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P8ge B 8 • The Dell)' Sentinel

Pomeroy, Mlddllport, Ohio

1\lee•y. March 7, 2000 :

Health Department addressed low-cost services
BY CHARLENE

HOEFLICH

Hlp; 70s;

1.999....:

The program includes computerizing
all childhood immunization records to
decreose the possibility of error wheil
clients seek care from more than one
health provider.
Again last year, rhe Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine Community Outreach Program continued to
assist with immunizing Meigs County
children on its childhood immunization
program mobile val). ·
The department continued specialty
clinics coordinated by T.C. Ervin, RN,
BSN, who-is th~ssiltant nursing director. The clinics were attended by out.of-county physician specialists who
assess children from birth to 21 years of
age for visual, hearing, neLtrology, car-

Developmental Screening tests, vmon,
hearing and speech screenings, social
POMEROY - Emphasis of activimd nutritional assessments, and diagties at the Meigs County Heal~h
nostic services with appropriate referDepartment in 1999 continued to be on
rals.
providing low-cost health care services
. Dr. Margie Lawson, DDS, and
with programs geared to disease prevenRhonda Davis, RDH, offered their dention, early detection and treatment, and
tal services to the clients. Maureen Henhealthy lifestyle education.
nessy, speech and language pathologist,
The department's philosophy is to
counseled parents after evaluating their
increase access to health care through
children's hearing and speech patterns.
providing~ wide-range of services to all
Brenda Curfman, LSW, performed the
residents, many of whom are uninsured
social assessments, and Carol Tannehill,
or underinsured.
retired RN , continued volunteer serThe extensive health services at the
vices to the program.
departmen t are made possible with
WIC Program
funds generated from a local tax levy,
The Women, Infants and Children
along with stiue and federal grant
(WIC) program continues to be directed by Debbie Babbitt, RN, who is
assisted by P~m Sharp, BS. The program
offers nutritional supplementation,
counseling and referral services. Dortha ·
· Riffie and Bccki Ball are the computer
·
coordinators far the program.
Last year, a total of 1,879 visits ·for
•
services were recorded. These were 'for · BOARD OF HEALTH- The Meigs County Department of Health operates under~lifi
hemoglobin
sc reemngs,
heights, appointed Board of Health. On the board are, from left, seated, Jim Clifford Jr., vic~ .
weights, nutritional assessments, and president, and Gene Jeffers; president: and standing, Ann Haning, member; .klll :
group and individualized counseling.
Jacobs, secretary; Dr. Margie Lawson, health commissioner, and Joanne Cri61!;:
Other WIC staff members are Elaine member.
·
;&lt;
Matheny, la ctation consultant; Janet
'
sonnel visited 108 sites, and were sewage disposal systems.
. ',:,.
· Bolland, dietitian; Linda King, family
. involved with or did presentations at
Little and Hodge regularly conductand nutrition educator from the Ohio
eight ather facilities.
'
ed
inspections at all landfill areas, mobile
State University Meig. County ExtenStatistics
home parks, camps and schools, al)d
sion Office; and Norma Torres, RN,
Edwina Bell, registrar and vital statis- investigated 58 animal bites. wl)ere
BSN, MSEd., nursing director. ·who .
tician, reported that there were 't89 injured in,!ividua)s received · medical
offered specialized part-time nutritio,,
. deaths recorded in 1999. The majority attention.
'.
services to the clients.
of deaths .were heart (cardiovascular sysPersonnel
Speech/hearing clinics
tem) and cancer-related deaths.
·
Dr.
Margie
Lawson ·is the health
Susie Heines, hearing and speech
A total. of 308 birth and 845 death commissioner and Jon Jacobs, RS, is th~ .
pathologist, continued to coordinate the
certified certificates were issued, as well deputy health commission.er.
'
evening hearing and speech clinics with
as, 2,091 uncertified copies for genealo· The health.department's nursing per~ ..
the assistance of therapists and students
gy research.
·
sonnel
consists of Norma 1'orres, nurs-;
from Ohio University.
.
FAMILY/CHilDREN FIRST COUNCIL- Funded by a wellness block grant, this proPublic awareness
ing director;TC. Ervin, assistant nursing
They made 441 total contacts with
~everal health or program-related director; &lt;;onnie Little, director o!
gram for health department staff members to participate in school and community clients in 1999, with 179 hearing tests
ev1mts. Norma Torres, left, is· the project director. and works with Margie Skidmore, r.ert:ormed, 6 7 referrals made, and SS
consultant, center, and Brenda Curfman, youth service coordinator. Jon Jacobs is the
clients receiving individualized therapy.
fiscal agent.
Other health services
Home visits were made byT.C. Ervin
monies.
.
diac and plastic surgery problems. ·
under the auspices of the Ohio DepartScreenings for health problems have
Th.e clinics continue to be free ·to ment of Health Bureau ·a ! Children
always been an importa{lt part of the
Meigs Cqunty residents , but appoint- Medical H.andicaps Program (BCMH),
department's programs and special ments are necessary to participate. Last which served over 60 children during
emphasis over the past year has been on year, a total o£'119 children were seen the year.
·
detecting cancer in both men and during these specialty clinics. ·
BCMH is a state-funded program to
wo men in its earliest stages.
·
Prenatal services .
ensure medical care to children, with
Mammography services were offered
Prena-tal services were offered by qualifying conditions and income eligiby the local health .department. each Connie Little, RN, BSN, and Jill Darst, ble families. It provides for medical care
month last year through either
LPN. Services included social assess- · at no cost for those determined eligible
(; rant/ Riverside or Ohio State Univerments, nutritional counseling, blood for the treatment program as long as
sity mbbile units:
'\'Ork, cultures. height, weight andphys- certain criteria is followed. ·
A total of 1t/9 women .took advari- ical exam. During physician clinics, . The Wel.lness Block Grant program is
t~ge of the low-cost screenings. In addi-'
which are .held two times a month, 86 coordinated by Nancy Aldridge, BA, BS.
tio n, 78 women were screened during
eli ems were scheduled and attended by She is assisted by Brenda Curfman, .
111011thly ce rvical cancer clinics. These
Dr. Wilma Mansfield.
·
LSW, and the program also employs
were provided at the Health DepartEach client · was seen an average of Margie Skidmore, RN, .BSN, as a partment by area providers at half-day clin- five visits with ultrasound scheduling time consultant.
io held each month,.
The personnel teach abstinence eduand other services performed that are
,.
cation to middle school and elenientary
'
students within the county by attending CHilDREN/FAMILY HEALTH SERVICES - A total of 405 children ages birth to 21:
classes at the schools.
·
were seen in the child health clinic in 1999. The staff consists of seated left to righi,
An active interest is taken in the Norma Torres, chairman; Margie Skidmore, well-child clinic nurse; Connie Uttie, chi]·
county's youth by 'also attending several dren and family health services director; and standing, Jill Parst, LPN, staff assis: .
·. '
community organizations, such as God's tant, and Jon Jacobs, fiscal agent.
Net. This grant· is coordinated by thl!
TricCounty Family and Children's First presentations w~re made at public ser- Child and · Family H.ealth Services~ ·
vice organizations during the year ..Ohio Margie Skidmore, child health project .
lntersystems Coordinator Robin 'H arUniversity medical students, nursing nurse; Jill Darst, LPN, Child and Family
ns.
students and other ancillary health 'ser- Health assistant; Sherry Wilcox, !AI:
New programs in '99
vice students were given the opport)lni- Welcome Home, and prenatal smoking
Two new programs started last year
ty to have short-term internships at th~ cessation nurse.
'·
by the Meigs County Health Depart~
Meigs County Health Department. ·
The Vital Statistics Department co~
ment are the prenatal smoking cessation
Staff members Norma Torres, Connie sists of Edwina Bell and Courtney Sini;
program, and the Welcome Home
Little, T.C. Ervin, Sherry Wilcox, and BSC. The environmental departmeni
Mother and Baby Program, both of
Bethany Gaul shared preceptorships and includes Keith Little, director, Doli
.which are coordinated by Sherry
other
student instruction.
Hodge aod Jon Jacobs.
.
· ::··
Wilcox,RN.
Environmental' se~rvices ' ..
The
WIC
staff
includes
Debbie
Bah':
Funds are· provided by the Ohio
Keith Little, RS, director of Environ- bitt, director; Pam S~arp, nutritionist;
Department of Healt~ and ,the Family
mental l:fealth, and Don Hodge, SIT, Dortha Riffie, Automated Data Proces'~
and Children First Council for the Welcompleted 313 ,insp'ections
215 . sor (ADP); and · Becki .-Ball, assistaat
come Home· Mother and Baby . Pro.
:. .:·
licensed food service op.erations ·auring · ADP. .
gram.
the year.
AnciUary personnel includes Carol
Fifty-seven home visits were made to
Five permits to install private water · Little, administrative assistant, Courtney
first time and/ or teen moms, that live in
systems were issued, 49 wat.er .samples Sim, BCS, nursing clerk, · receptionist;.
ACTION PROGRAMS -Among the action programs carried out at the Health Depart- Meigs County, bath in the last trimester were collected for testing, and 241 perdeputy registrar; and El,i.Zabeth Bearhs,
ment to improve children's health are smoking cessation for pregnant women, home and after the infant came. home follow- mits were issued to install private custodian.
·
· · .,:t
,
visits for prenatal clients, and immunizations for young children. Active in those pro- ing birth, for a total of 195 contacts.
Inforgrams are. from left, seated, Sherry Wilcox, Jon Jacobs and Margie Skidmore; and
mation
is
given
to,
the
new
mother
on
standing, Courtney Sim, Nancy Aldridge and Norma Tories.
what to expect during labor aod delivrequired by the American Academy of ~ry, prenatal care, post-partum care and
Again last year, the Southeast Ohio Obstetrics aiid Gynecology.
·
infant care, as well as doing height,
Breast and Cervical Cancer Project
A total of 315 pregnancy tests were . weight and ~ l)rief physical exam of the ·
helped with the cost for women taking performed with referrals and counseling
advantage of the screenings. Receiving provided. At the department, the prena- newborn. Ten referrals were made for
additional services.
assistance ;~fter establishfrig income eli- ul patients were followed through their
.' The Prenatal Smoking Cessation
gibility were 138 women. ·
26th week of ,pregnancy, at which time Program is funded by the March of
The annual prostate screeping served ' referral was made to the hospital chosen
Dimes, and 37 expecting, 'c lients
71 men 10 1999.
for delivery.
enrolled in the program to receiv~ supImmunization
Children's services
port and encouragement to stop smokand other clinics
The Health Department conducted ing, as well as inform~tion an the harmImmunizations for both adults and ·free blood lead ·screenings on 11 chilful effects smoking has on the fetus.
children as a key- to disease pravemion . dren during an annual lead probe to
Incentives were given to clients who
was again dominant in the Health determine how '1""Y six-month to sixdecreased and/or quit smoking, deterDepartmen c's. services.
year-ol&lt;;l
. .. children were at .risk for lead mined ~hrough tP.e use of urine,samples
At-cost influenza . vaccines were pmsomng.
to check .t he level of nicotine present. ' ·
administered to 1,683 Meigs counti'ans,
While annti&lt;Il screenings are no
Nutrition program
with 89 .of those
also .receiving the longer held, such. routine testing is done
.
· Th~ Ohio Departnient of Healthi
pneunu;mta vacctne.
through services offenid to children by Preventive Health Grant Funds, were
The· hnmunization Action Plan pro- the Well-C hild Clinic. (WCC) cond(tctused to emp,loy Jackie ·Starcher, DT, as ·
gram (lAP) for children is headed by ed.by Dr. James Witherell and Dr. Doucoordinator, and b,ter Rebecca Grueser,
Sherry Wilcox, RN and Courtney Sim; glas Hunter every month.
· as apart-time educator for .the nutrition
BSC, lAP assistant, who conduct four From birth to 21 years of age, 401 childaytime and evening cllnics in addition dren received scryices, indnding a phys- progr~m. A newspaper colun:'n, "Fun, WIC PROQRAM ..:. The calleiOad for the Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) Prograil} ~
Food and Fitness," is a part of the com- at the Mei&amp;s County Health Department reached 963 last year. Debbie Babbitt~ :
to . regul~r appointment schedules. Last ica] exantination ; bJood iron screeriing,
munity education program.
standing right, ,(s director of the program; with Norma Torres, as fiscal director. Oth~i,.:
year, 3,256 vaccinations were adminis- blood pressure measurement, lead
The grant also promotes physical fit- personnel working with Wit; clients .~re from the left seated, Pam Sharp, Dortha R , ;
tered during the ·clinics.
·
screenings, dental services, Denver ness for school aged .children. The perfie and Becky Ball. .
· .
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SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

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DeWine, Celeste to face .off, A7
Southem falls to VVhiteoak, Rio eams NAIA bid,

'111ursd~
Cloullr

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Details, A3

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Wednesday
March .8, 2000

•·
M•la• County's

Hometown News,.,.,

Middleport • Pomeroy. Ohio

v,,Jume so. Numb .. , 1n

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.:aush, Gore·
favored
. ~Y voters

Voters' decision .mea·ns j
ER will close by July
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BY 8RtAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY - Meig. County
voters gave the nod to Geotge W.
Bush and Vic,f President A1 Gore in
Tuesday's presidential primary.
Mike Azinger won the county's
nomination as the Republican
~andidate for u.s, representative,
and Mike De Wine and Theodore
Celeste the Republican and
Democratic nominations for U.S.
Senate.
'Gore was easily the choice of
Meigs County. Democrats in the
presidential race, receiving 1,460
votes to Bill Bradley's 493 and
Lyndon H. Larotich~ Jr.'s 68 ..
. Bush took 61 percent .of the
county's Republican votes, 2,787
in all. Jo~ McCain received 1,503
V,Otes; Alan Lee Keyes 137; Steve
Forbes 74; and Gary Bauer 56.
, Azinger received 2,217 votes in
the Republican congressional {ace,
de~'!_tiES, Ji~Yt S5ewart, ,who ...
.took
votes.'·
;·
U.S~ Rep. Ted. Strickland, DLucasvi!le, was unopposed on the

r.Mo

PluM-·tah,PIIpAl .

Bv JIM ·I'Ra;MAN

room care.
.
.
"We pray that all will be able to
POMEROY .- · Plans will be reach an out-of-county hospital in'
·made "i~ediatelf' to shut down time.
"Loss of our county'S'&lt;&gt;nly hasthe Veterans Memorial Hospital
emergency room ·and inpatient pital will also hamper economic
' care facility after a levy for the development in Meigs County,
operati~n of the facilities was since few companies want to move ·
rejected by Voters on Tuesday.
their business to an ·an;a lacking
That is according to a statement even basic emeriency and hospital
released 'by hospital . officials fol- care for employeeS and their farni lawiilg the .Ound defeat of a fou r- lies.
· 1·
tnill, three•year property tax levy
"But the · voten ·\lave spoken,
to support the emergency room And we will comply (with) their
and hospital facility.
.
wishes. We will begin immediately
Unofficial results from the Meigs to plan the emergency mom's and
County Board of Elections showed the inpatient hospital's · closing.
th.e levY' was defeated 3,653-2,147. That information will be comnm~
As the levy's defeat appeared nicated to the .community and
. "' ip\mirient, James Witherell, M.D., soon as a closing schedule is deterchairman of Friends of Veterans · · mined:
.
Memorial Hospital, released the
"I would like oo 1thank those
foUOwing statement:
·
~ho supported the levy through
"This is a sad day for Meigs their 'yes' vote and their tirelesS
County.
.
efforts to spread the wi:lrd through·~The levy's defeat signals the end put the county. Campaign volun~
of Veterans Memorial Hospital's teers Worked diligendy to tell the
EmergenqRoam l!"d acute mpa- ER and hospital story to all who
tient care unit. By July, people who would be affected by today's vote.
"We will now abide by the
.. , experienc.o: a h"''f[ attack, an injury
. vatat. home or Wt!r'Tt, a traffic accident ers', decision, and we wish .Very. or
i!fuess that requires emer- · .one the best of health."
gency treatment•wiD have to leave
The three-ye:ir levy, if passed,
Meigs County for emergency
Please see ER. Pllp Al
SENTINEL CORRESPONDEJIIT

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Howard, Fisber;~Sheets win,.Commissioner contests
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Harrison, Trussell
and Triplett also
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wtnners
BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEl NEWS STAFF

POMEROY- Republicans Jim Sheets
and John Fisher Jr. wiD challenge Democratic County Commissioners Janet
Howard and JetiThornton, respectively, in
November, and Republican Ralph TrusseD

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and Democrat" jeffiey Mmer,~·face off votes, Bobby Arnold with 794, and Ernest
, ,. ·
. E. Spencer with 6 7 4.
in the sheriff's race.
, Those were · the winners ~t the top of
Sheets defeated Joe Stobart 2,863-1,338
the local tickets inTu,esday's .pri.rilary ~ec- in the Republiilan rnce for the cmnmistion, a;;.;ording to ·tinofficial results C!Jm- sioner's term commencingJan. 3,2001.
puted by the Board of Elections at the
In the primary's closest contest; Marlene
· close of.polls. .
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Harrison was the winner in a three-way
Board figures show a 42-percent-voter Republican race for the open ~lerk of
turnout.
·
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courts' seat, defeating Andy Baer and Blair
··
Republicans.
Windon. Harrison received 1,7.96 votes,
In the race for the commissioner~ term Baer 1,755, andWindan·1,118.
co'mmencing Jan.· 2, .2001, Fisher carried
Eugene Triplett will be unopposed in
the race with 1,615 votes. Other candi- . November as the county engineer race,
dates were Richard Bailey with ' 1,136 defeating incumbent , ~ab Eason in the

Republican primary 2,754- 1,770.
Ralph Trussell received 2,27 4 votes in
the sheriff's race on the Republican ticket,
defeating Tim Gillilan, .'who took 1,567
votes.
Unopposed Republicans and their vote
totals were: Recorder Judy King, 3,41.8;
Treasurer HoWard E. Frank; 3,532; Coroner Douglas D. Hunter, 3,876; and Common Pleas Judge Fred W. Crow III, 3,399.
Pat Story. who ian unopposed for the
Republican nomination for pmoecuting
attorney, received 3,330 votes. Al)other
Republican, P.tricia Jamison, withdrew

from that race.
Democrats
Yesterday's race between Howard and
Charles Williams, who received 70 I Votes
to Howard's 1,233, was the only contested
local race on the Democratic ballot.
Commissioner Jeff Thornton received
1,540 votes, Miller 1,287, Prosecuting
Attorney John Lentes, 1,475, Clerk of
Courts candidate Betsy Herald Nicodemus, 1,399, Th:asun!r Candidate Ron P.
Casci, 1,400, and Recoi;der candidate A.
Tam Lowery. 1,528.

J!IIHH- Whln.,., PapAl

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·:get disaster

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MeA to clean street, sidewalks:
He also repqrted on recent action by village.coun-;
cil to purchase more Christmas decorations for the
downtown business district. The additional snowflake
during its regUlar l)leeting on Tuesday morning.
Merchanis. attending the monthly_meeting com- lights and banner.; will be placed on Mill Street art~
plained of litter on 'sidewalks, dilapidated trash CO[!- General Hartinger Parkway. A lighted swag to comtainers ana the · need for more regular cleaning of plement the snowflake theme will also be purchased,
streets by the village. .
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and Will be hung an the balcony of the Mill Stree~
In particular, the merchants noted problems y;ith Books building on the "T.''
.
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cigarette butts m streets and sidewalks, and trash recep· A completed calendar of events for holiday obser~
tacles on corners which are often overrunning.
.vances, festivals and contests was distributed to mem.;
While me~bers acknowledged that sidewalk main- bers. it was noted that spring flags will be installed otl ·
tepan€e is the resporisibility of business owners, Asso~ · 'light poles in the business district around April I, an4
dation ~!resident M}oron .Duffield said that he ,would . that the annual "YeDow Flag" community yard sal~
approach· Village council abOl.!t .the ~ty._of lolil- will be held on M:iy 5 and 6.
lage s~ crcwa ~the village's new leafvacuuil\ to
Duffield announced that the renovation of the AI!
sweep streets more ~Y·
Wars Monument, adjacent to the post office, h~
In other business, Duffield noted that the Assq~ia- begun. Crews began working on the roof of the:'
tion's membership drive was still underway, with only building on Mol).day. The roof of the gazebo, includ•
· 26 of over 50 members renewing their membership ing the distinctive red clay tiles, will be replaced, and
fur 2000. He urged members''who have nat renewed new steps, sidev,:-Uks and landscaping wiD also be
their dues to do so al soon as possible, and said that a included in the project.
. ,
reminder l~er will be mailed to thqse members who .
.,
~ not paid d!jes 'to date.
PIMH'" MCA. .. . . . Al ·
MIDDLEPORT -The Middleport Conunun,ity

Association dlSciiSSed cleaning of streets and sidewalks

�Wednesday, March 8, 2000

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

·Bush's g~s into fall mode; McCain muses Withdrawing
AUSTIN, Texas (AP) -

George
w. Bush\ Super 'lbcsday blowout
sent Sen. John McCain to his Ari-

night MSomeene will make history
this November. Either we will ratifY
the starus quo, or ~ will have a new
beginning in ~nC311 politia. I say:
A1netica must not give ClintonGore fOur more )'!ars."
The 'Thxas governor beat McCain
in Cali£omia and New York - the

zona retle:at to contemplate the
future of his presidential ampilign,
and launched tbe Texas governor
into a~ election attack on Vice

President AI Gore.

A senior Mc:Cain aide.sprakins

MO b·a
'Ibes4aY -

on condition of~ laid he
expects McCain to depart the GOP
;ontest but cautioned that no firm
decision had been made.
In fiont ofhis supporters, McCain
asserted: "We will never give up this,
mission, my ti:iends"- but by "mission" he seemed to mean his effort to
reform politics and his pany.
''We may meet again in primaries
a few daY' liom now;· Me~ told
supporters m Los Angeles and no
one missed the implication of the
woni"nliy~'
Previewing his. likely campaign
message, Bush told cheering supporters in his hometown Tuesday

+lrpte prizes at stake
and he won five other

primaries as weD: Ohiq, Georgia,
Maine, Missou'ri and Maryland.
Bush also won caucuses in Minneso12 and Washingron state.
McCairi won only in independent-minded New Engmnd - in
Maachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode
Island and Vermont ~ as voters in
13 states participated in the )'!ar's
hugest . night of Republican presidential contests. hj all, 613 delegates
were at .stake; I ,034 are needed for
the norninanon. ·
Bush won at least 446 delegates,
and. McCain at least 126, bringing
the totals to date to 616 delegates for

Bush and 231 for M cCain, according to the APs count.
An additional 34 I Republican
delegates will be elected in next
Tuesday's primaries' in six Southern
states- territory considered ti:iend'ly to Bush.
Bush forged his usual coalitions,
~ying on party faithful while
McCain drew fiom independents
, and
moderate
Repub~cans .
McCain's gamble of criticizing con- ·
servative Christian leaders may have
backfired in key states, while Bush's
Visit to a South Carolina univer.ilty
with a history·of anti-Catholic view.
seemed to have · been a beneficial
campaign issue for McCain in some
states.
In the Democratic primaries,
Gore won alliS contests against former New Jersey Sen. Bill Braclley,
setting the stage for Bt:!clley's del\arrure . and giving Americans seven · ·
months to contemplate .tlieit choice
between Bush and Gore al ,the neJ&gt;.'t

Gore dears~
forBradejs
departure

VICTORY- Bush beat McCain in California and New York - the twd ·''
Island and a,t least 26 in New York.
Alan Keyes was stiD in dte GOP biggest delegate prizes at stake Tuesday - and he won five other
race, but not a factor in any ofTues- · primaries as well: Ohio, Georgia, Maine , Missouri and Maryland. Bush
also won caucuses in Minnesota and Washington state. (AP photo)l
day's states.
~

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*Everyday Low Prices
*Temporary 'N Terrific

to California and points in
between, AI Gore charged
straight ahead at Republican
George W. Bush and, with talk of
a "healing heart and soul;' clea'red
the way for rival Bill Bradley to
bow gracefully out ofthe Democratic race.
Bradley faced a sobering
choice as he closeted himself
today at his Montclair, NJ. , home
to consult with supporters:
MI'U make my plans ·known
shortlY,' he said after minority
voters and union workers Sealed
•.
G&lt;?~'s Super Tuesday shutout in
15 states - including MissOuri,
where Bradley wa5 born, and
New York, where he was a basketball star.
Alreac:l}\ Bradley spoke of his
mission in the past tense. "I
believe history wiD write that we
·tried to~ politics,1to restore .•
trust, and to defeat the politics of
expediencY.' he told supporters
lllesday night.
.
A scheduling advisory· that,.
· Bradley aides pro~d to distribute to reporters this morning
held die promise of a clearer clue
as to whether the furnter senator
from New Jersey would carry
on.
Gore e:isily took as much as 60
pen:ent of the vote in the 15
conrests. In a victory address that
aides said woulcl become his standard stump speech, he painted
the GOP as beholden to its righ,t
wing- hirnself as "inainstream"
- ~d clearly counted on riding
the strong economy t:O ~ctory in

Food Store
Point Pleasant

Rt. 62 N

From
Anywhere

~.

.

.

· Gore pined at leasi 93~ delegates, increasing hiJ
total
to 1,418. He needs 2,170 to .win
the nomination. Bradley won at
least 349 delegates, fur a total of
406, according to the AP's count.
Bush emerged fiom the
Republican voting as the prohibitive ficnt-runner over Sen. John
McCain, who today planned to
contemplate the furure of his
campaign at his Arizona retreat.
Presaging how bitterly person. al a race between Bush and Gore
could prove to be, Gore also
allu!led to the presidency of
Bush's father, George Bush,
whom Clinton .defeated in 1992.
·" We need to build on our
record of prosperitY;' Gore said.
"We don\ need to go back to
where we were eight years ago. ·
They tried their approach before;
it produced a triple-dip recession
and quadrupled the national
debt:'

kr.n

PORTLAND - Maxine Durst, 78, of 31200 Durst R.id~ Road,
Prn:tland, passed away Monday, Ma~eh 6, 2000 at Veterans Memorial Haspial in Pomeroy.
She was born November 27, 1921 in Portland, daughter of the late
Lawrence and Cora Nease Ritchie. She was a homemaker, and a member of the Stiversville Community Church and Racine C hapter of Ohio
EaStern Star.
She married Robert R . Durst on June 29, 1939 in Ashland, Kenrucky,
and he survives, as does a son and daughter-in-law,Vic and C heryl Durst
of Richmond, Virginia. Also surviving is a granddaughter, Kelly Durst,
and two grandsons, Scott Durst and Jason Durst, and a ,great-grandson.
~ sisters survive, Pauline Damron of Fair Hope, Alabama, and Rita
Bel'ry of Lexington; .and rwo brothers, Jim R.i~chie of Racine, and Bob
Rig;hie of Belpre.
·
lri addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by a son, Thomas
Dwight Durst, on July 22, 1999; a grandson, Kirk The;&gt; mas Durst; and a
brother, Lawrence Arthur Ritchie.
·
Services will be conducted at 1 p.m. Friday, March 10, 2000 at the Cremeens Funeral Home, Racine. The Rev. Dewayne Stutler will officiate.
Burial will follow on the family plot in the Stiversville Cemetery.
Friends may call from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m :Thursday, March 9, 2000 at the
funeral home.
·

Ernest
L Greene
.
.

Hargis House

-Asst. Varieties

Vienna
Sa usa

Ban~uet

Soda

s

Ea.

can

,, Morn in' Gems

from

· ER

c S 79

7 oz.
pkg

20oz.
box

ment rate fat Medicare patients as
one reaslin for the financial struggles
experienced by the hospital, which is
county-owned and operated by
Consolidated Health Systems Inc.
Consolidated also manages Holzer
Medical Center in Gallipolis and
Oak Hill Comrnunity Medical Center in Jac~on :
.
Consolidated has had a 99-year
lease onVMH since raking it over in
1995.

from PapAl

•

'·

•
wo!tld have provided about $970,000
}far in revenue to offSet projected
losses of about $800,000 for the
u~rning )'far, along with providing
money to recruit physicians,
During the campaign, hospital officited changes in the reimburse•
..

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; The Daily Sentinel
:

(USPS Z13·NO)

c;ommuall7 Newspaper Holdlnp, lno.

Wylwood .
.Asst Green ·Beans; ·
.Peas or Corn

Home Churned

Vegetable
Oil

Family Size
Dinners

Vegetables

li:aL
. ........

31b.
tub

c

14.5- .
15.25

can

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Banquet Asst

24-2Bo1$
pkg.

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79

Chunk Light
Tuna

c

6oz.

can

from PapAl

Plbllahed every afternoon, Monday throuJh
Flldoy, Ill Coun So., Pomeroy, Oblo, by lhc
Ohio V.llcy Publi1hina Company. Scc:oad
clau postage paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
Member: The Associated Prtu, and tht Ohio

EVERYDi\Y!

Duffieid said that Feeney Bennett Post 128 . .American Legion,
which .owns the monument and is
overseeing the restoration, esti mates the cost at $14,000. So far,
Duffield said, $10,500 has been
raised.
In a street report, Duffield noted
that aT-shirt store on the "T" has
vacated a storefiont, and that a
number of prospective businesses
are considering locating in th e
space.
At next mo'nth's meeting, the
Association will begil) plans for the
July .4 celebration.

Newspaper Association.
POSTMASTER: Send address correc1ion11 to
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Ololo 45769
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No subscription by mail permitted in arcaa
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EVERY MY!

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Biscuits
Morning Delight 15 oz.
·Frozen.WafAes

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CoHage 24 oz.
Cheese

All Meat 16oz.
Bologna

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Totino's ·
Pizza Rolls
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More mercury
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Tomato
Juice 46oz.

the rlatu to adjust races

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All Purpose ' - '
Coffee
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•ubscriplioa period. Sut)~eription
ral; chanp may 'be implemented by ch1nging.
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during

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Democratic ballot, and received
I ,976 votes.
In the race for U.S. Senate,
DeWine defeated Frank A . Cremeans and Ronald Richard Dickson. DeWine received 2,515 votes,.
Cremeans 1,486 and Dickson 123.
Democrats gave Celeste, a
brother of former Ohio Gov.
Richard F Celeste, 1,023 votes.
Richard Cordray received 330;
Marvin A. McMickle 218; and
Daniel Radakovich, 112.
In the races for justice of the
Supreme Court, Democrats Tim
J3lack and James A. Brogan
received 777 and 7 40 votes, respec-tively, while Alice Robie Resnick,
unopposed on the Democratic
ballot, received I ,491 votes.
,
Republicans Deborah ·Cook
and Terrence O'Donnell received
2,903 and 2,727 votes, .:especiively

Winnen

l •

Beet or
Sugar Frosty
hicken Pot Pie ·. · Flakes

12 pack

5oz.

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POMEROY - Ernest L. Greene, 67, of Pomeroy, died on Tuesday,
Ma.rcli 7, 2000 at H olzer Medical Center in Gallipolis.
l;ie was born on August 26, I 932 in Mason County, West Virginia, son
of. the late George Leslie and Sibyl Edna H erdman Greene. H e was
PapAl
en\ployed as a truck driver and was a social member of the YFW Post in
Mason ,We.stVirginia. ·
.
November's local elections will
Surviving are his wife, Dorothy C. Greene of PomcrQy; three sons,
be
made interesting by two writeLeslie Ray (Carolyn) Greene of Jackso n , Kevin Dean (Eln:ta) Greene of
Columbus, and Samuel L. Greene of Point Pleasant, West Virginia; three in candidates for sheriff: James M .
dai)ghters, Tammera Kay (Roger) Arnold of Pomeroy, .'l isa J. Layne Soulsby, the incumbent D emocrat,
(Mjchad Wiggins) of Cincinl)ati,. and Alice L. May (Ray G reen) of New and Robert Beegle, both of whom ·
Haven, West Virginia; ~3 grandchildren and 13 great-grandchildren; a sis- were deemed meligible due to
ter; Deloris EDen (Charles) Rife of Middleport; four brothers, Ralph Basil qualifications requirements.
In ·addition , C. Edward Evans of
(D0nna) Greene of Letart, West Virgiitia, Roy Eugene (R\Ith) Greene of
Hamord,West Virginia, Kenneth Thurman (Norma) Greene of Hartford, Dexter and C harles H . Knight of
West Virginia, and George M elvin (Sue) Greene ofMason,WestVirginia; Pomeroy · have filed petitions with
three sisters-in~law, Ruby Greene of Hartford,WestVirginia, R eba Roush th e board of elections as candidates
pfLetart Falls, and Rosa Greene ofHartford,WestVirginia; and his moth- for the county commissioner term
er-'jn-law,Alice V. Lemley of Fostoria.
commencing Jan. 2, 2001. They
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by his daughter, Carol Sue will join Tltornton and Fisher in a
G~ene Toops; tWo brothers, James Robert Greene and Donald Edwin four-way race for the seat, but did
G~~ne; a half-sister, Mae Lewis; and a son-in-law, Michael S. Layne.
not appear ·on yesterday's ballots.
~~rvices will be held at 1 p.m. qn Friday, March 10, 2000 at the Fisher
Levies
FuiJeral Home in Middleport, with Larry Gilland officiating. Burial will · In addition to the cou ntywide
fom)w ·at Gravel Hill Cemetery.
levy t.; benefit Veterans Memorial
~iends may call at the funeral home on Thursday, March 9, 2000 from
Hospital, which was defeated
. 7~~p. m . · ·
soundly (see related story), voters decided several other township
•

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Bush
fnHn

LOCAL BRIEFS

in the Supreme Court race.
In the two Fourth District
Court of Appeals races on the
Republican ticket, Roger l. Kline
and William H . Harsha took 2,543
and 2,427 votes, respectively, in the
Republican primary. There were
no Democratic candidates for
either seat.
State Rep. John Carey, R-Wellston, . was also unopposed, and
received 3,780 votes. There was no
Democratic candidate for the seat.
Republicans nominated Phil A.
Bowman and Kay Reynolds as the
17th District members of the State
(:entral Committee, giving Bowman 2,388. votes and Reynolds
2,437.
Thomas R. King was defeated
. by lawrence W. Brown, 857 to ·
700, in the race for Democraric
state central conunittceman , and
Karen M~tney Sinu11ons, wl~o was
unopposed as state central committeewoman, rcc&lt;:ived l ,429 votes
from Meigs County Democrats.

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SPRINGFIELD (AP) - ·· More test
results were expected today for children
who p~ with mercUry theY, fOund
in a drum behini:l a v.~cant house.
.
Results cin sonie of.'the 16 to 20 cliildren whO ~ been tested came back
TuesdJ¥They sltov.d no signs of mercury poisoning, said Clark County
Health Commissioner SteveWenruth.
. "Everything at tim point is coming
back norinal," said Wermuth, adding
that he did not kno'w how many of the
test results ""re in.
Mercury cari. damage the central
rterloOOS S}'telll if inhaled or abSoroed
into .the bloodstream.

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POMEROY - Meigs County Emergency Services reported .
four emergency calls on Tuesday. Units respondin g were:

.,,

CENTRAL DISPATCH
10:59 a.m .,West Main Street, Pomeroy, Opal Cummins, Veterans
Memorial Hospital;
I :48 p~m . ,. with Pomeroy as first responder, Marilyn Watson, ' ·
Holzer .Mcdical Center;
·
";
COLUMBIA TWP.
3:5 1 p.m., Folden Road, brush fire , Penny Pleasant property

..•'

SYRACUSE

•'

10:32 p.m., Second Street, Austin Reitmire,VMH .

Disaster
. from Pap A1
Assistance application can be
done by calling 1-800-462-9029
frOm 8 a.m . until 6 p.m., seven
days a week until further notice,
. the governor's office advised.
Those who suffered damage
should first contact thm insurance
company.
"lf they find they haw tmmet
needs, they should apply for disaster assistance,'' Taft said.
·
Srrickland noted that FEMA
assistance will help families. whose
homes or businesses were damaged by flooding stenuning linin
·heavy rains on Feb. 18 get hack on

.~

·'

•
theor feet .
/
The congressman has also sent a
letter to Taft asking him to seek
FEMA aid to help rebuild public .•; ·
infrastructure. .
,
" 1 have been hearing fiom local ..;
elected officials who are facing ,•
hardship in paying fot repairs on • •
damaged public infrastructure," · "
Strickland wrote to Taft.
..'
" Although your office has indi- . •
cated local governments can seek . •
reimbursement through the State
Controlling Board, the 25 percent '~ '
matching local government con- r,
tribution will be very difficult for '·.•
inany io pay;' he added.
,
FEMA assistance, Strickland ' said, would cut the local share of :·: ·
paying fur rep.;,. by half
.
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VALLEY WEATHER
School board delays action on
schools backed by businessman Rain bringing coole.r temps

CO LUMBUS (AP) - Th e
The new contract
State Board of Education h as
provisions include
delayed
a
de ci sio n
on
admitting s1tudents with
w h e ther to approve · condisabilities, establishing
tract s fo r 13 n ew charter .
sc hools planned by an Akro n an open enrollment policy
businessman.
and establishing nonprofit
The bo ard po stp o n ed th e
status.
decis i o n Tu esday be cause the
o pe ra tor s haven't agreed to .h as raised qu es tion s about
.. new co ntra c t lan gu a ge that p otential con fl ic t s of interapplies to all co mmuni ty est' b!!tw ,e e n ' school managesc hools in Ohio, sa id spo kes- m e ~t com pani es and the··
woman Moni c a Zarichny.
nonprofi t charte r sc ho o ls
The new contrac't provi- th ey operate.
sions include admitting stu ·. Pam Young, d ir ec tor of
dents with disabilities , estab- the Department' of Eduo;:alishing an open en ro llment tion 's Office
of School
policy and establishing non-. Options, said issues rega rd profit status, she sai d .
ing conflicts o f interest h ave
Do c um e nt s obtained by
been turn ed over to the
the Akron B eacon Journal
attorney genera l and th e
show that the disput e with
department 's lega l depart the state includes aca demic
ment .
acc ountability,
whether
A June lette r from . .th e
sc hools hav e been regi st e red .
IRS
to the H ope Acade my
· as nonprofit organizations,
Ca mpu s
in
lo c ation , and who o wn s the Chapelside
Cleveland, which is run by
c'!assroom equipment.
The action t empora rily White H a t M an ageme n t,
blo c ks the creation of char- said that th ete is not eno u gh
ter sc hools that . in a few · separation · of the c h a rt e r
years could e nroll m o re than • school board and White H at .'
Brenn~n spok es m an Tom
13,050 students
throug h
Needles
said White Hat ha s
David Brennan 's
Akro nbased · fot "profit White Hat not secured federal nonprofit status for , any c h a rt er
Management Co.
State Auditor :Jim Petro schooJ sinJ:e then .

LOCAL STOCKS
AEP-21~.

Akzo- 38'1.
AmTechiSBC- 41'4
Aahland Inc• ..;.. 31 ~•
AT&amp;T-52~

Bank One - 24'· .
Bob Evans -12-,.
BorgWarnar - 31 l.
Champion - 3),
Charming Shopa - 5~
City Holding - 13
Federal Mogul~ 13'1•
·
Flretar - 17),

GanneU- 65'/i
General Electric

129.,

Harley Davldaon - 68\
K mart-8).
Kroger- 14"!.
Landi End - 30'),
Ltd.- 31'l.
Oak Hill Financial - 13
OVB-30~

Rockwllll - 40
RD Shell -55),
S.ara -26),
Shol&gt;!ly'a - H.
.Wendy'a ...; 14.,,
Worihlngton - 12),
.
Dally atock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing
quotH of the previous

d•y"• tral'llactlon•, pro·

011!1 Valley - 27),
Peoples- 16
P'remler - 8%.

vlded by Adveat of Gal·
. llpolla.

Z39"

8

BY THE ~SSOCIATED PRESS

The unseaso nably warm
weather across O hio shoul d
continue until the \Veekend ,
w hen conditions are expected
to return to normal.
By Saturday, the highs w ill be
back inc the 40s and 50s and
there will be a chan ce of snow
in northern Ohio1 the National
Weather Service said.
For now, though, mnny skies
and summerlike · temperaturees
a re in the offing. Highs on
Thursday will be in the 60s
north , 70s south.
Soine rain is possible to night,
especially in the north .
The reco rd high temp erature

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6:00 ~ ~ 12:00 A'11t

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'R$1/P 4 '1ltMd td., .2000
(740) 992-5005

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6 Suites to choose from.
.

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and savel

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for this date at the Columbus .. •
'weather station was 80 in 1974 •;
and th e · record low was -2 in
1960. Sunset tonight will be at •·:
6:32p.m. and su nri1e on Thursday at 6:52 a.m .
Weather forecast :
Ton!ght ... Bree zy and mild ,..
with a chance of showers after
midnight. Lows . only near 60.
:Southwest wind I 0 to I 5 mph. ~'
C hance of rain 30 percent.
"
l '.,
Thursday... A chance of a
· shower early... Otherwise windy :•• .
and still warm. Highs in the mid . ..
70s. Chance ofrain 30 percent. '·
Thursday
night ... Partly . , ,
cloudy and turning cooler. Lows
in the nu&lt;;l 40s.

\

Living Room Suites

Now Only

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EMS reports four calls

village tax issu es:
Middleport Village, renewal,
one-mill, current expenses, 304
for, 305 against; Syracuse Village,
replacement, 1'.8 mills, c urrent
expenses, I 79 for. I 44 against;
O range Township, renewal, 2 mills,
fire protection , 185 for. 124 against;
Salem Township, half-mill, maintaining and operating cemeteries ,
138 for, 61 against; Sutton Township, replacement, half-mill, maintaining and operating cemeteries,
691 for, 384 against.
Absentee bailors were included
in yesterday.'s vote 'tallies. However,
those ballots cast at the board of .
elections office under provisions of
state law will not be included in
the election.results until the board's
official count on March 29.
Board Director Rita Smith was
unable to report the .number of
walk-in · votes, since they will be
kept under lock and key until the
official count.

1

roll

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POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.- An Ohio woman was arrested
Tuesday on charges of embezzltmenr, according to a spokesman for
the Mason County Sheriff's Department.
Robin McGuire, 24, langsville, was arrested by Sgt. C.E. Stearns
for allegedly taking S23,000 from the Wal-Mart Store in Mason
where she was employed at the time of the theft .
McGuire was arraigned before Magistrate Johnny Reynolds, who
set bond at S5,000, whi&lt;;h McGuire posted.
The sheriff's department abo reported that a Poca woman was
cited for improper backing after a minor vehicle accident occurred
at 2:45 p.m. Tuesday.
·
Kimberly D. Arrington, 24, who was traveling in a 1991 Buick,
attempting to pull out into traffic, but oncoming traffic was traveling too fast. Arrington backed up her vehicle and hit a 1990 Ford
driven by Colleen L. Bowers, 27, Point Pleasant .

~nd

Glider Rockers

Bath Tissue

~

Ohio woman anested

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schente." ·
Gore defeated Bradley in primaries in 11 states, including the
big priZes of California and New
York. Bradley came closest inVermont, where he puDed 44 percent of the vote. In addition,
Gore won party caucuses in
North Dakota, Idaho, WaShington state, American Samoa and

"

Special Items
*IOOo/o Guaranteed

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) Pocketing wins fiom New York

He said he had the know-how
to continue the economic
growth begun under Bill Clinton
- the only time Gore used the
president's name. In an unnamed
rell:rence to Bush's policies, Gore
cautioned against "wasting the
{budget) surplus on a risky tax

Muilae Durst

alll2~tVermont, all14 fiomRhode

.

Nowmber.

OBITUARIES
.

occupant of the White House.
Looking past McCain, Bush congratulated the vice president fOr his
Super Tuesday "'"'ep, but said, "He is
th~ candidate of the statuS quo in
Washington, D.C. ... He's got a tough
case to make in the general election:'
The widespread ~ring prompted sevetal McCain advisers, speaking
on condition of anonymity. to say
the Arizona sel)3tor would take srock
ofhis campaign today at his retreat in
Sedona, Ariz.
Bush earned all 162 delegates at
stake in. California, at least 66 of 101
at stake in New York, 35 fiom Missouri and 14 fiom Maine. He won at
least I 03 of the 154 delegates at stake
in Georgia, Maryland and Ohio.
McCain won all 25 delegates in
Connecticut, all37 in MassachusettS,

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Ttl• Dally Sentinel • Page A 3 •

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

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Dryer

5289 00
Both
For Only

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�Wednesday, March 8, 2000

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·Bush's g~s into fall mode; McCain muses Withdrawing
AUSTIN, Texas (AP) -

George
w. Bush\ Super 'lbcsday blowout
sent Sen. John McCain to his Ari-

night MSomeene will make history
this November. Either we will ratifY
the starus quo, or ~ will have a new
beginning in ~nC311 politia. I say:
A1netica must not give ClintonGore fOur more )'!ars."
The 'Thxas governor beat McCain
in Cali£omia and New York - the

zona retle:at to contemplate the
future of his presidential ampilign,
and launched tbe Texas governor
into a~ election attack on Vice

President AI Gore.

A senior Mc:Cain aide.sprakins

MO b·a
'Ibes4aY -

on condition of~ laid he
expects McCain to depart the GOP
;ontest but cautioned that no firm
decision had been made.
In fiont ofhis supporters, McCain
asserted: "We will never give up this,
mission, my ti:iends"- but by "mission" he seemed to mean his effort to
reform politics and his pany.
''We may meet again in primaries
a few daY' liom now;· Me~ told
supporters m Los Angeles and no
one missed the implication of the
woni"nliy~'
Previewing his. likely campaign
message, Bush told cheering supporters in his hometown Tuesday

+lrpte prizes at stake
and he won five other

primaries as weD: Ohiq, Georgia,
Maine, Missou'ri and Maryland.
Bush also won caucuses in Minneso12 and Washingron state.
McCairi won only in independent-minded New Engmnd - in
Maachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode
Island and Vermont ~ as voters in
13 states participated in the )'!ar's
hugest . night of Republican presidential contests. hj all, 613 delegates
were at .stake; I ,034 are needed for
the norninanon. ·
Bush won at least 446 delegates,
and. McCain at least 126, bringing
the totals to date to 616 delegates for

Bush and 231 for M cCain, according to the APs count.
An additional 34 I Republican
delegates will be elected in next
Tuesday's primaries' in six Southern
states- territory considered ti:iend'ly to Bush.
Bush forged his usual coalitions,
~ying on party faithful while
McCain drew fiom independents
, and
moderate
Repub~cans .
McCain's gamble of criticizing con- ·
servative Christian leaders may have
backfired in key states, while Bush's
Visit to a South Carolina univer.ilty
with a history·of anti-Catholic view.
seemed to have · been a beneficial
campaign issue for McCain in some
states.
In the Democratic primaries,
Gore won alliS contests against former New Jersey Sen. Bill Braclley,
setting the stage for Bt:!clley's del\arrure . and giving Americans seven · ·
months to contemplate .tlieit choice
between Bush and Gore al ,the neJ&gt;.'t

Gore dears~
forBradejs
departure

VICTORY- Bush beat McCain in California and New York - the twd ·''
Island and a,t least 26 in New York.
Alan Keyes was stiD in dte GOP biggest delegate prizes at stake Tuesday - and he won five other
race, but not a factor in any ofTues- · primaries as well: Ohio, Georgia, Maine , Missouri and Maryland. Bush
also won caucuses in Minnesota and Washington state. (AP photo)l
day's states.
~

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*Everyday Low Prices
*Temporary 'N Terrific

to California and points in
between, AI Gore charged
straight ahead at Republican
George W. Bush and, with talk of
a "healing heart and soul;' clea'red
the way for rival Bill Bradley to
bow gracefully out ofthe Democratic race.
Bradley faced a sobering
choice as he closeted himself
today at his Montclair, NJ. , home
to consult with supporters:
MI'U make my plans ·known
shortlY,' he said after minority
voters and union workers Sealed
•.
G&lt;?~'s Super Tuesday shutout in
15 states - including MissOuri,
where Bradley wa5 born, and
New York, where he was a basketball star.
Alreac:l}\ Bradley spoke of his
mission in the past tense. "I
believe history wiD write that we
·tried to~ politics,1to restore .•
trust, and to defeat the politics of
expediencY.' he told supporters
lllesday night.
.
A scheduling advisory· that,.
· Bradley aides pro~d to distribute to reporters this morning
held die promise of a clearer clue
as to whether the furnter senator
from New Jersey would carry
on.
Gore e:isily took as much as 60
pen:ent of the vote in the 15
conrests. In a victory address that
aides said woulcl become his standard stump speech, he painted
the GOP as beholden to its righ,t
wing- hirnself as "inainstream"
- ~d clearly counted on riding
the strong economy t:O ~ctory in

Food Store
Point Pleasant

Rt. 62 N

From
Anywhere

~.

