lof Eidtr1Y
IIIII O&lt;lablod, EOH, (304}112·
3121 Or (304}6112·321~

Cll740-3115-4317

men1

•

1500-$4500 PTIFT ,.._ lniormil
tlon (414) 290.81100 www holM·

TALK TO GlALS UVEI
JUST CALL
1 1100-32HI30 Ell 7113

210

..... P- ...

tn Qption 1 plu&amp; Pasture. Poni:l.

lng applatlona. tor Ma upcoming
nur~lng 1111;1ant etatl1 The
duo wll,botllll on APril ~. 2001
II 8 A.M , &lt;'RP~Cftlons . f'lll bo llk·
on untiili\ul-sdiy, Ap/11 19, 2001
II 3 ~M I! r;GU ha'IOIII)V ,,.. •.
tlono p!Nae . - K- Mod·
donat74()-9112-Ml'2 EOE

Work from Home. FuU Training.

romance ext 1621

~

Drlwro

....~
-7~165

a hoOliiiiPiY
or
co10t10my or bland name products With one

-Bond Plac.- Accoplirlg

1111nt1 11 low as S1SO 32 per
111anth and only $750 DO dOwn

And A Tolal Of 120 Aerts Prlcecl
AI $189,900 ShOwn By Appoint·

I·IIIJD.~930

FREE SEARCH!
www SINGlES com

~" oltert

With 18 Acres For $129 .800.
Opllon 1: lncludol Everything

FINANCiAL

OSTOMY PAOOUCTSI

)'.f.UOoomA,

Fok

GollaW.oltt
112 - Old.
·.EIC~
1·12
1125
{74111256-1724

..~~ ~I:Houoo,&amp;m ~~

•~·--· · ~~·-- Witt Sol On lJind

700-llll2-931•

No•--Traon&lt;ng provicltd

Sorv·U (618}645-8434

l

DRIVERS • C~nnon Express
Owner Opll.e... Program Your
truck or .... ..13C+Iml.. COft1PIIll'
a...... lllrllng up to :Mclml WI

_,. cannonexpress com ~ -IQO..

$500-S1500porrno PIT
S2000-18000pormo . FIT

StOCk Model CINro..,... 811 iOOO
- - I t o NowllornOPIY·

{7401446-0151 or 339 0950 If
NoAniWor ...... ...._

E•~rlencl

FA~E

=-Trash. S350- 740-

At

Prot.ll}onall• _ Buckel Truck
$er¥tel · Top- Trim· Removal·
Sl"!"l' Grfndong ffM EotimaiH,
fiulfr Insured WorktfC"'C onrp

And RY's

HUDIFHA Mortgage Rotunda. No

... 1300

Mike

Wil Powerwaah Housn. Trailers.

Proc111ing

Rlquirod. fOr FREE
lnlormallon Call 1·80CJ.501·&amp;832

RopairW11h1n
-~
lloli\&lt;•rr
1d
Milas """
21 Year&amp;

Call

· Onltr . . . . IIWII.Ez.
...- ...,,..,.....1427

New Haven one bedroom lurnlshed apartment h•1 •nher

Lawn Mower And Small Engine

Eapenenca

ceptor, , . , . _, - I l l FREE

- ................. . .

Now 2001 F-wood. 3 b&lt; • 2
boll&gt;. HI up In The ~ Mot&gt;lo I:!Omo Pirie, *&lt;II' 10 in.
$995
- · $199911* - ·
7-·2117

~ MlllrinQ Servic:e. f&lt;H
-.Col(7~

--

Make Monoy ...... """""

WEEK~YI

-~

haul ,... togo 10 . -. . . . .· .. call
Goorgoo-

:IIM-675-1957

&lt;1«11446-1104
Nounra Tree Servu:e ·rhe Tree

"""""" 110m hOmO Part•liinollultlme 1 188-US-3712 Erl A11

$987 85

- - I I Y.... - o n d
Inport FrOM $278-$1141 Call 740992 5064 Equalltouling Oppor.

I

)

•

tJ-.

1

720 Trucka fof Salil , •
2000 Ford E&gt;qlloror, 12.000 Milts,
E•collenl Condlllon, (304}875·

1

810

HolM

lmptOVemen~
IAIIMINT

WATI.i!OOI'IIICI
Ui!COIIIIIIIonal il!tthM guarantto
Local ttftrencea turnrshld Et·

141liiah0d t97&amp; Cd 24 Hil, (740}
448·0870, I·S00•21NII71 Rog•

.,.w...,...!lng

::::;;_-Dotllon..,..-BI-Jildorl,...,.---

1960 Econollno, •1 ;ron Exttndt&lt;l
Cargo Von V; l, Auto. A
Now Whoola AM TlroJ 14,000
nilos, On 'Soard Power ~

E&amp;S lll'n Service' Dtlign, lm·
piomoniOIIon Alld S.vleo. Avoll•
oDie For Spring Clean Up Ferttlit·
lng And PlonUng. FrH Eatlmottl

Small Relrlgtrator. E11Ctltenl For

Satlafaotlon GtJ1r1nltld Greg

Contrabtoro Asking $3500
(304}675-1802

Mllho.ln (ao.}l75·4628

C~ll

~::-=:'-:-~===r.::::::oco • l Llvlng 0ton 1 Buomont Wttor
t994 OOdgt Grencs Caravan E$ Proofing 1n bue"'ert repalra

While, Loaded, Ould Sooting, 7 f dont trot' 'ti11matu lllollmt
Pouengor, Lo~a Then 7~ 000 g~arantlt nyta pn lob ••Ptrl·
Milts on Engine And 1Tranomla· onea (304)81lf1·3817 '
11on Towing Packago Sharp.
$8400080(7oi0)4Ct..0135
I
rm c~ ~. ve~,llOA&lt;I!
flri!t, 1
?.a !19:1·387$

cp~dlllon . loa9id ;. $75~Q

NC:

1995 Ford ftongtr, ~LT ••~
CD Plapr. Standtra Shl~. ••col·
lent Condition, 79,000 MIOI, Prlcl
Nlgo- (304}675 7874 ,

Southem
•

C&amp;C Gentrot HOinl Main·
lononct· ~lfrHfngl vinyl lldlng,
carplftrry. doOII, " lldOWI. blthl,
mobile home ttptlr 1n1&gt;re For
rrat 1111n1110 call Chtt, 740·992·
8323

4066
!
I Yout"oompiOto ho'f1l rtmodo!lng,
ao Cho•y PIU Runs &amp; 00rlvet : roplll &amp; '1)11..,nl!$ contractor
Good $1&amp;00 (7ol01742-4001
Polnllng, .,vln~l oiding, deoka.
- - ·' I blthl klfr:liOM! oltelrlcal Ill....,.
92 Ford F · t~b Exttndl~ Cl~, ' lng7;i!ll~ O!lll"f Ar\'ICit 10 lUll
1~ .ooo Mn,, , Good condlllqn. l yqur ~·· No Jgp 19 bla or-•,
$7800 (740)388-j18~ Evtnlnga , j 30 yoart txperlt~ce., ' ' " tall·
maiJI 7~0·888-87•3. 740·581·
730 Van11 &amp; ~WDi •' : 1314 ' .':' n •
Longl~

\

Pox scored on a Blm smgle 111 the
fifth, then N•Y ued the game tn the
stxtll when Chase Elhott was htt by a
pttch, balked to second, and VanDyke
smgled to t1e the game, 12-12.
Nelsonvtlle-York threatened m the
seventh when Stalder smgled but was
doubled off first base when Bateman
h1t a smkmg hne drrve to nght field.
Brandon Htllmade a dJVmg catch and
fired to first for the double play.
Southern went down 111 the seventh
when the Buckeye ace came on The
Bucks threatened m the top of the
etghth wtth a smgle, but Ash m rehef
of Pierce reured the ude.

That set the ~tage for the H11l-AUen
herotcs to wui the game
Matt Ash got the wm- m rehcf He
fanned two, h11 one, .md gave up two
htts 111 two mmngs of work Stalder
suffered the loss m rehef He fanned
four, h11 one, and gave up the lone htt
to Htll.
"Thts was a great wm for us agatnst
a good team," satd Coach Scott Wtc khne "Nelsonville has been playmg
good basebaU We JUSt about gave
them a htde more: than we could handle, but agam we found a way ro pull
off the wm"
"Matt Ash came through w1th a
couple good mmngs for us And our
offense continued to put some runs
on the board n
Southern hosts Federal Hoc kmg
Thursday

840, Electrical and

Rifrlgeratlon

Rtlleltntlal or commercial wtrtng

new Hrvlcl or repairs Maatar Ll-

otn~od oloctrlclon Rlde~our
Elootrlcal WV000301 304·t7i1718

fronaPapB1
ptck up
Three more: walks, and a h11 batter
brought home the four runs, then
Chaptuan fanned the last batter to get
out of the Jam

Emtly Hill stole home for Southernis lone run 111 the fourth, then
Southern plated four more runs wtth
the benefit of only one htt on stx
walks and a Fryar smgle to mercy the
Buckeyes before the fifth mmng was
complete
Southern hosts Federal Hockmg
Monday 111 a Tn-Valley Confencc
make-up

110 Help Wanted

e

Pleasant Valley Hosf: ital ,
PJ,asant Valley Hospital currently has an opening
for a Respiratory Therapist for our DME omce In

!pt. Ple*sanl, WV.

Excellent pay and benellla.
Send resume to·
Pleooonl Volley Hoapllel, c/o Hum1n R11oreee
2520 V.llty Drive, PC Pleapnt, WV 288110
Or FAX I~ (3~ I 075-e975
·
ANJ:OE

.

a.

·

�,... ••. ,..a z, ........

..
811111- . - . . . - AclltpOing - - - Far 1 . .
HUO.._~I'Or
_ . , ...... .._..,.., Eqtlll

: : " ' ~ (740)446-

~anger

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

Pigo F"" Site Co I r
Harald
Taylor, E-itlga

-

{7~

-·

EZPEJIIX.COM 8jloe up,ID-

....

-1Mng1aod2-

- ..Ide...,.,_

e..,.rlenee&lt;t Crew lof
Sonlng - Flnlalli"tt Set:tioul
HouUig.Pricing
and
ea.pertance
to. Southern
Homea, PO Bor 629 Joclloon.
OH.ot51t0 .. I

~.IIG

WIEICLYI llaiU"' 400
.brochurul S.tisfact1on Gu~r·

· .......
&amp;~pr...
vldt&lt;l!
Rush So!I·Adclroaat&lt;l
~ Enwtopot GICO, DEPT
5, 80l 1431. ANTIOCH &lt;TN.

Not&lt;lt&lt;l RN'I And C!!IA't FOr
Home Hollllh Agoncy To Oo
-VISit$ Co-IHM Wages

""" 411 -13113

3101,.. 43t S1ofllnvnoclilloll&lt;

.-II. !JO&lt;IIing wfth 1t1o gO¥-

• ~'

c.. 1·-

(2•tvs.}

--$925 WEEI&lt;l.Yft

Frto o.-o (2• ...,

I~En5700

'
ANNOUNCEr.1E fHS

I

005

I

'"ACCESS TO A COMPUTER?
Put h to world S251hr·S7511v FTI
PT FREE "'lo. 800-871 -B!M5 oat
601 wwwlahomlblz am

Per1onala

BtauUiul
Glrloll
Elcltingll
Pao&amp;iOna ..ll Toll&lt; To ·om Uvoll
HI00·329 8130 Ell 7338 $3 tt

••"WQAK FROM HOME•••

Per M•nutt Mult Bt 11 Ytlfl

- · Ohio Col &amp; 1-800- - (7401-..- owner

Big Kilchon w!Costom OM Calli·
nolO From s-·s Cabinets OR.

