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                  <text>Page 16\

~D~S~
Husband~

~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~·--~~·~·~·~s-~d~,~·!~~,~~~~~J~·~··

1h

Suspect fighting extradition to Ohio, A2

Three locals tabbed All-Ohio,

online Jriends' make reader nervous

11

March 2:5, 2000.
•

. l&gt;iiu

Ana Laaden: I really
to think about J,..B. IN
need your advice. Several months
GLENDALE HEIGHTS ILL.
ago, my husband, "Archie:• met a
DEAR L.B.: You have also
woman online . .He chatted with
given me something to think
her every day. then, began to call
about. I see no reason to celebrate
her on the phone. .He also sent
anything a year in advance. Why
her S3 cards, along with sweet
rush it? I'm still trying to get used
poenu and small gifts. Wh,en I
to writing the year 2000 - and
confronted Archie about this
it's not easy.
ADVICE
~oziness, he insisted that they
. Some people are happy to have
were just "computer pals." So far
any excuse for a parry. Folks, the
ates at an adolescent level, and he new century and the new millen~ I know, they ·never met.
. A few months ago, this woman is not going to change. You can nium begin on Jan. 1; 2001. The
married another man she met insist, however, that he stop call- worldwide extravaganza this past
online. She sent Archie an e-mail ing and sending gifts to his online New Year's Eve was only a warmto let him know about it, and cutie, and be very firm about it. up. The real celebration is yet to
then, told him she would no Some joint counseling might be . come. Batten down the hatches,
longer be chatting with him. He helpful. I recommend it.
and hang on to your hat!
Dear Aim Landen: OK, so
was terribly ·upset when he
That 'first kiss, that first
.
this
isn't
the
most
pressing
issue
of
learned of her marriage, which
embrace... Remember all those
made me wonder about the our age, but I feel my blood pres- things that brought you and your
intensity of their relationship. . sure go up every time I hear the loved one together? Ann Landers'
Archie insisted it was not .an terms "new century" and "new new booklet, "How WeMet," is
"affair:' and that I am the only millennium." I don't think' I can now available. This collection of
'woman who ever interested him take it for another eight and a h2If sentimental love stories wiD make
lexually. He swore he neve~ 'did months. It seems as though adver- a terrific gift for that special
get together with her. So, I for- tisers and the media ate jumping someone. For a copy, please send Q
gave him for the flirtation ; and on the bandwagon, celebrating self-addressed, long, business size
• things seemed to be better this year as the start of the 21st envelope and a check or money
century and the third miUennium order· for $5.50 (this includes
between us.
I thought he waS through with when it won't a.ctually happen .'postage and handling) to: How
until 20()1.
· We Met, c/o Ann Landers, P.O.
his chat-room shenanigans, but I
If
you
think
I'm
one
of
those
Box 11562, Chicago, lL 60611was mistaken. Last month, Archie
met a 28-year-old woman online, "millennium purists" or another 0562 (in Canada, $6.50). To find
lunatic, fringe historian on a out more about Ann Landers and
and has been callirtg her and
lending poems and ,gifts. He told soapbox, simply pull out the "C" tead her past columns, :visit the
me yesterday she is in' a terrible . book of your home en~yclopedia Creators Syndicate web page .at
and look up "century." It will say
marriage, and he is helping het
''recover" her self-esteem. Archie that since there was no year zero,
the first century started in 1 A.D.
thinks if he stops communicating and ended in 100 A.D. Therefore,
with her, she ·may do something each century ends in· the year
clnstic. I have told him he is
zero, as in 2000, and the new one·
betrayipg our marriage, but he starts with the year one, as in
insists since nothing physical is 2001. This means that 'on Dec. 31,
going on, I should not complain. 2000, we will celebrate the end of
· Am I overreacting? Archie says the last century, and the beginthis flirtation is meaningless, but it ning of a new one.
is very upsetting to .me. What can · I won't win this debate, but I
I do? - NEED ADVICE DOWN know you have mariy loyal readSOUTH
ers (me included); and at least I
DEAR SOUTH: You can will have ,given them something
accept the fact that Archie oper-

Ann

Landers

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•

408 RIChland Avenue, SuHe 101 Athena, Ohio 45701

.AssOciate PrOfessor
of Family Medicine

'"•.~,,-,-.;.

·r,, .... J,.,l,

' ' · ..

Fannenwom
COLUMBUS (AP) Farfrlers
;tatewide are worried that dry conditions
.luring another growing season will cause
:hem to lose a majoritx of their income for
1 second cQnsecutive year, a farming organization official said.
·
"While we're starting to see some of ti)e
moisttire be replenished, we stiU have a lot
tO go," said Joe Cornely, spokesman for the
Ohio Farm Bureau. "There are a lot of
f~ers that are very ne.rvous about the
kirid of the weather Ohio is going to get
this year. ·
.
· . "l don't know if any farmer would be
prepared for another devastating drought

•

about year's weather

like last year."
With predictions of below normal
spring and summer rain, farmers could
have a tough time harvesting their crops in
the fall.'.,
There is enough moisture in the soil for
farmers to plant corn, soybeans and other
crops in the coming weeks, but that doesn't mean the water will remain throughout
· the growing season, said JU,:. Ramey, a stat:istician With the Ohio Agriculture Statistics Service.
, "Rigltt now if they had to go out and
1 ·plant the crops today, they wot,Jid probably
get them in .... It's another thing·to grow it

out and bring it' to harvest," Ramey said
Wednesday following a meeting of the.
Drought Executive Committee.
The Legislature £reated the committee
after a 1988 drought as a way for state
agencies; scientists and others to share
information and make reconunendations
to the governor.
The drought that hurt water levels, crops
and livestock last year still is affecting farmland, with the northwest and westcentral
parts of Ohio being the driest, said Julie
Dian-Reed, a service hydrologist with the ',
Natiopal Weather ::&gt;ervice in Wilmington. .· ·
She told the group Wednesday that fore- ·

casts from April to June predict below nor-

n.rfrnr

Question: I saw my eye doctor rather complex, but ultima.tely the
because I have been having eye pupil constricts because the small
pain, particularly when I'm in . muscles of the iris make it do so.
bright light. He said that I, had These muscles become inflamed
uveitis and has treated me for it, but and sore with uveitis. Therefore, it
he also wants me to' see my family hurts as they contract as an autodoctor because he said the back matic response to being in bright
.
•
pain I've been experiencing might light.
be related to my eye problems. Are . Now, your back pain poses an
these ·d&lt;ictors in cahoots, or could intelesting dilemma. Back pain is a ·
my back· pain and eye problems normal characteristic of the human
teally have the same cause?
species. More ~ 80 percent of
Answwr: It is certainly possible the population wiU lose at least
to llave uveitis and back pain as a some time off the job during their
consequence of the same. illness, work career because .of back pain.
but you qllght also simply have two Perhaps your back pain is Simply
different problems that are produc- this common disorder involving a
ing symptoms at the same time. I'm disturbance in the smooth coordisure that.your eye doctor wants to · nation between the muscles, ncrwork with your family physician to vous system, bones and circulation
find out the specific cause or i;aus- of the· back. Howeiler, your back
~ of your . symptoms so that the pain ·may aJso be the consequence
proper treatment can be used. .' ·. of a speciaJ type of arthritis that
Uyeitis, the particular type of eye strikes from five to500out of every
trouble you have, deserves a bit of l,OOO.You may have what we docexp~tion. I'll start with the way tots call a spondylarthropathy (yes,
the eye is built. Tpe eye has a tough it's another terrible doctor name).
outer wall that is composed of
Spcmdylarthropathies are specific
three major layets, and .a center that types of arthritis that predominantis filled with a clear. and colorless ly at\ack the joints of the spine.
fluid. The tough outer layer of the Ankylosing spondylitis is the most
eye inc;ludes the transparent·cornea prevalent ofthese, but Reiter's synover the pupil as well as the white drome and psoratic are also fairly ·
of the eye, called the sclera, around common. These conditions attack
the remainder of the eyeball. The about 1.5 percent ofwh,ites, 4 per· inner layer consists of the light-sen- cent of.American blacks,18 percent ·
sitive optic nerve. Between these of Pima Indians, 50 percent of
two - ·in the layer called !he uvea Haida Indians in Canada and
- is the location of your eye trou- almost no one ofAsian ances!ry.
ble.
All spondylarthropathies can also
The. uvea contains the iris, that cause uVeitis. In fact, in soroe indicolored part · that controls the viduals the first srmP.tom of these
amourit of light entering the eye, types of arthritis.. iS eie·.pain, and it
the coroid plexus tbat is a coUec- may take months. or ~ for joint
tion of many small l!lood vessels, paiil to "show up" and make the
and an organ named the ciliary ·diagnosis possible.
.
body that produces the fluid filling
I think ~ur ~ doctor is trying
the eye.
.
to take good cate of ~u ---not jlist
In'flammation of the uvea is ~ur eyes, but all of ~u . He wants
called uveitis; the ·condition you to llC sute that yotir ulieitis does not
have. This causes general eye diJ.. indicate a more serious underlying
comfOrt as weD as the pain you lllns such as a spondylarthropathy.
experience in bright light. &amp; you Your docton ate not in cahoots,
know, bright light causes the pupil because that word indicates a qu~
- the opening in the center of the tionable motive for their coUaborairis through which' light enters the .,tion. Instead, they appear to be
eye - to contract. The way light working together for an honorabie
causes this automatic !eSpOilSC is goal- your good health.

Is a

enough to recover &amp;om last year's shortfalls.
Pam of the state still are about I0 inches of
precipitation below normal.
·"We need a pretty wet spring, and right
now it's not looking like that's going to
happen:· she said.
Ramey said beginning next week his
agency wiU begin a survey asking farmer's
how much moisture there is in the soil. He
hopes 'to see timely rains throughout the
~ season \hat will keep the top soil
moist and replenish groundwater reserves.
t. ·.-~" He~S' ~rtied that northwest and west-

A TATTOO FOR
YOU- Kids at
the Family Fun
Fest will be
able to get a
· tattoo - the
temporary kind,
of course. The
tattoos will
be offered by
·· the Meigs
Co.unty
Tuberculosis.
and Health
Association,
there educating
patrons on the
importance ·
of skin
testing.
(Charlene
Hoeflich
photo) .

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BY CiwuNI! lloaucH
County Health Department, the
SfNiliiB. NEW SWF
Family and Children First Coimcil,
EAST MEIGS . ~ One big aOd the Meigs County Departme~
~t, multi-generational in . nature ofHwnan services.
· and centered on a celebration of the
Activities will get underway at.9 :
&amp;mily.
a.m. and continue until 3 p.m. with
That is how the Meigs County more than 50 ~Cies and orgalnzaFamily Fun Fest to be held at East- . tions being imolved. There will be
ern Elemen\3fY School on April 8 is health screening~ and learhing activbeing described
ities, as well as a,.varifty of entertainThe fest wiD feature ".Om~ ment all day long.
I.Or everyone" through its focus on
The ac!ivities will. inclu~ every. . life skills within 1iunilies, by thing from ~ painting to sports
~ heali)l, !OCial and surVival I Pll}"ic:aJs, from, iflteractive crafu to
education. ·
·
..~ nutnttonal snack$, fiom body !itt
Dl--•-~ r~ th ·
..V under- •. saeeninjp to llCMJty makeovers, all
.
· • -u~'l! wr e ~ .,,..
.:....
.....~:..:"-. ·.
., ·skiCJm
'- Representatives of county.agencies ~~~d
when~ Of u=, accv.~'l! ~ ('vlarg!e
. ?re . local
attended a planning session for the sec·
inrolved agepcies met in the ron&amp;- · who ~ chaiJ:nlan of th~ planning ond annual
Fun Fest at East~~
· mentary School on April 8.
· room of Veterans
·
Memorial corruruttee.
·
t
ence
Th Am .
El. . .Power' Margie
R.N., chair~ lght, sfha1rman
·of th e even.
H --'k'
encan . ectnc
- were.• from left, Paule
""~'"Lo .e th Ligh
B " will bes Plctur""
""" with her during the planning se ~
· ·; Hosting the Fun Fest are John R. th walongee With~,_.~ Charli .. Eichinger, Hol~er Home Health of Veter n emorlal Hospital; ~unie
~ M~ ,County prosecutipg . , . ~
.
• o~~- · . e Meynerd; , Far)'lily. and Children Rrst Council; and Na~cy Aldndge,
alioniey. .personnel of the M~, .......... flllllllly, Pll~ AJ · · health departmtlllt. (Charle(le Hoeflich phOto)

,

vwy'I\Jesd#

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;_ Sentinel chang~s(AP) juvenile·justiCe laws
:asadl••-12 .....

AS

' ~·cOnalca"
ldltmlele
1

.' OhibJ••ie•
'' Sports
. ' · lV•ther

B1-2
A3

'.

owo .
• Pick 3: I ~9-3; Pick 4: 8-9-3-0
Sapw .__, 4-17~20-31~36-43
Kldor. 8-;4-S.S.:7-7
\I.VA. . ,
'
' Dally 3: 6-:i!-7 Dally 4: 4+7:.0
C 2(!00 Ohio ValJey Publdhifl8 Co.

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COLUMBUS
-A bill that the judge coulq sqspend that senshifi:i the emphasis ofjuvenile justice tence a5 long :1! the child successful- .
from rehabilitation to public safety. ly completes the ju~e teun.
· and victims' 'rigb~ is on its way to
SJ&gt;Ilnsdied by Sen..Robert Latta; ,
. lawmaktrs iii the Ohio House. , R~Bowling Greea, the biD stemmed
· 1The Senate.orl "'~dp~ passed · frop:~ reco~rulations the Ohio
the bill under ,which children as CrimiJW Sent:e~ Cornlrumon
; ~ung as 10 could be jailed and developed . Over . two 'ye3n . and
more yo!PIS olfenders would face . announce&lt;! in AugUst: 1999. ·
.
adult trials.
"We need to send a clear lt1eSsagli
, Th~ .biD,_ ~pproved ~2-1!, also to those individuals, those juvenib
Ul~ ~ ~tences for committing the lt10it uiispeablxe
v.anous lelony cnmes, keqls some of. .
,.,:.,;~ ..:.-..~
"- ~ '
'-""--~~- . . ·-"~ :...~~&gt;~.. to
·=that
es ._..-a....,.,.,
}OUIIg "'"'
um:;.nuc:tll Ul :JUV&lt;Ou"" ~~1
, age
ld,
will
be
ttented,"
25 instead of21, arid requires judges 0
. It
n~
to ~er an olfender to,adult court Latta said T~
.
. ·•
imless thete is good reasQn not .to.
. ~- Bob Tafts 0\\'11 Juvenile JU$' Childrep. could face more trials nee bill JS expected to .be voted ~ut ,.
·beCause the bill :would allow judges of the House CrlJt!lnal just)c~
to ~~ ~Wig olfendets both juVI!- Committ~e ".next ~. 'lldt
nile and adult sentences. The adult spokesman Scott Milbnm said
sentence would require a trial, but Wednesday.

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requiring reports - documents,
he added mockingly, that "already
have them quaking in Kuwait and
quivering in Venezuela."
But.when it came time to vote,
Frank cast a·" present"- not' wanting to · endOrse the legislation, but
,a~sor.~Qr~tote seen votinS'on'
the 11\'l'(!ng side in the oil cartel versus ~can consumer debaie.
there wete . 187 Den;_ocrats
who voi:ed with Republicans for
the legislation; including SOil}e
who wete highly critical of the biD
during a two-hour debate.

"Sometimes people laugh at
Congress. This is a day for laughing:• Rep. Martin Frost, D-Texas,· .
declared, chastising ~e Republican
~oriry for pushing the "meaningless"legislation, which he earlier in a news release . described :u
"feel good flulf." Still, Frost voted
for the bill.
· •
Senate Republicaru, meanwhile, were planning a largely symbolic vote oftheir own on a proprice fixing. ·
·
posed "gas tax holiday," possibly
Nevertheless, it was touted by early next week, in an apparent
supporters as a "wakeup call" and a attempt by the GOP leadership to
"clear me5sage" ' to the Clinton try to gain some political advanadministration and OPEC, which tage on a high-profile pocketbook
meets next Monday to consider
new oil production levels, that this iss~nate Majority Leader 'Il:ent
· country is angry over the run-up .
in oil prices.
·
· Lott, R -Miss., this week quietly
It "spotlights OPEC's price-fix- filed two gasoline tax bills - one
ing activities:• declareg Rep. Ben- to suspend the 4.3 cent-a-gallon
jamin Gilman, R-N.Y., !he mea- increase. that Congress approved in
sure's chief sponsor.
•
1993, and another to suspend the
Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., entire 18.4 cent federal levy ridiculed the mea.~ure as "feel.good with a ·test' vote pl:l!lned for early ·
legislation" that does little beyond · next week.

Sculpture h~no,f$ memory o~ Dr. Holzer
·,,
'
GALLIPOLIS - On March
11-, a brief ceremony was held
in the Charles E. Holzer Jr.,
MD, ~bulatory Surgery Urut
for the dedication of a sculp~
ture in . memory of the late
Charles E .• Holzer Jr.,. MD,
founder of Holzer Clinic: and
past prestdent and prestdent
emeritus of Holzer Medical
Center.
·
·
Th e scul p·t ure was comnus. sioned in honor of Holzer
Clinic's 50th anniversary last
year.
.
fpUowing the introduction,
comments were made by Holzer Clinic President J. Craig
Strafford, MD, and Holzer

.

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Clinic general surgeon Alice A.
Gricoski, and family introduclions were made by Dr. James'
Orr. M..S. Charles E. Holzer.Jr.
unveiled the sculpture.
Present at the dedication
were members of the Holzer
family: Mrs. Holzer's daughters
Karin Christi and Am~ and
members of their fan:ilies .
· · · d guests an d the'
ot.h.er mvtte
.
.
artist Robert Patnck Hutton.
The sculpture of Dr. Holzer
is located in the lobby of.the·
ground floor at the CharlQ E:
Holzer Jr., MD Ambulatory:
Surgery Unit at· Holzer Medical Center.

.
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SCULPTURE UNVEILED - Mrs. Charles E. Holzer Jr. (Bobbie) is
shown left with the sculpture In memory of Holzer CliniC founder Or•
Charles E. Holzer Jr.

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111p. Mlrtln Froet, .,.,.__

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f

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'!Sometimes people laugh
at Congress. 'I11is is a day
fcor lar~ohiflo.."
·

WASHINGTON (AP)
Republicans said they wanted to
"send a .message" to OPEC oil
producers. Democrats . caUed it
meaningless "feel good fluff."
But in the end, all but a handful
of House members - Republicans and Democtats alike - voted
for a bill Wednesday that both $ides
acknowledged would do little to
help Americans deal wit)&gt; ~e high
cost of oil, or lower prices.
·
Instead, the vote may ,J!ave
'·r ···otemcoru•ttalteitJ1Pw 'little pa-ter
Congress has to ~ddress the soaring
oil and gasoline· prices that grip the
nation, much less influence foreign
oil production plans.
The legislation, although .characterized by some lawmakers as
tepid and inconsequential, passed
the House 382-38, marking the
first congressionall'esl'onse to the
·tripling of oil prices over the past
14 months.
The bill, titled the "Oil Price
Reduction Act," simply requires
the White House to review pricing
ptactices of the 11-member Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Couritrtes and the president to
work with other nations to restrict
military assistance against countries
~ 1:9, be engaged in petroleum

.

Senate·votes for bill that

~· ·

C,leQder
Qeeeifiedt

prospects for recovery because forecasts for
rain are below normal.
"That's our gteenbelt," he said.
Fred Dailey, director of the Ohio
Department ofAgricultute, said he's urging
farmets to take ptecautions such as crop
insurance in case a lack of rain prevents
crops from thriving.
He cautioned farmers from taking comfort in last weekend's steady rains, which
pushed precipi1:1tion levels in southwest ·
and southeast Ohio above normallevi:ls for
the year.

Congress votes
to confront·oil
producing nations

Plans ·made for'
Fa.-wily
Fun
Fest
.

llaPPY

central Ohio, where a good portion of the

mal precipitation, which would not be state's farmers teSide, have the worst

The lnfllntied
tustllmer

au r·

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~/lt(1~•&amp;'•nr. ·.

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John C. Wolf, D.O.

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ami!p ·
·edicine

Cou••lt'•

M..p

--

\.lf,lurtu· ~(! Numt"l4· t ) f, ~

oticon

Jane Ann KM' Aanestad: M.A. S.rah E. Kuhn. M.A.
Audlologleta, CCC·A

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, Pomeroy, Mlddlapart, Ohio

Thur.uy, March 23, 2000

•
lhe Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

I

BUCKEYE BRIEFS

OBITUARY

Susped lillY be ev.allltecl

Hury c.tos 1111

·: CANTON (AP) - A 1}-year-old boy accused of raping two
women in his neighborhood might get an evaluation to determine
if he is competent to stand trial.
At his arraignment Wednesday in Stark County Family Court, he
pleaded not true to charges of delinquency by reason of aggravated
bwJiary and rape in the December attack on a 36-year-old woman.
~~ IAio ha pleaded not true to the same cbarJes in the rape of a 66-

y.r-old womm Friday l!ilht.
, Hit •ttomey, Ralph Laclti, asked Judge John R. Hallinan to schedule a competency evaluation, which would determine if the boy
understands the charges and is capable of assisting in his defense.
' Lacki said after the arraignment that initial conversations with the
teen and other facts about.the case caused him to question the teen's
understanding of the charges and the possible consequences.
Kristen Bates, juvenile division chief of the Stark County prose~utor's office, objected to the request, noting that juveniles do not
qave a right to competency hearings under Ohio law.
· · "If I .Sked for a competency evaluation in adult court, it's mandatpry: He would have been entided to one automatically." Lacki said.
Hoffman will hear arguments at 11:30 a.rn. April 5 on whether a
competency evaluation sjtould be performed.

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Vi~ations

woary officials

' URBANA (AP) -The coUapse of the back..of a vacant threestory building on the town square has forced the closure ofa highway to prevent traffic vibrations fiom bringing down the entire
struc~re. authorities say.
'
.
, Wednesday's collapse sent rubble into an alley and spilling. out ·
pnto a sidewalk at the side of the building. No one was injured.
"I heard an avalanche of bricks falling;• said Pam Thorp. "At first I
· thought it was a semi going tbtough."
Engineers blocked off U.S. 68 while they·assessed the damage.
"They're afraid the vibrations of the trucks will bring the rest of ·
the building down;' police Sgt. David Reese said.
The brick-and-srucco building had housed apartments and a
newsstand/ gift shop.
,
.
.
Larry Watkins, dispatcher for the Urbana Fire Department,' said
~esidents and workers vacated the bu1Jding last week when it was.
condemned because of structural problems.
· Urbana is ,aboui 30 mile5 northwest ofColumlius.

Wai-Mart donations
Walmart employee Jill Nelson presents donations to the Rutland Are
Department and the Eastern High School Band. Receiving $2,000
above are AFD representatives, left, Ted Hatfield and Henry Cade.
Pictured below receiving $1,000 for the Eastern Band are, left, Steve
Weeks, Barbara Smith, Molly Heines and Scott Wolfe. The donations
were part of. ',ya~Mart's Community Involvement Program .

a

Man·..t!ld for daughter's death
_ HAMILTON (AP) - A man has been charged with rap,ing and
killing his 2-ye:u-old daughter.
.
. Christopher J. Fuller, 29, of Hamilton, is being held without bond
in the Buder County jail on charges of murder, rape, attempted \'2pe
and felonious assault, police spokesman Dave Crawford said Wednesday. If convicted, he faces life in prison.
Police said they charged Fuller aft.~r receiving a 911 call Tuesday
afternoon and finding the child unconscious. She was pronounced
dead at Mercy Hospital North in Hamilton, police said.
A judge on Wednesday ordered Fuller to' remain in jail without
bond until a hearing March 29 in Hamilton Municipal Court.

Chief says he's harassed
~

AKRON (AP) -A police chief testified that he felt harassed by
the Akron Beacon Journal's investigation of his wife's allegation he
.
.
had abused her.
;:- The chief, however,. could not remember who at the newspaper
~had harassed him or the dates of phone calls he considered harassing.
:~ Akron· Police Chief Edward Irvine and his wife, Geneva, have filed
~ $8 million invasion of privacy lawsuit against the newspaper over
~ow it investigated Mrs. Irvine's abuse allegation. ·
· .
:• Irvine has denied causing injuries that Jed his wife to seek treat:inent at an emergency roonl in October 1998. At the time, Mrs.
•Irvine told a doctor that her husband had abused her but she later
•
;..,;thdrew the allegation, and no charges were filed.
•: Irvine, testifYing Wednesday for a second day in Summit County
~tommon Pleas Court, was cross-examined by Ron Kopp, an attor:Oey for the newspaper.
·
:; Asked whether he remembered any calls from the newspaper
:t&gt;efore roughly Dec. 11 , 1998, one day before the paper fint repoi:t:~ the allegations, the chie( responded, "I was constandy being
:tailed, from the time the incident happened to today."
:: Noneth,eless, Irvine could not recall any specifics of caJls froirt the
:paper bef~re Dec~mber 1?98.
·
.
.
.
•
·• Mrs. Irvme testified earlier that she went to stay with. her sister in
{ake Charles, La. , Nov. 27, 1998, pardy to escape the newspaper's
:attempts to contac1 her.
:; The newspaper has contended it made no attempt to eon tact Mra.
trvine about the abuse alleptiona untll a day or two btf'ore the ltory
~bout the alleption wu publilhed on Dec. 12, 1998.
~ Irvine testified on Thetday that hll wili'a dtcilion ro ltavt Aluon
~· not to pt away ftom him, but to 11cape ttrllt,
.
:. She aeemed to recover her mental healch while In LO\Illiana, buc
)he nare11od after the Beacon Journal callid her and ..nt her matt·
. j!al about the lnvestlptlon ln March 1999,1rvlnt aaid.