.

.

· Gore pined at leasi 93~ delegates, increasing hiJ
total
to 1,418. He needs 2,170 to .win
the nomination. Bradley won at
least 349 delegates, fur a total of
406, according to the AP's count.
Bush emerged fiom the
Republican voting as the prohibitive ficnt-runner over Sen. John
McCain, who today planned to
contemplate the furure of his
campaign at his Arizona retreat.
Presaging how bitterly person. al a race between Bush and Gore
could prove to be, Gore also
allu!led to the presidency of
Bush's father, George Bush,
whom Clinton .defeated in 1992.
·" We need to build on our
record of prosperitY;' Gore said.
"We don\ need to go back to
where we were eight years ago. ·
They tried their approach before;
it produced a triple-dip recession
and quadrupled the national
debt:'

kr.n

PORTLAND - Maxine Durst, 78, of 31200 Durst R.id~ Road,
Prn:tland, passed away Monday, Ma~eh 6, 2000 at Veterans Memorial Haspial in Pomeroy.
She was born November 27, 1921 in Portland, daughter of the late
Lawrence and Cora Nease Ritchie. She was a homemaker, and a member of the Stiversville Community Church and Racine C hapter of Ohio
EaStern Star.
She married Robert R . Durst on June 29, 1939 in Ashland, Kenrucky,
and he survives, as does a son and daughter-in-law,Vic and C heryl Durst
of Richmond, Virginia. Also surviving is a granddaughter, Kelly Durst,
and two grandsons, Scott Durst and Jason Durst, and a ,great-grandson.
~ sisters survive, Pauline Damron of Fair Hope, Alabama, and Rita
Bel'ry of Lexington; .and rwo brothers, Jim R.i~chie of Racine, and Bob
Rig;hie of Belpre.
·
lri addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by a son, Thomas
Dwight Durst, on July 22, 1999; a grandson, Kirk The;&gt; mas Durst; and a
brother, Lawrence Arthur Ritchie.
·
Services will be conducted at 1 p.m. Friday, March 10, 2000 at the Cremeens Funeral Home, Racine. The Rev. Dewayne Stutler will officiate.
Burial will follow on the family plot in the Stiversville Cemetery.
Friends may call from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m :Thursday, March 9, 2000 at the
funeral home.
·

Ernest
L Greene
.
.

Hargis House

-Asst. Varieties

Vienna
Sa usa

Ban~uet

Soda

s

Ea.

can

,, Morn in' Gems

from

· ER

c S 79

7 oz.
pkg

20oz.
box

ment rate fat Medicare patients as
one reaslin for the financial struggles
experienced by the hospital, which is
county-owned and operated by
Consolidated Health Systems Inc.
Consolidated also manages Holzer
Medical Center in Gallipolis and
Oak Hill Comrnunity Medical Center in Jac~on :
.
Consolidated has had a 99-year
lease onVMH since raking it over in
1995.

from PapAl

•

'·

•
wo!tld have provided about $970,000
}far in revenue to offSet projected
losses of about $800,000 for the
u~rning )'far, along with providing
money to recruit physicians,
During the campaign, hospital officited changes in the reimburse•
..

a

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·~

MCA

; The Daily Sentinel
:

(USPS Z13·NO)

c;ommuall7 Newspaper Holdlnp, lno.

Wylwood .
.Asst Green ·Beans; ·
.Peas or Corn

Home Churned

Vegetable
Oil

Family Size
Dinners

Vegetables

li:aL
. ........

31b.
tub

c

14.5- .
15.25

can

·Portside ·

Banquet Asst

24-2Bo1$
pkg.

.

79

Chunk Light
Tuna

c

6oz.

can

from PapAl

Plbllahed every afternoon, Monday throuJh
Flldoy, Ill Coun So., Pomeroy, Oblo, by lhc
Ohio V.llcy Publi1hina Company. Scc:oad
clau postage paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
Member: The Associated Prtu, and tht Ohio

EVERYDi\Y!

Duffieid said that Feeney Bennett Post 128 . .American Legion,
which .owns the monument and is
overseeing the restoration, esti mates the cost at $14,000. So far,
Duffield said, $10,500 has been
raised.
In a street report, Duffield noted
that aT-shirt store on the "T" has
vacated a storefiont, and that a
number of prospective businesses
are considering locating in th e
space.
At next mo'nth's meeting, the
Association will begil) plans for the
July .4 celebration.

Newspaper Association.
POSTMASTER: Send address correc1ion11 to
~ Otily Scnliacl, 111 Court St., Pomeroy,
Ololo 45769
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pen Clrrier each week.

No subscription by mail permitted in arcaa
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Publisher

EVERY MY!

Morning Delight
Biscuits
Morning Delight 15 oz.
·Frozen.WafAes

'4/'1

CoHage 24 oz.
Cheese

All Meat 16oz.
Bologna

.

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40 ct. pkg .
Totino's ·
Pizza Rolls
'i
Cagles Frozen 41b:
Party Wings
I,

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18 o:Z. box

Com Flakes

.

·. Bologna

More mercury
results expected

MAIL SUBSCRJmONS
J..WoMelpC..oly
ll'Wceb ........................., ................... $27.30
:ui:Wccb............................................. I5J.82
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S(;ft &amp; Gentle

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bow of •• trror lila...,.,
cal die HWJIV081 al (7411) '92•ZIS!. We

121

Vegetable
Oil 48oz.
Tomato
Juice 46oz.

the rlatu to adjust races

t~

Beef ·12oz.

All Purpose
Flour sib.

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McDaniels 34.5.oz. ·
All Purpose ' - '
Coffee
a· '

ggc ·

Soar
LOundry Detergent

rc~erve,s

•ubscriplioa period. Sut)~eription
ral; chanp may 'be implemented by ch1nging.
the duration of the aublcripllon.

during

..

wtp tMCl 7Hr laron~atloa

oz.

1s oz.

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and

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eat

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Democratic ballot, and received
I ,976 votes.
In the race for U.S. Senate,
DeWine defeated Frank A . Cremeans and Ronald Richard Dickson. DeWine received 2,515 votes,.
Cremeans 1,486 and Dickson 123.
Democrats gave Celeste, a
brother of former Ohio Gov.
Richard F Celeste, 1,023 votes.
Richard Cordray received 330;
Marvin A. McMickle 218; and
Daniel Radakovich, 112.
In the races for justice of the
Supreme Court, Democrats Tim
J3lack and James A. Brogan
received 777 and 7 40 votes, respec-tively, while Alice Robie Resnick,
unopposed on the Democratic
ballot, received I ,491 votes.
,
Republicans Deborah ·Cook
and Terrence O'Donnell received
2,903 and 2,727 votes, .:especiively

Winnen

l •

Beet or
Sugar Frosty
hicken Pot Pie ·. · Flakes

12 pack

5oz.

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PageA1

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POMEROY - Ernest L. Greene, 67, of Pomeroy, died on Tuesday,
Ma.rcli 7, 2000 at H olzer Medical Center in Gallipolis.
l;ie was born on August 26, I 932 in Mason County, West Virginia, son
of. the late George Leslie and Sibyl Edna H erdman Greene. H e was
PapAl
en\ployed as a truck driver and was a social member of the YFW Post in
Mason ,We.stVirginia. ·
.
November's local elections will
Surviving are his wife, Dorothy C. Greene of PomcrQy; three sons,
be
made interesting by two writeLeslie Ray (Carolyn) Greene of Jackso n , Kevin Dean (Eln:ta) Greene of
Columbus, and Samuel L. Greene of Point Pleasant, West Virginia; three in candidates for sheriff: James M .
dai)ghters, Tammera Kay (Roger) Arnold of Pomeroy, .'l isa J. Layne Soulsby, the incumbent D emocrat,
(Mjchad Wiggins) of Cincinl)ati,. and Alice L. May (Ray G reen) of New and Robert Beegle, both of whom ·
Haven, West Virginia; ~3 grandchildren and 13 great-grandchildren; a sis- were deemed meligible due to
ter; Deloris EDen (Charles) Rife of Middleport; four brothers, Ralph Basil qualifications requirements.
In ·addition , C. Edward Evans of
(D0nna) Greene of Letart, West Virgiitia, Roy Eugene (R\Ith) Greene of
Hamord,West Virginia, Kenneth Thurman (Norma) Greene of Hartford, Dexter and C harles H . Knight of
West Virginia, and George M elvin (Sue) Greene ofMason,WestVirginia; Pomeroy · have filed petitions with
three sisters-in~law, Ruby Greene of Hartford,WestVirginia, R eba Roush th e board of elections as candidates
pfLetart Falls, and Rosa Greene ofHartford,WestVirginia; and his moth- for the county commissioner term
er-'jn-law,Alice V. Lemley of Fostoria.
commencing Jan. 2, 2001. They
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by his daughter, Carol Sue will join Tltornton and Fisher in a
G~ene Toops; tWo brothers, James Robert Greene and Donald Edwin four-way race for the seat, but did
G~~ne; a half-sister, Mae Lewis; and a son-in-law, Michael S. Layne.
not appear ·on yesterday's ballots.
~~rvices will be held at 1 p.m. qn Friday, March 10, 2000 at the Fisher
Levies
FuiJeral Home in Middleport, with Larry Gilland officiating. Burial will · In addition to the cou ntywide
fom)w ·at Gravel Hill Cemetery.
levy t.; benefit Veterans Memorial
~iends may call at the funeral home on Thursday, March 9, 2000 from
Hospital, which was defeated
. 7~~p. m . · ·
soundly (see related story), voters decided several other township
•

r~,. , ; ·

Bush
fnHn

LOCAL BRIEFS

in the Supreme Court race.
In the two Fourth District
Court of Appeals races on the
Republican ticket, Roger l. Kline
and William H . Harsha took 2,543
and 2,427 votes, respectively, in the
Republican primary. There were
no Democratic candidates for
either seat.
State Rep. John Carey, R-Wellston, . was also unopposed, and
received 3,780 votes. There was no
Democratic candidate for the seat.
Republicans nominated Phil A.
Bowman and Kay Reynolds as the
17th District members of the State
(:entral Committee, giving Bowman 2,388. votes and Reynolds
2,437.
Thomas R. King was defeated
. by lawrence W. Brown, 857 to ·
700, in the race for Democraric
state central conunittceman , and
Karen M~tney Sinu11ons, wl~o was
unopposed as state central committeewoman, rcc&lt;:ived l ,429 votes
from Meigs County Democrats.

.

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SPRINGFIELD (AP) - ·· More test
results were expected today for children
who p~ with mercUry theY, fOund
in a drum behini:l a v.~cant house.
.
Results cin sonie of.'the 16 to 20 cliildren whO ~ been tested came back
TuesdJ¥They sltov.d no signs of mercury poisoning, said Clark County
Health Commissioner SteveWenruth.
. "Everything at tim point is coming
back norinal," said Wermuth, adding
that he did not kno'w how many of the
test results ""re in.
Mercury cari. damage the central
rterloOOS S}'telll if inhaled or abSoroed
into .the bloodstream.

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POMEROY - Meigs County Emergency Services reported .
four emergency calls on Tuesday. Units respondin g were:

.,,

CENTRAL DISPATCH
10:59 a.m .,West Main Street, Pomeroy, Opal Cummins, Veterans
Memorial Hospital;
I :48 p~m . ,. with Pomeroy as first responder, Marilyn Watson, ' ·
Holzer .Mcdical Center;
·
";
COLUMBIA TWP.
3:5 1 p.m., Folden Road, brush fire , Penny Pleasant property

..•'

SYRACUSE

•'

10:32 p.m., Second Street, Austin Reitmire,VMH .

Disaster
. from Pap A1
Assistance application can be
done by calling 1-800-462-9029
frOm 8 a.m . until 6 p.m., seven
days a week until further notice,
. the governor's office advised.
Those who suffered damage
should first contact thm insurance
company.
"lf they find they haw tmmet
needs, they should apply for disaster assistance,'' Taft said.
·
Srrickland noted that FEMA
assistance will help families. whose
homes or businesses were damaged by flooding stenuning linin
·heavy rains on Feb. 18 get hack on

.~

·'

•
theor feet .
/
The congressman has also sent a
letter to Taft asking him to seek
FEMA aid to help rebuild public .•; ·
infrastructure. .
,
" 1 have been hearing fiom local ..;
elected officials who are facing ,•
hardship in paying fot repairs on • •
damaged public infrastructure," · "
Strickland wrote to Taft.
..'
" Although your office has indi- . •
cated local governments can seek . •
reimbursement through the State
Controlling Board, the 25 percent '~ '
matching local government con- r,
tribution will be very difficult for '·.•
inany io pay;' he added.
,
FEMA assistance, Strickland ' said, would cut the local share of :·: ·
paying fur rep.;,. by half
.
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VALLEY WEATHER
School board delays action on
schools backed by businessman Rain bringing coole.r temps

CO LUMBUS (AP) - Th e
The new contract
State Board of Education h as
provisions include
delayed
a
de ci sio n
on
admitting s1tudents with
w h e ther to approve · condisabilities, establishing
tract s fo r 13 n ew charter .
sc hools planned by an Akro n an open enrollment policy
businessman.
and establishing nonprofit
The bo ard po stp o n ed th e
status.
decis i o n Tu esday be cause the
o pe ra tor s haven't agreed to .h as raised qu es tion s about
.. new co ntra c t lan gu a ge that p otential con fl ic t s of interapplies to all co mmuni ty est' b!!tw ,e e n ' school managesc hools in Ohio, sa id spo kes- m e ~t com pani es and the··
woman Moni c a Zarichny.
nonprofi t charte r sc ho o ls
The new contrac't provi- th ey operate.
sions include admitting stu ·. Pam Young, d ir ec tor of
dents with disabilities , estab- the Department' of Eduo;:alishing an open en ro llment tion 's Office
of School
policy and establishing non-. Options, said issues rega rd profit status, she sai d .
ing conflicts o f interest h ave
Do c um e nt s obtained by
been turn ed over to the
the Akron B eacon Journal
attorney genera l and th e
show that the disput e with
department 's lega l depart the state includes aca demic
ment .
acc ountability,
whether
A June lette r from . .th e
sc hools hav e been regi st e red .
IRS
to the H ope Acade my
· as nonprofit organizations,
Ca mpu s
in
lo c ation , and who o wn s the Chapelside
Cleveland, which is run by
c'!assroom equipment.
The action t empora rily White H a t M an ageme n t,
blo c ks the creation of char- said that th ete is not eno u gh
ter sc hools that . in a few · separation · of the c h a rt e r
years could e nroll m o re than • school board and White H at .'
Brenn~n spok es m an Tom
13,050 students
throug h
Needles
said White Hat ha s
David Brennan 's
Akro nbased · fot "profit White Hat not secured federal nonprofit status for , any c h a rt er
Management Co.
State Auditor :Jim Petro schooJ sinJ:e then .

LOCAL STOCKS
AEP-21~.

Akzo- 38'1.
AmTechiSBC- 41'4
Aahland Inc• ..;.. 31 ~•
AT&amp;T-52~

Bank One - 24'· .
Bob Evans -12-,.
BorgWarnar - 31 l.
Champion - 3),
Charming Shopa - 5~
City Holding - 13
Federal Mogul~ 13'1•
·
Flretar - 17),

GanneU- 65'/i
General Electric

129.,

Harley Davldaon - 68\
K mart-8).
Kroger- 14"!.
Landi End - 30'),
Ltd.- 31'l.
Oak Hill Financial - 13
OVB-30~

Rockwllll - 40
RD Shell -55),
S.ara -26),
Shol&gt;!ly'a - H.
.Wendy'a ...; 14.,,
Worihlngton - 12),
.
Dally atock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing
quotH of the previous

d•y"• tral'llactlon•, pro·

011!1 Valley - 27),
Peoples- 16
P'remler - 8%.

vlded by Adveat of Gal·
. llpolla.

Z39"

8

BY THE ~SSOCIATED PRESS

The unseaso nably warm
weather across O hio shoul d
continue until the \Veekend ,
w hen conditions are expected
to return to normal.
By Saturday, the highs w ill be
back inc the 40s and 50s and
there will be a chan ce of snow
in northern Ohio1 the National
Weather Service said.
For now, though, mnny skies
and summerlike · temperaturees
a re in the offing. Highs on
Thursday will be in the 60s
north , 70s south.
Soine rain is possible to night,
especially in the north .
The reco rd high temp erature

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I td., 2000
6:00 ~ ~ 12:00 A'11t

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'R$1/P 4 '1ltMd td., .2000
(740) 992-5005

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rice

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.

6 Suites to choose from.
.

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Hurry In
and savel

'

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for this date at the Columbus .. •
'weather station was 80 in 1974 •;
and th e · record low was -2 in
1960. Sunset tonight will be at •·:
6:32p.m. and su nri1e on Thursday at 6:52 a.m .
Weather forecast :
Ton!ght ... Bree zy and mild ,..
with a chance of showers after
midnight. Lows . only near 60.
:Southwest wind I 0 to I 5 mph. ~'
C hance of rain 30 percent.
"
l '.,
Thursday... A chance of a
· shower early... Otherwise windy :•• .
and still warm. Highs in the mid . ..
70s. Chance ofrain 30 percent. '·
Thursday
night ... Partly . , ,
cloudy and turning cooler. Lows
in the nu&lt;;l 40s.

\

Living Room Suites

Now Only

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EMS reports four calls

village tax issu es:
Middleport Village, renewal,
one-mill, current expenses, 304
for, 305 against; Syracuse Village,
replacement, 1'.8 mills, c urrent
expenses, I 79 for. I 44 against;
O range Township, renewal, 2 mills,
fire protection , 185 for. 124 against;
Salem Township, half-mill, maintaining and operating cemeteries ,
138 for, 61 against; Sutton Township, replacement, half-mill, maintaining and operating cemeteries,
691 for, 384 against.
Absentee bailors were included
in yesterday.'s vote 'tallies. However,
those ballots cast at the board of .
elections office under provisions of
state law will not be included in
the election.results until the board's
official count on March 29.
Board Director Rita Smith was
unable to report the .number of
walk-in · votes, since they will be
kept under lock and key until the
official count.

1

roll

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POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.- An Ohio woman was arrested
Tuesday on charges of embezzltmenr, according to a spokesman for
the Mason County Sheriff's Department.
Robin McGuire, 24, langsville, was arrested by Sgt. C.E. Stearns
for allegedly taking S23,000 from the Wal-Mart Store in Mason
where she was employed at the time of the theft .
McGuire was arraigned before Magistrate Johnny Reynolds, who
set bond at S5,000, whi&lt;;h McGuire posted.
The sheriff's department abo reported that a Poca woman was
cited for improper backing after a minor vehicle accident occurred
at 2:45 p.m. Tuesday.
·
Kimberly D. Arrington, 24, who was traveling in a 1991 Buick,
attempting to pull out into traffic, but oncoming traffic was traveling too fast. Arrington backed up her vehicle and hit a 1990 Ford
driven by Colleen L. Bowers, 27, Point Pleasant .

~nd

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•.

schente." ·
Gore defeated Bradley in primaries in 11 states, including the
big priZes of California and New
York. Bradley came closest inVermont, where he puDed 44 percent of the vote. In addition,
Gore won party caucuses in
North Dakota, Idaho, WaShington state, American Samoa and

"

Special Items
*IOOo/o Guaranteed

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) Pocketing wins fiom New York

He said he had the know-how
to continue the economic
growth begun under Bill Clinton
- the only time Gore used the
president's name. In an unnamed
rell:rence to Bush's policies, Gore
cautioned against "wasting the
{budget) surplus on a risky tax

Muilae Durst

alll2~tVermont, all14 fiomRhode

.

Nowmber.

OBITUARIES
.

occupant of the White House.
Looking past McCain, Bush congratulated the vice president fOr his
Super Tuesday "'"'ep, but said, "He is
th~ candidate of the statuS quo in
Washington, D.C. ... He's got a tough
case to make in the general election:'
The widespread ~ring prompted sevetal McCain advisers, speaking
on condition of anonymity. to say
the Arizona sel)3tor would take srock
ofhis campaign today at his retreat in
Sedona, Ariz.
Bush earned all 162 delegates at
stake in. California, at least 66 of 101
at stake in New York, 35 fiom Missouri and 14 fiom Maine. He won at
least I 03 of the 154 delegates at stake
in Georgia, Maryland and Ohio.
McCain won all 25 delegates in
Connecticut, all37 in MassachusettS,

:

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Ttl• Dally Sentinel • Page A 3 •

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OP-Inion

.:.. The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
'E.sta6trslid In 1948
111 Court St., Pom.roy, Ohio

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charles w. Govey
'
Publlahar
Chlrlllne Hoeflich

CANVIVATE

Dear Ann Landen: January marked a
major mileston• in the health of our
nation - the releas7 of the Healthy Peapie 2010 Initiativ•. This sets the nation's
health goals for the first 10 years of the
new century. Since your column provides a forum for important health issues,
please encourage your readers to join the
initiative, and be.c ome a part of this
country's "Healthy People."
Healthy People- forecasts wliat can 15e
achieved through prevention efforts. As
Americans embrace healthy lifestyles, we
can dramatically improve the health of
the nation, and advance our goals of
increasing rhe qttality and years of'
healthy life, ·as well as eliminating dispa'rities between different racial ethnic and
socioeconomic-groups.
Please urge your readers to do the· follo\ving to reduce their health risks: (1}
increase daily physical activiry; (2) get
regular check-ups, including blood pressure and cholesterol; (3} quit smoking; (4)

Dt.MHIII
Controller

General Mllnegw

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OUR VIEW:

Good start
Retraining proposal can help
soften economic blow

T

he loss of jobs from the closing of the Meigs Mines within
the next two years is being met with something other than
wringing of hands by local officials.
.
Plans arc beihg pur in place for retrainThese workers ing for hundreds of miners and support
tuant to remain personnel affected by the closing.
Community Action Agency officials a.re
employed and
working
on a package of grants to offer .
support their
new job skiUs for mine workers, many of
:: families. What's them frorn Gallia, Meigs and Mason coun-

.
more, many
: would rather not
'
relocate because
jobs are more
· ·~ plentiful else- ·
where. ·

..

ties.

Tom Reed of Gallia-Meigs CAA told
reporters last week the grants would be
used to retrain workers before they lose
their jobs, a forwaJ;d-looking step we
believe will at least soften the economic
blow the -closing· will deliver.
The proposal is in a preliminary stage
and is somewhat different because it looks to address ·a situation
before it actually becomes a problem.
Funding for retraining can be obtained through the U.S. Department of Labor, which hopefully will recognize it would be money
· wisely spent.
·
. _. Normally, funds are available for workers caught in a lengthy layoff, but for those facing limited employment opportunities outside
. of the mines, a program needs to be implemented that gives them
. the skills to pursue different career paths.
Even if it serves only a portion of affected workers, retraining will
. decrease the multiplier effect the mines' dosing will have on the .
· local economy. For with the departure of a major employer comes
an impact on.businesses and individuals which support that employ. er - stores, gas stations and food suppliers, for instance. The effect
will be seen in the local tax base and the level of services provided
· by local government.
.
'
CAA officials say it will take at least. $1 millioq to retrain workers. That may be a drop in the bucket. for Washington, but the total
represents a sizable investment for the Ohio Valley as it works to
avoid a potential disaster and keel? our standard of living at an
acceptable level.
·
.
We hope that when CAA develops its grant proposal, the feds will
take a serious look at its merits. These workers want to remain
employec;l and support their families. Wh~t's more; many would
rather not relocate because jobs are more plentiful elsewhere.
For the government, appropriating funds to get these workers
back on their feet will eventually pay itself back. We hope they will
recognize the Ohio Valley doesn't want to become a component in
. th~ monthly unemployment statistics.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Ash Wednesday, March 8, the 68th day of2000. There are
· 298 days left in the year.
, Today's Highlight in History:
.
·
Ori March 8, 1854, l,J.S. Conimodore Matthew C. Perry made his
second landing in·Japan. Within a month, he concluded a treaty with
the Japanese.
On thi.• ,date:
.
In 1702, England's Queen Anne ascended the throne upon the
death of King William III.
·
.
In 1841, Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr., the
. "Great Dissenter:· was born in Boston.
In 1874, the 13th president of the United States, Millard Fillmore, ·
died in Buffalo, N.Y.
In 1917, Russia's "February Revolution" (so called because of the
Old Style calendar used by Russians at the time) began with rioting
and strikes in St. Perersbuts.
·
·
In 1917, the .U.S. Senate voted to limit filibu-sters by adqpting the
.cloture rule.
.
.
·
.
In 193D, the. 2'Zth..president of the.United States,William Howard
Taft, died in Washington.
In 1942, Japanese forces caprured Rangoon, Burma, during World
War II.
In 1944, U.S. bombers resumed bombing Berlin.
In 1965, the United States landed about 3,500 Marines in South
Vietnam.
,I
In 1986, four French television crew members were abducted 'in
west Beirut; a caller claimed Islamic Jihad was responsible. (All .four
were eventually released.)
Ten years ago: Opelung arguments were heard in the Iran-Contra
trial of former national security adviser John M . Poindexter.One year ago: New York Yankees basebaU star Joe DiMaggio died
in Hollywood, Fla., at age 84.The Clinton administration directed the
firing of nuclear scientist Wen Ho Lee from his job at the Los Alamos
National Laboratory because of alleged security violations. President
Clinton began a tour of Central America.
Today's Birthdays:Actrcss Paire'frevor iS 91.Actress Sue.Ane Langdon is 64. Baseball player-turned-author Jim Bouton is 61. Actress
Lynn Redgrave is 57. Actor-director Micky Dolenris 55. Lyricist Carole Bayer Sager is 53.Actress Jaime Lyn Bauer is 5 I. Baseball player Jim
Rice is 47. Singer Gary Numan is 42.Actor Aidan Quinn is 41.Actress
camryt, Manheim is 39.Actress Kathy Ireland is 37.
1'
•
f.

•·

Wednesd•y. Ml!rch 8, 2000

Reader iriforms Ann about Healthy People 2010 Initiative

1Hf

~~

740-992·21158 • Fu: 1112·21117

R. Shawn Lewla
Man•glng Editor

THE

Page AS

IJtheBend

'· )he Daily Sentinel

SECRETARY FOR HEALTH
pointed in you for not telling her so. .-. DEAR DR. SATCHER: My thanks ARIZONA
to you for instructing my readers on how
DEAR ARIZONA: And I am disapto live h&lt;althier.lives. And many will live pointed in myself. Although "Kenrucky"
longer because you wrote.
said she did not want a divorce, my
Dear Ann _Landers: I disagree with answer was a turkey, and many readers
your response to "Stuck Forever in Ken- wrote and said sd. Here's some advice
rucky," the woman who had been in a from another woman who has a different
loveless marriage for over 22 years. You point of view:
ADVICE
said it would·help if she moved out of the
Oeat An_n l.ande.n: Lcannot believe- - ·· - · - - spare bedroom 'and tried to "thaw out" people still write to you and say they are
reduae excess body weight; (5) eat a hal- her disint.rest&lt;d husband.
stuck in a relationship. Those people
anced diet; and (6) practice good hygiene
Ann, ·"Kentucky's" husband told her should grow up. When you choose to
by brushing teeth arid washing hands.
she ·was the ugliest woman ~e had ever marry, you accept the obligation to do
As we build healthy bodies one step at seen . Lord knows how many other everything in your power to make the
a rime, we can build a healthier America insults and indignities she has suffered relationship work. If there is abuse, thar is
. one person at a time. If your readers over the years. Your advice .was degrad- a legitimate .reason to get out. Otherwise,
would like more mformatton about the ing. And your suggestion that she seek 'marriage is a commitment to stay and
Healthy People goals, they can call 1- counseling in order to "learn to cope" work out whatever problems exist.
800-367-4725, or visit our web site at was totally worthless. What she needs to
We arc a spoiled society, and spend too
www.health .gov/ healthypeople. Sin- do is find a job, get a lawyer, dump that . much time focusing on what others are
cercly ·DR. DAVID SATCHER, creep, and rebuild her self-esteein. Life is not doing for us. My husband and I have
SURGEON GENERAL OF THE too short to put up with such emorional been married 15 years. 1 don't expect
1
UNITI;D STATES, AND ASSIST~ abuse. She deserves better, and I'm disap- flowers and romance. He's 119t the type,

Ann
Landers

and I knew this early on. I know he loves
me, because he works hard every day to
provide for his family. In return, I try to
make him feel special. Most wedding
vows include the word "cherish;' and if
' "Kentucky" would cherish the small
things in her marriage, it JUSt might lead
to a fulfilling relations hip. - REALISTIC IN N.Y.
Dear !leaders: You've neara- botn sides. Take yo ur choice.
Planning a wedding? What's right?
What's wrong' "The Ann Landers Guide
for Brides" will relieve yow anxiecy. Send
a self-addressed , long, business~size envelope and a check ·or money orde r for
$3 .75 (this includes postage and handling) to: Brides, c/o Ann · Landers, P0.
Box 11562, Chi cago, III. 60611-0562. (In
Canada, se nd $4.55 .} To find our n1ore
about Ann landers and read her past
columns, visit · th~ . Creators Syndicate

I

web page at .www. creators.c om .

•,

TIME OUT FOR TIPS

I COM?OSE'P OF PEN$E
MAT~RIAL. ANP ~A-r~~~p
~y MANY COlLt~ION) I

8 T&gt;ITTO

Microwave ovens are found in almost
every home. They save cooking, reheating
and cleanup time for th~ _ pusy household.
Because they are . simple to operate,
microwave ovens are used frequently -by
children ,
It is important that your children know
how to use the microwave ·safely. A discussion should be held between the parent
and child about rules, gu.idelines and safety issues concerning the oven before
allowing the child to coo~ in
To begin with, children should not use
the microwave oven until they are old
. enough to read and follow directions.
· Many quick-to-fix foods have microwave
il)structions on them, so youngsters should
. understand what they mean before
·attempting to run the microwave.
:· , Another important thing to remember
-is that children should be able to tell time
~nd set the timer on the oven properly. It
is easy to hit an extra "0," making the time
ten minutes instead of one. This could
.result in charred and extremely hot food.
,. , Emphasis should be placed on which
.rypes of containers and utensils can be
, used safely. It may ·be a good idea for the
..paient to have 'a cabinet drawer just for
microwaveable-safe dishes. This way the
child will know that the item is safe to use.

HENTOFF'S VIEW:

ACL·U guilty of violating its own principles·_
As a former New York and national board
member · of the American Civil · Liberties
Union, I wei! remember that whenever a dispute arose about what the ACLU should or
shouldn't say, reference was made to a book
containing the official policies of the organization. It is, so to speak, ~he bible of the
ACLU.
One unequivocal policy, No. 229, is: "Any
attempt, in any form, intended or calculated
to inflqence a jury should bt!' prohibited."
Yet, in the internationally publicized case
offour New York City police officers accused
of killing an unarmed African immigrant,
Amadou Diallo, the ACLU published a fullpage ad in the New York Times that significantly. added to the prejudicial pretrial publicity.
Before the police officers were tried, before
they gave their testimony about what hap'pened that night, the ACLU in that ad ran the
words of the familiar Mi~anda warnings "You have the right to remain silent..." And
every . word of the Miranda warnings was
pierced by a bullet. (Forty-one bullets were
fired at Amadou Diallo, 19 of which killed
him.)
The. text of the ad - clearly prejudging
the outcome of the trial - .said: "On Febru. ary 4, 1999, the .NYPD gave Amadou Diallo
the right to remain silent. And they did it
without ever saying a word .... The police
killed an unarmed, innocent man. Also
wounded that night was the constitutional
right of every American to due process of
Iaw. ..
In that ad, the ACLU cavalierly denied
those four officers 4ue process - which
means fairness under our judicial system.
The cops had not yet testified -_ so how
did rhe ACLU conclude they had not identified themselves?

Nat

Hentoff
NEA COLUMNIST
The ad ended, with unconscious irony,
"Help us defend your rights. Support the
ACLU."
When the trial of the cops was moved
upstate from the Bronx, where Diallo was
killed, to Albany because of the pervasive prejudicial pretrial publicity, the appellate division
of the state court system cited the ACLU ad
as a key reason for taking the trial out of New
York City. Said the . court's unanimous decision:
"The ACLU advertisement·... demonstrates
that a long established organization formed
for, among other reasons, the protection of the
rights of the accused, has publicly ·prejudged
the guilt of these defendants."
· When l~wyer . Gerald Walpin; in the Wall
Street Journal (Jan. 17), criticized the ACLU
for violating its principles, he was answered in
the same paper (Feb. 2) by Ira Glasser, executive director of the national ACLU. Glasser's
·answer qualifies him for a privileged place
among tile directors of the Clinton spin
machine.
Glasser said that the ACLU ad "doesn't
mention any specific police officer, referring
instead to the 'Police Department."' .
Any 10-year-old who watches television

would know who was about to be tried for
the killing. So would any adult marginally
interested in th e news, from any source.
·
. ·Glasser went on to say in his letter that rlie
ACLU ad "doesn't mention the crimina1
charges, or· the trial. Its focus is on calling
attention to the latest unjustified killing of a
person · of color by excessive police force."
How did he know - before trial - that the
killing Was "unjustified"?
The man 'killed Is rnentioned by name In
the ad, as are .the 41 bullets and the New York
City Police Department. And the ACLU does
more than imply the criminal charges by prejudging the guilt of tbe cops, who the ad says
violated the due process rights of Amadou
·
Diallo.
The ACLU ad -does note that the defenders of the police describe what hap,Pened as ''a
tragic mistake," and that the indictment says it
was homicide. The ad, says Glasser,, does not
take a position on that question.
'
But the ad states unequivocally that "wit}l_out ever saying a word, the police killed ~n
unarmed, innocent 'man."That's a position 7-one taken without any evidence, under oath,
from either side. The ad ran five weeks before
any evidence was taken at the trial.
. In his letter to the Wall Street )ourn:il,
Glasser does .not (Jlention that officers of (ts
affiliate, the New York Civil Liberties UnioCl,
were · indignant because they were not to!d
about the ad- which they oppose - befo~e
it ran.
.
On Feb. 25, a jury that Included foi.r
African-Americans, one of whom was tlie
forewoman, fou~d the four cops not ·guilcy of
all charges- no thanks to the American Ci~il
Liberties Union.
1

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PRECINCT ..
BEDFORD

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7. She weighted seven Pound,
11 ounces.
Dean and Karen Brownell
are the maternal. grandpar·
ents, and Kenny and Nancy
Fisher and the late Melvin Van·
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away from the face. Steam can severely wiped up right away. If not, rhey will conburn the skin if caution is not used. This is tinue to take microwaves from food that is
especially true for -bags of Jlopcorn which being cooked, increasing cooking times . In
children may be . preparing. A corner of addition, the area where the door closes
container lids and plastic wrap should be should be kept free of crumbs that could
vented to prevent the steam from building prevent ·the door from closing properly,
up. .
.
allowing microwaves to escape.
Another food that children might be
Some basic microwave cooking techfixing that could be a p.otential safety niques need to also be instilled in the ·
problem is a sugar-fUled pastry. The sugar child. One would be that a dish needs to
in jelly doughnuts or toaster pastries cause be rotated and/or stirred for even cook~
the filling to become much hotter than ing. Another is that foods such as baked
the surrounding pastry. Have the child potatoes, baked apples, egg· yolks and hot
wait a few minutes before eating, or the dogs should be pierced with a fork to
food can be cut in half prior to microwav- allow steam to escape. This will keep the
ing. This will help balante the heat distri- food from exploding.
. bution.
The child should be taught that the
Mention ·that there. ·may be hotspots in more food in the oven, the longer the
liquids. Note that liquids such as so,up or . cqaking time, and that food continues to
hot chocolate should be stirred thorough- cook after the time has expired. Children
ly before tasting to prevent the mouth . sh&lt;;~,uld be shown how standing time is
from becoming hurried . . Short, wide needed to complete the cooking process
mouth mugs or cups wo~k best in distrib- without overcooking.
uting the heat in this situation.
After these tOpics have been discussed
Instruct the children on what to do if with the children, let them do some cookthere is. arcing or a fire. Explain that arcing ing under your superVision before giving
is caused by metal in the oven, and that it them free reign. If they seem to be able to
can qamage the microwave. Tell them to understand how the microwave , oven
immediately siop the oven, then remove works and the safety' precautions associated with it, then you can let' them cook
the metal that -is causing the problem.
Let the child know that spills should be mor~ on their own;

PRECINCT BY PRECINCT PRIMARY ELECTION RESULTS

.

Little-known law could be third party blessing

Cohn

Be certain that the child knows that no
glass dishes trimmed with metal, metal
twist-ties, foil or heat-sensitive plastic containers should be placed in the oven.
Wooden and plastic spoons and spatulas
would be all right.
· Children should be able to reich the
microwave door and control panel. They
should not be reaching above their heads
to lift foods out of the oven. Along the·
same line, the child should be big enough
so that he or she can lift the food and its
container out of the oven. Warn rhe child
to always use potholders. Even though the
microwave does not get the dish itself hot,
the heat from the food ma.y be conducted
to the container, making it too warm to
carry.
Another safety hazard to Stress is that
covers and cooking bags should be opened

'

WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND:

a

MEIGS COUNTY EXTENSION

...

(Nat Hentoff is a nationally renowned a11thorj·
ty on the First Amendment and the rest of the Bill
of Rights.)
•·

WASHINGTON -There is an interesting
gling party, Ross Perot's Reform Party. It is the
little Virginia law - at least it is .little known
Reform Party that is in jeopardy of going the
- that · runs along the lines that a political ·
way of the Federalists, losing its monetary cer-.
party that fails to run candidate in a major .
tification for the next election. However, it
election will 'be decertified. This came to·light
does have federal money as a res1,1lt of the l~t
a few years ago when the Democratic .Parry of
election, and it is precisely ·this fact that mak~s
Virginia. failed to put up a candidate against
it viable. This is why Minnesota Gov. Jesse VenRepublic Sen. John Warner. (Not only w•sVirtura's departure from 'the party was not fatal-:;ginia's senior senator unopposed, he ran with
this year. It is' why Patrick Buchanan and Oththe blesSings of the state's top Democrats.)
ers so covet its nomination.
•
As a result, a few Republicans in the Vir-_
.
And most important of all, it is why SeQ..
· ,ginia General Assembly waded through the
UFS COLUMNISTS John McCain could logically choose to join it.
cobwebs and produced the aforementioned
If McCain wins a majority Of independenf$
law, claiming the Democrats were finished in
and moderates in the Republican primarie~.
the Old Dominion. Naturally, it did not come
So the .qu~tion is: What marks the end of a but fails to win that party's nomination, Ire
to pass, the Democrats then being in die political party's viability? is it, aS according to . could rightly decide. that he is electable ori
· majority in the Generai Assembly.
Virgini~ law, when a party' fails to produce a third-party ticket. After all, moderates and
But what is of interest is the rationale of the candidate? The last time that occum;d on a independents are more nunierous than eithor
law . and its relevance to the current national national level was when the demise of the Fed- Republicans or Democrats.
. . . .. ~
political scene. Specifically, shoUld a political . eralisr Pa~ allowed James Monroe~ a De moe·McCain and fed!lral matching funds could,
1
party that fails to mount a viable campaign for rat-Republican, to run .unopposed in the clec- . theoretically. not on!y prevent the Reform
the presidency be certified? Indeed, on the ·tion of 1_8;20. (The only two other occurrences 'Party from going the way ofthe Federalists, but
national level the closest thing to ceri:ification were in the elections of 1789 and 1792; actually propel the party into the White
-comes from the use ofimblic funds to finance George Washington's two races.).
House.
.
presidential races, but only for those parties and
In 1820 the Era of Good Feeling prevailed,
(Political correspondent Eleanor Clift con;.
candidates meeting certain min.imum vote not unlike our current age of peace and pros- tributed to ' this ar~cle ..]ack Andersim and ~uglaj
percentages in prior and current general and perity. But today there are two solid parties, Cohn are . columnists for United feature Syndi~
primary elections:
Republican and Democraiic; and one strug- cate.)
,
·:

Becky Baer

I

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OP-Inion

.:.. The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
'E.sta6trslid In 1948
111 Court St., Pom.roy, Ohio

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charles w. Govey
'
Publlahar
Chlrlllne Hoeflich

CANVIVATE

Dear Ann Landen: January marked a
major mileston• in the health of our
nation - the releas7 of the Healthy Peapie 2010 Initiativ•. This sets the nation's
health goals for the first 10 years of the
new century. Since your column provides a forum for important health issues,
please encourage your readers to join the
initiative, and be.c ome a part of this
country's "Healthy People."
Healthy People- forecasts wliat can 15e
achieved through prevention efforts. As
Americans embrace healthy lifestyles, we
can dramatically improve the health of
the nation, and advance our goals of
increasing rhe qttality and years of'
healthy life, ·as well as eliminating dispa'rities between different racial ethnic and
socioeconomic-groups.
Please urge your readers to do the· follo\ving to reduce their health risks: (1}
increase daily physical activiry; (2) get
regular check-ups, including blood pressure and cholesterol; (3} quit smoking; (4)

Dt.MHIII
Controller

General Mllnegw

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OUR VIEW:

Good start
Retraining proposal can help
soften economic blow

T

he loss of jobs from the closing of the Meigs Mines within
the next two years is being met with something other than
wringing of hands by local officials.
.
Plans arc beihg pur in place for retrainThese workers ing for hundreds of miners and support
tuant to remain personnel affected by the closing.
Community Action Agency officials a.re
employed and
working
on a package of grants to offer .
support their
new job skiUs for mine workers, many of
:: families. What's them frorn Gallia, Meigs and Mason coun-

.
more, many
: would rather not
'
relocate because
jobs are more
· ·~ plentiful else- ·
where. ·

..

ties.

Tom Reed of Gallia-Meigs CAA told
reporters last week the grants would be
used to retrain workers before they lose
their jobs, a forwaJ;d-looking step we
believe will at least soften the economic
blow the -closing· will deliver.
The proposal is in a preliminary stage
and is somewhat different because it looks to address ·a situation
before it actually becomes a problem.
Funding for retraining can be obtained through the U.S. Department of Labor, which hopefully will recognize it would be money
· wisely spent.
·
. _. Normally, funds are available for workers caught in a lengthy layoff, but for those facing limited employment opportunities outside
. of the mines, a program needs to be implemented that gives them
. the skills to pursue different career paths.
Even if it serves only a portion of affected workers, retraining will
. decrease the multiplier effect the mines' dosing will have on the .
· local economy. For with the departure of a major employer comes
an impact on.businesses and individuals which support that employ. er - stores, gas stations and food suppliers, for instance. The effect
will be seen in the local tax base and the level of services provided
· by local government.
.
'
CAA officials say it will take at least. $1 millioq to retrain workers. That may be a drop in the bucket. for Washington, but the total
represents a sizable investment for the Ohio Valley as it works to
avoid a potential disaster and keel? our standard of living at an
acceptable level.
·
.
We hope that when CAA develops its grant proposal, the feds will
take a serious look at its merits. These workers want to remain
employec;l and support their families. Wh~t's more; many would
rather not relocate because jobs are more plentiful elsewhere.
For the government, appropriating funds to get these workers
back on their feet will eventually pay itself back. We hope they will
recognize the Ohio Valley doesn't want to become a component in
. th~ monthly unemployment statistics.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Ash Wednesday, March 8, the 68th day of2000. There are
· 298 days left in the year.
, Today's Highlight in History:
.
·
Ori March 8, 1854, l,J.S. Conimodore Matthew C. Perry made his
second landing in·Japan. Within a month, he concluded a treaty with
the Japanese.
On thi.• ,date:
.
In 1702, England's Queen Anne ascended the throne upon the
death of King William III.
·
.
In 1841, Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr., the
. "Great Dissenter:· was born in Boston.
In 1874, the 13th president of the United States, Millard Fillmore, ·
died in Buffalo, N.Y.
In 1917, Russia's "February Revolution" (so called because of the
Old Style calendar used by Russians at the time) began with rioting
and strikes in St. Perersbuts.
·
·
In 1917, the .U.S. Senate voted to limit filibu-sters by adqpting the
.cloture rule.
.
.
·
.
In 193D, the. 2'Zth..president of the.United States,William Howard
Taft, died in Washington.
In 1942, Japanese forces caprured Rangoon, Burma, during World
War II.
In 1944, U.S. bombers resumed bombing Berlin.
In 1965, the United States landed about 3,500 Marines in South
Vietnam.
,I
In 1986, four French television crew members were abducted 'in
west Beirut; a caller claimed Islamic Jihad was responsible. (All .four
were eventually released.)
Ten years ago: Opelung arguments were heard in the Iran-Contra
trial of former national security adviser John M . Poindexter.One year ago: New York Yankees basebaU star Joe DiMaggio died
in Hollywood, Fla., at age 84.The Clinton administration directed the
firing of nuclear scientist Wen Ho Lee from his job at the Los Alamos
National Laboratory because of alleged security violations. President
Clinton began a tour of Central America.
Today's Birthdays:Actrcss Paire'frevor iS 91.Actress Sue.Ane Langdon is 64. Baseball player-turned-author Jim Bouton is 61. Actress
Lynn Redgrave is 57. Actor-director Micky Dolenris 55. Lyricist Carole Bayer Sager is 53.Actress Jaime Lyn Bauer is 5 I. Baseball player Jim
Rice is 47. Singer Gary Numan is 42.Actor Aidan Quinn is 41.Actress
camryt, Manheim is 39.Actress Kathy Ireland is 37.
1'
•
f.