1800 Square Foot Home 10
Minutea From Ho~tal, Located
On A Beautiful. Private 1- 112
Aero Lot 3 llodroorn: 2 112 Batloo.
LA wltias Loo FJreplac:e. Front
l'llrch &amp;2· 112 Cor Garogo Quali-

ty Conotrucllon· All TM Wly
$135.000 c•n (740)446-451~
trom 11-5, Y.F, Or (740~
Afltr 5pm

Contacl !:tan At

WiH Repair Automobiles, lawn
Mowers. and farm Tractors.
lowest Rates In Town Cerhl•ed
cau ~ ..o,....r-ol99

lneruna up to 311e Pay roltl
every 8 moa

gram

Bonus·R•d~r

i-!j&gt;m-

pro-

Paid VIe lni avoll

\"'MI work tor $4 an hOU( outside
pa&lt;nt&gt;og &amp; mow grass &amp; - a t ,

845-9380.

COflllrUCIOd, $Ingle Story

Newly

3 BedroOm Horne. HardWood

75 Foot Lot, Gallipolis

1c:::~~:;::~

A NEW CAREER, Exam lnlorma·

Genueman Seeking While Fe
male Over 50 Years For WalkS
And Friendship Reply To 553
2nd Avenue Gallipolis Oh1o

45631 . Aparlmonlol03

START

DATING

TONIGHfl

Have fun meellng tbg1.., singles
in your area Call For More lntor·
mat10n 1·800 R'OMANCE ext

1736

Sian dallng lon&lt;ghl! Play tho OOio

tion· Postal Jobs Up to $18 351
hour Beneflls/Pens,on 1·888·
72tJ..9083 x1701
Accepllng AppiiCIIIOnl For
CNA.'s And ln· home Worfl:ers
Througholf,t Mason County
Applications May Be Picked Up
At Mason Co Action Group In
Home Serv1ces 221-112 Matn
Street.
Point
Pleasant

1304}875·3300. MCAG Inc Is
EOE,Mif:NA

~A

M Transport No ox

perlence needed 2 week COL

Training S3• 000/yr plus Full
bonoflts &amp; Paid Traonl"tt DriV811
baltd 1n midwest 1·87:7·230--1
6002 Sunaay 91a)-5pm Mon ·Frl

8arft..5ptn

1

I

, ,•

EARN $25,009 'fo $50:000/yr .
Medical lnouronce BHimg NOid·
oa lmmodlaiOiyl Homo CompuiOr
Nuded FAEE Internet, 1·800·

291-&lt;1113 DePt 1109

Ov•rbrook C~nter, 333 Page
SlrHt Mlddlopoil, It ,_ IOCOPI·

Oatrng Game Call tol tree 1-800-

OHIO VALLEY PUBUSHING CQ
'recommends that you do business wllh people you know and •

Available
C1nter.

on ~xpoll·

Vocaflon Pay BIHd

Kitchen Bulld1ngs tnctude A
'Large earn And Garap Excel·
-LOcltlonl

Only

tiJilsl No experfencel Weekly
I

!NOTICE!

adgn, or 1J1Y ~lllt!lloi•IO
mekt IJIY ouch,. .......

lm-.or-·

mall until you have mvestigaled
'thoollorlng

1'hll 110

....

-lolnvlolatlooofltlo
law Our.- nllnby
itb11JQCI that al dwue• vs
~In lhll nBWiptpef

a r e - 011 on equal
_...wry-

..... Col {740}:2118-1413 •

2-4 Bedroom House Fbr Sale tn
Bidwell. Includes 2 Lots

(7ol0)441-o420

1your bathrobe 4 slipper• Low ln-

IWO•

VOitme~t. 1-800·2~2·0193

~-

'

Evenings

2 Bedroom Full Basement. Large
Lot. Park Drive. 116 Liberty.
$48,500 ~ppolnl'l'tn! Only
(7ol0)374-4122

Government ' Joll~ 1111 00·
na 00 per hour potonllol. paid
Tr~jni)I~IF~II BtneJ)Ia. For )IIOro
lntorlhaiiOii coil cal! i liiH·674·
9150txl 3234

t l' I

GROWING BUSINESS NEEDS
HELP! Work lrPI!l hO~I """'l·or·
dor/E-c;o'"'""rce $522+!1&lt;1Hk PT
$1000·$40001wk FT o600·921 •

Golf Brown Bo•tr, Black Face,
P.lease Return No auesUons

Asked (7ol0)245-5747

70

Yard

--C!'ft\-lly.

8MB
Help -

Art you warm, Cf,rlng~ and compaallonalt? It 10, you oro ~rlect
lor our team OvertlrOOI&lt; c.n..r It
looking lor STNAI, LPNo and

MISSING From ' Indian

Slle -·

www buaintll·ttar~
iiorll,T....t Agoncy. Receive
Training, BUsiness support Your
own Travel Webslle ' and Travel

caring for ._

Daro1 Group Homo,

Dlooou~to/Por~s Earn big US
No!rjnal SIOrtup ~OJ1I 1·1188-6990901 or www EatnBuckaF~om­

n"''' PaYing

mlnlrilutn wade new lhlfls 1 ?am·
3pm, 7om-5pjl&gt;, •·11pm; 11pm-

RNa to provide quality care lor
our realdenta Come join the
OVerbrook Family For mort ln!or·
marion, please contact Krlstle

Madden at 7ol0 992 8&lt;172 or arop
by 333 Page Strut1o tm out en

apfl!lcatlon E 0 E

•

Thur-y 4/18 4 Friday 4120, 35
Grape Stteet. 9 00·5 oo, 4 Family,
Someone To Remove ~ ~~rge

Pomeroy,
Mlddlaport
&amp; VIcinity
Moving

230 Proleaalonal
. ' ' Service•

rand::::l::'m'' corp •··~~
ij~""" lor ctid·•
lcaled lla!btll~it(J .... Northern lndlana •.CIII.Btuca.800·1151 •
11057 or Norlhorn Qhlo·arn call
Bob 600.531·'7125 -.llllllcom ,

$. FREE CASH NOWl trorn
..._hh&lt;( llmllifa unloedlng mii&lt;Ons
ql, t!911irs, to help mihlmlzt lhtlr
14KOS wma ]mmadlately WIND·
FALLS, 3010 WILSH1f16 BLVD
188 LOS ANGELES CALIF'OR·
Nll\90010

Strolllngs
ras ldanea New Hope Rd
Chester Furniture and mote
Yard sate- 463 Grant Street, Middleport, 9am-3pm Friday &amp; Sa!Ur·

URGEim.M' NEEDED· plume
d0no10, nm $45 to f110 lor tor 3
hOUIO weekly Call Slri·TtC 740S92 6651'
t fl
'- 1

sell t4x70 1hree tilidrooma: tw~
baths, HO 9&lt;19-!!0.0!.altor Ji1!111

$$ NEED A LbAN7
1IJi Dobl ConiOIIdltlonl
Cui PtymenlliJp To eo%
Some Day Approvall

www na·
,

gagea For informauon. 1·800·
338-7812:oll 3622

CAREER OPPORTUNITY! Eorn
Alck Pearson Auc;tlon Company,
full lime aucllonet!lr complete
auction
service
L1cenaed
188,0hlo &amp; West V1rglnla 304

a•cellar'ft Income Easy claims
processing Full training \ HomePC required Call Physician &amp;
Htllthcare nevelopments lOll·

Rlvtralde Auction Barn, Sale
Every Saturday Night al 6p m
Auctioneer Raymond Johnson

2~)h

Wanted to Buy

Absolute Top Dollar

~

S SIIVI(&lt;

Gokf Coins Proofsets, Diamonds,

Gold Rings. U S Currancy,M T S Coin Shop tst Second
Avenue, GeH!JollS 7ol0 448-21142
Er~PLOYMFNf

;

110

Opporrunlly Employer eneourag

IIIAITENTIONIII
International Company Expanding
Work From Home 01' Olflce S500·
$6000/mo fiTIFIT Mall Orderfln
ternet Patd TratninWVacatiOfls

510

2538

SHes For Rent 00 Ka·
nawha Anter, 8 mtleJ from Paint
Pleasant, electric only (304)6751722, (304)875-41 .. Afltr 5pm

Equlvalonl,

81~1Zjhrt,

I

Hf /\I l , IA'l

~78

310 Home• lor Sale

Class AlB COL Drl\lttrs Good
Pay Stmellts 401 K Vacallon In·
surance Home Evenings Call

CashOnTheTable com

•

HUO Homos Payments Bllod
On Income Lfml!ed Tlmt· Hurryl
(740)446--:138.1

(740),88-1483

~

... '""'"

----

......_._

.

_____ ____
....

..,

~

..,,

'
.. - . . ...... . .--.

Houaehold

For Sate Reconditioned waahers dryers and rtfrlgeratora
Thompson• Applianca 3407
Jacbon AvtJroe (304}875-7388

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

Washers, dryers. ntft~geratora.
ranges. Skaggs Appliances 78
Vine Street Call 740.448 7398,

1·1188-6111'0128

992·9132

New And Ulld Furnuura Store
Below Holiday Inn, Kanauga We
Sell Grave Monuments And

v-

2 Bedrocm House For Rent In
Bidwell
Includes 2 Lots

(740)4.46-4782

Norge Frost Free Refrigerator,
Soars Stove Both While $75 00
Each 3 Weshera Sao 00 Each. 2

(740)44 Hl420

4 Bedroom 2 Ba!h tlouse For
Rent, (740}245-9128

Dryers $50 00 Each, (740}4469088

Tan And Brown Couch And love
St.at Burgundy Recliner $125
For All ThrH, (7oi0)4CI-Q108

Skeot, phone (7ol0}44&amp;.31145
304 736 7295

Toss Bacll Pitching Or Goll Not,
Usea 3 Times S60 (740)388·
8234, ~!lOr flpm
Uood Window
Unit Air
Condlttonoro. 90 Day Guorontto,
(7ol0}888-'7531 (7o10188&amp;-0047

520

Sporting

GoOds
2 Bedroom $3001 Month 3
Se~room 13251 Month In Vinton.
Available May 1st, (740}3889984
:2 Bedroom Ail Electric Trailer
$300 month No Pa11(740)367061t

neraville, $300/mo each reduced
rent for ~anes,y pereon who can
mow the grass In the park, 614

81,8.1881

3 bedroom mobile home In Mid
dlepor~ no pel&amp; 740 992·51!58. ,

Furnac.a, Oil Furnaces, 12 Seer
Heat Pump &amp; Air Conditioning
Sytteml Frte 8 Vear WJnanty
Bonnetll Healing &amp; Cooling. 1·

-

800·112·51187 -

orvb ccmlben-

Royal Oak Membership with
Coast lq Coast and cnlldrtfn's

Renters wanted call 740 380·

Smotl 2 Bt&lt;lroom Trailer ln Trollol
Park, Atlt(enct I Deposit
RoquirOd (7ol01+411-1104 1

Farma for Rent

AltenUon Stanley Home

STEEL BUILDINGS NOW, Must
Sill 30KoiOKI2 Wll $10,200 now
$8,990 40•60K12 was St 6.400
now $10.911 50x100l18 was
S27 590 now $19,990 8Ql200xt8
woo 158.760 now $&lt;12,990 t .fOO.
4015-51~

992·2218

beaehas, fabulous sunsets! De·
luxe roomafkltcheneltes &amp; baleD·
nifs overlooking the GuW ot MOKI·
co 111and Inn Beach Rtaort,
Treasure Island. FLA 800·241·
8910 www islandlnnreaort com
Near 5I PtiOrlllUfll

810Ck, brick, nwer plpel, wlndQWI, tin••• etc' Claude Winlers,

Rio Granao OH Call 740·245·
5121

580

$1,000 BACK 2 Ton Air Condl·
tlonor 2 Ton Coil, 1 Line Sot. In·
otaltod $2 295, St.OOO Back.
$1295 Not Price Free Eollmotoa
Call For Quotes On Olhtf SiltS
II You ' Don'! c•n Ul, We
Bo!h Loae! Mot&gt;!.. Homto OUr
Speciality 1-7•0·448·6306 1-800.
291-otltl

Months Old SIIIO (7401245-5887

first ohols csll740·742·1103 et
tor5pm

~oma

Or 8ualntll

Air

Purltlctlon SyaiOm NO Colt Or
Obligation, Fttl 3 Day Trial Mtl
Rou (304}675-3379

•

Sale

Blue heeler pupa, wormed and

Arl

1

Peta for

SO DOWN HOMES
No CrOdH 01&lt;1 HUO. VA
FHA Col lor Noftngt
HIOQ-501· tm Ell 11818