•

PORTSMOUTH (AP) - A mentally stable.
man accused in the slaylngs of
"Where's your sister aq~
four members of a family is mom?" Ketter asked.
•
resisting extra!lltion from Ken"They're down here, do"':ri
tucky to Ohi9, where be faces here oa the Ooor. ... My sistet
four counts of aggravated mur- (inaudible) had blood all over;
der, officials said.
Blood," Chamberlain said.
:
James R. Curry, of New
Ketter told Chamberlain t~
Boston, said Wednesday he stay on the line, then s;nt t~
would fight extradition to officers to Chamberlains houst,
Ohio, and a hearing was S&lt;:hed- He told one officer, "Joe, use
uled for April 5 in Bourbon some caution. I really don't,
County (Ky.) District Court, know what we've got at thiJ
the county attorney's office said. time."
Curry was arrested Sunday in
· The officers found the bodies
Paris, Ky., for driving erratically of Spradlin and Edwards in the
and was. charged with driving home they shared in suburb~n
under the influence of drugs. Sciotoville. Ratcliff said Cham,
He pleaded innocent to that berlain was upstairs 'at the ti~e
charge Wednesday.
of the attack, but he doesn'~
Meanwhile,
Portsmouth know why the man was spare!f..
Police Chief Greg Ratcliff said
"I have no doubt Cur.ry
Wednesday investigators were knew he was in 'there," Ratcliff
reviewing Sunday's sequence of said. "Why he didn't do any~
events that ended when officers thing to him, I don't know." .,
found the bodies of Curry'~
The bodies of Lana Spradlin,
alleged four victims.
35, and her son, Panie!Jones, 9,
He · said · police originally of Lucasville, were found ill
thought the 911 call that led Curry's apartment in New
officers to the bodies might Boston. SpradliJI: and Jones were
have been prank.
Emogene Spradlin's daughter
Dwayne Chamberlain; the. and grandson.
Rat~liff said he isn't sure ho'Y
28-year-old mentally retarded
son of one of the victims, Emogene Spradlin, 78, made the ca ll , long Cha.mberlain waited before
describing how someone named calling 911' but he would be
Rick had !tilled his-mother and surprised 'if it was more than an
. sister, Pamela Edwards, 52, with hour.
a knife.
·
"I don't ·know if Dwayne
fully
appreciates what hap"We· got someone !tilled here
in Sciotoville," · Chamberlain pened," Ratcliff ·said. "I don't
said when the dispatcher know if he understands it."

Cleveland NAACP favors
scrapping·proficiency .tests
CLEVELAND. (AP) - The
city's N~ACP chapter is urging
state legislators · to scrap Olrio
proficiency tests, alleging the
standardized exam5 are biased
against children from poor urban
areas.
,
Chapter President George L.
Forbes cited five Cleveland ele-.
mentary and middle schools
where no children passed all sections of \he five-part test last year
as evidence of what he considered bias.
"You can't tell me all of these
kids are dumb," Forbes said
Wednesday. He said there "is
something inherendy wrong"
·
with the tests.
The civil rights 'group ·
weighed in after weeks of attacks
on the; exal11S by .parents, c:ducators and a growing number of
legislators, inclutllng three nate
senators who Aakl!d for a tem.p~

rary hAir

·excessive police

force alleged
: CINCINNATI (AP) A
· ·e olic' ofticet ~mild be diklplined
lifter police investipton conclud·· d he used excessive force when
~e body-slammed a 68-year-old
· 'inan with Alzheimer's.
: Officer Robert J. Hill III used
~xcessive force during the
~ovember confrontation with
~obert Wittenberg, according to
Ole internal police feport released
'fuesday. Police investigators said,
Qowever, they could ·not deter-~
Qline whether Hill ca~d the
~juries
because Wittenberg's
fwyer had not responded to their
10equests for a medical report of
~e injuries.
'
:. Wittenberg's wife, Mary, comilained to pq,lice .that her husband
Jlllffered sever~! b'r oken bones
~hen Hill slammed the 160tiour\d man to the floor. Hill's
actions were captured on video by
a surveillance camera at the
Cincinnati convenience story
where it happened.

·,,.

.

Ruth "A. Ebas~

-

Ratcliff said dispatcher Steve
Ketter didn't know whether the
call was a prank or if it was
being made by someone not

They also contend that a commission appointed by Gov. Bob
Taft will address concerns about
the test, including the issue' of
fairness.
"The governor's commission
dc;&gt;es pla1;1 ' to do many of the
things, that people are asking
for;· said Patti Grey, a spoker.woman for the Ohio Department of Education.
,
Forbes said the Cleveland
National Association for the
Advancement of Colored Peopie would sepd letters asking
legislators from Cuyahoga
County to support replacing the
proficiency test with a les's
biased way of mea~uring student
achievement. ·

•'•

.

.

..

P•P of' the foutt.h·pde r..d.

r...'l Flip 0..1 Tl&gt;r I~ You'l
Find h tilt Cloulfilfl Stc1""'

--c..

'

advanciq co 6fth pade tc&amp;ttlnl
In cbt 2001·2002 tchool ye&amp;r.
Star• tducacion omclala
de&amp;lld the mt, clcinJI Cleveland ·
a~hoola that have poated double·
dllit lncreaaet In lett tc:om.

'
(VIPS
JIJ.Nt)

:
01111 v•..,
r,blt- ,...., anomooo, Mooday th""'P
l'llday, Ill Cowl St., .._,.,, Ololo, b; the
ottto Voltoy N&gt;lilloloa eom,..,., ........,,,

0111o 45769, n. m.2t56. -

c1uo pool·
,

·~ paliiOI ,_,.,, Ololo.

1

'M I t'lltt"-lllldi'NA,aodtlleOIIIo
'.~. i 1 AIIDdallon.
'
·~ --comotljoooaiO
1M Daliy S.tlll,.l, Ill C:Oun St., Por~oroy,
~GIIIo 45769,

,

·

'

'

IUBIICIUI'I10H IIATU
·:
B,~orM-a..ll
'0. Wiek............................................... ll.OO

:.Clot
eo. Moottlt ...........................................1104.00
, .. l8.70
.

. ~nd Set Free

,

Vat,,,,_,, ...............................

.

'

.SJNGU COPY PRICI

lito-

;~~ou 1 .................................. , ...... , ..... 50 c..~

'
'
:~ lbel&gt;""' doairlota 10 pay

may
•jionlt 11. lllv- t111oc1 10 Tlto Dally llonthtol

EVERYDA.Yl

-.

••• ..,.,,Ill Dl' 12 ..... ~ Credt~ will b.

:l!venCO!riateodtWMk&lt;
'·. '
.

31/'I"Ooultle.

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'·

MAILIWICIUI'I10NI
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MtlpC..I)'

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·!3 w..a ...................-...........................·-730
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:16 Wielia.- .....................................,.,_,.,3.112

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SZ .............._, ........................SIIl9.n

Us For All

Rt•.Hier Sl'l vtces

•

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•

VALLEY ·WEATHER

Highs in 70s set for Friday
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SYRACUSE :-- Middleport Literary Club will rnet at 2 p.m. Wednesday at the' home ofLeah Ord. Ida Diehl Will lead a group discussion about
Tom Brokaw's "The Greatest Generation."

Warmer air will continue to
pour into the tri-county area
through Friday. forecasters said.
Highs on Friday will be in the
70s.
The warm · temperatures are
arriving on southerly winds being
pumped into the region by a high
pressure system that was drifting
to the northeast.
A few clouds will linger across
the
area tonight, with overnight
RockY Boots - 4
AO Shell- 39"•
lows remaining. above normal.
Sears"' 3tl.
. They'll r~nge from the upper 30s
Shoney'o- 1
to mid-40s.
WBI-Mart- 55')•
On Friday, the area will see
WendY's - 17\1
plenty .of sunshine and dry slties.
Worthington -12').
Cally stocl! reports are the
The threat of precipitation will
4 p.m. closing quotes · of return · on Saturday with the
the previous day's trans·
actions, provided by approach of a cold fiont, which
will cool thing; off a bit: Highs on
Adve8t of GallipOlis. ·

Selvke Commission to meet

Gannett-11~

General Electrlo- 150'&gt;
Harley Davidson - .7 8'·
~mart

-to).

Kroger -

t7l'o

Lands End - 55h
Ud.-38~

Oak Hill Financial~ 14%
OVB-30~

Ona Valley~ 341'.
Peoples- 16%
Premier - B)..

Rockwell- 42).

Sunday will. be in the rrrid-50s
and 60s.
Sunset tonight will be at 6:48
P:m. and sunrise on Friday at 6:28
.a.m.
·weather forecast:
Tonight. .. Mosdy clear. Lows
40 to 45. Light and variable wind.
Friday... Pardy cloudy and
warmer. Highs 70 to 75 .
: Friday
night ... Increasin~
clouds. Lows in the upper 40s. '
Extended forecast:
Saturday...Mosdy cloudy with
. a chance of showers. Highs in tne
mid 60s.
Sunday... Pawy cloudy. Lows iil
. the mid 40s and highs in the mid''
60s.
.
Monday. .. Pardy cloudy. Lows
40 to 45 and highs in the mid
60sc ·
:'

..

GALLIPOLIS
THE GOOD LIFE AT A GREAT PRICE.

GUARANTEED~
I

667-7388
• 1-800-200-4005
.
.

Story time will take place every
hour.on the hour fium· 10 a.m tci 2
p.m in the school lilmry, ~re will
be a petfurmance by the Ohio River
CJosgen at 1 p.m. and pony rides,
compliments of Lentes (amily, all day
long. .
.•
•.

The Souti)ern Consortium for
children will have a motivational

Koo.-. s- Copoclty ""'" ........

3·speed motor, 15 cycles, 4 water tempt.

.,6523 Reg. ~29 . 99, Sale 29'1.9'1.

N20702

2s:gal. 8.6/6.~ SCFM at 40 . PSI.

~eg.

479.99, Sale429.9'1.

~269

99

we're puHing eur 1111tlrw 1tore an oale Ia celebrate
you and. lha~k 'you far your ouppart

.

..

Kanmcn Supor Cop city clryw
6 cycles, 3'temperatures. •60612
Reg. 339.99, Sole ~19 . 9'1 .

Qafbtt•S.W-tinelllor ·
Briggs &amp; Stretton etnglne, '17-in: tilling

width. f,19320 Reg ..599.99, Sale 569.9'1.

;"91~512

99

;ngs~287

_........
MillS

·as m ;.U.

..

'

.

99

~.'on site, there will be pro-

on drug av.lteDCSS and pre-

~

gun

~

me

prevention,

sugar,testingfiorn 9 a.m. to noon, Dr.
Boxkir will be offering vision screening fiorn 10 a.m. to 1 p.m., PleasaQt
.Vdlley.Hospital .will b.e checking fur
skiq ~lnHearing will be giving
hearing testS, and die Meig; High
School J;Iuning assistant class will be
~blood presslln' checks.
The Univmity. of Rio Grande

guage sltills.

hi. liM

'

er.fbmon 5.5-HP llr ~·-

c. afton•• 14.5-HP-

Briggs &amp;·Stratton 1/C Go!d engin@, •2-in.
vanhld O.ck, 6 spoede.l27053 Reg. 999.~..

"*"'*"

19.7-cu, ft! 11M11•W•th built-in water filtration. j56082
Reg: 999.99, Sole 888.00. ..

RCA 52-ln.

""'t"*"t

1

TV t
With Picture -In· icture.' It 549 9
IMk •PS29211 Reg. 1699.9'1, Sale 159.9.9'1.

KenrnaN ............,

5~1evel wash, Ultrll f• nw"" direct feed weter
sys1em. 115779 Reg. 4S9:9'1· Sale 399.9'1 .

J!9~899~ =~~800 s.gs~143cr =.~359
09

ClalllpoiJII! •••ra
.430 . . ._

•ride•

&amp;

operatood

By Bobby &amp; Yen•••• Muncy (tll34ea)
Mon.-P'rl. V-e. Saturday e-e &amp; Sunday 12-15
l7•10) 448-1548
. ,.

program on poetry, painting and lan-

. !furniture, Carpet, ftl.ppfianc.es , ~~._,;_~
· Financing Available 4212.3 State !/{t. 7 • 'Tuppers Plain$, 01l

"'

POMEROY -An action for dissolution of marriage has been filed in
Meigs County Common Pleas Court by Thomas Spencer, Middleport,
and Ruth Spencer, Gallipolis Ferry,W.Va:
.
'

mation, and Cathy Lentes with a

.

90DayLay·Awa

RACINE - Southern Local kindergarten registration will be held
May 4 and 5 fiom.8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. Reiidents who plan !0 enroll their
children are to call 949-2664 to schedule'an appointment. · '
Birth certificates, immunization records, Social Security cards and cur.tody papers in cases of divorce are to taken to the appointment.

hoop contlists.

1lilJ be there with .edqcational infi&gt;r7

!Furniture P{us
Ptt. 882·28115

' Regisballon~

Dissolution filed

nom

and )'0\ith olplizations.'
Holzer Medical Center will be
doing .ttee cholesterol and blood

ofioniloo"'
.,

From orlglaal 110 or 135 C-41 pi'OCIIII ro111.
See one of our clerlll for cl+teJ!ti die
Fuji Tru Color mm Club Card ~
.
HAVE 6 ROLLS DEVELOPED AND ~IT 'OlE SJ;VENTIJ ROLL

lium the American Red Cross, and
Ronald McDOnald, who will do a
magic show at noon.
Casey LcNe -~ .demonsttate ball
handliilg
.~0 a.m. to 2 p.m.
·when Rockin~ ;Reggie Robinson
will begin musiC\ for fun and boola

,.......- . ...... 'padod. Sullocdplloto ....
.ifoaoJts nloy bo lmplett I b)' ........ lito
lhl-.lplloto.

'

ltlbocrlplioo bf 11111 pamtlllld lo onu

:...,._ m,r...... ,tpiiOodjooil- ••,

Exp.

faona Pap AI

pm;

.~o

· Pcmll~. Oh.

Family

.,..,...- ................
\

ServiDe

LETART -All flowers and other things on graves in the Letart Township Cemetery need to be removed before April 1 when spring cleaning
will begin.

RACINE - RACO will meet at 6:30p.m. at Sw Mill Park. There will
be a poduck dinner.
I

.

:The Daily Sentinel

ln1 llCUil I requlrtmtnt for

PRESCRIPTIO~

RACOtomeet

· RACINE - Frances Marie Roush Miller, 82, Racine, died Tuesday,
March 21,2000 at Holzer Medical Center.
·' She was botn on Dec. 24, 1917, daughter ofthe late Roy and Elizabeth Cleland Roush: She was a homemaker., •
She is survived by her husband, Herbert LeRoy "Roy" Miller; two
daughters and a son-in-law, Loretta and Bob Cochrun ofWintersville,
and Claudia Hadley of Batavia; rwo sons and daughters-in-law, Herbert S. and Sharon Miller of Rockport; Ind., and Jefli:ey L. and Linda
Miller of Leon, W.Va.; a daughter-in-law, Rita Lewis of Pomeroy; a sir.ier, Delores Zaborich; and nine grandchildren, ~.0 great-grandchildren
and two great-great grandchildrep. .
.
.
: She was preceded in death by a son, a grandson, a brother and a sis.
I
ier.
. ·Private graveside services will be conducted for the family.
. ~rangements were completed by Fisher Funeql Home, Pomeroy.

Swisher &amp; Lohse
Photo Center .

E. Main

Spedll meeting set

Frances Miller

'•

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Skin testing set

36'·

On1 lbite senil.tor hit iUAaftted the ata~ repeal a law making

Mon. t!Vu Fri. 8:00 o.m. lo 8:00 p.m.IIII.I:GO . . ID 1:00pm
·
Sunday 10:00 a.m. to 4:00p.m, . · ,

Backyard gardening proa;am

LOCAL STOCKS

to the ttlltlng. · ·

DEVELOPED li'IJE

COLUMBUS -The Board ofDiiectors of Ohio State Leg;d Services·
•
Association and Southe2stenl Ohio Legal Services will meet at OSLSA,
861 N. Higl,t St. in Columbus on March 25 at I 0 a.m.
RACINE - Hal Kneen, Meig; County agricultural agent, will conThe meeting; are open to the public. OSLSA and SEOLS provide free
representation in civil matters to those who cannot afford an attorney in duct an hour-long program, "Caring for Fruits Grown in Your Backyard"
on Saturday at 10:30 a.m., at the Racine Library.
a number of counties, including Meigs County.
The program will include information about fertilizing, spraying, prun:ing and irrigation needS of the most common fruit crops.
Arrangements have been made to visit a small producer ~tely
afterwards
to see how the basic procedures can be implemented. Th05e
POMEROY - God's NET and the Meig; United Methodist Cooperative Parish will hold an 8-Ball Pool Tournament on April! . Doors will attending should be dressed appropriately for the weather and for walking
open at 9 a.m., with competition to begin at II a.m. Double elimination into a garden. The extension program is free of charge.
and "c;all the eight-ball" rules will apply. Lunch and snacks will be available. Three class~registrations. Proceeds will benefit the United Fund for
Meigs County.
'
PAGEVIL~E--, A free skin testing 'clinic will be condu.c ted by Conni~
· Cotterill, R .N., Meig; County ruberculosis nurse at the Scipio fire station
Monday. 4:30-6:30 p.m.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Eastern Local Board of Education will meet
All persons who are in food service are required to obtain yearly skin
tests.
·
Friday at 5 p.m. at the administrative office in Tuppers 'Plains. The board
will discuss and possibly act on the plumbing contract for the multipur·
pose building.

' ! MIDDLEPORT - · Ruth A. Ebershach, 82, Middleport, died Tuesct;y, March 21, 2000 in Marietta Memorial Hospital, following a
lengthy illness. ·
~;She was born on April 30, 1917 in Wellston; daughter of the late
Jlmmitt J. and Bertha Vaughn Blackburn. He was a homemaker and a AEP-Wo
Akzo-40l.
derk, and attended First Baptist Church of Middleport. ·
.
AmTach/SBC - 43'•
: Sutviving are a son and daughter-in-law, James and Kathy .Ebers- Aahl811d Inc. - 32'.1
.
~ch of Pataskala, and Darla and Thomas Siley of Marietta; and three AT&amp;T-58~
Bank One-27
'iir,.ndchildren and one grandchild.
.
' .
.
· Bob.Evans - 13).
: ·She was also preceded in death by her husbanll, Harold A. Ebers- ·a orgwarnerChampion - 3'~.
iia'ch; and a brother, Dale. Lester Blackburn.
Shope - ~.
, ; :Services will be 11 a.m. Friday in Ewing Funeral Home1 Pomeroy, Charming
City Holding - 1~.
..yith the Rev.I\~.ark Morl'l'w officiating. B.utif,l will be in Be~c~ Grove . Federal Mogul- 13').
Flrstar - 23'·
€emetery.
Friends inay call at the funeral home from 7-9 torught.
•c,

~~--~--~~~--~

:

DEATH NOTICES

..
I!

POMEROY- Meig; CountyVeterans Service Commission will meet
on Monday at 7:30p.m. at the office at 117 E. Memorial Drive, Pomeroy.

OS• SA/SEOLS board to 112eet

;'RACINE - Harry Carlos Hill, 87 .. of Racine, died on Tuesday,
Marc~ 21, 2000.
,
,
He was born on january 16, )913 in
Letart Falb, a son of the late Albert and Eliza
Miller Hill.
He was a lifelong farmer. He was
baptized at the Racine First Baptist Church.
He was a member of t~ Pomeroy/Racine
Mason Lodge No. 164, ~s a 32nd Degree
Mason, and was a Shriner with Aladdin Temple
of Columbus.
He was a former president of the Southern
Local School Board and was a central committeeman a11d Letart Township Trustee for many
years. He grew produce and sold it at the
Farmers' Market in Athens.
He is survived by his wife, Katie L. Hill of Racine, whom he mar"tied on October 28, 1939; a daughter and son-in-law, Janice and Joe
,Glenn of Racine; two sons and daughters-in-law, Paul E. and Cresdyn
Hill and Charles T. and Sheila Hart, all of Letart Falls; a brother and ,sister-in-law, Dallas and Donna Hill of Apple Grove; ·11 grandchildren,
CaJ:OI Glenn Litde, Brenda Glenn Manuel, Angie Glenn Queen,
Dwight Hill, Tina Hill Rees,Jarrod Hill, PJ. Hill, Tom· Hill, Jodie Hill
. Smith, Sarah Hill and Joni Dixon; 12 great grandchildren, Shauna
Manuel, Ryan Hill, 1Y Hill, Cyle Rees, Allie Rees, Brittany Ifill, Katelyn Hill, Maddison Hill, A)exis Hill, Kylie Smith, Cassie Springer and
'Jacob Dixon; three sister~ in-law; Pauline Hill, Inez Hill and Erma Hill;
and a brother-in-law, Harolo Roush.
;_ · In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by his' son, Virgil Hill; a great-grandson, Jeremy Guinther; eight brothers, St. Claire,
Joe, Jerry, Clifford; Julian, Albert Jr., Dale WaUace and John; and three
Sisters,: Doris Hensler, Violet Grimm; and M:ujorie Roush.
·· ·Services will be held on Saturday, March 25, 2000 at 1 p.m. at the
,First Baptist Church in Racine, with the :Rev. Rick Rule officiating.
Burial will follow at Letart Cemetery in Letart Falls.
Friends may call at Roush Funeral Homew in Ravenswood, West
Vjrginia, on Friday, March 24, 2000 from 2~4 .;and 7-9 p.m., with
Masonic rites to be provided by. Pomeroy-Racine Mason Lodge No.
·
164 at 7:30 p.m.
· Pall bearers are P.J. Hill,Jarrod Hill, Tom Hill; Ryan Hill,Max Hill
Jr., Dean Hill, Dave Hensler, Bob Morris and ~&lt;irman Roush.
.
.

·,,..

answered the emerge1;1cy call
Sunday afternoon. "Someone
just murdered my mom and my
sister Pam."

LOCAL NEWS IN BRIEF

.

Nlllll!!lOus other .Jocal agencies,
Olg:illizatioJU; businesses and individ.
uals wiD po.rtic:ipate using the Fun
Fest tp · infOrm and educate abot!t
suppoi:t services to local families.

•

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99

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_Th_e_o_an~y

·_Se...;..ntin_·_ei_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _O.;::;;.

The Daily Sentinel
•

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'£sta5fisfid itl1948

O.U Aan Landera: I am the director

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
74MI92·2156• Fu: 892·2157

·for the Mental Health Association in Fort
Bend County, Texas. I 'Mnt to thank you
for printing the letter about the National Alcohol Screening Day last year. The
response was terrific. We received calls
ttom teens who wanted to know how to
find help for their parenu, from elderly .
penons concerned. about loneliness and
drinking, 1111d from orhers who just needed to find the locations of available services. Many people who called were
between 30 and 50 yem of age, and had
started drinking to deal with personal
problems. They · were concerned about
16sing their jobs, families and friends.
;·Participants attending the screening
hear an educational presentation on alco- .
hoi problems, and complete a written
self-assessment. They have the opportunity to talk one-on-one with a health
professional, and are given the names and ·
phone mlmbers of support services and
l:l'eatmept facilities in the area. All screenillS' are free and anonymous.
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Ohio Valley Publishing Co•

Clw1ene Hoeflich

Gener81 U.118{1er

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R. Shawn Lewll

Charlel W. Govey
P!lblllhef
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P-inion

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Managing Editor

~rry

Boyer
Advertlelng Director

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Diane Klly Hill

,_.,.*'tiN ..Jilo,.,.. ........ n..,. •ltnll"'lnr ,.._ J(JIJ wonb. All ~den.,.. idj«t
10 . . . , aM..., H,... 11M,_,. IIMml .U II,.,.,..IUlllfbfr. ND '"uipal lntnY ..W
N ,-Hisle.., Ldtn •ltodl• iJc food Msk, ttdthuU., in.n~ 11011 fHI'JIDulilin.
71N

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u,rw.ft U.IM ~ IH/IIw.,. tiN~''"'" o/111• Oltio ~J PdJbltillt

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Co. 'I MlltriiJ lrNN, IUdn6 Ollurwii•MIM.

