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Po~Mror.lldlllpad,

P II B I • 1he DaJtw S1ntllllel

Ohio

NASCAR

Special Oining Guide -section inside· today

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the lOss of his father

Little E copes

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BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

"l

The nu.turing process for Dale Earnhardt Jr. ~ccelerated
"Just whnr you think you're begfnniHg tJ~el
npic!W'ith the death of his father in the Daytona 500.
"~ I found out he was dead, I knew nothing was ever better abf"' it, you'll hit a bump in the ro~atul
going to be the same," Little E said. "Before my father's . you 'II ~end two or 'tlaree days where you CAn't
•
death, I w.as kind of raised under his arm. I didn't have things
••
thinlr about t1othing else. I don't knourhow long
to worry about that other people had to Worry about.
'"He took care of everything - the money stuff, the team. tl1at'll be, but it's not s11ch a bad thing becatue I
I always thought there was this little brat in me somewhere .
like to tl1ink about him often. "
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That's all go.ne."
,
.
Bur it's hard to tell from just looking at the 26-year-old
I
.
Eamhltcll
Jr.
racer that much has changed.
He still wears his baseball caps backward and his shirts big,
sloppy and hanging below his w.ist. Chilling out with his make a living.
·
•;.·
music or his old. hometown pals remain his chief forms of
"It's not less important than it· used to be. It's just J.llferrelaxation.
Things are definitely different, though.
have been tdbutes to The Intimidator at each of the
The face that used to alrernatdy shine with a smile of. six Winston Cup rac!s since his death Feb. 18. That, to~,,has
innocent wonder at the racing fame taking hold of him, '1r been somewhat tough on Dale Jr.
grimace with an eye-blazing intensiry when talking about
"The thing that you have to keep in mind is that everyhis career, now too often melts irito a sad, faraway look.
one's intentions are sood;' he said. "It makes me feeJ ·good,
•
"It'll be a long, long rime before I feel like I felt before aD but then there's been times when it's a hindrance because it
that happened," Earnhardt said in a hushed voice. "I deal gets your mind off what you need to be doing." ·· ·
with this the best way I can. I think about him all the time,
A good example of that came last month in Bristol, Tenn.
and it seems like there's good days and bad days."
Earnhardt ran . extremely well in the final practice sessipn.
Usually, there's no total escape.
and was excited about the possibility of a good run the n.~xt
"Just when you think you're beginning to feel better about day in the Food City 500.
it, you'll hit • bump in the road and you'll spend two or
three days where you can't think about nothing else," Earnhardt said. "I .don't know how long that'll be,. but it's not
such a bad thing because I like to think about him often."
Earnhardt, who · grew up going to racetracks with his
famous father, has been ovecwhelmed by the outpouring of
support in the garage area.
Drivers he never reaDy talked to much are telling him how
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much his father meant to them.
· (
"It's been amazing." Earn'h ardt said.
·
Steve Park, a teammate, at Dale Earnhardt Inc., has noticed
a change in his friend.
"He went from being a young man to being a grown man
· in one weekend," Park said. "He's just done a tremendous
job in stepping up and going from wanting to sit home and
listen to CDs to helping run a multimillion-dollar company.
Park is amazed to see Earnhardt take such an active role so
quickly, determined to keep moving forward with what his
father and stepmother, Teresa, started fo~r years ago.
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. "He's really been impressive through all these tough
times," Park .said,
In times of personal crisis an4 despair, most drivers take
refuge in their race cars. Earnhardt Jr. said that hasn't been
the case for him.
"You know I raced for three years, in the Busch Series and
the Winston Cup Series, -and the majority of my enjoyment
was how proud my father got and to sec him happy after a
win," he said. "That's not there no more. So I guess I'm
doing it now like everybody else - · just out there trying to

•

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en+~ere

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But as he stepped out of his car, IR h~a~ commentary ?n
the ·p,a. system concer-ning his father's achievements at Bnstol.
,....,
.
"It just takes you out of that mindset IMa puts you to
thinking ~bout that;' he said.
The next day, the tributes continued, and Earnhardt was
caught up once more in the emotion.
"When they're done, they sing the national ant~em and
they move on," he said. "Then they start the engmes ~d
you're sitting in the car totilly unprepared for what you re .
getting ready to do."
·
t
.
Earnhardt finished 3 lst that Sunday. He stands 20th m
points, quite a faU after a second-pl•ce finish to teammate
Michael Waltrip _as his father crashed on the final lap of the
season-opening race.
But comp_etition remains a priority for the t~ird-g~neration driver, and he knows that wins and chao;npaonships for
him and the rest of the, elder Earnhardt's team are the best
way to honor has fathers memory.
.
.
· "I don 't _think you can loo~. for o~e t~mg, or a few thmgs
and say thiS ,IS gomg tO help, he m ,d: :OUJ.USI go s:i~lda~
after d~y. I _do know that I Want to ~m rac~s, P?
Y
champaonshap one year. Those thmgs w1ll help.

Mllp caunty"s ·

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Apnl 6. 20u 1 • Vol 51. No llJ 1

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Vote sets

battle .

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cut plan
WASHINGTON (AP)
- A di!'ided Senate neared
a vote on a 2002 budget
plan after signaling to President Bush that it will be a
formidable task getting .his
$1.6 trillion, 10-year tax cut
through
· Congress
unscathed.
Senate Majority Leader
Trent
Lott,
R-Miss.,
acknowlet:lged that the final
package to be voted on ·Friday may not fully . restore
· reductions in ~e president's
tax plan that were made
during a week of closely
contested budget votes.
"We're going to pass it:'
Lott said of the S1.94 trillion budget that lays the
groundwork for Bush's 10year tax relief plan. He said
the bill would go to a
House-Senate conference
with the tax cut "at whatever level the ·bill is at · that
point."
Following the 45t. in a
long series of votes Thursday night, the tax cut stood
at approximately $1.2 trillion. Vermont Republican
Sen. James Jeffords, who has
defied his own leadership's
. attempt to unify the patty
behind, the .Buab..plap, .said
"it's ~tt at 'die.• ·1~1 we• .
want now. • .,.;.
·.:. ... .
1
. GOP leade~ ·m~
to work'l&gt;ut a, ta'4:ui:':tl~·:
close to the p~ideOr's goa,(
bur still acceptable' tO tei:al.- ·
citrant Republicans and
perhaps some conservative
Democrats'. On Wednesday
twO. Republicans, Jclrords
and Sen. Lfncoln Chafec of · ·
Rhode Island, joined ill but .
one ' Demotrat in an
amendment that reduced
the tax cut to·$1.15 trillion .
amendmentS
Three
passed Thursday adjusted
that .figure to $1.2 trillion,
including one on which
Vice
President
Dick
C~eney, in his ~Uie as Senate
president, was summoned at
9 p.m. to vote to break a
50-50 tie.
Bush, in an address to
newspaper editors.. Thursday, said his' budget was "in
line with the values of the
American . people" and ' he
. sought to shake off the
rebuke delivered by the
Senate. "The bud8et process
is a long and winding one.
No one vote is decisive." ·

· EHlers
apprc;ve
grant
application
. Piv}eit exceeding $1 million

· Trussell said the county will use funds
from the Rural Hardship program as
"leverage" dollars for clients who need
septic tank and leach bed improvements.

addresses housing
8r BllliN J. REED
SENTINEl NEWS STAfF

P()M.EROY - The Me~ County conunissioners
wjl1 seek a $500,000 gr.mt to help finance a Sl million
housing rehabilitation Prosram·
· The board approved an application for the funds
· througjt the Community Development Block Grant
Home Improvement Fund during its regular meeting
Monday momiitg. Commissioner Mick Davenport

presided at the meeting in the absence of Board President Jeffiornton.
·
.
Jean Trussell, the county's fair ho111ing coordinator
and grants administmtor, conducted a second public
hearing on the proposed application llmrn:lay, and
explained the funding sources which will be used to
supplement the $500,000 sought from the CDBC program.
•

Marauden
fiDIIIPIIp81
all added singles.
Stanley started for Meigs
and was tagged with the loss.
Josh Napper came in to pitch
in the third. The two com-

.Meigs

II om Pap 11

hitter. She struck out thre~
and didn't walk a b'atter. ·
Harris led Meigs V{ith a pair
of doubles and a single, Bolin
added three singles, Kayte
Davis added a single and a
triple, Wigal at,td Chancey

Southem
framPap81

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reached on afielders choi"ce
then seven walks ensued.
Fryar doubled and Chapman
reached on an error to drive
in the last o£315-run inning,

each added singles.
Moore was the st;lrter and
loser for Federal Hocking.
She gave up 11 hits, walked
four and struck out two.
Rupe had a pair of singles lor
the Lancers. Springer added a
double, while Fossett and Bissell ~ach added singles.
. Meigs 'will play host to Belpre Friday.