Stverll MIIC bloplay Radio 27
Foot~ $1'tlmmlng Pool, 1972
Handfl CB 350 r.totorcyclo, Udllty
Wagon (to Pull ilo~ln~ Lawn
Tractor} '"' lnfor...tton Coli
''
{740\4*-T.IIt
ASTHMA ALLIAOV NIEDED,
10.15 PEOPLE Who Dtslre
"""*"IOte Rotlef To Tl)l Evalualt
A NEW Compocl Slolo Of Tho

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PAIC~S AT JACK ·
SON ESTATES, 52 W&amp;s lwood
Drive !rom $297 10 $383 Walk lo
shop &amp; movies C~i 740·448·

Building

Suppllel

Papora,$250(740)448-0495

Mirrored Becka, Worll: Stn~h

MITOB 'Jibil poo.OO

Jack Ruuell Terrier Male, 4

570

Mualcal
lnatrumenta

Acoustic
Acoustic

Guitar
Electric

$12HO,
Guitar

$159 (10 (7ol0)245-11199

•;tJPI'llf',
&amp; LIVESTOCK

FAHf~

610 Farm Equipment
1997 Terramilt T6C, tow hours

very good conditio•. 16500 Call
HUntington (;l04}738-4800
Culti- G11or Harrow 1211 $800,
JD Wheel Disk, t Ott $100, NH
09 Haybme 911 $3500 K11ten
Silage Wagon wl Avco· Nl Gear

$1200 (304}57fi.g0()9
~

Ford 2800 Oltso! Tractor 3000
Dloaol, 4800 DieHl, 11152 18 N
(740)26-22
La ... Ueod lqlllponeniOwlr 40 Farm Tractora, Over 40
lawn Tractors Hay Equipment 2
Auctloneera. 2 RinG• Don'l Be
LATE! 11am Saturday, April 21St
Carmlchltl s ~arm &amp; Lewn
1740}4AW412 1·800-594-1 It I

-Call lor~,

820 w•"ted to Buy

Century Corgo Cover, Fill tfi9
Or 2000 Shorlbed Chevy Color·
Black Gonoloc ~ 000 Wall
(7ol0}446-2350
Gru~bs Plano· Tuning I Ropalra
ProD!omo? Neoa Tuned? Cell The
Piano Dr 740,..8-4528

710 Autoe for Sale "
SO DOWN CARSI POLICE IM·
POUNDS &amp; REPOS! HONDA'S,
CHEVY'S JEEPS LOW AS $291
MO'S 0 19 9% FOR LISTINGS,
CALL 1 800 •5 t ·0050 Oll C·
9612

1980's &amp; 1980'1 45 33 RPM
Records DJ. SIOrt Stock
Collocllona (937)875-29:10 Alter
800pm

•

Good Ulld Hot Tub And Older

Camplng'Tnlller (740}245--5!85

4

tdWt- ......,._ JMrr. Due

was

midony • through

Because a

resrnctive device on
the carburetors robs the cars of
throttle response and added asr
foils create more downforce, 11 is
nearly impossrble to break away
fiont even :1 small pack of can
''It's totally three- and fourwide aU the hme, ~ scnes leader
Dale Jarrett satd ofTalladega. "To
ask 43 guys n&lt;jt to nu~ any tlll£ukn or ~~ 11~1pat1cllltn 500 nules
Is asking a whole lot "
He says , the sm of the pack
m~aru there's less chance chose
behrnd a spm or crash can av01d 11.
Jeff Burton thinks about that, as
did Richard Petty and the other
stan 32 years ago when they
refused to race at Talladega
because they satd the tun were
dangerous Unlike that Sunday m
1969, when NASCAR founder
Bill France repbced the drivers
with a field of unknowns who
avo1ded mayhem, Burton and hiS
brethren wtll be out there
" That's our JOb and we're going
to do tt,': he s:ud " But I have to
admit I have a little more trouble
sleepmg the rught before TaUadega
than I do at other races"
NASC.~R
mandated
the
restrictor plates at 2 1/2-mile
Daytona atld 2 66-ntile Talladega

bst

season

adding a metal lip to the top of the
rear ~er and a strip of meullli a bxicab sign - across the
top of the cars. That put the slmgsbot pass back tnto racmg, a llowmg any car m the field to Jump
mto the btg hole in the au created
by the c~r ahead and be vutualh·
sucked up ro the rear bumpcr
"You JUSt feel ltke the air grabs
you and you fly up through there,·
s:ud Daytona winner M1chael Wa ltrip. "You can ptck up I 0 poslllons
at a wne tf you ptck the nglu
hole."

th;h;:!:~r'-re:~~e~:;~~~" .of
races 111 NASCAR history, as well

as a feeling of trepulatmn that
\VOD't go 3\YaY
Elhott Sadler remembered the
2000 Daytona 500 as a bonng race
nobodyli~d

"E"'verybody fussed about the
level of compeCttion, so NASCAR
fixed tt and really gave us a compenhon level that everybody IS
gomg to ltke," he sa1d
But the tradeoff- partic ularly
after the deaths at other tracks last
season of NASCAR dnvers Adam
Petty, Kenny lrwm and Tony
Roper - ts constd~rable scrutmy
for the racmg cucult

-·many

8.
lldriJ.IOI! - ·
$8500, 740-992..017 '
'

t973 Volkswagon Bug. Runt 730 Vans &amp; 4-WQs
Gooa . Nooas work $1200 · ~~~:-=~~~-:-:c:-''-:':-::":'
(304}1185-37~7
"
.1tH Chtvy HI T9P Von. rod &amp;
1979 Z 28 Camero N - WOO., ~roy outside, II'W ,ljllltlor tnlkll,
Now Tires &amp; Roms ' 1100 ~~=..::::",:.,:!i
(304}875-8888
IHII. 59.000 mllll, 1-llont condition,
$1 I 300. 740-9912-2418
1986 Tran1-Am, 85K 1 Like New
$3895. 19118 Lu..,., 14895 1993
Motorcyclee
CavaiMir $2195 1993 Grarld-Am. 1740
V·6 13895, 1991 Ctvalltr. •· 1999 Horlay DoviiOII 1ZCKI CueDoor. 12095. We TokJ tradtl. tom, 8700 Mlloa, LOll or Chrllml
C DOIC MOTORS, (7•0}.48- Prlca $10.000 {7:10)319-2188
1
su1ca
I71Cf'8qlllf. _..,
Will Make EICCollenl, Derby Cor,
lor Sale
$250 C.U (304}695-3878
t Man Bqal Bau tjunltr With
1988 Subaru G( 4WO Wagon I-~- /7o10}U• Mil
Many Now Parts. 11800. 1917
Fool ••umtnurn Bau -...,, ••
Cavalier Z·24. 11200 OBO 18
~
"'"' (7ol0}388-ot13
HP M&lt;orcury Motor, Trolling Mo·
, tor. Traitor &amp; All Extrol 1.2795.
1989 Dodge Aries, Yory Cltan, f(:..7..:40;:.}3:..7H7011.:....;~--~~"::-':'
Very Good Condition. DePjlnd·
able, Mull Sao To Apprecllttlf 17' Marl&lt; 1Woln With Walk
Evenonga. {7ol0}245--92311
Through ~lndJhleld, It 5 HP,
Mercurv Moror, Aun• Oood,
1980 Lincoln LSC Vtly Good $t000{7ol0!?87;7235

~.:

~~a lt~r'o.:d8lln:

Reds

good"

It was all that the Bre\vers needed tn
Bob Boone sa~d
After a few laiC swmgs early m the break their 0-5 road mark. Milwaukee
at-bat,l;iernanaez managed to get the was the last team m the maJors to wm
one away from home
ttnung of Harmsch's p1tches
,
"That was one of the best at-bats
"He land df got nte hvinging lard at
one or two pttches, then I made some you're gomg to see," Lopes satd "That
adjustmencs," Hernandez satd "I start- was a class1c We don 't see too many
ed fighung off every jmdi he threw battles hire that dunng the course of a
me. Pmally, he left one nght there and season That was a great at-bat"
JameyWnght (2-2) pitched 11110 the
I took a chance"
He guessed correctly that the next seventh . and Curtis Leskamc came on
pttch - the j 2th of rhe at- bat - was m the mnth W)th a 7-2 lead to hold
gomg to be a fauball. Hernandez lut 11 He almost finnbl&lt;d tt away - Aaron
over the 14-foot wall m left-e&lt;nter Boone led off wllh a homer, a nd
and the flood wall for th&lt;' new sladt- Lcskamc lut pmc h-hmer Ken Gn!Tey
um beyond, a dnv1.· cstunat&lt;•d at 418 Jr on the leg w1th an 0-2 pitch to load
the bases
feet .

q!\l';.

2 Man 'oat Btu Tracktr Ban·
tam 31(, e.-r ~.Troll·
1991 Dodge Stealth RT, lWin Tur· lng Motor, Poddlt, Rod &amp; Flth
bo Komatsu Rod 300HP,' 5 IIOic (7~411 9548
Speed, AWD AW5, Loaded,
Super Sharp. S7IOO• 0BO. 760 Auto Plrtl &amp;

'

ACCIMICii1ea

~7ol0}44t-ot38

1992 Plymouth Voyagar, Loidtd,
Excellent Condition. •12800 Fkm
(7o10}245-!848 A!Wt5pm
1993 Buick Skylark Grand Spon,
••cellon! condlllon $3800, 740.
742·2375
1993 Spirit ~uto, A.,, Rod
112 000 MilOs Very Cloon, $2100
ceo (7ol012155-'6877 •
·

Tomadoes

4·285175 Ate GOOdY8ar A/8 on
1998 ~Ram 11100 Aluminum

Stock Whoolo $400 {740)843mt (74111534-25811

fromPapBl

lu-l_ol P•lotd Tronomloolon•
All , Typll Acctn To Ovor
10,QOO Tronamlnlona Tronalot
Cases, 740•245•51177, (:ell 33t3755

710

19114 ChOV)' camord, v.e, 2 Oojlr.
81 K, T·Tops Full Loaded,

Campers&amp;

Motor Mom..
E&lt;eollont Condition, $6,0001
(304}675-2881
•
11118 Chlmplon LllaiiO 1 4 ' -

1998 Dodge Intrepid ES, Con•
dyapplo Rod Loaded, ttal~tr.
Alloy Whoola, Highway Milot,
$8200 080 (7oi0)4Ct-0135

home, cl•il• A~ 111epa 1. ttll•
conlalntd very good co~dltlon,

1997 Codlllac Sedan Deville,
Loadt&lt;l It 4.900 o•y (30~}875·

$13 500
Can
Hunllngron
(3041736-il800
e&lt; Dutchl...n Campor, ' 31 h Whh
Expando Room Air Conditioning,
Mnlr&lt;Q (7ol0)44t-t631

9 f Oldsmobile Cferro 79,000

Sl H•ICt ,

~2! (304}89!j·32~7

Milea. Good Condition, 4 Door,
$3500 OC!Q (740)441..0172

91 Plymouth ~ollant $2000 91
Grand Am $'1 900 Bolh Hovt
High Mllll 82 Gto Metro 5
Spotd $700 Firm (304}197 ·
5927

t2 DODGE
(7ol0}2(5--5877

"It wasn't a very good pttch," Harnisch sud "It was 3-2, and I JUSt kind
of steered It 10 there trymg to throw a
stnke 1 didn't thmk he htt It that

frumPapBl

CondiUon, New Tranamlsslon,

RAil

12200.

Spbllorl Ont OW&lt;*. MttleuiO!Jaty
Mslntolnod E.co!ltnt CondR!On,
Rotlll 16360, Stlt For $8800
(740)245-1-5&amp;48 I

!r01ot lnlpOIJndt &amp; Repool
I·-1-oello Ext. Ctlt 7

TR A 'lSPO RT/1 Tl (J ll

96 Mu1t8ng, 82K1 Plclflc Green.

'Ttoy Bu"l Till.,, 7HP, Runs Good
..75, Cell {7o10)24&amp;-621 I

·~.()hlvy'l, .lHpll

Loavo M&lt;osaago {304}195·3740
Or (304)885-3188

(7oi0}367-Qt84

SUN'SAND'SUAF While sandy

AKC Bos!OII Terrier Puppies,
4 Ftmalea, 2 Males, Shots &amp;.