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NATIONAL VIEWS:

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Gore has ·learned well
from master of spin

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CoUnty 111MS

of Escondido, C.IH.. on the

Pentapn's flsall 'biiiCil hole':

As politicians of both major parties call for accountability and fiscal restraint - and many of them bemoan the state to which the
U.S. armed forces have fallen - laxness, errors and incompetence
at the Pentagon ·aie making that giant bureaucracy .its own worst
enemy.
.
Nearly everyone supports better pay and housing for our men
. and women in uniform, but it's difficult for the Pentagon to make
a pitch to Congress and to U.S. voters for more money· when it
can't lteep track of what it already has. For the fourth year in a row,
the Pentagon's inspector general reported (March 3) that the Pentagon's books are in .such disarray that they cannot even be a1,1dited.
That's a shameful state of affairs in an agency that consumes $275
billion a year, and an invitation to fraud and abuse ....
As a result, the Pentagon is unable to supply accurate information
to Congress, cannot accurately estimate the savings from b:ise closings, cannot -provide reliable statistics on whether to contract for
services or rely on the government for them, and cannot reliably
state the cost of defense systems that are subject to national d\'bate.
... Federal agencies have been required since 1996 to state not
whether they could pass an audit, but whether their. books were
such a mess that. they could even face an audit. For four years now,
the Pentagon ha$ said it cannot. That is inexcusable....
Secretary of Defense· William Cohen has . known· about these
accounting problems for years. They are his responsibility. if he can·
not clean up the acco~tnting mess at the Pentagon, it's time to find
someone who can. ·
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TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Thursday, March 23, the 83rd day of2000.There'are 283 ·
days left in the year.
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Today's Highlight in History,: '.- .
;·o,
On March 23, 1775, Patrick Henry made his famous call 'f or
America's independence from Brirain, telling the Virginia .P;ovirlcial
Convention, ".Give me liberty, or give me deathr'
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On this date:
In 1743, George Frideric Handel's oratorio "Messiah" had its
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London premiere.
In 1792,Joseph Haydn'$ Symphony No. 94 in G Major (the"Sur- ·
prise" symphony) was performed publicly for the first. time,.W Lon· ·
don.
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In 1806, explorers Lewis and· Clark, having reached,the ·Pacific
coast, began their journey back eas~. .
· ' . , . '. , . ·
In 19.19; Benito Mussolini founded his Fascist politic~!~ movement
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in Milan, Italy. .
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· In 1933, the German Reichstag adopted the llniblirig Ast;'which
~ctively granted Adolf Hider dictatoriallegislati~ ~fi, ·:' .
In· '1:94~, during World War II, the U.S. gGVernmentbegan evacuatirig Jap~nese-AmcJicans frOm their West Coast ·h9ines ·to detention centers.
' rn 195Q, at the Academy Awards, .. All the King's Men" won best
picture of 1949; its star, Broderick Crawford. won best actor. Olivia
de Havilland won best actress for "The Heiress." ·
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In 1956, Pakistan became an independer:~t republic within the
British Commonwealth.
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In 196S,America's first two-person space ~t began as Gemini
'3 &amp;lasted·off frtim Cape Kenne&lt;:ly wi~h asf~Una)lts,N'irgil I, ,Grissom
andJohnW.Yoting abpard,
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In 1983, Dr. Barney Clark, recipient of a permanent artificial
)leart, die&lt;:! at die University of Utah Me9ical Qnter after 112 days
, with the deVice.
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Today's Birthdays: Comedian· Marty Allen is 78 ..Movie director
Mark RydeU is 66. Singer-producer Ric Ocasek is 51. Singer Chaka
Khan is 47 .Actress Amanda Plummer is 43. Comedian john Pinnett
is 36. Actor Richard Grieco is 35. Country musician Kevin Griffin
(Yankee Grey) is 35. Rock singer-musician Damon Albarn (Blur) is
32. Rock musician John Humphrey (The Nixons) is 30. Actress .
. Keri RusseU ("Felicity") is 24. Actress Nicholle Tom ls 23.

Ann

Landers
ADVICE
Every call we receive gives us the
opportunity to edutate the public about
alcohol abuse, risky drinking, .alcohol
treatment and related mental health
ISSUeS.
Often, individuals with alcohol problems have other disorders ·such as depression, anxiety, manic depression, and so
on, and are undiagnosed. National Alcohol Screening Day is a great place to
start. Thank you;Ann, for being our messenger once again.- GAY WILLIAMS,
MENTAL HEALTH ASSOCIATION,
FORT BEND COUNTY, TEXAS

DEAR GAY WILLIAMS: I appreciReaders, if you have apy questions
ate being able to alert my readers yet rel!afding alcohol, or if you know someanother time to N ationa! Alcohol . one who could benefit from this annoyScreening Day, to be held this year on mous screening, please call 1-800-697Thursday, April 6. There will be 2000 6700 today to find a site in your area.
sites across the country, 500 of them on CoUege students can also check with
coUege campuses, offering free, anony~ their health or counseling center. Do it
mous screenings for those who h-ave today. It could save the life of someone
problems with alcohol, as weU as for you love.
those whose loved ones have a drinking
Dear Ann Landers: I didn't care for
problem.
your response to the woman whose
Nearly 14 million American adults cousin_s planned to visit,' then, canceled
have an alcohol-use disorder, and nearly when ~ked to bring their own . pillO\Ys
17 percent of children under age 14live and towels,You said buying extra piUows
with an adult who drinks heavily or has was no big deal.You are wrong. For some
an alcohol problem. Teens and coUege people, it IS a big.deal. Do you· have any
students are at risk as weU.Young persons idea how much a pair of down pillows
who begin drinking before age 15 are costs these days?
four times as likely to develop alcohol
I don't have room for any more pillows
dependence as those who begin drinking than the ones we have on our beds. Why
at age 2t.Aicohohs frequendy a factor in shouldn't those .. freeloaders bring theii
. auto crashes, homicides ·and suicides for own stuff when asked? It is enough that
15~ to 24-year-olds, and' 81 percent of the hosts offered to put them up and feed
fraternity artd sorority members report · them. When we trave), we. always bring .
· pillows, towels and blankets. I would not
binge drinking.

SOCIETY NEWS
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THIRTYSOMETHING:

Real-life lessons found on the playing field
While most grownup ball players are more
concerned with the Dow Jor:~es average than
their own batting average, the true meaning
of the game is stiU around.
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That meaning will be found on ballfields
across the tri-counry, soon, along with b,ig
smiles and high-fives. None of these players
will be paid; none will drive their Lexuses
(or it is Lexi?) to the games; and none have
incentive clauses for showing up on time.
In short, they'D play the game for fun.
BuUy for them.
These kids are likely to learn to real-life
lessons during their diamond days in the .
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These lessbns have been taught to young
. ballplayers for decades.
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Fortunately, I learned these lessons, having
played baseball since the time I could walk.
Between all-star games, traveling squads and
regular league play, I ate, drank and slept .
basebaU: I still db.
But the factors that keep me coming back
each year transcended the sport. It's not the
home runs, the perfect games or the diving
catches.
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It's the .love of the game and the lessons it
teaches.
. Coach Dad mixed the fundamentals . of
baseball with the fundamentals of life.
Speaking on .a child's level, Dad taught his
,players the principles of racial equality, gender equity and good sportsmanship - topics that were considered taboo during the
late '70s in the Deep South.
On the playing field, there is no black,
white, yeUov; or red, Dad said. There is· only
team.
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Thil was an 'important concept for a band
of rag-t~g Ariny brats to grasp. ·our typical
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R. Shawn
Lewis
MY VIEW

Coach Dad mixed the fundamentals of baseball with the
fundamentals of life. Speaking
on a child's level, ~ Dad taught
his players.the principles of
racial equality, gender equity
and good sportsmanship . topics that were co?tsidered
taboo during the late '70Sin
the Deep South.

Shackelford - was one of the most sought''
players on draft day.
But it wasn't always that way.
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. When Becky first tried out, the other.'
coaches passed on her. But Dad didn't hesitate.
He looked beyond her gender and saw tl:le
potential for a great second baseman - !lr,..
basewomalt in this case.
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As usual, Da!l's eye for talent was true. And
it didn't ,take long for other teams to discov,.."
er girls could not only play basebaU, but they;·
could play it well.
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There were times even with Becky on the ;
team that ,FortJackson was on the down side .
of soQle ·big-time blowouts. But . even in ·'
defeat, Dad taught us.
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"Go shake their hands," Dad would say at !
the end of the 22-2 rout-e. played in 100-...
degree heat.
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"And teU 'em 'good game.'"
The last thing we wanted to do was con-..
gramlate the "enemy," but we did ·i t because.;
Coach said it was the right thing to do. And
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it felt right after we did it;
Go,od sportsmanship is ' as much a part of
the game as hitting and fielding are, Dad
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said.
" Sometimes you win, sometimes YO!I .
lose," he said. ·
'There's a )ot more than athletic prowess to ·.
be developed on baseball diamonds across
the region.
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Real-life wisdom can be found ·on even ,
the most basic fields. Indeed, these are fields .,
of dreams .
. So play ball, kids. A~d learri. ·
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ethl)it makeup greatly •resembled the American' melting .pot. · From ·Puerto Ricans to
.Italians to Poles to African Americans, we
· covered all the bases~
Thanks, in, part, to th~ innocence of young
'minds, we mastered this concept on the
field. Off the field, our multiracial, multicultural relationships blossomed and
endured. ·
.
(k. SllaWtl Lewis is managing editor of Ohio ;
Dad tau~t us there was room for girls in
· Vii/ley Publishing Co.)
basebaU,
.. too. I remember one, girl - Becky
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'VIEWS: .
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Celebrate forming

Farmers and ranchers are producing meat doned in favor of more refined prescrip'tioi{',
· that. if low~ in fat an,d ·cholesterol- just "tonics," such as Ritalin, Prozac and a whoi~. ~
Dear Editor:
·' since 1985, qeef cuts have . become 27 per- host of other uppers/ down~rs and ali'~ '
This is National Agri~ulmre.Week and it is . cent,leaner:'
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around~r~ (amphetamines and tranquilize~s)
a time when we in the farming community : ' The,effictency of Amencan farmers bene- . JP ·calm down kids.
, ~·~
like to share the success ~tocy that is Ameri- fits . co~sutners ·m the pocketboo_k. W~ spend
According to our 'sources, ' more than · 2
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; ap~lPdmately 10 ·d7 perch e n t of our ~~~.omhe million sch~ol-age kids are presently on
can agriculture.
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d · •h : on 100 compare wtt 11 ,5 percent m t e h
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d t eseme tea1 restramts .a1, opgWlthcol!ntle!~
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media only the critical messages of the pro- · mte:
ng .om, . · percent
ap~q, an
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. · ' $1.4 percent 10 India.
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, num ers o pre ~c oo1 c 1 . ren.,
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testers and cnucs of Our food production
Am .
. ul
. . d d · . r
. What alarms me 1s that little ts known of'"
system.
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.- •· celebration .fhis week and- every day of the . the ppsstble lorlg-term consequences of
. . 1. ·· . da d'
A" d w hi!e agrtC\1
ture to y oes .ace
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t . ese tomes
on. ram .n
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many
chall eri ges as' all . success.~
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do,. by and large., tp4ay's f~ms are ~rvels pf,
Happy Agriculture Week.
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' :ttOIJ. . ~!}d. development; n~r ~. the ,poss1b~e4 ;;
efficiency and pfOdUctivity.
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Muy Withee , dependency. which · may be mduced as . a ~
Nearly 2 miDi()~· pepple farm or· ranch. in · .• .
Rio ~rande result•• of t.hetr extended use.
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the U.S., and of those almost 90 percent·are .
Could IJ be that wuh the. best of mten •. ~
operated by i~divid~aJs or family. · corpora,;~
tions, we are bending io short-ten~ .solutions.
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tions with long-term consequences, possibly
Farmet.:S. -are indep~~d.ent. ~qsiness people
Dear· Edit~r;
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creating a piU-popping drug and alcohM·I
who prDVl~e for t\le.lr fa!Jllbes by growmg
In. f~rmer umes, a to.ruc for IIIJY r.o,ts · was dependency in these kids?
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and. produ.~mg food .and fiber. , . . .
admi.m.stered to calm ·down act1ve ktds. .
· Frustrated busy parel)ts and teachel'S,oftoll~
· In the~ 1960s~ theJa~~er' s~pplied ·, 2$.8 • .fh!s tqnit ~as a·pate!lt.ed medic!n~ c~lled }a · eal to th~ rlledioal/psychiatric pf0fessi6;)
perronsl1n,:&lt;rhe••U.&amp; at~d abroad w1th food;. l~u~num: d liquid s~creuon ·of optum erys· pph
: hAbHD ·li:.ds . , •',
·h
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~oday, . ~ne farmtrr. SUP,plied food f?r 129 "· t~s; fbd ~!coh9!: N~edless t? point 1out, the to , e1Pt. em out Wlt
', .:_. J
people .1n qt~ O ..S. ;m.d abroad. ''
httll!.one who consumed th1s stuff were vu- . In (eahty, wh~t may be. need,sd u charact~f .
Res'ear~:h;' anti, ~vancemenl$ in biote~h- ~ually. s~~at~d into "~ombie-ijke" negative· f~rr~at.lOn, wht~h reqmres time,. P,attenc~!
nology F .now tn ,the t;narketplace, creatmg msenstb11ity.
.
.disctphne and most of all, lovtng pemstence. ,
food with a longtr shelflife, that's rastier and ' ,Ah,, ~ur to~. we ·are more· sophisticated
Bob Murphy 'i
in some ca!es, even more nutritious.
and · scientific. Laudan'¥" has been abanVinton

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l,iJving persistence

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200 IMin II., Pokrt , . .
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304.e71-1333

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"I'm very proud of the volunteers from our county
who were rec0gni2ed for their effuns;' said Haggerty.
noting that everyone attending learned things they C2II
use in working as a volunteer in the program.
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RECOGNIZED - Given recognition for volunte.llr
service at t~e 4-H Conference held in Columbuljo
were from the left, Sharon Jewell, 35 years; Pauline'
Atkins, 55 years, and Rachel Downie, 41 years.
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CELEBRITY FLASHBACK '

Sorority.. elects officers

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Award for best picture.
45 years ago: Elia Kazan's "On
the Waterfront" won eight Academy Awards including best picture and best director. Marlon
Brando won ' the best actor
Oscar.
35 years ago: Jeff Beck

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replaced Eric Clapton as guitarist
for the Yardbirds.
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30 · year~ ago: "Woodstock,""
the documentary about the 196~
rock festival in Bethel; N.Y., pre-,
miered at a theater in New YorR
City. The film won a best d~c'u.'
mentary Oscar.

55 Alive offered

COMMUNITY CALENDAR
tht homt OfYWMt Scllly.All MHS
STMP.SVIIJJ! - Hymh tina.
alumni Wtlcome. ·
Saturday, 7 p.m., Sdvenville ComPOMEl\.0¥ - Melp County
. munlty Chu~~:h. Ftat\lred llnaen
~n\ ~owthip Chun:h• of · ·
SATtJIU)A;Y, March 25
will be Delivered and Jo McCIQud
Chrilt, Thunday, 7 p.m. at Bradford
with othen I!Mted. Public welcome.
Chun:h ofChrist.
1UPPERS PLAINS -

VFW

Post,Thunda}\.7:30 p.m. at the hall.
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POMEROY - Precepto~ Beta
Beta Chapter, Bet! Sigma Phi Soror- ·
ity. Thursday. 6:30 p.m. at the home .
of]ane Brown. Silver and golden circle ceremonies.
POMERoY - ' Caring and
Sliaring SuppOrt Group. Thursday. 1
p.m. at the Mei~ Multipurpose
Senior . Center. Topic . . Alzheimers,
New Resean:h:'
.MIDDLEPORT- Middleport
High School alumni officers and
c=cutive.oflicers,Thursday. 7 p.m. at

J

Sale Price$
On All .

FromS89
o,ty

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Carpet Sale

· FREE
·FREE
·FREE Furniture• moving

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Sale·

Curio Cabinets

• 20 styles on sale
Quotes
Removal

Sertas

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I ftt, W.va. t
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POMEROY - Three 4-H V?iunteers from Meigs
unty attended the 2000 Ohio 4-HVolunteer Confernee Saturday in Colwnbus.
The conference atlr.lcted t:nnre than 1,300 youth and
dult volunteers from across the state,The objective of the
nt was to enable volunteers to learn new skills and·
ideas with each other in various suilject matter areas
ffered by the Ohio 4-H progcun. More than 81 differ! ~ons were offered.
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"Vruuriteers are. the badi.llone of the 4-H progr.lm;'
· . Jeff' King, acting ~tant difector of4-H youth devel~
ment "We truly recognize and appreciate all that they
throughout the year:·
Those from Meigs Counl:}' who attended the conferee were David R. "Chip" Haggerty, Meigs County
ension Agent, 4-HYouth Development, accompanied
Pauline Atkins, Rachael Downie and Sharon Jewell.
As part of the conference, a special recognition lunheon sponsored by BOb Evans Farms was held to honor
lunteers who had made significant contributions to the ;
hio 4-H program.
·Those who were recognized tiom Meigs County
re Mrs. Atkips .of Rutland, 55 years of service; Mrs.
ownie, Racine, 41 years pf service and Mrs. Jewell,
·
omeroy,35 years of service.

program. There is no test. to take and certificates will be
awarded to those who complete· the class. The course
.
SYRACUSE - The caU to prayer and self-denial fee is $10 for each participant and includes a workbook
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service highlighted the March meeting of the Syracuse . which is yours to keep.
United Methodist Women held at the church.
Several major auto insurance carriers in Ohio offer
Mary Lisle had the program using" A Day Accept- discounts to graduates of the 55 Alive course. Interestable to the l:ord" using scripture from Isaiah. Readers ed·persons should contact their insurance carrier to see
were Hope Moore, Freda Wilson, Ruth Crouch, and if a discount is available.
For more information or to register for the class,
Jean Stout. The program dealt with renewal, guidance
frOm the Holy Spirit, and the meaning of !!3Crificial residents may contact Alice Wamsley, 992-2161.
giVing.
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(AP) Entertainment highlights
. uring the week of March 26. Mrs..Moore led the group in the litany of the pur· ..
pose and The Lord's Prayer. Jean Stout gave the secrepril 1:
tary's report, and the birthday of Marie Houd:ishelt Was . POMEROY - Carol fl.dams was elected president
60 years ago: Alfred . Hitcht~~~~~~IIJt, ,:was~ reported that 18 sick calls were made. of Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi. · ock's "Rebecca" starred LauIt
use "Help for People'' for devotions.
Sorority at a recent meeting held ,at the St. Paul
ence Olivier,. Joan Fontaine,
Mrs. Crouch served re&amp;eshmen~ and during the ·Lutheran Church.
·
eorge Sanders and Judith
hour members looked at old family pictures disOther officers named were Carol McCullough, vice
nderson. It won. an Academy
by the members.
president; Manha McPhail, recording secretaty; Carolyn Grueser, treasurer; and Jean Powell, corresponding
secretary.
It was announced that a social meeting will be held·
POMEROY - The 55 Alive/Mature Driving. a at the home ofJane Bro~ Thursday night at which ·
[cla~om driver improvement course for drivers aged . time the Silver Circle and Golden Circle awards will
and older, will be held at the Meigs County Senior be honored.
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,Ce1nter on Wednesday, Maich 29 and Thursday, March •
Adams repone&lt;;! on a·new program being conduct·
ed at Veterans's Memorial Hospital· and supported by
from 10 a.m. to 2:30p.m. ·
beveloped by AARl? (American AMociation -of the National Cancer Society. An organitation meeting
'K&lt;,nn.o Penom) 5S Alive can sharpen driving skills, 'Ms held lMt week in the conference room there.
pre'l\'!nt accidents, 1111d keep older driven ort the road
The nell\ for volunteers to read weekly in the 10011
longer and more safely.
schools was discussed. Refrellunenta ~re served by
The eight hoilr dais conslits of video presentation, Vera Crow and Rose Sisson. O~ets attending wet\!
~oli ~Jltrtldpation by clau memben. Meip Jane Walton, Ann Rupe, Joan Cotdet, Jane Brown,
County Shetift'Jllll SOubby wUI apeak 11 part of die Ruth Arut Rlffie, lllld Mat:pret Stewart.

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HONORED FOR SERVICE- The Pomeroy Volunteer
Fire Department recently presented Reed Will with a
gold pocket watch In· recognition of 50 years of ser·
vice to the department. Making the presentation,
right, Is Are Chief Chris Shank.

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THt.!RIDAY. Minh 23

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DONATE TESTER - Crew's Family Restaurant in
Pomeroy, in conjunction with KFC, recently donated
a hose tester to .the Pomeroy Volunteer Fire Depart,
ment. Pictured with the tester are Fire Chief Chris
Shank and Danny Crow.

presume to impose on my hosts by
expecting them to 1upply these items. We
appreciate being invited, and anything
more would be taking advantage of their
hospitality. RESPECTING BOUNDARES IN ONTARIO, CANADA
...
D~AR ONTARIO: The mail was 20
to 1 against me. You win, When the relatives come to visit, they should bring
their own pilloW!·, and anything else that
might be, a hardship for the hosts to provide.
Lonesome? Take charge of your life
and turn. it around. Write for Ann Landers' new booklet, "How to Make
Friends and Stop Being Lonely." Send a
self-addreSsed, long, business lize envelope and check or money order for .
$4.25 (this includes postage and handling) to: Friends; c/o Ann Landen, P. 0;
Box 11562, Chicago, III. 60611-0562. (In
Canada, send $5.15.) To find out more
about Ann Landers and read her past
columns, visit the Creators Syndicat.e
web page at www.creators.com.

.4-H conference attended

. 'i

• 1he lnclllinapoHs Star, on AI Gore:
You've got to admire AI Gore. Not many politicians would have
the nerve to take part in an iUegal fund-raiser in a Buddhist temple,
make campaign calls from the White House, take refuge from prosecution in the phrase "no conqoUing legal authority," then declare
'ampaign finance 'r eform a passion of his presidential campaign.
:·
.
Gore has sure learned weU from his boss.
A look at
how to spin mistakes before the opposition turns them into political liabilities.
what U.S.
President Clinton did it repeatedly as the
public
over)ooked such mistakes as the
newspapers
Lincoln bedroo!Jl overnights, the s:ile 'of
are saying
U.S. technology to China, the misuse of
FBI files, the Monica Lewinsky affair.
: Th11s Gore's epiphany. He'd like to capture the D~mocratit and
jndependent voters who flocked to Repqblican Sen. John McCain,
whose narn,e really is synonymous with campaign reform (as in the'
McCain-Feiqgold bill).
·
·: If Gore is able to clailti.the issue as his, it will be either political
genius or the llltiniate hypocrisy.
·

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•111n ,tock
• AUortld ltyiH &amp; llzel

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�The Daily Sentinel

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f-'-••.•_A__e_·_nw__oa__I~._~---~----------------------------------~P~om~er~o~~~M~I~dd~~~p~o~~~Oh~~~--------------------------~Thu~~~~·~w.~~~h~23~,~~~~~00•
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Spring Training notes, Page 82
Thursday Scoreboard, Page 82

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The Daily Sentinel.com.
Meigs High School

PageBI

1h.... .,~ ... ell 2:5,

:a-4

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SUperior ratlnp won at

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MHS quiz team places in Bobcat Buzz-In

annual science fair

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HIGHLIGHTS
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Prep BasketbaU

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OHSAA SUite Tourtlllnlnt
81 Sc:llottallleln Center

TAIIIA JOHNSON

had formed on their walkway
The annual science fair was and dislocated her shoulder. He
'held last month at Meigs High wanted to find out what sub'School.. Students from College stance that he could use to melt
Chemistry and Biology II classes the ice. He learned' that com·entered the fair. There were six mercia! salts are not as effective
'uperior ratings, 17 excellent, as plain table salt, so don't waste
~nd eight good ratings.
your money.
; The fint place winners in the
Brooke Williams completed
-tompetition received S50. Those her project in three weeks. She
:People winning the $50 were chose the project because she
:kyle Smiddie, who presented wants to become an FBI agent
,"Ice Breakers: What is the mate- and firearms are required of all
Tial for melting Ice?"; Derrick special agents.
She wanted to learn as much as
Bolin, "Which Angle of Attack
.Produces the Most Lift?", possible ··about a 9mm and its
:Srooke Williams; ''Ready, Aim,' ammuriition. Fint, she t~ted the
:Pire: Do .$ome Ammunitions accuracy of . solid and hollow
Move More Accurate than Oth- point ammunition in a 9mm,
Jlts?". Shannon Price; "In What shot 30 rounds of each ammuni. '
.
~eneration and Age Level is tion at .different targets from a
;£:~~trasensory Perception More distanc~ of three yatds, measurec!
:,Prominent?", . Tawny Jones; the distances from the farthest
·"How Does Radiation Affect the bullet to the rest of the grouping
.(Jermination ofBeans?." and also, for each target and compared the
.'Beverly Burdette, "Which Dye results.
l&gt;ies First, Natural or SYI!thet- ·
Tawny Jones completed her
;ic?"
project in one month. The pro: . Three of the superior recipi- ject interested her because she
. ' ~nts shared a little of the history wants to further her education in
;pf their projects.
radiology. '
:· Kyle's project took him 3-1/2
Tawny learned that certain
·Weeks to complete. "My project · amounts of radiation are very·
;,ddressed the effectiveness of harmful to seed germination. "I
:S.Ven ma~erials for inhibiting icc exposed beans to different
;formation and melting formed amounts of radiation, for incre)ce:•
ments of 10 seconds, from 0 to
:· The reason for doing the pro- 60 seconds, then I observed and
ject was that a couple of years recorded any change for the next
:!lg0 his mom slipped on ice that five days." .
BY

THuRsDAY's

'

Columbua

DIVISION I
• Bedford (20-5) VI. Tot Libbey (25-

l&gt;t• Friday, 6 p.m.

HHIIard DaVidson (22·4) vs. Cin, .
St. Xavier (25-2), Friday, 9 p.m.
•
Final
Saturday. 8:30p.m.