the score 17-5.
Vinton County pulled back
to 17-8, but Southern
slammed the door the last
three innings. Meanwhile,
SHS picked up four straight
runs to secure the 21-11 win.
Southern hosts Waterford
today.

s·e ntinel

•

Rally

singled and advanced o.n an ·
error, Ohlinger advanced · the
runner with . a ruce sacrifice
burtt,
and ~nother error
fromPap81
forced home a run, 10-6.
run single to left. Dally !iill
Vinton County threatened
knocked home a run with a in the final round. Cecil
2-3 ground out, then A•ron scored ·after reaching on a
Ohlinger reached on an error. fielderis choice and taking .
Matt Shain singled home a advantage. of two Southern
run· and Brice Hill singled to errors .
knock home a run, and HubThe three Hill boys, Dally
bard walked to again load the Hill, Brandon Hill. and Brice
Hill, had two hits · apiece,
~ases . Three SHS runners,
however, were left slranded, \vhile Hubbard added a douthe score 8-4.
•
ble, Pierce a double, and Shain
Cecil reached on an error as a single.
Eberts singled for Vinton
did . Clary and Bartoe. The
two former runners then County, as did Norton,
scored on another error and Ruckel, and Clary. . Bartoe
sacrifice fly from Jason Ellerts, doubled to cap the hitting.
Southern plays host to
the score 8-6.
Southern got a two-run Waterford in a Tri-Valley
insurance policy in the fourth . Conference baseball, make-up
when Pierce doubled and contest today.
scored on an error. Dally Hill

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2 S1dl011 - II llllpl

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Plase- Gr•nt. Al

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CO LUMBUS (AP)
Republican lawmakers are (Onsidering further cuts to higher
education as they look for ways to pay for a
new school-funding plan ,
GOP lawmakers may eliminate $40 million
in fimding that Gov. Bob Taft proposed .for the
Ohio Plan, a technology initiative for the
state's public hi'gher education institutions,
House Speaker Larry Householder said Thursday.
"We don't want to take a water squirter to a·
fire;' sajd Householder, a Glenford Republican. "We have to look in reality what that real~YWts for the s~te of 0 · "}d) do(l't think
1t t\ets much. I thmk they eea to look at other

options."
The Ohio Board of Regents had asked for
$300 million for' the Ohio Plan; Democratic
lawmakers and university officials say Ohio
wiU fall fa.rther al)d farther behind other states
. without new investment in higher education.
"We're very much in competition with
other states who have recognized the ~onnec­
tion between higher education and economic
development," Regents spokesman Earl
Mackey said Thursday.
"Even though the S40 million is not large
when you think in terms of the total budget of
the .state of Ohio, it still sends a message that
the state wants to move tbrward," Mackey said.
Taft's two-year proposed budget is $45 billion.
·
·
Also Thursday, Householder said Republican lawnukers are considering freezing next
year's state budget at the level that foUowed a
recent round of c ut~ .
In December, Taft told state agencies to cut
their budgets by 2 percent to 4 percent for the
next six months because of a slowing econo. my and a $249 million Medicaid program
'
. bailout.
Republicans are considering whether· to
freeze the budget at the level that foUowed
those cuts - but not an additional round of
cuts Taft ordered last month.
The goal is "just keeping everybody where
they're at and at what rhey spent in 20Q1;'
·Householder said.

Fun·· •.in ·. the ·sun

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ttidents, at Salisbury
Elementary
in
· Pomeroy . enjoyed ·
)Thursday's sunny
weather as they took
to the school's playground
during recess. Temperatures in
the mid- to ,high 70s has many
Meigs 'Countians thinking of
summ:er, only a few months
away.,
... ......-!.14·;•"•'"'"

1Qiiy M. Leach phOtos
' &gt;

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This year's CH'lP would provide full rehabilitation fur
up to eight hou~; home repair.~ to repair critical safety
and health hazards on up co 13 houses - at up llO
$8,000 each; down payment assistance for up co eight
home buyers, with rehabilitation on those homes if
needed; and the fees for a specialist who will prescsu
informatio? about pre~tory lending practices llO parOclpants m ·the programs home buyer educaoon coune.
TrusseU said the county will use funds from the Rural
Hardsbip program as "leverage" dollars for clients who
need septic tank and leach bed improvements, and has
received a comminnent from Peoples Banking and
Trust Co. for assistance
with the down payment assis.

Republicans
consider
freeze in

~

bined to give up 10 hits, strike
out twO and Walk one.
Stanley led M~igs wlth his
home run and · a single,
Bullingt;Jadded , a double
and sin , Bolin a triple,
Stewart a ouble and Dettwiller added a single.
Meigs (5-4) will play host
to Belpre Friday.

50 Ct·nh

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overtax

Hometown Newspaper

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Hlp:I01
~=
Detai~ Kl '

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ResAick ·says corrimissio·n too partisan
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Lotteries

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COLUMBUS (AP) -Supreme Court
Justice Alice Robie Resnick, stung by a
series of attack ads in a muldmillion~dol• Jar campaign ~! failed to defeat her las!
fall, said Thu
y that the commission
that dismissed ·~tomplaints against. that
· campaigu is too partisa'!. ·.
·
'Resnick, re$ponding to the Ohio Elections Commission's 4-'3 rulings on
Wednesday that fell along party lines, said

the panel should - have considered th e
complaint&lt; fil ed against the U.S. C hamber ·of Commerce and an issue-advocacy
group caUed Citizens for a Strong Ohio.
The con1mi&amp;&lt;ion ruled that it did not
have the authority to hear th e complaints
against th~;- two groups because' they are
not political 'action committees and thus
nor · under commission jurisdiction. Th e
groups are nonprofit corporatipns that are

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exempt from election disclosure ruJes and
contribution limits.
They spent at least $3 million on a
series of ads that portrayed Resnick as
voting with the special interests that furld
her camp~igiJS. One ad showed a bag of
money spilled on ' th e desk of a judge;
another showed "lady justice" with a pile
of money tipping her scales .

Pluse see Resnick. Al

Home Care
of Holzer Medical Center

~Mera.lry
Ll\1. l..t ...
I fill T 0 U ll

OWN loAN.

.,

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\I

t!&gt; ..
Skilled Nursing, Home Health Aides, Physical,
Occupational and Speech Therapy. · .

Call
(740) 446-5301
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HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
I

Discover the Holw- Difference.

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Pa~Al

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

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Ftt• .,, . . . .HOI

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. j co~o 1

COLUMBUS (AP) ~ Ohio's dwter
school system violateS the srate constitution by·diwrting public money to . priwte1y run schools and breaks state law
by. allowing for-profjt companies to run
the schools, a teachers' union official said
Thursday in advance of a lawsuiL
The Ohio Federation ofTeacbers also
alleges that at least three schools were
illegally conwrted fiom private schools.
The union plans to sue Ohio over
these three issues in two to three weeks,
union president. Tom Mooney said
Thursday. The union wants charter
schools to adhere t&lt;! existing law but n&lt;!t
be abolished.
I
"What has happened in Ojlio is th~t
the concept of charter schools has been
hijacked, has been perverted," Mooney

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said "It's been conwrt.ed into a vehicle
for priv.atizing education-for the S2ke of
priv.atizing."
.
The union ·RpresetltS 25,000 teachers,
school emplot-s and other ~~
. Including reachers in Oeveland, Cmcmnati and Toledo.
. .
Charter schools, known as commumty
schools in Ohio, · ate publicly funded,
priv.ately operated institutions ~e fio':"
some srate regulations.They J:UeJvebas1c
srate aid, limited start-up money and rio
'construction funds. There are 68 charter
schools in Ohi&lt;! enrolling about 17,000
students. ·
Opponents say the schools aren't serving stUdents properly and drain money
fiom needy public schools. Supporters,
including many Republican lawmakers,

say the schools provide choice to parents
whose children aren't being served liy
their current public schools.
•
Mooney targeted Akron-based White
Hat Management Inc.. whic1i .opentes
12 charter schools serving about 4,000
students.
He said White Hat has illeg:ally converkd three priwte schools - Hope
Tremont and Hope Central Academy in
Oeveland and Hope Academy University in Akron - ro charter sc;hO&lt;!Is. ~tate
law bars the conversion of pnvate
sch0&lt;1ls to charter schools.
. Mooney also said White Hat schools
are violating state law by runqing forprofit c~rter schools. The comp~oy
contracts with individual schools, whidt
operate as nonprofit organi~tions.

·.