Antique Stlltrs Cabinet Wllh
Ctromol ColOred Gla11 In E"""l·
lent Condition. Antiquo Stcrotarv
With Curved GlaiO. Antiquo
Round Oak Tobie With Four
Chairs Antiquo Chell 01 Dlaw·
oro 2 Cuotom Buill Oak DIIPI~y
C1101 With GIUI ShtiVU And

1 and 2'bedroom apartments fur·
nlshed lnd\ unlurnlshed, securtiy '
depoe It requited no pets 740·

Prq~

duct• And Fuller 8rJjth AvallaD!o,
To Orllor Producll, Aoqutlt Cot·
alogl Call (304}675-e903

50 Verda Forroll Carpet &amp; Pad,
Slue Recllntr TWo town Mowertl.
Ono _
.... (740)388-8997

• lor Rent

1·800·578~

550

Antlquea

MerchandiH

11423

FREE lnlormallon
I 363 EXT 200-U

530

540 Mlacellaneoua

On Rented Lol In Galllpoilo. 17«1}
448-1409

New double wide 3 or 2 ba
$998 00 down o~ly $295 per (t&lt;Q)..G-1519

Tappan HI Et!lclency 90% Gas

Remington 870 20 Gauge, 18
Gauge, 12 G~uga, 12 Qaugo
Mtg, Savage 223 with scope.
(7ol0)2-522

For Rent1Or Land Contract 2
Bedroom, Natural Gas Heat, AJC,

(740}446-1143

'92 Mutlang GT. 5 - " 5 0 V·

Anytime, (740}446-too• Or
(7ol0}44&amp;.&amp;275

Wattrllno Special 31• 200 PSI
121.95 Ptr I 00, I' 200 PSI
137 00 Por ioo; All Breas Com·
prtllion Flttinge In SIOCII
RON EVANS ENTIRPIIIIEI
Jackson, OOio. 1.eoo-537·9528

120 Pockot WalChli In Good
oondlllon For Solo, P~ono
(740)446-1615 422 21111 ,O.vtnuo,
GtlllpOIIs ,
Buy or iell Riverine Antlquet,
t t24 Eut Main on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740 992·2528 or 740-992·
t 539 Ruu Moore, ~·

2. bedroom mobile home or 600
sq h olllet apaoe AM!rpark Ml

Tobacco Plants For Slle Call

RIIIIDEHilAL HOME DWIIERS

Celt

(304}675-1422
Sawmill $3.895 New ~ Lum515 Mllin SlrotL Point P-Ill
bermall 2000, larger capacities
more option• Manufacturer of
NOW &amp; Uaed F,.nnure
tdgera and akiddera
Now 2 l'*:o-~lvlng&lt;i&gt;om Sultel, I tawmills,
NORWOOD !~OUSTRIEli , 252
S3lt IIW. Soil. 111110
SO!)wll Ortvt, - . NY 142ll8.

RENTAlS

650 Sead &amp; Fertilizer

OTIS Forklllt, Gas Powered
$1200 {7oi0}441H15711

Fumlluro

lilocl

rig1'41. 11000 937·3416-2110

Main Slrtot Furrnture•

Furnished 2 &amp; 3 Room Apart
ments Clean No Pets, No Smok
lng, Refe rences &amp; Det:~oslt Re
qulred
Ullli ltes Furn jahed

Hay
&amp; flt9l1
Woro &amp;TitVolume
- · O•s·
'Round
Delivery

SO DOWN CARSI POLICE IM·
POUNDS &amp; AEPOSI HONDA'S,
CHEVY'S JEEP'S LOW AS $291
MO'S 0 I 9.fl'lt. FOR LISTINGS,
CALL 1·800·11~1·6777 t&gt;l C•
11814

Nice

740-418-77115.

Real estate wanted· 1am forced
out ot rrf'l house tor fllghway im·
provamenl Lookl"g for Cld farm
house In Meigs County with
acreage call 740-797 9303 7-'0·

New 14 It wide S499 dow!:) PiliY ;Fo::r-::re::n71·"'o"'n-o...be-d"'roo
_ m_l"ur_n_
lsh_e_d
199
mon call now 1 800 apartment In Middleport call 740
~2 5231

mon call now 1-800-691 6n7

NEW BRANO NAME COMPUT
ERS· Almoll evoryone approwd
with $0 down! Low monthly pay·
morut 1 8Q0.8t7 3478 oxt.330

pliances French City Maytag,

Real Eatate
Wanted

2568 Eq alt-1 1
u ous ~ portunlty
Christy s Family Living 33t40
New Uma Rd , Rulland Ohio 740·
Lot modtt ciearanoe lfvt up to 742 7403 Apartment, heme and
$8 625 'ft'ltr, anv hOme ch..
tck_....:t rrauer rent•!• Commercial store·
out were dealing Coles
lronts 8\lailebl., for lease VacanHomes, US 50 £aat Athens.
cles now

800-1191 ·6777

NEW AND UIEO &amp;TEEt Steel
· Channel,
Pipe - Flat
fOrSar,
ConcteiO,
Angle,
Steel
Grittng For Oralno, Ortvowayo &amp;
Walkways L&amp;L Scrap Molals
(7«1)446-7300

gratora. Up To 90 Oayo Guar·
anteodl we S.M NOW Moytag Ap-

(7ol0)«6-~70

New 16 fl wid&amp; $499 per mon
only $270 per mon call now 1

Ao--

RENT....S

Appliances
Recondftloned
Washers, Dryers. Ranges, Refri-

Ga!Hpoila(7ol0~3093

mtnt Benk Finance Only At Qak
wood In Barboursville WV 304
736-3409

No Pats

_..,.,.,_idltr,mmgotl'lllllll.....,
1.81JD.3054272 Ext 16
ARCADIAN
VACATION

Goodt

Camp

29x80 3
$345 oo Per, Jltonlh,99'1t. Flud
1n10rostRMt ,...., ~

7f43- 8:00pm

Tobacco Planls- OrGer Now To
- I E " ( ( y Sorlnll ~
lriCfUH AIIOimontl - · Exlnl
Tennl1 Courts, Color TellwltkJn . PIOniO Thank 'lt&gt;U For Yow - ·
~ ness Call Oflnny O.whurstTollphono

Back Of New Hawn On Un1on

430

'l!i:t

Ion~
~ tracks, Talbdega
md ~ lntematioo.al SpeedW2y,'' have nude racc:i at chose
venues "nsc,spccacubr and- in
the cue of the Daytona 500 tragi(..
"lc's not necessarily something I
look fonV3rd to," sard Jeff Gordon,
who \\'IJ'n ~e Talladega race last
spring under the old rules. ''It's a
very, very stnmpous rxe."
Jusc how s~nuous?
"Last lime I \v.rs here:, nry q~­
balls hurt," Gordon urd. "When
the race was over, my head hurt
JUSt because I was havrng to use
my concentraCton levd so much.
It's JUSt amaztng what goc;s on here
\VIth 43 can and the \vaf wr're
stac~d up."
He is amortg nuny dr~Wn who
don't like the rulc:i changn that
have bu.nched the can even closer
than they were before last fall. But
he nukes hii car as safe as poss1blr
and goe5 racing
"We have to race With the rules
that we have," he said
That's a fnghtenmg prospect,
because spectacubr, multiple-car
accidencs are commonplace at
Daytona and Talbdega. Three
months ago, a 19-,car crash in Daytona produced no serious injuries.

Vacation Renlall Ocean Front or

r.1EHCHANDISE

fc' il.flro:; ;JOflly 440 .''Apat'fm~"

Absolutery Muat Sill· Brand New
3 BRI 2 Bam Ooubtowlae Willi

LAIN

Roqulrod (740}406-.. 25 Or
(7ol0}446-3936

':?!"I

Llmllad Or No Crtdlt7 Govaln·

WV 25550 Or Fa&gt; (3041523 ·

Call I 800 228.0317

01

'

Final Days Na!lonwlde Inventory
Reducllonl(304)738--3409
No FooliStrvlct Cht'll"a
In Need ot l(nanclal Aulalanco?
Pie~•• can us ton Frto 1·888

lpg workplace dMirslly

Must Be 18 Years Old EJ!p&amp;rl·
ence With Preschoo ~ Chlldr•n
Preferred Send Re,um~ To
Children s Village Mhon Co
Vo Tech At2 4 8 Point Pleasant

Hllp Wanted

1996 t~xio Mobllo Homo Vinyl
Siding, Shingled lloot Canlr~~l A~
Cathedral Clolllng Through Olft
Throe Bedroom, 2 Full Balha
Mull Movll, Call Allor 5pm
(7ol0)448-8308.
.. ·~r: ' ~

In

high schools students 3P·1 IP
Jnttrestltl candldattl lhOuJd .apply 1o Rocksprings Rthtb eenttr. 1: ~r!~
36759 Roekopringo Road, Pof!llr• I i
oy Oh io 45789 conltots ore
Sandy Bowen or Judy Hart Equal

D jp)om~

1982 14•70 fl~fi'Ont TO¥f~h0Ult
2 bedroom, t ••me ba!h with heat
pump &amp; ale, f7;SOO 740·591 ·
4043 or 740-!19:1 0$18
"

For

Kay Otpotjt

Country Living~ Doublewide On '
Wooded Acres $2500 &amp; Move-

SHklng candidates who are carIng, compaulonate and want to 1 , ~·.~~~;'
be a mtmber of a great team , .
Clau will be evening houri for

Tlmo HS

740·420·1823. 740·1149·2123 tor
morolnlormtfton ebOUC It

Delivery, Soi·UP AIC &amp; Sklrllng
From $2871 Monlll Only 0 Oak·

Ing Claae Is schtdultd tor May 7·
tor 100 bod oklllod !tclllly

Chlidcare Center located In
Point Pleasant W'J Teacher At
slttants-1 Fun Time &amp; 3-4 Part

Sf-f1V)rf',

'

1977 Cameron Skyline, 12x5Q 2
bedroom good cond1tlon, Racine
on Willow Lane. $3,000 ~ call 1.,-

wood

Certified Nursing Assistant Train-

10

CRI!DIT PROBLEMS? ~LL Tht£
CREDIT EXPERTS LICENSED/
BONDED CORRECTIIIEMOVE
BAD CREDIT BANKRUPTCY
tAWSU1T,S . J)JD=TS AAA
RATING 1-888.&amp; L1
f ~ '•

kH 1 1100-772 5033 Oil 2070

n:J-5785 Or 304·773-5447

(70Q)2~989

I 888 9211-3428
(740)446-0822

d$~ LOANS l2000·S5000 ,
eonootldatlon 10 $200,000 Bad/
Nli t::rodit" Crtdlt CaJUJ Morl·

- Sualnea•-;
Tr~lnlng

Underpinning

gas Heat, Remodeled. $3700

11111 Settlemtntat lmm•dlatt
Quotoaltt 'Nobody boola our priC
•• • National Contract Buyers

•80·0731 oxt 101
lionlle&lt;lntllcti)Uytn ccm

16 WldO I Only $195 DO Per
Monlh ~ 99% Fl•aa 1n1eres1, A4to
I 972 Winchester 1?•50, lljptural

1·877·769·8188
ISS NEED CASH?? WE j&gt;SY
Clfh fpr rtmalnlng paymenta on
PIOfltrly Soldl Morlgagosl Annul

(800}

14)170 SoUthern Drum, tree10.
livery lrao,S•tuP only $9995 t.
688 928-3428 - •

And

2nd Row 1·• Condos
and Conogts Pools, Whirlpools.

Otstnct Ideal For ProftlliOI'\81

Gampground Road (304)882·

Pilot Program, Renters Nuded,

Floors H/2 Bath Boau!llul
Flroploco, 2 'car Gerage, 173.000

Air

Thliler lot for rent In Uiddleport,
$125-700-llll2311l4

T-rOd (304}897-!illil7

Remolded 3 Bedroom, Wood

With

MYATlE BaCH. SC

..