Eastern's Brown and Will tabbed D-IV All-Ohio
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Gibsonburg's Jeremiah Diebler and Marion
Catholic's Edward McCants share the
player of the year award in Division IV of
the 1999-2000 Associated Press AU-Ohio
boys high school basketball team
announced Wednesday.
Dieble!', a 6-foot- 1 senior, and
McCants, a 6-4 senior, were selected based
· on the recommendations of a state media
'panel.
Both scored' more than · 30 points a
game, Diebler hitting for 33.2 and
McCants for 30.4.
Locally, Eastern junior Joe Brown was a
special mention, while senior teammate

WorTop-ranked
Josh Will earned honorthington Christian (26able mention. Brown
and Will helped key the
0) t:\kes on No. 7 St.
Eagles' drive to the
Henry (23-2) at 6 p.m .
TVC Hocking title as
Thursday in' the first
Division IV semifinal,
well as a sectional crown
this season.
followed by No. 10 Fort
The coaches ·of the
Jennings (22-3) against
year were Tim King of
second-ranked Berlin
Berlin Center Western
..=......J Hiland (25-1) in the
Reserve and two men
nightcap. The champiWill
Brown
who will be on opposonship game is Saturday
.
ing sides this week in
at 2 p.m. at Ohio State's
Value
City
Arena.
the state' tournament, Worthingtoo Christian's Ray Slagle and AI Summers of St. . Worthington Christian's Sam Smith, a
Henry. ·
· 6-5 senior who averaged 20.7 points · a

DIVISION II
· Cin. Purcelr Marian (23·3) vs.
Cambridge (21-4), Thursday, 11 a.m
Lima Shawnee (20·5) vs. Werrensl/llle His .. (24·2), Thursday, 2 p:m
Final
Satui'day, 11 a.m.

Penn State
ousts Kent

DIVISION Ill
Lima Clint. Cath. (21·4) vs.
Jamestown Greenaview (22-4). Frl·
day, 11 a.m.
, Akron SVSM (25-0) vs. Canal
' Winchester (24-1), Friday, 2 p.m . .
•
Final
' · Saturday, 5 p.m.

DIVISION IV
·Worthington · Christian (28-0) vs.
St. Henry (23·2), Thursday,.a p.m.
· ·Fort Jl!nnlnga (:a:!-3) v.s . Berlin
Hiland (25-1 ), Thursday, 9 p.m.
Final
· ·saturday, 2 p.m.

-

BUZZ-IN WINNER - The Meigs High School quiz team took second place In Division C at the Bobcat Buu-ln .held recently at Ohio Unlvei:
slty. Judge Bob Buck is advisor for the team. Qisplaying their plaque are, from left, seated, Robert Day, Wesley Thoene, Ryan Pratt and lal)
Story, varsity members; and standmg, Josh Sorden, John ·Kopczinsky, Evan Shaw and Amber Snowden, reserve team. Not present for the
picture·were Jackie Buck and Mike. Williams, both varsity team members.
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Honors breakfast halls students' efforts

BY JENNIFIR NEASE

Recently, the Family . Career Community
Leaders of America (FCCLA) hosted a regional
rally at Meigs High School.
The schools that participated in the rally were
Meigs, Gallia, South Webster, South Gallia, River
· Valley, Vinton County, Wellston, Green Junior
· High, Northwest, Waverly, Buckeye Hills and
Wheelersburg Middle School.
The projects in which the Meigs FCCLA students participated were Skills for Life, Focus on
Children, and The Award of Merit. Erica Bryan,
Brook Bryan, Tirzah Dodson and Jessica Cundiff
of the _Award of Merit te.am helped arrange
information on the group's activities f(lr the
year.
To earn the ·Award of Merit, students from
Meigs High School participated in community
service projects such ,as the Christmas Angel

t

project _and the Heart Walk. Award of Merit
received 98 points, the highest award of the day;
· They will attend the FC&lt;;:LA state· conventior{
and -be recognized for earning the award.
. ·~
· Will Kauff entered the Skills for Life event,
His goal ·was to teach people ways of being safe
while driving and walking. Will earned a 3-star
rating ,and will also be recognized at the State
Convention.
The group entering Focus on Children went
to Salisbury Elementary and talked to kindergarten students about eating nutritiously. Toni'
McCli.ntic, Valerie McClintic, and Jolene Allen
demonstrated the food pyramid and talked to
them about how many servings they should eat
of each group a day to get a .balanced and nutri~
tiona] meal. They received a 2-star rating. ·
· Approximately 20 students will be attending
the state convention in late April.

PIA sells

for S5 million
. ,AKRON, Ohio (AP) -The
financially troubled Professional
Bowlers Association was sold for a
reported SS ririllion to a group ·
headed by Internet entrepreneur
Chris Peters, who once left his ..
Microroft · job to betqme a
howler.
Peters wants to reinvigorate
bowling with ,high technology.
The new owners will assume
about $3 million in debts and trY
·tO provide an extra S1 million in
prize money for PBA tourna.
ment events.
Peters will become chairman of
the PBA as. it changes from a
nonprofit to for-profit corpora. tion.
The PBA, founded in 1958,lost
its television contract with ABC ·
in 1996 after .36 years. · "

Kldd out for
the season

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

••

·333 Page Street .
Middleport, Ohio
45760
(740) 992·6472

0 liio 'River

'Bea~

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FCCLA chapter hosts regional rally

grade, because of a funeral. He . the honor roll, I ltave given up
comes ·to school because the many after-school activities and
On Monday, Feb, 28, the government says he has to.
even made many sacrifices in
· Wof.Jcing late shifts at qight many ·other Qrganizations. MakMeigs High School Hoqors
Breakfast was held in the cafete- and being tired in the mornin,g, . ing the honor roll involves ded~ia. To have the pri':'ilege of classes that are uninteresting, lack ication and many hours of
attending this event, students of will power to get up so early studying. As I strive to keep my
must have achieved perfect. in the morning, appointments . grades high. I have explored my
attendance or have been on the with the doctor, sick, or just not' strengths and Wl'aknesses. The
bonor roll the second nine caring enough to show up are harder 1· work the more that I
.weeks-grading period.
·
some of the reasons students gave find setting goals is the best way
;- A total 145 students qualified for missing school.
to fulfill the honors of Meigs
lo attend the breakfast and each
To all of the students that have High School Honor Roll.
bqe· received a certificate for his had perfect attendance we want Remember study, dedication
)&gt;r Iter achievement.
to congratulate you on a job well a"-d hard work = good grades =
:
Perfect attendance
·done. We wish there were more Honor Roll." - . Amanda
: Out of those students, there students like you who valued the Miller.
· ~ere 35 who had perfect atten- · importance of a high school
"Being on the h?nor roll
~nee. Receiving perfect atten- education. ·
means disciplining yourself and
C!a'!tce certificates were Carrie
Honor roll
sacrificing your time for study,
:t.bbott, Ryan Bates, Michelle
Many students feel it is a ing. The hard work required to
benedict, Lindsay Bolin, Andrea great accomplishment to be on get on the honor roll will aid
Burdette, Willie Collins, Shaun the honor roll. Among their future plans and goals." l:risp, Liz Delille, Delana comments were:
Brook Bolin.
Sichinger, Chris . Gilkey, :t;ach
"Th stay on the honor roll, I
pilkey, Stacy Gilmore, Stephanie work hard and do a lot of study~ru~ser, Michelle Hart, CJ Haye, ing and paying attention in
't\ddie Hubbard, Bobby Johnson, class. It's harder to stay on the
banny Lenigar, Joe McCall, honor roll in high school
Ryan Qualls,Jodi Reeves, Nancy though. I have managed to be
Rife, Elizabeth Russell, Jennifer on the honor roll my whole life
5hrimplin, Chris Smith, Ishmael ,somehow. My best advice is just
Smith; jereriliah Smith, Chris do your liomcwork and study a
5nouffer, Josh Sorden, Stephanie litde bit. Anyone can succeed· if
Story-Schwab, Wes Thoene, they do that." - Emily Story.
~assie Thorn, Cory VanReeth,
."I haye been on the honor
Jarred Wolfe and Jennifer. Zielin- roll throughout my high school
~ki.
'career. Staying on the honor roll
: Some of the
students ~art be achieved by . paying
txpressed their views on what . attention and working hard.
motivates them ro · come to . Paying attention also allows ·
ichool. Most have come to more free lime because you do
iehool sick. That takes a lot of not have to study as much.
ivill pQWer to come to school , Working hard and paying atten~hen you ate not feeling \Yell. tion will reflect on your high
· These students should be proud Sc:hool record and will prepare
. t( themselves. · ·
.
you for a successful futu.re in
:'~ Wes Thoene, a senior, ortly has life." -Jeremiah Smith.
! couple of months before he
'~I have been on the 'bono~
..
ends his high school career and roll for three years now. I had to
lle wants to be;here as much as work hard at keepi~g my grades
fee can. He also wants to prevent up by studying for every test
Calling behind in his school and making sure my homework
Work. He has only missed three . was done. Anypne who works
lays of school from kindergarten hard enough can be on the
throughout his senior year.
. honor roll. You also have to pay
~ Chris Gilkey, a senior, comes attention to your teachers." to school to see his friends. His Lisa Bias.
' '
parents would. like him to have
"In my opinion;. !t isn't neip.~rfect attendanc~, so he listens. ther hard nor easy .to stay on the
tfe has never rrussed a day of honor roll. All you have to do is
lchool in his high school career. . listen to your teachers, study for
: Carri~ Abbott, a freshman, has · your tests, and do your home~r missed a day of school. She work. All you have to do is try."
'"d her parents' think it is very - Clayton Taylor.
' '
tmportant ro come to school.
"Staying on the honor roll is
•. Joseph McCall,· a senior, has harder in high school · than
only missed school in the fifth junior high. 'In order to stay on
BY AMY HYSELL
AND BRANOY l.AUDERII!IILT

HOME
ATIONAL

992-2156

.

· threeweeks,

DoWling Childs MuUin
Musser Insurance
111 E. 2nd, .~C)meroy

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Dii'l'e-Tbna 'Wbldo1r

PHOENIX (AP)
All-Star
guard Jason Kidd broke his left .
i(likle in the Suns' win over Saqamento and will miss rest of the
regular season.
Kidd, who leads the NBA in
~ists and averages 14.5 points,
sustained the injury with .2 sec-.
oads left iri the .first half while
r:lcing the dock to take a shot.
, Kidd fractured a bone high in
the left ankle and will have
surgery today: He is questionable
for the playot!S.

OlaJuwon to. miss

408 General
Hartinger Parkway
992·3471

Racine 949·22.10
Syracus' 992-6333
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Subscribe 'today.

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992-4055•,

~

HOUSTON (AP) - Doctors
· tOld Rockets center Hakeem
·Q\ajuwon to stop playing for up
tQ.: three weeks because of ongo'il)g breathing problems.
; Olajuwon, 37, was diagnosed ·
March 1 with a disease that
restricts flow of air through
bronchial passages during ' heav)r
e'!'en:ise, causing spasms in his
luitgs. He's been talcing medicine
Cor the·condition.
Olajuwon, 'the NBA's career
leader in blocks and Rockets
leader in virtQally every offensive ,
category, pid next .season would
be his last. Houston, which wori
NBA tides in 1994 and 1995, will
. miss the playoffi for t~e first tim:c
since 1992.
·
. 011\iuwon's ; career ,averages
were· 23.6 p'oints and 11.8
rebounds before this season,,
· when he's averaged 10 points and
six rebounds in 24 minutes, 13A
below his c=er ,average.

FLYIN'

UGH...,. Jon Crispin of Penn State (left) goes airborne during Wednesday's NIT contest against Kent

as John Whorton tries to defend him. (AP)

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STATE ' COLLEGE, Pa . for the Lions (18-}5), who are
(AP) - The last time Penn fast forgetting . their ninth~
State played Notre Dame, an place finish in the Big Ten. i
NCM Final Four berth was · Eric Thomas had 18 points,
at s~ake. The two will meet while Andrew Mitchell and
again next week with a trip to· Demetric Shaw added 15 each.
for the Golden Flashes (23-8) ..
the NIT final on the line.
The Nittany Lions beat Their' leading scorer, Trevor
Kent in the NIT quarterfinals H uffinan, had just two points
81-74 Wednesday, .and will on 1-for-5 shooting.
"The way we're playing
play the Irish at Madison
Square Garden next Tuesday right · now, it's going to be
night. Notre Dame beat BYU tough to beat us," Perin State's
Gyasi Cline-Heard said.
64-52 Wednesday night.
The largest margin for
· In 1954, the Nittany Lions
snapped the Irish's 18-game either team in the second half
winning streak" with a 71-63 was four until Penn State
victory. Under "Memorable pulled ahead in the final four
Wins" in Penn State's.. media minutes.
For the second game in a
guide, the game is listed as
row,
fans · stormed the court.
No. 2 in school history.
Notre Dame, the NIT run- This time. "New York, New
nerup in 1992, wants to shake York" blared over the loudoff this year's NCAA tourna- · speakers.
ment snub. Penn State just
Penn State is 2-0 against
wants· to make up for Its sec- Notre Dame, including a 33ond-place finish in the 1998 22 victory in 1925.
NIT.
.
.Notre Dame U, BYU 52
The Irish (21-14), who also·
"We felt we should have
WOJ1 it all last time," Penn · played three games at home,
State coach Jerry Dunn said. were led by Troy Murphy's 19.
"I know these guys are look- points and nine rebounds to
ing forward .to finishing what ·clinch their trip to New York.
we started."
·
"It might be kind of our•
Jarrett Stephen's had · 24 home away from home," said'
points. and 10 rebounds for guard David Groves of Notre
·the Lions, playing like he Dame's third trip to New York
wanted to make up for 1998, this season after playing in the ,
when he missed the tourney preseason NIT and the 'Big
East rournalnent there. "We
due to inju.ry.
"He definitely deserves it," still have some . things to·
,
,
said Joe Crispin. "He's worked prove. 'y"
wereI not gomg
to JUS~
hard to come back even better be happy to be in the semifi-.
nals."
·
than he was."
The Cougars (22-11) were
Crispin added 18 points
against Kent, including eight forced to travel 1,800 mile~
free throws in rile final minute ,for the game.
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Beha among : D-II~AII;Ohio selections,
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Super seniors sharei

Mr. Baskell•all title ·

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) ·remains unbeaten heading into Ottawa-Glandorf (6-4, Sr., 19.0); '
Dayton Christian's Romain Sato · this week's Division Ill state Napoleon's Chad Bostelman (6and Maverick Carter of Akron tournament. He signed early 2, S_r., 23.3); Chris Winesburg of
Lisbon Beaver Local (6-4, Sr.,
St:Vincent~St. Mary received the with Western Michigan.
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) - . media panel. Both will receive a
top individual awards in DiviMedina High School's Tony plaque in the shape of Ohio.
Locally, Steve Beha of Meigs 17.2); Columbus Briggs' Isaac
siorts II and III of the 1999-2000 was tabbed honorable mention · Campbell (6-0, Sr., 23.2); Bruce
They edged Dayton Christian
Stockman used his sparkling
As!Qciated Press All-Ohio boys Division II AU-Ohio. The senior Miles of Hillsboro (6-2, Sr.,
offensive skills to get simed senior Romain Sato in the vot-·
basketball
led the Marauders in scoring and 16. 7); and Warrensville Heights' '
with Clemson. What . he does ing. Toledo Libbey senior Eyu, . ·
helped fuel their run to the sec-. Julius Juby Johnson (6-6, Sr.,
defensively will determine how less · Palmer was fourth. Othe('.
teams
25.6).
tiona! finals. Beha was selected
finalists were Marion Cath9li~.
announced
much he plays as a freshman.
In addition to Carter, the
first team All-TVC Ohio and
The 6-foot-2 senior, along senior Edward McCants and.
Tl!esday.
Sato
was was also i first team All-District Division· III first, 'team also
with Cleveland South's Chet Grove City senior Josh Helm.
Mason, a 6-foot~3 senior
selected as the 13 honoree and AP All-District includes: Todd Lovegrove of
"The Jet" Mason, share · Ohio's
headed
to Miami of Ohio, :Wer-;
Division
II selection. He also earned Acade- Columbus Grandview Heights
13th Associated Press Mr. Bas, ketball
award,
announced aged 25 points, 13 rebounds and.
player of the mic All-TVC 'honors this season . (6-3, Sr., 20.8); Bellaire's James
WattS
(5-8,
Sr.,
26.0);
Brian
Swift
The
coaches
of
the
,
year
in
11 assists a game. He led Soutli
and ·
Wednesday.
.
year .
Carter as the Division II are Philo's Todd Van of Bedford St. Peter Chane! (5· Stockman .averaged 25.4 · to its first top-10 AP state rank10,
Jr.,
21.1);
WaYIIesville's
Nick
Reeth,.Cambridge's
Gene
Ford,
points, 6.1 assists; 4.7 rebounds ing and into the regional! fo~·
top player in .
Garrett
(6-3,
·
·sr.,
'
.
1
6.i);
Mike
Bella
Division III Tallmadge's Jack Greynolds Jr.,
and 3.2 steals .a game. But he the first time in more dian 40
of
Ashland
.
. based on , the. Dayton Christian's Dave Jack- Vipperman
said the steal statistic, while yean.' He' scored 35 points in a
solid, is misleading. and he plans 77-72 finals loss to Bedford.
recommendatio~s of a state son, Larry Asmus of Tontogany Crestview (5-11, Sr., 26.5);
Otsego and Willard's Greg Nos- William.iport Westfall's Tyler
to spend the summer lifting " "I have never seen a player
media panel.
Schleich
(6-5,
Sr.,
23.7);
and
Seth
. Sato averaged :;!6.4 points, 15.6 saman.
weights so he won't be over- with the kind pf energy that he
In Division III, the coaching Hoyng of Sparta Highland (6-3,
matched by bigger players in the had," said South coach Miguel
rebounds and 5.3 assists a game.
Sr.,
18.0.)
.
.
bruising Adantic Coast Confer- Curl. "He played all five posiThe ' Xavier sil!_ll~e had five honors went to .Canal WinchesIn addition to the first team's
tions and It seemed like he never
. triple-doubles during the regular ter's Kerit Riggs and Rob Beuence.
Carter,
three
members
of
the
,
season as Da}'ton Christiap went cler of Sardinia Eastern Brown.
"I have to get stronger," got tired."
Joining Sato on' the first team second team will be competing
Past win:nen of the Mr. Bas-·
unbeaten and finiShed second in
Stockman said. "That's the ortly
in Diviiion II were: Jaivon Har- in this week's state tournament:
the AP poll.
.thirig would have trouble with ketball 1.ward include current
Carter, also a 6-foot-4 senior, ris of Allia!)c;e (6-5, Sr., 21.0); Greg Guiler of ,Ganal Winche~
, iE.I ~fin there right ~:·,. · · co,llege standQuts Kenny &lt;;;rego· averaged 16.9 , points, 7.2 Struthers' Rick McFadden (6-7, ter (S-11, Sr., 18.2);Sc.V-St. M's
Mason and Stockman, who ty at Kansas andJason Collier at
rebounds and 5.1 ass~ts on. ~ bal- · Sr., 18.5, also a first-team All-. · LeBJ;OnJames (6-4, Fresh.,18.7);
also shared AP Division I player Georgia Tech, alol\8 · with Jim
anced St. V.-St. M. team that fin- Ohioan as ' a football quarter- and Lima Central Catholic's
of the year honor'$, captured the Jackson of the NBA's Atllbta
. ished No.. 1 in the poll and back); '!yson McGlaughlin of Adarq Stolly (5, 10, Sr., 18.3).
award in balloting by a state Hawks.

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game,joined Diebler and McCants on the
first team.
Also on the squad were: Matt Plunkett
ofTipp Gity Bethel (6-3,Jr., 21.9); Western Reserve's Matt Orr (6-5, Sr., 17.0);
Rick Kroll of New Matamoras Frontier
(6-4, Sr., 23.9); Franklin Furnace Green's
Chris Williams (5-9, Sr., 21.6); and Chris
McGraw of New Boston Glenwood (6-4,
Sr., 20.5) .
Worthington Christian also placed a
player on the second team,)ason Weakley
(5-10, Sr., 14.1), and Hiland was represented by two players, Kendall Schlabach
(5-11, Sr., 15.3) and Matt Miller (5-10,
Sr., 14.5).

,&gt;• •
'

''

;';

'

'

�..
l

•

Pomeroy,

Ohio

Thursdly, March 23, 2000

Thuradlly, March 23,

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

MLB rotations shape up as openers draw near
BY THE ASSOCI.UED PRESS

It's decmon ttme m sprmg
tramm~, as teams begm to make
final roster moves m preparation
for the start of the season
Glendon Rusch of the New
York Mets and Jason Dtckson of
the Anahetm Angels closed m on
locking up spots m thetr teams'
rotations Wednesday, while John
Halama mtght have pttched htmself out of Seattle s plans
Rusch, acqUired from K2nsas
Ctry last season, beat out Btll PulSipher, Bobby M Jones and DenDIS Sprmger to earn the fifth spot
111 the M.;ts rota[lOn
There s a lot of quahty pttchmg not makmg tillS team, Rusch
sotd ' [ thmk I threw the ball well
and stayed conSistent throughout
the camp
Rusch s numbers were far supenor tu Ius compemors He was 1":.
ll wtth a 'l 2-l ERA 111 I 6' mntng&lt;
tlm spn ng

"It was stmple Rusch pttched
the best th1s spnng," general manager Steve Phillips satd "You tend
not to want It to be a compeunon
durtng camp, but It became a
competition "
Dtckson, who miSsed the entire
t 999 season because of shoulder
surgery, pitched
strong mnmgs
m Anahemt's 6-3 vtctory Wednesday over the San Otego Padres m
Tempe,Anz
D1ckson allowed one run and
five hus and earned hiS first wm
wuh clearly his best outmg of the
sprmg
' He had the command today,
manager M1ke Scwsoa said
"That s the way Jason Dtckson can
p11ch and that's the way he pttched
when he was on the All-Sta r team
That was very encou;-agmg to see
hun step up'
The start D1ckson s thud of the
sp nng was hiS longest of the exhtbltlon s~aso n H t&gt; allowed sev~..: n

sz,

I

h1ts and four runs 1n his prevtous
ouung March 17 ag.unst Milwaukee and entered Wednesdays game
Wtth a 9 35 ERA
"Today was one of those days
that 1 felt on top of my game"
D1ckson s;ud
Halama nught be on the verge
of losmg hts starttng JOb for Seattle after allowmg two home runs
m five mmngs of a 4-3 loss to the
Mtlwaukee Brewers m Peona,
Anz
In three spnng starts, Halama
has gtven up five home runs and
has an II 13 ERA
Wtth the addttton of Brett
Tomko to the Manners' staff,
Halama's JOb IS m Jeopardy Halama allowed home runs to Jose
Hernandez and Henry Blanco
I m not looking at my st,ts
n ght now" Halama satd If that
was the case, then I probably
wouldn t make any of the 311
teams I've got an ERA of who

knows how h1gh"

Mason Bowline Lanes results

•

In other games

lndtans 11, Braves 2

• Early Wedneeday Mixed Bowling
(Ae of March

At Wmter Haven, Fla , John
Rocker got a nuxed reactton m
h1s thud appearance of the spnng
and Jull Thome, Mark Whiten and
Russell Branyan homered for
Cleveland
1Wins 2, Parates 1 1
At Bradenton, Fla Cnman
Guzman's b ad-hop mple led to a
f\vo-run first mnmg for Mmnesota and Ptttsburgh starter Franctsco
Cordova's first spnng loss m f\vo
years Cordova was 6-0 m hts bst
mne spnng starts unnl y1eldmg
two earned runs and five has and
walkmg two m five mmng&lt;

League

8)

W:l..·\,

111m
Metgs County GoH Course
Dairy Queen Brazter
The Dark S1de
Tony's Carry

52·36

48-40

Out.

44-44

FOE 2171
Metgs Industries

32·56
10·78

Team high sarlea: Me1gs County Golf Course (1845)
Team hlgh game: Me1gs County Golf Course (656)

Onty Ag11 25 50 Call 740 388

Sunday, lllaroh 26~1nal

NIT slate

s.tunlay-oemHintll
Old Dominion (29-4) ,. Loul~ana Tech (30
2) Sp m
IOwa St (27 5) vs Penn St (2B-4) 10 30
pm

FREE Sample Lava Tarot By
~hone Live 1 On 1 Spoclallzta
Reuniting
Lovers
GUAR
~NTEEOII 24 Hrs II an LOVE

START DATING TONIGHTI
Have Fun Moe!lng Ellglbla Sin·
glea In Your Area Call For More
Information 1 BOO ROMANCE
Ext 9735

I

Why Wall? Start mooting Ohla
1i09it1 tonlghl Call toll tree 1
BOQ.788 2823 aldanoton 817B

Semifinal wtnners 2 40 p m

Wednesday's third-round scores
Notre Dame 64 Br1gham Young 52
MIUI!!Islppl (19 13) at North Carolina State

\OWl State (31 4) vs UCLA (2t 11 ) ~55

pm

Georgia (31 3) vs North Carolina (20 12)

10pm
Rutgers (24 7) va Alabama Birmingham

6
12
16&gt;
17
39 .
43

(2112) t23Cam

Friday's game

Monday March 27-llnal

Callfomla (18 14) at Wake Forest (19 ,4)

Semifinal winne111

7 30pm

Tue8day, March 28-11mltlnal1
At llladloon lquort Qlfdon, Now Vorl!
Penn State (1B 15) '" Nolrt Domo (~ t 14)
7or9pm
MIIIIUWI·NC Slllll winner VI Collfomlo·
Wak.t Forett winner 7 or 9 p m
•

27

Saturctey.umtftnlll

738pm

(t9 t2) 7 30.p m

217o

WutReglonal

Michigan State (28 7) vs Syracu.se (26 5)

Tonight's game

f87o

Semifinal winners

Tonight eemlfinele

Thured8y, Mlrch 3D-flnala
Atlllacfleonlq...,. G . third pt- Somlfli'IIIIIOHrs 4 30 p m
Clllmplonoltlp Stmlllnol winners 7 p m

NCAA men's
tournament alate

Somfflnol winners 4 40 p m
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Attontto Dlvlolon

NCAA women'a

Miami
NowYorlc
Philadelphia
ihnR111ona1
onondo
-rdov-ttmlllntll
Booton
LSU (24 B) va Oul&lt;o (28 5) 11 30 a m
Connoctlcul (32·1) vo Oklahoma (25 7) 2 Now JorHy
pm
Washington
Monday, March 27-ltnat

Kindont

Semifinal w1nne11

Frido~·Hrillflnott

Duke (29-4) 111 Florida (2B·7) 7 38 p m
Seton Hall (22 9) vo Oldahomo 1Siate (26
6) 955pm

Toronto

Mkltat Reglonll

Sllunlay.ett~~Rinalo

Virginia (25 8) vo Tennessee (30 3) Noon
Notre Dame (27-4) vs T&amp;l&lt;ls Tech (27 4)

2 30pm

Cnartono
Detroit
Ml-..ukeo
CLEVELAND

42
41
39
33
30
29
23

25
26
28
38

Frlday·••mlflnlfl

Tulsa (31-4\'115. Mlaml(23 10) 7 55 p m

B12
S82
478
38 441
3B 433
46 333

c-ot DlvlaiDn
47 21
39 28

36 3t

35 32
31 36
26 41
25 42
13 54

Atlanta

Chicago

t
3
10
12&gt;
13
20

891
582

7.