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Unseasonal warmth forecast

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BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

There will be no doubt that
spring is in the tri-county area
over
the · weekend, the
National Weather Service said.
Warm conditions are forecast f&lt;~r tonight, Saturday and
Saturday ·night under partly
cloudy skies.
Highs will be in the 70s
and lows in the 50s and 60s.
Temperatures still will be
Wllrm Sunday with highs
m&lt;!sdy in the upper 70s.
Sunset tonight will be at
8 :0t, and sunrise on Satu!day

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Southwest wind 5 to 10 mph
increasing late in .the morning
to 15 to 25 mph.
Saturday ·
night ... Pardy
cloudy and windy. Lows 56 to.
62.
Extended forecast:
Sunday... Continued warm
with a chance of showers.
Highs in the upper 70s.
Monday... Pardy
cloudy
with . a chance of showers.
Morning lows 55 to 60. Highs _
around 80 _

Tuesday.,.Showers or thunderstorms likely. Morning
is at 7:06a.m.
h
h
Weather forecast:
lows 55 to 60. Hig s in t e
Tonight ... Cloudy.
Lows mid 7Qs.
·,
around 60. Southwest wind 10
Wednesday... Partly cloudy.
to 15 mph.
Morning lows in the mid 40s. ·.
Saturday.. . Partly cloudy, . Highs around 70.
.b ecoming windy late in the
Thursday... Mosdy cloudy
morning and early in the with a chance of showers.
afternoon.
. Unseasonably Morning lows in the upper
warm with highs 80 to 85. 40s. Highs 65 to 70.

'.

.'De students slayer selltenced
CINCINNATI (AP)- A man who pleaded guilty to murdering a 19-year-old University of Cincinriao student has been
sentenced to life in prison without parole.
Michael Price, 20, of Cincinnati, pleaded guilty Thursday
before a three-judge panel in Hamilton County Common
Pleas Court.
"I never meant for this to: happen, l wish it was me who was
not alive now instead of David Peet" Price said before brea~.
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ing into sobs.
Peet, 19, of Springfield Township, W:IS shot to death A~g. 14.'
after being robbed and abducted from a restaurant parking lot.
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Inmates leave Crowded ·•••• ·

NAACP opposes school levy

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Texan will supervise zoo

fi
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City nances remain . ea

ot

Taft cancels.Chinese meetlncr

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CELINA (AP) - A mercury spill at Celina Intermediate
School canceled classt$ Friday.
• Thursday. a sixth-gnder brought about 2 to 4 ounces of mercury to the school anc! ,began showing it to friends, demonstrating the chemicals prop~rties by pouring it onto a table in a
;~ sCience roo.J11, .S up.4trinteodent Hank Smith said. .
.. '-.-/ ."I believe that the chil~n were curi9us and did not underf
. • •
stand the significance of die material," Smith said.
. .
l'he 23 sixth-gradets' ~~~ the classroom stripped o~:~t of their
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clothing and look showe;s to reduce the chances of spq;ading
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the mef'l'ury throughout the school, Smith said.
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Parish halls beloved priest

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CLEVELAND (.AP) - ,The city's ltalian-Apterican community bid a heartfelt farewell to a beloved immigrant priest.
"This man came here when the Italian people needed him,"
said Bishop Anthony M. Pilla, who officiated the funeral Mass
on Thursday for the Rev.Vjncent Caruso With four bishops and
33 priests." And he took c~re of his people. We must not forget
where we come fiom ."
Caruso, who died last Friday at 95, was the oldest priest in the
Cleveland Catholic Diocese.
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Caruso was born in Avellino, Italy, and entered the Order of
Our Lady of Mercy, cnmmonly caUed the Mercedarian friars,
when he \Vas 14.
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1 Lb Russell Stover Assorted
Wrap
Chocolates with

Now

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Russell Stover Solid Milk

Chocolate Easter Eggs aoz ~
Reg. $4.99

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From Yo•r"'

Now Only s3.39

' Russell Stover Truftle Eggs

Now O~ly 34•:.

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NEW LEXINGTON (AP) - Perry County sheriff's office
employees and family members are protesting office layoffs
announced as a result of county budget cuts.
.
"Don't take my daddy's job" was the slogan on one of the
signs that demonstrators were waving at passing motorists in a
protest Thursday in front of the sheriff's office.
JacKie Miller, wife of Sgt. Ed Miller, was one of. those protesting the layoffi. She said her husband, who has 14 years of law

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Landown-

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Belir Dei.Oftl

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PO~::t- Scott Holt, . RACINE -IUymond C "Pete" Elberfeld, 80, Racine, died
REEDSVILLE- Betty D. DeLong. 69, Reedsville. died
~lues gllltanst and former on Thursday, April 5, 2001 at the extended care unit of\leter- Thursday, April 5, 2001 at the eXtended care unit ofVeter:ans
sideman of legendary blues ans Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy.
Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy. .
perf~ Buddy Guy, will h:e · He was born Qn February 8, 19i1 in Meigs C&lt;!unty, son of She was a homemalrer.
malting an . appearance at the late Raymond Elberfeld and Carrie Roush Elberfeld. He
Surviving are two sons, ,H0111er DeLong Jr. of Maine, and
~ttend a pond clinic on April
Spencer Musac, 202 W. . Sec... wa5 a gqdnate of Pomeroy High ScbO&lt;!l. and a lifetime mem- Maurice DeLong of Reedsville, a daughter and son-in-law,
.22 from 10 a.m. till noon at ond St.,_Pomeroy, on Satu!day ber of the National Rifle Association.
·

en' interested in building a
·poild, or petbips wanring to
·Jearn mon: about an existing
pond, should make plans to