•·

Wednesd•y. Ml!rch 8, 2000

Reader iriforms Ann about Healthy People 2010 Initiative

1Hf

~~

740-992·21158 • Fu: 1112·21117

R. Shawn Lewla
Man•glng Editor

THE

Page AS

IJtheBend

'· )he Daily Sentinel

SECRETARY FOR HEALTH
pointed in you for not telling her so. .-. DEAR DR. SATCHER: My thanks ARIZONA
to you for instructing my readers on how
DEAR ARIZONA: And I am disapto live h&lt;althier.lives. And many will live pointed in myself. Although "Kenrucky"
longer because you wrote.
said she did not want a divorce, my
Dear Ann _Landers: I disagree with answer was a turkey, and many readers
your response to "Stuck Forever in Ken- wrote and said sd. Here's some advice
rucky," the woman who had been in a from another woman who has a different
loveless marriage for over 22 years. You point of view:
ADVICE
said it would·help if she moved out of the
Oeat An_n l.ande.n: Lcannot believe- - ·· - · - - spare bedroom 'and tried to "thaw out" people still write to you and say they are
reduae excess body weight; (5) eat a hal- her disint.rest&lt;d husband.
stuck in a relationship. Those people
anced diet; and (6) practice good hygiene
Ann, ·"Kentucky's" husband told her should grow up. When you choose to
by brushing teeth arid washing hands.
she ·was the ugliest woman ~e had ever marry, you accept the obligation to do
As we build healthy bodies one step at seen . Lord knows how many other everything in your power to make the
a rime, we can build a healthier America insults and indignities she has suffered relationship work. If there is abuse, thar is
. one person at a time. If your readers over the years. Your advice .was degrad- a legitimate .reason to get out. Otherwise,
would like more mformatton about the ing. And your suggestion that she seek 'marriage is a commitment to stay and
Healthy People goals, they can call 1- counseling in order to "learn to cope" work out whatever problems exist.
800-367-4725, or visit our web site at was totally worthless. What she needs to
We arc a spoiled society, and spend too
www.health .gov/ healthypeople. Sin- do is find a job, get a lawyer, dump that . much time focusing on what others are
cercly ·DR. DAVID SATCHER, creep, and rebuild her self-esteein. Life is not doing for us. My husband and I have
SURGEON GENERAL OF THE too short to put up with such emorional been married 15 years. 1 don't expect
1
UNITI;D STATES, AND ASSIST~ abuse. She deserves better, and I'm disap- flowers and romance. He's 119t the type,

Ann
Landers

and I knew this early on. I know he loves
me, because he works hard every day to
provide for his family. In return, I try to
make him feel special. Most wedding
vows include the word "cherish;' and if
' "Kentucky" would cherish the small
things in her marriage, it JUSt might lead
to a fulfilling relations hip. - REALISTIC IN N.Y.
Dear !leaders: You've neara- botn sides. Take yo ur choice.
Planning a wedding? What's right?
What's wrong' "The Ann Landers Guide
for Brides" will relieve yow anxiecy. Send
a self-addressed , long, business~size envelope and a check ·or money orde r for
$3 .75 (this includes postage and handling) to: Brides, c/o Ann · Landers, P0.
Box 11562, Chi cago, III. 60611-0562. (In
Canada, se nd $4.55 .} To find our n1ore
about Ann landers and read her past
columns, visit · th~ . Creators Syndicate

I

web page at .www. creators.c om .

•,

TIME OUT FOR TIPS

I COM?OSE'P OF PEN$E
MAT~RIAL. ANP ~A-r~~~p
~y MANY COlLt~ION) I

8 T&gt;ITTO

Microwave ovens are found in almost
every home. They save cooking, reheating
and cleanup time for th~ _ pusy household.
Because they are . simple to operate,
microwave ovens are used frequently -by
children ,
It is important that your children know
how to use the microwave ·safely. A discussion should be held between the parent
and child about rules, gu.idelines and safety issues concerning the oven before
allowing the child to coo~ in
To begin with, children should not use
the microwave oven until they are old
. enough to read and follow directions.
· Many quick-to-fix foods have microwave
il)structions on them, so youngsters should
. understand what they mean before
·attempting to run the microwave.
:· , Another important thing to remember
-is that children should be able to tell time
~nd set the timer on the oven properly. It
is easy to hit an extra "0," making the time
ten minutes instead of one. This could
.result in charred and extremely hot food.
,. , Emphasis should be placed on which
.rypes of containers and utensils can be
, used safely. It may ·be a good idea for the
..paient to have 'a cabinet drawer just for
microwaveable-safe dishes. This way the
child will know that the item is safe to use.

HENTOFF'S VIEW:

ACL·U guilty of violating its own principles·_
As a former New York and national board
member · of the American Civil · Liberties
Union, I wei! remember that whenever a dispute arose about what the ACLU should or
shouldn't say, reference was made to a book
containing the official policies of the organization. It is, so to speak, ~he bible of the
ACLU.
One unequivocal policy, No. 229, is: "Any
attempt, in any form, intended or calculated
to inflqence a jury should bt!' prohibited."
Yet, in the internationally publicized case
offour New York City police officers accused
of killing an unarmed African immigrant,
Amadou Diallo, the ACLU published a fullpage ad in the New York Times that significantly. added to the prejudicial pretrial publicity.
Before the police officers were tried, before
they gave their testimony about what hap'pened that night, the ACLU in that ad ran the
words of the familiar Mi~anda warnings "You have the right to remain silent..." And
every . word of the Miranda warnings was
pierced by a bullet. (Forty-one bullets were
fired at Amadou Diallo, 19 of which killed
him.)
The. text of the ad - clearly prejudging
the outcome of the trial - .said: "On Febru. ary 4, 1999, the .NYPD gave Amadou Diallo
the right to remain silent. And they did it
without ever saying a word .... The police
killed an unarmed, innocent man. Also
wounded that night was the constitutional
right of every American to due process of
Iaw. ..
In that ad, the ACLU cavalierly denied
those four officers 4ue process - which
means fairness under our judicial system.
The cops had not yet testified -_ so how
did rhe ACLU conclude they had not identified themselves?

Nat

Hentoff
NEA COLUMNIST
The ad ended, with unconscious irony,
"Help us defend your rights. Support the
ACLU."
When the trial of the cops was moved
upstate from the Bronx, where Diallo was
killed, to Albany because of the pervasive prejudicial pretrial publicity, the appellate division
of the state court system cited the ACLU ad
as a key reason for taking the trial out of New
York City. Said the . court's unanimous decision:
"The ACLU advertisement·... demonstrates
that a long established organization formed
for, among other reasons, the protection of the
rights of the accused, has publicly ·prejudged
the guilt of these defendants."
· When l~wyer . Gerald Walpin; in the Wall
Street Journal (Jan. 17), criticized the ACLU
for violating its principles, he was answered in
the same paper (Feb. 2) by Ira Glasser, executive director of the national ACLU. Glasser's
·answer qualifies him for a privileged place
among tile directors of the Clinton spin
machine.
Glasser said that the ACLU ad "doesn't
mention any specific police officer, referring
instead to the 'Police Department."' .
Any 10-year-old who watches television

would know who was about to be tried for
the killing. So would any adult marginally
interested in th e news, from any source.
·
. ·Glasser went on to say in his letter that rlie
ACLU ad "doesn't mention the crimina1
charges, or· the trial. Its focus is on calling
attention to the latest unjustified killing of a
person · of color by excessive police force."
How did he know - before trial - that the
killing Was "unjustified"?
The man 'killed Is rnentioned by name In
the ad, as are .the 41 bullets and the New York
City Police Department. And the ACLU does
more than imply the criminal charges by prejudging the guilt of tbe cops, who the ad says
violated the due process rights of Amadou
·
Diallo.
The ACLU ad -does note that the defenders of the police describe what hap,Pened as ''a
tragic mistake," and that the indictment says it
was homicide. The ad, says Glasser,, does not
take a position on that question.
'
But the ad states unequivocally that "wit}l_out ever saying a word, the police killed ~n
unarmed, innocent 'man."That's a position 7-one taken without any evidence, under oath,
from either side. The ad ran five weeks before
any evidence was taken at the trial.
. In his letter to the Wall Street )ourn:il,
Glasser does .not (Jlention that officers of (ts
affiliate, the New York Civil Liberties UnioCl,
were · indignant because they were not to!d
about the ad- which they oppose - befo~e
it ran.
.
On Feb. 25, a jury that Included foi.r
African-Americans, one of whom was tlie
forewoman, fou~d the four cops not ·guilcy of
all charges- no thanks to the American Ci~il
Liberties Union.
1

I

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PRECINCT ..
BEDFORD

YOUR OPINIONS COUNT.
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SYRACUSE - Mike and Kathi
VanMeter
of
Syracuse
announce the birth of a daugh- ·
ter, Paige Danlelle, born Dec.
7. She weighted seven Pound,
11 ounces.
Dean and Karen Brownell
are the maternal. grandpar·
ents, and Kenny and Nancy
Fisher and the late Melvin Van·
Meter, Sr. are the the patern&lt;&gt;l ,
grandparents.

/PJ

WEST CHESTER

Anderson

Paige Danlelle VanMeter

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away from the face. Steam can severely wiped up right away. If not, rhey will conburn the skin if caution is not used. This is tinue to take microwaves from food that is
especially true for -bags of Jlopcorn which being cooked, increasing cooking times . In
children may be . preparing. A corner of addition, the area where the door closes
container lids and plastic wrap should be should be kept free of crumbs that could
vented to prevent the steam from building prevent ·the door from closing properly,
up. .
.
allowing microwaves to escape.
Another food that children might be
Some basic microwave cooking techfixing that could be a p.otential safety niques need to also be instilled in the ·
problem is a sugar-fUled pastry. The sugar child. One would be that a dish needs to
in jelly doughnuts or toaster pastries cause be rotated and/or stirred for even cook~
the filling to become much hotter than ing. Another is that foods such as baked
the surrounding pastry. Have the child potatoes, baked apples, egg· yolks and hot
wait a few minutes before eating, or the dogs should be pierced with a fork to
food can be cut in half prior to microwav- allow steam to escape. This will keep the
ing. This will help balante the heat distri- food from exploding.
. bution.
The child should be taught that the
Mention ·that there. ·may be hotspots in more food in the oven, the longer the
liquids. Note that liquids such as so,up or . cqaking time, and that food continues to
hot chocolate should be stirred thorough- cook after the time has expired. Children
ly before tasting to prevent the mouth . sh&lt;;~,uld be shown how standing time is
from becoming hurried . . Short, wide needed to complete the cooking process
mouth mugs or cups wo~k best in distrib- without overcooking.
uting the heat in this situation.
After these tOpics have been discussed
Instruct the children on what to do if with the children, let them do some cookthere is. arcing or a fire. Explain that arcing ing under your superVision before giving
is caused by metal in the oven, and that it them free reign. If they seem to be able to
can qamage the microwave. Tell them to understand how the microwave , oven
immediately siop the oven, then remove works and the safety' precautions associated with it, then you can let' them cook
the metal that -is causing the problem.
Let the child know that spills should be mor~ on their own;

PRECINCT BY PRECINCT PRIMARY ELECTION RESULTS

.

Little-known law could be third party blessing

Cohn

Be certain that the child knows that no
glass dishes trimmed with metal, metal
twist-ties, foil or heat-sensitive plastic containers should be placed in the oven.
Wooden and plastic spoons and spatulas
would be all right.
· Children should be able to reich the
microwave door and control panel. They
should not be reaching above their heads
to lift foods out of the oven. Along the·
same line, the child should be big enough
so that he or she can lift the food and its
container out of the oven. Warn rhe child
to always use potholders. Even though the
microwave does not get the dish itself hot,
the heat from the food ma.y be conducted
to the container, making it too warm to
carry.
Another safety hazard to Stress is that
covers and cooking bags should be opened

'

WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND:

a

MEIGS COUNTY EXTENSION

...

(Nat Hentoff is a nationally renowned a11thorj·
ty on the First Amendment and the rest of the Bill
of Rights.)
•·

WASHINGTON -There is an interesting
gling party, Ross Perot's Reform Party. It is the
little Virginia law - at least it is .little known
Reform Party that is in jeopardy of going the
- that · runs along the lines that a political ·
way of the Federalists, losing its monetary cer-.
party that fails to run candidate in a major .
tification for the next election. However, it
election will 'be decertified. This came to·light
does have federal money as a res1,1lt of the l~t
a few years ago when the Democratic .Parry of
election, and it is precisely ·this fact that mak~s
Virginia. failed to put up a candidate against
it viable. This is why Minnesota Gov. Jesse VenRepublic Sen. John Warner. (Not only w•sVirtura's departure from 'the party was not fatal-:;ginia's senior senator unopposed, he ran with
this year. It is' why Patrick Buchanan and Oththe blesSings of the state's top Democrats.)
ers so covet its nomination.
•
As a result, a few Republicans in the Vir-_
.
And most important of all, it is why SeQ..
· ,ginia General Assembly waded through the
UFS COLUMNISTS John McCain could logically choose to join it.
cobwebs and produced the aforementioned
If McCain wins a majority Of independenf$
law, claiming the Democrats were finished in
and moderates in the Republican primarie~.
the Old Dominion. Naturally, it did not come
So the .qu~tion is: What marks the end of a but fails to win that party's nomination, Ire
to pass, the Democrats then being in die political party's viability? is it, aS according to . could rightly decide. that he is electable ori
· majority in the Generai Assembly.
Virgini~ law, when a party' fails to produce a third-party ticket. After all, moderates and
But what is of interest is the rationale of the candidate? The last time that occum;d on a independents are more nunierous than eithor
law . and its relevance to the current national national level was when the demise of the Fed- Republicans or Democrats.
. . . .. ~
political scene. Specifically, shoUld a political . eralisr Pa~ allowed James Monroe~ a De moe·McCain and fed!lral matching funds could,
1
party that fails to mount a viable campaign for rat-Republican, to run .unopposed in the clec- . theoretically. not on!y prevent the Reform
the presidency be certified? Indeed, on the ·tion of 1_8;20. (The only two other occurrences 'Party from going the way ofthe Federalists, but
national level the closest thing to ceri:ification were in the elections of 1789 and 1792; actually propel the party into the White
-comes from the use ofimblic funds to finance George Washington's two races.).
House.
.
presidential races, but only for those parties and
In 1820 the Era of Good Feeling prevailed,
(Political correspondent Eleanor Clift con;.
candidates meeting certain min.imum vote not unlike our current age of peace and pros- tributed to ' this ar~cle ..]ack Andersim and ~uglaj
percentages in prior and current general and perity. But today there are two solid parties, Cohn are . columnists for United feature Syndi~
primary elections:
Republican and Democraiic; and one strug- cate.)
,
·:

Becky Baer

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BIRTH

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~A e • The Deily Sentinel

Wedne•d-v, Mlrch 8, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

.COMMUNITY

BUCKEYE
BRIEFS

Precinct by Precinct Primary Election Results

CALENDAR
Wednesday, March 8
POMEROY Pomeroy
M erchants meeting, 8 :30 a.m.
·w ednesday, Alw.~ys and Forev« . Dues are payable.
POMEROY - " Fun for
Jesus" at God's N.E.T., 106 W.
Main St., Pomeroy, for youth 8
through 12 years old. o 'pen
3:30 to 5:30 p.m. Free meal,
fl,ln , ganies, safe environment,
and short lessons that teach
about the Bible, Jesus aiid.. how
t~ey relate to today's youth.

.

.

.: POMEROY
Aslt
Wednesday breakfast and quiet
ljour,
Trinity ·
Church,
eomeroy, 7:45 a.m. , Bethany
f}uilding. Service open to anyone. For rese rvations call
~ianne Hawley, 992-2722 or
ileggy Harris, 992-7569.
.

.

Kids save coins

.

for statue

6-J

~~&gt;flo.y ~ 5 ~ ~ ~ ~ '~ ~.,

CINCINNATI (AP)
Students at an elementary
school are saving pennies and dimes and quarters - for
the restoration of a deteriorating statue of Abraham Lincoln
outside their school.
. Cathy Lutts, principal of
South Avondale 'E lementary
School, got the "Lincolns for
Lincoln" project started in
February by dropping SI 0 in
coins into a jar.
. The jar has been placed on
a counter in the school office
and is being ftlled daily with
pennies, nickels, dimes and ·
quarters. Two other jars have
been filled and locked away.
The statue has been outside
the school since 1902. The
Cincinnati Preservation Association, the school's 450 students and others are working
to raise money for the restoration:
The students are trying to
collect $1,000. It will be
added to $40,000 already
donated \&gt;y the city, the Com~
munity Arts Fund, the Ohio
Arts Council and the Procter.
&amp; Ganible Co. The cost of the
restoration is estimated at
$70,000.
Lutts said the fund-raising
effort was an opportunity io
teach students about the community, history and math .
· "We've raised over $700
now," she said Monday. "People are dropping off their pennies and their penny jars and
the kids bring in money every
,day, and now they pick up .
pennies off the ground,' wheil ·
before, ihey would have left
'therh."
·

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•

~ SALEM CENTER -

Ash
Wednesday service, 7 p.m., at
~alem
Center
United
¥ethodist Church.

.

'

Thursday, March 9

. RACINE- Southern High
School athletic
boosters,
Thursday. 7 p.m high school.
S}lo~ts banquet will be dis-.
cussed.

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• TUPPERS PLAINS ~ .
Tuppers Plains VFW · Post
2053, Thursday, 78:30. meeting
~nner at 6:30 p.m.
.

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·: POMEROY Preceptor
!;leta Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma
(!hi Sorority, 6:30 p.m. Thursday, Lutheran Church. Election
• officers. Hostesses1 Vera
()f
Crow and Rose Sisson.

·.
,,

..

..

: MIDDLEPORT Mid. -veport Y~uth League, signups
:1J fire station, Thursday, 6 t9 8
p;m.; noon to 3 p.m. Council
cbambeo, Saturday.

. ,•"
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Friday, March 10

: LONG BOTTOM'.- Youth
~ly and hymn sing, Long Bot~
t-om Faith Full Gospel Church,
1. p.m . Friday. Crusaders of
~arietta to s(ng. Fellowship to
fOllow. ·

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.•

• POMEROY Annual
C::harter Day luncheon for
Return Jonathan Meigs ChapI'Cr, Daughters of the American
itevolution; Friday, 12:30 p.m.
¥ Trinity Church. Winners of
4r11erican History awards will
~e guests.
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..
• MIDDLEPORT -Veterans
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Senefit seminar, 10 a.m. to 2
tm· Saturday, open to all vetqans, DAV building, on State
)!..oute 7 below Middleport.
J::unch will be served.

•

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: SYRACUSE - . Signup for
!!Yracuse Youth
Baseball
~eague, Saturday, 10 a.m. to .
noon in mayor's office, Syraoose municipal building. Also
March 18.
•

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.• POMEROY - Burlingham
:Modern ,Woodmen, potluck
ainner, Saturday, 4 p.m. at hall.
Meat furnished, members to
~ear green. Rosalie Story to ·
aiv.:n St. Patrick's Day protram. Door prizes. Friends
invited.

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COLUMBUS (AP) - Suburban Columbus real estate broker
Ted Celeste won a four-way
Democratic primary Tuesday to
challenge Sen. Mike DeWine, who
is trying to become the fint Ohio
Republican in decades to win a second Senate term.
DeWine easily beat back two
challenges fiom the right, former
Rep. Frank Cremeans and gunshow operator Ron Dickson.

"This is a presidential election
year, and we'll have the cross-currents in that race that will impact
the Senate race," he said in an interview. "I anticipate a tough campaign
for the fall."
. Celeste, the brother of former
Gov. Richard Celeste, defeated the
Rev. Marvin McMickle, president
qfthe Shaker Heights school board;
Columbus lawyer and former legislator and state solicitor Richard ·

With 61 percent of precincts
reporting unofliciod results in the
GOP race, DeWine had 79 percent
co mpared with 13 percent for
Dickson and 8 percent for Cre-

means.
No Ohio Republican has been
re-elected to the U.S. Senate since
Robert Taft, the governor's grandfather, and John Bricker in the 1950s.
"It will be a formidable task in
OhiO:' DeWine said.

Cordray; and Dan Radakovich, a
Cleveland temporary
agency
employee.
With 61 percem of precincts
reporting, Celeste had 46 percent of
the vote to 25 percent for Cordray.
20 percent for McMickle, and 9
percent fQr Radakovich.
Celeste said he's eag« to see how
DeWine will run his campaign.
"Will he engage me or will he
run his campaign fiom a distance in

Washington? I don't know what his
style will be. He wasn't very visible,
in the prU1tary~
.,
DeWine said until November he
will continue to balance his senatorial duties with campaigning.
DeWine led all candidates in•
fund raising, having $2.2 million to ·
spend in the campaign's final weckol '
compared with his opponents".
available cash, which ranged from
$5,000 to about $140,000.
• ''

.

Stop &amp; Register to Win Free
Prizes' ...
.

EASTMAN'S
1980.:

I

.2000.

If

'Countrv Style
Beef Bucket

2nd

·m,.

Steaks

·Week

'Lb$.89

FOODLAND

.

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3lb. or
more

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12 Pack 12 oz. cans
Asst. Varieties

•.,

YOUR · CHOIC

RCor
:Diet Rite

20°

· .Nature's
Best .Dell Bologna lb. $1.49
•',

Chef Boyardee.
Cheese Pizza
Kit
'
32.5

oz. box

~IIIQUnt.on...Oct. J 5..

.

'

·.

The. city and Hamilton
County each agreed to pay ~he ·
schools $5 million annually as
part of the campaign to get a
half-cent sales tax increase to
build two new stadiums. The
city had failed to make any pay'ments for the last 'rwo years
because of budget problems.
Initially, City Manager John
Shirey recommended paying
the schools $1 rruUion in 1998,
$3 million in 1999 and $5 million
year from 2000 on.
City Council rejected that plan.
The
county's
pledged
money for the schools is coming from sales tax · revenue for
the two new stadiums. OffiCials
of the 44,()00-student school
disttict, · Ohio's third-largest, ·
plan to use the proceeds to
· repair old buildings. ·

every

1 ..

DeWine to face Celeste in .November

CINCINNATi (AP) -The
public ·s chool · system wiD
receive its first payment next
month as part of the city's commitment of $5 million a year
for 20 yeaJ;S.
The Cincinnati Board of
Education's: finance committee
was told Monday 'that the city
will pay . $2.'5 million to the
schools on April IS. The 'City .
will pay the ·rest of this year's

i

.~~

i

~pection, Monday, 7:30· p.m.
·
.
•
~ MIDDLEPORT - DAV
~hapter 53, Monday, 7 p.m. at
ft!e hall, on Route 7 below
t&lt;liddleport, .7 p.m. preceded
~y dinner at }i:30 p.m.

-1

.'

. Monday, March 12

~ POMEROY -

1~ ~ ......: ~

~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ . ~ ~ ~ ~ I ~ •~ ' ~I~ ~~' ~ ~I ~ ·~ ~I ".; ~ ~

.

: MIDDLEPORT Midilleport Youth League sign ups,
(:ouncil chambers, noon to 3
p.m .. Registration fee of. $20
Rer child,' not . to exceed $30
~er family.
·

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: HARRISONVILLE
tfarrisonville Lodge 411,
f'&amp;AM, spccial .meeting, Satur·""y. breakfast at 8 a.m.; work in
f:.A,. degree, 9 a.m.

.••

·.

~ ~

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The Dally Sentinel • Page A 7.

.

CINCINNA11 (AP) - .
Procter ~cG~mblt Co. Chair~
man Durk I. Jager says he felt
"terrible\' about the COil!JJa·
ny's forecast of sharply diminished earnings for the third
quarter.
Investors dido 't like it
much, either.
The
company's
stock ·
plunged Tuesday after P&amp;G
warned that earnings would
fall far short of expectations.
P&amp;G's' stock fell $27.12 112
· per share, or 31 percent, to
$60.31 114 on volume of
more than 68 million shares.
Two months ago, the · stock
reached a 52~week high of
$118 .37. On Tuesday, the
stock lost about S38 billion in
market value for the roughly
l A billion shares.
"Shocking," said
Lyle
Schonberger, an analyst for
Olde Discount Corp. in
Detroit. "That's about all you
can . say. Nobody expected
.this."

..

.

.

Middleport, Ohio

PNder It Gamble
·earnlnp dip

'

·:,REEDSVILLE Olive
Township Trustees, Friday, 6:30
p;m. garage on Joppa Road.

Pom~roy,

SUPERMARKETS

�'
~A e • The Deily Sentinel

Wedne•d-v, Mlrch 8, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

.COMMUNITY

BUCKEYE
BRIEFS

Precinct by Precinct Primary Election Results

CALENDAR
Wednesday, March 8
POMEROY Pomeroy
M erchants meeting, 8 :30 a.m.
·w ednesday, Alw.~ys and Forev« . Dues are payable.
POMEROY - " Fun for
Jesus" at God's N.E.T., 106 W.
Main St., Pomeroy, for youth 8
through 12 years old. o 'pen
3:30 to 5:30 p.m. Free meal,
fl,ln , ganies, safe environment,
and short lessons that teach
about the Bible, Jesus aiid.. how
t~ey relate to today's youth.

.

.

.: POMEROY
Aslt
Wednesday breakfast and quiet
ljour,
Trinity ·
Church,
eomeroy, 7:45 a.m. , Bethany
f}uilding. Service open to anyone. For rese rvations call
~ianne Hawley, 992-2722 or
ileggy Harris, 992-7569.
.

.

Kids save coins

.

for statue

6-J

~~&gt;flo.y ~ 5 ~ ~ ~ ~ '~ ~.,

CINCINNATI (AP)
Students at an elementary
school are saving pennies and dimes and quarters - for
the restoration of a deteriorating statue of Abraham Lincoln
outside their school.
. Cathy Lutts, principal of
South Avondale 'E lementary
School, got the "Lincolns for
Lincoln" project started in
February by dropping SI 0 in
coins into a jar.
. The jar has been placed on
a counter in the school office
and is being ftlled daily with
pennies, nickels, dimes and ·
quarters. Two other jars have
been filled and locked away.
The statue has been outside
the school since 1902. The
Cincinnati Preservation Association, the school's 450 students and others are working
to raise money for the restoration:
The students are trying to
collect $1,000. It will be
added to $40,000 already
donated \&gt;y the city, the Com~
munity Arts Fund, the Ohio
Arts Council and the Procter.
&amp; Ganible Co. The cost of the
restoration is estimated at
$70,000.
Lutts said the fund-raising
effort was an opportunity io
teach students about the community, history and math .
· "We've raised over $700
now," she said Monday. "People are dropping off their pennies and their penny jars and
the kids bring in money every
,day, and now they pick up .
pennies off the ground,' wheil ·
before, ihey would have left
'therh."
·

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•

~ SALEM CENTER -

Ash
Wednesday service, 7 p.m., at
~alem
Center
United
¥ethodist Church.

.

'

Thursday, March 9

. RACINE- Southern High
School athletic
boosters,
Thursday. 7 p.m high school.
S}lo~ts banquet will be dis-.
cussed.

~o~ . .1~.1oiJ.1 ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ B; ~ ·~ · 'e: ~ ~ ·~ ~ ~

~• ' l ~ ~ ~ ~I~ ~ *' ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
'

.

'•

·~

• TUPPERS PLAINS ~ .
Tuppers Plains VFW · Post
2053, Thursday, 78:30. meeting
~nner at 6:30 p.m.
.

,,.,

~

•

~

-.

.

"' ·~
.

'

'

·: POMEROY Preceptor
!;leta Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma
(!hi Sorority, 6:30 p.m. Thursday, Lutheran Church. Election
• officers. Hostesses1 Vera
()f
Crow and Rose Sisson.

·.
,,

..

..

: MIDDLEPORT Mid. -veport Y~uth League, signups
:1J fire station, Thursday, 6 t9 8
p;m.; noon to 3 p.m. Council
cbambeo, Saturday.

. ,•"
.•

..

•

I .

Friday, March 10

: LONG BOTTOM'.- Youth
~ly and hymn sing, Long Bot~
t-om Faith Full Gospel Church,
1. p.m . Friday. Crusaders of
~arietta to s(ng. Fellowship to
fOllow. ·

' &gt;

r

.•

• POMEROY Annual
C::harter Day luncheon for
Return Jonathan Meigs ChapI'Cr, Daughters of the American
itevolution; Friday, 12:30 p.m.
¥ Trinity Church. Winners of
4r11erican History awards will
~e guests.
~

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..~ !. Saturday, March 11
..
• MIDDLEPORT -Veterans
~

'

.

Senefit seminar, 10 a.m. to 2
tm· Saturday, open to all vetqans, DAV building, on State
)!..oute 7 below Middleport.
J::unch will be served.

•

i' I

: SYRACUSE - . Signup for
!!Yracuse Youth
Baseball
~eague, Saturday, 10 a.m. to .
noon in mayor's office, Syraoose municipal building. Also
March 18.
•

•

-&lt;.y0~s

.• POMEROY - Burlingham
:Modern ,Woodmen, potluck
ainner, Saturday, 4 p.m. at hall.
Meat furnished, members to
~ear green. Rosalie Story to ·
aiv.:n St. Patrick's Day protram. Door prizes. Friends
invited.

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COLUMBUS (AP) - Suburban Columbus real estate broker
Ted Celeste won a four-way
Democratic primary Tuesday to
challenge Sen. Mike DeWine, who
is trying to become the fint Ohio
Republican in decades to win a second Senate term.
DeWine easily beat back two
challenges fiom the right, former
Rep. Frank Cremeans and gunshow operator Ron Dickson.

"This is a presidential election
year, and we'll have the cross-currents in that race that will impact
the Senate race," he said in an interview. "I anticipate a tough campaign
for the fall."
. Celeste, the brother of former
Gov. Richard Celeste, defeated the
Rev. Marvin McMickle, president
qfthe Shaker Heights school board;
Columbus lawyer and former legislator and state solicitor Richard ·

With 61 percent of precincts
reporting unofliciod results in the
GOP race, DeWine had 79 percent
co mpared with 13 percent for
Dickson and 8 percent for Cre-

means.
No Ohio Republican has been
re-elected to the U.S. Senate since
Robert Taft, the governor's grandfather, and John Bricker in the 1950s.
"It will be a formidable task in
OhiO:' DeWine said.

Cordray; and Dan Radakovich, a
Cleveland temporary
agency
employee.
With 61 percem of precincts
reporting, Celeste had 46 percent of
the vote to 25 percent for Cordray.
20 percent for McMickle, and 9
percent fQr Radakovich.
Celeste said he's eag« to see how
DeWine will run his campaign.
"Will he engage me or will he
run his campaign fiom a distance in

Washington? I don't know what his
style will be. He wasn't very visible,
in the prU1tary~
.,
DeWine said until November he
will continue to balance his senatorial duties with campaigning.
DeWine led all candidates in•
fund raising, having $2.2 million to ·
spend in the campaign's final weckol '
compared with his opponents".
available cash, which ranged from
$5,000 to about $140,000.
• ''

.

Stop &amp; Register to Win Free
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~IIIQUnt.on...Oct. J 5..

.

'

·.

The. city and Hamilton
County each agreed to pay ~he ·
schools $5 million annually as
part of the campaign to get a
half-cent sales tax increase to
build two new stadiums. The
city had failed to make any pay'ments for the last 'rwo years
because of budget problems.
Initially, City Manager John
Shirey recommended paying
the schools $1 rruUion in 1998,
$3 million in 1999 and $5 million
year from 2000 on.
City Council rejected that plan.
The
county's
pledged
money for the schools is coming from sales tax · revenue for
the two new stadiums. OffiCials
of the 44,()00-student school
disttict, · Ohio's third-largest, ·
plan to use the proceeds to
· repair old buildings. ·

every

1 ..

DeWine to face Celeste in .November

CINCINNATi (AP) -The
public ·s chool · system wiD
receive its first payment next
month as part of the city's commitment of $5 million a year
for 20 yeaJ;S.
The Cincinnati Board of
Education's: finance committee
was told Monday 'that the city
will pay . $2.'5 million to the
schools on April IS. The 'City .
will pay the ·rest of this year's

i

.~~

i

~pection, Monday, 7:30· p.m.
·
.
•
~ MIDDLEPORT - DAV
~hapter 53, Monday, 7 p.m. at
ft!e hall, on Route 7 below
t&lt;liddleport, .7 p.m. preceded
~y dinner at }i:30 p.m.

-1

.'

. Monday, March 12

~ POMEROY -

1~ ~ ......: ~

~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ . ~ ~ ~ ~ I ~ •~ ' ~I~ ~~' ~ ~I ~ ·~ ~I ".; ~ ~

.

: MIDDLEPORT Midilleport Youth League sign ups,
(:ouncil chambers, noon to 3
p.m .. Registration fee of. $20
Rer child,' not . to exceed $30
~er family.
·

~

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: HARRISONVILLE
tfarrisonville Lodge 411,
f'&amp;AM, spccial .meeting, Satur·""y. breakfast at 8 a.m.; work in
f:.A,. degree, 9 a.m.

.••

·.

~ ~

r

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 7.

.

CINCINNA11 (AP) - .
Procter ~cG~mblt Co. Chair~
man Durk I. Jager says he felt
"terrible\' about the COil!JJa·
ny's forecast of sharply diminished earnings for the third
quarter.
Investors dido 't like it
much, either.
The
company's
stock ·
plunged Tuesday after P&amp;G
warned that earnings would
fall far short of expectations.
P&amp;G's' stock fell $27.12 112
· per share, or 31 percent, to
$60.31 114 on volume of
more than 68 million shares.
Two months ago, the · stock
reached a 52~week high of
$118 .37. On Tuesday, the
stock lost about S38 billion in
market value for the roughly
l A billion shares.
"Shocking," said
Lyle
Schonberger, an analyst for
Olde Discount Corp. in
Detroit. "That's about all you
can . say. Nobody expected
.this."

..

.

.

Middleport, Ohio

PNder It Gamble
·earnlnp dip

'

·:,REEDSVILLE Olive
Township Trustees, Friday, 6:30
p;m. garage on Joppa Road.

Pom~roy,

SUPERMARKETS

�•

P.ge A 8 • The O.lly Sentinel

Inside: .

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

NBA roundup, Page B2
Reds &amp;Tribe win, Page 83
AI McGuire steps down, Page 84 ·
Today's scoreboard, Page 84

Tiberi beats Watts; Traficant wins tough race
COLUMBUS (AP)- State Rep. Pat Tiberi
~ the Republican congressional primary

'tuesday in the 12th District, where Rep. John
IK.a&amp;ich's retirement has given Democrats hopes
.o f picking up a House seat.
i Rep. James Traficam won the Democratic
primary in the 17th District, despite being
ordered to turn over office documents as part
of a corruption investigation in Mahoning
County. In incomplete, unofficial returns. he
Was getting as nuny votes as his three competi~ combined.
· [n the bitterly contested 12th Congression~ District, Ohio's ' only open seat, Tiberi had
56,846 votes, 73 percent, to 16,115 votes, 21
percent, for state Sen. Gene Watrs, with 99 percent of the precincts reporting. Nurse Ramona
Whisler had 4 percent, 3,431 votes, and 2 percent, 1,444 Votes, went to Andrew Zuchowski,
~ho spent part of the campaign in jail.
· Coluntbus City Councilwoman Maryellen
P'Shaughnessy easily won the Democratic
nomination. With 99 percent ol the precincts
fl.-porting, she had 78 ·percent, 26,736 ·votes, to

14 percent, 4,851 votes for Edward Brown, a cent of the precincts counted, software salesretired computer field engineer, and 7 percent, nun P~ul H. Alberty h~d 52 percent, 21 ,416
2,480 votes, for Ralph Applegate, a retired votes, to beat former Rep. Lyle Williams, who
mechanical engineer.
had 48 percent, 19,442 votes. Williams lost his
. Kasich upset an incumbent Democrat in 'seat to Traficant in 1984.
1982 to win t4e seat, and voters kept re-electIn the 6th District, which covers all or part
ing him by comfortable nurgiru as he rose to of 14 southern Ohio counties stretching from
become chairman. of the House Budget Com- Marietta to the Cincinnati suburbs, insurance
mittee. His decision to leave Congress after his salesman Mike Azinger narrowly defeated
unsuccessful presidential campaign gave Athens city auditor Jimmy Stewart. Azinger
Democrats a chance to claim the district that had 51 percent, 35,002 votes, to 49 ~rcent,
covers parts of Franklin and Licking counties 33,581 votes, for Stewart with 99 percent of
and all of Delaware County.
the precincts reporting.
Ohio currently has 11 Republicans and
They competed ifor the chance to take on
eight Democrats in the House.
incumbent Rep. Ted ·Strickland, who was
In the 17th District in northeast Ohio, Traf- unopposed in the Democratic primary. ·
icant received58,930 votes, or 50 percent, with
For Tiberi and Watts, the retirement of 47I 00 percent of the precincts reporting. State year-old Kasich meant a rare opportunity to
Sen. Robert Hagan ofYoungstown had 34 per- move. from · ilie term-limited Stateho!lse to
cent, 39,785 votes; Mahoning County Auditor Congress.
George Tablack 14 percent, 16,098 votes; a.nd
Tiberi, a former Kasich aide, snared more
schoolteacher C.htistopher Doutt 2 percent, money and endorsements but Watts had ilie
1,970 voteL./'
television commercial assistance of an outside
.In the Republican primary, with 100 per- group that favors term limits.

Attomey: Sexual addiction Bodies went unnoticed
·tormented Hensley
. for nearly one month
. SIDNEY (AP) -A sexuol addiction and interest in satanism were the
~&lt;;' that raged inside a man convic,red of lcilling iliree teen-age girls
lihd a Bible studies teacher, says the
nians attorney.
Lawrence Michael Hensley plead&lt;d guilty Tuesday to aggrnvated mur4er, attempted aggravatect .murder
.ind kidnapping as part of a plea 1=Pn to avoid a possible death
Hensle); 30, who surrendered five
days foDowing the July ~ after
tlking hOstages at a g;IS station, was
!entenced to life in prison without
paole by Shelby County Common
l'teas Court Judge John Schmitt.
Detense attorney Kott Gatterdam
lllid Hensley had a sexual addiction
.ID exposing .himself and had studied
saianism as part of a spiritual crisis
created by his problems.
"The combination of his spiritual
ptoblems and his sexual addiction
jUst too overpowering,''. saKI

PenaJty.

Gatterdam.
Prosecutors, who me~d ,more
details of the slayings, said Hensley
had previously exposed himself to
one or more of the girls.
. Although they don't know what
happened the · day of the killirigs,
prosecutors believe Hensley was
invoM,d in "activities" with some of
· the girls that could have.(ed to ctiminal charges, county ProsecutorJames
Stevenson said.
"He \WI concerned about the
possible ramifications of that information being disclosed," Stevenson
said.
Hensley \WI charged with lcilling ·
his neighbor Sherry Kimbler, 16, her
cousin Tosha Barrett, .1 6, and their
friend Amf Mikesell, 14. The girlS'
bodi~ were found July 8 iri this westem Ohio city afterVeronica Eagy. 22,
who had been shot and wounded,
escaped-fion) Hensley~ .house.

AVON (AP) - A bedridden and diabetic. His legs had been
·double amputee may have been amputated and he was unable to
able to see the body of his dead care for himself, Matus said.
mother down the haQ before he
As recently as last summer, the
died several days later at home, · son still had beth legs and had
the coroner said.
been · cutting the grass on the
"They had a loving relation- family's 5-acre plot with a rider
ship,;, Lorain County Coroner mo~er, accordiqg to a next-door .
Paul M. Marils said Tuesday. "She neighbor, Nancy Rothacher, 35.
doted ~n him. She was a full"We saw hini being taken
time caregiver."
.
away (in an ambulance last fall),"
The bodies of Joan Donald- · she said. "We never saw him outson, 71, and her son, Richard side afterthat."
Donaldson, 3-7, were found
Donaldson apparently ):lad his
Monday when a postal carrier legs amputated at that rime and
saw mail overflowing the curb- then
became
bedridden,
side box. They had been dead Rothachet said.
nearly one month.
Her husband had placed a
Joan Donaldson likely died of blowing ·piece of mail in the
a heart condition around Feb. 9 · Donaldson mailbox on' Sunday,
and the son died a few days later, Rothacher said. Asked · if they
probably from dehydration, had checked on the Donaldsons
Matus said.
at the rime, she said, "We weren't
The son was schizophrenic that kind of neighbors:•

The Daily Sentinel

Page 81
Weclnudllf, March I. liDO

•

WEDNESDAY's .

12,000

MILES

HIGHLIGHTS

Southem falls to
BY Seem WOIJIE

Playing their final games for
Southern were seniors Russell
ATHENS - Hitting just '27 Reiber, Kyle Norris, and...Chris
percent (16-of-59) from the Randolph. Reiber and RanDlvlalon II Dlltrlct Toum1ment
floor,
Southern fell 68-46 at the dolph ·shared team sc'?ring hanIll: The Convo, AtMnl
hands of Whiteoak Tuesday ors with Jonathan Evans; each
Frld1y's achldule
McClain v. Portsmouth, 6:15
night in the Division IV district tossed in nine points. Norris and
Hillsboro v. Sheridan, 8:15
tournament semifinals at the Chad Hubbard each scored five.
Ohio
Uni'l:ersity Convocation
Whiteoak's Barnett led all
. p!vlalon Ill Dl.trlct Toum1111111t
Center. '
scorers with 22 points, while
11 The Convo, Athllll
.
Saturday'l IChedUII
Southern (13-9) bows from teammate ·Mike Turner added
Chesapeake v. Wheelersburg, 6:15
tournament
play,
while . 12 and Kevin Shannon had
Eastern Brown v. Belpre, 8:15
Whiteoak
(i7-5)
advances
to . eight.
.
.
the
district
championship
game
On goals by Barnett and
' Toum1ment
Division IV Dlltrlct
against Bea~er Eastern Saturday · Turner, Whiteoak went up 5-0 .
.t The Convo, Athena
Tu88day's·t'IDuHs
at 2 p.m.
Southern got on 'the board with .
Beaver Eastern 63, Green 51
" Whether it was their defense a pair of Randolph free throws,
Wh~eoak 68, Southern 46
or our nerves, I don't really then made it 5 ~3 on a _Norris
know for sure, but when you get tally. The score rose to 7-4 and
Saturday's IChldule
to this level you have to be able on to 11-6 at the end of the
Eastern v. Trimble, Noon
Wh~eoak v. !Ieaver Eastern, 2:00
to shoot the ball," said Southern · frame as Southern scored just
coach Jay Rees. "The effort was one fkld goal.
there, but we dug .ourselves a
Southern's shooting woes
hole offensively. We took several · continued into the second half.
off balance shots and never real- Southern's lack of success from
ly got into our offensive .the field took away one of their
rhythm. When you don't shoot strategies on winning the game
well you don't win.".
- the press.
Southern shot 10 percent
Rees reflected, .. "Scouting
from behind the arc (2-for-20) reports indi&lt;;ated that Whiteo:ik
· CLEVELAND (AP) -Anthoand
the two point effort wasn't was susceptible to the press,
ny Stacey, Bowling Green's .burly
significantly better at 35 percent however, after we put the press
se.nior forward who led .the Fal(14-for-39). Likewise, Southern · on · we only made four field
~ons to the Mid-American Conhad a miserable night ·at the line goals. And when you press after
terence regular season title, was
with
a 12-for-22 (54 percent) the made basket that limits what
named a first team all-conference
·showing.
you can do. Defensively, we did
selection by the MAC's coaches.
·
The
first
two
frames
told
the
our job' most of the night - we
' Stacey wa~ joined on the first
story statistically: Southern was forced 26 turnovers - but our
1eam Tuesday by Ohio forward
1-for-11 from the fielii in the misses converted into additional
Shaun Stonerock, Marshall guard
first period ·and 4-for-12 the possessions for them, and they
Tamar Slay, Northern Illinois
second
period. Whiteoak, how- eventually converted.". .
center T.J. Lux and Toledo forever,- \Vas 5-for-11 and 5-fur-14
It was. fortunate that a
W:.rd Greg Stempin.
in the same stretch.
blowout did not come in the
Stacey and Stempin also were
Rees said, "One of our goals first half.as Southern sputtered
named to the first team in 1999.
. Was to take it right at them arid along with a 4-12 shooting
The 6-foot-4, 235-pound
get them in foul trouble. We did effort \he second period, yet.was
Stacey averaged 17 points and 5. 9
"'
j,;t;. ' . '
that, but · we couldn't take still in the game. Fortunately,
rebounds per game in leading the
Falcons ',.to · tbeir.!--first outrigh.t . ~d~~e of their two~ sit- Whiteoak suffered a shooting
.. I ll L&lt;;-~ !§}.
l:JHnv SP tit
MAC :·re~r- ~fon·~ tiffe ' sine~ ·· tt~'ii:th'~ bench~* •,. !t ~
MiChael
picked
up
two
•
u
-i!'!!i
t ,;&lt; ~.-:, • ,::Sfl' r:;r,r, ,. \!:d. ;;
osh
J
1983. He is BG's career scoring
ern o s y Within struung tsfouls in the first minute of the ranee at the hal(; 27-16.
leader.
game and sat out most of the . In the third frame, Southern
The second tean:t was comfi..St quarter, picking up his third made its · final ·stand. A Garret
prised of four guards, Ball State's
upon entry in the second frame. Kiser goal, a Reiber back door
Duane Clemens, Miami of Ohio's
Likewise, top scorer Ryan Bar- . cut, and a Reiber steal and
Anthony Taylor, Akron's Janii ·
nett picked up his third early in . coast-to-coast tally quickly cut
Bosley, Kent's Trev9r H11flinan,
the
second frame, but Southern
·
and one center, Kent's John
AIRBORNE ·- Southern's Chris Randolpt\ (4) goes to the basket during Tuesday's Division IV district sem~
could ·n ot capitalize.
PIIIH - Southern. Plip IJ
Whorton.
final against Whiteoak. The Tornadoes lost 68-46. (Dave Harris photo)
Bowling Green had two more
.
players on the third team, forwards Len Matela and Dave
Esterkamp. They were joined by
Marshall forward J.R. Vanl:ioose,
Western Michigan guard Tony ·
Barksdale, Central . Michigan
'
CHICAGO (AP) - For all but one of formed."
ously," Illinois coach Lon Kruger said.
. bubble, help~d its cause by beating Indiana
guard David Webber, Akron guard ·
This year's Big Ten tournament kicks off on Sunday, but it probably needs a victory
the Big Ten's lowliest · teams, the task
Ah, yes, Illinois, now the patron saint of
Jimmal Ball, Toledo guard Justin
Thursday,withMichigan(15-12,6-10Big
sounds
simple
en'
o
ugh:
Win
four
games
in
or two this week to. get into the NCAA
lost
causes
.
in
Big
Ten
hoops:
The
Illini
Hall, Miami guard Rob Mestas,
four days, and it's on to the NCAA tour- · arrived at last year's Big Ten tournament Ten) taking on Penn State (13-14, 5-11); tournament.
Eastern Michigan forward Calvin
nament.
·
having. won just three conference games. · Iowa (13-15, 6-10) facing Minnesota (12As for the rest of the big boys, Ohio
Warner and Ohio forward Sanjay
Of course, that m,eans getting by Ohio They were supposed ·to be done in one, 15, 4-12); and Wisconsin (16-12; 8~8) State and Michigan State are the easy
Adell.
picks to win this week. The Buckeyes and
State, Michigan State, Indiana, Purdue and sent home after the first game · to settle playing Northwestern (5-24, 0-16).
"
lllinois, some of the best teams in the into their couches and dream about next
No. 25 Illinois (19-8, 11-5) meets No.·" Spartans, Final Four teams last year, shared
18 Indiana (20-7, 10-6) in the first quar- the regular-season conference title and
.country. It also means playing d~y after day year.
.
still have a shot at a No. l seed in th~
with weary legs, burning lungs and emoInstead, they had the audacity to knock terfinal Friday.
The top three teams .-. Nq. 4 Ohio NCAA tournament.
•
tional ups and ·downs that make a 'Viler- off not one, not two, but three Top 25
coaster look tame.
·
But enough about the top teams. What
teams on their way to the championship State (22-5,"13-3), No. 5 Michigan State
SANTA ANA, . Calif. (AP) - ·
(23-7,13-3) and No. 22 Purdue (21-8, 12- about the upstarts? Which of the little
But don't tell them it can't be done.
game.
Imagine
that,
a
conference
that
sent
Dallas Mavericks forW-ard Dennis
"This is a tourriameni.for opportunists,'' . two teams to the Final Four was within 40 4) - all have byes uflti! the quarterfinals. gtlys is going to shake up the tournament
Rodman was charged with misPenn State coach Jerry Dunn said. "I think minutes of giving its automatic bid to a · The Big Ten will send at least five and and make things exciting?
demeanor drunken driving. stempossibly -siX teams to the NCAA tournaThe tournament means the least - and
Illinois demonstrated that as well as any- teant with a losing record. ·
ming from a December arrest in
body has since this tournament's been
"It's an exciting time of the year, obvi- ment this year. Wisconsin, the team on the
Plene- BlciO, Pap &amp;3 1
Costa Mesa .