537

10 \

522

463

388

373
194

11 ~
15~
20~
21 ~
33~

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mldwtt! Division

ltt L I 8I ell. llE liA

41
39
31
29

25
22
34
35
22 44

8
t2
B
11

a

5
2
6
3

95 224
92 212
76 216
72 211
1 53 1n

- t l Dlvltlon
39 23 11 1 90 199
38 30 5 6 Bll218
31 33 10 o 72 197
17 47 8 7 49 180
13 52 7 4 37 149

172
1BB
201
270
273

x·Waohi"910n
FlOrida
Carolina'
Tampa Bay
Atlonto

Tonlght'a gamae
Milwaukee atlni;"lana 7p m
CLEVELAND It Dallas B 30 p m
L A Clippers at Houston 8 30 p m
Wa1hlngton at Denver 9 p m
Friday•• games
Char1otte at Toronto 7 p m
Boston at Phlladolphla 7 p m
Houlton at O~ando 7 30 p m
Atlanta at New York 1 30 p m
Minnesota at New Jersey 7 30 p m
Miami at Milwaukee 8 p m
Denver at Chicago 8 30 p m
Utah at Seattte 10 p m
Detroit at Sacramento t0:30 p m
Portland at Golden State 10 30 p m

4,1~ ~~~JK

PubliC Notlca

•

'3M

~

BUICK•

M

NDrttt-DivloiOn
Colorado ...... ........ 34 29 11 1 80 209 1BB
Edmonton
28 30 tB 8 80 203 191
Vancouver

26 34 14

Calgary

29 36

74 199 216

8

9 5 72 192 231

Peolfto Dlvlolon
25 8 4 92 tB7 163
Los Angeles
34 30 9 4 81 222 211
Phoenl•
35 30 7 2 79 209 200
San Jose
31 34 9 7 78 207 199
Anaheim
31 32 12 2 76 198 203
x.cllnched playotf berth
Overtime losses count as a loss and a regu

x Dallas ..,.. :......... 4o

latlon tie

T1k1 lt1 America s Moat Suc·
ceaarut Campgrouf1d And Time·

oh&amp;ro Rooalo Clearinghouse Coli
Reson Silas lntematlonlll 1 800.
423-5967 24 Hours www resort

.-com

Tonight's games
Florida at Boston 1 p m
Calgary a! BuffalO 7 p m
Toronto at Ottawa 1 p m
Los Angeles ol P~llodelphla 7 p m
Washington at N Y. Rangers 730 p m
Oetroh at Nashville 8 p m
Colorado at Phoenix. 10 p m

DO
FACIAL
EXERCISES
WORK? • DON T WANT TO
SPEND A LOT TO FtNp OUT!
For Bas ic Exerclus, Sand S3

•

Friday's games
New Jtfiey at N v. tarandert 7 30 p m
Plnst&gt;urgh at Atlanta 7 30 p.m
St Louis at Tampa Bay, 7 30 p m
Chicago at DIHII B30 p m
Anahelm at vancouver 10 p m
Photnlut San Joot 10 30 p m

fOlD

TIUIIS •

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Wa• '14,999

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............. .
O...-.IUDIDIII• Waa'l7,995 ......... .
IUICI Willi· Wa, '11,999 . . • .. ..

OLIMIIU AUIOU •

, IIOW
IIOW 112,950"
lOW 113,400"

............................. ....... IIOW 114,990"
lOW 110,200"
lOW

Wao

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lttt CHiftOln I-ll lWEI•

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Paekaae, Only 7,800tirllea, Like New,

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ltt7 CHIYIOln SolO PICIUP • V6, Auto, Alr,lllt, Cruiat, Caueue, 4WD, Fiberpuo Topper, Green,
Only 26,000 MUeo, One Owner, W10 '15,91)0

ltt7 CIIYIOln S.JO PKI• • 4 Cyl

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, 5 Speed, Po, Pb, Tiated Gl101, Waa '8,999

Houra

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Saturday 9:00-4:00 Sunday 1:00-S:OO

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Ask Us About Our
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Rent /Salo Century 21 18! Soutl&gt;orn Truot
1·800·255 9487

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Publisher
Ohio Valley
Publishing Co.
825 2nd Ave
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

$2,000 WEEKLY! Mailing 400
Brochur11! Satlafacllon Gu1r
ontatdl Po11age &amp; Supplloi Pro.
vldadl Ruoh Stlf·Addrt.. od
Stampad Enwtlopol GICO DEPT
5 B~x 143B ANTIOCH TN
370111of38 Start IIIIIIOdlatoty
Working

Fo'

The Government

From Home Part T1me No E-1

1n0t Raquied 1.BOQ.757.Q753

1/2 Pomeranian 112 Terrier, 4
Montha Old Female 740·4410118

a famalo dogs aboul 7 men old
pall sheep dog good with kids
3o4-137 3348
e Mlllld Bltad

P~les,

4 Boys 2
Glrlo Vary Culal 740 245 9062
14fl.245.()114
Couch dinette set with

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74fl.742 2019

~4fl.388 9357

•lxtd Lab /Gaklen Retriever Fl·
~bale 3 Years Old House Dog
t.,o;l"9 Homo Only 740o441 1269

Loat and Found

P'ound Key on Smokey Tho Boar
t!OY Chain Call to ldontlly In PI
~taaoan1 Aroo (304)675-5706
~sl Dogs While Lab Mb:ed
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firlendly Kids Pet Lincoln Pike

~256-9194

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&gt;

Yard Sale

;.

Gallipolll
&amp; VIcinity

•

Communlly Support Contul1anl In
Local And Surrounding Area_~ En
try · Level Salaa And Marketing
Position Excellent Man1gemant

Opponunlty Starting Salary Of
1500 t/Wk Plus BonuHS Com
mlselono Bantftlo Ratall ~"""~
enct And Women Excel Minimum 2 Years College Oagree A
Plus Wt Train For Personal And
Confldontlal Interview Col
1 843-857-(1522.

Call For A. Free Boo~ltt 1· 888

849-2258

AVON! All Arollf To Buy or Soli
Shirley 8powl 304-875-1429

-

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Unllmlttd earnlngo Coli I BOO
551 4801 lndopondon! Rtpra

74Qo441-8511
Batts Brothllt AmuHment Co If

Business Services

;

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

~

£;-

AX'anl S.le• Muat

a. Peld In

Dttdllnt t.OOpm the
btfora thl1 od Ia to run,
i\day &amp; Mondoy tdltlonJoOOptitl'rllloy '

110

•Estes Rockets and Accessories
•Trains by Lionel &amp; MTH
•K-Line
•Gargtaves Track
•Athearn
•Model Power
•Atlas
•Lifeline

A &amp; DAuto Uphol1terr • Pl11, laG
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Rutland, Ohlq

,

Truck seats, a~r seats, lieadllnen, tnck tarps;
convertible &amp; vinyl tops, Four wheeler seats,·
motorcyde seats, boat coven, carpets, ete.
Mon- Frl 8:30 • 5:00
Over 40 yr1 ~perlence

•

DlrtctOro!Day
TttttmtntProgrom
Graduote ot accrodl1ad COIIf91 or
unlveralty: prlfarabte with a Mas
ter's Dear11 In a Mental Health

dltclpllnt or other rtlattd !laid
bachelors plus e)lperlence ac·
ctptablt Rtqulrea two yeara dl
reel experience In mental health/
mental l'ltsrdatlon fltld, or wl&amp;h
Individuals with dementia ac

companied by challtnglng bo·
havlor Apply Servlcoo P 0
Box 575 Point Pleasant West

VIrginia 25550

1-888-521..()916

Avon? Call Malanle vour Local
Independent Salel R'epr11enta·

11110 At 740-256-92Be
log loader operator &amp; timber cut
ter needed must have experi

call 740-985-4485

Main Sb'HI Altorna!lvo &amp; Clasolc
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us

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Atttntlon Publliher
8252ndAve

All Applications Must Be Post·

140

GatllpoiiO c.- Colltgt
(Careors CI010 To Home)
Call Todll)'l 740-448-4387
I~00 2 I4.().4!52
Reg 19().()5-12749

ucatlon And Shari Study COul'll
For FREE Information Booklel

MEDICAL BILLING Groat Eorn
lng Potonllall Full Training /Com
putar Aeq d 888 680 88U3 6•1
Medical personnel to do mobile
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IP&lt;l..,not Basad Upon PriOr Ed
Phona CAMBRIDGE STATE
UNIVERSITY t~OQ.984.B316

180

Georgea Portable Sawmill don t
haul your logs lo the mill just call

304-675 , 957

new carw with usl

Calli fl00.929-5753
for an &amp;JliOintmtnt
Wa took forward to metll"9 youl

Mother Ot 3 Will Babysit Any
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Reuonabla Rates Mercerville

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TAKE aACK YOUR LIFEI Be
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Medical Insurance Billing Allil
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very latt paced proft~~lonal of
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well public: • bl lo 1ypt
al lout 40 wpm ptoa11 11nd ,..
IUmt to Tht O.lty Bantil'llll PO

Box 7»82. ~ Oh 457M
~ut~ Ttmo

/Port Ttmo O.ok Cltrtl
Pot11i011J Avallalllt Apply 1ft Par
Rn At ludgat Inn. 210 Jacl&lt;aO!I
Pilot, G,lltpollo No Phone Colla

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WANTED 42 Poopla To Loot Up
To 30 lfjl In 30 lloyl All NojUrll
Doctor Recommended 100'11.
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Non-Profll I

800-4~7

9912

230

Professional
Services

Stay At Home Mom wanting to

do babyolnlng In my home Aof
oranees Available (304)675
6048
Wanted To Do Mounts Tree
Service Buckel Truck Service
Top Trim Removal, Stump GrindIng Fully Insured Free Esll

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Willing To Take Cere Of Elderly
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lor $86 000 Call uo al (304)8B2
3652

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13 000 WEEKLY! Mailing 400
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--Jia~ 1 BQ0.489 ••77 E 68
rr..a ... ,,
::..
xt
124 Hro) •
fNDTICEI

owned

446 stat $119 000
Nice older story and a halt house
In the country with new replace
men! doors and windows new
sunporch new ro9f and fen ced
in Yard New two car garage and
6ingle car garage Also a lot set
up lor nousetral ler with separate
septic water and electri c N!ce
rental potential Price reduced It
lnterellod call (304)8B2 2685 If
no answer please lea'Je mas

sage
On Crab Creek Rd 13 Acres
3BR 2BA Complete Kitchen
Dining &amp; LlvlngRoom Family
Room wfFireplace 2 car garage
&amp; 2 nlce mobile homes
13041675 3030 or (304)87!5-343t

Mobile Homes
for Sale

•

~ 1 ) •••••AMAZING .. ••
Drywall 4BR 32x80 •over 2348
sq It Payments low as $406 par
ma t 800 94B 5678

nancing 2 and 3 Bedroom Ar

ound $200 Per Month Call t
800 948 587B •

sq ft for less than $450 mo
FREE Detlvery &amp; Set 1· 800 948

5578
t 4Fl X 70Fr Shullz 3 Bdrm 2
Baths With 7 X 20 Expando CIA
Approx 7 Acres Minutes From
Schools $42 000 00 740 446

land Aptomottd Mtdtcil Sorvlc
ao Inc 800 322 1139 EKI 050
Wid In KY, IN CT
Ntld A loin? Try Dlbt Conooll·
dation U 000 $200 000 Bad
Crllllt O.K FH 1•800 770 0092
Ext 215
NEW AUTOMATED HOME
BUSINESS Quickly Earn A Full
Time lnoomo No Belling ~nllmlt·
tct Income Ytoll http 1/wWW retire
qulokty.notlcb To Btt &amp; Htor
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Start Your Buatna11 ,Tod1y

Prime Bhopplng Ctnttr 8poct
Avollabto At AIIDrdobto Rate
8prfng Ylltay Plaza CtH 7of0.441.
010t

28t0

1967 Alcon mobile home 12x55

$1900 74().742 2852

A.ll real estate advart•sing m
thiS" newspal)ef Js subject to
the Federal Far Housing Act
ot ~ 968 whlch makes it Illegal
to advertise any preterenr;;e
Umltation or dlscrlmlnat10n
based on race color relig ion
saw familial status or national
ortgln or any Intention to
make any such preference
lfmltaUon OJ discrimination •
This newspaper will not

know.ngly aceepl

Ventura 14x70 Slngtew1de
Deck ~Oxe On rented lot 2BA
1 BA Gas HeatfNew Furnace
$6000 (304) 675-6319
1985 Nashua Mobile Home
14x70 with 7x2 I Factory Pull
Out 3 BR 1 1/2 SA Central Air
1 Appliances Total Elec 2 porch
es Excellent Cond!Uon $~0 000
neg (3C.c)675 2034 Leave Mts
IOQO

1991 Mansion Mobile Home
14•60 2 bedroom 1 bath Central
Air Total Electric Ready to

Movel S1 I 500 (740) 949 90t6

law Our readers are hereby
Informed thai all dwellings

tst lime Buyers Uttte or no Credit
Ok only at Oal&lt;woocl Homes Galli
potts 740-446-3093

'

•

23 112 acres excellent building

4 112 Acres 8 Miles From Gllll
polls 150 Fool Road Frontage
Water &amp; Elec tric A'JIIIable
$20 000 740.258-8522
Anention Oe\lelopers
33 Acres Approximately 10 Acre
Lake Mobile Home Ideal For
Housing Campground Eatatt

$99 500 Also 5 Acre Lola
$32 000 74fl.!lfl8.8878
Ethlcai Environmentally Con
earned Hunter Looking To LeaH
Hunting Rlgl\11 Or Buy Lind 300
+Acres 304-744 1379

Property lor llle 11 4 Colt SlrHI
l'orner!rf 74fl.m 5t 92

RENTALS
Hou18elor Rent

~
3 Bedroom&amp; Foreclosed
Homes From S 199/Mo 4% Down
For Listings &amp; Payment Detalla

IBQ0.319 3323 EXl 1709
2 bedr oom house In Portland
$300 plus tlectrJc heat wllh WOOd

740-843-5546
Far sale or rent• 2 bedroom
house In Pomeroy S3.50 month
plus 11tposit will sell on contract
with good references no peta

740-698 7244
2 Bedroom Stove Refr igerator
Water Trash Paid In Country
S350/Mo Plus Deposit Alao 2
Bedroom Mobile Home 740 381-

B37t

701 Bnch Street 2 bedroom un
furnished house no pets depoalt
&amp; references 740.992.0185

House tor rent two ator~ 2 3
bedrooms one bath Middleport
$350/mo plus $350 depasll &amp;
utllllits no pets Call 800·388

Bt94
Two bedroom home with garage
Htgh Street Pomeroy $350 thrt1
bedroom duplex Vale Street Po
...""' $300

420

740.992-6134

Mobile Homes
for Rent

1 14 Condor Street Mobile Home
&amp; Lot For Sale $14 000 Will
Consider Land Contract 1•0

701l-0084 Or 740.388~591
Between Athena and Pomeroy 2
&amp; 3 bedroom mobil&amp; homea
$260-$300

74fl.992 2167

2 Bedroom Furn ished Mobile
Home $300/Mo Plus Electric &amp;
Heat St 00 Deposit Located On
Hannan Trace Road 1 Mile Off

2t8 740-256-6202

adl(ertlaed In lhl!l newspaper

Abandoned Home Needs Owner
Pay Small Transfer Fee I Move

oppOrtunity basis

:::ln:..;_74:::0:::~:..;~.:.B.::;::3;__ _ _~

2 Bedrooms 1 Bath Inside VII
lage Alo Grande $300/Mo Wa
tar &amp; Trash Paid 740-446-2422

740 44&amp;-3093

Mason 2 bd 2 ba trailer $295 1
mon +dep ref req Hud accept

are a\l&amp;tlable on an equal

308

....1;1Only
Brand New 3 Bedrooms 2 BatHs
$233/Mo wont LaiUI Hu"y

1•--"l!'~~--

~_,.;:..;_=--"'"""---

Don T Waolt Your Time Qualify

310 Homes fDr Sal8
1 NO DOWN! HOMES NO CRED
IT NEEDED I GOV T FORE
CLOSURES! GUARANTEED AP
PROVALI 1 800 380 4620 EXT
B509

3 Bldrooms 1 Balh Ranch Style
Home 1 Car Garage Vinyl Stdtng
Gas Furnace CIA' Located 3
Mlloo OuL S R 141 740 446
7812

FP DA Large Kitchen Central

3t03 Kalhnor Lane (304)675
6014 al1er 5PM
A ZERO% DOWN LOAN!
No Down Payment Requ•red With
Government Sponsored Loan
Good Credit And Steady Income
Required Call For More Informs
tJon And For Other financing Op
Ilona Independence Mortgage
Strvtcas 1 800 B45-00!l6

81 level homo Baum Adcllllon Rd
(behind Ch 10 Skat A W ) 4
bedroom e; ~alh adr l~y fr
equipped kitchen utlllly area cia
2 car alia h d
age large t0 1
740 985 ,;,: gar
Country Home 3 Bedrooms 2 112
Baths UlllifV Fireplace Level Lot
Large Kllchen &amp; Olning Room

740-379-9887 or 740-379-9000
For Sale By Owner 3BR 28A
t•rge family room &amp; office new
rool guttering 1 car garage
2912 Anniston Dri'Je Pt Pleas

ant (304)675 2608 "Price ro

ducert.

FORECLOSED HOMES Low Or 0
Down! Govn t And Ba!lk Repo J
Baing Sold • "'WI FinanCing Avail

obit Call
Ext 8040

~

t aoo 35e 0024

By Phone New SW Or OW 1
888 736·3332

---------Ooublowldt $249 Per Month
Low Down Payment 1 800 691
6777
14 Wide 3 Bedro~m 2 Bath
$209 Per Month Law Down Pay
ment ~ -800..891-8711
16~e80

$273 Per Month Low

Down Paymonl 1.aoo 691 6n7

(301)675 29t7

Houae lor 1111 two atory 2 3
bedroom• one bath Middleport

uklng $29 000 No down pay·
mont tlnenclng available to quail·
fltd Ctll1 800-38HtfM

nl&amp;hod $200 month plus 1175
deposit you pay gas water and
tlectrlc call after Spm 740 982

2806

440

Apartment•
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments fur
nlshed and unfurnished security
deposit required no pets 740

992 22t8

"MARCH MADNESS SALE"

•eo First

Off Floor Price Deduction 2000
Model 32 Wide O'Jer $5 000 00
Off ygur pckle 145 4?8 QO
Off Floor Price Deduction t 492
Sq
Fl
2000 Model O&gt;Jtr
$4 000 00 Oil
Your Price
142017 00
Homes Ate 3 Bedrooms f2 Baths
Priced lnc:ludoo COmplo!e Setup

Other Spoolals
Single As Low As $149 00
Mof'!th Sectional&amp; At Low A&amp;
$269 00 Month Coma In Or Calf
For Pre Appro&gt;Jall 1• 118•5e5·

0187

Local

1-740·888-0117

Trade-Ins Are Alsa Welcome

Older Model Traitor for ule 1 112
Bedroom Must golbeat offer
First uallor on leh Camp Conley
or leave message (304)675

1935

3013
Throe bedroom totally ramodeled
Inside and out traUtr and lot new
furnace

Avenue (Galltpotla, 1 1
Bedroom Apartment $210/Mo
Plus Damage Deposit 740 U1·

0952 740.888,-4531
Apartment For Rent $375/Mo AU
Utilities Paid Wa lking Distance ,
To College Very Nice Available '

411/00 740-24!h5t00
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT '
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK· ,
SON ESTATES 52 Wootwood •
Drive lrom $289 to S370 Wane to J
shop &amp; mo&gt;JJea Call 740·448· ~
2558 Equal Housing Opportunity

Christy a Family Living apart
menta home &amp; trailer rentals
741)..992 451.C apartmenta available furnished &amp; unfurnWd

new apPliances new car

pol $23,500 081740-992 4514

••
•
•
~

Furnlahed 3 Flaoma a Bath ~
Downstairs Clean No Pits Rll· •
erences &amp; Deposit Required ~
74~~519

Doublswldl Repo Easy Terms
Free Delivery &amp; Sol Up. 741)-446-

~

Gracious living 1 and 2 bedroom :
apartment&amp; at VIllage Manor 1nd ,
Rlveraldt Apartments In Mlddle· •

port From 1273 $336 Coli 740. '
992·5084 Equal Houolng Opper ;
tunitlta

..

Bank Repo $499 + Move tn Free

Moderr 1 Bedroqm Apartment
~740-448-«l90...;....;..;;,:....;._ _ _ _ _ _ •

DtiiVory &amp; Bat Up 740-448 3093

-

Put Your Tax Refund To Work

'

~~:;e~•;:;fl~;~t b::~oo~~ !U,:d ;

$499 Down Only At Otkwoo4

rtterencea no pets 740·882 · ,

Homu In Barboursville

0185

304

736-3409

330

~----- ·

Nice One Bdrm Unfurnl1htd •
Apartment Range &amp; Rafrlg pro· :

3 BR Repoa /ForecJosurts Fee

Houat Far Salt By Qwntr Brick
Hou11 on 2109 Mt Vernon Fu!l
Baaement 1 3BR Central Heat/Atr

Two bedroom trailer semi fur

1 Bedroom Near Holzer AIC
Econortlicai Gas Heat WfD
Hookup Quiet Location $278/ l
Mo + Utilftes 740-446 2957

HOMIS FROM 1118.30 /MO. I
4% Down For Lloltlngo /Payment
Dtlllls 1 800-7ti)-3001 K1185

1ld 304-675 7783

FLEETWOOD HOMES
n84 StIlL 1
PROCTOIIVILLI, ott 4Hel
(Next To Foodla~)

Farme for Sala

11 ACRES &amp; POND
Beautllul meadow wllh pond hid·
dan 11'1 woods Ntar Jackaon

(740)·268.()()61

vldtd Water &amp; Qarbogt Pold ,
Dapoott Rtqulrad Can 740 448 •
-Altar 8 OOPm
•

'

North 4-th Awnut Middleport· 2 :
"""" tllfclancy lplrtrnonl dtpOO- •
It and rararencta no para, 740 •

992-0tta

310 acroo +I Molgo Couniy So~
plo epproxlmototy 200 tltllblt 70
polturo 5 pondo, 3 blmo 2 grain
bln1 double wide, gareae Serl•
OUI CINI only; 7~

I

'

$30 000

Available early April 304 875

~98~

Air Large tot with garden space

•• 895 Financing Avallall't Ia

wilt\ water ttpa

.....,r hook14&gt;0 paid

410

3BR 2BA 2 Out build ings 2
porches on 1 acre ol land located
In Gallipolis Ferry WV (304)675
7203 After 6PM

ATlT .. MCI • SPRINT 1 Cent
PHONE CARD ROVTEI Meke
II 000 $5 000 /Wk ALL CASHI
FREE Intel I 800 997 9888 E• I
1155 (24 Hra)

CD ROM lnvaatment $4 995

two rental tral5art
and

2484 or (304)995 3383

3BR 2112BA Family Room wllh

come Potential No Experience
Netetlary Free Information &amp;

65 8CfO ......, to! tor .... biOcl&lt; oil
SR 7 In 1\Jppors Plolno tnctudto

14x70 two bedroom trailer newer
heat pump and carpet 740 742

the olfertng

MEDICAL SILLINQ UnNmi1ad In

Loti &amp; Acreage

II'J&amp;ry service 740 992·9796 or
wwwweshop4u0altavlsta com
Senior discounts/ Christian

3 BR, 2BA 2 Car Garage on 1

Provldod Must 0w11 Compultr 1
800-43+55tl ~887

350

3 br country home at Lttan WV

Ac;ra Heat Pump t a Mlles from
Sporn Plant $57 000 (304)882
3518

Stekl People To Process Madl·
cal Claims From H9me Training

~40-388-9 1 30

6345

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO

FRITO LAY /PEPSI lt!ERSHEY
SNACK AND SODA VENDING
ROUTE S$ ALL CASH BUSt·
NESS$$ BUILD A BUSINESS
THAT IS ALL YOURS SMALL
INVESTMENT /EXCELLENT
~ROFITS 1 800 731 7233 EXT

Ideal Location 40 Acrea Hay &amp;
Pature New otO xeo HorH Barn
3/4 Mile Road Fron11g4 On 2
Roads TractOf &amp; Hay Equipment,

WE SHOP 4 U new shopping/do

recommend• that you do busl
ness with people you know and
NOT 'o Jtnd money tf1rough the
mall until you have Investigated

FREE ANTI AGING TAPE As
Seen On NatiOnal TV Retire In
(1) Year CaU 24 Hour Recorded
M11sage 1 aoo •es 9222 Ext
1800

(BOO) 213-8365

sllll all IJlllltloo evallablt $35 000
740.949-2179

(3) ·····tooK .....
5 Bedrooms 2 Baths owr 2 000

Ro-levtd Make 1400 1500 Eve
rydll)' In Your spore Time Limited
Spoca 1 8811-831-8454(24 Hro)

phlalel Wt Pay You $1 Per Pam

ltACIIU
In the country oft SA 3S Land
Contract available $12 500t 1

Oak Cablntts Bullt Jn Dt&amp;hwaaher/Compactor C1ntral A/C Gas
Heat lnground Pool 18x32 Quiet
Nelghbori'IOod Flnls hed Bast
ment 1 ~ 05 Teod ara A'Je ~7ot0)

(740)38B.Qo4621(740)701l-0538

which Ia In ~ola!IOn of the

Buelne11

Sale

7.Co-&amp;57 !M87

(2) First Time Buyero Easy Fl

Low pricedlh•gh Impact business
ads long term discounts 740
992-9796 Stove

Farme for

Nice Brick Home 3 8R 3 Batho

Blnneta Lawn Clre
Community &amp; Residential Landocapo &amp; Doalgn ~lne deanng &amp;
btush removal cal for free as
tlmate

advertisements for reat es1ata

FINANCIAL

210

330

Let us save you lhe high coat of
a real estate agent Buy tt\ls 5BR
Ranch home w/2 112BA large
modern kitchen basement w/
pool table 27 above ground
pool Atta ched 3 car garage set
on level 314 acre lot Save tht
7~ commlulon
lnstud of
$92 000 this beautiful home In
New Hav,n WV can be yours

320

Roofing plumbing &amp; odd lobs
74().992.()501 11k lor TeiJY

t,IEDICAL BILLER $15 145 /Hr
Merttcat Billing Software Company

Working With Children Contacl
Qa)lla Jackson Vinton JVSD
740 245 e33• Ext 201 For Ap
ptlcotlqn Dtadllnt 312812000
EEO

CREDIT PROBLEMS? CALL THE
CREDIT EKPERTS LICENSED I
BONDED CORRECT /REMOVE
BAD CREDIT BANKRUPTCY
LAWSUITS
JUDGEMENTS
AAA RATING 90 t80 DAVS I
100-422 1598

740-446-2847

1203

Cooking Background Experience

Windfalls B47 A SECOND AVE
1350 NEW YORK NEW YORK
t00f7

Gaurantesdl Ftee Esllmatesl

Year Earning Potential Or's Naad
People To Proceu Cla1m1 Vou
Can WorX From Home We Daln

VACANCY Cook QuaiHiqallonl
H S Diploma /OED Ouan!l!y

CAS)I NOW$ From

Families Unloading M1l
Ilona Of OOIIars To Help Minimize
The ir Taxes Write Immed iately

er7 Beat High Prlo11 All Work

UP TQ $20 000 $45 000 fl Par

URGENTLY NEEDED plasma
donors, tom $35 1o 145 lbr 2 or 3
houro weekly CaN Slfo·Toe 740.
592-6651

$FREE
Wea lth~

Nttd An Electrician Or Carpent·

phlell Homeworker&amp; Needed lm

(24 Hr Recorded Message) 1·

Buyero 800 490 0731 Ext t 01
www noUonaJoonlrac!buyors oom

Homes lor

16X80 Chandelur Moblle Home

Posrat Jobs $48 323 00 Vr Now
Hiring ·No Experience Paid

STAY HOIIEI MAKE MONEY
HELPING PEOPLE RECEIVE
GOVERNME~T
AEFUNOS
FROM HOME FREE DETAILS!