Edith and Marion,Watson of Racine; a brother and sister-inHe was a veteran of the U.S. Army during World War II, and law, Maurice and Mary Mann &lt;~IToront:O, Ohio; and 6.ve grand~ 92:1 The_ frog was a member of the F1atwoocJs United Methodist Church.
chidren and four great grandchildten.
will be .holding_an m-stote · Survi~g are his son and daughter-in-law, Mike and Heidi
She was preceded in death by her '!usband. Homer DeLong
. ~roadcas~ ~':" 2-4 p.m. dur- Elberfeld and his sranddaughter, Carrie. Elberfeld, all &lt;If Sr.
•ng Holu vutt.
·
"' '
Racine; and a sister, ~rine Price, and nephew, Thomas Price.
Graveside 5ervices will be Saturday ~t 10 a.m. at the Heiney
both of Columbus.
·
Cemetery in Reedsville.
·
In addition to his pa~nts. he was preceded' in death by his
There will be no calling hours.
wife,Virgette Knight Elberfeld; his brother,James Elberfeld; and
POMEROY - Units of an· infant sister.
Graveside services will be held on Saturday, April 7, 2001 at
the Meigs E~rgency Service
answered eight calls for assis- I 1 a.m. at the Chester Cemetery. with the Rev. Keid) Rader
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. - William " Richard" Oldaker, 76,
ranee on ThursdaY' Units officiating.
· ·
:
New Ha\Jen, .d ied Thursday, April 5, 2001 at Pleasant Valley
responded ~ follows:
Friends may call at the Fisher-Acree Funeral Home in Hospital, Point Pleasant, W.Va.
·
CENTRAL_ DISPATCH Pomeroy on Friday,April6,2001 &amp;om 7~9 p.m .
He was the son of the late jo5eph and Ruby (Craig) Oldak7:37 _a.m_. , High Street, Joe . . Memorial contributions may be made to the Fla~oods er, and was a tet;in:d furnace hc.!fer with FO&lt;!te Mineral Co. in
Shavonnski, Holzer Medical United Methodist Church, in care of Mrs. Harry Brown; 44781 New Haven, W.Va.
·
·
Center;
.
.
Pomeroy Pike, Racine, Ohio 45771 · or to Holzer Hospice,
He was also a member of the Union United Methodist
11 a.m., Lmcoln Hill, Steve Meigs C&lt;!unty Division, 115 East Memorial Drive, Pomeroy, Church in Letart, W.Va.
Ohio 45769.
Lusll, HMC;
He was also preceded in death by a daughrer, Thelma Diana
3:20 p.m., South Third
Oldake"i one sister; and four brothers.
Street, Henry Clatworthy, .
He is survived by his wife, Thelma E . Oldaker; three sons,and
HMC;
,
two daughten-in-law, William and 'Kathy Oldaker Jr.• of Letart.
4:47 p.m. , Holzer Medical
MIDDLEPORT - Terry "Steve" McCune, 42, took the Toby and Janet Oldaker of New Haven, and Steven Lee
Center Clinic, Linda Ruosell, comforting hand ofJesu~ and was led home on Thursday, April Oldaker of Middleport; tw&lt;! daughters and sons-in- law, SharHMC;
5, 2001 at 9:59 a.n:'. alkr a lengthy illness.
,
. lene and James Staats of Letart, and Luella and Charles Stanley
8: 11 p.m., Success · Road,
Terry was born on July 27, 1958 to Ralph and Ocie of Point Pleasant; and 14 gnndchildten and eight great-grand- '
Doris Deeter, · ci'Bleness McCune of Middleport, Ohio, formerly of Rutland. He grew children.
·
Memorial Hospital;
Uj&gt; in Rutland, Ohio, lhe youngest of six children. He attendGraveside services will be Saturday at 11 a.m. at Union
1 1:18 p.m., Tower Ro~, ed R:utland and Meigs Local Schools. He was a carpenter by Cemetery in Letart. Officiating will be the Rev. Jack Mayes.
Matt Pelfrey, treated.
·
.
Arrangements are by New Haven Funeral Home.
.trade and resided in Orrville, Ohio.
POMEROY
Terry is lovingly remembered by his parents, Ralph and Ocie
7:49 p.m., Dead Man's · McCune of Middleport, Ohio. Brothers and siste'rs are Dick
Curve Road, Charles Withee, (Marcella) McCune of Orville, Ohio, Sharon K. Warner of
which was created to handle
HMC.
· Pomeroy, Ohio, Kenneth (Janet) McCune of Orma, West Vir-.
these types of problems dur~
ginia, Riu (Mark) Lower of Smithville, Ohio, and Virginia Vee
RUTLAND
ing campaigns quickly and in
8 a.m., Bradbury Road, {Robert) Johns of Orrville, Ohio.
a
bipartisan way, obviously is
lromPapA1
Also remembering l;llm are nieces and nephews, Sarah Johns,
Eugene Underwood, Pleasant
not bipartisan and is a.politiValley Hospital.
Evan Lower, Erin, Jared and Justin Warner, KeUy, K.arrie and
Democrats on the commis- cal group;' Resnick said.
Kenny McCune,Julie and Jason McCune and several aunts and
sion
wanted it to at least . Philip · Richter, executive
~ Pickup
uncles.
Services will be held Satu~~y. April 7, 2001, and Sunday, determine whether the ads direc(J:lr ofJhF . ~~)llll}lission,
ROCK SPRINGS
said the p311el was just f\lll?~April 8, 2001 at the Stump Funeral Home in Arnoldsburg, West contained false information.
Those with boats and
Resnick,
with
help
from
ing its interpretation of the
Virginia, with burial in Orma, West Virginia.
campers at the Rock Springs. • PORTLAND ~ Special
organized labor and the law.
·
'
Fairgrounds are to pick them services for Palm Sunday. will
Democratic Party, easily
"The honorable justice is .
·ap at the fairgrounds on Sat- be held at the Community of
defeated her opponent for a allowed he~ opinion. I know
' urday fiom 9 a.m. to 3 .p.m.
the commission struggled
Christ Church, located on
POMEROY..;_ Eugene. Underwood, 67, of Pomeroy, died third six-year term.
She
told
an
audience
gready with making this deciLovett Road just off County on Thursday, April 5, 2001 at Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point
att~nding an Ohio Federation sion," . Richter said. "The
Road 35, beginning at 10:30 Pleasant, West Virginia.
ofTeachers
conference Thurs- commission believed th ey
a.m. on Sunday.
He was bom on February 17, 1934
POMEROY
Phil's
The church will hold Eastin ' Coshocton County, son of the late day that the Elections Com- were issue advocacy, which
·'Smokehouse, a Mode$1o, er Sunday services, beginning
Forest E. Underwood and· Leatha ~i~p',s r.u~.ru; ;:.'!\dn't ..sur_, . th&lt;: US. , ~I!.P.~ellf Coif§ has
pme me," but tnticized the " del'erl)linetlfi!is sEparate and
n&lt;llalif; ,:· firm is voluntarily with sunrise services at 8
Osborn Underwood.
,
distinc;t froqt ,political mat~rirecalling approximately 780 a.m., with breakfast. to (ollow.
He was a graduate of Union High panel for reachin~ i~.
"lt's
sad
to
say
that
our
al."
; pounds of duck products that , An Easter egg hunt will fol- .
School's Class of 1952 in Coshocton
•may be contaminated ~ith low breakfast.
.
County, and was a graduat~ of the Ohio Elections Commission, · )
Listeria
mcinocytogenes,
Cincinnati ·Bible College. He was
~ccording to · a release from
employed by the Kroger Company for
County Health Deparmtent,
~e Meigs County ·Health
·
over 36 years.
submitted a proclamation,
~epartment.
He ministered at fiv,e different
SALE¥ CENTER - Star
which the commissiOners
; · The release said . that the Grange · 778 and Star Junior
,_..
Churches of Christ in Meigs Counw ·
signed, declaring the we~k of ·
f1omPageAI
Department of Agricul- Grange 878 will meet in regin. over '40 years! and for 10 years conApril
23- as National Infant
•
'
~ ure 's Food Safety and .Inspec.
du
cted
a
radio
ministry
on
WMPO
Rai:lio.
He
}vas.
a
supportular session on Satu!day with
. lance program.
Immunization Week.
tion Service advised that the a poduck supper at 6:30p.m., er of the Grundy Mountain Mission for Orphans.
The total project cost IS
The board also:
.
)iuck products were produced ' followed by the meeong at
Surviving are his wife, Ruth M. Ashcraft Underwood of $1,050,000.
• Referred a request fiom the
Pomeroy; a daughter and her fiance, Virginia Ruth Underwood
on Feb. 12 and bear, the estab- 7:30p.m.
Michael Swisher, director of, Lc.tartl'ownship Trustees for the
iishment number 1-18274 . Final plans will be .made to and War:'ren "Buster" Haning of Pomeroy; three brothers and the Meigs C&lt;!unty Oepartnlent wideri'ing o( johnson Road to
;nside the · USDA seal of host the TB clinic on April 9 sisters-iq.-law, Harrison and Hazel Undenyood ()f Bluffton, ofJob and Family Services, met Engineer Eugene Triplett;
inspection. The products ·sub- from 11:30 to 6:30 p,m., and Charles and Marilyn Underwood of Glenmont, and Ray and with the Board to discuss an
• Paid bills in the amount of
Dorothy
Underwood
ofWarsaw;
a
sister
and
brother-il}-law,
Iva
amendment to the department's $1 78,42837;
iect to recall were distributed for the consignment sale on
Belle
and
Dan
Gault
of
Brinkhaven;
a
sister-in-law,
Lena
Con• Tabled a funds transfer
April28.
Child Care Traiping contract.
~o restaurants . nationwide,
All members are urged to nell of Newark; a special friend,Vir~inia Wyan .of Pomeroy; and. The amendment, which was request from Justin Diddle,
~~cording to the report.
several nieces and nephews.
approved, will allow for an coordinator of J he Meigs
attend.
'
Services will be held .at 2 p.m. on Sunday, April 8, 2001 at additional $1,200 in day care County Artisans AsSociation.
I '
'·
Fisher-Acree Funeral Home in Pomeroy, with Doug Shamblin training services, ro be provided
P~nt, in addition ro Dav''
.officiating. Burial will follow at Bradford Cemetery.
enport,
were C&lt;!mmissioner
at the DJFS offices in Middle'I
. Friends may call at the funeral home on Saturday, April 7, port.
Jim Sheetoi and Clerk Gloria
.
I
2001
from
6-9
p.m.
·
Swisher also met With the Kl~.
I '
i:IOc:ICWell - 40).
Gannett -113
board in executive session to
A!=P-47~
Rocky Booil- 4.4.
Arch Coai-3H
General El8CIIIc - 42
discuss personnel.
AD Shell- 55),
GKNLY-10
~lczo-42~
'
·
In other businei5, the com. HaJ1Iy DIIYidlon- 39,, Stars-'34~
AinTechiSBC- 44~
·Knlllt -i'l•
S/looty's -~
~lnc.-39~
missioners approved transfer
Wai-Mart- 50~
·At&amp;T ....:.21~
~-23 .
requests and other appropriaLandS End - rn,
'llenltl• -23
!lank One - 34\
tions adjustments for the Clerk
Ltd. -15!.
.
Wor1hlngton - 10
~ Evans- 17 '·
DAYTON (AP) - General driving the vehicles immedi- of Courts, Treasurer, Major
Deily llcxlk reports are
Oak ~Ill Flnandal ~~or~~w.mer- ~.
13%
lhe 4 J.m. . closing Motors Corp. plans to recall ately.
ONmplon-2'Crimes Task Force, juvenile .
quo11e
the prevloul
OVB-24~
~hops-5~
6,000
·
sport
utility
vehicles
.
"We:re
asking
customers
to
Court, Litter Control and
liST -35l.
diYI 1rlnlac1lonl, PfOo
OilY
-8
Peoplet-18
vidtd
by
Sn\lth
Par1ne11
be~ause of a safety concern stop driving the vehicles and Recycling program.
Mag... - 3
at Advellt Inc.
Pith lilt'....,. 7
r~'a .:..·23~
ove·r a suspension part and ·asking dealers 'to pick up th~
Margie Skidmore and Nancy
'
temporarily
idle
the
plant
that
vehicles
and
provide
alternate
Broderick,
with the Meigs
'
produces the vehicles.
. transportation," Morrissey said:
. GM spoltesman Mike Mor~
He said the metal part in
.,
rissey said Thursday that GM question is on the lower con' .
' Wants customers who bought a trol arm of the. front suspen.
(UIPI 21MIO)
OhiO Ylloy Publl&amp;lllrlt co.
2002 Chevrolet TrailBlazer, sion. GM fears that failure of .
Publ- eve.y otternoon. Monday
through ,Fnlll(y, 111 Court St.,
2002 GMC Envoy or 2002 . the part c'o uld cause the driver
Correction Polley
Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Second·claos
Oldsmobile Bravada to stop to lose control, he said.
·
Our maJn COIICem In all sto~ee 11 potllgo pold 01 Pome.roy.
lhmller:
The
Attoclatea
Proaa
and
to be accurate. If you know of an
Ohio Newspaper Auociltlon.
· error In a story, call the newsroom the
Poectmlller: Send address correc·
. at (740) 992-2156.
tiona 10 The Dally Sentinel, t 11 Coun.
·the Curtis B'!ithaser Farm
· near Danville.
· Want to know haw to con-trol weeck? What causes fish
.kills? How about the riumber
of fish to stock? Those ques. :tions and others will be
·answered at the clinic, a cooperative effort between the
•Meil!' Soil and Water Conservation District and the Ohio
State University Coop~rative
Extension Service.
Speakers will include Mike ,
.Duhl, Meigs &lt;;;ountj district
conservationist for the Natural Resources Conservation
·Service, on -pond construction; Hal Kneen, Meigs
County . OSU Extension
~gent, on aquatic weed control; Jerry lies, OSU Extension Wlltershed agent, streams;
Bill Lynch, OSU Extension,
fish stockings and fish kills.
·· · The Balthaser farm is located on Briar Ridge Road .
From Ohio 124 west of
"langsville, turn onto Ohio
·325 to Danville, turn left on
'Briar Ridge Road. The farm
·and pond are located "on the
left approximately one-half
mile &amp;om 325.
' For more information, con: tact Jim Freeman, Meigs
SWCD, ai 992-4282.