Prep Basketball

SENTINEL CORR~SPONDENT

MU's Slay, OU's.

Stonerook tabbed
. AII·MAC

'..

o('

Lbw seeds in Big 10 don't lack ·confidence

Symptoms To
Pay Attention To
Many people believe that most health problems will take care

Roclmonian finds
trouble again

Of themselves onr time. And, quite often they do. But some
IYJI\ploms may Indicate the possibility of a more serious conclition and you lhould.have them checked out with you physl"
dan. Here's a few that should at least be looked into... If for no
other reason .t hm peace of mind.
.. cnplaa"' . . . .

heart, You may even feellightheaded
or be nauseous. Regardless, you should
take an aspirin and go to the nearest
emergency center.

This could be simple bronchitis or lnitation of the throat. Espedally if you
are young and don't smoke. But if ·
you're a smoker or older person, you
should have your physician look more
clo~ly because it could be the resUlt of .
. pneumonia or lung cancer.

s-llure41pHda aad,/ot
. WaalaaaaOa 0.. ldM .
These sound simple but most likely
mean that you are having a stroke. Call
gu or go to the nearest Emergency
Room immediately.

a.•n•lallleUdu

While It could be a simple kidney infection, this could also mean a kidney
.. Vnnall.._p, lonl, . , , . . _
stone or even a malignancy. To find out
--.:~.J!l~!.8!1Ylll:~ see }'llUuiodoLas:~~~ Whlle-thesecare usually no·t-se' rio1Js,~---rsoon as possible. .
they should be checked by a physldan
to make sure they are not cancer. This
Is particularly true If }'llU are exposed
J.llctaJ•··
••••·hemorrhoids or·it
This
could be from
to the sun a lot or have moles thirt have
trreSUiar shapes or change color. .
could he C&lt;lUSed by an active '!leer or
colon cancer.lf there Is a lot of blotid,
.
'
callgn and your doctor Immediately. If · With any of these symptoms, the key Is.
the amount Is small, youi: doctor will
to take action qulcldy; No one likes to
probably do a couple simple tests In the
uk the question ~whjlt's wrong with
me" but the sooner you do, the faster ·
office. Depeiidlnfi~ on the result of the
you'll get the helJ&gt; needed to overcome
tests, addltlo~ exams may be.needed
to mate sure that your condition Is not
the problem.
.
. serious or life threatlming. . ·
.

.

.,

.. a..t....

,,,.

'

..

'

It. could just be Indigestion, or It could
be a heart attack. Chest pains ftl'Y.
sometlinesit feels like someone Is sitting on, you chest or It squeezing your

Holzer Clinic
KEEPING OUII PIIONIISE
~~~~ RMctoiHolzerCIInk.

·Police said the 38-year-old had
a blood-alcohol level of.l5, nearly twice California's legal limit,
when he was pulled over.
On March 27, . a trial is scheduled in 'Las Vegas in the federal
!~sui~ by Connie Wilcox that
a,l:cuses Rodman of battery and
intentional .infliction of emotional.distres$.

.

BRADENTON, Fla. (AP)
Non-roster reliever Dave Ste\rens
was rushed to a hospital after having a seizure in the Pittsburgh
Pirates' dubhouse and falling
unconscious.
Stevens was sitting in front of
his locker when he suddenly
began shaking. He .was able to
Walk to the trainer's room under
his own power, then collapsed.
· Stevens, 30, was liste&lt;~ in good
condition and elc:p_ected to stay ,
overnight for tests. ·
·
He is 15-16 with 21 saves and a
5.95 ERA in 181 major league
games during six seasons with·
Minrtesota, the Cubs an.d &lt;:Jeveland.
·1 '

NCAA bid on line for Miami, Ball State
CLEVELAND (AI') - Ball
State and Miami of Ohio will
put the finishing touches on a
wild Mid-An)erican Conference
season and tournament tonight
in the championship at Gund
Arena.-'
Don't be surprised if they
spend a little .extra time doing it.
After all, the two teams needed four overtimes to settle two
regular-season m,eetings'. And
with an NCAA bid on the line,
there's no telling how long they
might play. ·
"I hope it goes into overtime,''
said Miami coach c;:harlie Coles. .
"Then I'd 'know we'd still be in
the gante."
·
.
· Biill State coach Ray McCal·(um kidded that he was preparing his team alJ:i,ady for a long
night . .·
.
"In our walkthrough we'll
rprobab)y
ab~ut what we'll
do in OT:' McCallum quipped.
"It just shows yo\1 the, parity in
this conlerence."· • .
Indeed. Th~ might 'not be

tal'-

(\.J '
·\

'

Rio heads back

.to NAIA nationals

apother league .that can match a surprise to everyone except the
the MAC's overall balimce. Con- RedHawks (15- 14) · and the
sider: Five MAC teants have 20 other MAC teams who hate to
or more wins and five finished play them.
BY MARK WIWAMI
with identical 11-7 league '
Miami has advanced to the
LATROBE, Pa. AMC!
marks. The league had 21 gan).eS . finals without Taylor, their lead- __AMCLAMCf._.... ~~
go 'to overtime;includin!ftwo"irr-inglcorent 17 ro1ms per gante,
For the second consecutive
the tourney quarterfinals.
scoring a field goal.
season that sound Will be heard
Add to that No. 4 seed Akron . Jason Stewart made . a conferfrom the University of Rio
being upset in the first round by ence record 10-of-12 triples as
Grande after the No. 15 RedNo ..13 Central Michigan, regu- Miami beat Marshall in the
women defeated No. 22 Saint
lar season champ Bowling Green semifinals. Despite . his perforVincent 82-66 to claim backgetting knocked out in the quar- mance, Stewart can be streaky.
co-back American Mideast
terfinals, No. 9 Miami still alive, He shot just 3-for-17 from the
Conferenee Tournament titles.
and s~ tourney games at Gund field in his 4't garne against Ball
'l'he win gives Rio Grande
Arena decided by 15 total .State.
.
.
another automatic berth into ·
points, and you can see why
.The Cardinals will have to be
the NAIA Division I National
some call it the Mad MAC.
· careful not to leave Jason
Tour,;.,me,n t in Jackson, Tenn.
Ball State, the No. 2 seed, and Grunke~eyer open either. H:is
. Rio Grande forward Renee
Miaini have , already had two tbree-pmnter a~ the buzzer got
Thrley had a spectacular game
slugfests this season.
the RedHawks to OT in their
with 19 points, seven rebounds,
In thei~,first ~~rig ~n Jan. . quart~rfinol win _over .top seed
seYen steals and six assists. Senior
12, m.e t~ needed three OTs Bowh~.Gree~.
.
Meghan Kolcun hit some key
at Miarm before ~he RedHawks
M1afni s nuss1on will be to try
thn:e-pointers early in the game
won 86-84. Then, on Feb. 19; an~ slow. the tempo and ~ake
. · en route to scoring I8 on the
the Cardi~ (21-8) avenged the thmgs difficult for Cardinals
night.
.
loss to Miami wi~ a 60-5,7 win ~ard Duane. ~)em~ns, .. W~? .
~arley Mohler scored 16
in another OT ·thriller. 1 •· • score.~ a. tareer•htgh 35 pomts m
pointS, all in the second half,
Miami's tourney run h'IS 'been a semmnal win_ .over Ohio.

after a quiet first half and Misti
Halley added 1 I points widi
sev6n-assists-. -·Junior post ·player Kassie
Kendall provided some big play~
for the Redwomen in the first
half, scoring eight points and
being effective in the paint . .
Saint Vincent (26-6) was
plagued by foul trouble the
entire game as three players
fouled out. Freshman Erica
Hogan scored I 4 points off ,th~
bench.
Kelly Morda poured in 12
points and Tara Cochrahe added
11 points before each player
fouled out.
..
The Redwoinen (26-7) will
make their fourth national tour.;
ney trip in eight years and the
third visit in the last four }'l'ars
to the big dance. The tournament will be held at the Oman
Arena, March I 5-21.

. rt

�•

P.ge A 8 • The O.lly Sentinel

Inside: .

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

NBA roundup, Page B2
Reds &amp;Tribe win, Page 83
AI McGuire steps down, Page 84 ·
Today's scoreboard, Page 84

Tiberi beats Watts; Traficant wins tough race
COLUMBUS (AP)- State Rep. Pat Tiberi
~ the Republican congressional primary

'tuesday in the 12th District, where Rep. John
IK.a&amp;ich's retirement has given Democrats hopes
.o f picking up a House seat.
i Rep. James Traficam won the Democratic
primary in the 17th District, despite being
ordered to turn over office documents as part
of a corruption investigation in Mahoning
County. In incomplete, unofficial returns. he
Was getting as nuny votes as his three competi~ combined.
· [n the bitterly contested 12th Congression~ District, Ohio's ' only open seat, Tiberi had
56,846 votes, 73 percent, to 16,115 votes, 21
percent, for state Sen. Gene Watrs, with 99 percent of the precincts reporting. Nurse Ramona
Whisler had 4 percent, 3,431 votes, and 2 percent, 1,444 Votes, went to Andrew Zuchowski,
~ho spent part of the campaign in jail.
· Coluntbus City Councilwoman Maryellen
P'Shaughnessy easily won the Democratic
nomination. With 99 percent ol the precincts
fl.-porting, she had 78 ·percent, 26,736 ·votes, to

14 percent, 4,851 votes for Edward Brown, a cent of the precincts counted, software salesretired computer field engineer, and 7 percent, nun P~ul H. Alberty h~d 52 percent, 21 ,416
2,480 votes, for Ralph Applegate, a retired votes, to beat former Rep. Lyle Williams, who
mechanical engineer.
had 48 percent, 19,442 votes. Williams lost his
. Kasich upset an incumbent Democrat in 'seat to Traficant in 1984.
1982 to win t4e seat, and voters kept re-electIn the 6th District, which covers all or part
ing him by comfortable nurgiru as he rose to of 14 southern Ohio counties stretching from
become chairman. of the House Budget Com- Marietta to the Cincinnati suburbs, insurance
mittee. His decision to leave Congress after his salesman Mike Azinger narrowly defeated
unsuccessful presidential campaign gave Athens city auditor Jimmy Stewart. Azinger
Democrats a chance to claim the district that had 51 percent, 35,002 votes, to 49 ~rcent,
covers parts of Franklin and Licking counties 33,581 votes, for Stewart with 99 percent of
and all of Delaware County.
the precincts reporting.
Ohio currently has 11 Republicans and
They competed ifor the chance to take on
eight Democrats in the House.
incumbent Rep. Ted ·Strickland, who was
In the 17th District in northeast Ohio, Traf- unopposed in the Democratic primary. ·
icant received58,930 votes, or 50 percent, with
For Tiberi and Watts, the retirement of 47I 00 percent of the precincts reporting. State year-old Kasich meant a rare opportunity to
Sen. Robert Hagan ofYoungstown had 34 per- move. from · ilie term-limited Stateho!lse to
cent, 39,785 votes; Mahoning County Auditor Congress.
George Tablack 14 percent, 16,098 votes; a.nd
Tiberi, a former Kasich aide, snared more
schoolteacher C.htistopher Doutt 2 percent, money and endorsements but Watts had ilie
1,970 voteL./'
television commercial assistance of an outside
.In the Republican primary, with 100 per- group that favors term limits.

Attomey: Sexual addiction Bodies went unnoticed
·tormented Hensley
. for nearly one month
. SIDNEY (AP) -A sexuol addiction and interest in satanism were the
~&lt;;' that raged inside a man convic,red of lcilling iliree teen-age girls
lihd a Bible studies teacher, says the
nians attorney.
Lawrence Michael Hensley plead&lt;d guilty Tuesday to aggrnvated mur4er, attempted aggravatect .murder
.ind kidnapping as part of a plea 1=Pn to avoid a possible death
Hensle); 30, who surrendered five
days foDowing the July ~ after
tlking hOstages at a g;IS station, was
!entenced to life in prison without
paole by Shelby County Common
l'teas Court Judge John Schmitt.
Detense attorney Kott Gatterdam
lllid Hensley had a sexual addiction
.ID exposing .himself and had studied
saianism as part of a spiritual crisis
created by his problems.
"The combination of his spiritual
ptoblems and his sexual addiction
jUst too overpowering,''. saKI

PenaJty.

Gatterdam.
Prosecutors, who me~d ,more
details of the slayings, said Hensley
had previously exposed himself to
one or more of the girls.
. Although they don't know what
happened the · day of the killirigs,
prosecutors believe Hensley was
invoM,d in "activities" with some of
· the girls that could have.(ed to ctiminal charges, county ProsecutorJames
Stevenson said.
"He \WI concerned about the
possible ramifications of that information being disclosed," Stevenson
said.
Hensley \WI charged with lcilling ·
his neighbor Sherry Kimbler, 16, her
cousin Tosha Barrett, .1 6, and their
friend Amf Mikesell, 14. The girlS'
bodi~ were found July 8 iri this westem Ohio city afterVeronica Eagy. 22,
who had been shot and wounded,
escaped-fion) Hensley~ .house.

AVON (AP) - A bedridden and diabetic. His legs had been
·double amputee may have been amputated and he was unable to
able to see the body of his dead care for himself, Matus said.
mother down the haQ before he
As recently as last summer, the
died several days later at home, · son still had beth legs and had
the coroner said.
been · cutting the grass on the
"They had a loving relation- family's 5-acre plot with a rider
ship,;, Lorain County Coroner mo~er, accordiqg to a next-door .
Paul M. Marils said Tuesday. "She neighbor, Nancy Rothacher, 35.
doted ~n him. She was a full"We saw hini being taken
time caregiver."
.
away (in an ambulance last fall),"
The bodies of Joan Donald- · she said. "We never saw him outson, 71, and her son, Richard side afterthat."
Donaldson, 3-7, were found
Donaldson apparently ):lad his
Monday when a postal carrier legs amputated at that rime and
saw mail overflowing the curb- then
became
bedridden,
side box. They had been dead Rothachet said.
nearly one month.
Her husband had placed a
Joan Donaldson likely died of blowing ·piece of mail in the
a heart condition around Feb. 9 · Donaldson mailbox on' Sunday,
and the son died a few days later, Rothacher said. Asked · if they
probably from dehydration, had checked on the Donaldsons
Matus said.
at the rime, she said, "We weren't
The son was schizophrenic that kind of neighbors:•

The Daily Sentinel

Page 81
Weclnudllf, March I. liDO

•

WEDNESDAY's .

12,000

MILES

HIGHLIGHTS

Southem falls to
BY Seem WOIJIE

Playing their final games for
Southern were seniors Russell
ATHENS - Hitting just '27 Reiber, Kyle Norris, and...Chris
percent (16-of-59) from the Randolph. Reiber and RanDlvlalon II Dlltrlct Toum1ment
floor,
Southern fell 68-46 at the dolph ·shared team sc'?ring hanIll: The Convo, AtMnl
hands of Whiteoak Tuesday ors with Jonathan Evans; each
Frld1y's achldule
McClain v. Portsmouth, 6:15
night in the Division IV district tossed in nine points. Norris and
Hillsboro v. Sheridan, 8:15
tournament semifinals at the Chad Hubbard each scored five.
Ohio
Uni'l:ersity Convocation
Whiteoak's Barnett led all
. p!vlalon Ill Dl.trlct Toum1111111t
Center. '
scorers with 22 points, while
11 The Convo, Athllll
.
Saturday'l IChedUII
Southern (13-9) bows from teammate ·Mike Turner added
Chesapeake v. Wheelersburg, 6:15
tournament
play,
while . 12 and Kevin Shannon had
Eastern Brown v. Belpre, 8:15
Whiteoak
(i7-5)
advances
to . eight.
.
.
the
district
championship
game
On goals by Barnett and
' Toum1ment
Division IV Dlltrlct
against Bea~er Eastern Saturday · Turner, Whiteoak went up 5-0 .
.t The Convo, Athena
Tu88day's·t'IDuHs
at 2 p.m.
Southern got on 'the board with .
Beaver Eastern 63, Green 51
" Whether it was their defense a pair of Randolph free throws,
Wh~eoak 68, Southern 46
or our nerves, I don't really then made it 5 ~3 on a _Norris
know for sure, but when you get tally. The score rose to 7-4 and
Saturday's IChldule
to this level you have to be able on to 11-6 at the end of the
Eastern v. Trimble, Noon
Wh~eoak v. !Ieaver Eastern, 2:00
to shoot the ball," said Southern · frame as Southern scored just
coach Jay Rees. "The effort was one fkld goal.
there, but we dug .ourselves a
Southern's shooting woes
hole offensively. We took several · continued into the second half.
off balance shots and never real- Southern's lack of success from
ly got into our offensive .the field took away one of their
rhythm. When you don't shoot strategies on winning the game
well you don't win.".
- the press.
Southern shot 10 percent
Rees reflected, .. "Scouting
from behind the arc (2-for-20) reports indi&lt;;ated that Whiteo:ik
· CLEVELAND (AP) -Anthoand
the two point effort wasn't was susceptible to the press,
ny Stacey, Bowling Green's .burly
significantly better at 35 percent however, after we put the press
se.nior forward who led .the Fal(14-for-39). Likewise, Southern · on · we only made four field
~ons to the Mid-American Conhad a miserable night ·at the line goals. And when you press after
terence regular season title, was
with
a 12-for-22 (54 percent) the made basket that limits what
named a first team all-conference
·showing.
you can do. Defensively, we did
selection by the MAC's coaches.
·
The
first
two
frames
told
the
our job' most of the night - we
' Stacey wa~ joined on the first
story statistically: Southern was forced 26 turnovers - but our
1eam Tuesday by Ohio forward
1-for-11 from the fielii in the misses converted into additional
Shaun Stonerock, Marshall guard
first period ·and 4-for-12 the possessions for them, and they
Tamar Slay, Northern Illinois
second
period. Whiteoak, how- eventually converted.". .
center T.J. Lux and Toledo forever,- \Vas 5-for-11 and 5-fur-14
It was. fortunate that a
W:.rd Greg Stempin.
in the same stretch.
blowout did not come in the
Stacey and Stempin also were
Rees said, "One of our goals first half.as Southern sputtered
named to the first team in 1999.
. Was to take it right at them arid along with a 4-12 shooting
The 6-foot-4, 235-pound
get them in foul trouble. We did effort \he second period, yet.was
Stacey averaged 17 points and 5. 9
"'
j,;t;. ' . '
that, but · we couldn't take still in the game. Fortunately,
rebounds per game in leading the
Falcons ',.to · tbeir.!--first outrigh.t . ~d~~e of their two~ sit- Whiteoak suffered a shooting
.. I ll L&lt;;-~ !§}.
l:JHnv SP tit
MAC :·re~r- ~fon·~ tiffe ' sine~ ·· tt~'ii:th'~ bench~* •,. !t ~
MiChael
picked
up
two
•
u
-i!'!!i
t ,;&lt; ~.-:, • ,::Sfl' r:;r,r, ,. \!:d. ;;
osh
J
1983. He is BG's career scoring
ern o s y Within struung tsfouls in the first minute of the ranee at the hal(; 27-16.
leader.
game and sat out most of the . In the third frame, Southern
The second tean:t was comfi..St quarter, picking up his third made its · final ·stand. A Garret
prised of four guards, Ball State's
upon entry in the second frame. Kiser goal, a Reiber back door
Duane Clemens, Miami of Ohio's
Likewise, top scorer Ryan Bar- . cut, and a Reiber steal and
Anthony Taylor, Akron's Janii ·
nett picked up his third early in . coast-to-coast tally quickly cut
Bosley, Kent's Trev9r H11flinan,
the
second frame, but Southern
·
and one center, Kent's John
AIRBORNE ·- Southern's Chris Randolpt\ (4) goes to the basket during Tuesday's Division IV district sem~
could ·n ot capitalize.
PIIIH - Southern. Plip IJ
Whorton.
final against Whiteoak. The Tornadoes lost 68-46. (Dave Harris photo)
Bowling Green had two more
.
players on the third team, forwards Len Matela and Dave
Esterkamp. They were joined by
Marshall forward J.R. Vanl:ioose,
Western Michigan guard Tony ·
Barksdale, Central . Michigan
'
CHICAGO (AP) - For all but one of formed."
ously," Illinois coach Lon Kruger said.
. bubble, help~d its cause by beating Indiana
guard David Webber, Akron guard ·
This year's Big Ten tournament kicks off on Sunday, but it probably needs a victory
the Big Ten's lowliest · teams, the task
Ah, yes, Illinois, now the patron saint of
Jimmal Ball, Toledo guard Justin
Thursday,withMichigan(15-12,6-10Big
sounds
simple
en'
o
ugh:
Win
four
games
in
or two this week to. get into the NCAA
lost
causes
.
in
Big
Ten
hoops:
The
Illini
Hall, Miami guard Rob Mestas,
four days, and it's on to the NCAA tour- · arrived at last year's Big Ten tournament Ten) taking on Penn State (13-14, 5-11); tournament.
Eastern Michigan forward Calvin
nament.
·
having. won just three conference games. · Iowa (13-15, 6-10) facing Minnesota (12As for the rest of the big boys, Ohio
Warner and Ohio forward Sanjay
Of course, that m,eans getting by Ohio They were supposed ·to be done in one, 15, 4-12); and Wisconsin (16-12; 8~8) State and Michigan State are the easy
Adell.
picks to win this week. The Buckeyes and
State, Michigan State, Indiana, Purdue and sent home after the first game · to settle playing Northwestern (5-24, 0-16).
"
lllinois, some of the best teams in the into their couches and dream about next
No. 25 Illinois (19-8, 11-5) meets No.·" Spartans, Final Four teams last year, shared
18 Indiana (20-7, 10-6) in the first quar- the regular-season conference title and
.country. It also means playing d~y after day year.
.
still have a shot at a No. l seed in th~
with weary legs, burning lungs and emoInstead, they had the audacity to knock terfinal Friday.
The top three teams .-. Nq. 4 Ohio NCAA tournament.
•
tional ups and ·downs that make a 'Viler- off not one, not two, but three Top 25
coaster look tame.
·
But enough about the top teams. What
teams on their way to the championship State (22-5,"13-3), No. 5 Michigan State
SANTA ANA, . Calif. (AP) - ·
(23-7,13-3) and No. 22 Purdue (21-8, 12- about the upstarts? Which of the little
But don't tell them it can't be done.
game.
Imagine
that,
a
conference
that
sent
Dallas Mavericks forW-ard Dennis
"This is a tourriameni.for opportunists,'' . two teams to the Final Four was within 40 4) - all have byes uflti! the quarterfinals. gtlys is going to shake up the tournament
Rodman was charged with misPenn State coach Jerry Dunn said. "I think minutes of giving its automatic bid to a · The Big Ten will send at least five and and make things exciting?
demeanor drunken driving. stempossibly -siX teams to the NCAA tournaThe tournament means the least - and
Illinois demonstrated that as well as any- teant with a losing record. ·
ming from a December arrest in
body has since this tournament's been
"It's an exciting time of the year, obvi- ment this year. Wisconsin, the team on the
Plene- BlciO, Pap &amp;3 1
Costa Mesa .

Prep Basketball

SENTINEL CORR~SPONDENT

MU's Slay, OU's.

Stonerook tabbed
. AII·MAC

'..

o('

Lbw seeds in Big 10 don't lack ·confidence

Symptoms To
Pay Attention To
Many people believe that most health problems will take care

Roclmonian finds
trouble again

Of themselves onr time. And, quite often they do. But some
IYJI\ploms may Indicate the possibility of a more serious conclition and you lhould.have them checked out with you physl"
dan. Here's a few that should at least be looked into... If for no
other reason .t hm peace of mind.
.. cnplaa"' . . . .

heart, You may even feellightheaded
or be nauseous. Regardless, you should
take an aspirin and go to the nearest
emergency center.

This could be simple bronchitis or lnitation of the throat. Espedally if you
are young and don't smoke. But if ·
you're a smoker or older person, you
should have your physician look more
clo~ly because it could be the resUlt of .
. pneumonia or lung cancer.

s-llure41pHda aad,/ot
. WaalaaaaOa 0.. ldM .
These sound simple but most likely
mean that you are having a stroke. Call
gu or go to the nearest Emergency
Room immediately.

a.•n•lallleUdu

While It could be a simple kidney infection, this could also mean a kidney
.. Vnnall.._p, lonl, . , , . . _
stone or even a malignancy. To find out
--.:~.J!l~!.8!1Ylll:~ see }'llUuiodoLas:~~~ Whlle-thesecare usually no·t-se' rio1Js,~---rsoon as possible. .
they should be checked by a physldan
to make sure they are not cancer. This
Is particularly true If }'llU are exposed
J.llctaJ•··
••••·hemorrhoids or·it
This
could be from
to the sun a lot or have moles thirt have
trreSUiar shapes or change color. .
could he C&lt;lUSed by an active '!leer or
colon cancer.lf there Is a lot of blotid,
.
'
callgn and your doctor Immediately. If · With any of these symptoms, the key Is.
the amount Is small, youi: doctor will
to take action qulcldy; No one likes to
probably do a couple simple tests In the
uk the question ~whjlt's wrong with
me" but the sooner you do, the faster ·
office. Depeiidlnfi~ on the result of the
you'll get the helJ&gt; needed to overcome
tests, addltlo~ exams may be.needed
to mate sure that your condition Is not
the problem.
.
. serious or life threatlming. . ·
.

.

.,

.. a..t....

,,,.

'

..

'

It. could just be Indigestion, or It could
be a heart attack. Chest pains ftl'Y.
sometlinesit feels like someone Is sitting on, you chest or It squeezing your

Holzer Clinic
KEEPING OUII PIIONIISE
~~~~ RMctoiHolzerCIInk.

·Police said the 38-year-old had
a blood-alcohol level of.l5, nearly twice California's legal limit,
when he was pulled over.
On March 27, . a trial is scheduled in 'Las Vegas in the federal
!~sui~ by Connie Wilcox that
a,l:cuses Rodman of battery and
intentional .infliction of emotional.distres$.

.

BRADENTON, Fla. (AP)
Non-roster reliever Dave Ste\rens
was rushed to a hospital after having a seizure in the Pittsburgh
Pirates' dubhouse and falling
unconscious.
Stevens was sitting in front of
his locker when he suddenly
began shaking. He .was able to
Walk to the trainer's room under
his own power, then collapsed.
· Stevens, 30, was liste&lt;~ in good
condition and elc:p_ected to stay ,
overnight for tests. ·
·
He is 15-16 with 21 saves and a
5.95 ERA in 181 major league
games during six seasons with·
Minrtesota, the Cubs an.d &lt;:Jeveland.
·1 '

NCAA bid on line for Miami, Ball State
CLEVELAND (AI') - Ball
State and Miami of Ohio will
put the finishing touches on a
wild Mid-An)erican Conference
season and tournament tonight
in the championship at Gund
Arena.-'
Don't be surprised if they
spend a little .extra time doing it.
After all, the two teams needed four overtimes to settle two
regular-season m,eetings'. And
with an NCAA bid on the line,
there's no telling how long they
might play. ·
"I hope it goes into overtime,''
said Miami coach c;:harlie Coles. .
"Then I'd 'know we'd still be in
the gante."
·
.
· Biill State coach Ray McCal·(um kidded that he was preparing his team alJ:i,ady for a long
night . .·
.
"In our walkthrough we'll
rprobab)y
ab~ut what we'll
do in OT:' McCallum quipped.
"It just shows yo\1 the, parity in
this conlerence."· • .
Indeed. Th~ might 'not be

tal'-

(\.J '
·\

'

Rio heads back

.to NAIA nationals

apother league .that can match a surprise to everyone except the
the MAC's overall balimce. Con- RedHawks (15- 14) · and the
sider: Five MAC teants have 20 other MAC teams who hate to
or more wins and five finished play them.
BY MARK WIWAMI
with identical 11-7 league '
Miami has advanced to the
LATROBE, Pa. AMC!
marks. The league had 21 gan).eS . finals without Taylor, their lead- __AMCLAMCf._.... ~~
go 'to overtime;includin!ftwo"irr-inglcorent 17 ro1ms per gante,
For the second consecutive
the tourney quarterfinals.
scoring a field goal.
season that sound Will be heard
Add to that No. 4 seed Akron . Jason Stewart made . a conferfrom the University of Rio
being upset in the first round by ence record 10-of-12 triples as
Grande after the No. 15 RedNo ..13 Central Michigan, regu- Miami beat Marshall in the
women defeated No. 22 Saint
lar season champ Bowling Green semifinals. Despite . his perforVincent 82-66 to claim backgetting knocked out in the quar- mance, Stewart can be streaky.
co-back American Mideast
terfinals, No. 9 Miami still alive, He shot just 3-for-17 from the
Conferenee Tournament titles.
and s~ tourney games at Gund field in his 4't garne against Ball
'l'he win gives Rio Grande
Arena decided by 15 total .State.
.
.
another automatic berth into ·
points, and you can see why
.The Cardinals will have to be
the NAIA Division I National
some call it the Mad MAC.
· careful not to leave Jason
Tour,;.,me,n t in Jackson, Tenn.
Ball State, the No. 2 seed, and Grunke~eyer open either. H:is
. Rio Grande forward Renee
Miaini have , already had two tbree-pmnter a~ the buzzer got
Thrley had a spectacular game
slugfests this season.
the RedHawks to OT in their
with 19 points, seven rebounds,
In thei~,first ~~rig ~n Jan. . quart~rfinol win _over .top seed
seYen steals and six assists. Senior
12, m.e t~ needed three OTs Bowh~.Gree~.
.
Meghan Kolcun hit some key
at Miarm before ~he RedHawks
M1afni s nuss1on will be to try
thn:e-pointers early in the game
won 86-84. Then, on Feb. 19; an~ slow. the tempo and ~ake
. · en route to scoring I8 on the
the Cardi~ (21-8) avenged the thmgs difficult for Cardinals
night.
.
loss to Miami wi~ a 60-5,7 win ~ard Duane. ~)em~ns, .. W~? .
~arley Mohler scored 16
in another OT ·thriller. 1 •· • score.~ a. tareer•htgh 35 pomts m
pointS, all in the second half,
Miami's tourney run h'IS 'been a semmnal win_ .over Ohio.

after a quiet first half and Misti
Halley added 1 I points widi
sev6n-assists-. -·Junior post ·player Kassie
Kendall provided some big play~
for the Redwomen in the first
half, scoring eight points and
being effective in the paint . .
Saint Vincent (26-6) was
plagued by foul trouble the
entire game as three players
fouled out. Freshman Erica
Hogan scored I 4 points off ,th~
bench.
Kelly Morda poured in 12
points and Tara Cochrahe added
11 points before each player
fouled out.
..
The Redwoinen (26-7) will
make their fourth national tour.;
ney trip in eight years and the
third visit in the last four }'l'ars
to the big dance. The tournament will be held at the Oman
Arena, March I 5-21.

. rt

�•
J

Pege B 2 • The Dlllly Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

W.ctnuday, March 8, 2000,

S~aq's

61-point.
show bolsters
case for MVP
LOS ANGELES (AP) - In this
season of campaigns, Shaquille
O'Neal ~ade a convincing pitch
to MVP voters - a career-high 61
points.
"It's a good feeling," O'Neal said
after the Los Angeles Laker$ beat
the Clippers 123-103 Monday
night for their 16th consecutive
victory, equaling their longest winning streak of the season.
"My shots were falling and I fel_t
pretty good. The crowd gave me a
lot of energy arid I was running,".
he said. "They weren't doubleteaming me that much, so I \Vas
just \rying to 'get it deep. and take
·the' high-percentage shot."
O'Neal, playing on his 28th
birthday, also grabbed 23 rebounds.
He shot 24-for-35 from th.e field
and 13-for-22 from the line in 45
t n1inutes.
"He's the MVP withou~ a
doubt," Glen Rice said. "He's having a- tremendous season both
offensively and defensively and he's
been a great leader for this team."
A sellout crowd o£20,385 at Staples Center - the largest to attend
.
.
an NBA ga•* in Southern CaliPAssiNG IT. AROUND - · Utah guard John Stockton (left) passes the fornia - certainly thought ~o.
f!asketball around the Cleveland Cavaliers· Marl\ Bryant during Tues·
Fans chanted "MVP, MVP" ·
Cllly night's. NBA game In Salt Lake City. (AP)
when O'Neal sank a free throw to
complete a three-point play for his
•
59th point with 4:12 remaining.
·,
The
usually blase Los Angeles fans
·,
·,
were on their feet cheering each
time O'Neal scored in the fourth

.

'

·..
·•
·.
.

NBATODAY

Patterson leads.
$onics
past Dallas·.
...

quarter.
O'Neal's teammates were happy
to help him break the 60-point
barrier, making him the first NBA
player to do since San Antonio's
David Robinson scored 71 points
against the Clippers in April 1994.
"We ,showed our appreciation to
him that he is having a heck of a
year," said Ron Harper, who had
four assists. "I'm not surprised he
hasn't scored 60 before. That's
something that's hard to do."
Making it easier was the fact that
seven- foot
Clippers
center
Mic~ael Olowokandi played just
14 minutes because of five fouls.
His absence created a size deficit
against the 7-toot- 1 O'Neal _that
the Clippers couldn't overcome.
"We knew that if we moved ihe
ball and found Shaq in the n)iddle
of the lane, he'd have the position,"
Lakers coach Phil Jackson said. "So
the team hooked up well . and
played exactly the way we'd like to
see them do it."
·
O'Neal thanked his teammates
for giving him the ball where he
likes it, down in the low post so he
can dunk with abandon.
"I think every star will admit
that it takes a lot of teall\ play for a
to have a night like that," Jackson said. "But it takes the individual effort to want to do thai and
have the doggedness that it takes to
persevere m very difficult situations .

.

•
••

BY lliE ASSOCIATED PRESS

.

~: Gary Payton· was in the shower

~ell before Seattle's g:ame was
o~r. It didn't matter, because
}\u~n Patterson knew he "was in
i•zone out there."
;: "With Gary gone, I told the
gUys to give it to me in the low
P,Ost, and I took it from there, "
P'&lt;ttterson said after scoring a seas¢n-high 32 points as Seattle route~ Dallas 101-86 Tuesday night.
;: Payton was tossed in the final ·
t¥.n ute of the third period with
~attic ahead 7\2-64. The All-Star
~ani left with 19 points, ·nine
aisists and eight rebounds.
:; Patterson stepped right in, scorii)g 16 points in the final quarter~
;• "Some teams think I can just
~ive or post7 up;· Patterso'l said:"l
~anted to show what I can do.".
:• He ·put together a highlight reel
ill the last6:21; scoring _14 ofSeat~e's final 1.6 points. He made a
~ree-point shot, hit . a midrange
~mper, had couple of double4lutch layups and a thundering
(lght-handed dunk.
0: "Our game plan Was to let him
iake some outside shots, 'and we
r;aid the price," Mavericks interim
~ead coa"ch Donn Nelson said.
i· Elsewhere in the NBA, it was
btdiana 90, Denver 89, which
¢!inched a Western Conference
playoff spot for. the idle Los Angelies Lakers; Utah 113, Cleveland
9s; Charlotte 102, Golden State
~;Chicago 89, Atlanta 82;Wash~gton 90, Minnesota 86; Phoenix
t08,Houston 101; and New York
1:11, Vancouver 86.
·
:: Pacen 90, Nuggets 89
:: The Pacers, the league's leading
~e-throw shooters, made Denver
· RilY for its fouling arl;d earned their
:lfth consecutive home. victory.
'the Pacers overcame 39 percent
~ooting from tl)e field by
Q,utsc:oring Denver 23-6 from the
ltef~-throw line. It was Denver's
straight los$ to the Pacers.·.
~+--'--"'-•· 11 ·-="llRr.o~se;;'lled Iniliina witllt9 ~i.nts and nine assists.
. : Antonio . McDyess had 23
~ints for Denver, which outrellounded the Pacers 60-43, with
1teon Clark pulling down a
iareer-high 22.
~ Hornetl 102, Warriors 99
: r Derrick Coleman scored 14 of
C harlotte's 6nal 18 · poinis and
tvound up .with 34 points and 17
~bounds in .a victory at Golden
· State. He was 13-of-20 from the
lleld and 8-of-8 from the line.
; Eddie Jones added 19 points- for
ihe Hornets, and Elden Campbell
&amp;ad 18.
;. Larry Hqghes led the Warriors
Y,.ith 21 points, Donyell Marshall .
~Cored 19 and Vonteego Cum~ings 18.
;:
Bulls 89, Hawks 82

:~LEARWATER, Fla. (AP) -With his father watching from the

PINse -

'

The los Angeles lakers ' Shaquille O'Neal
strengthened his case for the NBA's most valuable player award with
a 61-point performance Monday night against the L.A. Clippers . (AP)

.

"Shaq staned out shooting foul
shots very poorly, but kept his confidence going. I think that helped
him a~d the crowd helped .him,"

Jackso n said. "Then he got his ·
rhythm dur ing the course of the;:
game and it seemed lik e everything."
started to go for_him."
, .
;--:----::-------"7.". .-;---:---.......-:-:7Li'::!ii~:-;;;:::;;:-~

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.
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For Information or catalog contact:
John McCutcheon • (304) 647-7408
Rodney Wallbrown • (304) 675-0888

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Garret Kiser . went to the line
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- and the most - to Minnesota. The Golden Gophers have
a se,lf-imposed ban on post-season
play this year, thanks to the academic chea ring scandal uncovered
on the eve of the NCAA tourna.
ment last ye_ar.
That rn&lt;oans if Minnesota wins
the Big Ten tourney, the conference will forfeit its automatic bid
al:td the Gophers will watch
March Madness from home.
. "Their t.ournament is not good
epough for us this year. We're not
C!Jming," Minnesota coach ban
Monson joked.
: "This is the only postseason we
nave:· he said, turning serious.
"We're excited to go and try to
do some~hing special:'
For Northwestern, the tournament gives the Wildcats one more
chance to beat someone - anyone- in the.BigTen.The Wildcats, who get almost .all of their·
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since the 1991 Northwestern
squad .
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with young people. Sometimes
you can't even play very well in
this league with young people;•
coach Kevin O'Neill said.
"I don't think our record is an .
indication of whether out team .
got better or not. I think we did
get better. It just didn't show up
in wins and losses."
. Then ihere's Iowa, which
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and had dose losses to Ohio State
(79-'73) and Illinois (51 - 50).
Or how about Michigan,
which has LaVeil Blanchard, the
media's pick for BigTen freshman
of the year.
"Anything can happen in tournament play, Guys get hot, teams
get on a ron;· Michig:an coach
Brian Ellerbe said. "But mentally
and physically, to play four games
in four days is very difficult. It's
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MAKING HIS CASE -

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&lt;:

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Big 10

, ' "t'

MASON,

Dwight Gooden, who played for Cleveland in 1998 and '99, followed:;
with two perfect innings. Gooden has now pitched four innings this:;
spring without giving up a hit.
::
Indians starter Bartolo Colon allowed two hits in 3 2-3 scoreless':
innings.
•:
With Cleveland trailing 1-0 in the ninth inning, Ruben Sierra led; .
off with a double to right 6eld off Octavia Dote!.
·
•l
Johnson, the frontrunner to win the Indians' center field job while~:
Ali-Sta·r Kenny Lofton recovers from shoulder surgery, followed with~:
a single and Dote! hit Danny Peoples with a pitch, loading the bases.
Bill Selby then singled home Sierra and Jesse Levis lofted a sacrifice ..:.
fly to right, with Jo"bnson sliding home for the winning run.
·~
Houston had scored in the eighth on a balk by Cleveland pitcher! :
MarkWatson.
!-

:"IfPetey
gets enough
at-bats you
this . .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - spring
training,
he'll impress
gpys:• the elder Rose said. "Believe

..
'-------------~--------~--~--------------~~ ~ ·

HARDWARE

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 3 ·

me, when I tell you. If he gets enough at-bats and enough ground balls
hit to him, Francona is going to have to give him a second loo)&lt;."
Cincinnati pulled ahead in the sixth when Brooks Kieschnick hit a
three-run homer off Amaury Telemaco.
Both starters were hit hard . Villone was tagged for three runs and
eight hits in three innings, y.ohile Andy Ashby gave up two runs and
four hits in three innings.
Indians 2 Astros 1 ·
WINTER HAVEN, Fla. (AP) - Lance Johnson singled ancl scored
the winning run on a head-first slide into home plate Tuesday as the
Cleveland Indians rallied in the ninth inning to beat the Houston
.Astros 2-1 .
The loss was· the Astros' 6rst in spring training after four straight
win.s.
.
.
.
Houston starter Shane Reynolds pitched three scoreless innings and

Pl!il•delphia Phillies lost to the Cincinnati Reds 5-4 Tuesday in a splitsqu;ad g:ame.
:':It was a good day, but it would be 10 times better if this was in the
bik'Ieagues,"Rose said.
.
He tied the g:ame at 2 with an RBI single in the second off Ron ViiloJie.
''It feels good to get a start, to get three or four at-bats," said Rose,
a :non-roster player expected to start the season at Double-A Reading.
}Jefore the first pitch, the third baseman did his traditional salute to
hi' :father, baseball's career hits king, by drawing "HK 4,256" in the dirt
bp}pnd third base with a finger.
·
•
;Pete Rose Sr., who accepted a lifetime , ban in 1989 _following an
investigatiun~orhis gambling, campaigned-for Phillies manager 1,'erry
F'rancona to give a long look at his
son, 2-for-6 this spring.
.

In a rough game at Chicago,
Elton Brand scored 31 points. His
coach, Tim Floyd, was ejected, as
was Alan Henderson ·of Atlanta,
and six technical fouls were called.

.

'

s~ds, Pete Rose Jr. went 2-for-3 in his 6rst start of the spring as the

.

.

Pomeroy, Mlddleport1 Ohio

· Jr., plays well for Phils in 'loss to Reds; Johnson leads Tribe past Houston ~ ·

guy

•

'

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�•
J

Pege B 2 • The Dlllly Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

W.ctnuday, March 8, 2000,

S~aq's

61-point.
show bolsters
case for MVP
LOS ANGELES (AP) - In this
season of campaigns, Shaquille
O'Neal ~ade a convincing pitch
to MVP voters - a career-high 61
points.
"It's a good feeling," O'Neal said
after the Los Angeles Laker$ beat
the Clippers 123-103 Monday
night for their 16th consecutive
victory, equaling their longest winning streak of the season.
"My shots were falling and I fel_t
pretty good. The crowd gave me a
lot of energy arid I was running,".
he said. "They weren't doubleteaming me that much, so I \Vas
just \rying to 'get it deep. and take
·the' high-percentage shot."
O'Neal, playing on his 28th
birthday, also grabbed 23 rebounds.
He shot 24-for-35 from th.e field
and 13-for-22 from the line in 45
t n1inutes.
"He's the MVP withou~ a
doubt," Glen Rice said. "He's having a- tremendous season both
offensively and defensively and he's
been a great leader for this team."
A sellout crowd o£20,385 at Staples Center - the largest to attend
.
.
an NBA ga•* in Southern CaliPAssiNG IT. AROUND - · Utah guard John Stockton (left) passes the fornia - certainly thought ~o.
f!asketball around the Cleveland Cavaliers· Marl\ Bryant during Tues·
Fans chanted "MVP, MVP" ·
Cllly night's. NBA game In Salt Lake City. (AP)
when O'Neal sank a free throw to
complete a three-point play for his
•
59th point with 4:12 remaining.
·,
The
usually blase Los Angeles fans
·,
·,
were on their feet cheering each
time O'Neal scored in the fourth

.

'

·..
·•
·.
.

NBATODAY

Patterson leads.
$onics
past Dallas·.
...

quarter.
O'Neal's teammates were happy
to help him break the 60-point
barrier, making him the first NBA
player to do since San Antonio's
David Robinson scored 71 points
against the Clippers in April 1994.
"We ,showed our appreciation to
him that he is having a heck of a
year," said Ron Harper, who had
four assists. "I'm not surprised he
hasn't scored 60 before. That's
something that's hard to do."
Making it easier was the fact that
seven- foot
Clippers
center
Mic~ael Olowokandi played just
14 minutes because of five fouls.
His absence created a size deficit
against the 7-toot- 1 O'Neal _that
the Clippers couldn't overcome.
"We knew that if we moved ihe
ball and found Shaq in the n)iddle
of the lane, he'd have the position,"
Lakers coach Phil Jackson said. "So
the team hooked up well . and
played exactly the way we'd like to
see them do it."
·
O'Neal thanked his teammates
for giving him the ball where he
likes it, down in the low post so he
can dunk with abandon.
"I think every star will admit
that it takes a lot of teall\ play for a
to have a night like that," Jackson said. "But it takes the individual effort to want to do thai and
have the doggedness that it takes to
persevere m very difficult situations .

.

•
••

BY lliE ASSOCIATED PRESS

.

~: Gary Payton· was in the shower

~ell before Seattle's g:ame was
o~r. It didn't matter, because
}\u~n Patterson knew he "was in
i•zone out there."
;: "With Gary gone, I told the
gUys to give it to me in the low
P,Ost, and I took it from there, "
P'&lt;ttterson said after scoring a seas¢n-high 32 points as Seattle route~ Dallas 101-86 Tuesday night.
;: Payton was tossed in the final ·
t¥.n ute of the third period with
~attic ahead 7\2-64. The All-Star
~ani left with 19 points, ·nine
aisists and eight rebounds.
:; Patterson stepped right in, scorii)g 16 points in the final quarter~
;• "Some teams think I can just
~ive or post7 up;· Patterso'l said:"l
~anted to show what I can do.".
:• He ·put together a highlight reel
ill the last6:21; scoring _14 ofSeat~e's final 1.6 points. He made a
~ree-point shot, hit . a midrange
~mper, had couple of double4lutch layups and a thundering
(lght-handed dunk.
0: "Our game plan Was to let him
iake some outside shots, 'and we
r;aid the price," Mavericks interim
~ead coa"ch Donn Nelson said.
i· Elsewhere in the NBA, it was
btdiana 90, Denver 89, which
¢!inched a Western Conference
playoff spot for. the idle Los Angelies Lakers; Utah 113, Cleveland
9s; Charlotte 102, Golden State
~;Chicago 89, Atlanta 82;Wash~gton 90, Minnesota 86; Phoenix
t08,Houston 101; and New York
1:11, Vancouver 86.
·
:: Pacen 90, Nuggets 89
:: The Pacers, the league's leading
~e-throw shooters, made Denver
· RilY for its fouling arl;d earned their
:lfth consecutive home. victory.
'the Pacers overcame 39 percent
~ooting from tl)e field by
Q,utsc:oring Denver 23-6 from the
ltef~-throw line. It was Denver's
straight los$ to the Pacers.·.
~+--'--"'-•· 11 ·-="llRr.o~se;;'lled Iniliina witllt9 ~i.nts and nine assists.
. : Antonio . McDyess had 23
~ints for Denver, which outrellounded the Pacers 60-43, with
1teon Clark pulling down a
iareer-high 22.
~ Hornetl 102, Warriors 99
: r Derrick Coleman scored 14 of
C harlotte's 6nal 18 · poinis and
tvound up .with 34 points and 17
~bounds in .a victory at Golden
· State. He was 13-of-20 from the
lleld and 8-of-8 from the line.
; Eddie Jones added 19 points- for
ihe Hornets, and Elden Campbell
&amp;ad 18.
;. Larry Hqghes led the Warriors
Y,.ith 21 points, Donyell Marshall .
~Cored 19 and Vonteego Cum~ings 18.
;:
Bulls 89, Hawks 82

:~LEARWATER, Fla. (AP) -With his father watching from the

PINse -

'

The los Angeles lakers ' Shaquille O'Neal
strengthened his case for the NBA's most valuable player award with
a 61-point performance Monday night against the L.A. Clippers . (AP)

.