Cash For Rema ining Payments
On Property Sold! Mortgagea l
Annuil llll Setllementsl lmme
dlale Ouotaslll •Nobody B•ata
Our Prices • National Contract

Aroo 740-258-t576

$2 000 Wllkly From Home Pro
ceasing VlsaiMa&amp;lerCard Pam

nlturo tmmodillll Opening• P~rt·
Time Apply Topao furniture Co
151 SOCond A110nuo GaiUpolll

$$$ NEED CASH77 WE Pay

No Fee Unless We W1nl
, 688 582 3345

pltal c/o Poraonnol 2520 vana~
Dr PI Ptoaaanl WV 25550 or
fa• to (304)&amp;75-8975 AAIEOE

Salesperson Needed Retail Fur

Bl Level In Spring Valley Area 3
Btdrooms 2 Bllhl FamHy Room
2CirGarage 7~7

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /Sst?

Box 845 Durl&gt;ar W&gt;/ 2eo&amp;l

ville A.nd Audition For Major
Record Producers And Concert
Prornotres Internet www wcin ac

DRIVERS Cannon EKprtSS
991!. Orlvor No Touch Freight
Start AI 34e Ml IS Yr + E~:p
:~•-~"': 14 Yr !!:!c Mt 13 Yr 31C
30c Ml 11 Yr 290 Ml
Yr 2Be Ml 18 Moo. Or
I
Or 1 Mo Exp $350

Wanted To Do

to 304 788 1884 or man to PO

Mllllnnlum ,.....,._
Is plMIOd 10 ennounco ..,
Grand opening olllll new Wtl~
oton calling otntao
we are now Httl"9 up
Interview oppointmenll lor
~ ltlooervtoo pooitonl
No -rftnoo nect~~~ry
Earn up to 115/ltr
with quarterly 111ary rovtewo
Monogernenl opportun~too avail
able 4011&lt;oto4adicatl!lontai/Pald
vaoaUono available 31hllto daHy
Aexlllfe scheduing Start your

Q Auto Loans Personal Loans
Debt Consolldallon Mortgages
And Rtllnancing Credit Problems
OK Consumers Financial I 800
2475125 Exl 1134 VOid OH KS.

OK Free A.ppHcatlon u s Ap
pl~anto Only t-an 780 1938

Preferred Apply Aequlalrlona

151 Second Avonua GaUipollo

310

MONEY TO LOAN Bad Credll

EARN A LEG~
OLLEQE DE
GREE QUICKLY Bachatoro

Sale

220 Money to Loan

Payments To 85% fiCASH IN
CENTIVE OFFERfl Call 1 BOO
3:!8 8!10 EX! 29

Buslne11
Training

Muter• Doctorate By Corre

SINGERS! QDSP~L CLEAN
COUNTRY and ~AIY LISTEN•
INOI Call t 800 469 8164 For
Appointment To Come To Naah

Gallipohs, Ohio 45631

Starling Salary $5 50 I

Hour Interested Applicants Need
To Specify Position 01 Interest
And Sand Resume To P 0 Box

Full Tlmo Wl)h Bonollto Ratall
Saloo And Compultr E•porlenco

MUST Own Computer- I·
Jl88.332 5015Exl t700.Cally

'

School Diploma IGED Valid D[W

to hearing from you 740 742

POSTAL JOBS To 118 35 IHR
INC BENEFITS NO EXPERI
ENCE FOR APP AND EXAM
abot~tll INFO CALL t BOO 8 IS 3585
EXT t4210 8 AM 9 PM, 7
DAYS fdo Inc.

Your Home Computer For Grear

Aoqdla~lonl .-~~y

In Buying Or Salting

Interview
c~~~~::~~~
your resume
and

ll'lCP Nttdod

Ina Etc

tntoreota~

Tra1nlng Groat Btnoftts can 7
Days 800-429-3880 Elrt. J·385

Call For O.tallo

8Z5 ZndAve

We Are Searching For Compas
slonatt Pro1eulonals With A
Team VIsion And A Onlre To
Teach Peraonal And Community
Skllls To Individuals With Mental
Retardation The Work Environ
ment Is InfOrmal And Rewarding
The Requ irements Are High

Marked By 3128100 Equal Opper
tunl!y J;"1JJI)'ar

Pl. .sant Valley Nuraing and Re
habilitation Center hsa an open
ing tor an Admission/Marketing
Coord&amp;nator RN with lhrte years
clinical nursing experience
long. term care of rehabilitation
experience preferrad Competl
tlva salary and benefits Submit
resume to Pleasant Valley Has

Avail

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

fits Include Health /Dental In
S~Jrance And Vacation /Sick
Time 2) 33 Hrs fWk 8 A M Sat
Thru 8 AM Man Sleep Over
Requ ired 3) Emergency Relief
(Subatltutes, Hours Scheduled

988-3599 Ext 2601

Part Time Help For Handicapped

Program Paid

Publisher
Ohio Valley
Publishing Co.

Sorvlcto Currenlly Hao Optnmga
In Molgl Coun1y
t) 40 H11 Nlk 3 ~M Mon '!h&lt;u I
A M Sat Slaep Over Required
Dlyllme Hours Ott Poollton Bane

Peroon 3 00 PM 7 00 PM In
My Homa 740-!lfl8.9605

Apply To Holzer Clinic Human
Relations Department 90 Jact;

tO

WA .. TED BuCkeye Community

604 Jackson Oli 45640 0604

4 Monday Thru Friday At 8204

Fringe Sonoflt Pocl&lt;oct

Help Wanted

Receive Government Refunds
From Home FrM Details , 800·

Carla Drive Gallipolis Middleton
EotoiOo 740-41&amp;-4814

6)qk Ptaraon

T.S, Coln Snop t51 Blcond
~. Qolllpollo, 7-2842

33 Qalllpollo OhiO 4!631

Part Time Dlroct Cart StaH Appl.
cations Will Bl Token - n 6

~~oftoolonal Auction Sorvlct
l'artn. Eattte, Inventory Reduc
t16ri Fll'ldralolng, Sttwtn Bltz At
~ Clill! 740 246-5747

•

~d

P 0 Box

WWW lrrp!JMdllfl ntt

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740-m 11102

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oolutt Top Dollar All u S Sll
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~·· Antiquo J-try, &lt;lold
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t.+l~

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$300
Per w..k
Hl88 900.ao65

ddltpOrt Ohio &amp; WV Lloenu

Olltlf&gt;OIII OtiC 7ol0-379-2720
I
811 Wanted to Buy

9 OOPm

12 30

and EKG o. part limo Fox ,..ume

DENTAL BILLEA $15 ·$45 /Hr
Otntal Billing Software Company
Nuda People To Proe11o Modi·
cal Clatmo From Homo Training
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800-223-11-!8 Elct 480

ij,yfatll 11tataa consignment
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t/iedemayer 1 Auction Strvlce

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888 848 S12&lt;t

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director'•
Intent with
rllptct IO the IIIUince,
denlll,
modiiiCitlon,
rtvoc1ttan, or renewal of a
permit, IICIInM, or vlrtance.
Written commento and
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m . .tl\111
regerdlng 1
prapC)ood 1ctlon may bo
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rtqUIIt Or ObjtCtlon II
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den111,
modlllcltlon or revocltlon
oiiiC11n111, permlte, 111-

SALES &amp;
MARKETING

110 Help Wanted
GallipoliS Gun a Archery Has A

No Exptrltnce Necessary Wil t

.....

Anontlon Work From Homol Eom
$450 ·It ,500 /Month Part Time
S2 000 S4 500 Full Tlmo 1 888
382-6228

Now To 'lbu TlYfft Shopjle
9 Wesl Stimson Alhtnl
740-592 1842

FrH to good home medium size
malt terrier wery fnendty 1•0

Include the

-WD&lt;tlo~

A8SEMILY AT HOIIEII Crotts

www c2tmarco com

(304)895-3188

IH4111C SIIIU PICIUP • LWB, 2WD, Maroon/Silver, VB, Air, Auto Trano., Tilt, Cruioe, AM1FM Caooette
Wu

Beachea And Ralaxarion Stach
Front Condo• Or Homea For

Hound Mother Is good hunter
80th partnta can be seen

1nd the epprovel or
dl11pprova1 or planl and
tpeclllcatlont
"Draft
Acllona•
~re
wrlttan
1t1temtnt1 of lite Director
of
Environmental
Prot-on'• {Directar'a)
Intent with r11pect Ia tho
IIIUIIICII, dtnlal, tiC of I
permit, llctnll, order, tic
lnttrlltod poraont may
aubmlt written commento or
roqutat a public mooting
regarding draft aotlona
Comment•
or public
mtttlng reque111 mull be
tubmlttlld wltltln 30 dlyo or
notiCII or the drift •etlan

Wao '18,999

FLORIDA MARCO ISLAND En·
joy Tho Tropical Paradlao Of

i!f.. Pupplas

Public

v•rlancee, or oertlflcltea;

IUKI USMII·

48619-0tot

V:00-5 30

A-lun IAIIgue
ANAHEIM ANGELS Announcad tho rstlro
monl of INF Pot Ktlly Rlltllad INF Jaocm
Batoo Optlonld OF Nann HutchliW to Edmon
ton of thl Pacific Coaet League
BOSTON RED SOK Optioned 38 Wilton
Verso to Pawtucl&lt;ot of tho lntomotlonal L..gue
Aollgntd FtMP Fomondo Da l.a Cruz to tllofr
minor league camp
TORONTO BLUE JAYS Ot&gt;tk&gt;nld OF vtr·
non Wells to Syracuse ol the lnttmatlonal
League Roosslaned C Charlie Groene C Ke'll•
Brown and INF" wtiMs Otaniaz to their minot'
loog&lt;Jo camp
Nttlanat LMgut
CHICAGO CUBS Optioned INF Cole Llnlik
and c JoH MoYna to Iowa ol the PeL Rea&amp;
signed LHP Daniel Garibay RHP Mike Heallt
con and RHP Todcl Van Poppet to their mlnorr
league camp
CINCINNATI REDS Optrofltd RHP Eddie
Gaillard to Louisville of the International League
Sent INF Freddy Garcia outright to louiSVIlle ...
MILWAUKE~ BREWEAS Agreed to terms
with INF Charlie Haves on a minor league con
tract

PUBUC NOnCii:
The
following
eppiiCIIIona and/or verlllld
camplelnte Wlrl recelvlld
end the following drelt,
propo11d, or llnel actlone
wore leaulld, by the Ohio
Envlronmentel Protection
Agency {OI!PA) lilt -

"A.ctlona"

Stlf Addroosed Stamped Envat
cpa To LAB ENTERPRISE. PO
Box 3141 South Bend Indiana

Quatlty clothing and household
ltimt 11 00 bag sale every
fhuraday Monday thru Saturday

BUibllll

•·Dotro~l:;::: ::::::43
22 B
9 2
97 242 225
190
Chlcogo
29 36
2 68219
Naahvlllo
28 41 7 7 B6 1B5 215

St Louis 2 Carolina 1
NY Islanders 5 Toronto 2
Montreal 1 Atlanta 1 tie

Y.

248

197
184
174
193
217

Wednesday's scores

308 E. Main St., Pomeroy, Ohio 47569

181
162
214
215

NorthHit Dlvlelon
•·Toronlo ............. 40 26 7 3 90 222
011awa
36 25 t1 2 B5 215
Montreal
31 34 9 3 74 173
Buffalo
30 34 10 3 73 191
Booton
23 33 17 B B9 188

~LOUII

Phoenjx at L A lakers 10 30 p m

Mldwtlt lltglonll

' Philadelphia
Pittsburgh
NY Flangers
N Y. Islanders

Atlanllc DMIIIon

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Cenlnl Dlvllllon

827

Mondoy, March 27of1nll
Semifinal winners

South Regional

:rum
x New Jersey

Yt I. 1!111. lil

111m

tournament alate

Ellt Regional

Sunday, March 28.flnllt
Semifinal winners s p m.

•

NBA atandlnga

S~oflntl

EASTERN COI'4FERENCE

4.

16 ~

Monday, Mllrch 27..flnal

Midwest Regional

Penn State 81 Kent 74

NHL standings

Annou!ICementa

"GOT A CAMPGROUND Mom·
bershlp Or Timeshare?" Well

Calgary 2 Detroit 2 tJa
Edmonton 2 Anaheim 1
San Jose 4 Vancouver 3

-

IIIIIINU8?
P1471/HII PT 1fT
1 Ill 100-13!11 EXT 1211

SERVICf S

45831

Women
High serial Margaret Eynon (537), Kaye Spencer (498)
High gam~. Eynon (212), Spencer (188)

3

FL.1PLOYi.H

"'0

Wa lka &amp; Friendship Send ,_,
pilea To 553 Second A&gt;Jenue
A.partmant 1403.._Gallipolla OH

High game: Sm1th (235) Burton (201)

AilE 'IOU READ\'
FOil AH 1-CDWEIICE

not. 7of0.181.121 0

ohlp From Nice Female For Tolko

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD
6) 1015pm

Pereonala

Caucasian Dominatrix Ftmata
S..~ing Caucasian "'-n Frlenda

30

Nontl Carolina ~20 13) vs Tennessee (26

Wanted early modell KawaAkl
1118 80 all modell running or

Gentleman Seeking Companslon

High sarles . Sam Smtih (549), Chuck Burton (530)

Reds 10, Red Sox 6 (11)

DOS

Wanted to Buy

10

288

Mill

At Fort Myers Fla , Hal M o rm
doubled m the go- ahead run to
lead CC:m cmnatJ Aa ron Boone and
Gook1e D twkms home red for the
Reds

ANrJOUNCEr.1EtHS

78·10.

•

•

Now Taking Appllcatlona- 35 •
Wilt 2 Bedroom Tawnhoult •
Apanmenra Includes W111r

!

Stwago. l)uh $315/Mo 740· •
4480008
4

.'

�i •

Pete a 4 ·The""o.ny s.nunet

Thurecl8y,-.March 23, 2000

540 MIICIIIIMOUI
MerchllndiM
"'-'Y- ~

-

Grubll'l 1'11110· IU~lng &amp; ropalra .
P - . ? NMd Tunod? Coli lhl
..,Dr. 740 148 ·~

Apt. . ..

1250. F,.thly polnled IXItrlor.
lion
~~5510.

Hot Sprlnga t\Ot lub, 4 l)trson,
OOOd ..,._,, wllhiYt ,_ lOp,
f1M Oft hN..,. and MW thtf'1'no.
ltat, aom. chtmlcata lneludtd ,
eodlr wltll bluo loC&gt;. call 740-992·

1

'l'wtn TMra

now oecljlling ap.

pileltlono tor 1 BR. HUD aublld·
l1ed apt. for eldtrty and han(U·

5053-~rn.

_.t. EOH. (30&lt;)8711-111t.

p._,.
tnt, WV, AtttrtnCII , DIPOIIt,

COOUIICI EOUII'MI!HT

tractive Aperlfnent , Point

IHSTAUED

., You Don 't Call U1 W• Both
Lolf. • Free EaUmatesl 740·446·
6301, 1-100-291-&lt;1098.

7.0 448 00411 Aller 5 P.M.

VIllage Green Apartment• · 2:
· total
liletrlc.
l!llllllne·
• lumllhod,
lll.lldry
""""
llolll·

JET

lions 1\18lllblt 11 offrc.. 740-11112·
3711 TOO I·IU·Z13-eeM. Equal
Hooling CliJpor1unlty

480 Spece for Rent

Jtwtllry Sate: 30 Year Colltcdon
Avon Jewelry, Moat Still Boxed,

100 square lett olllce building .
S350/mo .• mobile home spaces,

N'"'r Worn To S11 Call 710·

~39.

$120/mo., 2 btdroom mobile
home, $300/mo., Rlverpark, Po·

Kenmore Waahtr $6!5 : Kenmore
Dryer SISO: Hotpolnt Dryer $55;

-

Whirlpool Waoher $75; Ali Whho.
Co1After5:45, 7~1l066.

· 740-949-2093.

LarQa. private, mobile home lot,

at Santa's Forest, on Rt. 87, water/sewer.

References.

MDIILE HOllE OWNERS

$90

monlh. (304)e75-1138.

Huge ln~entory, Diacount Pries&amp;.
On VInyl Skirting, Doo rs, Windows, Anchora, Water Heaters,

Moblll Homo Lot For flint. Takas
Up To 18' Wido, 740·446·0175 ,
$125/Mo., $100 Deposit. Aelar- ·
lflllll, 7~0175.
'

PIUOlblngl' &amp; •ltctrlcal Parts, Furnace a &amp; Htat Pumpa. Bennetls
Mobllt Home ,Supply, 740·146·
·9418 www.orvb.canwtnnetl

Mob~l Home Park Lot Available,
$115/Mo .. Addloon Pike. Will·
man Aoolly, 7-3641.

Nice Uaed Furniture and Ap·
pllancos. (7401·416·4039 (7401·
445·1001~mo.

r,1Ef1CHANDISE

510

NO MONEY DOWNIII

HomeBuelneu To~ayl Almost
Everyone Approved! Low Monthly
Payment&amp;, Frte Color Prlnttr 1·
881·479·2345
· (ToiiFrool
www.ejump-start.com

Appllancee : · Aecondlllon8d
Walhef'l, Orytf'l, Flanges, Refrl·
gratora, 90 Day Guarant11t
French City Maytag , 7•0·446·

RESIDENTIAL HOME OWNERS

m~.

Tappan HI Efflqlency 90% Gas ·

,.,._s

Flbruary &amp; Mardl Sale:
Appliance Repair
3407 Jackson Avenue

Furnaces, 011 Furnaces, 12 Sur
Heat Pump &amp; Air Condltlonlnd
Syatems Free 6 Vear Parts &amp; La·
bor Warranty Bennetts Heating·&amp;

· -~ prlcaa on Appliance!:
Rllrtgeratoro
95.00
Dryori
80.00
Eile1rlc Rlngea 75.00
95.00
Dilhwlllletl
55.00
,.,.._
135.00

Cooling , ·
1·800·872·5987
www.orW.com'blnnett
Ron's Goo Shop. 740-742-8412.

Sawmill $3,795, Saw Logs Into
Boards , Planks, Bums. Large
Capacity. Best Sawmill Value Anywhere. FFIEE InfOrmatiOn. 1·BQO.
578·1383 NORWOOD SAW·
MILLS 252 Sonwill Drive, Bullalo,
NV 14225.

0\llr 1100 - 90 dly . .,.,.
ty. (30&lt;)875-7388.
For S•Je: Reconditioned wasnera, drytrl and refrigerator&amp;.
Thompaone Appliance. 3407
.,_.,A..,..., (301)875-7388.

STEEL BUILDINGS ; Factory
Cancellations 25x30, 30x40,
•sx100, 50x1.t0 New Materials/
Soiling At Invoice! 1·800·211·
9394 X-47.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wlthere, drytrl~ refrigerators,
rang11. Skaggt Appllancea, 76
Vlna Str111, Call 740.148·7398.
1-88Hit-01'28.

I

I

Mollohln Clrpot 202.

at Road, Porter ·Onlo,

r1&lt; Chap-

7111'DrO.oA LlltleSawl

King Slzo Bod (Whitt Iron Hud·
board), MaUraii/So• Springs.
E•cailant Condition. $200.
(304)158-2211.allor 1PM.
R&amp;o·~

6

530

Antiques .

Bt.ly or 1111. Rlveririt Antiques.
1121 Eut Moln on SR 124 E. f&gt;o.
meroy, 71(1..992·2526 or 740.982·
1~· Rua Moore, owner.
Fancy Oak Secretary Desk •
Boc;tkcasa With Gallery; Early
Bakers Cablntt /Kitchen Cup·
board, Stone Jars With Wrlllng,
Sponge Waar Pitcher, 740·3877871 , All« 5 P.M.

540 Mllcellaneoua
Merchandise
UBAD CREDIT? Got Caoh
Loano To $5,000. Debt Consoli·
dillon To $200,000. Crldlt Carda,
Mortgagas, Refinancing And
Auto Lo~n1 Available. Marldlan
CrodH Corp. 1-80(1..471·5119 Ext.
1180.
.
37 People Nttdt'd To Lose Up
To 30 POunda In The Next 30

Days, Free Samples, 7.o40·"41 ·

1M2.

I
•

VIAGRAIIII ORDER BV PHONEIII
Stay At Homoiii1·800·21H737
l;loptF

Atgillorad Rt&lt;! Polil&lt;l LiOIOUoin
Bull For Salt Vurllng. Phone
740 418 1081.

(304)e7$-2413.

Wild TurUyl For Sail, E111n1ngs
0Ny. 7-31M5

H-v l Grein

12 Round Balta for Mulch Hay,

$10 oaen. Cll
lor 5PM.

(304)~78-2752.

of·

Clean, Wl'laat Srraw, ·square
Balta. Any quantity. Tim-Rock

Aa~gor

Whttla.

Call

'

1984 GMC 1500 Strlll SLE
Loadtd, V·l. Automttlc:, Low

Millo. WHI&lt;doyl 8:30 A.M. ·5:00
P.M. Call 740·«1·2••~ ; Alter
5:00 P.M. And W~tktnda Call
7-1309, Mlt. For Virgil.

Extended Cab, 3 door, toadtd ,

Straw: Bright Wlnt Til Straw Vur

·'RoUnd Deliver~ &amp; Votum• 011·

count Available. Heritage ·Farm.
(304)175-5721.

650 Seed &amp; FlrtiiiZII'
Toboceo Ptlnoa

df'ivt, atep side. excellent condl11on, 4 cyl ., auto, ale, amlfm CO,
50,000 milts, custom whetll, fl·

DeWhurst

Forms,(304)895-374011195-3789.

32,0'00 miles, 5 speed, arr, co,

crulae, $10,000 fi rm. 740·949·
2221.