at 2 p.m.

..

. .. .

EMS runs

Willam 1tic:hard' Oldaker

Tell J 'Steve' McCune .

Resnick

date set

SerVices
.pianned

Eugene ,Underwood

Granges. meet ·

Grant

hs.

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LOCAL STOCKS

GM to recall 6,000 vehicles

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••

Layoffs dt•w protests

•

DANVILLE -

.

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llololyaur_.._wilh.Nnonco'tlOII11!0

,... sc

Yete' Elberfeld

.

f,edefal

Wilt DISH,.,.,. Dlftt.l 15fl H-.1'1.,
P"9""'"*'1 r

•

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r

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·

Mayor faces fewer charges ·

TOLEDO (AP)- A judge Thursday threw out two of three
CLeVELAND (AP) -· The NAACP, whpse Cleveland . charges against Toledo Maypr Carty Finkbeiner for a conleader is a longtime political rival of Mayor Michael R . White, fiontation with a restaurant owner last July.
'
will9ppose a ~ increase referendum fo~ the mayor-controlled
&amp;wling Green Municipal Judge Mark Reddin, a visiting
city school district.
·
·
judge ass,ig~~ed to the case, dismissed charges of dis?rderly conGeorge L. Forbes, president of the ·Cleveland chapter of the duct and interfering with civil rights. Reddin , gJd he would
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, de~ide Within thn;e weeks whether to dismiss a C&lt;!erciQn .
said Thursday that the group would spend $25,000 to defeat the charge.
.
.
May 8 levy referendum.
Reddin ruled there wasn't enough evidence to pursue the
Forbes is a former city council president and lost the 1989 interfering with civil rights charges. The disorderly conduct
mayoral election to White.
·
·
charge was filed two days after the statute of limitations
NAACP executive board members voted 44-3 to oppose the
d
·
expire .
.
.
_
levy and a companion bond iss~e.
Resuurant owner John Skiadas had accused Fmkbemer of
grabbing and shaking him. He told police the mayor. yelled
obscenities at him, poked him and threatened to run him out
of town.
CINCINNATI (AP) - Greggory Hujkon, executive ditector of the Fort Worth Zoological Association, was chosen as
· •
president and chief executive officer of th.e Cincinnati Zoo on
Thursday.
·
h
ha
Hudso~·succeeds Ed Maruska, who retired in December after HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) - Layoffi andfi ot eralcuhtsl ve
not been enough to dig the city out of its nancl
o e, -as
beinJ director at the Ohio zoo since 1968.
. .
. .
.
milli
Tlie Cincinnati Zf30, founded in 1875, is known for its sue- un~:nd bills ~ave agam top~d $2 . on.
cessful b~Ceding programs, particularly for white tigers. It draws
.Fmance DJ~ctor ~b Wilhelm s:ud he does not know how
abo~t 1.3 million visitors a year.
.
.
. large the ~Jty s deficit will be at the end of the fiscal year June
"I hope t&lt;! build on its reputation, its national and interna- 30.
.
. ,
.
.
. .
tiona! reputation;' Hudson said. "Th~ Cincinnati Zoo has one
l;l_e w~ the cttys unp:nd bills had fallen from . $2.~ milli~
of the best animal collections in the world, and the communi- earlier this year to $1.3 milbon. Now, the unpa•d bills aga1n
ty supp~rt for the zoo is the envy every zoo in the country." exceed $2 million.
.
,
In February, City C&lt;!uncil approved Mayor David Felingtoq's
plan to end the fiscal year with a deficit to $701,296 by laying
8
off workers and cutting spending.
.)
COLUMBUS (AP) - Gov. Bob Taft on Thursday canceled
an appearance with a Hong Kong trade group, saying it would
be inappropriate. for him to attend as long as China detains the
crew of a U.S. plane.
.
The spy plane collided with a Chinese fighter jet on Sunday
an~ made an emergency landing. . ,
. ·
Until the return ?f the.
A;menc_an service men and
women ... who are being detamed m Chma, 11 IS mappropnate

. :·· ~-spOt cloM$ .school foFo ,day
•

.

ration.
.
Investigators believe that while ·the couple was in. the
woman's car on the street, Bolin displayed a handgun. Fnghtened Carol Bolin then drove the car over the curb and sidq~·
walk,and into the parking lot toward a·policeman who was in
his cruiser. ·
·'
·
,

Hi Val Cigarettes
IVIan shootS self.in parking lot . s1.35 /Pock s13.45 I Carton

.
I

enfmcement experience, was told to take a third-shift dispatcher position or be bid off.
·
·
.
.· .
A county budget shortfall forced Shenff W1lliam Barker to
send layoff notices to 14' employees this week. The layoffS take
effect in 10 days, leaving the office with just 16 employees. The
cuts mean that only one 'deputy will be patrolling county roadways during each shift, sheriff's officials said.

for me as ~overnor to participate in an event promoting trade
with China;· Taft said in a statement.
AKRON (AP) - . The overcrowded Sununil ,County jail , He noted that the crew includes Aviation Machinist 2nd
released 10 iQmates in the latest renewal of a legal fight that .Class,WendyWestbrook'from Rock Creek in northeast Ohio.
began 28 yeats ago oyer cellblock conditions. •
.
.
Attorneys who represented inmates in the case ,complained
that prisoners are sleeping bn mattresses on the floor and that
nonviolent offenders are housed alongside dangerou1 inmates: . SIDNEY (AP} - A man wll&lt;! was sitting in a car with his
"We believe that the administratiol\ is not in •a position to estranged wife and two children shot himselfin the head as the
guarantee die safety and security of those inmates and s¢ y.oho woman pulled into· a parking lot next to police neadquarters,
.
work in the facility;' attorl,leys Robert Armbruster, and~Tho!JW authorities ~aid.
Kelley said in a motion for contempt filed with U.S. District
Dewayne Bolin, 32, of Sidney, died at Mjami Valley Hospital
C&lt;!urt in Cleveland.
.
in Dayton, where he was taken after Wednesday night's shootIn the pan cwo years, ~!\..average of 40 to 60 inmates per night mg.
.have been sleeping 01,1, the' floor or op cots, the attor.neys said.:
f&gt;ccordiJig to Sidney police, t\le couple had driven to the
, , •
•
'&lt;
r
police department in separate vehicles so Boli~ could return
·r&lt;
..•••,.. '" ,, ' f ..
the coii,Ple's 3-year-old son to Ca~ol Bohn, 32, following visi-

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nes

LOCAL BRIEFS

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Teachers; union to·sue state ove.r schools

Ohio weatl•r.
- ...........
Aprll7
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lcnealt for

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p.

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ALL AGE S, ALL TIMFS $4 00

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Pa~Al

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

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Ftt• .,, . . . .HOI

~

. j co~o 1

COLUMBUS (AP) ~ Ohio's dwter
school system violateS the srate constitution by·diwrting public money to . priwte1y run schools and breaks state law
by. allowing for-profjt companies to run
the schools, a teachers' union official said
Thursday in advance of a lawsuiL
The Ohio Federation ofTeacbers also
alleges that at least three schools were
illegally conwrted fiom private schools.
The union plans to sue Ohio over
these three issues in two to three weeks,
union president. Tom Mooney said
Thursday. The union wants charter
schools to adhere t&lt;! existing law but n&lt;!t
be abolished.
I
"What has happened in Ojlio is th~t
the concept of charter schools has been
hijacked, has been perverted," Mooney

oiWitf l

I

..