"Shaq staned out shooting foul
shots very poorly, but kept his confidence going. I think that helped
him a~d the crowd helped .him,"

Jackso n said. "Then he got his ·
rhythm dur ing the course of the;:
game and it seemed lik e everything."
started to go for_him."
, .
;--:----::-------"7.". .-;---:---.......-:-:7Li'::!ii~:-;;;:::;;:-~

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.
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For Information or catalog contact:
John McCutcheon • (304) 647-7408
Rodney Wallbrown • (304) 675-0888

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cut the score to 29c23. An
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At the 3:53 mark of the third
period, S~uthern appeared to get
a
when Josh Michael was
personal. The possible momentum shift SHS anticipated, how-ever, never came.
Garret Kiser . went to the line
for the technicab and hit one, but
that's all Southern could get from
the "infraction; missing the shot
after the_inbound possession , the
score 33-26.That was as dose as it
would get.
. .' .
At the end of the third round,
· Whiteoak led 41-28 and ·quickly
pushed that ro 45-28 onr~he 6rst
two possessions of the 6nal quarter.
Southern had 30, rebounds
(Kiser Evans 6), three assists, 20
turnovers, two blocks, 25 fouls
and 11 steals (Reiher 5).
. Whiteoak had 51 rebounds
(Thmer 12), 26 turnovers, 16
assists (Barnett 4), 9 steals (John·
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- and the most - to Minnesota. The Golden Gophers have
a se,lf-imposed ban on post-season
play this year, thanks to the academic chea ring scandal uncovered
on the eve of the NCAA tourna.
ment last ye_ar.
That rn&lt;oans if Minnesota wins
the Big Ten tourney, the conference will forfeit its automatic bid
al:td the Gophers will watch
March Madness from home.
. "Their t.ournament is not good
epough for us this year. We're not
C!Jming," Minnesota coach ban
Monson joked.
: "This is the only postseason we
nave:· he said, turning serious.
"We're excited to go and try to
do some~hing special:'
For Northwestern, the tournament gives the Wildcats one more
chance to beat someone - anyone- in the.BigTen.The Wildcats, who get almost .all of their·
minutes from fres_h men . and ·
sophomores, went 0-16 in conference play, the 6rst team with
such a woeful Big Ten record
since the 1991 Northwestern
squad .
"You can't win in this league
with young people. Sometimes
you can't even play very well in
this league with young people;•
coach Kevin O'Neill said.
"I don't think our record is an .
indication of whether out team .
got better or not. I think we did
get better. It just didn't show up
in wins and losses."
. Then ihere's Iowa, which
knocked off then-No. 1 Connecticut to start the season. And
Penn State, whic h beat Wisconsin
and had dose losses to Ohio State
(79-'73) and Illinois (51 - 50).
Or how about Michigan,
which has LaVeil Blanchard, the
media's pick for BigTen freshman
of the year.
"Anything can happen in tournament play, Guys get hot, teams
get on a ron;· Michig:an coach
Brian Ellerbe said. "But mentally
and physically, to play four games
in four days is very difficult. It's
difficult for an NBA team to do,
let alone a college basketball
team. Especially
one as young as
.
ours.
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MAKING HIS CASE -

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Big 10

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MASON,

Dwight Gooden, who played for Cleveland in 1998 and '99, followed:;
with two perfect innings. Gooden has now pitched four innings this:;
spring without giving up a hit.
::
Indians starter Bartolo Colon allowed two hits in 3 2-3 scoreless':
innings.
•:
With Cleveland trailing 1-0 in the ninth inning, Ruben Sierra led; .
off with a double to right 6eld off Octavia Dote!.
·
•l
Johnson, the frontrunner to win the Indians' center field job while~:
Ali-Sta·r Kenny Lofton recovers from shoulder surgery, followed with~:
a single and Dote! hit Danny Peoples with a pitch, loading the bases.
Bill Selby then singled home Sierra and Jesse Levis lofted a sacrifice ..:.
fly to right, with Jo"bnson sliding home for the winning run.
·~
Houston had scored in the eighth on a balk by Cleveland pitcher! :
MarkWatson.
!-

:"IfPetey
gets enough
at-bats you
this . .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - spring
training,
he'll impress
gpys:• the elder Rose said. "Believe

..
'-------------~--------~--~--------------~~ ~ ·

HARDWARE

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 3 ·

me, when I tell you. If he gets enough at-bats and enough ground balls
hit to him, Francona is going to have to give him a second loo)&lt;."
Cincinnati pulled ahead in the sixth when Brooks Kieschnick hit a
three-run homer off Amaury Telemaco.
Both starters were hit hard . Villone was tagged for three runs and
eight hits in three innings, y.ohile Andy Ashby gave up two runs and
four hits in three innings.
Indians 2 Astros 1 ·
WINTER HAVEN, Fla. (AP) - Lance Johnson singled ancl scored
the winning run on a head-first slide into home plate Tuesday as the
Cleveland Indians rallied in the ninth inning to beat the Houston
.Astros 2-1 .
The loss was· the Astros' 6rst in spring training after four straight
win.s.
.
.
.
Houston starter Shane Reynolds pitched three scoreless innings and

Pl!il•delphia Phillies lost to the Cincinnati Reds 5-4 Tuesday in a splitsqu;ad g:ame.
:':It was a good day, but it would be 10 times better if this was in the
bik'Ieagues,"Rose said.
.
He tied the g:ame at 2 with an RBI single in the second off Ron ViiloJie.
''It feels good to get a start, to get three or four at-bats," said Rose,
a :non-roster player expected to start the season at Double-A Reading.
}Jefore the first pitch, the third baseman did his traditional salute to
hi' :father, baseball's career hits king, by drawing "HK 4,256" in the dirt
bp}pnd third base with a finger.
·
•
;Pete Rose Sr., who accepted a lifetime , ban in 1989 _following an
investigatiun~orhis gambling, campaigned-for Phillies manager 1,'erry
F'rancona to give a long look at his
son, 2-for-6 this spring.
.

In a rough game at Chicago,
Elton Brand scored 31 points. His
coach, Tim Floyd, was ejected, as
was Alan Henderson ·of Atlanta,
and six technical fouls were called.

.

'

s~ds, Pete Rose Jr. went 2-for-3 in his 6rst start of the spring as the

.

.

Pomeroy, Mlddleport1 Ohio

· Jr., plays well for Phils in 'loss to Reds; Johnson leads Tribe past Houston ~ ·

guy

•

'

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Page 8 4 • The Dally Sentinel

-·

Muon 68 Clo'jiOII Nontvnont 18
CCII Honlly 73, IJI&gt;per Soncluol&lt;y 55

Polond 4, 46

nm Heaton

Doug Hanko
Jen&gt;my Johnson

Justin Mld'laltl
Josh Sraoey
.Kevin Shannon

..JoshMichao
Cl'1ad Hanke

Todd Runyan

J

2:111. a:aL
3-5

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0.0

12

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22

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22

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47

13

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4

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Dlvlelon I

2

0-5

12

51

Ohio H S girls'
regional tourney alate

EI 1!11.

1

:Chad Young
o-o 0.0 0.0 0
t.llko Tumo
5:.11 Q:Q H ll
TOII!o
111-43 S-1 21-30 68
Aoolota 18 (Barnett 4) Blockoel ohoto

Foull 23 Fauled our Shannon Reboundl

AI CMICOI- Civic

a-

Charf'!llonahlp Hudoon (23 2) vo Cte E
Frida~ 7 30 p m
AtA&amp;hiMd U.._.lly.......llt
1bl Coni Cllh (23-1 ) •• Parma fils Holy
Nome (20·3) 6 15 p m
Defiance 122 2) vo Rocky Rlvar Magnifica
(167) 8pm
Championlhlp SOiurdoy 11 a m
AI Wrlght · - Untvorolly
Champl6nohlp Meson (23.0) vs Baavo

Tooh (23-1)

creek (23 2) Satutdl't noon

At Columbuo Folrgrouf)do-lonlght
Nowart&lt; I 8-6) vs Trotwood Madison (23-o)

54 (Tume 12) Steolo 9 (Johnson 4) TOiol 615 p m
FGo 22 51 ( 431) Tumovero 26
Pickerington 22 2) vs Zonoov Uo (16-6)
8 5 pm
•
Southom (131)
Champlonsh p Saturdoy 11 a m
.tJ~•s,Aando ph ~ ~
fllg
Dlvlolon II
BandonH
3
0.1
DO
2
AI North ContCOI Hoovor
ChadHubbad
5
1
oo
s
Championsh p Norton (18 6 va Po and
DalyH
00
01
00
0 Sem nary 22 2) Frida~ 730 p m
Kyo Noms
4 0-5
38
5
AI Morral Aldgodele

fl

Matthew Wame
Jeremy Fishe

Russe Reba

MattShaw

01
2

01
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Jona han Evans

Me lhew Ash
Tololo

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22

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2

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46

14-39 2 20 12 22

0

Alllltl 3 Blocked ehotl :i! Foula 25
Fouled oul Rando ph Rebound• 30 (Evans
6 Sloelo 1 Re be 5) Total FGo 16 59
( 27 ) Turnovers 20

Oh1o H S boys' scores
District tournaments
Dlv alon I

H

a d Dav dson 5 Thorn Worth ng on 48

Westervlle N 48 Dub n Coffman 41

Div slon Ill
App e C eek Wayoeda e 59 Ak Manches

•• 34

Champlonah p Col Hartley (23 ) vs M n
otva (21 3) Friday 7 30 p m

At Vondalla Butler

Championship Cham nade Ju enne (23 2)
vs Ham lton Bad n {21-4) Frklay 7 30 p m

AI Zonoovllle
Champlonalll&gt; S C a JSYI o (21 3) vs Ph o
(20-4) saturday 7 30 p m
Dlvlalon Ill
At Lexington tonight

Lorain Cearvlew (20-4) vs Blu HOn (23.0)
6 5 pm
Huron (20 3~ vs Codwa e ( 3 10) 8 p m
Champlonsh p Saturday 30 p m

At L1nc11ter tonight
A bany A exander (21 2) vs Bever1y Fort
FIJI&amp;

(22 2) 615 p m

Sardinia Eastern Brown

23..0) vs Col

Ready (20-4) 8 p.m
Champlonshl&gt; Salurtlay 30 p m
At Vlndalla Butler tonight
c nclnnat

Made ra (22 2

vs

Mor a

RldQedae(21 3) 8 15 p m
Be a e 57 Gnadenhutten Indian Va 5
Waynesvl e (23 1) va Spnng Northwollom
Bucvrus Wynford 58 Huron 42
(231) 8pm
Co umblana C estvlew 59 Lisbon 46
Chomplonshlp Sat~~~~ 30 p m
Cuyahoga Fa s Ch 57 Lora n C earvlew
At Mount Union
Hon gilt
47
Akron !AanohoSio (22 2) va C e VASJ ( 8
Ey aC8th 65 Obenn640T
6)615pm
Matvem 68 Mart ns Ferry 52
5 EUClid Regina (23 1) vo You Mooney
Newton Fal s 58 Campbel 43
(14
9) 8pm
Ontario 58 Ml an Ed son 37
Championship Saturday 30 p m
You Ursu ne 51 Warren Champion 46
51

OT

OviloniV
Beave Eastern 63 Frankl n Fu nace G een
Delphos St John 7 L ma Temple Chr S.
Edon 60 Gorham Fayette 56
F Jenn ngs 74 Lima Parry 52
ndependence 59 Kidron Cent a Ch 58

Jackson M I on 51 M nera Ridge 3

Dlvl•lon IV
AI Vandalllo BUIIor Thundoy
Mana Sten Menor Looa (14 8) vs Fon
LoJimo (1410) 615pm
Jad&lt;lqn Center (22 2) vo S Chanesron
Southoaolam (1 3 11) 8 p m
Championship SaluRiey 1 30 p m
AI Ellci•Thutocloy

Ohio H S girls' scores
Reglonaltoumamente
Dlvlolon 1
Beaverc eek 43 Cin Mt No e Came 29
Cle E Tech 49 You Boardman 44
Hudson 72 Warren Hard ng 57

plan to skip this years NCAA
Eool
tournament will go far beyond
Penn 73 Princeton 52
that
Tournem•nta
McGuue told the Milwaukee
Mid-Continent Conlor.......,homplonohlp
Velperalso 71 S Ulah 62
Journal Sentmel m a story for
Mld-E•tem Ath~Uc Confertnct-flrst round today s edttmns that he rs rettrmg
florida A&amp;M 69 De a wan&gt; Sl 66
after 23 years of broadcastmg say
mg he no longer has the energy or
-oo-Colloig01e
COnf.. et:ce championship
desrre to continue
Bulle 62 Dabolt 43
The former coach who led
Marquette to the 1977 NCAA
NCAA Division I
t1cle before begmrung a broadcast
women's scores
mg career cold CBS he would
Regular 11110n action
m ss the NCAA tournament
Eut
Dartmouth 96 HatVard 74
beduse he IS suffermg from a
Penn 68 Prtr::ce on 54
form of anenua
But M cGu1re 71 told the Jour
Tournaments
Big 12 Conf1rencHirat round
nal Sentmel that he w1ll be retlr
Colo ado 83 M ssoun 69
ng fro n broadcast ng
Nebraska 82 Bayto 61
Ok ahoma S 67 Kansas St 59
Its over Its curta 1s Its all she
Texas 83 Texas A&amp;M 72
wrote McGUire told the newspa
Big Eut Conferen~h•mp onah p
per
ConnecticuT 79 Ru gers 59
Forner North Carohna and Los
Mid-Continent Confe~nce-champ onsh p
Angeles Lakers star Jan es Worthy
Youngstown St 73 Va pa also 57
vrll replace McGu re and tean
Mld-Eutem Ath ettc Conferenc: ..n,..t round
w1th play by play anno ncer
Md Eastem Sho e 60 Oe awa e St 55
D1 c k Enberg on CBS s thrrd team
for the NCAA to un ey w htch
opens March 16 McGUire also
was sci eduled to work the South
NBA standmg,

easter

EASTERN CONFERENCE
AtlonUc: blvlolon
Tum
w ~ lli
Mam
37 23 617
New Yort&lt;
36 23 610
PhHadalph a
33 25 569
Onando
28 32 467

Boston

407

24 35

Naw Joroay
24 36 400
Wash ngton ..................... .. 19 42 311

Central Division
41 9 683

ndana

Toronto

34
33
29
28
25
23

cnar1otte
M waukee
Detro t

CLEVELAND
Atlanta

Chicago

576
550
483
483
417

25
27
31
30
35
36

390

220

13 46

Valerie HIU'per (Mary and
Rhoda) rece1ved $1 4 mdhon ro
a wrongful distlllssll suit after
she Was fired from the Sitcom
Val~nt

3
9

12&gt;
13
18

s•
6
2
2
6

'"

SS3

Pulf c Dlvl .. on

Phoenx

Suttle
Sacramen o

GoldenS ate
LA Cippero
• c nohed playoff bonh

3

10~
13~

15

33

31~

Tuesday 1 ecores
Indiana 90 Denve 89

New York 111 Vancouver86

Phoenix 108 Houston 101
Washing on 90 Minnesota 86

Ch oago 89 Atlanla 82
Uflh 13 CLEVELAND 95
seame 101 Da las 86
Charlotte 102 Golden Sra e 99

;=~P=ub~l~lc~N~o~t~lc=e===r==:;Pu~b~ll~c~N~oU~ce==~r===P=u=.b;ll~c~N~~7.1c~e~~r-=~P~u~b~llc~No~t~lc=e==~
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Staled bide will bt
received by the Director of
Tr8neportetlon Stall of
Ohio
et the Ohio
De p a r 1m e n t
oI
Tranoporlltlon Dletrlct tO
office Merletta Dhlo until
J oo pm Mondey Aprll3
2000 for the purchlet and
removal of etructuree
deecrlbod In thll notice
Theil atructuree hiVI ~Men
ecqulrod by tha Stela of
Ohio from the former
'bwnero thereof end are
located within the right-of
way required tor the
lmprovemtnl/relacaUon of
Melge Stile Route 338
Section 3 539
Tha bide " ' to be
eubmiHtd only on a Bid
Propoeal Form (RE Form
79 Rev 11 93) evelleble et
the following Treneporlltlon
pftlcea
Ohio Dapertment of
Traneporllttlon Dlatrlct 10
338 Muaklngum Drive
Mlrllltl Dhlo 45750
or
Ohio Depertment of
Traneportatlon
.Melga County Malntanonce
Facility
State Route 7
Pomeroy Ohio 41711
The bide art to be
addrenid to
ODOT Dlllrlct 10
Rill Ettalll Section
338 Mlllklngum Drive
Marietta Ohio 45750
Atte"tlon Ken Dolllaon
Real Eotate Admlnletrator
The following Information
muet appaer on tilt outalda
front of the envelope
Melge 338 Sec 3 438 Par
25 WD 4/3100 1 00 PM
Certified checke official
bank checka or money
ordare (pareonal check•
and caeh are unacctptable)
payable
to
the
TREASURER STATE 01'
OHIO In tht euct amount of
the bid lor each ltam In the
event lildl are not lcetpted
lha chtokl will bt returned
to the bidder The Director
of Traneportadon re11rvet
the right to rejtot eny and
all bide
Thla property may or may
not conteln Lead or Lead
d A-~
baltd pelnt en ,.._110 1
n shall .,. tilt rupontlbltlty
of eaeh bidder to lnepect
end examine fa; theiillllwl
the elze end aondltlon of
tech
etruoturt
111

J

J

appurtenenoee thereto Inti
the conditione whloh may
anec:t the remov11 thereof.
The d11artptlona lleltd ' "
to be ultd for kllntlllcatlon
purp0111 only and are not
to bt conetr.ued ee 1
warrenty of any kind
Each bidder mull
properly exHutl the 14on
Colluelon Affld1vlt ~arm
a1110111d and aubmlllt with
thllllgnedlld Propa•l
Aamoval of lhllllrUcturll
mull 1M comptllld not lltlr
thin 70 (HVIIIIY) dlye lfllr
receipt Of the Notlct of
AvaUablllty from thl Dlatrlot
l'rllnaporllttlon Offlct
Item No 1 Paf01121 WD
One etory vinyl lltd c•dar
11 de d
d w •Ill n 11
encompenlng
approximately 1 344 aq It
over crewl epaoe with
aHeched two-oar garage ol
521 eq It end atteched
lrema covered and open
deCk oiiiZ4 ICI ft. L.oclllld
11141178 Blind HolloW Roed
)'TWp Rd 88) RIOIIII Ohio
41771 (corner of 8 R 338
and Blind Hallow Roed
llactlon 8 l.tbtrt Townllhlp
Malp County Ohio
Perlormenoe GuarentH
$2 000 00
The acctptance of the bid
by the Department of
Treneportetlon end written
notlflcetlqn of ewerd
thereof to the aucCIIIIUI
bidder lhlll oonttllutt a
contrect by 1nd bltwllh
the eucctloful bidder and
the Director Trenaportatlon
anti will lncorporetl 111 the
term• provlelone and
conditione ol thla Notlca
and tha Bid Propollll
Gordon Proctor
Director ol TraneportiUon
There will be en open
houll on March 20th from
2-8 p m a March 2111 2-8
pm
(3) a 15 :lTC
Public Notice

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNT'l OHIO
IN THE MATIER OF
TYLER SAVAGE
CASE NO 30800
DOCKET 0 PAGE 200
NOTICI!
Revlatd Code Sec
2717.01CA)
Notice le hereby given
thlt Tyler savage Clla No
30800 of 32373 Hampton
Hallow Rd Langevllle OH
454741 h11 applied to the
Common Plue Court
Probllta Dlvlolon of Melga
County Ohio lor on order
to chango Tylart nama to
Mercum
Said eppllcatlon will be
heard In eald Court at April
on the 10 day of 2000 at
1 3Dpm
The State of Ohio Meigs
County
Pereonolly appeared
before me Judhh R Sleecn
Deputy Clark and made
eclemn oath that the notlct
a copy of which 11 hereto
ettached wae publlehtd
one lime to wn on tilt 10
day of April 2000 (!Ming at
11111 thirty d1y1 prier to the
8th dly of March 2000 the
dati the application Ia to 1M
hterd 11 mentioned In ..ld
notice) In the Dallr
Sentinel a ntwepeper of
g1n1ral circulation In the
County afare•ld
Amanda Marcum Todd
Marcum
Sworn to before mt and
tlgned In my pr'"ance thla
6th day of February 2000
Judy Sloson
(3) 8 lTC

I

t--"';::============:::;--::--"""1

PUBUC

CONTENT FOR
NOTICE
The Melge county
1
Council on Ag 1ng nc
which le • prlvltl nonprofit
oarparetlon lnttndl to
eubmll en eppiiOIUon lor I
capltel grant under the
prOVIIIon of41USC lea~
of the l'edlrll :l'rMIII
1310
Aot to 1111 ~ wllll tile
••
P •ovtalonrvtct
lorof
11
.... 1414 ~

dlllblad within Malgl
County and eurroundlng
ariU. The grent eppllcatlon
will
requnt
one
microcomputer
and
10ft-.
II 11 predicted that 200
elderly tnd/or dleabled
PIIIOMwlllulllhiMCCoA
traneportellon aarvlca !Iva
dlyt a - k liZ Wtlkl 1
year
I n c I u d I n 11
tranaportatlon to the
congregete meal 1111
medlaal eppolntmentl end
ptiiQnli bullnen
The Melga County
Council on Aging Inc
Invitee com menta and
r,ropoule !rom 111
ntlrtltld public prlvelll
and peretrenelt operetore
lnaludlng tul operetora for
the
provlelan
of
treneportetlon tervlca to
the elderly and dleablll
within our area
Operetore who are
lntarealld In offering
propoaale to provide
Hrv1oe thould 11tt11
a...... Anoolllll Director
Ill thelltlge County Council
on Aging 112 all Memorial
Drive PCNMrOy Ohio 45789
to obtlln full dttalll of the
type of traneportetlon
1ervloe tl!et 11 n11dad to
prior to preparing •
proponl
Written oommtntl or
propOIIII
mull bl
aubrnllttd within 3D daya lo
the aganoy 11 the above
addretl with a copy to the
Ohio Department of
Tl'llnaportetlon Office of
tftn•lt 1110 W11t Broad
Strait Columbut Ohio
43223
AttenUon
Allmlnfltrlto1:
(3) 8 1TC

and love h1m ts an understate
ment
McGUire has been a CBS ana
lyst for e1ght NCAA tournamerlts
He was wnh NBC from 1977 92
In all of our lives you m~et
certam people who are spec1al and
he s one of those sa~d CBS le~d
analyst Billy Packer who also
worked w1th McGmre at NBC
He will be mused not only 111
this tournament but by anybody
who got to know h1m

Gentleman Seeking Compans on
sh p From Nice Female Fo Talks
Walks &amp; Fr endsh p Send Re
Qllll To ~53 Second Avenue
~~ment 1403 Ga I po s OH

'START

Mo1gs County Golf Course .... .... .
Da ry Queen Braz11r
The Dark S1de ..... ...................... ..
Tony s Carry Out
FOE 2171

DATING

.................. 72 8
so 30
........ ,; .... 42 38
'""""" ............... 42 38
..... ...... ......... ..... .26 54
.................. 8 72

lnlo mal on 1 800 ROMANCE
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Fu Bone 115 1 81J0.598 4504 Ex
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89 Peop e Needed Fo Ho1 aa1

Weak AI Seen On TV Me Ia
Fat Stops Hunge Boos a Ene

Unbel evabty Fast Results 800

cas com COirS/CtedRCa ds

40
2 7mon o d fema es part sheep.
dogJ par1 eon e good w th k da

304 937 3348

High aeries Sam Smith (515) Chuck Burton (493)
High game Smith (194) Bill Slack(188)
Women
High nrl11 Debbie Sayre (550) Margaret Eynon (498)
High game Sayre (202) Pat Carson Eynon (lied at 175)

GOV T POSTAL JOBS Up
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RAPID WEIGHT LOSS F.ru
Samples Losa 3 5 Pounds Every

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Fal B octce s $1 I 95 I 800 733-

Teem high eerlea Metgs County Golf Course (1972)
Taam high game Me1gs County Golf Course (693)

B ochu 18 Sa afae on Gua
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A e You Connected? Interne

final penod
Trading by e1ght the Wtzards
started the final penod With a 14
2 run Reserve Tracy Murray
82
scored 17 pmnts for the W1zards
The VICtory snapped an e1ght mcludmg 10 10 the fourth
game los ng streak for the Bulls
M10nesota was led by Kevm
Jazz 113 Cavahers 95
Garnett and Wally SzczerbJak
Karl Malone scored 30 pomts each w1th 26 pomts
and John Stockton ned a season
Kn1cks 111 Gr1zzller 86
h1gh w1th 18 assiSts as the host Jazz
Charlie Ward returned from the
won their fifth straight
InJUred list and helped host New
Stockton the NBA s career
The long vaned TV career of
aSSists leader was at his best 10 out
Ernie Hudson mcludes appear
duelmg Cleveland rookie Andre
ances
on Tax L ttle House o
Miller In recent years the two
the Pra~rle Bosom Budd1es and
faced off m ptckup games durmg
G mmea Break
Millets career at the Umverslty of
Utah
We played qUite a btt Stock
ton sa1d He was JUSt one of the
gang It certamly wasn t a test mar
ket for h1m or any evaluation pen
lOX OffiCE WILL Of'IN AT
od It was good to get to know
6:SO PMIOI MNING SHOWS
hm1 I d seen h1m play while he
12:SO PM FOI MAnNHS
was at Utah

'

York to a 13 0 lead The Knicks
shot a season best 62 percent from
the field 10 handing Vancouver 1ts
fifth succesSive loss
Latrell Sprewell and Allan
Houston scored 22 pomts ap1ece
and Patnck Ewmg had 21 Ward
had five pomts sue assists and a
team h1gh seven rebounds

oad

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outscormg Mmnesota by 12m the

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PEPSI /COKE IFR TO LAY 1 78 Ac es n Count y On State
SNACK AND SODA VENDING Roull 775 PaBI o o Mclnly e
ROUTE BE 'fOUR OWN BOSS $ Park Cal 740 441 1659 After s
ALL CASH BUS NESS $ N PM
CRESE YOUR NCOME NOWI
SMALL INVESTMENT EXCEL
LENT PROFITS I 800 73 7233
EXT 1057

Instruction
EARN A LEGAL COlLEGE DE
GREE QUICKLY Bacholo 1
Mastera Docto ate By Corr1

spondonce Baaed Upon Prior Educal on And Sho I Sludy Cour10
Fo FREE nformat on Book et

Phone CAMBRIDGE STATE
UN VERS TY 1 BOO 964 8~1 6
8142

Cash For Remlilnlng Paymen a
On Property So d Mortgages!
A.nnu Ilea Settfementsl lmme

dlatt Ouo10a111 Nobody Boa s
Ou P cea

Nat anal Cont act

Buyers 600 490 0731 exr 10
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Wea hy Fam 1es Unload ng M
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The r Taxes W e mmad ate y

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10017
CREDIT PROBLEMS? CALL THE
CREDIT EXPERTS LICENSED I
BONDED CORRECT REMOVE
BAD CREDIT SANJ&lt;RUPTCV
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JUDGEMENTS
AAA RATING 90 180 DAVS 1
800-422 598
CREDIT REPA Rl AS SEEN ON
MONEY TO LOAN Bad Cradll

Handyman ma 111tnanee aervlet
carpanlrj pa nl ng skiing roo!lng

dry waH and elactrlca! 740-6491035

EKeel enl care lor pe son n my
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230

Profenlonal

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1-668 582 3348

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$16 500 97 Ac oa For $57 ooo

lor Sala
(I)

mo 1 !!Q0-648 5678

(2) F s T me Buyo s Easy F
nanc ng 2 and 3 Bed oom A
ound $200 Pe Month Ca 1

800 948 5678

If

You A o lnllr

Homo F oo Cauatto 1 1168-813-

Th 1 Oppo(IUnlly P oaoo S1!11d A
Copy Of Your cv To Mor dlen 210

5275

Corporate Healthca 1 Human

Rooourctl 20 Bunor HI t BMI
Suitt :100 Nllhvlllo TN 31215
Fox (815) 234-1028
MEIIIDIAN

Buelneu

Opporlun!W

Nood A Loan? Try lltbf ConiOI~
dot o~ $5 ooo 1200 000 led
CrociK QK l'tt HID0-710-oq,t
El&lt;l215

www COIJntrytyme com
RENTALS

FREE 011 very &amp; SOl I 8D0-948
5678
(I) 1 Doubewde $249 Po
Month Low Down Paymen
800-81!,1 -6777

1

(2) 14 w de $167 Par Monrh
Low Down Payment

an1

BOO 691

(3) 18x80 $254 Per Monlh Low

1 3 Bad ooms Forecto&amp;ed
Homes From S199/Mo 4% Down
For L 1t ng11 &amp; Payment Data s
800-319-3323 EXI 1709
1 Bedroom On 32 LinCOln Ga po-

lio $300 Mo $200 Depoe 1 No
PolS 740-446-9342

Down Payment F ee A r 1 800

6918n7

152 Fou th Avenue tJallipo a 3

114 Condo St eel Mob e Home

&amp; Lot Fo Sale $14 000 W II
Consider Land Contact 740

109.oo64 Or 740-388-6591

4x70 1988 fa rmont I ved In 7
mon sr 1 has new sme g bath
rooms 3 br lots ot closet space
an a ec e/a poss bta eave on
low entad ot Cha • rd 62 2
decks under pinning&amp; bock

620 000 ca 304-875-4 53.

Bed ooms WD Hook Up $375
Mo

Depos

640-052

Aequ ed 1 888

152 Fourth Avenue Gall pol s 3
Bad ooms w D Hook Up $375

Mo Cepos Rtqul ed I 888
840-0521

For sa e o ent 2 bed oom
house n Poma oy $350 month
plus depos I w I se on con1rac1
w tn good tla aneta no ptts

Wanted To Aen T a le lot For
HI K80 li'a II 740 24S.5146

740-698-7244

MERCHANDISE

510
Fo rtn1 n Sy acuu 4 bedroom
two bath all appl ancea 201 K56
kU lanced In p ay area ca peted

Houeehold
Goods

lhroughou HUD evallab a $575
po mon h $575 doposll ch ld on

App ances
Recondl oned
wasne s o ve a Ranges Rat
g a o s 90 Day Gua antee

740-992-45 4

nes

welcome Chr sty a Fam ly Llv ng

F onch C ry May ag 740 448

Renters Needed

2552

PICkiOI EOE

COli Ryan

1001213-1385
Anthony Land Company L70

(3)
LOOII
5 Bedrooms 2 Baths ove 2 000
aq It for eaa than $450 mo

ug

ttted IJ'I Lea n ng Mo 1 About

p oved 740 928-4941 afta 6pm
co""'

Real Eatate
Wanted
We Ply l:AIII
For LANDI
E"'n II IS Llllod
20 500 Acn&gt;s

360

AMAZING

0 ywa J. 4BR 32x80 ave 2348
sq It Payments low as $406 per

F H Eol mo101 Low AIIOI 74
Gal polio &amp; Po nl Ploaoanl Area 387 5043
Must Have Experience With P o
I'MJrHER OF 2 WILL BABYSIT IN
pane Bufla Or ver License t
MY HOME CHRISTIAN NON
818 491 6 31 BelwHn 1 PM 5 SMOKING
M F CALL 304 812
PM

I lo'J ANC II\ I

Two 2 bed oom I one 1 bed oom
apa men s M dd apo t HUD ap

Can Comb ne F ea Maps land
Con act Aval able 1 800 213
6365

320 Mobile HDmee

REAL ESlATE

Conlracla And Ftt Schedule&amp;
Exeettent 81 1 v And Beneflta

740-388-8678
LAND NEAR RIO
OH SR 35 5+ Acres Grear Homa
at&gt;~

WV JtUNTING LAND

Loria Helping Hand Cfean ng
Service WI Oo FOOd C ean

PH'ISICIAII OPPORTUNITY
Noed An Elact Clan Or Cerpenl
NIAA CHAIII.EilON WV
Meridian Corpora-. Hoallhoo a A 1 1 Boll High P 001 All Wo k
Grow ng Natlona Hlltthea • - - · 74Q.4'oie-2947
comp1ny Currently Ha1 An Wanted To Do Mounta Tree
()ptnlng Fer A FuR Time 1\ltdlca Sl v ee Bucket Tuck s•rvlce
Olracto To Prov de Prtventlve Top Tr m Almovt 61ump G lnd
And Mtd cal Ca 1 For An Em
ng Ful y neurod Fru •Ill
p oyea Workfo co Noer Charlel meloa 81dwt 0~ p 1 800 IHton wv The Sueceastul Can
9568 Or 740-388-~
dldall Should Be Elftll on&lt;*! In
Fam ly Praclloo Emorgof1C\' Modclno Or Occupat onel Medicine
Tho Poolllon Qltoro An Oppor
tun ly For A OediCOIId Profu
alonal To Praclloo Mod Clnl In A
Sett no NOI Sound By lnouranco

Ava

Frea Maps 1-800-213-8365

0101

$$$ NEED CASH1? WE Pay

School•

5 Ac 11 Slacktop F ontage &amp;
Lakeview $32 000 Mo e Ac eage

S as Land Cant act Ava abe

S a t You Business Today
P me Shopping Cen111 Space
Ava able At Affo dab e Rate
5p no Valley Plaza Call 740-446

TV Erase Bad C edt Lega y
Free Info 888-659-2!580

Person /Pe aona NHd To Ma n
ananct T a F oor In Pomeroy

Buelneseand
Buildings

MEDICAL BILLER $15 $45 H
Medica B Ing So~wara Company

$$ Au o Loans Pe sona Loans
Oetl1 Consolli:lat on Mortgages
And Rei nanc ng Cred I P ob ems
OK Consumers Finane al 1 800
247 5125 Ext 1134 Void OH KS

GoiHpoHo CtMr Collogt
(Careers Closo1b Homo)
Cal Today 740o448-4367
-800-214-()452
Rag 190-05-12741

Nulrll onal Meals P ovlded 740
245-5923

ween Bam Spm Man Frl ro 111
up an IntervieW

Oa~wood

Homes In Barbou svllle 304

220 Money to Loan

Bualneea
Training

Ch d Care In My Home Reason
ab e Rates Exce ent P ay Area

m1•

advertisements for real es ate
which 1 n vlo atlon of he
aw Ou readers are hereby
Informed ha a dwe ng!l
advert sed n lh s newspapar
are ava able on an equal
opportun ty bas s

Class B COL And Laboro Pay
w 1 Be $6 oo An Hour To Apply

741&gt;-366-8931

Po m lui lime jolla
40 hrsl-kl+ ova kno cloanng DUIIdlngl n lho IUFI'ALO
A,. """ 11'1 w1 hln a 20
radius of BUFI'AI.O melo or 10malo dllfe"'n' 8h 11s ,_nno 24
h period cal 1 304-708 7290
taM pnone nurnbe name and
beslllme 1o oa I you bad&lt; bel

$269 oo Monlh Coma n 0 Ca
For Pra App ova s 888 !!M
o 81 Local 1 740 888 0167
Tra!IO- ns A o A 10 Welcome

knowngtyaccep~

n,,;,.,. W Nttd

EMERGING COMPANY NEEDS

PC You Can Earn $25 000 To
$50 000 Annua ly Ca 1 800
291-4663 Dopt I I09

Th I ntwspape WI not

Town1hlp Truatetl
For Part Time Work
Opt alo 1 Gredt
Truck D vera

lions Porches Decks Old Barns

Medica lnau ance B lng All 8
tanct Immediately II You Have A

Sngle As Low As $14900
Mon h Sec1 ana s As Low As

Record P oducera And Cancer
Promotres nternet www wcin,.ac

All Phases Of Ca pantry Fram

Transpot

8D0-997 9888

Homes A 1 3 Btd oomt 12 8athi
Priced Includes Compll"' So up
01hor Specia~

Appointment To Come To Nash

lng Fin sh ng Remoda ng Add

PM
PAM
www 123pam com

Yr W Phone Cads

Easy FREE lnfol
Ex I 155 (24 Hro)

Chnsly • Fam ly Llv ng 740 992
45 4

bas6d oo race colo&lt; re lgk&gt;n
sex tam llalstatt.e or natiOnal
orlg n or any ntenllon 10
make BllY such preference
I mltatlon o discrlm na ion

v lie And Audition Fo Malo

25550 EDE

D vers 2 Week Pa d COL ~ aln
lng No Exp Notded Eo n Up To
$32 000 IV Ful Banal 16 CenTO'
day 1 877 230 6002 Sunday 9
A M 8 P:M Mon F I 8 A M 8

$125K

Fo en HUO ready ust remo
de ed th ee bad oom new u
nace new app ances ntw ca
pel $375 pa monlh $375 ctopoa
R lmmedla oty IYallabl&lt;l l'omot111

Job lnvo ves Typ ng Estimates
Work ng With Cuaotme s Schad
u ng Appo ntments Phonts And
Much More Call Chr stlan .a
Conat To Set Up An nterv fNI AI

140
Own

MARCH MADNESS BALE

AI raal-18 odvOJIII no n

Lkes working W h Tl)e Pub c

App cant Shall P epa o And Tak ng App cation• For Ful
Tmoly Subm11 Dh o EPA Roporta Time and Pan Tlmo MO(nlno And
Appl cant Sha 1Be Comm lied To Day Sh 11 at ~a po 1 MeDon
The P otect on Of The Environ
aida Sian ng Sa ary ar 5 25 H
men And Tha Hoal h Safely And Apply In PoriOn
Wallare Of Tho Com""nil)&lt;
URGENTLY NEEDED for plasma
donors earned $35 o $45 lo 2
Ga Ia Counly Ia An Equa ()ppo
tun ty Employer Appllca ona &amp; o 3 hours weekly Cal Sore-Tee
Resumes Shou d Be Subm tted 740-592-6651

Need SOmeone To Mow Grass
On Week y Bas 1 &amp; Trim Hedges

0H 450$9

(NeXI To Food ol)

Prefar Someone

Responding To Public Sa vice Dev Ia 740 245 9237 0 Come

6 Locual Slrtel Room 1292
Ga lpol~ Ohio 45S31

ATIT MCI SPRINT Wha o
Tha B g Sec al? Mako S52K

n Hel"'derson $375 +
No Pe a ~tie
Ca I after
o an~ me

st uctlon Bualnese We Are
LOOking For A Full Tme Mu 11•Toanted Agg easivt Pe aon Who

0 8ShDOI

Requests As We As Ma n1a1n
Ope atlon And Main enance
Schedules Logs And Repor11

PJOCIOIVU~

Mobile Home•
for Rent

W th 'know edge Of Tht Con

Computer With Modem To Be

Both Written And 0 al Commun
cat ana Skills Applicant Shall
P ofeulonally Rep eaent The
Gal a County Commlsa one s tn

Flllrwooa Homes
1754S R1.1

this newspaper ~ subject lo
lho Fodera Far Hous ngAct
of 1968 """h makes K legal
oany preleronce
1--Hm'ltatl&lt;"' Of d acrimlnallon

PEPS COKE FRITO LAY
SNACK AND SODA VEND NG
ROUTE BE YOUR OWN BOSS
SUALL CASH 8USINESS$U
INCRESE YOUR NCDME NOW
SMALL INVESTMENT EXCEL
LENT PROFITS 600 731 7233

420

Sec tiel\' Wanled Fo Buoy Coflo

And Shall Have Accan To A
Abo To Check "nd T ou
SCADA Sy11om Re
motely Appllcanl Sha Poaooas

lor Sale

$3 000 WEEKLYI Ml ling 400
B ochu eo AT HOM El Gua
anloed FREE SUppUu SIOrt m
mod a ely Ca I 800 489 9417
Ex! 68 (24 Hrs)

EXT: 1003

AN o70 t30 IHA
LPN o70 IIZZ IHR

SINGERS! GOSPEL CLEAN
COUNTRY and EASY LISTEN
INGI Call 1 800 469 8164 Fo

.Pentecosts chu ch sa e n Ga

Jtl-11 10-4

45n9

320 Mobile Homet

Buelneu

Opportunhy

S~cuoo

o Clertto Of

740-446-4514

g ound ehack Send resumes to
PO Box 106 P Pleasant WV

1t1y before the ad 11 to run

&lt;den Room forme Blue Tartan
'803 South Th rd M dd eport
~uch &amp; loveseat mise Ma ch

Pool monago nHdocl

v11ago roeomo ! CO PO Box 208

600-223-1149 Exl460
0 str bu or Sh p Open Now fo
Flowe a Bak ng Company Fa
App cat on come to o Jack

210

Sha 1 Be Able To Road And Un

P ovlded Must Own Computer 1

Suns 108 Rockets 101
At Houston Rodney Rogers
scored SIX of hrs 15 pomts m the
final two nunutes to spark the
St ns Anfernee Hardaway led
Phoemx w1th 1 4 pmnts follow d
by Tom Gugliotta with ?3
Rook e Steve Francrs paced
Houston w1th season h gh 32
pomts folio 1Jed by Shandon
Anderson wrth 20

110

de stand Eng near ng Plans
Speell cat ons And E actrlca
Schematics As Well Aa Oversee
The lnara a1 on 1or New G av ty
Sewer Connect ona P easu e
Sewer Connee ana And STEP

No Later Than Wednesday
Ma ch 22 2000 To Gal a County
Comm sslone a Attn Karen
Sprague County Admin II ator

!Loll black loathe wallet w h
~roy

Help

GAI.UA COUNTY
BllWELL !PORTER
WASTEWATIA COLLlCTION
SYITEII I TREATMENT
F~ILITY OPEIIA70A

Help Wanted

TONIGHT

Announcement&amp;

110

EMPLOYI.1UJT
SERVICES

110

740-592 1642

W:L

Ium

'

Pei'IOnale

Naw To 'ltltl Tlv ft Shoppe
9 Wes Stimson Athena

Early Wednesday Mixed Bowling League
(As of March 1)

Moizer Clinic.....KeePins our Promise!
~

005

Mason Bowling Lanes results

•For best cholesterol screenmg, 1t ·~ recommended
that you do not eat for 12 to 14 hours before the test

.!-:=lr'.:

ANNOU'JCEMENTS

30

from Page

27

441
400
400
300
50 , 820
46 13 180
39 21 650
37 25 597
34 25 578
16 43 271
12 48 200

remember getttng old How d that
happen?
I felt I JUSt wasn t touching
bases And rather than nulk It and
leave them short I dectded to
wave the white flag
McGutre s last appearance on
CBS was Sundays B1g Ten game
between Indtana and Wtsconsm
alongs1de Enberg
Saturday mght he md he
couldn t do It and he started to
cry: Enberg md Tuesday tn New

NBA

lli
661
633

Hopewel

Confere 1ce tournan1ent

but w II be replaced by Bill
Raftery
McGUire sa~d hiS condiuon 1sn t
hfe threatenmg but saps hiS cner
gy particularly at mght The ardu
ous schedule of the NCAA tour
nament - wh1ch would reqmre
h1m to call four games on the first
day - was too much

WESTERN CONFERENCE

x LA takers
Port and

B5

•

NEW YORK (AP) - CBS
I JUSt don t feel on top of my York To say he s gomg to -be
basketball analyst AI McGmre s game McGmre s:ud
I don t 11U5,1cd by those who know him

Delphos St John s (23 0) vs Bascom

Loudon 121 2) 815 p m
McGuffey Upper SOiolo V. loy (17-6) VS
Holgall (20-3) 8 p m
Championship 7 30 p m
McDona d 52 Wes em Reserve 48
AI Plcllorlngton-Thrndoy
M nste 43 L rna Allen E 36
FJ8nklort Adona (9·14) VI Oak HII (20-3)
Mowrystown Wn teOak 68 Racine Southern
815pm
46
Donvtl&lt;l (23-1) VI Ba~ln Hlond (24-o) 8
N Robinson Crawford 49 South Centra 42
pm
New A ege 47 Vln Bu en 44
Championship Salurda~ 7 30 p m
Rchmond His. 84 Columba 73
At Muolllon PonY Thurlcloy
51 Henl)l 106 Upper SOiolo V. 71
Kidron Can ill CMIIIan (18-5) vs. lled!ool
Strasburg F ank n 65 Shadyside 60
Chanol (18 5) 615 p m
Slry\&lt;o 88 Edgenon 44
N RObinson Colonel Craw!o d (22 2) vi
Tiffin Ca vert 65 Vanlue 48
Leolonla (1$-7) 8 p m
Ka da 66 G bsorl&gt;urg so
Lucas 62 Lakeside DanbuiJI 52
McComb 59 L berty C8n1e 44

NCAA Division I
men'• scores
Reguler 1111011 action

lludcoye 33

St. Cloltlvllo 81 -

68

Whll-k (17-1)
l!.lmr
Ryan Barnett

--62~31
• , Elida 311

Notlon44 --Aroo30
Philo 68 Wlrron 47

Dlvlelon IV Diltrlct SemlllnU
Ill Alhene
Whl18oak 68 Southern 4e
Whheoak
1 16 14 27.soutnem
6 10 12 18o

Dey Cho"*-'JUI. 110. Col. ~ 41

The Dally Sentinel • Page

AI McGuire to leave CBS ~
after 23 years in booth

TODAY'S scoREBOARD
Local scoring summaries

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Wednndly, Merch 8, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Renters Needed

:ttt1 Flemming 14x70 central
air new ea pet 2 ful ba ha

Docko
(304)675 3955
(304)675-3249

or

Three bed oom wb balh jua off
SA 1"3 ntar Han1sonv le Maate

bedroom wibalh. wd hookup nice
yaol no poll no smok ng daposk - red 740-742 3033
420 Mobile Homea
for Rent

4 Badroom Hou11 For Sa 1 In

Doublowldo On Lor $250 Depos 1
RoquiJ8d 000.738-129~

Mddlopo I 12 ACrol 01 LeM
WII Conaldor Land ContriCI With 'LIITWOOO HOlliS Of Proc
15 000 Down Poymont, 740 387 rorv
1&lt;1 Ohio GRANO OPENING
7234
Lergul Now lnvonrory n South
4 Bodroomo 2 Belha 5 MlnuiH trn Oh o Spaela • On Homes
To Ho ror Holpllel To Ga IJ'OIII, Af'd F nanolnQ In P ogro11 Cell
Fomly Room 8!lllng Room Dining For Delalla. 1-888-565-0167
Room Ell In Kltchon Sunroom a Lot Models Must Go Extra
Llogo ~ Room 1 C. G-. Nlco Loadod Your Cho oo $9119
WOrk Shop On Aero Lol White Down Hurry Won'l Last Oakwood
Vlnnol Foncl New u 8ld no And Goilpolll 741).446.3093
Newlloof Coi740-44H881

2 Sod oom Mobllo Homo You
Poy UIIMieo l Oopoo 1 In Po er
-No Poll 814o388-9UI2
2 Btd ooma A r Natural Gas

Furnace In Gal polls 740 446
2003, 740-446-1409

R&amp;D a Used Fun tu e G tats ...
lee on Pr ceCI To Sell! Comt
And 8 OWSI Co ner Of ROU1t 7
6 Add son P ke We Buy Furn

'"" 740-387.()260
waaho $95 oo Dryer $95 oo
E ac e ange $8!5 00 F oat rm
Rt ge ato $125 OD L ke new

Rt g $250 00 Deep F ooror

nice St75 00 Washer Llk1 n••

$250 oo One Yoor Wa"anly DIY&lt;
e Lke Now $250 00 One yoa

wa anty Sktg.ga Appt anc11 71

Vino St ool Galllpollo Ohio

(740)-44&amp;-7398 1(888) 818-Dt28

�I

L

Page 8 4 • The Dally Sentinel

-·

Muon 68 Clo'jiOII Nontvnont 18
CCII Honlly 73, IJI&gt;per Soncluol&lt;y 55

Polond 4, 46

nm Heaton

Doug Hanko
Jen&gt;my Johnson

Justin Mld'laltl
Josh Sraoey
.Kevin Shannon

..JoshMichao
Cl'1ad Hanke

Todd Runyan

J

2:111. a:aL
3-5

!H
0.0

12

o-o

3--1

o-o

22

0-1
o.o

0.0
22

0

12

0.0

13

s

0.0

47

13

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5

0..0

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2-4

4

3-.t

3

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13

3-4

o-o

56

Dlvlelon I

2

0-5

12

51

Ohio H S girls'
regional tourney alate

EI 1!11.