NASCAR otdeml lut fall for tCS the danger ofT~~ga

(304}875-572•

Couple All Modern - t i e l 3
Bedrooms. Spaclout LIVing. 1-112
Baths, Aoor Dock HVAC $6001
mo Pluo Utilities Sacurlly And

Mason County, Natural Spring
C&lt;ly W-. A Creek At The Bot
tom, Aslttng $50,000 Already

Four Rp_orn Houae, 52 Ollvt

Aerodyn:uruc

counl Avadabte Heritage Farm

2nd Floor Apar-nt In HistoriC

80 Acres Developed Land In

Neighborhood, Large Yord GOOd
Condlllon. Won't Last tall 800
Make Otter (304}675·1618

99 mobile home for salt, must

Trash Pile ')'rlh ' Nogbtlablo
(7ol0)446-&amp;588

"'PI'

sa~IUrday,

Handyman Sptctal In Eaccellenl

Home'"""'
J(740}388-9t5t
1! (.' ,
Sl~rl Your Buslnoae Today
erlme,Shopplng Cantor Sp~~· Two car1 garage/apartment In
Ava~oblo At Allordlblo Aale
Middleport, two bedrooms. full
Spring Vallav Plaza, CaN 740·«&amp;- balh, LA. ki\Ch~n ,wit~ oloctrlq
0101
range, central air. 740-985·3650
,•
WORK , FROM HOME I Earn or 7ol0 1192 2795
$500·S7 000/month PTIFT Full
Training Free Information Call 320 Mobile H011111
Nowll-800-290-891~
for Sale ' ,
www anai\t.n:dreama.oom

7am. cal 740-9112·5023

Linens, Clothes &amp; Mise

FOAECLOSED GOV T HOMES!
SO OR LOW ' DOWN! TAX
REPO'S &amp; BANKRUPTCIES! OK
CREDIT! FOR LISTING! CALL 1·
800·501·1777 ... 11813

Annutl Btntloy P1g

Hoy ~r Sate, 45 Round lloiea,
And 250 Square 8alo1 Call
{740}..8-Q115 or (7~0}..8-

{7~

a-.lfui,18110Sq Feet -

I •

•

Uaytag Dryer $100. Ken1110re
F r - $225, AICC 8oaton TMri• ~ Rudy May IlL $250

460 Space for Rent

490

350 Lota &amp; Acreage

360

EARN $500·$900 por week In

.--~pool.-­
$300; 7 - 1412.

nace1 I Heat Pumps 8ennena

lootung To Buy A New Home?
Don'l Have Land? We Doll! Hurry
0 Only I 0 Lola loft 304-738·7295

30 Announcement•

9 oo-e oo

---·-··50;

21t~

Sale. f&lt;IClly, Ap&lt;ft 20ih 7 30pm
Fayette
Co
Fairground5.
Walhlngton Courthoulo. ~
200 Hod Of Barrowl I GIHI.
Con•tgnerl Roger Benller.
{937}514-2311. Ltror Yrridl •
Fidyfl37)710 ·=r

MObile Home Supply, 740 .. 6.
9418---

9 Acres. Small Pond, 3-112 Moles

wll not

_ lk"""""""'
o r .accopl
,.._

A VENDING GOLDMINE·ACT

New To You Thrift Shoppe
9 West Stlnioon. Athens
740-592 I 842
Quality clolhmg and household
itema 11 00 bag sale every
Thursday Monday thru Saturday

tor I -00111 Hud

The

Huge lnwnlory, Oiscount Prical.' Tobacco Plugl For Sale. TM90 &amp;
NC3, Locally Grown. (740)245ows. Anchors. Water Heaters.. 5193
Plumbing &amp; Etoc:trical Partl, Fur·

$215,000 i7ol0)446-

4230

1:130

cr.-

•

afteupeeds went beyond 210 mph
and
Bobby Allison i car became
~the~stM,
kiUCd when ~·embed mto airborne and neuly ent~red the
che wall on che fim1 lap while ~dstmd herem 1987. But the
runmng at the fiont of a hgbt racing became less excmng
because there was ' ltttle passmg,
pack.
Mmy drtven a~teJdy were particubrly in recent years at Dayune»y about the rumung at the tona.
To remedy that, NASCAR
two tncb. Earnhardt's death has
changn made them even more aW2re of nude two ae~ynanu' c h anges

Ab. (AI)
RxiOg ar Deady 200 mpli surrounded by roos olbtaYy meal is
~ toUgb way ' to m.tlc.: a living.
Domg it at che Talbdep Superspeedway is e¥e11 riskier.
On SUDday. 43 W&amp;nltoll Cup
driven will be takinB that .risk in
the T3lladcp 500.

on Vinyl Skttl&lt;ng. Doors. Wind·

Farm House, 8eaupfulty AemoSquare Feet, 17 Act·
es, Pond ln1J&lt;OUIIII Pool. Several
Barno Garage,' F&lt;uH Trees Cion

To -

10811\etiiM•anypt........
111 lta:U liNl or dlla'lmllllllort
baled an ,.., cokJr. ralglan,

ycho&lt;kal Everyth•ng
auppiiOdl
1

Call

No ollllgoliono.

{7«1}441-1112

Polio, Start S3115/Mo No Per...
Laa11 Plus Sacunly llll!oail Requlrod, Oayo 7~0 ..8·3411.
Evtllmgs 740 387·0502 740·
448-0101

FARM FOR SALEII Wt Hovt
~ovod And Are Soiling Our
Farm 3 -.om Home Hal High
Ceilonga. Dak Tnm, And A Largo

tho-flirl-.gAd

Dl1968--lilogll

ca"!fY ,AND phone cards (2 5el
m1n u s }Earn $800+/wkly Wort&lt;
e 9 hialwk Great locations! 800.
f859-1n5·1nv req Fin avail

cal. Oentat I Vlaton Insurance.

8296

~---.gin
tills-~~ Uljec:IIO

___,_

t ,OOO:~EEI\tl'! 'Wolle 11 hOme
rp!;tUing IUIOtljoJivt PI'"•

NOW! Machines vend Hershey

E•porlonced Truck . M&lt;ochanl~
Ntfdt&lt;l, oiOIK Rotiroment, Modi·

lndopondtnl- ~.
Call For Producf Or O!Jpor1unily.

CoUJIH55-11180

Tara Townhouu ApariNfttl.
Vtry Spoclo,.., 2 Bedrooms. 2
Floots, CA, I 1/2 8111. Fully Cor·
~ted , Adult Poot &amp; !lolly Pool.

Farm With COWl
And Some Machinoty {740}256-

223 Aero Oaory

- · 2963

NOT to send money through 1t1o

_IYIIOml_,

$3 99 Per Minute Must Be 18
Years S.V·u {819)645 8434

Opportunity

Own a PC? Put &lt;I to World For a
free call 800-429 5853 or

EARN WHILE YOU LEARN!

Now Taking Applications- 35
We11 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments, Includes Water

~lOIII

330 FIII'II'IS for Sale

(7oi0)31MHl259

BualneSI

-800-!551 3f75

HORIEII:!OEINO,
c.rtil~
Ftrritr, F&lt;Od au- (740)256-

Sublldt&lt;l Apartment lof Eidtr1Y
IIIII O&lt;lablod, EOH, (304}112·
3121 Or (304}6112·321~

Cll740-3115-4317

men1

•

1500-$4500 PTIFT ,.._ lniormil
tlon (414) 290.81100 www holM·

TALK TO GlALS UVEI
JUST CALL
1 1100-32HI30 Ell 7113

210

..... P- ...

tn Qption 1 plu&amp; Pasture. Poni:l.

lng applatlona. tor Ma upcoming
nur~lng 1111;1ant etatl1 The
duo wll,botllll on APril ~. 2001
II 8 A.M , &lt;'RP~Cftlons . f'lll bo llk·
on untiili\ul-sdiy, Ap/11 19, 2001
II 3 ~M I! r;GU ha'IOIII)V ,,.. •.
tlono p!Nae . - K- Mod·
donat74()-9112-Ml'2 EOE

Work from Home. FuU Training.

romance ext 1621

~

Drlwro

....~
-7~165

a hoOliiiiPiY
or
co10t10my or bland name products With one

-Bond Plac.- Accoplirlg

1111nt1 11 low as S1SO 32 per
111anth and only $750 DO dOwn

And A Tolal Of 120 Aerts Prlcecl
AI $189,900 ShOwn By Appoint·

I·IIIJD.~930

FREE SEARCH!
www SINGlES com

~" oltert

With 18 Acres For $129 .800.
Opllon 1: lncludol Everything

FINANCiAL

OSTOMY PAOOUCTSI

)'.f.UOoomA,

Fok

GollaW.oltt
112 - Old.
·.EIC~
1·12
1125
{74111256-1724

..~~ ~I:Houoo,&amp;m ~~

•~·--· · ~~·-- Witt Sol On lJind

700-llll2-931•

No•--Traon&lt;ng provicltd

Sorv·U (618}645-8434

l

DRIVERS • C~nnon Express
Owner Opll.e... Program Your
truck or .... ..13C+Iml.. COft1PIIll'
a...... lllrllng up to :Mclml WI

_,. cannonexpress com ~ -IQO..

$500-S1500porrno PIT
S2000-18000pormo . FIT

StOCk Model CINro..,... 811 iOOO
- - I t o NowllornOPIY·

{7401446-0151 or 339 0950 If
NoAniWor ...... ...._

E•~rlencl

FA~E

=-Trash. S350- 740-

At

Prot.ll}onall• _ Buckel Truck
$er¥tel · Top- Trim· Removal·
Sl"!"l' Grfndong ffM EotimaiH,
fiulfr Insured WorktfC"'C onrp

And RY's

HUDIFHA Mortgage Rotunda. No

... 1300

Mike

Wil Powerwaah Housn. Trailers.

Proc111ing

Rlquirod. fOr FREE
lnlormallon Call 1·80CJ.501·&amp;832

RopairW11h1n
-~
lloli\&lt;•rr
1d
Milas """
21 Year&amp;

Call

· Onltr . . . . IIWII.Ez.
...- ...,,..,.....1427

New Haven one bedroom lurnlshed apartment h•1 •nher

Lawn Mower And Small Engine

Eapenenca

ceptor, , . , . _, - I l l FREE

- ................. . .

Now 2001 F-wood. 3 b&lt; • 2
boll&gt;. HI up In The ~ Mot&gt;lo I:!Omo Pirie, *&lt;II' 10 in.
$995
- · $199911* - ·
7-·2117

~ MlllrinQ Servic:e. f&lt;H
-.Col(7~

--

Make Monoy ...... """""

WEEK~YI

-~

haul ,... togo 10 . -. . . . .· .. call
Goorgoo-

:IIM-675-1957

&lt;1«11446-1104
Nounra Tree Servu:e ·rhe Tree

"""""" 110m hOmO Part•liinollultlme 1 188-US-3712 Erl A11

$987 85

- - I I Y.... - o n d
Inport FrOM $278-$1141 Call 740992 5064 Equalltouling Oppor.

I

)

•

tJ-.