..;;

I

said "It's been conwrt.ed into a vehicle
for priv.atizing education-for the S2ke of
priv.atizing."
.
The union ·RpresetltS 25,000 teachers,
school emplot-s and other ~~
. Including reachers in Oeveland, Cmcmnati and Toledo.
. .
Charter schools, known as commumty
schools in Ohio, · ate publicly funded,
priv.ately operated institutions ~e fio':"
some srate regulations.They J:UeJvebas1c
srate aid, limited start-up money and rio
'construction funds. There are 68 charter
schools in Ohi&lt;! enrolling about 17,000
students. ·
Opponents say the schools aren't serving stUdents properly and drain money
fiom needy public schools. Supporters,
including many Republican lawmakers,

say the schools provide choice to parents
whose children aren't being served liy
their current public schools.
•
Mooney targeted Akron-based White
Hat Management Inc.. whic1i .opentes
12 charter schools serving about 4,000
students.
He said White Hat has illeg:ally converkd three priwte schools - Hope
Tremont and Hope Central Academy in
Oeveland and Hope Academy University in Akron - ro charter sc;hO&lt;!Is. ~tate
law bars the conversion of pnvate
sch0&lt;1ls to charter schools.
. Mooney also said White Hat schools
are violating state law by runqing forprofit c~rter schools. The comp~oy
contracts with individual schools, whidt
operate as nonprofit organi~tions.

·.

0 ~--~-·e?t'•
.....,
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Unseasonal warmth forecast

•.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

There will be no doubt that
spring is in the tri-county area
over
the · weekend, the
National Weather Service said.
Warm conditions are forecast f&lt;~r tonight, Saturday and
Saturday ·night under partly
cloudy skies.
Highs will be in the 70s
and lows in the 50s and 60s.
Temperatures still will be
Wllrm Sunday with highs
m&lt;!sdy in the upper 70s.
Sunset tonight will be at
8 :0t, and sunrise on Satu!day

.
I.

·.

Southwest wind 5 to 10 mph
increasing late in .the morning
to 15 to 25 mph.
Saturday ·
night ... Pardy
cloudy and windy. Lows 56 to.
62.
Extended forecast:
Sunday... Continued warm
with a chance of showers.
Highs in the upper 70s.
Monday... Pardy
cloudy
with . a chance of showers.
Morning lows 55 to 60. Highs _
around 80 _

Tuesday.,.Showers or thunderstorms likely. Morning
is at 7:06a.m.
h
h
Weather forecast:
lows 55 to 60. Hig s in t e
Tonight ... Cloudy.
Lows mid 7Qs.
·,
around 60. Southwest wind 10
Wednesday... Partly cloudy.
to 15 mph.
Morning lows in the mid 40s. ·.
Saturday.. . Partly cloudy, . Highs around 70.
.b ecoming windy late in the
Thursday... Mosdy cloudy
morning and early in the with a chance of showers.
afternoon.
. Unseasonably Morning lows in the upper
warm with highs 80 to 85. 40s. Highs 65 to 70.

'.

.'De students slayer selltenced
CINCINNATI (AP)- A man who pleaded guilty to murdering a 19-year-old University of Cincinriao student has been
sentenced to life in prison without parole.
Michael Price, 20, of Cincinnati, pleaded guilty Thursday
before a three-judge panel in Hamilton County Common
Pleas Court.
"I never meant for this to: happen, l wish it was me who was
not alive now instead of David Peet" Price said before brea~.
'
'
.
.
ing into sobs.
Peet, 19, of Springfield Township, W:IS shot to death A~g. 14.'
after being robbed and abducted from a restaurant parking lot.
·

Inmates leave Crowded ·•••• ·

NAACP opposes school levy

' It

Texan will supervise zoo

fi
• bl k
City nances remain . ea

ot

Taft cancels.Chinese meetlncr

?4

• '

~·

' •

CELINA (AP) - A mercury spill at Celina Intermediate
School canceled classt$ Friday.
• Thursday. a sixth-gnder brought about 2 to 4 ounces of mercury to the school anc! ,began showing it to friends, demonstrating the chemicals prop~rties by pouring it onto a table in a
;~ sCience roo.J11, .S up.4trinteodent Hank Smith said. .
.. '-.-/ ."I believe that the chil~n were curi9us and did not underf
. • •
stand the significance of die material," Smith said.
. .
l'he 23 sixth-gradets' ~~~ the classroom stripped o~:~t of their
.. .
.
clothing and look showe;s to reduce the chances of spq;ading
'
the mef'l'ury throughout the school, Smith said.
· •· ·
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-

Parish halls beloved priest

...' '

CLEVELAND (.AP) - ,The city's ltalian-Apterican community bid a heartfelt farewell to a beloved immigrant priest.
"This man came here when the Italian people needed him,"
said Bishop Anthony M. Pilla, who officiated the funeral Mass
on Thursday for the Rev.Vjncent Caruso With four bishops and
33 priests." And he took c~re of his people. We must not forget
where we come fiom ."
Caruso, who died last Friday at 95, was the oldest priest in the
Cleveland Catholic Diocese.
.
' I · ·
Caruso was born in Avellino, Italy, and entered the Order of
Our Lady of Mercy, cnmmonly caUed the Mercedarian friars,
when he \Vas 14.
•

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•'
•• . .

•

1 Lb Russell Stover Assorted
Wrap
Chocolates with

Now

s6"

s4a9

Russell Stover Solid Milk

Chocolate Easter Eggs aoz ~
Reg. $4.99

••
,
From Yo•r"'

Now Only s3.39

' Russell Stover Truftle Eggs

Now O~ly 34•:.

*• And.... ... •

, .

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• lllrll etau•,. Prtfsaalonellnstalattoft
• I lt•htn
..............
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.. Plalllllt
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.
• Mil Go 1 ........ May :10011

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• fht~h::•fa,..hww · llnakldad

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NEW LEXINGTON (AP) - Perry County sheriff's office
employees and family members are protesting office layoffs
announced as a result of county budget cuts.
.
"Don't take my daddy's job" was the slogan on one of the
signs that demonstrators were waving at passing motorists in a
protest Thursday in front of the sheriff's office.
JacKie Miller, wife of Sgt. Ed Miller, was one of. those protesting the layoffi. She said her husband, who has 14 years of law

..

Landown-

--

Belir Dei.Oftl

\

PO~::t- Scott Holt, . RACINE -IUymond C "Pete" Elberfeld, 80, Racine, died
REEDSVILLE- Betty D. DeLong. 69, Reedsville. died
~lues gllltanst and former on Thursday, April 5, 2001 at the extended care unit of\leter- Thursday, April 5, 2001 at the eXtended care unit ofVeter:ans
sideman of legendary blues ans Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy.
Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy. .
perf~ Buddy Guy, will h:e · He was born Qn February 8, 19i1 in Meigs C&lt;!unty, son of She was a homemalrer.
malting an . appearance at the late Raymond Elberfeld and Carrie Roush Elberfeld. He
Surviving are two sons, ,H0111er DeLong Jr. of Maine, and
~ttend a pond clinic on April
Spencer Musac, 202 W. . Sec... wa5 a gqdnate of Pomeroy High ScbO&lt;!l. and a lifetime mem- Maurice DeLong of Reedsville, a daughter and son-in-law,
.22 from 10 a.m. till noon at ond St.,_Pomeroy, on Satu!day ber of the National Rifle Association.
·

en' interested in building a
·poild, or petbips wanring to
·Jearn mon: about an existing
pond, should make plans to