'

'

Sat• or Trade. 1M2 Chevy PlckJ
up wl tool bolC . Rebuilt, good

TRANSPORTATION

paint and Interior.
(304)17$-7890.

13800.

710 Autos lor Sale

730 Vane l. 4-WO.

'92 Ponlloc 8onnevitll, four door,
eondiltC&gt;n, aharp, 141SO.

1978 GMC 112 ·Ton Van. 350 Au·
tomatle, $1,200 Runo Good, 741).
416-8323.

axcll~nt

74D-81~201S .....mtgo,

CARS $100, $500 &amp; UP. POLICE
IMPOUND. Honda't Toyota'a,
Chavyo, J-i. And Sport Utili·
tlu. Call Nowl 800·772·7170;
_EXT. 7832.

1971 Chevy Caprice, very nice,
'lOry good conditiOn, 11300, 740·
949-211t.
t9at Camoro V·8, Good Condl·
lion. 740-118-6511 Alllr 5 P.M.

1986 Camero, 355 HP Engine
With Approximately 3,000 Miles,
T·Topa, Good Body &amp; Paint. 4
Inch Hood Sooop, $3,500, 740·
245-5443.
'

,1988 D0dge 1 Caravan Asking
$1 .400, 710-446-3317.

1988 Honda Accord, par1aet con·
dffion, to mitat, one prevloua own·
er, automatic, loaded, 740~992·
2886.

1991 Plymouth Blazer AS. 5

740

550

Speed, Premium Sound Package,

199 \ Pont. 8000 LE , 4-door.
51,000 miles. Excellent Condl·
lion. 12.800." (304)675· 12011
(304)e75-2030.
1992 Chevy Beretta . 5 Speed,
82,000 mllos. 13500. oeo.
(304)e75-5823.
'
1992 Chevy CaYiill( 4 Cyl, AJC,
""' ~tr. ""'- Braklo, Lookl Good,
Runs Good. Asking $1 ,609.QO.
74D-387·7180 Or 7~9552.
1982 Ford TemPo, .t Doors, Au·
tomatlc, AJC, Power Steering &amp;
Braktll. 74,000 Milas, 1 Owner, ·

BOdy l'!orl&lt;. Palnled, $6,000 OBO;
1993 Dodge Spirtt 4 Cylinder. Automatic, 100,000 Miles, $1,800

1990 Hatley Sports1er, 883,
Black. EJCCellent ConditiOn . .Hy·
porchirglf, Saddlebags, Loll of
chrome. 14,000 miles. $8,200.
PBO. (:j01)175-2443,

Albany, Ohio .

Pomeroy Eagles

ThUractaya · ·
' l llllh St.,

Pom~·y,OH
Pay! .taO.OO
'

·~~·-.
$30ii.OO
Coverall
$500.00 jltarburtt
· Progr.tll~ top line.
. Uc.ll oo.ao nn-

"Were. Back"
219 E. 2nd
Pomeroy, Ohio
Used Appliances
Parts • All Makes

992•,1'550

The Appliance

1998 Yamaba Kodiak 400; warn

- --"noL
lmprovem1nts
1997 a"p Grand Cl!erokoe Lar- 1----::,===--..,o. whllo, 15,000 mlllo, asking
119,800, 74D-M5-3118.

--

2 Nazarene Oonkeye Jack· a

epm, '

Jtnny $1 ,000 OBO. 710·411·
5101 LIM Mtuago . .

COIIPl/TERS • Low Or SO Down,
Low Monthly Payments. Y2K
Compliant. Almoat Evoryone Ap·
pro\IICI. 1-eGO-e17·31?1 En 330. .

2 Pa!nt MarH: One 4 Vlafl Ola:
Ona 2 Vura Old; 2 ·Aroblon
Galdlnga: One 7 ,Voora Old..Ono
3'111ara0id, 7~ .

Dlomond Ring For Solo. 0.51 Clr·
111, a.,arqu/1 Cut, E Color, S·1
Clarity, 11 Coral White Gold
Mount, 201,Diamond Chlpl Total·
lng .15 Cnta, LIM Phone I AI
7-1.QIS3.

2 'Mar Old Stud Colt 1500, 71038W255 . .
2·112 yr fllidlng, 112 Morgan, 112
Tenn. Walker. Broke to rldt.
(304)895-3467.
-

Hogl. 741).2!58~~110.

Fllr Pigl For Solo, 7-io-111-0911
Or 740 111 4382.

319-~3 X2150. ·

dona , free "umatea, ntettme

1

r20 Truckl for ~le
1!188 C•30 Chlv. {Ton) 1 Spit&lt;!,
350 E!!Uina, 9' Flat Bid, Roou
A~d Qooaeneck Hltchll Com740-,11&amp;-ll971.
11188 Chivy 112 19n pleic•up, 1x4, ·
H.OOO or 1· .,hallor •• -trldl ln.
(3041773-li211.

'*'"·

1992 DOdgl flom A·50, 4 Cylln·
der, AIC, Overdrive, Automatic,
Clb, on Bod, _ , 14.1195, 111 K~
noon Drivo, Oollipolla, 740·4481540.
88 Foid Ranger e~:tend cab,
12100. 710-'712·2710.'

gutrantee . 12yre on jab
.....(300)895-3887- '

e~:perl·

840 . Electrical 8fld
Refrl
I
gll'lt On

Alllntion; Ntiw Hoatlng And ~~
ing Slidp Olllrl Gr~t RAial Al!d:
~ Slrvlct.' Lot Out Elll*lonce Technician Olvo You A
Free Estlmata Today And Beat
Thl Sprlng Ruari. Clll AdVance&lt;!
Coriitort' Systems At 7"0·448·
0918..
•
Rlsldanltat or COft'!mlrcial wiring,

now WVIcl or· ropalro. l!aollr

L~

ctnaed electrician . Ridenour
Electrical, WV000306, 301-875·

17ae.

':"

.,

39

Pus

All Breedo

'740o949-~J.·

-~
•

'

'

')

DIPOYIAI

-

too ohlp

;MS~af

35 Servile

11.341 F o r - a y

· ~!:.=·)

1011c1M11 Hawal,..,

1t Colando
' lncllln

~
;;

ln.truments
12 Male lhNP

21 AIUICit

i

22 ....... and

23

West

Pus
Dbl.

Norlll

z•
79

Eaat

ca.rm.ny

All pus

An Makes Tractor &amp;
Eqaip...,m Pa11s
Factory Aatliorized

'J;"'J ~;t'
~ ~-

750 East State Street · Phone (740) 5931-6~i7il
Athens, Ohio 45701

1000 St. Rr. 7 Souih
Coolvlll•, OH 45723

740121-1111

Ql

CRIDI,. PIOBLIMS???.
No Credll • Slow Credll • Blnkruptoy

&amp;uru-tBom•

Repo • Dlvorded

·

Corutruetl011

WORRYIII!!!
.No l!mblrianment...

New Construction &amp;:
Remodeling-• Kitchen
Cabinets· Vinyl Siding·

You're Trellled with ReiiJI8C)tl

Roofs • Decks • Garages

Free Estimates

•

740•742•3411

I

I

.

BORN LOSER

,..

j w~ 51J':PI!:J:IED 'IOU~

.,
:rt:fl~t&gt;~Tli\~ VI~IT Wl'l'l\ COIC.
~---· !53~~ElbN C.UEN'I'!l...

Bryan Reeves
·
www.su sethome.com

BISSELL IUILD.RS .
INC.
New Homes • Vinyl

Siding • New Garages
• Raplacement Windows
• Room Additions
• Roofing

COMMERCIAL an4 RESIDENTIAl.
FREE ESTIMATES

Ken Young

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

MYERS PAVING ':
Henderson, WV :

Cell Phone 674-3311

1

l"ax 304-675-2457 : :

•Driveways •Tennis Courts . :
•Parking Lots • Playgrounds . ,
•Roads • Streets
'
.

I

.....

.

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

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

20 Yrs.

Shade 'River

ll!tolodl Pcartl

...... •"• u

All replacement
·parts

Bulldooer &amp;: BaciJwe

Fr" Delivery

Land Clearing &amp;
Grading

"··n· ·
Sen&gt;lcea

Septic Sytlerru

.

Nutrena Western Pride · .
"
lQ% Sweet Feed $5.00/50 lb. llag

S rin Seeds 8 Fertilizer

P/B CONTBA&lt;;TORS. INC;
c *CONCRETE *BACKHOE SERVICES M

~. *MASONRY *BOBCAT SERVICES
~

t

' RESIDENTIAU/////1/COMMERCIAL 0
. FREE EST~TES........ FUUY INSURED N
· Bnia Morrlslin I Kleine, Ohil) , , · R
E
(740) 985·3948 ,
y
Jr.l1100 1 mo.

We Semce AU Maltea

To get a current weather
report, check the

Sentinel

.,•
••
'

· · AT&amp;T CELLULAR &amp; ·\
BLACKBE.AR. PAGING .
' '

"

'

.

.

~~

~.

RADIO SHACK DEALER !•

Middleport New Haven ·
._9_.9.,._.~2--2_6_·3_5__,;8;;.;;8;;..:::2~.....:::3...:::6...:::6~6:...-JJ

ILL'S
SELF STORAGE

. JAC¥5 ROOFING·,
&amp; CONSTRUOION

21i7o ·aeehan

The.more p.eoplc.with whom you

New Roofl • 'Ropalre
• Coetlng • GuUere
• Siding• Drywall
• Painting • Plumbing

.Road ·
Ra~lne, Ohio ,.
·

·,

1'

FYH !Oitlmatea

Joseph Jacks
740-992-2()68
"

Friday, ·Mareli 24, 2000 .
., . . It wiU be tbe knowlodp snd
' expertise you'lloc..,in: throu1h·
out tbe year ahead that will make
• rmdinl profitable outlets for your
' . wam feasible . Get busy search·
t •
ing them out.
.
'
ARIES (Man:h 21-April 19)
People will come through for
• you today and belp you aecom·
plish thinas you cannot do unaid·
ed. Just be sure they fiaure in on
the eventual rowanls. Oet a iump
on life by understandins tbe mHu·
that'li 1ovem you in the
, year ahead. Send'for your Astto- : '
, • Oraph predietion1 by mailing $2
t
to Astro-Oraph, c/.o thii newapa. per, P.O. Do• 17S8, Murmy Hill
' ' · Station, New Yortc, NY 1.0156. Be
:';~ sure to ltate your Zodiac siJn. .
•
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
; Althou&amp;h you may ~fer to be a
.. . loner when il comes to directlns
~. your activities, try to be a joiner
iniiCead today, because you could
~
be quite lucky in situations initl· .
: ated by others.
. ; " OI!MINI (Moy 21-lune 20)

•I"'••

' Nelf A:dditio,n•,
Polo BuUdiap, Et&lt;.

F~ Eslimolas
740c992-J 709

•

Cellular ·Jeff Warner ·1ns~
,

.

.

'

992-5479

.

tile betler. You
interac:t ·well 'with ~hem and you ~
will have "'uch 'to $Jiare arid learn
, from one another. ,
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Instead or merely coasllns today,

SCORPib (Oct. l4-Nov. 221 .
Don't un~ersell Ihot whi&lt;:h yoll •
have lo offer in way of wan:s or
servicet IOday. Your possibilities
for ge.,erating fair matetial retums
for tl'le effons you ellpend look
good.
SAGmARIUS (Nov. 23-Dee.
21 )Asocial involvement in which
you ' re involved with !ie;veral
friends needs your personal touch
roday to accelerate rhe proceed~
,ings. Find the lime to otTer your
input.
·
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jun.
19) A persistent challense wiil
cause. your real talents for over·
coming ini\Urmountable obstacles
to emerse. Yo~fll find out you
~ve grearer re~rv~ upon whl.:b
to draw dian you realize.
AQUARIUS (Jan. :ZO.Feb. '191
N~ project~ Or endeavors will be
more fortunate for you today than
okt ones. Think progre!i!lively and
. don'i be afraid to zet involved.
PISCES (Feb. :ZO.Man:h 201 ·
Toke advantBJe of tbe conditions
todoy that 1J0 bovina o favonble
innuence on your ma&amp;erial well
lxins: whilt thinJ!'t are J,OiRI in
your favor. Don't put off fin•lal
affain.

associate today,

2J2IWO 1 mo. pd.

PSICONSTRUGION
Remodella.1_, Roofla,,

'

~ ii\IICI;l ~s W-~1'11\U,
IN~ALI.ji.TtOtJ ~'I? ·

l

ELICftiOIICS i

.

·-.'aahera - Dryers
Ranges • R~frigerator
Frooi.~r1 -,'))lah Wao.h~r '

III·L.P£EBtrtr., ...... .

·sur

'

.

· 45n1
740 849 2217
Slua 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
l:loura
7:00 .A M· 8 PM

......

r-----------..,

&amp;:

U1ilitie•
(740) 992-3131

Nutrena Hunters Pride Dog Food

SEP'ARATION OF CIIURCII AND
STATE? NO, I'VE NEVER
UEARD OF SEPARATION OF
CIIURCil At!D STATE ...

'

.

Houl!ll &amp; Trailer Sileo

'Toll Free

$6.75/50 lb. bag

I

'tE5, SIR, MR,PRINCIPAL .. IM
'mE ONE WIIO BROU611T
1-\ER '' PRA'I'IN6 DOLL~ FOR
~s.tOWANDTELL~ .. SEE?

EXC.VATING CO •.

740-742-9501

Ag. Service

PEANIJTS

.·aowaRD ·

R&amp;IOHiitv

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

.

171-2417 or·441-1428;..

JONES'

740-742-0419

0

"A Better

740·992·7599

S.Wing·macblne
&amp;vacuum
clean~ repaired

• •

Arguably, the Mecca of base· ,
ball is Yankee Stadium. The Mecca of tennis is Wimbledon. There
is no Mecca of football . For
cricket, it is Lord's, the home of
the Marylebone Cricket Club
(MCC). Last October, the MCC
Bridge .Society hosted a mixedteam event (every team liad to
contain at 'least one man and
woman) with 53 entries. This
deal featured a very rare result.
North's .two diamonds was the
0 ••
game-forcing oj)ening in his system. (A two-club opening shows
eight or nine playing tricks in any
suit. '1\vo of a major is weak.)
This is known as Benjamin,
named after Albert of that ilk, an
entertaining Scotsman who had
· his 90th birthday last year.
was very cautious -- why
.... notEast
bid four or five clubs?
OILiillW~L? Gf:E., C.f\IEf, ['M
Three hearts guaranteed a good
~T
r'f'/\ LINC.OM..! five·card
or longer suit and eight·
plus points. (Tw.o hearts would
have been the negative' response,
showing 0-7 points.) North, no
procrastinator he, jumped to the
grand slam. Now West inadvis·
ably doubled. Ten-seven-fifth of
trumps do not a grand slam beat;
0
and even if they would, maybe the
0 bo
opponents 'would run to a makable
seven no-trump, as happened at
the other table.
The dec!'ater, Peter Collins,
won the firJ&gt;t'trick in the dummy
and carefu_lly played a trump to
his king, which permitted him to ·.
pick up all fi,ve trumps, whether
held by West br East.
The vulnerable seven no-trump
scored 2220; seven hearts redou·
bled was worth 2940. The differ·
•.
ence of 720 points was worth 12
. · international match points to the
C911ins team. When did you _last
IF THAT KID WITH TilE
bid and.make seven no-trump, yet
ROCKET LAUHC~ER PUS~ES
lose 12 IMPs?
ME A6AIN,I'LL SEPARATE
When will we see bridge at
HIS MEAD FROM HIS NECK!
Yankee Stadium?

•

press yourself a bit, because
~ ou ·re in an uceptionally aood
• achievement cycle. Do not put o~
until tomorrow what you can do

now.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) focus
on friendly fon:cs todoy. be&lt;:ausc
they' ll represent the majority,
e.ven thouah something in which
you're presently involved could
have both supporten and detrac·

ton.

.

'

YIROO (Aug. 23-stpt. 22)
·You're an exceplionally

aood '

manager Ieday, be it with xour

own affairs or those 'for whom
you work. Plus, ldokins out for
otheu wil.l provide you with as.
much rewards for yQUrself as for
them.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) If
you have an important matter you
wish to discuss wilh anocher,
today would be a good time to
arrange ror i one-on"'&gt;&gt;1C meeting.
Chances . . this penon will be
amiable.

I . .

I

=(llbbr.(

21 FIX '
21B....

Put
Pus .

Redbl.

.

240rowweMY
25R-In
•

21

•

•'
''

·

conctuct

30Puton~

.,

·

31FNahwtt..r ;

lortolae
·. ,,
37 Acqul..cl by labOr
•,\
31 Romen 2,001 •
410~ ·
'
42 EgypiiM
•

Bridge at Mecca

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle
Sales Representative ·
Larry Schey

·piRft

Man

'·

I,

33 AI rlghl.nQIM

Opening lead: • 7

''
~

32TN1118

s2

• Q J 10 t 7 5 3 2
South
•JI
9KQJ84
• K Q 10 I

South

•Earl

Pomeranians &amp; Pet
Poma For Sale

toll tr. . 817-353-7122

wlncf1. Big Foot kl1, Pro Oes~CP~ air
filter, 7119 mHos, $1500, 304·773:
5715 dayo, 740·992·3021 evon·
inga.

1----------

LIV~t~tock

39 141 ST. Rt. 684
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

• J

,_

Vulnerable: Both

E-m11il · mmy•ticpomlliiAOL.eorq
Also Show Quality

Owner

D10alen.

COOk-·

830

.

23~11aaf-

27-

Dealer: North

• Nails • J:o·'lea Bath8

Free EBtimatel!l

Free Estimates

1991 Honda ~4 Trax, 4wd. Aunds
good; In good shape. Only used
for 0.. tturm~- (3041,576-2781.

$3,900 , 740·448·1214 Allor 5 · 1817 Honda Foreman, "wo, all·
cellent' COndiUon, 800 mll11 ,"'"
P.M.
$1006, 741).992-5065.
.
1992 Olda Cutlaoo. Bright ROd,
Registered Border Collla Pups ,. 4dr.. Auto, Air, CIC, Alum~. 1999 Honda 450 ES 1 Wheal
Working Parents, lmporttd Blood 125,000milll.(304)675-3324.
' Drive Excellent Condition, 11.100.
Linea, Good Marking&amp;, Firat ·
"740-258-9244.
1993 Buleic RaQal. Minor 1t1t ~~
ShQII, 740-379-9110.
oa._. 11.100. (304)773-5725.
Honda 300 EX, E•callant Shapt 1
. Ma~y ~extras . Runs Great. CIU
570
Mualcal
1993 Ford Probe GT, amlfm CD. , olior"5PM (30:1~75·2443.
· ·
lnatrum~nts
air, cruise·, power 884111 and ·aun;. ' "'
'root, ~aiiiOr ~. sharp; 14000 750 Boatl &amp; MotOI'I' ·
Atllnlion -Attention
oeo. cal/740-1182-0053. · • · ·
.fOr Sale ·
Poortoyo Mualc Inc.
Ia Coml~ Soon To GaNipOiis
1993 Grand Am 13,995; 1991 LU· :=::"':::--.-"""'::i'''~"'=",.,-..,..=
mina Euro $3 ,985 , 1992 CaYIIIIr ;83 Stratoa Floh _&amp; Ski boat, 120 .
&amp;y, Sal~ T-. Aopalra,
hp Evl~uda motor, Stratoa.Trail
740-441-7093
RIS $3 .19~; 11!10 Skylar1&lt; 11 ,695; Trailer,
m~ option&amp;, very good
Harmony bass Peavay TNT 115 1992 Accllam 1 Doors, $1 ,995, condition. 11500. call'740· 742·
7ito-41t-0103.
2249.
1
basa amp with built In equalizer,
also wllh ball, 1&amp;2 CO's &amp; 1995 Camaro, Air, Tilt, Crulll,
book&amp;, one VCFI tape. Have CD, Tintt&lt;! Glou, 51,000 Mlloa, 1985. Metallic Blue &amp; Sllvtr Pro$1000 lnveoted. asking $800 Aaklng $8,500, 740·«e·8172, croll. 170V Bass Boat wla 91,
100 HP Mercury OutbOard W/SO
OBO, eau 710-992·9017.
741).21!8-9103.
thr~at, 12/24. Volt Trolling Motor, ~
1995 Chrysler Cirrus, XL, Au· llveWall a traHer. Like new condl~
tomatlc, AIC. Sunroof, $9,300 non. Will listen to trade·lns.
FARM S UPPLIE S
OBO. ·740-«e-0655 Days; 710· (304)812·3852.
&amp; l. IVE SIOCK
448·6832 Evtlngo And W11· Boll V·205 Rinker Cuddy Ca~in
'klndl
•.
20 loot. $12,000, Phone; (7.10),
'
199e Nloian 3oo zx. rod with 2e8.fli28
810 Farm Equipment
blOck lnta(for, 21!.0~2 mills, t-tops,
SERVICES
a... otoroo. 5opltd, front dam2 Hay wapons S100 Each: 1 In· ago, seeoo. 71D·992•1soe. 740· 810
Homa
• tornauona Hay Rake $700, 710.
For Sale : Tobacco SUcks. ·740·
2*5121.

•Bathi~

21S.Uepabr

• 6 4

Fw YMr Pet'I lto4s.

· and all melaJ buildins1
, 25 years experienci

Cue-IH Pa11s

· C.tr1etert WeJoemt ·

Motorcyclea

19811 Honda 125 4 wheeler. Motor
Stuok, good tires . $150. OBO . .
(304)895-3338.

740-742-80115

1·800·311·3$91

AT 8:30P.M,

1996 J11p ·cherokee 4114 Drive,
82.000 Miles, Air, Needs A Little

740-•cte eae2.

~&amp;SdUit

1994 Ford F· 150 XLt, V·8, au·
tomatlc. 4WD. 8' bed, air. electric
wlndqwa, btdllner, fiberglass topper, excellent condition. $12,000,
740-992·5065.

1990 Ford· Crown Victoria, .t door,
~ 15,000 mltea, urvlced ·regularly,

Sunroof, Loadod, $3,200, OBO.

·· WILLIS'
SEAMLESS
GUnERS

Club Bingo On

1996 Chrysler Jown &amp; Country

• 10.

... Optt '" ......,..

Quality concrete Oat work

Bryt~~~t ,

•78543 ·2
•I07f5 2
• 55

Poana

lndependent Dealer
Gold l e e ) Steel

Dennis

Eut

••••

11 ..-Town'"
20 DlsCMder

...

Wee&amp;

Mystic

'"'k''R''• 'on

17 Cllore

•AKQ
9 At 3
• At 7 4
• A K 5·

.B Y PHILLIP ALDER

1993' 8·1 o Blazer. 4 wo, 4.3 Litre

LXI Van, 47,000 Milos, V·8,
Loade~ . ~13,500, OBO 740·2561252, Horne: 740-256·1818.

740-448·7194. .

Hauling • Umestone •
Gravel• Sand • Topsoil•
Fill Dirt• Mukh •
Bulldozer Services
(740) 992-3470

Vor1ec. Loaded, 87,000 Milt&amp;,
Aoklng $9 ,000, 740·256·9244 -0r
7 40-446-4423. .

1990 BUick LISabre Limited, all
powtr, 78,000 careful miles, ex·
cellant oondltlon. 741).992·25211.

Your Concrete
Col)nectlon

14TM111aflhtw
15UU111e-.
11 o.tencl

No

1JMIOO 1 mv. pd.

"fiOUHG and .
EXCfiVfiTING

19'87 CneVy Van, Full Size ,
Ralse.d Roof, Conversion. 350 V
8, Auto. PS, PB, PW. 66,000
miles . Good co ndition. $5,000 .
(3041372-11210.

1987 Ford Aero&amp;tar XLT Good
Condition, 41 ,750, Price Negotiable, 74D-38H445.

740-593-7390.

740·992·5212

~WICK"S.

1985 Dodge Aamcllargar. 380 v.
8, 1 Speed, Runs tlood .. Needs
Work On 4WD. Serious Inquiries
Only. $1 ,200.00 OBO . Can Bot·
woan 3:30Pm And 8;00Pm. 710·
387.Q229

1884 Grand .Prlx 2 Doorl, Goad
WOrk C8r, Runa Oood, $900,
OBO 710rl41-o533.

1988 pnrysler Flflh Av.enue, pa,
pi&gt;; eruloe. good work ear, $1200.