1

720 Trucka fof Salil , •
2000 Ford E&gt;qlloror, 12.000 Milts,
E•collenl Condlllon, (304}875·

1

810

HolM

lmptOVemen~
IAIIMINT

WATI.i!OOI'IIICI
Ui!COIIIIIIIonal il!tthM guarantto
Local ttftrencea turnrshld Et·

141liiah0d t97&amp; Cd 24 Hil, (740}
448·0870, I·S00•21NII71 Rog•

.,.w...,...!lng

::::;;_-Dotllon..,..-BI-Jildorl,...,.---

1960 Econollno, •1 ;ron Exttndt&lt;l
Cargo Von V; l, Auto. A
Now Whoola AM TlroJ 14,000
nilos, On 'Soard Power ~

E&amp;S lll'n Service' Dtlign, lm·
piomoniOIIon Alld S.vleo. Avoll•
oDie For Spring Clean Up Ferttlit·
lng And PlonUng. FrH Eatlmottl

Small Relrlgtrator. E11Ctltenl For

Satlafaotlon GtJ1r1nltld Greg

Contrabtoro Asking $3500
(304}675-1802

Mllho.ln (ao.}l75·4628

C~ll

~::-=:'-:-~===r.::::::oco • l Llvlng 0ton 1 Buomont Wttor
t994 OOdgt Grencs Caravan E$ Proofing 1n bue"'ert repalra

While, Loaded, Ould Sooting, 7 f dont trot' 'ti11matu lllollmt
Pouengor, Lo~a Then 7~ 000 g~arantlt nyta pn lob ••Ptrl·
Milts on Engine And 1Tranomla· onea (304)81lf1·3817 '
11on Towing Packago Sharp.
$8400080(7oi0)4Ct..0135
I
rm c~ ~. ve~,llOA&lt;I!
flri!t, 1
?.a !19:1·387$

cp~dlllon . loa9id ;. $75~Q

NC:

1995 Ford ftongtr, ~LT ••~
CD Plapr. Standtra Shl~. ••col·
lent Condition, 79,000 MIOI, Prlcl
Nlgo- (304}675 7874 ,

Southem
•

C&amp;C Gentrot HOinl Main·
lononct· ~lfrHfngl vinyl lldlng,
carplftrry. doOII, " lldOWI. blthl,
mobile home ttptlr 1n1&gt;re For
rrat 1111n1110 call Chtt, 740·992·
8323

4066
!
I Yout"oompiOto ho'f1l rtmodo!lng,
ao Cho•y PIU Runs &amp; 00rlvet : roplll &amp; '1)11..,nl!$ contractor
Good $1&amp;00 (7ol01742-4001
Polnllng, .,vln~l oiding, deoka.
- - ·' I blthl klfr:liOM! oltelrlcal Ill....,.
92 Ford F · t~b Exttndl~ Cl~, ' lng7;i!ll~ O!lll"f Ar\'ICit 10 lUll
1~ .ooo Mn,, , Good condlllqn. l yqur ~·· No Jgp 19 bla or-•,
$7800 (740)388-j18~ Evtnlnga , j 30 yoart txperlt~ce., ' ' " tall·
maiJI 7~0·888-87•3. 740·581·
730 Van11 &amp; ~WDi •' : 1314 ' .':' n •
Longl~

\

Pox scored on a Blm smgle 111 the
fifth, then N•Y ued the game tn the
stxtll when Chase Elhott was htt by a
pttch, balked to second, and VanDyke
smgled to t1e the game, 12-12.
Nelsonvtlle-York threatened m the
seventh when Stalder smgled but was
doubled off first base when Bateman
h1t a smkmg hne drrve to nght field.
Brandon Htllmade a dJVmg catch and
fired to first for the double play.
Southern went down 111 the seventh
when the Buckeye ace came on The
Bucks threatened m the top of the
etghth wtth a smgle, but Ash m rehef
of Pierce reured the ude.

That set the ~tage for the H11l-AUen
herotcs to wui the game
Matt Ash got the wm- m rehcf He
fanned two, h11 one, .md gave up two
htts 111 two mmngs of work Stalder
suffered the loss m rehef He fanned
four, h11 one, and gave up the lone htt
to Htll.
"Thts was a great wm for us agatnst
a good team," satd Coach Scott Wtc khne "Nelsonville has been playmg
good basebaU We JUSt about gave
them a htde more: than we could handle, but agam we found a way ro pull
off the wm"
"Matt Ash came through w1th a
couple good mmngs for us And our
offense continued to put some runs
on the board n
Southern hosts Federal Hoc kmg
Thursday

840, Electrical and

Rifrlgeratlon

Rtlleltntlal or commercial wtrtng

new Hrvlcl or repairs Maatar Ll-

otn~od oloctrlclon Rlde~our
Elootrlcal WV000301 304·t7i1718

fronaPapB1
ptck up
Three more: walks, and a h11 batter
brought home the four runs, then
Chaptuan fanned the last batter to get
out of the Jam

Emtly Hill stole home for Southernis lone run 111 the fourth, then
Southern plated four more runs wtth
the benefit of only one htt on stx
walks and a Fryar smgle to mercy the
Buckeyes before the fifth mmng was
complete
Southern hosts Federal Hockmg
Monday 111 a Tn-Valley Confencc
make-up

110 Help Wanted

e

Pleasant Valley Hosf: ital ,
PJ,asant Valley Hospital currently has an opening
for a Respiratory Therapist for our DME omce In

!pt. Ple*sanl, WV.

Excellent pay and benellla.
Send resume to·
Pleooonl Volley Hoapllel, c/o Hum1n R11oreee
2520 V.llty Drive, PC Pleapnt, WV 288110
Or FAX I~ (3~ I 075-e975
·
ANJ:OE

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S!'!i4[W. FI1WiCil DfPAJn'MENJ'

Banbupfcy?•Cmlft Problrms?
. - "We Cia lldp"D

Ca5i u. Firat Or We ,Jiotk Lose!

Ask For Mike Hindle
l
or

Padorf Awl•·'' 1

c....orl'lrta

&gt;# Advertise
in this
space
for $150
.per month.

,_::;n,..,...,..,,.r
CHitCLI, OH

,. I J

...,

Roof•lj·Hoine
Gullft. Down·
Spout

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s.rn«»M

FINcE II I T

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941-1405
581ii011

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Mike('
warner Hti8tlng f. Cooling; Inc.
Under rww I!WIIiri Ill lip HIs now

~s-ee&amp;.

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•

urily lillh CKd says
.... liued on your

---

hind, the dummy and

.... bas """' ' .... 10
r., you dlinliit would
be bell for ptnner 10

Uc uf • •
l!d
Tdlll• Mllllol•n• :zl Zone• ~

switch 10 this suit.
Whaaos if yoo pik:h
., your Iowat card, you
suggest putner try
ellewhae.
In lhis dell, after
. Wett leads tile diamond queen against
four heMs, Elsl might
have the chonce ' for
two attitude signals on
consecutive tricks.
Firsl,
declarer
should will with dummy's diamond ace to
try tocoticear the king.
However. Elsl nsakes

Serving cu.tomtr~. 11 v-era

•

'We . . . \-.saline Pladucll" •AIII..IIIDcll .

---~..-.---11111

Clanl6llhlorla - . OWow

ToJJ FI'H 1 1111134,.5
•

THE BORN LOSER
~'Ji:E.IVJ.Jc.t-UNC. Til£ MR.'?
DWI~! nuf-~JO!&gt;T
cu.~:srali.Ef'\'

I

\

K£NSINGTON .
-DOW&amp; HEAT

.i·

•ROR TECHNOLOGY
K£EiiS THE
IUIIMERTIIE HEAT
OUT AND WINTER
TillE HEAT IN
BLOCKS OUTtU%
OF DAMAGING
ULTRAVIOLET RAYS

FACTORY DIRECT
. PRICING

,.· OUALITY·'

WINDOW
·SYSTEMS

~ .Pomero~£.H

uy.,r

AAIEiri lf£.K NU,I~

8UILDIIJIIJNC.

New.,... .VlaJt

High&amp; Dry'•
SeH-Storage

Sidlq • New G......
•• ,., ctaal

to

I

10~£01{

·.~~­

.BISSELL

•••·.._

Addldou • Jloollq
C..aAI. .. mrDIIIIAI.

FREE 'ESTIMATES

.

740-992.;7599
(NO SUNDAY CAllS)

r

'

'Pomeroy,
Ohio
rrp

AND AIR
(niDDJCSORS'

· ,;.'~~

·(

umptete Mobile
Repair oa

.:..wu

we

LOS'I' IOV!! TH.'\T'S

HARDLY ISETTER TIWI
8EING AN

EXnA!

Traeton, Mowen,

Titten, Wamlnty
Repaln

1·&amp;66-299-4445

"in'this ·

t ~(J

I ,•

(

) 1

rspace·

on:.,.-.

'K

DLLZ

RVCR

lliNPLRVKIX
RVL

· CHR

RN

signal, dropping the
tWO ·tO &lt;!&lt;ny the dia,
mond king. Then, if
decluu draws a round
of tnunps. Euuhould ·
diseand the .... jack
- lhe highesc card he ~
can affmf -- 10 show
Ollthusialm for that
suit, (He could pitch
the discourapng club
two, but it is beaer to
encourage if one c1111
.n'otd the coni.) Then, .
when West pts in
with the club - · be
should haYe no difficulty twik:hing 10 his
low ..,..Je, ollowing
the defense to pick up
tluee !ricks ia the suit
and defeat the con-

ND

VCII

EN

CGVKL,ILPLIR

IIPKZZILIIM

tniCt.

NOTICES

by Luis C.mpos
Cololll1ty C-CI)ptoglllniiiW ....... lrom qi;otatJona 11y ,._,.
people. pu1
Each-In 1M ciplllt oWICIIIor _ ,_
TodaY, clue: H equa/8 R

adiscouraging attiwde

. Sooth does betrer if
be imrnodioidy plays a
club ·. ., hio tine or
.qqeen. However, if
V(~ has s.this putner's Irick._ signal
and rollowslhe principle not to lead suits
being played by
declarer. he should
come up with the
spade alllll;i::

HEAD BONE!

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Kl

GVCNM.'

IKRV
ND

RVL ·

PKEIIP

IICOZ

YLZZNI
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Human aalvltlon Ilea In the hand&amp; of
·lhe CINIIvlly llllla*'eled."- .MertJn.Luther Kil)t[ Jr. · - - ••
· - .., NIA.....

It '

.'

••••
UMI

SUBOTE

I II I I~• I I
0 R M0 B

I 13 I I I
~
I I I Is I~ ~ I
I~

A DI EL

"Have you put something away
fora rainy day?" I asked my colleague. ·sure,' he smiled, "I just went
outaboughtan-----,--,":

CLENAG

I. I'
A

III

15

•
Complete the chuckle qu&lt;*d
by filling in tho mllllilg -eli
you dovolap from lltp No. 3 below.

e

PRINT NUMBERED

'l:;tr LETTERS IN SQUARES

!tor-$SG·
'

... ·per

•

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

month .

'

n
.•

Warmth- Oasis -Jetty- Coddle- TWO RITES

•

·"We had two wedding ceremonies," t~e old man told
me. "I guess," he grinned, "that's when a wrong is Made
. by TWO RITES ."
·
·· '

..

..

~

,.

11,2001

Klllly HyHII,

Friday, April 20, 2001
Most of your successes in
the year ahead coold stem from
places thBI ...n 't ·easily disl:em'ible to olbe!s, Your narur, al insights will guide you Qllto
btgger and better things.
TAURUS (Ap/il 20-l\lay
20)- Don't he surprised that
you're the one whorD friends
tum to loday in · hopes lhat
you'll be able to help them.
This is because you have
proven in the past that yotl'no
nornarl&lt;ably adroit with problem solving. Get a jump on life
by understanding · the influ·
.,.... that'll goVern you in the
year ahead. SOlid for your
. Alllni-Oraph p!edictions ~y ..
n\aiting $2 to l\stro-Oraph, c/o
this newspaper, P.O. Box 1758,
Mumy Hill Slation, New

Cllrf&lt;.l1'rlaeuNr

John W. BIMI!Nir,
Mll)'lll'
JohnF.M.....,,

Prtlldent
19,2e,2tc ' ·

Public Notice

'' ' ,; 94!;1-4900

. .. ·Try.our.new BLT &amp;

· ··

8,an&lt;;~

Pips
A traat not to miss

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

to

Yod&lt;, NY '10156. lie sW.
. ·swC your Zodiac li1n.
' OEMINl(May 21-lwM 20)

-.- Should so-swtthrowing his or her weight around a
bit today, keep in mind that
you'no the one who has the
edac o~er .playing mind .&amp;ames.
Use your wits to buttress the
attacks.
CANCER &lt;June 21-July 22)
... -- It'll be wonh it to you todoy
to make the time for

anyone

who wanlll to communicate

. . . lilfiMio 1M pi!Onl"

),

•
............

~

..- ...-.-o&amp;4....................__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ....... -··
•

I

.,j At. . ... .

"" .... .