Edith and Marion,Watson of Racine; a brother and sister-inHe was a veteran of the U.S. Army during World War II, and law, Maurice and Mary Mann &lt;~IToront:O, Ohio; and 6.ve grand~ 92:1 The_ frog was a member of the F1atwoocJs United Methodist Church.
chidren and four great grandchildten.
will be .holding_an m-stote · Survi~g are his son and daughter-in-law, Mike and Heidi
She was preceded in death by her '!usband. Homer DeLong
. ~roadcas~ ~':" 2-4 p.m. dur- Elberfeld and his sranddaughter, Carrie. Elberfeld, all &lt;If Sr.
•ng Holu vutt.
·
"' '
Racine; and a sister, ~rine Price, and nephew, Thomas Price.
Graveside 5ervices will be Saturday ~t 10 a.m. at the Heiney
both of Columbus.
·
Cemetery in Reedsville.
·
In addition to his pa~nts. he was preceded' in death by his
There will be no calling hours.
wife,Virgette Knight Elberfeld; his brother,James Elberfeld; and
POMEROY - Units of an· infant sister.
Graveside services will be held on Saturday, April 7, 2001 at
the Meigs E~rgency Service
answered eight calls for assis- I 1 a.m. at the Chester Cemetery. with the Rev. Keid) Rader
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. - William " Richard" Oldaker, 76,
ranee on ThursdaY' Units officiating.
· ·
:
New Ha\Jen, .d ied Thursday, April 5, 2001 at Pleasant Valley
responded ~ follows:
Friends may call at the Fisher-Acree Funeral Home in Hospital, Point Pleasant, W.Va.
·
CENTRAL_ DISPATCH Pomeroy on Friday,April6,2001 &amp;om 7~9 p.m .
He was the son of the late jo5eph and Ruby (Craig) Oldak7:37 _a.m_. , High Street, Joe . . Memorial contributions may be made to the Fla~oods er, and was a tet;in:d furnace hc.!fer with FO&lt;!te Mineral Co. in
Shavonnski, Holzer Medical United Methodist Church, in care of Mrs. Harry Brown; 44781 New Haven, W.Va.
·
·
Center;
.
.
Pomeroy Pike, Racine, Ohio 45771 · or to Holzer Hospice,
He was also a member of the Union United Methodist
11 a.m., Lmcoln Hill, Steve Meigs C&lt;!unty Division, 115 East Memorial Drive, Pomeroy, Church in Letart, W.Va.
Ohio 45769.
Lusll, HMC;
He was also preceded in death by a daughrer, Thelma Diana
3:20 p.m., South Third
Oldake"i one sister; and four brothers.
Street, Henry Clatworthy, .
He is survived by his wife, Thelma E . Oldaker; three sons,and
HMC;
,
two daughten-in-law, William and 'Kathy Oldaker Jr.• of Letart.
4:47 p.m. , Holzer Medical
MIDDLEPORT - Terry "Steve" McCune, 42, took the Toby and Janet Oldaker of New Haven, and Steven Lee
Center Clinic, Linda Ruosell, comforting hand ofJesu~ and was led home on Thursday, April Oldaker of Middleport; tw&lt;! daughters and sons-in- law, SharHMC;
5, 2001 at 9:59 a.n:'. alkr a lengthy illness.
,
. lene and James Staats of Letart, and Luella and Charles Stanley
8: 11 p.m., Success · Road,
Terry was born on July 27, 1958 to Ralph and Ocie of Point Pleasant; and 14 gnndchildten and eight great-grand- '
Doris Deeter, · ci'Bleness McCune of Middleport, Ohio, formerly of Rutland. He grew children.
·
Memorial Hospital;
Uj&gt; in Rutland, Ohio, lhe youngest of six children. He attendGraveside services will be Saturday at 11 a.m. at Union
1 1:18 p.m., Tower Ro~, ed R:utland and Meigs Local Schools. He was a carpenter by Cemetery in Letart. Officiating will be the Rev. Jack Mayes.
Matt Pelfrey, treated.
·
.
Arrangements are by New Haven Funeral Home.
.trade and resided in Orrville, Ohio.
POMEROY
Terry is lovingly remembered by his parents, Ralph and Ocie
7:49 p.m., Dead Man's · McCune of Middleport, Ohio. Brothers and siste'rs are Dick
Curve Road, Charles Withee, (Marcella) McCune of Orville, Ohio, Sharon K. Warner of
which was created to handle
HMC.
· Pomeroy, Ohio, Kenneth (Janet) McCune of Orma, West Vir-.
these types of problems dur~
ginia, Riu (Mark) Lower of Smithville, Ohio, and Virginia Vee
RUTLAND
ing campaigns quickly and in
8 a.m., Bradbury Road, {Robert) Johns of Orrville, Ohio.
a
bipartisan way, obviously is
lromPapA1
Also remembering l;llm are nieces and nephews, Sarah Johns,
Eugene Underwood, Pleasant
not bipartisan and is a.politiValley Hospital.
Evan Lower, Erin, Jared and Justin Warner, KeUy, K.arrie and
Democrats on the commis- cal group;' Resnick said.
Kenny McCune,Julie and Jason McCune and several aunts and
sion
wanted it to at least . Philip · Richter, executive
~ Pickup
uncles.
Services will be held Satu~~y. April 7, 2001, and Sunday, determine whether the ads direc(J:lr ofJhF . ~~)llll}lission,
ROCK SPRINGS
said the p311el was just f\lll?~April 8, 2001 at the Stump Funeral Home in Arnoldsburg, West contained false information.
Those with boats and
Resnick,
with
help
from
ing its interpretation of the
Virginia, with burial in Orma, West Virginia.
campers at the Rock Springs. • PORTLAND ~ Special
organized labor and the law.
·
'
Fairgrounds are to pick them services for Palm Sunday. will
Democratic Party, easily
"The honorable justice is .
·ap at the fairgrounds on Sat- be held at the Community of
defeated her opponent for a allowed he~ opinion. I know
' urday fiom 9 a.m. to 3 .p.m.
the commission struggled
Christ Church, located on
POMEROY..;_ Eugene. Underwood, 67, of Pomeroy, died third six-year term.
She
told
an
audience
gready with making this deciLovett Road just off County on Thursday, April 5, 2001 at Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point
att~nding an Ohio Federation sion," . Richter said. "The
Road 35, beginning at 10:30 Pleasant, West Virginia.
ofTeachers
conference Thurs- commission believed th ey
a.m. on Sunday.
He was bom on February 17, 1934
POMEROY
Phil's
The church will hold Eastin ' Coshocton County, son of the late day that the Elections Com- were issue advocacy, which
·'Smokehouse, a Mode$1o, er Sunday services, beginning
Forest E. Underwood and· Leatha ~i~p',s r.u~.ru; ;:.'!\dn't ..sur_, . th&lt;: US. , ~I!.P.~ellf Coif§ has
pme me," but tnticized the " del'erl)linetlfi!is sEparate and
n&lt;llalif; ,:· firm is voluntarily with sunrise services at 8
Osborn Underwood.
,
distinc;t froqt ,political mat~rirecalling approximately 780 a.m., with breakfast. to (ollow.
He was a graduate of Union High panel for reachin~ i~.
"lt's
sad
to
say
that
our
al."
; pounds of duck products that , An Easter egg hunt will fol- .
School's Class of 1952 in Coshocton
•may be contaminated ~ith low breakfast.
.
County, and was a graduat~ of the Ohio Elections Commission, · )
Listeria
mcinocytogenes,
Cincinnati ·Bible College. He was
~ccording to · a release from
employed by the Kroger Company for
County Health Deparmtent,
~e Meigs County ·Health
·
over 36 years.
submitted a proclamation,
~epartment.
He ministered at fiv,e different
SALE¥ CENTER - Star
which the commissiOners
; · The release said . that the Grange · 778 and Star Junior
,_..
Churches of Christ in Meigs Counw ·
signed, declaring the we~k of ·
f1omPageAI
Department of Agricul- Grange 878 will meet in regin. over '40 years! and for 10 years conApril
23- as National Infant
•
'
~ ure 's Food Safety and .Inspec.
du
cted
a
radio
ministry
on
WMPO
Rai:lio.
He
}vas.
a
supportular session on Satu!day with
. lance program.
Immunization Week.
tion Service advised that the a poduck supper at 6:30p.m., er of the Grundy Mountain Mission for Orphans.
The total project cost IS
The board also:
.
)iuck products were produced ' followed by the meeong at
Surviving are his wife, Ruth M. Ashcraft Underwood of $1,050,000.
• Referred a request fiom the
Pomeroy; a daughter and her fiance, Virginia Ruth Underwood
on Feb. 12 and bear, the estab- 7:30p.m.
Michael Swisher, director of, Lc.tartl'ownship Trustees for the
iishment number 1-18274 . Final plans will be .made to and War:'ren "Buster" Haning of Pomeroy; three brothers and the Meigs C&lt;!unty Oepartnlent wideri'ing o( johnson Road to
;nside the · USDA seal of host the TB clinic on April 9 sisters-iq.-law, Harrison and Hazel Undenyood ()f Bluffton, ofJob and Family Services, met Engineer Eugene Triplett;
inspection. The products ·sub- from 11:30 to 6:30 p,m., and Charles and Marilyn Underwood of Glenmont, and Ray and with the Board to discuss an
• Paid bills in the amount of
Dorothy
Underwood
ofWarsaw;
a
sister
and
brother-il}-law,
Iva
amendment to the department's $1 78,42837;
iect to recall were distributed for the consignment sale on
Belle
and
Dan
Gault
of
Brinkhaven;
a
sister-in-law,
Lena
Con• Tabled a funds transfer
April28.
Child Care Traiping contract.
~o restaurants . nationwide,
All members are urged to nell of Newark; a special friend,Vir~inia Wyan .of Pomeroy; and. The amendment, which was request from Justin Diddle,
~~cording to the report.
several nieces and nephews.
approved, will allow for an coordinator of J he Meigs
attend.
'
Services will be held .at 2 p.m. on Sunday, April 8, 2001 at additional $1,200 in day care County Artisans AsSociation.
I '
'·
Fisher-Acree Funeral Home in Pomeroy, with Doug Shamblin training services, ro be provided
P~nt, in addition ro Dav''
.officiating. Burial will follow at Bradford Cemetery.
enport,
were C&lt;!mmissioner
at the DJFS offices in Middle'I
. Friends may call at the funeral home on Saturday, April 7, port.
Jim Sheetoi and Clerk Gloria
.
I
2001
from
6-9
p.m.
·
Swisher also met With the Kl~.
I '
i:IOc:ICWell - 40).
Gannett -113
board in executive session to
A!=P-47~
Rocky Booil- 4.4.
Arch Coai-3H
General El8CIIIc - 42
discuss personnel.
AD Shell- 55),
GKNLY-10
~lczo-42~
'
·
In other businei5, the com. HaJ1Iy DIIYidlon- 39,, Stars-'34~
AinTechiSBC- 44~
·Knlllt -i'l•
S/looty's -~
~lnc.-39~
missioners approved transfer
Wai-Mart- 50~
·At&amp;T ....:.21~
~-23 .
requests and other appropriaLandS End - rn,
'llenltl• -23
!lank One - 34\
tions adjustments for the Clerk
Ltd. -15!.
.
Wor1hlngton - 10
~ Evans- 17 '·
DAYTON (AP) - General driving the vehicles immedi- of Courts, Treasurer, Major
Deily llcxlk reports are
Oak ~Ill Flnandal ~~or~~w.mer- ~.
13%
lhe 4 J.m. . closing Motors Corp. plans to recall ately.
ONmplon-2'Crimes Task Force, juvenile .
quo11e
the prevloul
OVB-24~
~hops-5~
6,000
·
sport
utility
vehicles
.
"We:re
asking
customers
to
Court, Litter Control and
liST -35l.
diYI 1rlnlac1lonl, PfOo
OilY
-8
Peoplet-18
vidtd
by
Sn\lth
Par1ne11
be~ause of a safety concern stop driving the vehicles and Recycling program.
Mag... - 3
at Advellt Inc.
Pith lilt'....,. 7
r~'a .:..·23~
ove·r a suspension part and ·asking dealers 'to pick up th~
Margie Skidmore and Nancy
'
temporarily
idle
the
plant
that
vehicles
and
provide
alternate
Broderick,
with the Meigs
'
produces the vehicles.
. transportation," Morrissey said:
. GM spoltesman Mike Mor~
He said the metal part in
.,
rissey said Thursday that GM question is on the lower con' .
' Wants customers who bought a trol arm of the. front suspen.
(UIPI 21MIO)
OhiO Ylloy Publl&amp;lllrlt co.
2002 Chevrolet TrailBlazer, sion. GM fears that failure of .
Publ- eve.y otternoon. Monday
through ,Fnlll(y, 111 Court St.,
2002 GMC Envoy or 2002 . the part c'o uld cause the driver
Correction Polley
Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Second·claos
Oldsmobile Bravada to stop to lose control, he said.
·
Our maJn COIICem In all sto~ee 11 potllgo pold 01 Pome.roy.
lhmller:
The
Attoclatea
Proaa
and
to be accurate. If you know of an
Ohio Newspaper Auociltlon.
· error In a story, call the newsroom the
Poectmlller: Send address correc·
. at (740) 992-2156.
tiona 10 The Dally Sentinel, t 11 Coun.
·the Curtis B'!ithaser Farm
· near Danville.
· Want to know haw to con-trol weeck? What causes fish
.kills? How about the riumber
of fish to stock? Those ques. :tions and others will be
·answered at the clinic, a cooperative effort between the
•Meil!' Soil and Water Conservation District and the Ohio
State University Coop~rative
Extension Service.
Speakers will include Mike ,
.Duhl, Meigs &lt;;;ountj district
conservationist for the Natural Resources Conservation
·Service, on -pond construction; Hal Kneen, Meigs
County . OSU Extension
~gent, on aquatic weed control; Jerry lies, OSU Extension Wlltershed agent, streams;
Bill Lynch, OSU Extension,
fish stockings and fish kills.
·· · The Balthaser farm is located on Briar Ridge Road .
From Ohio 124 west of
"langsville, turn onto Ohio
·325 to Danville, turn left on
'Briar Ridge Road. The farm
·and pond are located "on the
left approximately one-half
mile &amp;om 325.
' For more information, con: tact Jim Freeman, Meigs
SWCD, ai 992-4282.