FREE
'ESTIMATES
740-992-1671

1 111010..
711a-..:
• 1S Peel

High &amp; Dry
Self-Storage

7/2211FN

berglan bed cover. $8,999, 304·
773-530S allor 6pm.
1997 Ranger XLT Sttpslde,

Now taking Onlerl for IIIII Spring.
First Orders will GuarantH Beat&amp;

ACROSS ·
......-~s1t

NewB111'n1

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

25,000 mi!Oo, vory aharp. lull lor·
lngo, 112,000, 740·949·2045 or

BABIMEHT
WATERPROOFING
littlime Quarahlee.
Hay Ma.chinery Located: GaiUa 1988 Burguridy Subaru legaay Unconditional
LOCal
raferencaa
furnished. Ea·
County, Ohio. NH189 Hoyblno
13.900; Machinery in Excalltnt 0 -. 27,000 MillO. (301)875• tabi~hld 1975. Ceil 2~ Ht'l. (710)
8937.
448-0870, 1·800-287-0578- Aog·
ALL STEEL BUILDINGS. Factory Condlllonl 937·481·5S93, Plloll
1He"Bioet&lt; Monlt Carlo AM Pow· oraWatarprooling.
LiquidiiiOn. Up 10 50% OFF. Must LIM~.
Soli . · 40•80, 50•100, 70xt00,
ara, tn Exeoilln1 Shaptl 110:311.
M
.F.
112
Squara
Hoy
Bator.
Good
80xt50, Doug r-aoo-nB-~78 .
8358,
Appllenee Parts And Sorvleo: All
ConditiOn. (304)895-35110. .
Name Brands OVer 25 YHrs. EM·
· Are You A Metal Building Er8ctor
1999 Mltaublehl Mirage, GrHn ptrlence All work Guar,nteed,
820
.Wantad
to
Buy··
.
/Contractor? ·We Have Factory 1
Exterior, :le,OOO Milas, E&gt;CIIitnt Franch City Maytag. 710·411·
DlriiCI BuUdlngs WMh NP Dealer· TOBACCO Poundage Wanlld Carii"Wll Take Pay-on, 71D-245· m&amp;.
1hlp F11 OrfVOiume Commitment.
I ~;;:--::--:-:-'--:-:-:-::~=
Le811 For A Good Price Paid o333.
C&amp;C General Home Main ~
ALL SIZES IALL ' LOADS. EL· To
Up
Front.
Call
Jodray
J.
Farm
1·
, DORADO BUILDING SYSTEMS 937·373·4814 Can Call OOiilct 9'2, Bonneville Se ltdan, metallic ••!'•nca- Paln~ing,, vlnytsldlng,
bllil, 80,000 miles, good condl· earpenJrY, doora, wlndowt, biiiJII,
1·800-27&amp;-4300.
Altar 9:00 P.M.
lion, aiRing 18,000. "710·742· motillo 1mme ropalr and,.,., For
Blbybad, stroller, car 11at, high Wanlld·. RCA or Hughll Direct 8200,
tr11 oatlmtlte call Cr\e1, 7o!O·m.
chair, walker, playpen. 304·675· TV oystom. will pay top donor,
«123.
HONDA's $100, $500 &amp; UP. PO•
2801 .
Wollle 710·919·331 s llavo moo· LICE tMPOUND. Honda'o Toyo· Jlmo Dry .. all 'a C9notructlon.
IIG ICRIIN TV. Take ori Smarr
ta'a, Chavya, J"pa, And Sport New Consttucllon &amp; Ramodtll
Monthly Payments. Good Cretin Wt Are Buying Tobocco 8111 &amp; Utilillll. Call Now/ 800-772·74?0; Drywall. Siding, Aoolo, ~ddl·
Alquilod. 1-101).718· 1857.,
tiona, Painting, Ole. (3011871·.
Leaoo. 937 ·195·0.897 . (8oloro · EXT.e338.,
4623 or (304)874-01S5.
11:00
A.M
.
&amp;
Allor&amp;
P.M.)
CARS
fRO
II
Ut/110.
1m:
Ca{pet tor sale· teal color, ana
12qf), ono 9Kt7(+1, aoklng $100
pound&amp; /RtpOI, Fit. $9 Down 124
Llvlngaton's l111ment .Witer
IICh, call 740-IWI-2844,
•
!!ol· 011.11% For LIIIJ"U' 1·800- Proofing, an Deaamant ,.polro
Complota DISH Network lllalil1t
oyatom, brand na_,., $99, 710·
992· 1182 or 304· 773·5305 alter

R•moctellng
Stop &amp; Compare

1987 block Chivy S-10 Stapolda

1987 Ford Ranger XLT, 2 wheel

12~.

• Complete

0318.

740-9ol&amp;-2203.

Plantl.

•New Hom"
• Oar11g"

UH Dodgo Dokota 5 Sp11d.

second and third cuHlng, 1quere
bales. S2.50 per bale: also some
round balta, $25; Paul Klrr,
Chlllef, Ohio 710-985-3e38.

Earliest

101111 IISSILL
COIITIUmGI

S8,ooo Miloa, 11.100. 710·258-

Ear corn and square balls of t\11;.
Cli1710 981l14e5

NBA Cro11word Pua.le

PHILLIP
ALDER

SPM .

Alllr5, 7~.

ceo. 74D-2ee-t~33.

Building
Supplies

after

1H4 Ford Aangor XLT 2 WD.
TIIM, 5 lljiHd. UN*I G Stalnlttl Stttl Chrome Along
Bottom. 15.600. 740·411·11 08:

1990 Plymouth Lazar, s Speed,
Loaded With Sunroof, 42,000
Miles, $5,300, 740r141:1309.

36&amp;-0101.

W!oNT A COMPUTER?? BUT
NO CASH?? MMX Tochnology
Will Finance With '0' Down. Paot
Cradti·P - . No Protllem. Coli
Tol FrM 1·8n·293-10112.

SLT. 2wd, ~
apd, CO, Tonau Cover, Chtom•

ltU Ford

Waterline Spacial : 314 2ao·PSI
121.95 Por 100; 1' 200 PSI
137.00 Par 100; All Bra&amp;s Com·
prolllon F111ingo in Stock
RON !VANS ENTERPRISES
JacksOn, Ohio, 1-1100·537·9528

Used Furniture a Ap·
pNancta Great Selection. Priced
To Balli ·come And Brow11. •
Corner Of Routt 7 &amp; Addl1on Block, brick, aewet pipes, wind·
Pike, •we Buy Furniture• 740· ows, lintels, etc. Claude Winters,
Rio Grando, 0~ Call 710·245·
387-&lt;1280.
, S121 ,
Waahtr $95; Dryer $95; Electric
Pet• fO!' Sale
Range $95; Refrigerator Frost 560
Fflt $125: Refrigerator Like Now
$3SO; Freezer Upright $17S; Gas AKC Labrador Pupplu, Black ,
Range Nice $175: Skagga Ap· $175, 740-2-733.
pllances, 76 Vlne Street, ·oaUipo- Over 75 Tanke of Freshwater
lla. 74D-416·7398.
Fish, Locally Railed Parakeets/
Su~pllot. Floh TapkiPot Shop;
520
Sporting
2413 Jackaon
Avanue,fPI.
Piouant. (304)875-2083. Sun. 1·
Goods
4PM. Mon-Sa111AM-8PM.
Calloway Big Bartha Irons, 3·PW
plus X·12 A,S,L wedges, all Female Rat Tarrier. 5 yrs old .
graphHo ohallo. 1550, 740·992· Very Friendly. $85 . OBD.
(304)895-3338.
82730\llnlnga.
Kiln dried red oak, select &amp; t1
common, some cl'\arry, 740·687·
0111 or 740-117-3562.

I

Com~aq

HP IBM Oesktops /Laptops, ' E·
Comerce WebaUes. Start Your

Houeeh~ld
GoodI

BRIDOJ:

Foir Plga, 8or~ 2110100, 140
Each; Alto, Sholll For Sole, 3
ForS1QO. 740-~11.

Farm. (304)&amp;75-1301.

AERATION MOTORS
Rapolrod. Now &amp; Albuin in StOCk.
Cll Ron EYint, HIOO·W·8528.

1ltt lAd • - 10 aehool, IPI&gt;flca·

UYIItock

640

JAMTIIOL HEATING AND

Unlurni&amp;Md 5 Rooma , Nic. AI· .

830

TM Dally SentiMI • Pag• a 5

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

43

.... '

~'arwck

~

hair

-

44 .,_ - dlelt" ~
45A-.ut

' ArmatrOnll

47 Tlny)wwtl h ~
41 Rhytllmk:
"
l...v-t -~
41 Archltacl
..

r.-..

,..........

..

511 . . . .
112 Duld1 City ' · '

114 eonv.nt
dweller

'y z

T

8RI!IRHCP

URPJH

y I

UK T M

8RI!IRHCP
QRIXCP

8 R W .Q J
DC

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ICC J

MR

SRI!IRHCP.'

ICJ

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URWQ J

DC

T

·'=~~!~'

"••

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KC

Ill

PRPCI!

PREVIOUS SOLUTION:_"I alweyatellotudanta
you know n·all that cou'nta.•- Harry Truman

s.

HMTMC

r

,r

..-

that"ll II What you ltam alta"·,.
:;

S©\\lllAa. "r..~s·

~---...:.:....:..
· ;;;
.

141to4 It, CLAT

Rearrange l•flera cf
0 four
ocramblod wordo

WOlD
lAM I
POllAN _ ; __ _ __

the

be·

.. low to form four slmpla words.

,,.

•••
0

G0 R L E D

I I I' I r I I
L0 CCI

rr 1 1
I.A E.., L It.v TI.

-·..

.
."..

.. ,l.:o

~' ,

Moth er to newly mar ried
daughter. "Never let a problem to
.
.' be solved become more important
L-...L.-L-...L.-1--" 'than is a person tc • · • · • • ·."

I

5

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. .1'• •I· ·I._. •I 1e Complete
_
by filli'I.O in the missing word•
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SCIIAM-LETS ANSWERS
Quiver · Welch • Candy· Junket · HEARD
Originality is the art of rememberin_g what you hear

but forgetting where you HEARD it.

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·'The o.Ay Sentinel

'Thur8dly, March 23, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

~•urd~allr

i NATIO.NAL BRIEFS Two fight for COIIbOI of Refonn Partyi
.! Lodes
up by pn

_......: 701;

Details, A3

•

SIIIPIJid

CMftetS .

; EASToN, Conn. (AP) -Marilyn Davies bas found two good reato &amp;'t locks for her 10 guns - her grandchildren.
l "You try to reinforce, reinforce, reinforce, but there might be that
~ time they might pick it up:· said Davies, who cares for the cllil~ ~ her home during the week.
• Davies and her husband were among the lint in Easton to pick up
gun locks offered this ~~~~eek by a gun industry group.
nng the last six months, the National Shooting Sports Foundahas given a~ 50,000 locks acmso the country. Another 111
nities are to begin dismbuting locks this summer.
t!~riffi have been u~ble 'to keep up with demand in Augusta, Ga.,
~ 5,000 locks have been given out since November. '
~We ran out last weekend;' said Mark Gibbons, an assistant to Mayor
Young. "We have parenls with kids, we have hunters, we had a
C .S. congteSSrnan come in and get some locks from us. It's pretty
JllllCh acmu the board - businesspeople, truck drivers, you name it:'
l In Orlando, Fla., 3,000 locks' haw been distributed to residents, plus
~er 633 to each of the city's police officers.

tons

:

l Runaway van kills one, InJures six
•i SMITHFIElD, N.C. (AP) -The last thing an 84-year-old woman
~members before her minivan suddenly lurched backward and hit

~n middle school boys- killing a tO-year-old- W2S shifting gears
into reverse, her attorney says. .
.
L~:Oe next thing she heard was the children screaming:' George
f.'""'t said in today's editions ofThe News &amp; OliServer ofiUieigh. "She·
~n't remember anything in between:·
.
.~.. POlice were still trying to.determine the cause ofWednesday mornIng's crash outside tlte school's front door. Mast said he does not anticJp;"ite any charges against his client. . .
I. Sara Bell Kennedy had just dropped off two children at Smithfield
~~e School when th~ vehicle.suddenly lurched into reverse, ~olice

LYNCHBURG, Va. (AP) - . One of twO
men bying claim to the Reform Party chairmanship and its millions of taxpayer dollars
contends in federal court that the wrong guy
was improperly elected at a party meeting last
month in Nashville,Tenn.
"The evencs at Nashville were mught with
people who shouldn't have been voting;'Tracey
Lenox, the attorney for Jack Gargan, said
""'-~- -- ~·
h
w"""'""'"Y in a preview of th e testimony
e
was expected to give wh~n the trial resumed
today. "The outcome was preordained:'
Gargan, an ally of Minnesota Gov.Jesse Ventura, follows rival chairman Pat Choate to the
stand. Choate, the 1996 running mate of party
founder Ross Perot, was elected in Nashville to
replace Gargan. Gargan argues that the meeting
~n
ed d that he is stiD ch:ur·
was ill
· e~&gt;""y conven aq
man.
I
Bqth men have run parallel chairmanships .
. and dueling "official" party Web sites and are
· · n'val nommating
· ·
·
pIamung
conventions
Wit· h
$2.5 million in federal funding - some of
which is missing.
The rivalry-· and the raucous nature of the

"It~ tr~JU,

a form
of J'Olitii:Al tmorilm."
, . CIIOIIt
Nashville ...-;.,.,. _ has colt the third party

··---a

significant credibility this election year, Choate
testified Wedoesday.
"It adversely affect&gt; our capacity to make a
meanintlfUI run ~r the presidency this fall," he
told U.S. Diltrictjudge Norman K. Moon, who
is expected to pick- the real chairman at · the
close of the scheduled three-day trial.
·
Choate specifically pointed to a March 14
electronic letter from a Robert Tice urging
recipienls to file criminal charges, against' leaders
of Perot's faction "for attempting to viola~ our
civil. righcs;•
suils
th as well as $100
I A million finthcivil mail
agamst e same peop e. copy o e e'd d
w:a~. P~ e .to reporters.
..
. ,
Its really a form of political terrotism,
Choate s:ud . .
. ..
~nox .pbject~ to the document bemg
admitted 1~to evtdence on grounds that there
was no evtdence that the author acted at Gar-

san's direction.
"I don't know anything about it;' Gaqpn·
said during a court break. "That's called guilt by
association."
.
Gargan also said he has instructed the people
who posted an "official" Reform Party Web site
loyal to him to ~ it down, but he acknowl
edged plans to replace it with his own "official
party site.
'
The hearing · is only one light facing the
Reform Patty, and may not be ics last in federal;
oourt.Joining Pat Buchanan, who is seeking th
Reform presidential nomination, the party ~
challenging the CommiSsion on Presidential;
Debates .on the.,grounds that its rules would;
unduly bar the party from those events in the;fall. If the Federal Election Commission ~
not rule in the party's favor, Choate and
B!Jchanan intend to pursue the ·matter in feeler"'
~ro~

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Volume

•

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Number 204

PONYING UPChuck Absten, a
Pleasant Valley Home
Medical Equipment
· employee, had his
hair c~t after. workers.
donated more than
$400 to the cause.
Cindy Sexton; owner
of Mane .Oesigne~J;,
said tnat more men
thari women. parted
with their long locks
for this special event.

~

In federal court this week, Choate and oth-;
ers allied with Perot sought a court order to bar
Gargan and his supporters from acting as lead-•
en and planning the convention in Ventura's
state.
·

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TH!i TALLY - Twenty-four of the 2_
5 ponytails
that will go to make hairpieces for sick· children
are shown here.
•

Haircut for a cause·

Leeks of Love
. spurs residents
:·. to help sick kids

.
G

BY R. SHAwN Llwll

·:•

MANAGING EDITOR

ALLIPOLIS -'.
Hair today, gone
tomorrow - and
Jor a good cause. .
:.:Twenty-five tri-county
-residents are sporting
shorter 'dos today, and 25
siCk ,children across the
n~tion are the better fo~
it. The ,. good deed was
spawned by D~an Rainey
of Gallipolis. .
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so.

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'l X ]hether you're driving down I-65 from the Ol!!o
· V V Vall~y,
down .I·85 from the Caro~, or along the
.
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The ROBERT TRENT }ONES GoLF TiwL is 378 holes of
championship golf on a series of eight ~pectacular sites

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spanning the -length of Alabam.a's natural beauty. Dfign~d
.

by the master himself, the Trail is what The New York

Time; called "some of the best public golf on EO!Idi."

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And nqw the famo~s GRAND HOTEL REsoRT AND
GoLF

CLUB,

recendy

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Enjoy yourselflounging by the

p~l, sailing ip 'the bay or exploring sc~nic trails

·

on horse}:Jack; It's 'wonderful dining. It's impecca1

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.._,.AND DOLl' CLUI

: .., 1.800.5!44.8833 .

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-· Point 04tlr

1

.aoo.a•a.••••

••

~d that last Friday's cult tragedy
ii(: Uganda which left hundreds
~ could have been avoided ·
~ Lut week, over 500 members of.
~:thli in, Ugmda, "Movement 'for
!'he Restoration of the Ten Commandments of God," lo~ked
. themse~'!P in•a: chlii'Ch buil~
aud, :set the. building ablaze in' an
· e¥losion and subsequent fire. At
ldit 78 children were included in
tho
and
exact dead! '1011
nligli( ' never be knbwn, officials

as murders.
Police say that the gtoup's
leader, 68 year-old Joseph Kib-.
wetere, · was among those · who ·
·died in the fire.
On Tues&lt;;lay. the decomposing
bodies pf six inale adults, apparently murdered · shOrtly before the
fire, were pulled fiom a pit latrine
in the church compoun!L
The · ~dy. according to Qr..•
fireJ
Paul Martin, diteftor of Meigs
· Comity's Welbpripg Retreat and ,
Illy.
.
.Resoun:e Center, is the second
J{undreds of charred corpses
cult tragedy in history.
Were buUdo~ unceremonioUsly· woru
Wellspring, in, Columbia TowniDtO a mass grave en Mo~ The
ti!ipdV .,... initially tho1.!tlht. to
Piilll . . Gill.~ AI .
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SPRING PICNIC ~
These Toledo men found
Pomeroy's Promenade and ·
Thursday's perfect spring
weather a great
combination. The men
make Pomeroy an ·annual
stop on their way to the
NASCAR races in Bristol,
Tenn., and said that
Pomerot s scenery and
friendly faces make for an
inviting pl'cnlc spot. The
ducks, In the river below,
appreciated the men's
castoffs - and the ·
sunshine, liS well.
(Brien J. Reed photo).

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Weather

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PiCk 3: S-7-2
~ 4: S-s-s-8,

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B11o I ;u Rw: t.~22-Z7-31-36
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Ddy 3: 2-4-9 o.ily 4: 2-9.0.0
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,' · o·200:1 ~vane,. ~ wq eo.

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AWARDED - Justin Roush, a senior at Meigs High Schoo!, was honored with a House Resolution at the Ohio Statehouse on March 16.
The resolution honored Roush for· being named a 1999 ASsociated
Press Division Ill cp·&lt;lffenslve Player of the .Year In Ohio. high SChool
football . He plays on the Meigs Marauders Varsity Football Team as a
running baqk. He ran for 2,313 yards on 271 attempts, ·an average of
8.5 yards per attempt, and sc.ored 34 touchdowns for 227 paints in
the 1999 season. He has scored 598 paints and was also selected
as a first-team All-Ohio punter last year for the Marauders, as well as
being named the Southeast District's Offensive Player of the Year In
· Division Ill last year. Roush Is the son of Kenneth and Usa Roush.

for~epark

13-4

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ALABAMA'S

~1/Q;m/ ~el ·,.

The~dBd

•'

h:rVe.been a mass ritual suicide, but
8IM!I J. REID
• ~' .
$ENTJNEL NEWS STAFF
..
police in Kampala, Uganda_; are ·
.: :AlBANY -A !&lt;)Cal cult expert tre~ting the death of the children

grand resort on the Trail.

-MARRIOTI'S--,......--~

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ble service. Jt~' all here at the Gran4 Hotel, a

was kind o( surprised by' the
tvondeiful. 1 ktlew that I lived in a WOtldetftd
generosity."
· • d
,
• · b t I . k' d ., 1
. Kristen Grinstead, · a ninthcommmuty,
'' · was. . •tl 1
·!!I· .surprue
d
t .·p om
' · t PI easant H''gh
;
graera
1
.1
·
by the generb)ity. " ·
School, is one of the folks
·
· ' ·
whose hair will be packed in
..
~
-'
Cindy s..tor~ ....,. pialgi...
·
· dry plastic baggies and' shipped
"I th9q · t it w:as a .j!ood for diq:Prograrn, and two work- to Locks of Love.cause;' he
with a smile,
ers pl!ni~ipated.
"Her friends told. her .about'
. "No on.:' backed out, and
"Than)t you for doing this:• this,'' said her proud mother,
we've ha more J;I~en than said Gavan employee Russ Shaw B b
G .
d
h'
·
·
·
·
"
s
t
·
f
B'd.J-11
ar
ara
rmstea
,
watc
mg
women
ICipate,
ex on 0 I w" ' '
'
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said. · · · , "t ~ '. • , .
, "I though\ the response was , , her da~ghfer s h:ur · tran~f?r~.
In addit.i;¥ utg i few s~erit ove~helniintiJy wonderful,'!-. :. ~ll- bh~s.toryl· dofd.. ~achh . htt~ec~
contributio s, Gavan, Rowet: Sexton said, "I knew that I lived'· Wl, · e me u e 1n t e oc s 0
plant worker'!l\also raised money in a wonderfUl community, but I Love package.

·~11alyze.·Uganda cult t~agedy

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"I thought the resporue was ovenvhelmingly

~perts at Meigs fac~ities ·

by Contll Nut magazine, is waiting for you on the
coas~.

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named one of the best places in the world 'to stay
Alabama

.WASHINGTON (AP) · heading toward $2 a gallon, sevPointing ~o his experience as eral initiatives have been proOhio's gOvernor for eight years, posed in Congress to lift all or
Sen. George Voinovich is urging part of the 18.4 cents per gallon
his colleagues to refrain from gasoline tax.
· ·
•
rolling back the federal fuel tax in
Ohio Reps. Dave Hobson,
response to rising gasoline prices. John Kasich and John Boehner,
States rely on gasoline tax rev- all Republicans, h~ve pressed for
enues to pay for road mainte- repeal of the 4.3 cents-per-gallon
nance and construction projects, tax levied in 1993 · for deficit
and those projectS would suffer if reduction and dedicated in 1997
even part of the tax was removed, to highway use only.
Voinovich said Thursday.
"Our constituents are getting
"This would effectively gut
p!Jmmeled at the gas pump and ,
Ohio's plan for new constructhey want this tax eliminated,"
tion ,'' the Ohio Republican said
Boehner said.
as a small group of foes declared
Republican Sens. Trent Lott,
their opposition to the effort.
R-Miss.,
and Frank Murkowski,
"It's going to shortchange the
American pu~lic and it's short- R-Alaska, said thei're getti'n'g
sighted,'' said Sen. Max Baucus, ready to offer legislation to .stop
D-Mont., adding that there was the government from collecting
no guarantee that any tax savings· the 4.3 cencs per gallon for the
would be passed aiong to cus- rest of the year and stop ill gasoline tax collection if the average
tomers.
"The three of us are going to price of unleaded regular
stand like a stone wall on this becomes more than $2 per gal- ·
issue:·. vowed another opponent lon.
There ~so is a prQposal in
of the proposed tax repeal, Sen.
,
Congress to roll back the 24.4
John Warner, R , Va. .
With. prices
'the pump . cents-a-gallon tax on diesel fuel. '

at·

..,,

o( Love campaign and decided
h~ would part with his to-inch
ponytail - for .a price.
. ~·1 told my wife l'f she would
raise $250 (for the program), I
would get -my hair cut," Absten
said.
. Chuck and Karen Absten both
work ~t 'Pleasant Valley Home
Medical Equipment and, evidently,, ' their co-workers were
ready 'to . see ' Chuck's locks
shorn. They raised more · than
$400 for the cause- in just a
few hours.
~ Chuck kept his word.

gulf coast on I -10 there is incredible golf along the way ...

and something Orand at the ep.d of the Trait ·

Voinovich:
Don't cut tax

erChtick Absten of Point Pleas- THERE
- Clncjy Seleton, OWI\llt of .Mane Designers In Gallipolis, cuts Krlsten,'Grinstead's hliir
ant heard about the local Locks .Thursday;, Grinstead is a nlnth·aiailer at POiht Pleasant High SChool. (R. She~ LE!YfiS photos) , . ..

·,
·•.'&gt;·'-

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• Rainey, who lias had-long·liaiF
for most of his adult life, was
watching a "Locks of Love"
iQ(cnhercial when th~ idea ·hit
him. The show discussed . the
._ gro~ing need for people to
donate their long hair so volun•
teers could mak-e h,Urpieces for ,
i:hildreh suffering from illr!esses ' ·
Uh cancer.
' Rainey took the idea to ·
Cindy Sexton, owner of Mane
Desiguers. in Gallipolis. Together, the two created 'a movement
that climaxed Thursday evening
with a massive hair-chopping ·
session at the salon.
Hair wasn't tlie . only thing
being donated Thursday, howev~ .

.

roads-on. the
to 't he

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•

PASADENA, Calif. (AP) - A veteran police officer bas been susr.ended for writing a ·book detailing alleged sexual abuse and cor[\lp'"'n within his department.
.
.
l, But Oflicer Naum L. Ware, 41, is standing by "The Rose Garden:'
~ng he has memos and notes to back his claims.
~ "There is enough drama in the truth;'Ware said.
: The 173-page book uses fictionalized names to describe a police
~o.rce in which one officer is caught soliciting Hollywood prostitutes,
~nother tears up traffic citatiops for sexual favors and a sergeant rapes
~ cadet at a police station.
, "We may not like it, but that is what happened:'Ware said.
; It also refers to some female officers .as "tramps" and. includes a
chapter tided "Gays of Our Lives."
- Ware's colleagues are being offered counseling as a result of the

.

· March 24. 2000

-

PaSadena oflicer suspended

• l&gt;ook.

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Ohio kid holds class at gunpoint, A2
Big·night for the Big Ten, Bl

tlolaatawn ..._,.,.,

:: "All of a sudden, we saw a van going reilly fast in reverse," said Brit~- Sherman, 14. "It hit a student, and he went flying:'
:. As studencs mntically tried to get out of ics path, the van crossed a
tandy yald, knocked down a flagpole and finally stopped when it hit
~he school's brick wall.
·
~- One student was trapped beneath the V311, and otheJ:S were briefly
tinned between the van and the building, authorities said.
put my hands on my face and started crying and praying," said
f~~elissa Cockrell, 14.
·
·
, Byrone Murray died a short time later at Johnston Memorial Hosfital, said spokeswoman Susan Phillips.
·
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