-

liiS' or hgr ~houshts to you.
You 'll pick up all kinds of
·gems of wisdom through the
txchange~ .
.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) •
"Try, try again"' should be
yo~r J!'Of.lo wlfen tackling an
obJeCtive today that isn ' t coming easy for you . Simply
regroup your fon:es and ~eep
striking until you break
throu!h. You will.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
•• Theno 's a good chance you
might receiYe a bit of news
. today that could he a tough pill
to swallow. However, it will he
this vety truth that will put you
on the path to the necessary
solutions.
LIBR=(S. 23-Dc:t. 23) neflts are in the
- Additio
works 1 y from taSks. jobs or
services you perform well.
However, unless you put fonh
a little extra, you may never see
It bonus.
'
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22).- You might get an opportunity today to get to know
~ someone better with whom
you have only had a causal
acquillntanc:e. The relationship ·
could bud into something beautifuL

"••

'

.

.·SAGQTARIUS . &lt;Nov: ~,
Dec. 21) -- Because of ~our
tenacity and slick' ta.iij\oe,_
in oven:o!Tiing difficuliies,
ypu' ll Jum cond~iQ~ ~~~ pneral into promising and reward~
ing outcomes.
f
~ APRICORN (Dec. 22'illll.
19) - Instinctively. you' ll know
how to hondle people today
with just the right blend of,.,.,_
ousness and compassion . Thi~
balance gives you a finn grip

over events.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20;&amp;1&gt;:
19) -- Adhere to your fu~lla­

mental busine~s ·sense' ~tfe!n~

ever involved in com ~rcial
dealings today. and you won't
have any trouble with saving
·either pennies or dollars.
PISCES (Feb. 2~March 20)
-- It'll he the responsiblo way
you' ll handle yourselr i'c;day
that will make you ~ a success in dealing with peojilc on
almost any level or scale. The
n:spect you Pill. will lie IAitin1.
ARIES (March 11-April 19)
-- Much 10 your cJedit, your
compassiqnate illlllre will he
quite charitable toward those
Who are ·less fortun.tc. How·
ever, be realistic as to what

e"'enl you're able to help.

�.,

-.1.__

....,..

"

'TIIwlll .. Apd1t, 21101

, _ I IOJ, ..rldllpaft, Ohio

AILEYOOP

llleDII~S1 6011•7

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1187

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Discard

Mediate Supplemenr; Lire Insurance;
BtarW and final Expenses; pollege,
•
lletimnent,
·EmerJeacy Fuads; ~
:"ft -

Major Medical • N

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·yes~~~...,,

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loobd .K lrick-one
....... siplls. Also.
if YOur fila dilcMI is
io a •it 001 yc1
"'-'he!! by either
side, ,.,. are telliaJ
pwbii.t: •hetha you
w..W lil&lt;e him 10 lead

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S!'!i4[W. FI1WiCil DfPAJn'MENJ'

Banbupfcy?•Cmlft Problrms?
. - "We Cia lldp"D

Ca5i u. Firat Or We ,Jiotk Lose!

Ask For Mike Hindle
l
or

Padorf Awl•·'' 1

c....orl'lrta

&gt;# Advertise
in this
space
for $150
.per month.

,_::;n,..,...,..,,.r
CHitCLI, OH

,. I J

...,

Roof•lj·Hoine
Gullft. Down·
Spout

.

s.rn«»M

FINcE II I T

.;n.,

941-1405
581ii011

r•r

•

J

Nil

'We
Mike('
warner Hti8tlng f. Cooling; Inc.
Under rww I!WIIiri Ill lip HIs now

~s-ee&amp;.

........ A!! _,.,...

•

urily lillh CKd says
.... liued on your

---

hind, the dummy and

.... bas """' ' .... 10
r., you dlinliit would
be bell for ptnner 10

Uc uf • •
l!d
Tdlll• Mllllol•n• :zl Zone• ~

switch 10 this suit.
Whaaos if yoo pik:h
., your Iowat card, you
suggest putner try
ellewhae.
In lhis dell, after
. Wett leads tile diamond queen against
four heMs, Elsl might
have the chonce ' for
two attitude signals on
consecutive tricks.
Firsl,
declarer
should will with dummy's diamond ace to
try tocoticear the king.
However. Elsl nsakes

Serving cu.tomtr~. 11 v-era

•

'We . . . \-.saline Pladucll" •AIII..IIIDcll .

---~..-.---11111

Clanl6llhlorla - . OWow

ToJJ FI'H 1 1111134,.5
•

THE BORN LOSER
~'Ji:E.IVJ.Jc.t-UNC. Til£ MR.'?
DWI~! nuf-~JO!&gt;T
cu.~:srali.Ef'\'

I

\

K£NSINGTON .
-DOW&amp; HEAT

.i·

•ROR TECHNOLOGY
K£EiiS THE
IUIIMERTIIE HEAT
OUT AND WINTER
TillE HEAT IN
BLOCKS OUTtU%
OF DAMAGING
ULTRAVIOLET RAYS

FACTORY DIRECT
. PRICING

,.· OUALITY·'

WINDOW
·SYSTEMS

~ .Pomero~£.H

uy.,r

AAIEiri lf£.K NU,I~

8UILDIIJIIJNC.

New.,... .VlaJt

High&amp; Dry'•
SeH-Storage

Sidlq • New G......
•• ,., ctaal

to

I

10~£01{

·.~~­

.BISSELL

•••·.._

Addldou • Jloollq
C..aAI. .. mrDIIIIAI.

FREE 'ESTIMATES

.

740-992.;7599
(NO SUNDAY CAllS)

r

'

'Pomeroy,
Ohio
rrp

AND AIR
(niDDJCSORS'

· ,;.'~~

·(

umptete Mobile
Repair oa

.:..wu

we

LOS'I' IOV!! TH.'\T'S

HARDLY ISETTER TIWI
8EING AN

EXnA!

Traeton, Mowen,

Titten, Wamlnty
Repaln

1·&amp;66-299-4445

"in'this ·

t ~(J

I ,•

(

) 1

rspace·

on:.,.-.

'K

DLLZ

RVCR

lliNPLRVKIX
RVL

· CHR

RN

signal, dropping the
tWO ·tO &lt;!&lt;ny the dia,
mond king. Then, if
decluu draws a round
of tnunps. Euuhould ·
diseand the .... jack
- lhe highesc card he ~
can affmf -- 10 show
Ollthusialm for that
suit, (He could pitch
the discourapng club
two, but it is beaer to
encourage if one c1111
.n'otd the coni.) Then, .
when West pts in
with the club - · be
should haYe no difficulty twik:hing 10 his
low ..,..Je, ollowing
the defense to pick up
tluee !ricks ia the suit
and defeat the con-

ND

VCII

EN

CGVKL,ILPLIR

IIPKZZILIIM

tniCt.

NOTICES

by Luis C.mpos
Cololll1ty C-CI)ptoglllniiiW ....... lrom qi;otatJona 11y ,._,.
people. pu1
Each-In 1M ciplllt oWICIIIor _ ,_
TodaY, clue: H equa/8 R

adiscouraging attiwde

. Sooth does betrer if
be imrnodioidy plays a
club ·. ., hio tine or
.qqeen. However, if
V(~ has s.this putner's Irick._ signal
and rollowslhe principle not to lead suits
being played by
declarer. he should
come up with the
spade alllll;i::

HEAD BONE!

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Kl

GVCNM.'

IKRV
ND

RVL ·

PKEIIP

IICOZ

YLZZNI
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Human aalvltlon Ilea In the hand&amp; of
·lhe CINIIvlly llllla*'eled."- .MertJn.Luther Kil)t[ Jr. · - - ••
· - .., NIA.....

It '

.'

••••
UMI

SUBOTE

I II I I~• I I
0 R M0 B

I 13 I I I
~
I I I Is I~ ~ I
I~

A DI EL

"Have you put something away
fora rainy day?" I asked my colleague. ·sure,' he smiled, "I just went
outaboughtan-----,--,":

CLENAG

I. I'
A

III

15

•
Complete the chuckle qu&lt;*d
by filling in tho mllllilg -eli
you dovolap from lltp No. 3 below.

e

PRINT NUMBERED

'l:;tr LETTERS IN SQUARES

!tor-$SG·
'

... ·per

•

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

month .

'

n
.•

Warmth- Oasis -Jetty- Coddle- TWO RITES

•

·"We had two wedding ceremonies," t~e old man told
me. "I guess," he grinned, "that's when a wrong is Made
. by TWO RITES ."
·
·· '

..

..

~

,.

11,2001

Klllly HyHII,

Friday, April 20, 2001
Most of your successes in
the year ahead coold stem from
places thBI ...n 't ·easily disl:em'ible to olbe!s, Your narur, al insights will guide you Qllto
btgger and better things.
TAURUS (Ap/il 20-l\lay
20)- Don't he surprised that
you're the one whorD friends
tum to loday in · hopes lhat
you'll be able to help them.
This is because you have
proven in the past that yotl'no
nornarl&lt;ably adroit with problem solving. Get a jump on life
by understanding · the influ·
.,.... that'll goVern you in the
year ahead. SOlid for your
. Alllni-Oraph p!edictions ~y ..
n\aiting $2 to l\stro-Oraph, c/o
this newspaper, P.O. Box 1758,
Mumy Hill Slation, New

Cllrf&lt;.l1'rlaeuNr

John W. BIMI!Nir,
Mll)'lll'
JohnF.M.....,,

Prtlldent
19,2e,2tc ' ·

Public Notice

'' ' ,; 94!;1-4900

. .. ·Try.our.new BLT &amp;

· ··

8,an&lt;;~

Pips
A traat not to miss

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

to

Yod&lt;, NY '10156. lie sW.
. ·swC your Zodiac li1n.
' OEMINl(May 21-lwM 20)

-.- Should so-swtthrowing his or her weight around a
bit today, keep in mind that
you'no the one who has the
edac o~er .playing mind .&amp;ames.
Use your wits to buttress the
attacks.
CANCER &lt;June 21-July 22)
... -- It'll be wonh it to you todoy
to make the time for

anyone

who wanlll to communicate

. . . lilfiMio 1M pi!Onl"

),

•
............

~

..- ...-.-o&amp;4....................__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ....... -··
•

I

.,j At. . ... .

"" .... .

-

liiS' or hgr ~houshts to you.
You 'll pick up all kinds of
·gems of wisdom through the
txchange~ .
.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) •
"Try, try again"' should be
yo~r J!'Of.lo wlfen tackling an
obJeCtive today that isn ' t coming easy for you . Simply
regroup your fon:es and ~eep
striking until you break
throu!h. You will.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
•• Theno 's a good chance you
might receiYe a bit of news
. today that could he a tough pill
to swallow. However, it will he
this vety truth that will put you
on the path to the necessary
solutions.
LIBR=(S. 23-Dc:t. 23) neflts are in the
- Additio
works 1 y from taSks. jobs or
services you perform well.
However, unless you put fonh
a little extra, you may never see
It bonus.
'
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22).- You might get an opportunity today to get to know
~ someone better with whom
you have only had a causal
acquillntanc:e. The relationship ·
could bud into something beautifuL

"••

'

.

.·SAGQTARIUS . &lt;Nov: ~,
Dec. 21) -- Because of ~our
tenacity and slick' ta.iij\oe,_
in oven:o!Tiing difficuliies,
ypu' ll Jum cond~iQ~ ~~~ pneral into promising and reward~
ing outcomes.
f
~ APRICORN (Dec. 22'illll.
19) - Instinctively. you' ll know
how to hondle people today
with just the right blend of,.,.,_
ousness and compassion . Thi~
balance gives you a finn grip

over events.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20;&amp;1&gt;:
19) -- Adhere to your fu~lla­

mental busine~s ·sense' ~tfe!n~

ever involved in com ~rcial
dealings today. and you won't
have any trouble with saving
·either pennies or dollars.
PISCES (Feb. 2~March 20)
-- It'll he the responsiblo way
you' ll handle yourselr i'c;day
that will make you ~ a success in dealing with peojilc on
almost any level or scale. The
n:spect you Pill. will lie IAitin1.
ARIES (March 11-April 19)
-- Much 10 your cJedit, your
compassiqnate illlllre will he
quite charitable toward those
Who are ·less fortun.tc. How·
ever, be realistic as to what

e"'enl you're able to help.