1

:Chad Young
o-o 0.0 0.0 0
t.llko Tumo
5:.11 Q:Q H ll
TOII!o
111-43 S-1 21-30 68
Aoolota 18 (Barnett 4) Blockoel ohoto

Foull 23 Fauled our Shannon Reboundl

AI CMICOI- Civic

a-

Charf'!llonahlp Hudoon (23 2) vo Cte E
Frida~ 7 30 p m
AtA&amp;hiMd U.._.lly.......llt
1bl Coni Cllh (23-1 ) •• Parma fils Holy
Nome (20·3) 6 15 p m
Defiance 122 2) vo Rocky Rlvar Magnifica
(167) 8pm
Championlhlp SOiurdoy 11 a m
AI Wrlght · - Untvorolly
Champl6nohlp Meson (23.0) vs Baavo

Tooh (23-1)

creek (23 2) Satutdl't noon

At Columbuo Folrgrouf)do-lonlght
Nowart&lt; I 8-6) vs Trotwood Madison (23-o)

54 (Tume 12) Steolo 9 (Johnson 4) TOiol 615 p m
FGo 22 51 ( 431) Tumovero 26
Pickerington 22 2) vs Zonoov Uo (16-6)
8 5 pm
•
Southom (131)
Champlonsh p Saturdoy 11 a m
.tJ~•s,Aando ph ~ ~
fllg
Dlvlolon II
BandonH
3
0.1
DO
2
AI North ContCOI Hoovor
ChadHubbad
5
1
oo
s
Championsh p Norton (18 6 va Po and
DalyH
00
01
00
0 Sem nary 22 2) Frida~ 730 p m
Kyo Noms
4 0-5
38
5
AI Morral Aldgodele

fl

Matthew Wame
Jeremy Fishe

Russe Reba

MattShaw

01
2

01
0-2

4 3

01

00

Ga ettKse

Jona han Evans

Me lhew Ash
Tololo

!l 5

ll:Q

22

(H)

2
2

13

9

00

o-o

0-4

12

3

0.0
Q:.1

ll:Q

~

6
Q
46

14-39 2 20 12 22

0

Alllltl 3 Blocked ehotl :i! Foula 25
Fouled oul Rando ph Rebound• 30 (Evans
6 Sloelo 1 Re be 5) Total FGo 16 59
( 27 ) Turnovers 20

Oh1o H S boys' scores
District tournaments
Dlv alon I

H

a d Dav dson 5 Thorn Worth ng on 48

Westervlle N 48 Dub n Coffman 41

Div slon Ill
App e C eek Wayoeda e 59 Ak Manches

•• 34

Champlonah p Col Hartley (23 ) vs M n
otva (21 3) Friday 7 30 p m

At Vondalla Butler

Championship Cham nade Ju enne (23 2)
vs Ham lton Bad n {21-4) Frklay 7 30 p m

AI Zonoovllle
Champlonalll&gt; S C a JSYI o (21 3) vs Ph o
(20-4) saturday 7 30 p m
Dlvlalon Ill
At Lexington tonight

Lorain Cearvlew (20-4) vs Blu HOn (23.0)
6 5 pm
Huron (20 3~ vs Codwa e ( 3 10) 8 p m
Champlonsh p Saturday 30 p m

At L1nc11ter tonight
A bany A exander (21 2) vs Bever1y Fort
FIJI&amp;

(22 2) 615 p m

Sardinia Eastern Brown

23..0) vs Col

Ready (20-4) 8 p.m
Champlonshl&gt; Salurtlay 30 p m
At Vlndalla Butler tonight
c nclnnat

Made ra (22 2

vs

Mor a

RldQedae(21 3) 8 15 p m
Be a e 57 Gnadenhutten Indian Va 5
Waynesvl e (23 1) va Spnng Northwollom
Bucvrus Wynford 58 Huron 42
(231) 8pm
Co umblana C estvlew 59 Lisbon 46
Chomplonshlp Sat~~~~ 30 p m
Cuyahoga Fa s Ch 57 Lora n C earvlew
At Mount Union
Hon gilt
47
Akron !AanohoSio (22 2) va C e VASJ ( 8
Ey aC8th 65 Obenn640T
6)615pm
Matvem 68 Mart ns Ferry 52
5 EUClid Regina (23 1) vo You Mooney
Newton Fal s 58 Campbel 43
(14
9) 8pm
Ontario 58 Ml an Ed son 37
Championship Saturday 30 p m
You Ursu ne 51 Warren Champion 46
51

OT

OviloniV
Beave Eastern 63 Frankl n Fu nace G een
Delphos St John 7 L ma Temple Chr S.
Edon 60 Gorham Fayette 56
F Jenn ngs 74 Lima Parry 52
ndependence 59 Kidron Cent a Ch 58

Jackson M I on 51 M nera Ridge 3

Dlvl•lon IV
AI Vandalllo BUIIor Thundoy
Mana Sten Menor Looa (14 8) vs Fon
LoJimo (1410) 615pm
Jad&lt;lqn Center (22 2) vo S Chanesron
Southoaolam (1 3 11) 8 p m
Championship SaluRiey 1 30 p m
AI Ellci•Thutocloy

Ohio H S girls' scores
Reglonaltoumamente
Dlvlolon 1
Beaverc eek 43 Cin Mt No e Came 29
Cle E Tech 49 You Boardman 44
Hudson 72 Warren Hard ng 57

plan to skip this years NCAA
Eool
tournament will go far beyond
Penn 73 Princeton 52
that
Tournem•nta
McGuue told the Milwaukee
Mid-Continent Conlor.......,homplonohlp
Velperalso 71 S Ulah 62
Journal Sentmel m a story for
Mld-E•tem Ath~Uc Confertnct-flrst round today s edttmns that he rs rettrmg
florida A&amp;M 69 De a wan&gt; Sl 66
after 23 years of broadcastmg say
mg he no longer has the energy or
-oo-Colloig01e
COnf.. et:ce championship
desrre to continue
Bulle 62 Dabolt 43
The former coach who led
Marquette to the 1977 NCAA
NCAA Division I
t1cle before begmrung a broadcast
women's scores
mg career cold CBS he would
Regular 11110n action
m ss the NCAA tournament
Eut
Dartmouth 96 HatVard 74
beduse he IS suffermg from a
Penn 68 Prtr::ce on 54
form of anenua
But M cGu1re 71 told the Jour
Tournaments
Big 12 Conf1rencHirat round
nal Sentmel that he w1ll be retlr
Colo ado 83 M ssoun 69
ng fro n broadcast ng
Nebraska 82 Bayto 61
Ok ahoma S 67 Kansas St 59
Its over Its curta 1s Its all she
Texas 83 Texas A&amp;M 72
wrote McGUire told the newspa
Big Eut Conferen~h•mp onah p
per
ConnecticuT 79 Ru gers 59
Forner North Carohna and Los
Mid-Continent Confe~nce-champ onsh p
Angeles Lakers star Jan es Worthy
Youngstown St 73 Va pa also 57
vrll replace McGu re and tean
Mld-Eutem Ath ettc Conferenc: ..n,..t round
w1th play by play anno ncer
Md Eastem Sho e 60 Oe awa e St 55
D1 c k Enberg on CBS s thrrd team
for the NCAA to un ey w htch
opens March 16 McGUire also
was sci eduled to work the South
NBA standmg,

easter

EASTERN CONFERENCE
AtlonUc: blvlolon
Tum
w ~ lli
Mam
37 23 617
New Yort&lt;
36 23 610
PhHadalph a
33 25 569
Onando
28 32 467

Boston

407

24 35

Naw Joroay
24 36 400
Wash ngton ..................... .. 19 42 311

Central Division
41 9 683

ndana

Toronto

34
33
29
28
25
23

cnar1otte
M waukee
Detro t

CLEVELAND
Atlanta

Chicago

576
550
483
483
417

25
27
31
30
35
36

390

220

13 46

Valerie HIU'per (Mary and
Rhoda) rece1ved $1 4 mdhon ro
a wrongful distlllssll suit after
she Was fired from the Sitcom
Val~nt

3
9

12&gt;
13
18

s•
6
2
2
6

'"

SS3

Pulf c Dlvl .. on

Phoenx

Suttle
Sacramen o

GoldenS ate
LA Cippero
• c nohed playoff bonh

3

10~
13~

15

33

31~

Tuesday 1 ecores
Indiana 90 Denve 89

New York 111 Vancouver86

Phoenix 108 Houston 101
Washing on 90 Minnesota 86

Ch oago 89 Atlanla 82
Uflh 13 CLEVELAND 95
seame 101 Da las 86
Charlotte 102 Golden Sra e 99

;=~P=ub~l~lc~N~o~t~lc=e===r==:;Pu~b~ll~c~N~oU~ce==~r===P=u=.b;ll~c~N~~7.1c~e~~r-=~P~u~b~llc~No~t~lc=e==~
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Staled bide will bt
received by the Director of
Tr8neportetlon Stall of
Ohio
et the Ohio
De p a r 1m e n t
oI
Tranoporlltlon Dletrlct tO
office Merletta Dhlo until
J oo pm Mondey Aprll3
2000 for the purchlet and
removal of etructuree
deecrlbod In thll notice
Theil atructuree hiVI ~Men
ecqulrod by tha Stela of
Ohio from the former
'bwnero thereof end are
located within the right-of
way required tor the
lmprovemtnl/relacaUon of
Melge Stile Route 338
Section 3 539
Tha bide " ' to be
eubmiHtd only on a Bid
Propoeal Form (RE Form
79 Rev 11 93) evelleble et
the following Treneporlltlon
pftlcea
Ohio Dapertment of
Traneporllttlon Dlatrlct 10
338 Muaklngum Drive
Mlrllltl Dhlo 45750
or
Ohio Depertment of
Traneportatlon
.Melga County Malntanonce
Facility
State Route 7
Pomeroy Ohio 41711
The bide art to be
addrenid to
ODOT Dlllrlct 10
Rill Ettalll Section
338 Mlllklngum Drive
Marietta Ohio 45750
Atte"tlon Ken Dolllaon
Real Eotate Admlnletrator
The following Information
muet appaer on tilt outalda
front of the envelope
Melge 338 Sec 3 438 Par
25 WD 4/3100 1 00 PM
Certified checke official
bank checka or money
ordare (pareonal check•
and caeh are unacctptable)
payable
to
the
TREASURER STATE 01'
OHIO In tht euct amount of
the bid lor each ltam In the
event lildl are not lcetpted
lha chtokl will bt returned
to the bidder The Director
of Traneportadon re11rvet
the right to rejtot eny and
all bide
Thla property may or may
not conteln Lead or Lead
d A-~
baltd pelnt en ,.._110 1
n shall .,. tilt rupontlbltlty
of eaeh bidder to lnepect
end examine fa; theiillllwl
the elze end aondltlon of
tech
etruoturt
111

J

J

appurtenenoee thereto Inti
the conditione whloh may
anec:t the remov11 thereof.
The d11artptlona lleltd ' "
to be ultd for kllntlllcatlon
purp0111 only and are not
to bt conetr.ued ee 1
warrenty of any kind
Each bidder mull
properly exHutl the 14on
Colluelon Affld1vlt ~arm
a1110111d and aubmlllt with
thllllgnedlld Propa•l
Aamoval of lhllllrUcturll
mull 1M comptllld not lltlr
thin 70 (HVIIIIY) dlye lfllr
receipt Of the Notlct of
AvaUablllty from thl Dlatrlot
l'rllnaporllttlon Offlct
Item No 1 Paf01121 WD
One etory vinyl lltd c•dar
11 de d
d w •Ill n 11
encompenlng
approximately 1 344 aq It
over crewl epaoe with
aHeched two-oar garage ol
521 eq It end atteched
lrema covered and open
deCk oiiiZ4 ICI ft. L.oclllld
11141178 Blind HolloW Roed
)'TWp Rd 88) RIOIIII Ohio
41771 (corner of 8 R 338
and Blind Hallow Roed
llactlon 8 l.tbtrt Townllhlp
Malp County Ohio
Perlormenoe GuarentH
$2 000 00
The acctptance of the bid
by the Department of
Treneportetlon end written
notlflcetlqn of ewerd
thereof to the aucCIIIIUI
bidder lhlll oonttllutt a
contrect by 1nd bltwllh
the eucctloful bidder and
the Director Trenaportatlon
anti will lncorporetl 111 the
term• provlelone and
conditione ol thla Notlca
and tha Bid Propollll
Gordon Proctor
Director ol TraneportiUon
There will be en open
houll on March 20th from
2-8 p m a March 2111 2-8
pm
(3) a 15 :lTC
Public Notice

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNT'l OHIO
IN THE MATIER OF
TYLER SAVAGE
CASE NO 30800
DOCKET 0 PAGE 200
NOTICI!
Revlatd Code Sec
2717.01CA)
Notice le hereby given
thlt Tyler savage Clla No
30800 of 32373 Hampton
Hallow Rd Langevllle OH
454741 h11 applied to the
Common Plue Court
Probllta Dlvlolon of Melga
County Ohio lor on order
to chango Tylart nama to
Mercum
Said eppllcatlon will be
heard In eald Court at April
on the 10 day of 2000 at
1 3Dpm
The State of Ohio Meigs
County
Pereonolly appeared
before me Judhh R Sleecn
Deputy Clark and made
eclemn oath that the notlct
a copy of which 11 hereto
ettached wae publlehtd
one lime to wn on tilt 10
day of April 2000 (!Ming at
11111 thirty d1y1 prier to the
8th dly of March 2000 the
dati the application Ia to 1M
hterd 11 mentioned In ..ld
notice) In the Dallr
Sentinel a ntwepeper of
g1n1ral circulation In the
County afare•ld
Amanda Marcum Todd
Marcum
Sworn to before mt and
tlgned In my pr'"ance thla
6th day of February 2000
Judy Sloson
(3) 8 lTC

I

t--"';::============:::;--::--"""1

PUBUC

CONTENT FOR
NOTICE
The Melge county
1
Council on Ag 1ng nc
which le • prlvltl nonprofit
oarparetlon lnttndl to
eubmll en eppiiOIUon lor I
capltel grant under the
prOVIIIon of41USC lea~
of the l'edlrll :l'rMIII
1310
Aot to 1111 ~ wllll tile
••
P •ovtalonrvtct
lorof
11
.... 1414 ~

dlllblad within Malgl
County and eurroundlng
ariU. The grent eppllcatlon
will
requnt
one
microcomputer
and
10ft-.
II 11 predicted that 200
elderly tnd/or dleabled
PIIIOMwlllulllhiMCCoA
traneportellon aarvlca !Iva
dlyt a - k liZ Wtlkl 1
year
I n c I u d I n 11
tranaportatlon to the
congregete meal 1111
medlaal eppolntmentl end
ptiiQnli bullnen
The Melga County
Council on Aging Inc
Invitee com menta and
r,ropoule !rom 111
ntlrtltld public prlvelll
and peretrenelt operetore
lnaludlng tul operetora for
the
provlelan
of
treneportetlon tervlca to
the elderly and dleablll
within our area
Operetore who are
lntarealld In offering
propoaale to provide
Hrv1oe thould 11tt11
a...... Anoolllll Director
Ill thelltlge County Council
on Aging 112 all Memorial
Drive PCNMrOy Ohio 45789
to obtlln full dttalll of the
type of traneportetlon
1ervloe tl!et 11 n11dad to
prior to preparing •
proponl
Written oommtntl or
propOIIII
mull bl
aubrnllttd within 3D daya lo
the aganoy 11 the above
addretl with a copy to the
Ohio Department of
Tl'llnaportetlon Office of
tftn•lt 1110 W11t Broad
Strait Columbut Ohio
43223
AttenUon
Allmlnfltrlto1:
(3) 8 1TC

and love h1m ts an understate
ment
McGUire has been a CBS ana
lyst for e1ght NCAA tournamerlts
He was wnh NBC from 1977 92
In all of our lives you m~et
certam people who are spec1al and
he s one of those sa~d CBS le~d
analyst Billy Packer who also
worked w1th McGmre at NBC
He will be mused not only 111
this tournament but by anybody
who got to know h1m

Gentleman Seeking Compans on
sh p From Nice Female Fo Talks
Walks &amp; Fr endsh p Send Re
Qllll To ~53 Second Avenue
~~ment 1403 Ga I po s OH

'START

Mo1gs County Golf Course .... .... .
Da ry Queen Braz11r
The Dark S1de ..... ...................... ..
Tony s Carry Out
FOE 2171

DATING

.................. 72 8
so 30
........ ,; .... 42 38
'""""" ............... 42 38
..... ...... ......... ..... .26 54
.................. 8 72

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Fu Bone 115 1 81J0.598 4504 Ex
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89 Peop e Needed Fo Ho1 aa1

Weak AI Seen On TV Me Ia
Fat Stops Hunge Boos a Ene

Unbel evabty Fast Results 800

cas com COirS/CtedRCa ds

40
2 7mon o d fema es part sheep.
dogJ par1 eon e good w th k da

304 937 3348

High aeries Sam Smith (515) Chuck Burton (493)
High game Smith (194) Bill Slack(188)
Women
High nrl11 Debbie Sayre (550) Margaret Eynon (498)
High game Sayre (202) Pat Carson Eynon (lied at 175)

GOV T POSTAL JOBS Up
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Teem high eerlea Metgs County Golf Course (1972)
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final penod
Trading by e1ght the Wtzards
started the final penod With a 14
2 run Reserve Tracy Murray
82
scored 17 pmnts for the W1zards
The VICtory snapped an e1ght mcludmg 10 10 the fourth
game los ng streak for the Bulls
M10nesota was led by Kevm
Jazz 113 Cavahers 95
Garnett and Wally SzczerbJak
Karl Malone scored 30 pomts each w1th 26 pomts
and John Stockton ned a season
Kn1cks 111 Gr1zzller 86
h1gh w1th 18 assiSts as the host Jazz
Charlie Ward returned from the
won their fifth straight
InJUred list and helped host New
Stockton the NBA s career
The long vaned TV career of
aSSists leader was at his best 10 out
Ernie Hudson mcludes appear
duelmg Cleveland rookie Andre
ances
on Tax L ttle House o
Miller In recent years the two
the Pra~rle Bosom Budd1es and
faced off m ptckup games durmg
G mmea Break
Millets career at the Umverslty of
Utah
We played qUite a btt Stock
ton sa1d He was JUSt one of the
gang It certamly wasn t a test mar
ket for h1m or any evaluation pen
lOX OffiCE WILL Of'IN AT
od It was good to get to know
6:SO PMIOI MNING SHOWS
hm1 I d seen h1m play while he
12:SO PM FOI MAnNHS
was at Utah

'

York to a 13 0 lead The Knicks
shot a season best 62 percent from
the field 10 handing Vancouver 1ts
fifth succesSive loss
Latrell Sprewell and Allan
Houston scored 22 pomts ap1ece
and Patnck Ewmg had 21 Ward
had five pomts sue assists and a
team h1gh seven rebounds

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~3-&amp;785 Or 304-173-5447
..Wedemeyer a Auction Service
~

OhiO 740-319-2720

~ Wanted to Buy
;Aboolu t Top Do lar ~II US 811
oolltr And Gold Colno P oolltll
~omoodl Ani que J-ry Gold
"Ringo P o 1930 u S Cu roncy
&gt;•~ Elc Aoqulllllono Jawalry
"'"!A T.S Con ShOp 15 S.eoncl
~nuo Gol~ls 740-446-2642
... II ollor $100 lo good 1144
or The Gamb e 1 M rror

for olhor boeko old pem
~l!tto,
euara we alto
740 593

Bonoln Paol&lt;agos

ww.any 1-can-u.mcom

1-6!8-116-1682

Millennium Ttlelln1cll
Ia pteollld 10 announce rno
G ll1d _ , ng of 111- Wol~
110n cal ng center

Wo1J8now10111ngup
lntervloW appoiltmanla luf
bu!bound llloaarvlco PQIIIona.•
No experlenoo nocoaaary
Eam up 10 $1 5/hr
with quarllrly oalal)lroviewo
Menagtmlnl Oflport..,itloa aval
elliO ~~ Kot.ledlcaVDofllaiiPiid
IIICII~on• avalleblo 3 8hlfta de II&lt;
Floxlblt od&gt;edul ng Slart your
Mil carHr with IAI
eon t-eooHI29·e753

lufan_,_t
... 10 rnot1lnO yotJ

We look _

Mom 1 W1nted Americas 11
Home Bu11ne11 Mom• Wo k At

Put You Tax fletund To Wo k

$499 Down On y At
738-3409

Ideal Local on 40 A.c ee Hay &amp;
Pa u e New 40 JC60 Horse Ba n
3 4 M e Road Fron age On 2
Roads Trac o &amp; Hay Equ pment
74().388 9130

340

15Q

Fu n shed 3 Rooms &amp; Bath
Downs a s C ean No Pe s Ref
e ences 1 Oepos I Requ ed
740~6-15 9

Needs People To Procua Med
cal C a ma F om Home Train ng
P ovided Must own Compute 1

600-434-55 8 Ext 887
MEDICAL BILL NG Unl ml ed In
come Potentia No Expe enef

Neceasa y F ee Into mat on &amp;

CD ROM tnvaa1men $4 995

$8 995 Financing Ava labll Ia
and Au omated Meet cal Serv e
ea Inc BOO 322 1139 Ext 050

Void In K~ IN CT

Nice 3 Or 4 Bedroom Ranch W th

Full Basement Hea Pump On

PEPSI /COKE IFR TO LAY 1 78 Ac es n Count y On State
SNACK AND SODA VENDING Roull 775 PaBI o o Mclnly e
ROUTE BE 'fOUR OWN BOSS $ Park Cal 740 441 1659 After s
ALL CASH BUS NESS $ N PM
CRESE YOUR NCOME NOWI
SMALL INVESTMENT EXCEL
LENT PROFITS I 800 73 7233
EXT 1057

Instruction
EARN A LEGAL COlLEGE DE
GREE QUICKLY Bacholo 1
Mastera Docto ate By Corr1

spondonce Baaed Upon Prior Educal on And Sho I Sludy Cour10
Fo FREE nformat on Book et

Phone CAMBRIDGE STATE
UN VERS TY 1 BOO 964 8~1 6
8142

Cash For Remlilnlng Paymen a
On Property So d Mortgages!
A.nnu Ilea Settfementsl lmme

dlatt Ouo10a111 Nobody Boa s
Ou P cea

Nat anal Cont act

Buyers 600 490 0731 exr 10
"""na lonalcorlfac!buyors com
$FREE CASH NOWS F om
Wea hy Fam 1es Unload ng M
Ilona 01 Dolara To Holp Mnlm ze
The r Taxes W e mmad ate y

Wndfello 847 A SECOND AVE
1350 NEW YORK NEW YORK
10017
CREDIT PROBLEMS? CALL THE
CREDIT EXPERTS LICENSED I
BONDED CORRECT REMOVE
BAD CREDIT SANJ&lt;RUPTCV
LAWSUITS
JUDGEMENTS
AAA RATING 90 180 DAVS 1
800-422 598
CREDIT REPA Rl AS SEEN ON
MONEY TO LOAN Bad Cradll

Handyman ma 111tnanee aervlet
carpanlrj pa nl ng skiing roo!lng

dry waH and elactrlca! 740-6491035

EKeel enl care lor pe son n my
home non amok1 and Mob It
Yal)l RooiOnaiiiO (304)862-3880

OK Free Appl ca on U 8 Ap
pllcan15 Only 1 en 7110-1938

230

Profenlonal

Services
TUIIHED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /881?
No Feo UnlaaoWtW n
1-668 582 3348

30 To 100 Ae e 11 acts Of P me
Hun ng Land
Start ng A1

$16 500 97 Ac oa For $57 ooo

lor Sala
(I)

mo 1 !!Q0-648 5678

(2) F s T me Buyo s Easy F
nanc ng 2 and 3 Bed oom A
ound $200 Pe Month Ca 1

800 948 5678

If

You A o lnllr

Homo F oo Cauatto 1 1168-813-

Th 1 Oppo(IUnlly P oaoo S1!11d A
Copy Of Your cv To Mor dlen 210

5275

Corporate Healthca 1 Human

Rooourctl 20 Bunor HI t BMI
Suitt :100 Nllhvlllo TN 31215
Fox (815) 234-1028
MEIIIDIAN

Buelneu

Opporlun!W

Nood A Loan? Try lltbf ConiOI~
dot o~ $5 ooo 1200 000 led
CrociK QK l'tt HID0-710-oq,t
El&lt;l215

www COIJntrytyme com
RENTALS

FREE 011 very &amp; SOl I 8D0-948
5678
(I) 1 Doubewde $249 Po
Month Low Down Paymen
800-81!,1 -6777

1

(2) 14 w de $167 Par Monrh
Low Down Payment

an1

BOO 691

(3) 18x80 $254 Per Monlh Low

1 3 Bad ooms Forecto&amp;ed
Homes From S199/Mo 4% Down
For L 1t ng11 &amp; Payment Data s
800-319-3323 EXI 1709
1 Bedroom On 32 LinCOln Ga po-

lio $300 Mo $200 Depoe 1 No
PolS 740-446-9342

Down Payment F ee A r 1 800

6918n7

152 Fou th Avenue tJallipo a 3

114 Condo St eel Mob e Home

&amp; Lot Fo Sale $14 000 W II
Consider Land Contact 740

109.oo64 Or 740-388-6591

4x70 1988 fa rmont I ved In 7
mon sr 1 has new sme g bath
rooms 3 br lots ot closet space
an a ec e/a poss bta eave on
low entad ot Cha • rd 62 2
decks under pinning&amp; bock

620 000 ca 304-875-4 53.

Bed ooms WD Hook Up $375
Mo

Depos

640-052

Aequ ed 1 888

152 Fourth Avenue Gall pol s 3
Bad ooms w D Hook Up $375

Mo Cepos Rtqul ed I 888
840-0521

For sa e o ent 2 bed oom
house n Poma oy $350 month
plus depos I w I se on con1rac1
w tn good tla aneta no ptts

Wanted To Aen T a le lot For
HI K80 li'a II 740 24S.5146

740-698-7244

MERCHANDISE

510
Fo rtn1 n Sy acuu 4 bedroom
two bath all appl ancea 201 K56
kU lanced In p ay area ca peted

Houeehold
Goods

lhroughou HUD evallab a $575
po mon h $575 doposll ch ld on

App ances
Recondl oned
wasne s o ve a Ranges Rat
g a o s 90 Day Gua antee

740-992-45 4

nes

welcome Chr sty a Fam ly Llv ng

F onch C ry May ag 740 448

Renters Needed

2552

PICkiOI EOE

COli Ryan

1001213-1385
Anthony Land Company L70

(3)
LOOII
5 Bedrooms 2 Baths ove 2 000
aq It for eaa than $450 mo

ug

ttted IJ'I Lea n ng Mo 1 About

p oved 740 928-4941 afta 6pm
co""'

Real Eatate
Wanted
We Ply l:AIII
For LANDI
E"'n II IS Llllod
20 500 Acn&gt;s

360

AMAZING

0 ywa J. 4BR 32x80 ave 2348
sq It Payments low as $406 per

F H Eol mo101 Low AIIOI 74
Gal polio &amp; Po nl Ploaoanl Area 387 5043
Must Have Experience With P o
I'MJrHER OF 2 WILL BABYSIT IN
pane Bufla Or ver License t
MY HOME CHRISTIAN NON
818 491 6 31 BelwHn 1 PM 5 SMOKING
M F CALL 304 812
PM

I lo'J ANC II\ I

Two 2 bed oom I one 1 bed oom
apa men s M dd apo t HUD ap

Can Comb ne F ea Maps land
Con act Aval able 1 800 213
6365

320 Mobile HDmee

REAL ESlATE

Conlracla And Ftt Schedule&amp;
Exeettent 81 1 v And Beneflta

740-388-8678
LAND NEAR RIO
OH SR 35 5+ Acres Grear Homa
at&gt;~

WV JtUNTING LAND

Loria Helping Hand Cfean ng
Service WI Oo FOOd C ean

PH'ISICIAII OPPORTUNITY
Noed An Elact Clan Or Cerpenl
NIAA CHAIII.EilON WV
Meridian Corpora-. Hoallhoo a A 1 1 Boll High P 001 All Wo k
Grow ng Natlona Hlltthea • - - · 74Q.4'oie-2947
comp1ny Currently Ha1 An Wanted To Do Mounta Tree
()ptnlng Fer A FuR Time 1\ltdlca Sl v ee Bucket Tuck s•rvlce
Olracto To Prov de Prtventlve Top Tr m Almovt 61ump G lnd
And Mtd cal Ca 1 For An Em
ng Ful y neurod Fru •Ill
p oyea Workfo co Noer Charlel meloa 81dwt 0~ p 1 800 IHton wv The Sueceastul Can
9568 Or 740-388-~
dldall Should Be Elftll on&lt;*! In
Fam ly Praclloo Emorgof1C\' Modclno Or Occupat onel Medicine
Tho Poolllon Qltoro An Oppor
tun ly For A OediCOIId Profu
alonal To Praclloo Mod Clnl In A
Sett no NOI Sound By lnouranco

Ava

Frea Maps 1-800-213-8365

0101

$$$ NEED CASH1? WE Pay

School•

5 Ac 11 Slacktop F ontage &amp;
Lakeview $32 000 Mo e Ac eage

S as Land Cant act Ava abe

S a t You Business Today
P me Shopping Cen111 Space
Ava able At Affo dab e Rate
5p no Valley Plaza Call 740-446

TV Erase Bad C edt Lega y
Free Info 888-659-2!580

Person /Pe aona NHd To Ma n
ananct T a F oor In Pomeroy

Buelneseand
Buildings

MEDICAL BILLER $15 $45 H
Medica B Ing So~wara Company

$$ Au o Loans Pe sona Loans
Oetl1 Consolli:lat on Mortgages
And Rei nanc ng Cred I P ob ems
OK Consumers Finane al 1 800
247 5125 Ext 1134 Void OH KS

GoiHpoHo CtMr Collogt
(Careers Closo1b Homo)
Cal Today 740o448-4367
-800-214-()452
Rag 190-05-12741

Nulrll onal Meals P ovlded 740
245-5923

ween Bam Spm Man Frl ro 111
up an IntervieW

Oa~wood

Homes In Barbou svllle 304

220 Money to Loan

Bualneea
Training

Ch d Care In My Home Reason
ab e Rates Exce ent P ay Area

m1•

advertisements for real es ate
which 1 n vlo atlon of he
aw Ou readers are hereby
Informed ha a dwe ng!l
advert sed n lh s newspapar
are ava able on an equal
opportun ty bas s

Class B COL And Laboro Pay
w 1 Be $6 oo An Hour To Apply

741&gt;-366-8931

Po m lui lime jolla
40 hrsl-kl+ ova kno cloanng DUIIdlngl n lho IUFI'ALO
A,. """ 11'1 w1 hln a 20
radius of BUFI'AI.O melo or 10malo dllfe"'n' 8h 11s ,_nno 24
h period cal 1 304-708 7290
taM pnone nurnbe name and
beslllme 1o oa I you bad&lt; bel

$269 oo Monlh Coma n 0 Ca
For Pra App ova s 888 !!M
o 81 Local 1 740 888 0167
Tra!IO- ns A o A 10 Welcome

knowngtyaccep~

n,,;,.,. W Nttd

EMERGING COMPANY NEEDS

PC You Can Earn $25 000 To
$50 000 Annua ly Ca 1 800
291-4663 Dopt I I09

Th I ntwspape WI not

Town1hlp Truatetl
For Part Time Work
Opt alo 1 Gredt
Truck D vera

lions Porches Decks Old Barns

Medica lnau ance B lng All 8
tanct Immediately II You Have A

Sngle As Low As $14900
Mon h Sec1 ana s As Low As

Record P oducera And Cancer
Promotres nternet www wcin,.ac

All Phases Of Ca pantry Fram

Transpot

8D0-997 9888

Homes A 1 3 Btd oomt 12 8athi
Priced Includes Compll"' So up
01hor Specia~

Appointment To Come To Nash

lng Fin sh ng Remoda ng Add

PM
PAM
www 123pam com

Yr W Phone Cads

Easy FREE lnfol
Ex I 155 (24 Hro)

Chnsly • Fam ly Llv ng 740 992
45 4

bas6d oo race colo&lt; re lgk&gt;n
sex tam llalstatt.e or natiOnal
orlg n or any ntenllon 10
make BllY such preference
I mltatlon o discrlm na ion

v lie And Audition Fo Malo

25550 EDE

D vers 2 Week Pa d COL ~ aln
lng No Exp Notded Eo n Up To
$32 000 IV Ful Banal 16 CenTO'
day 1 877 230 6002 Sunday 9
A M 8 P:M Mon F I 8 A M 8

$125K

Fo en HUO ready ust remo
de ed th ee bad oom new u
nace new app ances ntw ca
pel $375 pa monlh $375 ctopoa
R lmmedla oty IYallabl&lt;l l'omot111

Job lnvo ves Typ ng Estimates
Work ng With Cuaotme s Schad
u ng Appo ntments Phonts And
Much More Call Chr stlan .a
Conat To Set Up An nterv fNI AI

140
Own

MARCH MADNESS BALE

AI raal-18 odvOJIII no n

Lkes working W h Tl)e Pub c

App cant Shall P epa o And Tak ng App cation• For Ful
Tmoly Subm11 Dh o EPA Roporta Time and Pan Tlmo MO(nlno And
Appl cant Sha 1Be Comm lied To Day Sh 11 at ~a po 1 MeDon
The P otect on Of The Environ
aida Sian ng Sa ary ar 5 25 H
men And Tha Hoal h Safely And Apply In PoriOn
Wallare Of Tho Com""nil)&lt;
URGENTLY NEEDED for plasma
donors earned $35 o $45 lo 2
Ga Ia Counly Ia An Equa ()ppo
tun ty Employer Appllca ona &amp; o 3 hours weekly Cal Sore-Tee
Resumes Shou d Be Subm tted 740-592-6651

Need SOmeone To Mow Grass
On Week y Bas 1 &amp; Trim Hedges

0H 450$9

(NeXI To Food ol)

Prefar Someone

Responding To Public Sa vice Dev Ia 740 245 9237 0 Come

6 Locual Slrtel Room 1292
Ga lpol~ Ohio 45S31

ATIT MCI SPRINT Wha o
Tha B g Sec al? Mako S52K

n Hel"'derson $375 +
No Pe a ~tie
Ca I after
o an~ me

st uctlon Bualnese We Are
LOOking For A Full Tme Mu 11•Toanted Agg easivt Pe aon Who

0 8ShDOI

Requests As We As Ma n1a1n
Ope atlon And Main enance
Schedules Logs And Repor11

PJOCIOIVU~

Mobile Home•
for Rent

W th 'know edge Of Tht Con

Computer With Modem To Be

Both Written And 0 al Commun
cat ana Skills Applicant Shall
P ofeulonally Rep eaent The
Gal a County Commlsa one s tn

Flllrwooa Homes
1754S R1.1

this newspaper ~ subject lo
lho Fodera Far Hous ngAct
of 1968 """h makes K legal
oany preleronce
1--Hm'ltatl&lt;"' Of d acrimlnallon

PEPS COKE FRITO LAY
SNACK AND SODA VEND NG
ROUTE BE YOUR OWN BOSS
SUALL CASH 8USINESS$U
INCRESE YOUR NCDME NOW
SMALL INVESTMENT EXCEL
LENT PROFITS 600 731 7233

420

Sec tiel\' Wanled Fo Buoy Coflo

And Shall Have Accan To A
Abo To Check "nd T ou
SCADA Sy11om Re
motely Appllcanl Sha Poaooas

lor Sale

$3 000 WEEKLYI Ml ling 400
B ochu eo AT HOM El Gua
anloed FREE SUppUu SIOrt m
mod a ely Ca I 800 489 9417
Ex! 68 (24 Hrs)

EXT: 1003

AN o70 t30 IHA
LPN o70 IIZZ IHR

SINGERS! GOSPEL CLEAN
COUNTRY and EASY LISTEN
INGI Call 1 800 469 8164 Fo

.Pentecosts chu ch sa e n Ga

Jtl-11 10-4

45n9

320 Mobile Homet

Buelneu

Opportunhy

S~cuoo

o Clertto Of

740-446-4514

g ound ehack Send resumes to
PO Box 106 P Pleasant WV

1t1y before the ad 11 to run

&lt;den Room forme Blue Tartan
'803 South Th rd M dd eport
~uch &amp; loveseat mise Ma ch

Pool monago nHdocl

v11ago roeomo ! CO PO Box 208

600-223-1149 Exl460
0 str bu or Sh p Open Now fo
Flowe a Bak ng Company Fa
App cat on come to o Jack

210

Sha 1 Be Able To Road And Un

P ovlded Must Own Computer 1

Suns 108 Rockets 101
At Houston Rodney Rogers
scored SIX of hrs 15 pomts m the
final two nunutes to spark the
St ns Anfernee Hardaway led
Phoemx w1th 1 4 pmnts follow d
by Tom Gugliotta with ?3
Rook e Steve Francrs paced
Houston w1th season h gh 32
pomts folio 1Jed by Shandon
Anderson wrth 20

110

de stand Eng near ng Plans
Speell cat ons And E actrlca
Schematics As Well Aa Oversee
The lnara a1 on 1or New G av ty
Sewer Connect ona P easu e
Sewer Connee ana And STEP

No Later Than Wednesday
Ma ch 22 2000 To Gal a County
Comm sslone a Attn Karen
Sprague County Admin II ator

!Loll black loathe wallet w h
~roy

Help

GAI.UA COUNTY
BllWELL !PORTER
WASTEWATIA COLLlCTION
SYITEII I TREATMENT
F~ILITY OPEIIA70A

Help Wanted

TONIGHT

Announcement&amp;

110

EMPLOYI.1UJT
SERVICES

110

740-592 1642

W:L

Ium

'

Pei'IOnale

Naw To 'ltltl Tlv ft Shoppe
9 Wes Stimson Athena

Early Wednesday Mixed Bowling League
(As of March 1)

Moizer Clinic.....KeePins our Promise!
~

005

Mason Bowling Lanes results

•For best cholesterol screenmg, 1t ·~ recommended
that you do not eat for 12 to 14 hours before the test

.!-:=lr'.:

ANNOU'JCEMENTS

30

from Page

27

441
400
400
300
50 , 820
46 13 180
39 21 650
37 25 597
34 25 578
16 43 271
12 48 200

remember getttng old How d that
happen?
I felt I JUSt wasn t touching
bases And rather than nulk It and
leave them short I dectded to
wave the white flag
McGutre s last appearance on
CBS was Sundays B1g Ten game
between Indtana and Wtsconsm
alongs1de Enberg
Saturday mght he md he
couldn t do It and he started to
cry: Enberg md Tuesday tn New

NBA

lli
661
633

Hopewel

Confere 1ce tournan1ent

but w II be replaced by Bill
Raftery
McGUire sa~d hiS condiuon 1sn t
hfe threatenmg but saps hiS cner
gy particularly at mght The ardu
ous schedule of the NCAA tour
nament - wh1ch would reqmre
h1m to call four games on the first
day - was too much

WESTERN CONFERENCE

x LA takers
Port and

B5

•

NEW YORK (AP) - CBS
I JUSt don t feel on top of my York To say he s gomg to -be
basketball analyst AI McGmre s game McGmre s:ud
I don t 11U5,1cd by those who know him

Delphos St John s (23 0) vs Bascom

Loudon 121 2) 815 p m
McGuffey Upper SOiolo V. loy (17-6) VS
Holgall (20-3) 8 p m
Championship 7 30 p m
McDona d 52 Wes em Reserve 48
AI Plcllorlngton-Thrndoy
M nste 43 L rna Allen E 36
FJ8nklort Adona (9·14) VI Oak HII (20-3)
Mowrystown Wn teOak 68 Racine Southern
815pm
46
Donvtl&lt;l (23-1) VI Ba~ln Hlond (24-o) 8
N Robinson Crawford 49 South Centra 42
pm
New A ege 47 Vln Bu en 44
Championship Salurda~ 7 30 p m
Rchmond His. 84 Columba 73
At Muolllon PonY Thurlcloy
51 Henl)l 106 Upper SOiolo V. 71
Kidron Can ill CMIIIan (18-5) vs. lled!ool
Strasburg F ank n 65 Shadyside 60
Chanol (18 5) 615 p m
Slry\&lt;o 88 Edgenon 44
N RObinson Colonel Craw!o d (22 2) vi
Tiffin Ca vert 65 Vanlue 48
Leolonla (1$-7) 8 p m
Ka da 66 G bsorl&gt;urg so
Lucas 62 Lakeside DanbuiJI 52
McComb 59 L berty C8n1e 44

NCAA Division I
men'• scores
Reguler 1111011 action

lludcoye 33

St. Cloltlvllo 81 -

68

Whll-k (17-1)
l!.lmr
Ryan Barnett

--62~31
• , Elida 311

Notlon44 --Aroo30
Philo 68 Wlrron 47

Dlvlelon IV Diltrlct SemlllnU
Ill Alhene
Whl18oak 68 Southern 4e
Whheoak
1 16 14 27.soutnem
6 10 12 18o

Dey Cho"*-'JUI. 110. Col. ~ 41

The Dally Sentinel • Page

AI McGuire to leave CBS ~
after 23 years in booth

TODAY'S scoREBOARD
Local scoring summaries

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Wednndly, Merch 8, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Renters Needed

:ttt1 Flemming 14x70 central
air new ea pet 2 ful ba ha

Docko
(304)675 3955
(304)675-3249

or

Three bed oom wb balh jua off
SA 1"3 ntar Han1sonv le Maate

bedroom wibalh. wd hookup nice
yaol no poll no smok ng daposk - red 740-742 3033
420 Mobile Homea
for Rent

4 Badroom Hou11 For Sa 1 In

Doublowldo On Lor $250 Depos 1
RoquiJ8d 000.738-129~

Mddlopo I 12 ACrol 01 LeM
WII Conaldor Land ContriCI With 'LIITWOOO HOlliS Of Proc
15 000 Down Poymont, 740 387 rorv
1&lt;1 Ohio GRANO OPENING
7234
Lergul Now lnvonrory n South
4 Bodroomo 2 Belha 5 MlnuiH trn Oh o Spaela • On Homes
To Ho ror Holpllel To Ga IJ'OIII, Af'd F nanolnQ In P ogro11 Cell
Fomly Room 8!lllng Room Dining For Delalla. 1-888-565-0167
Room Ell In Kltchon Sunroom a Lot Models Must Go Extra
Llogo ~ Room 1 C. G-. Nlco Loadod Your Cho oo $9119
WOrk Shop On Aero Lol White Down Hurry Won'l Last Oakwood
Vlnnol Foncl New u 8ld no And Goilpolll 741).446.3093
Newlloof Coi740-44H881

2 Sod oom Mobllo Homo You
Poy UIIMieo l Oopoo 1 In Po er
-No Poll 814o388-9UI2
2 Btd ooma A r Natural Gas

Furnace In Gal polls 740 446
2003, 740-446-1409

R&amp;D a Used Fun tu e G tats ...
lee on Pr ceCI To Sell! Comt
And 8 OWSI Co ner Of ROU1t 7
6 Add son P ke We Buy Furn

'"" 740-387.()260
waaho $95 oo Dryer $95 oo
E ac e ange $8!5 00 F oat rm
Rt ge ato $125 OD L ke new

Rt g $250 00 Deep F ooror

nice St75 00 Washer Llk1 n••

$250 oo One Yoor Wa"anly DIY&lt;
e Lke Now $250 00 One yoa

wa anty Sktg.ga Appt anc11 71

Vino St ool Galllpollo Ohio

(740)-44&amp;-7398 1(888) 818-Dt28

�Wednnday, March e. 2000

pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio
1110
Buy or 1111. Rlvtrlnt Antlqull .
1124 &amp;II -on SA 124 E. Po"'""'~'• 7 -·2521 or 740-tnl qt.- - . -·

ISIAD CREDIT? Got Caan
l oona To 15,000. Dtbl Conaoll·
dafon To 1200.000. Crd Canlt,

Mqrtgaa-e. Rtfinanclng And
Au&amp;o loant Available. Merldiln

C - Corp. 1·801J.t7HI 19 Ext
ttiiO.
(31 All SIMI Bu ilding&amp;. 25x30
w,a $7,800 Sell $3,900; 30xtB
Waa $11,700 Soli $5.850; 50d0
Wn $18,500 S.ll $7,900. TOfO 1·
1109'382-78(11.
W~llo molal Twin Bod 150.00 ,
matching Dre11er wllh Bookcase.
8 Pteco Socttonal Couch 1:150.00
- Girls Name Brand Clothes (00:211
Boys Name Stand Clothn (0·
tmo.) (7to~l · l3t9

Building
11!11111111

510

" ' Coli

, . few Sale

AKC Labrador Ao-'--a Yollow
I Black 1:125 · 1250, 7t0·25e-

8733.

AKC St, Bomltd I"IPI• flrlt lhcll
1nd wormed, $300 tiCh, 740:·
811H178.
AKC St Borno1d Pupa, 8 WHkl
Old, Vel Chlcked, 111 Shots, a

. 1300, 3()4.2~ .

Golden

Retriever

Puppln

$1\10.00 E-7-.nez.

37 Ptol)le Ntl!dtd To LOll Up
To 30 Pounda In The NaJCt 30
Dayt, Free Samples, 740·441 ·

J1c:k Ru11ell tarrier pupa, flrat
lh011' 1nd wormed, lllla docttd.
$150, 740-89&amp;-7055,

11182.

Miniature Collie Pupp111, 175.

W~NT

A COMPUTER?? BUT
NO CASH?? MMX Technology
Will Flnanco Wllh '0' Down. Paat
Cradll Probloms, Nc P - .. CoH
. Toii'FrH Hn·283-1082.

7to-4t1 .QI85,

570

.A-re-You A Metal Building Erector
/Con1ractor? Wt Ha\le Factory 1
Direct Buildlngo With NO Doaltr·
aNp Foo Or Volume Cornmlnnt.
ALL SIZES /AlL LOADS. EL·
DORADO BUILDING SYSTEMS '
t·II00-279-4300,
Complete DISH Network aatellltl
system, brand new, $99, 740'·

992·1182 or 304-773·5305 anor
6pm,

COMPUTER BLOWOUTII HP,
COMPAQ Deaktopa, Laptops,
Merchant · Accounts. Webaltes
Start Your Home Buslnitss Todayll Almost Everyone Ap·
proved!! No Money Oownll Low
Monthly Paymenlsll 1·988·479·
23t5 (Toll Free1

Mualcal
lnatrumenta

FARr,l SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

610 Fann Equlpnient
10' John Deere transport d!tk,

liM: John DHro 1t8 front end
loader (1111 301 0·4230), t3250:
brush hog. 8'. 1550: ....,.

er/toner, (like new), $2500; call

7to-tt2·3885 or 7!10-1182·5168,

2 UnMimH BIIIIBnUIIIJifll
Factory Cancellallonal Brand
Now. Still Eralodl Urgent Mull
Soli. Ouonnt Atch Styto, Ono Ia
40xll0, SeiHng For Balance Onlyl

joy The Tropical Paradise Ot
Beaches And Relaxation. Beach 1.aoo.&amp;25-!5069 Ellioll.
Front Condot 'Or HomM. For. Baler. Vermeer 805C With Extra
Rent ISale. century 21 1st. SOUth- Sol 01 Tonalon Sprtngo: Excolltnt
ern Trust. 1·800·255-9487 CoMHion, 13.000. Coli 740·182·
www:c21 marco.com
88t2.
'

Grubb's Plano· luning &amp; repairs.

I

'

I

For Sale : Tobecco Slicks. 7 40.
245-512t .
Indianapolis Moline lraclor, 52
hp., IMI &amp; 3 pl. hllch: biUih
hog, grader blade; boom pole;
man1,1re spreader; $5000 for all,

Problems? N.-cl nmod? Calllht
plano Dr. 740-44fl.4525

741).742·2050.

Hot Sprlnga hot tub, 4 person,
good condition, some chemicals
Included, call 740·992·5053 after
5pm.

Massey Ferguson 281 207 Hrt.

,I
,

JANITROL HEATING AND
COOLING EQUIPMENT

INSTALLED

"It Yqu Don't Call Ut W• Bolh
Lose. • Free Estimates! 7-40-448·

6308, 1-800-29HXl98.

JET

AERATION MOTORS·
Ropolnld, Nlw &amp; Aobul~ In Stock.
Cal Ron Eva,., 1-800-537-115211.
Macintosh Performa 5200 CD
Computer With Built In Color

Duel Remote, $13,000, 7to·388·
9031.

2 Ouartor Horsot B-. Sound &amp;
~lie Trail Ridden Or t·H -Projocl, '

740-388 8!504.

APHA Slack /Whllt Palnl Mart
Fold At Side AQHA Sorrel Moro
Ready To Fold, 7~130.
Bulct1erHOQo, 7to-2-10.

Rfotlltrod Angui Bulla For Sail,
7to-245-5084.

640 · Hay &amp; Grain

a.

Tobacco Plinta

Mobile Homo Supply, 740·4..,
tt1ew..... oM&gt;....-.non
NEED

A CO'MPUTEA? We

Flnince Bad Cf'8dlt • Bankruptcy
OK I No Turndowns • FREE IN•
T~ANET ~88·827·71102

Now liking' ontero for IIIIa Spring.
Fnt 0n1aro w111 Guaranleo !loot&amp;
Earlleat
Planta. Dewhurst
l'llrms,(304)185-37-378t.
, Tf1ANSPORTA110N

710 AutOI few Slle

-w.pc-

pllancn (740)·448-4039 (740)·
448-1004 Anytime.
PSYCHIC READINGS By Soilhlal
C01111&gt;11montary Andlngl Amazing
Prldlctlonal SOIYII All Problems!

Cll11 tst t84 tt59.
- l i n g Selt: Excotlonl Shope
Walnut Kitchen Ceblnets, Utld .

Appllancoo, Sink, Etc. 7to·448·
7565 Mer 4:30 P.M.

RESIDENTIAL HOME Di¥NEIII

PftOII IZt/110. lm·
~ /Aopol. Foo. 10 Down 12•
Moo. 111.8% For Lltllnga 1.801).
3111-3323 X2158.
'

720 Truckl for Sale
1 0 ' - - 30t.f7!&gt;2203.

1987 Toyota Truck 4 Wht~l
Orlv., New Tlru, Excellent

CONSTRUaiON

CARS 1100, 1500 &amp; UP. POLICE
IMPOUND. Honda's Toycta't,
Chavyl, JtiJII, And Spcn Utili·
tlta. Call Nowl 800·772·7t70;
EXT. 7132.
18to·80 tlonciu From l2t1Mo..
lmpol.lldll 0 Down, 2t •
19.11% Lltllngt, IIC)0.3tt-3323 Ext.

390t.
ttl4 Chilly Comaro, 305, t brl.,
..... point, lltic:lng
n... good oondltlon, 12200. 7to9112·1!807 ~~filii.

Supplln
Block, brick, oowor pipit, winG·
OWl, llntolt. I!C. Claude Wlntort,
Afo GttnGt, OH Call 740·245·
5121. .

992-5479

Your Concrete

YOU.I I'S
CARPENRI SERVICE

Connection

Up. tOIK Milos. Auto • Air. Now
BF Goodrich Tlrll &amp; Alum. Cen·

lndeJM!Q.dent puler

ter Line Rima. Red w/Biack

Qold

Taunty Cover. $8 ,900. (304)875·
2029. $8,900.

kn! fltec!

Exrended Cab, 3 door, loaded,

25,000 milia. very lharp, full far·
lngo, $12,000, 740·9•9·2045 or
740-949-2203.

730

hl!dfge, lpp.

•EIIctrlcllll'luinlllng

•Roofing • Gutllfl
•VInyl Siding ll'llntlng
•Pilla &amp; Ponlli Dtdca
,.,.,. &amp;If""*'

QuaUly eoncrete fiatwork
.and all metal huildinp

1987 Chevy S· tO Slazor, txt,
2.8l, A.T.. A.C.. High Mlloo,
12.000. (304~76-2887.
1995 Ford 150 XLT 4x4 6 Cylln·

der, 5 Speed, Loaded, 88,000

Mlloa. $11,000 OBO 740·441·

t800.

740

Free Eatimatet
Dennta Bryant, Owner
. 39141 ST. Rt. 684
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769

••• ,,.. 817-555-7122

Vane &amp; 4-WDa

Moton:ycl•

t918 Hondo 70 4 Whoolor Good

~.7~189.

1993 Suzuki 125 RM 2 SlrOkl,'
It ,200 080, 740·245·5011 Or

.352-4605 u... Mletl!lgt.

. . .

740-742-8015
25 year• experience

1997 black Chivy 6'10 Stopoldt

•Room lddltlana • AltnOdtllng

' •New Gngtt

Phone (740) :'1\13-bO/

~

:

1

•..........
,.........,.,.,.
R&amp;JOMIIIt

All replacement
parts

. Free Delivery
740-742-9501
'Toll Free

1997 HOnda Foreman 400, "

wheol drive, 131 mlloo, $4500,
7to-IIB2·5065.
'
1999 Kawatakl Volcan 750 cc
3000 mlloa, co~tact 304·773·
561-8. If no answer leave mas- .

--

750 Boats &amp; Motore

for Sale

·12 Ft. Aluminum V Ruts Tralter,

Trou Motor. $550.00 (7t0)·446·
2350

)'1'1·

Loe.aJ

1·800·950·3359

•

~ ~~(\t\\r\9

SHE

~

Naw Homes • Vinyl
Siding • N- Garages
• Replacament Windows

• Room AddHione
• Roofing ..

COMMERCIAl !lid RESIDEIIIIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

740·992·7599

CANE·•

..

ft/0, JUT ttO~

.· /lfiATS'·
•

CRIDIY PROBLIMI??? ·;

.. AJOuT A
·~
cf,APt 1'8''
~tiiCICtN wtto

ANI&gt; ·

I

: PlfOPIICt

· ctt~ATtP

ON Tttf

No CredH • Slow Credit • l!lenkruptcy
Repo • Divorded

~)CAM7

!!

=t'~E&lt;; ~-8

No l!mberrlllrnent. ..
You~re TrHted with Raapectl
Call N- few tlll(lnt ApJ)~rellt"*

1-800·311-3391
Free Estinudes

c....-.s.....
Scrubbed&amp;

...

Ca•trutera Wale•••

~

.

.

'

t liKE '11\t ~OLO \Nil

...

OOE!&gt; &amp;.TIEl:. .

Albany, Ohio

.B ANKBUPT£Y ·

. cleaned
Ctun &amp; Scotch
Guard ·~ - A"y
Normal .Size RoOm.

740-742-2706
740-446-1141

• Drlnwey Steae
• Lae4ceepe Meterlel

Auto Parte &amp;

• ,., Sill &amp;. . . . .

AcceaeorleB

••LI•••••t
Servlel
1tt H.. n.

Budget Priced Transmissions_All
Types, Access To OVer 10,000
Tranamiaslona, eve Joints, 740·

19911 ST Blaar LS, IDA, 75,000
mlllt, IIIII IIIII nice, Ilk•
lng lt2,1100.00 30t.f711-7542.
t ttl Ford Tauruo 23,000 Mtlta,
Top Shapol $14,200. CaN 740·
'441.fl816AIItrliP.M.

Jlmt Drywall 1 Conatructfon.
New Construction &amp; Remodel/

Drywall, Siding, Roots, Addi· '
Ilona, Painting, •!c. (304.)67t·
4623 or (304)874-0155.

Livingston's Bailment Water
Proofing, all- basemenl repalra
done,· frM 11t1mate1, lifetime
guarantee. 12yrs on job experl·

'

840 Electrical and
Refrlganltlon
Att0111lon: ljoallng And Cool,
lng Shop 011oro G- AnG
E x - -· Lot Our Exptrlo
once TtcMtclan tllvo ' You A
Fttl Elllmllt Today And Boat
Tho Spring Ruth. Coli Mvoitclotl
Comfort, Sy111"'1 AI 740·tte-

0988.

_...,. .. ...,..._u.

A-1 O f - Wiring.
ctnt~ t~IIIOitn.

ADDENDUM' TO PAIIT 1,
rrEM G(2) SOUTHERN
OHIO COAL COMPANY·
MEIGS MINE itO. 31

7-..aM

The Ploodpl•ln V•rtance

BURKE'S

CARPET SERVICE·

pubUc.
EdwardW....,

Floodplain Mrnngsr

(3)1,

10 :m:

AUCTION

Aldtnour
E-larll, WVOOOM. 304.f7111718.
'

~=~=~~~:;,1 ;.~,.~:~ur::

:O'::•=·;:

CONSIGNOBS WANIED

:~;::::'
I will be accepting consignments on .
ttclametlon oparetlo" Will Thursday, March 9th and Friday, March lOth
•• conducled In Melge from 9:00 a.m. until 4:00 p.m. Or call me to
COUnty, lelem Townehlp,
k h
sectiOn• 1 end a. The rna e ot er arrangements.
··
.
propoeed underground
TERMS: Cash or,Check with Pos. I.D.

~t~;•::,::.:c.•,':::,.":

lhe Rutlltnd 7 1!2 ""nute.
U.S.G.S. quldlengle mep,
1.2 mllet eoulh of
Hlnaevllle, Ohio. The
epplloetlon propqeee to.
1111*111 the .,.. lor lull COli
extreotlon mining by
Iongweii and room and
plll1r · mining (longwlll
· development). Forty-eeven
illlree of the ere• to be

Billy Goble AUCTIONEER .
Phone: 740-992-7505 Lie. # · - 7137
L"
d d Bo d d . f
f
1cense an
II e m avor o
the State of Ohio.
Not Responsible for Accidents or
Lo
S I M h d
st_o_r__to-en-r-~e-r_c_a..n.....;ise:.:.....~_..--.J

"'-----o.·__

ST&lt; )HA&lt; ;r
·"1.

I{

992-1717
IOIERIIISSELL
COISftUCIIOI
•New Home•
• Garage•
• Complete
Remodeling

;

7:00AM-8PM

South

fonnll' Blua .......~R
~

S. 3rd Mlddleplllt, OH
Couch Jove Mil. Mile.
MM:h 10, 11
101m-tpm

a

f.qidp-naPUI8
Factory Autharbed
c--IHParle
.
DeaiBn.
.

111110 .. Ill. 7lloulll

.,...,._

Ceultll • QW G723

Penneylv~ll

• Q 52
• A J to 9 1 •
t A J
• 8 4

Annue, e.g.

33 Wet

'

3iWStep--t"
37Concl...-

1 Lge, CICIIItlltwc
2 Drlwn'orv·
3 Lump
.
4 Wldinll bird
5 Killed
8 Auleted

7•ToollebNith
Unit or 1ran111r1
currency
I Ninny

1D Fool part

IWEDNESDAY

ACKS.ROOFING ·
&amp; CONSTIUOION ':
• Painting • Plumbing
FriltEitlmatM

1·3 SUpp ll&lt;1lcl
118-

..

.......
s.,u,,.·
,..,
"

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..
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. Tburaday, Mal&lt;h 9, 2000 .
in dto,.. abeod, _ . liaJ.

HouM &amp; Trailer Sileo
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading

Self·Stor•a•
38795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

140·992-Sth
•• 1-1..0,fll,

1110111 for nwerlal pwth c:oithl
' ......... tlinul-ly thatpins. You'ro
haridllnt mono than CKie project II
, a limo,-' yooi can cult in:
•. PISCES (Feb. :ZO.Man:h 20)
' Then in llroiiJ cltanct ~perceplionl could be 1 trifle foully
today, .. be prepored 10 odjust 10
&lt;!e&gt;el~ in Older 10 net be .
• caulhtllllfootod. Know whtn 10
,• looiHor..,....... and you'D ftad

..,.u.,..._.

17401 tt2•JIII

Htgh &amp; Dry

·. ••

faod

"• '

20 Kickoff type • •
22 Put on aolid .... ,, ·
23 Slterper
·, .' , I
24 Slore fodder ·· " '
25 Cuddle up
··''
27 Negatl32 Cowboy . ' .~
Rogera
~ ..
34 L.lngenr
35 Oozed
~ '~
··'
~
31 Dlttort
•'~

43

Logrolling' ;• ,

cantHI .
45 OovL I..,
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holdlna ~'&lt;:
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CELEBRITY CIPHER .
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by Lule Campo•

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Celebrity Cipher cryptogram~ are created trom quotaflonl by famous people, pall and
present Each letter lnlho dphor IIOndo tor anolhol.

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Today's ci!Hl: K '1'/UIIIS W

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L U g I T ~ A young cutie announced to
1---,.:1::.. .:;..1~,r!--11...!-li her unreliable boyfriend, "Your

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•. word IS somethtng you can give

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From the have you ever noticed department: Few
things prevent us from being naturaias much as the
desire (O APPEAR so..

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MARCH·Bl ·:.:·

!~ii~=!!:~~i!~!i~[l!!~~:::=~~~~~~~~~~~~~;=~~~

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EICAYATIIIG CO.
,

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Joseph Jacka •'
740-992-2068
'I IIJM)O 1 mo. pd.

•,•

11 Prtntet'l

1

IIHigh-

Sentl·ne}

•
•

· Ulililieo

a

31--l eoo~~-

scRAM-LETs ANSWEtts
Limber· Graph • Radar· Napkin . APPEAR

'•

Nowaeidlaa
AD~=be Tractor

DOWN

21 CompulpL
30Astnl

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

1121- I ..;, .... ..:

.

viewing. Wrttttn comftiWIII

I 6 5 2

'

To get a current weather
report, check the
L

I

Seplie Sy~lerf!l ct

. 7122/TFN

The eppllclllon le ou ftll
11 the orfloo· of Melge.
County recorder, , Melge
County Co,urt Houee,
·Second Straat, Pomeroy,
Ohio 4570 lor public

(3) 1111, •• 21 4TC

+ 10

-

PREVIOUS SOL.UTION: 'Whatever tears one may shed, In the and one ··""'
· always blows one's nose.' - Heinrich Heine
.
.,.

!

Hours

u

-.1

• 8 5

Fumlture wood

5I Dlllurb

BY PHILLIP ALQER
What is fast food?
As you know, bridge is full of
"rules," such as "Lead up to honors." Yet these rules should be
treated only as guidelines because
there are always exceptions hiding
just around the .comer. Still, the
majority of them are rjght most of
the lime.
In today's deal, which maxim
.must .be ignored? You are in four
hearts. West starts with three
rounds of spades, East ruffing the
last, SliCk comes the diamond I 0.
- Over to you.
North expects to end in four
hearts. But with only three-card
support, he 'must go through a
two-step routine. He shows his
own suit first, then supports
·hearts.
Ruffing in 'the shott-trump
hand is ~orth an extra trick and is
almost always the right line of
play. But ruffing iri the long-trump
hand is usually wrong because it
doesn't generate an extra trick per
se and it of\en risks losing trump
control' , '
_ . , · ·
Well, o~e clear eKception
occurs when YO!J are establishil)~
dummy's long suit, turning a low
card from B loser into a wil)ner.'
Here, with a diamond loser-to
eliminate, you must establish ·.
dummy's club suit. ·And if you
like to show off; you 'can have
some esthetically pleasing play
too' After winning trick four with
the diamond ace, cash the heart
. ace, play a .club to dummy's king,
cash the cll\b ace, and ruff the club.
three in hand with the nine. Play
a trump to dummy and ruff the
club five in haQd. Finally, lead a
trump to the dummy and triumphantly cash the club two, discardipg the diamond jack from .
hand.
Fast food is what you are
allowed to eai during Lent, which
begins today.
·

'•
1

Bulltlo..,. .t Baelclt.,.

740 892·1871

end Ia being Npetmltlecllor
lull -laxtr IICtlon mining.

_,

• Coltlng • Guu.nt
• Siding • Dryviall

S(,O

I

- !

R•clne, Ohio
45771
740-949-2217
Size• 5' X 10'
to 10' x 30'

I. -

~~~

REFOND!

'

Road

'

10 X 10 S10

I0 X

'

" - Roofl• .........

. FREE .
EmMATES

•pproved lor mining by
room •nd pUler methode

.........

~OBaah•n

74Q-7 42·2706
74Q-446-ll41

Stop &amp; Compare

rnovld hu pnvlouely bean

1nd/or rlquaet lor 1n
lnlormel _.,.noe mer be
lien! to lht Dlvlelon of
Mlnel . end Re011m1tlon,
1lll . l'ountaln Square
Court, Building · H·3,
Columbue, Ohio 43:124·
1117, ......, 30 11118 ol 1111
' " ' diiB or pubiiOaiiOn or
. .

HILL'S
,
SELF STORAGE : ;

Clean &amp; Scotch lo1rd Will maat 11 · 10:00
Guard $40 - Any
1.m. M1rch 13, 2GOO In the '
Melg1
County Normal Size Room~
CommiMlonwa Ofllot. The
meeting le open to the

P.O. lox 4110, Atllenl, ·
Ohio 45701, 1JU aubmltlacl
an lllleMnt- apptlcallo!t DATE: March 10, 2000
TIME: 7:00PM
~~=~=gNu,!;! LOCATION: At the Old American Legion
D·0354·7, to the Ohio. .
. Fourth Ave, Middleport, OHIO

tenenc,. Painting, vinyl aiding,

..... (30t)895-3887,

Public Notice

31,

carpiontry, dooro, wlnclowt, bolhl.
hOmo fepllr ono mora. For
,.. """"'" can Chtl, 7to-9t2·
8323.

)1,

'

•,

sou~~LNg~E Call--====·=·:;P:;u:;b:llc:=Sa:l:;•:;•;:n;:d:;A;:uct::;l;:on:=::::::::=:::;. IIARI\\IFI .L
Company, Malge Mine No. r

1~1 louzu PICk-Up Convortablt .
:Jet Win- Englno, C.fllant· Appt'-nco Porto AnG Service: AM
'Nirne Brandl Over 25 Years Ex·
· 5 SIOr (740~25t-t547.
' · 12,500. · perlenc:e All· Work GuarantHd,
French Cll)l Ma~tag , 740·448·
ttt2 S.tO lloior W PS, P8; ole, 77f5.
'
.
Mull Soli $&amp;,500 OBO 740·4tfl.
3&amp;110.
'c&amp;c Gon11a1 ., Homo Main·

tlt3 Ford Prolltr GT, V-8, Ill op.
llonl, VOI'f - · $3000, CIH 741).'
lltll- Of 740 lltll 3115.
. .

"

MEIGS COUNTY
TAX PLAT OFFICE
. COURTHOUSE
POMEROY, OHIO 457811

._ .

~--~------~--~~~~~~~---~·~

790.-.. Campere &amp;

I 982 Wlldtrnoao Camper 24' AI

MS. !!&gt;EKINS?

WV Contractors Lie . #003506

1 UpiO•tan 1

Motor Home•

1.1\ CHIINCE, PE~?
01(. f"'AY&amp;E ... (((0\ollf.!l.

Fax 304-675-2457

•Driveways ~Tennis Courts
•Parking ·Lots • Playgrounds
•Roods • Streets

· t.•t .... Aiit ..
c.ll ALittle 0..

C, Microwave, Excellent Condl·
lion, 740-4te.9206 Allor 5 P.M.

I 5 THE~ 5011E HI'INK'(
A'.NKY GOIN(, ON SE •
TWEEN you AND ANY
OTHER TEKH~~ 111!.$

1711-1417 or
Cell Phone 67!1,-3311

21~··

Soft, unfast rule

ME OVER

TH' HEAD
WITH IT' u·

~&amp;s.jjie

(NO SUNDAY CAlLS)

~75-2203.

•

s

temper

57

Opeiling lead: • A

THEN SHE
WHACKED

RAISED

:!!!!!!!!..,__...J ..

Free Estlmatel ·
740-742-3411
Bryan Ree¥es ·

IIC.

barge 21' eo hp. Mercurv motor

4tHI5t9.

Kenoheval

All pUS

20 Yrs. Exp. • 1ns. Owner: Ronme Jones

·wiLLIS'
SEAMLESS
GUnERS

55Litcel0ml
fonnel gowne
5I Sollln In

Eul
Pus

Cabinets- Vinyl Siding·
Roofs • Decks • OaraiJes

IISSELl.IUILDEU

19911 Trac~r Pontoon boal,· party

RV Generator &amp; Onan Marqult
7000 Wllh Aceeaaorles, 740·

• 4

lml1h
51Nawton-John

Vulnerable:·Botb
Dealer: South

www.aunsalhome.com

4tHl136

1998 No maG Camper, 2211.
Sleeps 7·8. Only used-8 times.
$7,500 llrm. COlt: (304)675-5778.

2t ActNSe
lleclgrewa

~J976

'

•. ......

Pomoroy, Ohio .

1992 Yamaha Wave Runner,
BXA, 650 CC Trailer, lila JaekJI,
Caver, Wtl SuiL $1,t00.00 (740)·

760

'6 AK532
EUI

• Q 10

fi!l.....,

992·6215

45lY$11ollbMit

Nlvll-.

23Aclor

• 8 3
t K Q 7 4

~

:

11

(740) 367·0266 •1 ""'t'l'9 .
I

44 hmll:erutf

21 8tllr poet

Y KQ2
• 8 3

A K 9 B6

~
New Construction &amp;t
Reniodeling. Kitchen

V.C. YOUNG Ill
. 22

.'""'oV''

41 o,p. or NNW

17Aclor~

• J 10 7

JOlES'
• ToP

tool
40 Holltr

~

•' I

Pul::dl

.. W*h poclr8t

'

i/17JUI 1 mo pd.

1918 GMC 2 Ton Callie Truck ,
Edison Mayoa. (304)el'l&gt;lli58.

..,w.....w:-•..,.

740-387·'12111.

-·

Building

740-992-1709

mllea, 11,8,000. Call (304)875·
4288.

tHO Oldtmobllo t1 Aoyllo v,l, Local reterenc11 rurnlthed. El·
4 DoOfo, _,.,-Every. . 1t75. Coil 24 Hill (740)
lhlngl 'New Baltory, 12.700, 080 448-0870, 1.f00•287-0571,. Aog·

SOCIAL SECURITY DISABiliTY
Claim Donlod? Wo Spocloll•t In
Appe.lo AnG Ht.Hnga. FREE 1183 Grand Am 2 Doors, 12K
CONSULTI\TION . Benolll Team '13,915; 1991 Lumina Euro 2
Servlcea, lne. ·Toll-Free: 1~888~ Ooora 88K $3,995; 1995 &amp;·tO
8:J6.4052.
IDK t5,495; Olhtr 3·10 Truckt
And Clrl Sllrlln~ AI lt ,795,
Wanted· RCA. or Huges Direct
Cook l(olorl. 7to I«&lt; Ot03.
TV ayatem, will pay top dollar,
womo 740·949·33t51oavo maa· tttt Chryalor Now Yorkor,
72,000 Mllao, Full)' Loaded, CD
Player, t8' Aluminum Whoolo,
Wallrllhl Special: 314 200 PSI
$21.115 Por 100; t• 200 PSI 15,500, 740-2!5fl.l168,
137.00 Por tOO: All 8ra11 Com· 1H4 Ford Probo, 2.0, II Valvo
pross1on Fllllnga In Stock
Fuellnjocllon, A.T., A.O., $3200.
RON EVANt ENTEftPIIISEI (304)676-2887
Jactclon; onto, t-8fl0.537-9528
1994 Grand PriK. S.l!!.. SunRoof,
WANT A COMPUTER???? BUT LOidod. Good COnGIIIon. 11500.
NO CASH?? MMX TECHNOLO· (30t)458-1577.
tiY Wo Flnonco, ·o· Downl Paat
Ortdll Probllmt OKII Evon If
lll'nod Down Bofortll A-tablllh 1H4 Pontiac GranO Pro, 14,000
mll11, loodad; p.w,tdr. 304·175. lbu!Ciodln t~.
3705.

55o

Cellular .
Jeff.Warner Ins.

Caasette wllh topper; 19,000

Unconditional lifetime guarantee.

SAY GOODBYE To Pounds
NOW! Forever, I GuirantH You.
FREE 2 Wooko 'Supply (45 Ta,
biola With SclontNic Procl) Sond
$4.95 8 IH: OAF Inc. 1109A Broad
Strttl, Oopt I 02t, Sullo 1748,
· -.NJ07102

Remodeling,
Roofirig New
Additions, Pole
Buildings, Etc. ·
Free Estimates

1998 Dodge Rom 1 sao, tx4, 5
spooG, monual, AIC, AM/FM

19955-tO
4 cyl. 5 SP.P.S,P.B,Nice Truck
lt500. 30(.875-3824.

~LltiL

~toPi&amp;:AO ' ..

42-15.
,.::::-_., ............
•

1 Exile
7 Furtoue
12 Trlnlr8t

1• fcwnwdUU

~--~U~C~~~~~~~~~~~~-MM~ L---~~~~'--------~--~--------_Jl_~~--~~~~~ J[~~~~~~~

PSI

7to-245-51181 '

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701

.,

31 u- • culling

ACROSS

13eoo-d

.,.:.~

(740) 742•8888
1-888-521 -()916

PI'!IIII'MI!ve top line.

1986 Ford F·150 pickup, StoO,
... 7to-1182·3194.

~.

Truck seats, car seats, headliners,
truck tarps. convertible &amp; vtnyl tops.
Four wheeler seats, motorcycle seats,
boat covers, carpets, etc.
Mon - Frl 8:30 ~ 5:00
Over 40 yrs experience

Plying SIO.OO .
~~ 11
$100.00Stlrburat

CAftl

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle
Sales Represenlative
Larry Schey

Rutland, Ohio

lbln St.,
Pome•oy, OH

EXT. 8338.

1988 Nllllln 300 ZX, V·8, 5
Tappan HI Elllcloncy 90% Gao Spaocl, Auno &amp; Drlvoo, No TIIIt,
SERVICES
Furnaces, 011 Furnaces, t2 SHr Makt Olior, o\IIC 11164 Chevy C.
Heal Pump &amp; Air Conditioning 20 Truck 8 CyUndor, 4 Spud, .
,Syatema Free 8 'Mar Pans &amp; La· Auno Good, 0111 No Gooo. Boat 81~
Home
bor Warranty Bonnotto Heating &amp; Ollor, 7to-4t1·1013.
Improvements
Cooling,
I ·800·872·5967
t919 Dolll 88 A.l Oldlft!Oblt,
www.orvb.cornlblnnett
IIABEMENT
excel-.t oondltlon, mual ... to
WATERPROOfiNG
_.,..., 741).882-7212.
Ron'o Gun Shop, 740-742,..12.
SAVE THOUIANDB Top 01 Tho
Uno SoiiG Wood Kllchon Cabl·
nets, Excellent Condition, In·
eludll Desk, Bullt·ln Microwave
&amp; Oven, Stove Top &amp; Sink,
$1,800, Ltavo Mo11ago, 740·.
44Hl0t3.

Club Bingo On
Thurldayl
AT 1:30 P.M.

HOIIDA't I tOO, 1500 I UP. PO·
liCE IMPOUND. Honda't Toyc·
ll't, Chavya, Jnpa, AnG Sperl
U111111N. Coli 801J.772-7470;

PHILLIP
ALDER .

....., ..

245-5877.

Credil.com

Nice Used Furniture and Ap·

AAUIJU.tnv~oo~p~--~--------------~~------------~::~====~~~=====-==============~~~~~~~~~·
BRIDGE
..
NEA CrOIIWOrd Puzzle

Livestock

630

Monllor. MAC OS 7.5 Syatom nn- Straw: Bright Wire Tie Straw IUr
ternot Roady Y2K .OK/C- Sty· 'Round Delivery &amp; Volume Oil·
IOWntor 2400 Prl-.. lntomll Mo- ·Count Available. Heritage Farm.
demJMicrophone/Same· Kind (30t)el'!i-5724.
USO&lt;I AI Tho Schoclo. 1500, 7tot48·2151 Loavo Moaaago.
650 Seed Fertilizer
Huge lnYentory. ·Diaoount Prices.
On Vinyl Sklrllng, Doora, Windows, Anchors, Waler Heaters,
Plumbing &amp; ElectriCal Plrta, Fur·
nac11 &amp; He•t Pumps, Bennetts

Pomeroy--

rllfU • r500 Stt/H, Chivy PICk·

Low Monthly .Payments. Y21&lt;
Compllant. Almost Everyone Ap-

Gel An 18' Mini .QIIh?
Wam320CI1annols7
OnoAIIonlabttFoo.
No Monlhly Chalgosl
1·204·992-2841.

s,.....

The D811y Sentinel• Page 8 7, ,

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

eo.-

1988 Ford Ranger, good eondl·
lion, $1500, 740-llf2.322t.

COMPUTERS · Low Or $0 Down.

FLORIDA, MARCO ISlAND. En·

tttl l'onlitc llona·Am S50 V·l
l S·I
Engine, - I I C
Tranamf11hln, Fac:lary Chrome
Whttll, T· Topt, FUlly lOIGtG,
500 wt Mon-. Sttrao
With 1D Spta~ro And 12 Oltc
CD Cllengtr In 'lhl'* Cntt In
Doth, Ottp Navy Mtlllllc Wllh
Dark Grey lnlhor lnlorlor, Any
Ruaontblt Ottlr COI'IIIdertd,
740 HI 1511 Or 7-7375.

1988 Ford Ranger 2.0, .t eyL
nlco&amp; atralght 12.300. 304·875·
3824.

12 Hundred lbo. ot Round Bolla
Hay; tor Sate: $20,00 Each.
(7to)-37Mt94
.

proyod. 1-IJ00.617·3t76 Ext 330.

Wednn!Mr, U.rch 8, 2000

710 Aulol few ....

llooflhlotM; ..22' ~ ·120
Each; .. 23'5' 120 Each;
1·21'4' Truant S30 Each ; 2·
21'4' Gallll Trutta ·U5 EaCII;
tt · il.t'S' Truant 150 Each ; t ·
40'2• Poll Bam Tru1111 ·$10
Each; MllctUaneoua lumbtr.
Good For Fotm Projoctl. Solei Ely

Tho
Cloly - 740-lltll.f4111.

•

up"'

=

it ne Allni--Onlph Mak:hm r'no..ra whlob alpt n
~·-~-(icalll)' pooftcl for )'OIL Mail
12.75 to Mall:iunlller, cJo IIIia
neWJplpOI', P.O. Box 1751, Mur·
1
1 tay IIlii ~ New YOit, NY
I 10156.
' .
.
! AIUIIS (Man;h li·April 19)
•,.,hlo:ly .U rtpl. but your

i

, t..

;I .....,.,
=:·.~~~:::::
.,... k too r•. oopocltlly

! ""'",_..,. 10 . . alotfrvm
j,
'•-\

alluo.

TAURUS (April :ZO.MJy 20)
'

'

'

Be miodful i.f your,behavior in aD
your dealinp with ol~ 'today.
You mi&amp;bt not be holdina 11
lUI)' 11!00 u ywlllink IIIII, if you
. try 10 trump IIIOiher, it .coold

mike you look tiod.
OI!MIN! (Ma~ 21·J - 20)

'liminJ it ·-ly imporlanl
tOday lr yoti hoPo to· sue&lt;eed. II

e&lt;&gt;old ....,.,, dilllle your poul·
· bilitiel if ye11 Jip'your haad altho
·,wrooa ti .... :Walc:h ror .... riahl

~

oponins.

CANCER . (IIBIO 21-July 22)
TIM is a strorlll &lt;""'- odton

miJht not come ifhroqh ror )'011 I
u you thoulh~ 10 10 play

lttafa.

·do net ..... YOII'"""' 100 .......
ly on ~- or Wllllfill tbllll:·

....

' ' LJl() (July

.

1J..Aua.

22) . .

.very , careful with whom yoo
bec:omeillvolvedtodoy. Theript
choice CCROid be very
for '
yoa. but tho ""R one
""' ,,
die you with ilothina but - .
....i..... .
.,.
VIRGO (Aul. 23!$ep&lt;. 22)·1i
isn't lib yoo 10 be~ bot
.. arpnizod. i....lllliciu. ,.._

,:=I

but...,.

.......... - " " ' ·
Ins .....,yell
what you ;..,.10 do

--.Dyclalnt 11. Qat bact, Ia
dwaiiiCier.

tl

LIBRA (Sept. 23·01:1. 23)
Oenenpy, it ~erv.. yw well to ·
believe thai moll drinp in life cut
be treated ... pmo if you look
" them in lhat.liaht The ~rn~~bte
it, today you could be too cav• ·
lier aboullhinJ•·
, 'sCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22)
· 'NeJIIiye lhinkina .clluld ..,,,.
evenll dtat unfold today, which
abould•l"" you ......,able ...,.
for op11miam. llon'l allow the
blues to blt&amp;r your vilion.
SAOmAJUOS (Nov. 23·Dec.
21•) Allhou&amp;b you c:lliUiually 150
Oattery to , runeuver your Wly

th""'J!t t~hy slrulllons, today
yoU may hive to, w~k ~ 1 very fine
,.,.. Don't !&gt;otrilical. but ....., be
manipulative, eliller.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·llil:
19) K&lt;op ....... ""' of the pidure
today ifY&lt;IU p1 Ln\'01,.... in....,
type of ~liveocdvlly lhO!'s
meant to be ftin. Thinp cculd pi ,
out of h{ncl when money it
irivol..... ,' •.
. '
AQUARIUS (Jon. :ZO.Feb. l9)
Unlest you mollitor evaythlas
from llllt·ID fil!lth,lhinp . . not
likely 10 . . 10 ~ Iaiit'
r.odoo tay. ll rniJbl be bell not
10 ..... IIII)'IWIIa lri the . . _ of

dto m.porienced.

I)

-'"·~

..•""
:J

'

'

.•••. ''t!.
j

::

I' ' ,!

�Wednnday, March e. 2000

pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio
1110
Buy or 1111. Rlvtrlnt Antlqull .
1124 &amp;II -on SA 124 E. Po"'""'~'• 7 -·2521 or 740-tnl qt.- - . -·

ISIAD CREDIT? Got Caan
l oona To 15,000. Dtbl Conaoll·
dafon To 1200.000. Crd Canlt,

Mqrtgaa-e. Rtfinanclng And
Au&amp;o loant Available. Merldiln

C - Corp. 1·801J.t7HI 19 Ext
ttiiO.
(31 All SIMI Bu ilding&amp;. 25x30
w,a $7,800 Sell $3,900; 30xtB
Waa $11,700 Soli $5.850; 50d0
Wn $18,500 S.ll $7,900. TOfO 1·
1109'382-78(11.
W~llo molal Twin Bod 150.00 ,
matching Dre11er wllh Bookcase.
8 Pteco Socttonal Couch 1:150.00
- Girls Name Brand Clothes (00:211
Boys Name Stand Clothn (0·
tmo.) (7to~l · l3t9

Building
11!11111111

510

" ' Coli

, . few Sale

AKC Labrador Ao-'--a Yollow
I Black 1:125 · 1250, 7t0·25e-

8733.

AKC St, Bomltd I"IPI• flrlt lhcll
1nd wormed, $300 tiCh, 740:·
811H178.
AKC St Borno1d Pupa, 8 WHkl
Old, Vel Chlcked, 111 Shots, a

. 1300, 3()4.2~ .

Golden

Retriever

Puppln

$1\10.00 E-7-.nez.

37 Ptol)le Ntl!dtd To LOll Up
To 30 Pounda In The NaJCt 30
Dayt, Free Samples, 740·441 ·

J1c:k Ru11ell tarrier pupa, flrat
lh011' 1nd wormed, lllla docttd.
$150, 740-89&amp;-7055,

11182.

Miniature Collie Pupp111, 175.

W~NT

A COMPUTER?? BUT
NO CASH?? MMX Technology
Will Flnanco Wllh '0' Down. Paat
Cradll Probloms, Nc P - .. CoH
. Toii'FrH Hn·283-1082.

7to-4t1 .QI85,

570

.A-re-You A Metal Building Erector
/Con1ractor? Wt Ha\le Factory 1
Direct Buildlngo With NO Doaltr·
aNp Foo Or Volume Cornmlnnt.
ALL SIZES /AlL LOADS. EL·
DORADO BUILDING SYSTEMS '
t·II00-279-4300,
Complete DISH Network aatellltl
system, brand new, $99, 740'·

992·1182 or 304-773·5305 anor
6pm,

COMPUTER BLOWOUTII HP,
COMPAQ Deaktopa, Laptops,
Merchant · Accounts. Webaltes
Start Your Home Buslnitss Todayll Almost Everyone Ap·
proved!! No Money Oownll Low
Monthly Paymenlsll 1·988·479·
23t5 (Toll Free1

Mualcal
lnatrumenta

FARr,l SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

610 Fann Equlpnient
10' John Deere transport d!tk,

liM: John DHro 1t8 front end
loader (1111 301 0·4230), t3250:
brush hog. 8'. 1550: ....,.

er/toner, (like new), $2500; call

7to-tt2·3885 or 7!10-1182·5168,

2 UnMimH BIIIIBnUIIIJifll
Factory Cancellallonal Brand
Now. Still Eralodl Urgent Mull
Soli. Ouonnt Atch Styto, Ono Ia
40xll0, SeiHng For Balance Onlyl

joy The Tropical Paradise Ot
Beaches And Relaxation. Beach 1.aoo.&amp;25-!5069 Ellioll.
Front Condot 'Or HomM. For. Baler. Vermeer 805C With Extra
Rent ISale. century 21 1st. SOUth- Sol 01 Tonalon Sprtngo: Excolltnt
ern Trust. 1·800·255-9487 CoMHion, 13.000. Coli 740·182·
www:c21 marco.com
88t2.
'

Grubb's Plano· luning &amp; repairs.

I

'

I

For Sale : Tobecco Slicks. 7 40.
245-512t .
Indianapolis Moline lraclor, 52
hp., IMI &amp; 3 pl. hllch: biUih
hog, grader blade; boom pole;
man1,1re spreader; $5000 for all,

Problems? N.-cl nmod? Calllht
plano Dr. 740-44fl.4525

741).742·2050.

Hot Sprlnga hot tub, 4 person,
good condition, some chemicals
Included, call 740·992·5053 after
5pm.

Massey Ferguson 281 207 Hrt.

,I
,

JANITROL HEATING AND
COOLING EQUIPMENT

INSTALLED

"It Yqu Don't Call Ut W• Bolh
Lose. • Free Estimates! 7-40-448·

6308, 1-800-29HXl98.

JET

AERATION MOTORS·
Ropolnld, Nlw &amp; Aobul~ In Stock.
Cal Ron Eva,., 1-800-537-115211.
Macintosh Performa 5200 CD
Computer With Built In Color

Duel Remote, $13,000, 7to·388·
9031.

2 Ouartor Horsot B-. Sound &amp;
~lie Trail Ridden Or t·H -Projocl, '

740-388 8!504.

APHA Slack /Whllt Palnl Mart
Fold At Side AQHA Sorrel Moro
Ready To Fold, 7~130.
Bulct1erHOQo, 7to-2-10.

Rfotlltrod Angui Bulla For Sail,
7to-245-5084.

640 · Hay &amp; Grain

a.

Tobacco Plinta

Mobile Homo Supply, 740·4..,
tt1ew..... oM&gt;....-.non
NEED

A CO'MPUTEA? We

Flnince Bad Cf'8dlt • Bankruptcy
OK I No Turndowns • FREE IN•
T~ANET ~88·827·71102

Now liking' ontero for IIIIa Spring.
Fnt 0n1aro w111 Guaranleo !loot&amp;
Earlleat
Planta. Dewhurst
l'llrms,(304)185-37-378t.
, Tf1ANSPORTA110N

710 AutOI few Slle

-w.pc-

pllancn (740)·448-4039 (740)·
448-1004 Anytime.
PSYCHIC READINGS By Soilhlal
C01111&gt;11montary Andlngl Amazing
Prldlctlonal SOIYII All Problems!

Cll11 tst t84 tt59.
- l i n g Selt: Excotlonl Shope
Walnut Kitchen Ceblnets, Utld .

Appllancoo, Sink, Etc. 7to·448·
7565 Mer 4:30 P.M.

RESIDENTIAL HOME Di¥NEIII

PftOII IZt/110. lm·
~ /Aopol. Foo. 10 Down 12•
Moo. 111.8% For Lltllnga 1.801).
3111-3323 X2158.
'

720 Truckl for Sale
1 0 ' - - 30t.f7!&gt;2203.

1987 Toyota Truck 4 Wht~l
Orlv., New Tlru, Excellent

CONSTRUaiON

CARS 1100, 1500 &amp; UP. POLICE
IMPOUND. Honda's Toycta't,
Chavyl, JtiJII, And Spcn Utili·
tlta. Call Nowl 800·772·7t70;
EXT. 7132.
18to·80 tlonciu From l2t1Mo..
lmpol.lldll 0 Down, 2t •
19.11% Lltllngt, IIC)0.3tt-3323 Ext.

390t.
ttl4 Chilly Comaro, 305, t brl.,
..... point, lltic:lng
n... good oondltlon, 12200. 7to9112·1!807 ~~filii.

Supplln
Block, brick, oowor pipit, winG·
OWl, llntolt. I!C. Claude Wlntort,
Afo GttnGt, OH Call 740·245·
5121. .

992-5479

Your Concrete

YOU.I I'S
CARPENRI SERVICE

Connection

Up. tOIK Milos. Auto • Air. Now
BF Goodrich Tlrll &amp; Alum. Cen·

lndeJM!Q.dent puler

ter Line Rima. Red w/Biack

Qold

Taunty Cover. $8 ,900. (304)875·
2029. $8,900.

kn! fltec!

Exrended Cab, 3 door, loaded,

25,000 milia. very lharp, full far·
lngo, $12,000, 740·9•9·2045 or
740-949-2203.

730

hl!dfge, lpp.

•EIIctrlcllll'luinlllng

•Roofing • Gutllfl
•VInyl Siding ll'llntlng
•Pilla &amp; Ponlli Dtdca
,.,.,. &amp;If""*'

QuaUly eoncrete fiatwork
.and all metal huildinp

1987 Chevy S· tO Slazor, txt,
2.8l, A.T.. A.C.. High Mlloo,
12.000. (304~76-2887.
1995 Ford 150 XLT 4x4 6 Cylln·

der, 5 Speed, Loaded, 88,000

Mlloa. $11,000 OBO 740·441·

t800.

740

Free Eatimatet
Dennta Bryant, Owner
. 39141 ST. Rt. 684
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769

••• ,,.. 817-555-7122

Vane &amp; 4-WDa

Moton:ycl•

t918 Hondo 70 4 Whoolor Good

~.7~189.

1993 Suzuki 125 RM 2 SlrOkl,'
It ,200 080, 740·245·5011 Or

.352-4605 u... Mletl!lgt.

. . .

740-742-8015
25 year• experience

1997 black Chivy 6'10 Stopoldt

•Room lddltlana • AltnOdtllng

' •New Gngtt

Phone (740) :'1\13-bO/

~

:

1

•..........
,.........,.,.,.
R&amp;JOMIIIt

All replacement
parts

. Free Delivery
740-742-9501
'Toll Free

1997 HOnda Foreman 400, "

wheol drive, 131 mlloo, $4500,
7to-IIB2·5065.
'
1999 Kawatakl Volcan 750 cc
3000 mlloa, co~tact 304·773·
561-8. If no answer leave mas- .

--

750 Boats &amp; Motore

for Sale

·12 Ft. Aluminum V Ruts Tralter,

Trou Motor. $550.00 (7t0)·446·
2350

)'1'1·

Loe.aJ

1·800·950·3359

•

~ ~~(\t\\r\9

SHE

~

Naw Homes • Vinyl
Siding • N- Garages
• Replacament Windows

• Room AddHione
• Roofing ..

COMMERCIAl !lid RESIDEIIIIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

740·992·7599

CANE·•

..

ft/0, JUT ttO~

.· /lfiATS'·
•

CRIDIY PROBLIMI??? ·;

.. AJOuT A
·~
cf,APt 1'8''
~tiiCICtN wtto

ANI&gt; ·

I

: PlfOPIICt

· ctt~ATtP

ON Tttf

No CredH • Slow Credit • l!lenkruptcy
Repo • Divorded

~)CAM7

!!

=t'~E&lt;; ~-8

No l!mberrlllrnent. ..
You~re TrHted with Raapectl
Call N- few tlll(lnt ApJ)~rellt"*

1-800·311-3391
Free Estinudes

c....-.s.....
Scrubbed&amp;

...

Ca•trutera Wale•••

~

.

.

'

t liKE '11\t ~OLO \Nil

...

OOE!&gt; &amp;.TIEl:. .

Albany, Ohio

.B ANKBUPT£Y ·

. cleaned
Ctun &amp; Scotch
Guard ·~ - A"y
Normal .Size RoOm.

740-742-2706
740-446-1141

• Drlnwey Steae
• Lae4ceepe Meterlel

Auto Parte &amp;

• ,., Sill &amp;. . . . .

AcceaeorleB

••LI•••••t
Servlel
1tt H.. n.

Budget Priced Transmissions_All
Types, Access To OVer 10,000
Tranamiaslona, eve Joints, 740·

19911 ST Blaar LS, IDA, 75,000
mlllt, IIIII IIIII nice, Ilk•
lng lt2,1100.00 30t.f711-7542.
t ttl Ford Tauruo 23,000 Mtlta,
Top Shapol $14,200. CaN 740·
'441.fl816AIItrliP.M.

Jlmt Drywall 1 Conatructfon.
New Construction &amp; Remodel/

Drywall, Siding, Roots, Addi· '
Ilona, Painting, •!c. (304.)67t·
4623 or (304)874-0155.

Livingston's Bailment Water
Proofing, all- basemenl repalra
done,· frM 11t1mate1, lifetime
guarantee. 12yrs on job experl·

'

840 Electrical and
Refrlganltlon
Att0111lon: ljoallng And Cool,
lng Shop 011oro G- AnG
E x - -· Lot Our Exptrlo
once TtcMtclan tllvo ' You A
Fttl Elllmllt Today And Boat
Tho Spring Ruth. Coli Mvoitclotl
Comfort, Sy111"'1 AI 740·tte-

0988.

_...,. .. ...,..._u.

A-1 O f - Wiring.
ctnt~ t~IIIOitn.

ADDENDUM' TO PAIIT 1,
rrEM G(2) SOUTHERN
OHIO COAL COMPANY·
MEIGS MINE itO. 31

7-..aM

The Ploodpl•ln V•rtance

BURKE'S

CARPET SERVICE·

pubUc.
EdwardW....,

Floodplain Mrnngsr

(3)1,

10 :m:

AUCTION

Aldtnour
E-larll, WVOOOM. 304.f7111718.
'

~=~=~~~:;,1 ;.~,.~:~ur::

:O'::•=·;:

CONSIGNOBS WANIED

:~;::::'
I will be accepting consignments on .
ttclametlon oparetlo" Will Thursday, March 9th and Friday, March lOth
•• conducled In Melge from 9:00 a.m. until 4:00 p.m. Or call me to
COUnty, lelem Townehlp,
k h
sectiOn• 1 end a. The rna e ot er arrangements.
··
.
propoeed underground
TERMS: Cash or,Check with Pos. I.D.

~t~;•::,::.:c.•,':::,.":

lhe Rutlltnd 7 1!2 ""nute.
U.S.G.S. quldlengle mep,
1.2 mllet eoulh of
Hlnaevllle, Ohio. The
epplloetlon propqeee to.
1111*111 the .,.. lor lull COli
extreotlon mining by
Iongweii and room and
plll1r · mining (longwlll
· development). Forty-eeven
illlree of the ere• to be

Billy Goble AUCTIONEER .
Phone: 740-992-7505 Lie. # · - 7137
L"
d d Bo d d . f
f
1cense an
II e m avor o
the State of Ohio.
Not Responsible for Accidents or
Lo
S I M h d
st_o_r__to-en-r-~e-r_c_a..n.....;ise:.:.....~_..--.J

"'-----o.·__

ST&lt; )HA&lt; ;r
·"1.

I{

992-1717
IOIERIIISSELL
COISftUCIIOI
•New Home•
• Garage•
• Complete
Remodeling

;

7:00AM-8PM

South

fonnll' Blua .......~R
~

S. 3rd Mlddleplllt, OH
Couch Jove Mil. Mile.
MM:h 10, 11
101m-tpm

a

f.qidp-naPUI8
Factory Autharbed
c--IHParle
.
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.

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'

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37Concl...-

1 Lge, CICIIItlltwc
2 Drlwn'orv·
3 Lump
.
4 Wldinll bird
5 Killed
8 Auleted

7•ToollebNith
Unit or 1ran111r1
currency
I Ninny

1D Fool part

IWEDNESDAY

ACKS.ROOFING ·
&amp; CONSTIUOION ':
• Painting • Plumbing
FriltEitlmatM

1·3 SUpp ll&lt;1lcl
118-

..

.......
s.,u,,.·
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"

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in dto,.. abeod, _ . liaJ.

HouM &amp; Trailer Sileo
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading

Self·Stor•a•
38795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

140·992-Sth
•• 1-1..0,fll,

1110111 for nwerlal pwth c:oithl
' ......... tlinul-ly thatpins. You'ro
haridllnt mono than CKie project II
, a limo,-' yooi can cult in:
•. PISCES (Feb. :ZO.Man:h 20)
' Then in llroiiJ cltanct ~perceplionl could be 1 trifle foully
today, .. be prepored 10 odjust 10
&lt;!e&gt;el~ in Older 10 net be .
• caulhtllllfootod. Know whtn 10
,• looiHor..,....... and you'D ftad

..,.u.,..._.

17401 tt2•JIII

Htgh &amp; Dry

·. ••

faod

"• '

20 Kickoff type • •
22 Put on aolid .... ,, ·
23 Slterper
·, .' , I
24 Slore fodder ·· " '
25 Cuddle up
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27 Negatl32 Cowboy . ' .~
Rogera
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34 L.lngenr
35 Oozed
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present Each letter lnlho dphor IIOndo tor anolhol.

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From the have you ever noticed department: Few
things prevent us from being naturaias much as the
desire (O APPEAR so..

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!~ii~=!!:~~i!~!i~[l!!~~:::=~~~~~~~~~~~~~;=~~~

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EICAYATIIIG CO.
,

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Joseph Jacka •'
740-992-2068
'I IIJM)O 1 mo. pd.

•,•

11 Prtntet'l

1

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Sentl·ne}

•
•

· Ulililieo

a

31--l eoo~~-

scRAM-LETs ANSWEtts
Limber· Graph • Radar· Napkin . APPEAR

'•

Nowaeidlaa
AD~=be Tractor

DOWN

21 CompulpL
30Astnl

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

1121- I ..;, .... ..:

.

viewing. Wrttttn comftiWIII

I 6 5 2

'

To get a current weather
report, check the
L

I

Seplie Sy~lerf!l ct

. 7122/TFN

The eppllclllon le ou ftll
11 the orfloo· of Melge.
County recorder, , Melge
County Co,urt Houee,
·Second Straat, Pomeroy,
Ohio 4570 lor public

(3) 1111, •• 21 4TC

+ 10

-

PREVIOUS SOL.UTION: 'Whatever tears one may shed, In the and one ··""'
· always blows one's nose.' - Heinrich Heine
.
.,.

!

Hours

u

-.1

• 8 5

Fumlture wood

5I Dlllurb

BY PHILLIP ALQER
What is fast food?
As you know, bridge is full of
"rules," such as "Lead up to honors." Yet these rules should be
treated only as guidelines because
there are always exceptions hiding
just around the .comer. Still, the
majority of them are rjght most of
the lime.
In today's deal, which maxim
.must .be ignored? You are in four
hearts. West starts with three
rounds of spades, East ruffing the
last, SliCk comes the diamond I 0.
- Over to you.
North expects to end in four
hearts. But with only three-card
support, he 'must go through a
two-step routine. He shows his
own suit first, then supports
·hearts.
Ruffing in 'the shott-trump
hand is ~orth an extra trick and is
almost always the right line of
play. But ruffing iri the long-trump
hand is usually wrong because it
doesn't generate an extra trick per
se and it of\en risks losing trump
control' , '
_ . , · ·
Well, o~e clear eKception
occurs when YO!J are establishil)~
dummy's long suit, turning a low
card from B loser into a wil)ner.'
Here, with a diamond loser-to
eliminate, you must establish ·.
dummy's club suit. ·And if you
like to show off; you 'can have
some esthetically pleasing play
too' After winning trick four with
the diamond ace, cash the heart
. ace, play a .club to dummy's king,
cash the cll\b ace, and ruff the club.
three in hand with the nine. Play
a trump to dummy and ruff the
club five in haQd. Finally, lead a
trump to the dummy and triumphantly cash the club two, discardipg the diamond jack from .
hand.
Fast food is what you are
allowed to eai during Lent, which
begins today.
·

'•
1

Bulltlo..,. .t Baelclt.,.

740 892·1871

end Ia being Npetmltlecllor
lull -laxtr IICtlon mining.

_,

• Coltlng • Guu.nt
• Siding • Dryviall

S(,O

I

- !

R•clne, Ohio
45771
740-949-2217
Size• 5' X 10'
to 10' x 30'

I. -