�(

KENT (AP) Stan round of the NCAA tourHeath, an assiJt2nt at Micbi- rwnent, .left Kent State thiJ;
pn State the . - five sa- month ·to become the
sons, will succeed Gary coach at Rut~rs.
Waters as Kent State~. head
l{ent State is expected to
coach.
return four surters- lead-:
Ho!ath's hiring will be for- ing scorerTn:110r Hulfuun,
rnally announced at a news Demetric Shaw, Andrew
conference.Thursday, sports Mitchell and Mike: Perry
information di~ctor Will · - from last year's 24-10
Roleson said.
team.
Waters, who led the . Heath was a member of
Golden Fbsh6 to the Mid- Michigan State coach Tom
Ariterican Conference tou~- !no's staff when the Sparnantent championship and a tans won the 2000 national
win over Indiana in the fi"t championship.

Marauder
•

ho111PapBl

'

li

pitch, and Zach Bolip
n·ached .on a Miller· error.
Nick Dettwiller {lOached on
anotller MiUeF nti~ue, a walk
and singles by Stanley and
Derick Johnson and a sacrific~ fly off the bat of Darrick
Knapp pbted the runs.
Miller tried the stay in the
game with a four spot in th"
bottom of th" second to t&gt;ull
· to within 7-6. A walk, and
singles by Lowery and Cook
along with another- walk and
another Nelson double made
it 7~6.
.
But Meigs added run in
the third inning, and seven
more in the fourth to break it
open.
Meigs scored in the third
without the . benefit of a hit.
· In th~ fourth Meigs took
adva ntage of three walks and

a

-

.I

singles by Dettwiller, Matt
Stewart, Stanley. Jqhnson,
Bolin and a Buzzy fackler
double to plate the t)lns. ·
Mcig&lt; closed out the scoring in the fifth, Den,viller
doublc•d and scored "on a
Stewart ~ipl to niake it a 166 conteot.
Davis picked up the win,
scattering 12 hits, striking out
two and JVallcing five. I;&gt;ettwiller had a double and two
singles to lead Meigs, Stewart
and Knapp added a single and
triple each, Stanley and Johnson added a pair of singles,
and Fackler chipped in with a
double .and Bolin a single.
Starner picked up the loss
for Miller, Cook had three
singles to lead the Falcons,
Nelson added a pair of doubles, and Boryard and Keller
each added two singles.
·
Meigs is now · 6-8 overall
and 4-6 in the TVC, the
Marauders will travel to
Alexander on friday.

· Meigs'

'

feet piUlle for ,4 and 113
mmngs, the game was calle~
after five innings. The trio
faced. one batter over the
f1omPapB1
limit.
Chancey, Nikki Butcher
Jones was the losing pitcher
and Katie Jeffers each added a for the Falcons. Wright broke
single.
up the pe~ect ga111e with' a
jeffers, Davis and Abbott single to r~ght with one out
combined to give up one hits , in the fifth.
strike out five and walk
Meigs ,\.ill travel to Alexannobody, The three had a per- · der on ·Friday.

·

·D EAL!
Norris Northup Dodge

~

.
Is makinla commltmeat to the s.rroundlng community to
think them for their yon or •upport.
•
Tbla Commitment lnduda: ,

ttl 'hE IEIJ·POIIIIU PIICI AVAILAIU
ttl SERVICE AFTER THE UU. .
.
·ttl THE PROMitE TO WORK WITII YOU, TIE
AJ CUSTOMER TO MAKE YOU CAR IU..IO

r

s

Tribe beats O's; area diamond roundup, B1

.

UPERIEICE THE IEIJ 10U'VE EVER liAD.

Tile best thlnaa~ut tbls commitment Ia that It never ends!
We want to be your Home Town Dealer ror Ufe!
Come on In and see the commitment lint hand.

81

MslpCousty"s
'•" ' '""" • 1\pr~l /II /!I'J I ·Vol ~ 1 No 1'I 1

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court

BY TOfiY M. LEAcH
SfNTIII£l NEWS STAFF

RACINE - Personnel
matters, including renewal
and - non-reneWal
of
teacher, supplemental and
non-certified worker contr.lcO were handled at this
week's special meeting of
the Southern Local Board
of Education.
Effective with the 2001~
02 school year, teachen
hired on a one-year contract were Scott Wolfe,
Christen Hull, Janette
Oldaker, Patricia Cook,
Lori Hill, Christy Chaney,
Michelle Gow, . Rusty
Richards and Joy Neal,
pending written verification; and Tom Weaver,
technology coordinator.
Hired on two-year contracts were Ruth Shain,
superintendent's secretary;
Rebecca Bradford, cook;
employed on th~e-year
contracts were Ryan Lemley, Michelle Barr, Jay
Rees, Tricia McNickle;
hired on five-year contracts
were Michael Elberfeld,
Barbar Lawrence, Vicky El
Dabaja and Jan Norris.
The board accepted the
; r;e,ignations from the sup· plemental positions they ,
hc;lid effective' June 30 of

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31K
ONLY sm-.

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myddily., .. ntlnl'l &lt;om

Leaders
.approve
nt
nn
Commissioners approve
application for a
$1 million water projed ·
BY BRIAN

J. Rrm

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Students prepare to compete for the title of king and queen at Southern High School's Senior Prom this
Saturday. This year's prom theme is "Under the Sea" and will take place in Southern's gymnasium from 8
p.m. until midnight. Candidates are, from left, first row, Garrett Kiser, Matt Neigler, Chad Hubbard,·Jeremy
Asher, Joe Sands and Jonathan Evans; second row. Mia Bass, Kati Cummins, Macyn Ervin, Courtney Hill,
_Kenda Smith and Emily Stivers. (Tony M. Leach photo)
·
·
·

Music store donates guitar to shelter ·
BY TONY M. LEAcH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

OMEROY - The Meigs County.
Homeless Shelter will be filled with
the sounds of music now that a new
acoustic guitar has been donated !:0

~n~:~t~~~;~:r~~::~::~~~~.;;~

POMEROY - Meigs County commissioners approved a grant application for a $1.
million water project in Scipio and Columbia
townships during their regular meeting on
Monday morning,
Jean Trussell, the county's grants adrninistra~ .
tor, presented resolutions for t)te co,mminion..;
ers approval, allowing the .county to seek:
$515,650 in Community Development BJock
Grant funds, .a nd $250,000 in Appalacbi~
R egional Commission funds.
·
The Leading Creek Conser:V'}Pcy District
will provide $265,800 in matcl)lng funds for
the_project, which, if funded, will extend service to 106 new customers along Ohio 143 in
Scipio and Columbia townships, according to
LCCD General Manager Martin Broderick.
In other business, the . commissioners
renewed . a contract with Noble County,
which will provide up to five beds for day in
the Noble County Jail for Meigs County use.
The contract provides for the beds at a
reduced cost of$40 per bed, per day. The contract allows for a considerable savings to the
county in housing, said Commissioner Jim
Sheets, who noted that the county holds a
daily average of 11 prisoners between the
county jail, which honses a maximum of five
prisoners, and other facilities. ·
The commissioners approved a resolution
for · economic development administration
~ith Buckeye Hills / Hocking Valley Regional .

Romatoach';-Pet
Sayre; varsity ..Sayfll,•
volley".~ ·••• ·~· "
ball· ,
n-""all
· h ' Cur~s ;Spc:nte1
Pl\&gt;.p rietor
~tvel ' vo~ , ..,
.coac ;S '· " ..
. ''lltlriteti:ly, ,
d .. h .
P,Chter .
m ,"
presente Van Jo n' Beckylfulldm,:juhl~r high
volleyball coach; Lee Codson, manager of the
shelter on Union
ner, high school cheerleadAvenue, with a newJohnson ·610 acoustic guitar
ing advisor; Jonathan Re~s.
Wednesday morping to be used at the facility for
resetve- boys basketball
entertaioment purposes.
coach; Kyle . Wickline, • ','The gUitar will definitely give the residents
junior high eighth grade
someihing to do;• said Johnsoq. "The shelter has GUITAR DONATION - Curtis Spencer, owner and proprl·
etor of Spencer Music, recently donated a new acoustic
boys basketball coach;
i 10 p.m. curfew and there usually is not much guitar
to the Meigs County Homeless Shelter. Van John·
Jamie Evans, j11nior high
. to do expect watch television or read:"
son, manager of the shelter, Is seen here holding the
girls ba5ketb~ coach; ·and ·
PIIIM ... Doutlon. Q
new slx·strlng Instrument. (Tony M. Leach photo)
PluM 1ft Gr11nt. AJ
(}ordon
Fisher,
junior/senior prom advi.
sor.
.
Hired on supplemental
· contracts were Alan Crisp,
h~ad girls basketball coach;
Jay Rees, head boys basket, FROM STAFF REPORTS
national, state arid local government leaders,
ball coach, head golf coach;
POMEROY-· Meigs ·County will observe churches, families, schools and communities
1
Scott Wolfe, athletic directhe National Day of Prayer on May 3, with a during the county-wide prayer service, which
tor; Rusty Richards, head
week's
worth of events, including a public will be held from t1:30 a.m. until 12:30 p.m.
football
coach;
J(im
prayer sen;:ice at the Meigs dounty Court- on May3.
Romine, yearbook advisor,
The public .is invited to attend the service, to
house.
compliance -officer; Derinie
be
held on the steps of the courthouse.
· On Thunday, the ~igs County comntis·Hill,
treasurer; Vicki
The local observance will begin· on S~nday,
Northup, parent resourc:e
sionen signed a proclamation declaring May 3
· coordin_ator; Joyce Thoren,
· as National Day of Prayer in Meigs, The as a Bible reading m;~rathon and prayer vigil
food service supervisor;
proc~tion was presented by Steve Beha and begins at the pavilion on the Pomeroy levee. EVENT' PLANNERS- Peggy Crane, the Rev. Craig Crossman, Faith
Shirley Sayre, guidance;
Brenda Barnhart, who serve on' the county's Bible riders will continue to read from 8 a.m. Hayman, Brenda Barnhart and Gladys Cumings serve as planners
nntil 8 p.m. each day, through Wednesday.
Diana
Dunfee, . FHA;
Day of Prayer comntittee.
for the Meigs County National Day of Prayer events, which begin
Public prayers will be offered on behalf of
April 29. Crossman is the coordinator. (Brian J. Reed photos) . .
, ........ Pr8fW,AJ
,.. . . . . . . . . .rd,AJ

·Prayer week observance set

HW.:IOI.
.;;: 101

Todlly'•

Sentinel

Details, A2

CaleOdar
C!usifieds
Comj"
Edjtprla!s

Obituaries
Sports
Weather

AS

.

Lotteries

2 Suthu - .12 ,.._

60 ...

-AI IW CIHriiN-II•riltt &amp;..... ltnttl•'•

.. Ha•etaa• Neaspaper

Middlt-port • PomP roy, Oh io

Southern
board
approves
contracts

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Friday

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hires
.

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81.3.6 Dlly J: H-4 Dlly 4: H.S.2
A2 . c" lOOt Ohio Valley Publlohi"' Co.
.

Poll .doesn't bother concealed weapons backers_
COLUMBUS (AP) - ·. Ohio Poll
re~ults showing a majority of Ohioans
opposed to making it easier for people
to carry hidden guns' did riot sway Jawmakers preparing CC)nce_aled weapons
bills.
,·
"If 1 believe in something, I'm going
to fight for it," said Sen. Jim )orda11. an
Urbana Republican and one of the
Leg-i slature's most outspoken gunrights advocates , "It doesn't really

b,o ther me.
"There may be some members who
it do es (bother) and that always makes
it more difficult to get the legislation
· passed ."
·
Sixty-nine percent of the Ohioans
surveyed opposed making it easier to
obtain a permit to carry concealed
weapO!lS, while 27 percent favored it.
Pour perce nt were undecided .
The University of Cincinnati's lnsti-

tute for Policy Research sponsored the
telephone poll qf 804 adults March 26April 5. The margin of sampling error
was plus or t)linus 4 percentage points,
Polling director Eric Rademacher
said the poll numbers are consi!lenf
with polls the institute conducted iri
1995 and 1999 . Those polls found 'that
69 percent and 72 percent, respectively;
opposed making it easier to obtain
contealed weapons permits.

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