~~~

REFOND!

'

Road

'

10 X 10 S10

I0 X

'

" - Roofl• .........

. FREE .
EmMATES

•pproved lor mining by
room •nd pUler methode

.........

~OBaah•n

74Q-7 42·2706
74Q-446-ll41

Stop &amp; Compare

rnovld hu pnvlouely bean

1nd/or rlquaet lor 1n
lnlormel _.,.noe mer be
lien! to lht Dlvlelon of
Mlnel . end Re011m1tlon,
1lll . l'ountaln Square
Court, Building · H·3,
Columbue, Ohio 43:124·
1117, ......, 30 11118 ol 1111
' " ' diiB or pubiiOaiiOn or
. .

HILL'S
,
SELF STORAGE : ;

Clean &amp; Scotch lo1rd Will maat 11 · 10:00
Guard $40 - Any
1.m. M1rch 13, 2GOO In the '
Melg1
County Normal Size Room~
CommiMlonwa Ofllot. The
meeting le open to the

P.O. lox 4110, Atllenl, ·
Ohio 45701, 1JU aubmltlacl
an lllleMnt- apptlcallo!t DATE: March 10, 2000
TIME: 7:00PM
~~=~=gNu,!;! LOCATION: At the Old American Legion
D·0354·7, to the Ohio. .
. Fourth Ave, Middleport, OHIO

tenenc,. Painting, vinyl aiding,

..... (30t)895-3887,

Public Notice

31,

carpiontry, dooro, wlnclowt, bolhl.
hOmo fepllr ono mora. For
,.. """"'" can Chtl, 7to-9t2·
8323.

)1,

'

•,

sou~~LNg~E Call--====·=·:;P:;u:;b:llc:=Sa:l:;•:;•;:n;:d:;A;:uct::;l;:on:=::::::::=:::;. IIARI\\IFI .L
Company, Malge Mine No. r

1~1 louzu PICk-Up Convortablt .
:Jet Win- Englno, C.fllant· Appt'-nco Porto AnG Service: AM
'Nirne Brandl Over 25 Years Ex·
· 5 SIOr (740~25t-t547.
' · 12,500. · perlenc:e All· Work GuarantHd,
French Cll)l Ma~tag , 740·448·
ttt2 S.tO lloior W PS, P8; ole, 77f5.
'
.
Mull Soli $&amp;,500 OBO 740·4tfl.
3&amp;110.
'c&amp;c Gon11a1 ., Homo Main·

tlt3 Ford Prolltr GT, V-8, Ill op.
llonl, VOI'f - · $3000, CIH 741).'
lltll- Of 740 lltll 3115.
. .

"

MEIGS COUNTY
TAX PLAT OFFICE
. COURTHOUSE
POMEROY, OHIO 457811

._ .

~--~------~--~~~~~~~---~·~

790.-.. Campere &amp;

I 982 Wlldtrnoao Camper 24' AI

MS. !!&gt;EKINS?

WV Contractors Lie . #003506

1 UpiO•tan 1

Motor Home•

1.1\ CHIINCE, PE~?
01(. f"'AY&amp;E ... (((0\ollf.!l.

Fax 304-675-2457

•Driveways ~Tennis Courts
•Parking ·Lots • Playgrounds
•Roods • Streets

· t.•t .... Aiit ..
c.ll ALittle 0..

C, Microwave, Excellent Condl·
lion, 740-4te.9206 Allor 5 P.M.

I 5 THE~ 5011E HI'INK'(
A'.NKY GOIN(, ON SE •
TWEEN you AND ANY
OTHER TEKH~~ 111!.$

1711-1417 or
Cell Phone 67!1,-3311

21~··

Soft, unfast rule

ME OVER

TH' HEAD
WITH IT' u·

~&amp;s.jjie

(NO SUNDAY CAlLS)

~75-2203.

•

s

temper

57

Opeiling lead: • A

THEN SHE
WHACKED

RAISED

:!!!!!!!!..,__...J ..

Free Estlmatel ·
740-742-3411
Bryan Ree¥es ·

IIC.

barge 21' eo hp. Mercurv motor

4tHI5t9.

Kenoheval

All pUS

20 Yrs. Exp. • 1ns. Owner: Ronme Jones

·wiLLIS'
SEAMLESS
GUnERS

55Litcel0ml
fonnel gowne
5I Sollln In

Eul
Pus

Cabinets- Vinyl Siding·
Roofs • Decks • OaraiJes

IISSELl.IUILDEU

19911 Trac~r Pontoon boal,· party

RV Generator &amp; Onan Marqult
7000 Wllh Aceeaaorles, 740·

• 4

lml1h
51Nawton-John

Vulnerable:·Botb
Dealer: South

www.aunsalhome.com

4tHl136

1998 No maG Camper, 2211.
Sleeps 7·8. Only used-8 times.
$7,500 llrm. COlt: (304)675-5778.

2t ActNSe
lleclgrewa

~J976

'

•. ......

Pomoroy, Ohio .

1992 Yamaha Wave Runner,
BXA, 650 CC Trailer, lila JaekJI,
Caver, Wtl SuiL $1,t00.00 (740)·

760

'6 AK532
EUI

• Q 10

fi!l.....,

992·6215

45lY$11ollbMit

Nlvll-.

23Aclor

• 8 3
t K Q 7 4

~

:

11

(740) 367·0266 •1 ""'t'l'9 .
I

44 hmll:erutf

21 8tllr poet

Y KQ2
• 8 3

A K 9 B6

~
New Construction &amp;t
Reniodeling. Kitchen

V.C. YOUNG Ill
. 22

.'""'oV''

41 o,p. or NNW

17Aclor~

• J 10 7

JOlES'
• ToP

tool
40 Holltr

~

•' I

Pul::dl

.. W*h poclr8t

'

i/17JUI 1 mo pd.

1918 GMC 2 Ton Callie Truck ,
Edison Mayoa. (304)el'l&gt;lli58.

..,w.....w:-•..,.

740-387·'12111.

-·

Building

740-992-1709

mllea, 11,8,000. Call (304)875·
4288.

tHO Oldtmobllo t1 Aoyllo v,l, Local reterenc11 rurnlthed. El·
4 DoOfo, _,.,-Every. . 1t75. Coil 24 Hill (740)
lhlngl 'New Baltory, 12.700, 080 448-0870, 1.f00•287-0571,. Aog·

SOCIAL SECURITY DISABiliTY
Claim Donlod? Wo Spocloll•t In
Appe.lo AnG Ht.Hnga. FREE 1183 Grand Am 2 Doors, 12K
CONSULTI\TION . Benolll Team '13,915; 1991 Lumina Euro 2
Servlcea, lne. ·Toll-Free: 1~888~ Ooora 88K $3,995; 1995 &amp;·tO
8:J6.4052.
IDK t5,495; Olhtr 3·10 Truckt
And Clrl Sllrlln~ AI lt ,795,
Wanted· RCA. or Huges Direct
Cook l(olorl. 7to I«&lt; Ot03.
TV ayatem, will pay top dollar,
womo 740·949·33t51oavo maa· tttt Chryalor Now Yorkor,
72,000 Mllao, Full)' Loaded, CD
Player, t8' Aluminum Whoolo,
Wallrllhl Special: 314 200 PSI
$21.115 Por 100; t• 200 PSI 15,500, 740-2!5fl.l168,
137.00 Por tOO: All 8ra11 Com· 1H4 Ford Probo, 2.0, II Valvo
pross1on Fllllnga In Stock
Fuellnjocllon, A.T., A.O., $3200.
RON EVANt ENTEftPIIISEI (304)676-2887
Jactclon; onto, t-8fl0.537-9528
1994 Grand PriK. S.l!!.. SunRoof,
WANT A COMPUTER???? BUT LOidod. Good COnGIIIon. 11500.
NO CASH?? MMX TECHNOLO· (30t)458-1577.
tiY Wo Flnonco, ·o· Downl Paat
Ortdll Probllmt OKII Evon If
lll'nod Down Bofortll A-tablllh 1H4 Pontiac GranO Pro, 14,000
mll11, loodad; p.w,tdr. 304·175. lbu!Ciodln t~.
3705.

55o

Cellular .
Jeff.Warner Ins.

Caasette wllh topper; 19,000

Unconditional lifetime guarantee.

SAY GOODBYE To Pounds
NOW! Forever, I GuirantH You.
FREE 2 Wooko 'Supply (45 Ta,
biola With SclontNic Procl) Sond
$4.95 8 IH: OAF Inc. 1109A Broad
Strttl, Oopt I 02t, Sullo 1748,
· -.NJ07102

Remodeling,
Roofirig New
Additions, Pole
Buildings, Etc. ·
Free Estimates

1998 Dodge Rom 1 sao, tx4, 5
spooG, monual, AIC, AM/FM

19955-tO
4 cyl. 5 SP.P.S,P.B,Nice Truck
lt500. 30(.875-3824.

~LltiL

~toPi&amp;:AO ' ..

42-15.
,.::::-_., ............
•

1 Exile
7 Furtoue
12 Trlnlr8t

1• fcwnwdUU

~--~U~C~~~~~~~~~~~~-MM~ L---~~~~'--------~--~--------_Jl_~~--~~~~~ J[~~~~~~~

PSI

7to-245-51181 '

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701

.,

31 u- • culling

ACROSS

13eoo-d

.,.:.~

(740) 742•8888
1-888-521 -()916

PI'!IIII'MI!ve top line.

1986 Ford F·150 pickup, StoO,
... 7to-1182·3194.

~.

Truck seats, car seats, headliners,
truck tarps. convertible &amp; vtnyl tops.
Four wheeler seats, motorcycle seats,
boat covers, carpets, etc.
Mon - Frl 8:30 ~ 5:00
Over 40 yrs experience

Plying SIO.OO .
~~ 11
$100.00Stlrburat

CAftl

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle
Sales Represenlative
Larry Schey

Rutland, Ohio

lbln St.,
Pome•oy, OH

EXT. 8338.

1988 Nllllln 300 ZX, V·8, 5
Tappan HI Elllcloncy 90% Gao Spaocl, Auno &amp; Drlvoo, No TIIIt,
SERVICES
Furnaces, 011 Furnaces, t2 SHr Makt Olior, o\IIC 11164 Chevy C.
Heal Pump &amp; Air Conditioning 20 Truck 8 CyUndor, 4 Spud, .
,Syatema Free 8 'Mar Pans &amp; La· Auno Good, 0111 No Gooo. Boat 81~
Home
bor Warranty Bonnotto Heating &amp; Ollor, 7to-4t1·1013.
Improvements
Cooling,
I ·800·872·5967
t919 Dolll 88 A.l Oldlft!Oblt,
www.orvb.cornlblnnett
IIABEMENT
excel-.t oondltlon, mual ... to
WATERPROOfiNG
_.,..., 741).882-7212.
Ron'o Gun Shop, 740-742,..12.
SAVE THOUIANDB Top 01 Tho
Uno SoiiG Wood Kllchon Cabl·
nets, Excellent Condition, In·
eludll Desk, Bullt·ln Microwave
&amp; Oven, Stove Top &amp; Sink,
$1,800, Ltavo Mo11ago, 740·.
44Hl0t3.

Club Bingo On
Thurldayl
AT 1:30 P.M.

HOIIDA't I tOO, 1500 I UP. PO·
liCE IMPOUND. Honda't Toyc·
ll't, Chavya, Jnpa, AnG Sperl
U111111N. Coli 801J.772-7470;

PHILLIP
ALDER .

....., ..

245-5877.

Credil.com

Nice Used Furniture and Ap·

AAUIJU.tnv~oo~p~--~--------------~~------------~::~====~~~=====-==============~~~~~~~~~·
BRIDGE
..
NEA CrOIIWOrd Puzzle

Livestock

630

Monllor. MAC OS 7.5 Syatom nn- Straw: Bright Wire Tie Straw IUr
ternot Roady Y2K .OK/C- Sty· 'Round Delivery &amp; Volume Oil·
IOWntor 2400 Prl-.. lntomll Mo- ·Count Available. Heritage Farm.
demJMicrophone/Same· Kind (30t)el'!i-5724.
USO&lt;I AI Tho Schoclo. 1500, 7tot48·2151 Loavo Moaaago.
650 Seed Fertilizer
Huge lnYentory. ·Diaoount Prices.
On Vinyl Sklrllng, Doora, Windows, Anchors, Waler Heaters,
Plumbing &amp; ElectriCal Plrta, Fur·
nac11 &amp; He•t Pumps, Bennetts

Pomeroy--

rllfU • r500 Stt/H, Chivy PICk·

Low Monthly .Payments. Y21&lt;
Compllant. Almost Everyone Ap-

Gel An 18' Mini .QIIh?
Wam320CI1annols7
OnoAIIonlabttFoo.
No Monlhly Chalgosl
1·204·992-2841.

s,.....

The D811y Sentinel• Page 8 7, ,

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

eo.-

1988 Ford Ranger, good eondl·
lion, $1500, 740-llf2.322t.

COMPUTERS · Low Or $0 Down.

FLORIDA, MARCO ISlAND. En·

tttl l'onlitc llona·Am S50 V·l
l S·I
Engine, - I I C
Tranamf11hln, Fac:lary Chrome
Whttll, T· Topt, FUlly lOIGtG,
500 wt Mon-. Sttrao
With 1D Spta~ro And 12 Oltc
CD Cllengtr In 'lhl'* Cntt In
Doth, Ottp Navy Mtlllllc Wllh
Dark Grey lnlhor lnlorlor, Any
Ruaontblt Ottlr COI'IIIdertd,
740 HI 1511 Or 7-7375.

1988 Ford Ranger 2.0, .t eyL
nlco&amp; atralght 12.300. 304·875·
3824.

12 Hundred lbo. ot Round Bolla
Hay; tor Sate: $20,00 Each.
(7to)-37Mt94
.

proyod. 1-IJ00.617·3t76 Ext 330.

Wednn!Mr, U.rch 8, 2000

710 Aulol few ....

llooflhlotM; ..22' ~ ·120
Each; .. 23'5' 120 Each;
1·21'4' Truant S30 Each ; 2·
21'4' Gallll Trutta ·U5 EaCII;
tt · il.t'S' Truant 150 Each ; t ·
40'2• Poll Bam Tru1111 ·$10
Each; MllctUaneoua lumbtr.
Good For Fotm Projoctl. Solei Ely

Tho
Cloly - 740-lltll.f4111.

•

up"'

=

it ne Allni--Onlph Mak:hm r'no..ra whlob alpt n
~·-~-(icalll)' pooftcl for )'OIL Mail
12.75 to Mall:iunlller, cJo IIIia
neWJplpOI', P.O. Box 1751, Mur·
1
1 tay IIlii ~ New YOit, NY
I 10156.
' .
.
! AIUIIS (Man;h li·April 19)
•,.,hlo:ly .U rtpl. but your

i

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;I .....,.,
=:·.~~~:::::
.,... k too r•. oopocltlly

! ""'",_..,. 10 . . alotfrvm
j,
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alluo.

TAURUS (April :ZO.MJy 20)
'

'

'

Be miodful i.f your,behavior in aD
your dealinp with ol~ 'today.
You mi&amp;bt not be holdina 11
lUI)' 11!00 u ywlllink IIIII, if you
. try 10 trump IIIOiher, it .coold

mike you look tiod.
OI!MIN! (Ma~ 21·J - 20)

'liminJ it ·-ly imporlanl
tOday lr yoti hoPo to· sue&lt;eed. II

e&lt;&gt;old ....,.,, dilllle your poul·
· bilitiel if ye11 Jip'your haad altho
·,wrooa ti .... :Walc:h ror .... riahl

~

oponins.

CANCER . (IIBIO 21-July 22)
TIM is a strorlll &lt;""'- odton

miJht not come ifhroqh ror )'011 I
u you thoulh~ 10 10 play

lttafa.

·do net ..... YOII'"""' 100 .......
ly on ~- or Wllllfill tbllll:·

....

' ' LJl() (July

.

1J..Aua.

22) . .

.very , careful with whom yoo
bec:omeillvolvedtodoy. Theript
choice CCROid be very
for '
yoa. but tho ""R one
""' ,,
die you with ilothina but - .
....i..... .
.,.
VIRGO (Aul. 23!$ep&lt;. 22)·1i
isn't lib yoo 10 be~ bot
.. arpnizod. i....lllliciu. ,.._

,:=I

but...,.

.......... - " " ' ·
Ins .....,yell
what you ;..,.10 do

--.Dyclalnt 11. Qat bact, Ia
dwaiiiCier.

tl

LIBRA (Sept. 23·01:1. 23)
Oenenpy, it ~erv.. yw well to ·
believe thai moll drinp in life cut
be treated ... pmo if you look
" them in lhat.liaht The ~rn~~bte
it, today you could be too cav• ·
lier aboullhinJ•·
, 'sCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22)
· 'NeJIIiye lhinkina .clluld ..,,,.
evenll dtat unfold today, which
abould•l"" you ......,able ...,.
for op11miam. llon'l allow the
blues to blt&amp;r your vilion.
SAOmAJUOS (Nov. 23·Dec.
21•) Allhou&amp;b you c:lliUiually 150
Oattery to , runeuver your Wly

th""'J!t t~hy slrulllons, today
yoU may hive to, w~k ~ 1 very fine
,.,.. Don't !&gt;otrilical. but ....., be
manipulative, eliller.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·llil:
19) K&lt;op ....... ""' of the pidure
today ifY&lt;IU p1 Ln\'01,.... in....,
type of ~liveocdvlly lhO!'s
meant to be ftin. Thinp cculd pi ,
out of h{ncl when money it
irivol..... ,' •.
. '
AQUARIUS (Jon. :ZO.Feb. l9)
Unlest you mollitor evaythlas
from llllt·ID fil!lth,lhinp . . not
likely 10 . . 10 ~ Iaiit'
r.odoo tay. ll rniJbl be bell not
10 ..... IIII)'IWIIa lri the . . _ of

dto m.porienced.

I)

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j

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·. Page B 8 • The Dally Sentinel

NATIONAL BRIEFS
,,

1h:ops didn't 1eceive •mlng

••

., WASHINGTON (AP) -;;:-/urrrt and Air Force leaden concede they
~ 't warn their troops not to use potentially flawed ~hemical-protec­
_liw sui~ until weeks after the Pentagon had urged them to do so.
. In fad, the services confirm that soldien and airmen did not get the
·lUll story until after a news report brought the problem to public light
' Srill, it is unclear even now how widely the warning has spread among
·u.s. forces deployed worldwide.
~
,. On Feb. 3, the Defense Logistics Agency told all the miliury services'
logistics offices not to use suits from twO suspect lots in any real emergency. But. it was not until Feb. 28, the day after The Associated Press
,iqx&gt;rted that many of the suits contained holes and tean and the con.l bctor had been charged with &amp;aud, that the message went beyond the
_ ·logistics offices, ~ - - - - '
. Unaware of the problem's scope Were troops at Ami)' and Air Force
!lases who, the Pentagon inspector general says, could have been killed
W.arirlg faulty suits during a gas or germ atuck.
: Only last Friday did the DLA send a me111o to four..,.tar generals and
' a&lt;!mirals on every continent, the Army and Air Force chiefS and others
: : - as opposed to logistics offices. The latest memo provides more
·detailed information on what items to set aside and whom to call with
'911est:Ions.
.
.
.
1· The Feb. 3 warnin!! said 1989 and 1992 lots of"battle dress Ov.!rgarnients" made·by Isratex Inc. of New York City should be removed from
' : the active inventory. An alert last December.to the same logistics offices
• · ,had mentioned only the 1992 lot.

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Wine debate uncorked
'

, ALBANY, NY. (AP) - A summer night. A "romantic dinner at
home. A bC'ttle of wine.·
' John Norris thought it would be perfection.
· He'opened the bottle with a 8ourish and inspected the corkscrew.
Impaled on the end was a "cork" made entirely of plastic. The mood.
.\'Yas gone.
. • "It looks like a toy," Norris said, recalling his surprise. "It doesn't
~belong in a bottle of wine."
· · More and more synthetic corks are being yanked from wine bottles
these days. Proponents cJaim ·they are superior tonatural corks, while
· critics mourn a loss of romance and tradition.
· Squishy squeaks 311d scrutinizing sni£1';. have accompanied bottle·
·:Qpenings for centuries, and some wine drinken find popping plastic a
. ·downer on a good bottle.of wine.
' "You almost · equate · it to twist-Off;' said Eric Pankonin, a wine
'dri11ker who doesn't like his fermented grape juice packaged like reg~dar grape juic.e:

Demjanjuk appeals judge's refusal to dis~iss, Al

WednlldiY, M11 ch B. 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Clinton rallies against GOP readies steep·
minimum wage plan spending measure
WASHINGTON (AP) Pushing for a higher minimum
wage, President Cfu)ton is rallying
Democrats against a Republican
plan that would tie an increase to
S 122.7 billion in taX cuts.
"Some are using this minimum
wage increase to pass irresponsible
tax cuts that would tlueaten our
fiscal discipline and jeopardize our
ability to extend the life of
Medicare ·ancl Socw Security and
pay down the debt;' Clinton said
in a letter to the leaders of both
parties in the House and Senate.
"Let 111~ be clear: This is the
wrong a~proach. I will veto any
legislation that holds this minimum wage increase hostage." '
· Clinton planned a rally today
with Democrats at the. White
House. "Working families across
this country deserve an increa!it!,"
he said.
Despite Clinton's oppositioo ,
House Republicans are forging
ahead with legislation to slash
inheritance taxes and cut ·other
taxes for businesses to ofEet the
cost of raising the minimum wage
by $1 over th_ree years.
Republican leaders generally
oppose raising the $5.15-an-hour
minimum wage but are willing to
put the question ·to a fl?Or vote
Thunday to appease GOP mod~

erates who havoe strong labor constituencies and to givoe conservatives another election-year opportunity to vote for tax cuts.
Using a chunk of the projected
budget surplLH es!imated at S122.7
billion over 10 years, the taX package would sharply reduce the ·
estate tax, boost contribution lim.
its for 401 (k) plans, lUake health
insurance fully tax deductible for
the self-employed ana enact several tax changes favorable to small
businesses.
House Wa-ys and Me.ans Committee Chainnan Bill Archer, R Texas, said raising the minimum
wage alone would "saw off the
bottom rung of the economic lad- ·
der" by reducing the number of
jobs smaller employen could
alford to offer.
"Tilis modest tax relief for
those who create jobs will provide
an effective antidote to the jobthreaiening potential of a higher
minimum wage," Archer said.

Under the bill, the hourly nrinimum wage would rise to $5.48
. this year, $5.81 in April 2001 and
$6. 15 in April 20\)2. Backed by
· orga1rized labor, Clinton .and congressional Democrats favor a S1
increase over ~o years and
oppose the tax cun as unnecessary
and tilted toward the wealthy.

CleS.
WASHINGTON (AP) Almost doubling a request from
".We see some emergency
President
Clinton,
House items that were not included" in
Republicans have prepared a $9 Clinton's request, said House
billion measure financing every- Appropriations
Commi~tee
thing from eradicating cocaine Chairman Bill Young, R-Fla. .
production in Colombia to
The bill, for the current fis~
repairing fire traps in the U.S. year, has drawn the ire of conser"Capitol.
vatives unhappy over its · pric~
. Republicans ,plan to push the Ug, whi~h is.J!nlY likely to K!?W
legislation · through the House with additional money . for the
Appropriations Committee on Pentagon and Carmen. They are
· Thursday. But its fate, after that is .. also upset that nearly all of the
unclear as lawmakers will face bill would be paid for from this
their first -battle of this election year's projected budget surplus.
l.n additi:on, many Democrats
year over what to do with the
.federal surplus.
, are unhappy with the anti-drug
A copy of the bill , obtained money. They say . the proposal
Tuesday by The Associated Press, risks U.S. involvement in what
shows that lawmakers would has been a bloody Colombian
make only minor changes in the civil war, and that more attention
$1.6 billion Clintpn requested should be paid to preventing
for battling drug, traffickers in drug use at home.
Colombia and nearby cou':'trles.
Senate Appropriations ComThey would"also provide the S2 mittee Chairman Ted Stevens,
billion wants for U ,S. troops in R-Alaska, said h~ planned to ·
Kosovo.
·
push his version of the bill
But · the . p,a~kage co.n!ains through his panel in two . weeks .
money Clinton did not seek for He said Clinton's request for
the military's. troubled, health military construction in Colominsurance system, rising Penta- · · bia "bothers us" and that much
gon fuel costs, and road repair of that spending would probably
and housing !oat\ costs attributed be left for later this year, when
j to damage from last fall's Hurri~
considers spending
.

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Ball State wins MAC, Redwomen go to NAIA tourney, Bl

Details, A3

I
,I

. Melp County's

so Cents

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 50, Number I'll

Pomeroy .merchants gear up for summerl.
BY CijARL£NE HOEFUCH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY - The . Pomeroy Merchants Association began planning for a
summer of activities tnat will include a
bass fishing tournament and a duck derby
at the Siernwheel Festival.
Planning started during a meeting of
the association Wednesday at Always and
Forever.
_ Annie · Chapman, president, reported
that the fishing tournantent has been set

for Aug. 20, th~ day after the Meigs Co~n­
ty Fair closes.
· The Sternwheel Festival will be Sept.
28-30, and again this year, the merchants
will · hand)e the derby. Bobbi K;!rr has
been named derby chairman, with Sarah
Fisher to serve on the Sternwheel Festival
Committee as the merchant representative,
. · Plans ~ere also proposed for making
the weekend of Chester Shade Days "and
the Buffington Island celebration a "signature" weekend in Pomeroy, with displays

•

.Chapman reported that plans
are moving forward for the
~eystone arch relocation into
downtown Pomeroy.

Dutcher; on June 23, old pop standards-of
1940s' vintage with Tony Tenoglia, vocal
and instrumental; and on July 21 , Neal
Jacobs, guitarist, and his group, a violinist
and, a bas1 player.
It \Val noted that the amphitheater is
available for use by the public for a nominal charge and cleanup. John Musser handles bookings for the facility.
Chapman reported that plans are mov. ing forward for the keystone arch relocation into downtown Pomeroy. Announcement "o f land availability is expecte? to be

and activities.
' Chapman announced that . several
musical progrnms have been scheduled in
the amphitheater.
On June 9, there will be a jazz, blues and
contemporary music performance by Bill

National Honor Society inducts stUdents

,,
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excels-in art ·

The lnf()nned
'

tust()mer
is a
INDUCTION
Meigs High School juhiprs l!flil:
' '
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t
seniors were
Honor Society in ceremonies
tleltl·
Wednesday moriling.lilducted were, left to right, seated, Stephanie Wigal,
Adan\ Sh&lt;l!lk, 'cara Ash, Derrick Bolin, Belrtrice Morgan, Andy Davis and .
Usa Bias; and standing, Chris Pickens. Whitney Ashley, Chris Dodson,

tiaPPl'

.

-~u:sh, Gore begh1 se~king· indep~ndent votes
WASHINGTON \AP) - Alier solidifYing
their base voten to win big in the presidential primaries this week, George W: Bush and AI Gore
"'""'·
£
.... , ·depe de
.._.. a new campa1gn - .or u1e m
n nn.
· ·. A bruising
primary battle left Bush with

Rebate

fW '

5.9%APR '

GOP

the big job,of winning over independents; who,
one~ R~rn}~~~ Go~ by~ wide ~The )\\'6. an)" l)i'iW . W!u;illy "'""n a,mong that
group, ','lhich bel::ame ~ed in large measure
tfue to Repubticanjolih. McCairi'sinsurgent can-

AI From

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.:·sentinel·

PLUS

6.9%APR ·

. 2Si*.IW-12,...

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.., ~CaJewler
~ .qeeMfitcb '

Comig

., '•
\}tditoriele

B5

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Lotteries
..

. Q}UQ
.• :Pick 3: 2-0-6; Pick 4: 5-S-1-2
.; :Super l,oii0:(12-I4-17·2&gt;J8-45 .
-~ ·Kidlltr. 9-1-J-1-1-6

.

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3: 7-2-4 Ddy 4: ()..()..9-6
.

C 2000 Ohio Voll&lt;y

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Publlohlna Co.

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to exit poDs by Voter News Service; done for the
AP and television netwOrks. He started his campaign by appealing to independenn and moderates.
As for Gore, he lately has invoked McCain:s
, name more than President Clinton's~ In a round
ofTV interviews Weditesday, he twice ~tarted a
sentence saying, "Like John McCain :.. :•
Both nomineescin-waiting are scouring O)&lt;)t
poDs that validate McCain's ability to draw
Democran, independents and first-time Republican voteri .into the political process. In Republican contests Tuesday. 60 percent of the independent wteri backed McCain.

TEAM ROPING
CHAMPIONRyan Buckley,
right, of Pomeroy,
a senior at Ohio
State University,
. brought home
this saddle after
winning in ream
Roping competition held Feb. 19
In Greenville, just .
north of Dayton.
He is the son of .
Bill and Twlla
Buckley.
Team Roping is a
rodeo competition
in w~ich two riders - a header
and a heeler attempt to rope a
steer by the
horns (head) and
the hind legs
(heel).

ry sees record number of Ohio~ns
'

COILUMEI$' (AP) - An. e&lt;trly election date and -ihc,reased voter regimations
he)ped produce .a record voter t,urnout in
the Ohio prin4fy, but more needs, to ~e
done ·to push p)tticipation even higher,
Secretary of S,qte Kenneth Blackwell

'

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lengers Bob Dole and Pat Robertsoh .
Only 34 percent of registered voters
ctst ballots Tuesday, up from the record
low of 30 percent ·in "1996 but far below
the record 42 percent
1"984.
Blackwell said it's important to measure turnout by the number of actual"vot· ~aid.
·c;
•:when ·y ou ombine interesting polit- ers because Ohio regis,tration, rolls still are
·
ical choiCes an Usues with ~n interesting inftated by inactive voters,
But John Kessell, a political analyst at
pr~sidential pri
ry race where voters
have a' sense 0 . reat person;U stake· - · Ohio State University, ' said persentases
choosing a n . 11's leader - you're are important' because population
bound to get b
r turnout," Blackwell increases . can . · contribute to record
. turnout numbers. ·
.
' said Wednesday.
1
Like Blackwell, :\(essell ' attributed
There were 2..5 _milli'o n voters who
cast' b~ots Tuesday, be,a ting the previous Tuesday's turnout to interest in the presrecor&lt;l of 2.4 l"illion in the 1988 presi- idential races and a number of interesting
'
· · local races. ·
dential primary;
:
A competitive sheriff's primary and
.'I'hat year, Michael Dukakis f~ced , several', challengen includ,l ng Jesse Jackson two contested commissioners' ·races in
on the Democratic side while George Noble Comity, for example; likely helped
' Bush turned ' back Rep,ublican 'chal• that' 'c ounty reach a '54 .percent turnout,

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"It's a bigger problem for Bush
, · than Gore but both of them are ·
(' .
h '
fi
· b d.
. going to ave to ocus on a roa er
•
h
h h
fi ,
1. ·
· ~rutttuency t an t ey av~ lo ar.

:will h
f t4
ret4, , .
'.'?
ear "lY . message ,
re orm: . ornung
schools, refornung the military, refomung the tax
J:l)de, and ren~, renewing the spirit ofAmeri'dldacy.
' '
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.
'John McCain
into a vein," Bush, the
,· Independent voters in GOP primaries Tuesday ,
Texas governor, ooJd The Associated Press in w. t•were about evenly split on whether they ~ad a
,interview Wedoesday. ·~e M~Cain supp6n~ ~~i:able or ~vo~ble view of Bush, acconling .

HILLS, Calif. (AP) ,- Ten mailbags with all 4,000
Oscar ballots are missing in a real Hollywood whodunit for Ac~demy
Awards executi\'!'S, a distinguished accounting firm and the· Po1tal
Service.
,
A week after mailing the ballots, tucked in business envelopes with
:tl-cent, first-class postage, the Academy ·of Motion Picture Arts and
Sciences was getting panicky Tuesday because . memben hadn't
~ceived them.
,
-·The deadline for returning ballots is March 21. The Oscars are
March 26.
·
"We mailed the ballots, 4,000 of them, to Academy memberS last
Wednesday and Price Waterhouse Coopers took the 10 m~ilbag5 .to
the Beverly Hills Post Office and !eli: them there as would anybody,"
Academy spokesman John Pavlik said.
·:·"That's the last they have been see11;' Pavlik said, adding foul play
i1n 't suspected...
,
.
·_. The mailing had been treated with considerable ·fanfare by · the
()lea{, people, who invite the ·news media to witoess the annu'll ritu~ ~t the Academy's offices.
·
. .
·
·. In Washington, Postal Service spokeswoman Monica Hand said the
.igency is investigating.
'
If the ballots aren't found, the numbers on them will be invalidat·
.~ ~nd ne;.v ones will be printed and mailed.

•

Speaking at thf!·~mony were Meghan Avis on character, Amanda Miller
on scholarship, Marjoiie Halar on leadership, and Julie Spaun on service.
The officers ar~ James Stanley, president; Steve Beha, vice president;
Kyle Smiddle, secretary; and Beverly Burdette, treasurer.

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i· BEvERLY

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Brooke Williams, Carrie Ughtfoot, Andrea .Kraws~ and Shannon Prtce.

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4,000 missing Oscar ballots

by

POMl;ROY - When one ers - a header and a heeler considers "tbe pastimes tradition- attempt to rope a steer hy the
ally enjoyed by coUege senion, horns (head) and the hind legs
roping. steers does not immedi- · (heel) . · The horses are hacked
into box stalls on either side of
ately spring to mind.
But for Ryan 'Buckley of the steer .which is held in · a
Lovers Lane, Pomeroy, and sev- chute. Upon release of the steer,
er~l other Meigs Countians, the riden break out "of the stalls ,
Team · Roping has become a and ·chase the steer. The header
popular pastime. ·
, . .
. is to , ~pe first and, assuming he
Buckley, son of Bill arid'Twila ropes .the' steer: he · rurt'ls '· his
Buckley, is. a senio" at.Ohio State. ,, llpd~_to turn the steer =!ll&lt;l'llllitlg
University majoring in ci~l , the_ h,~el~r ~o rope, ~he hi~d legs. ·
engineering. He . will' graduate Thts' I! a ..tsmed · ~nt wtth the
this June.
· shortest time Wt!lmng.
He and several other Meigs
Rya~ , won the ." Header"
Countians joined Team Roping competition by .ropmg more
competition on Feb. 19 in steen t~an any of the other
Greenville, just north of Dayton competitors. There. were 24
on the Indiana/Ohio border.
headers and 24 heelers m the
Team Roping is a ·rodeo round-robin event · in which.
competition in which two rid- PluH- .............. M

. .· Couric spreads awareness of caMer

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made within the next few weeks.
Beautification of the downtown area
was discussed, with Fisher to continue al
chairman of the work.
A donation of$50 was made to the vii~
!age park project being handled
Pomeroy Councilman .Victor Young. A
park is to be consrructed in the Kerr~
R:un ~rea on village-owned property. :
Plans call for the erection of a shelter
house with rUnt]ing water, pi¢nic table!;
and other facilities on the area which has
a 360~foot fi:ontage along ~he highway. ·

Pomeroy man

'

· NEWYOR.l{ (AP) -"Today" show host Katie Couric on Tuesday
allowed NBC to broadcast footage of the inside of her own intestine
10 spread awareness of colon cancer and urge people to get screened for
lite disease.
; Courit, who lost her husband to colon cancer twO yean ago, is the
host of a weeklong series on the disease on "Today;• starting \vith Tues"
tlay's airing of her colonoscopy. The procedure ~volves a doctor using
llexihle tube to look into the colon.
· "Katie's point is that if I ain going to go out ~nd tell people to get
sc~ned, I shoulil go out and get screened myse!c,' said "Today" show
t}rokeswoman Allison Gollust:"She feel's that people have a bit of trepidation when it comes to the procedure itself, so this was an attempt to
Ckmystity it."
:_ GoUust s3id there was "an overwhelming reaction" from viewers all positive,
. Coloiectal cancer is the second leading cause of cancer deaths in the
United Stites, with an estimated 129,400 cases and 56,600 fatalities
~ported in 1999.
, Because the disease is slow to develop, early detection and treatment
an significandy reduce the chance of death.
· In the case of Couric's husban4, 1V legal analyst Jay Monahan, the
lnalignancy W:lsn't discov.ered until it had spread. · .

.

of steer·roping

• , Police said the kidnapping may have been planned. The girls' home
near .Blue Springs is .in a sparsely populated area northwest of
Gainesville.
,
: "How could someone know there would be small children getting
bff the bus, at the time, on that stretch of road with so few homes?"
.Gilchrist County Sheriff David Turner asked Tuesday. "It had to have
been someone who was looking into it."
The girls' mother,Jennifer Graham, was asleep in the house when the
kidnapping occurred just before 4 p.m. Monday. t--Ier fiance, Thomas
keeley, was \vorking in the. yard and heard Jessica scream, Turner said.
·.' He jumped into his car and tried to chase the Jeep Cherokee, but was
unable to find it.
"Every day we make sure those girls get to the bus stop and we are
waiting for them when they get home, but I fell asleep;' Graham said.
"Please let her come home safely."
·
·., A composite drawing of the man was produced using information
sUpplied by the ,sisters. Jessica's picture and details ofher abduction were
posted on the Web site of the National Center for Missing and Exploit~d Children, www.missihgkids.com.
·
.
.

,,

March 9, 2000

Ho111etown News,.per

·· ' TRENTON,Fla. (AP) -The FBI has joined state an~ local author·ities in the search for a 10-year-old girl who was snatched from her driWway in front of her two.younger sisten.
· ·
' .· Jessica Rodriguez and her sisten had just been dropped off by their
!chool bus when a man in a sport utility vehicle pulled into their dri~y and asked ifthey lived nearby, the sisters, ages 8 and 4, told police.
' They said the man grabbed their sister, put her in his c.ar anp drove
of[

I

•

•

FBI looks into kidnapping
I

thursday

J

..

'

'•

·"JVhen you combine iriteruting .
political choices and issues with
an interesting presidential
primary race whert voters have a
mue ofgreat personal stake ' choosing a nation's leader you 'rt bound to. get better
"
turnout!'

in·

'
.

Kenneth Blllckwell

·

. the highest percenrage in Ohio, said
: Diane Wharton, deputy director of the
·coul}ty elections board.
, Although Democratic Sheriff Landon
'Smith, a :IS-year ·office holder,, defeated
Chris Cobb, 63 percent to 27 percent,
"that got a lot of attention," Wharton
said,
·
·
In Shelby County, where four Democratic candidates battled for the nomina-

'

tion for sheriff, turnout was 48 percent.
In .Mahoning County, where three
candidates challenged US. Rep. jim Traficant ~ y;ho has acknowledged he
believes he will be indicted in a corruption investigation - t_u rnout was 46 percent.
Kessell said he doubts Tuesday's
· turno~t sig;tals a reversal in the national
voter turnout decline, whic~ dates to the
_1960s.
' While politi~al parties can 4se the rolls
of new voters to bring more people out
in future elections, "that would be a
modest stimulus. But what they really
need are more barn-burning races among
candidates people are excited about,"
Kessell said.
Blackwell said campaign finance
reform, which will · help voters better
. understand the role of money in _politics,
also is needed to boost participation.

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