at 2 p.m.

..

. .. .

EMS runs

Willam 1tic:hard' Oldaker

Tell J 'Steve' McCune .

Resnick

date set

SerVices
.pianned

Eugene ,Underwood

Granges. meet ·

Grant

hs.

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LOCAL STOCKS

GM to recall 6,000 vehicles

_The ·D.aily Sentinel

: Reader Senices

Greeiii\IZ Cards· Complete Stock

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.COLDPOP

.

20 oz. Bottle only 69•

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Other services

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Optn WHkniQhts 11ll9 · e Friendly Service
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To advertise your
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call Dave ~or Debbie

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Genoral manager

••

Layoffs dt•w protests

•

DANVILLE -

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llololyaur_.._wilh.Nnonco'tlOII11!0

,... sc

Yete' Elberfeld

.

f,edefal

Wilt DISH,.,.,. Dlftt.l 15fl H-.1'1.,
P"9""'"*'1 r

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·

Mayor faces fewer charges ·

TOLEDO (AP)- A judge Thursday threw out two of three
CLeVELAND (AP) -· The NAACP, whpse Cleveland . charges against Toledo Maypr Carty Finkbeiner for a conleader is a longtime political rival of Mayor Michael R . White, fiontation with a restaurant owner last July.
'
will9ppose a ~ increase referendum fo~ the mayor-controlled
&amp;wling Green Municipal Judge Mark Reddin, a visiting
city school district.
·
·
judge ass,ig~~ed to the case, dismissed charges of dis?rderly conGeorge L. Forbes, president of the ·Cleveland chapter of the duct and interfering with civil rights. Reddin , gJd he would
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, de~ide Within thn;e weeks whether to dismiss a C&lt;!erciQn .
said Thursday that the group would spend $25,000 to defeat the charge.
.
.
May 8 levy referendum.
Reddin ruled there wasn't enough evidence to pursue the
Forbes is a former city council president and lost the 1989 interfering with civil rights charges. The disorderly conduct
mayoral election to White.
·
·
charge was filed two days after the statute of limitations
NAACP executive board members voted 44-3 to oppose the
d
·
expire .
.
.
_
levy and a companion bond iss~e.
Resuurant owner John Skiadas had accused Fmkbemer of
grabbing and shaking him. He told police the mayor. yelled
obscenities at him, poked him and threatened to run him out
of town.
CINCINNATI (AP) - Greggory Hujkon, executive ditector of the Fort Worth Zoological Association, was chosen as
· •
president and chief executive officer of th.e Cincinnati Zoo on
Thursday.
·
h
ha
Hudso~·succeeds Ed Maruska, who retired in December after HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) - Layoffi andfi ot eralcuhtsl ve
not been enough to dig the city out of its nancl
o e, -as
beinJ director at the Ohio zoo since 1968.
. .
. .
.
milli
Tlie Cincinnati Zf30, founded in 1875, is known for its sue- un~:nd bills ~ave agam top~d $2 . on.
cessful b~Ceding programs, particularly for white tigers. It draws
.Fmance DJ~ctor ~b Wilhelm s:ud he does not know how
abo~t 1.3 million visitors a year.
.
.
. large the ~Jty s deficit will be at the end of the fiscal year June
"I hope t&lt;! build on its reputation, its national and interna- 30.
.
. ,
.
.
. .
tiona! reputation;' Hudson said. "Th~ Cincinnati Zoo has one
l;l_e w~ the cttys unp:nd bills had fallen from . $2.~ milli~
of the best animal collections in the world, and the communi- earlier this year to $1.3 milbon. Now, the unpa•d bills aga1n
ty supp~rt for the zoo is the envy every zoo in the country." exceed $2 million.
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In February, City C&lt;!uncil approved Mayor David Felingtoq's
plan to end the fiscal year with a deficit to $701,296 by laying
8
off workers and cutting spending.
.)
COLUMBUS (AP) - Gov. Bob Taft on Thursday canceled
an appearance with a Hong Kong trade group, saying it would
be inappropriate. for him to attend as long as China detains the
crew of a U.S. plane.
.
The spy plane collided with a Chinese fighter jet on Sunday
an~ made an emergency landing. . ,
. ·
Until the return ?f the.
A;menc_an service men and
women ... who are being detamed m Chma, 11 IS mappropnate

. :·· ~-spOt cloM$ .school foFo ,day
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ration.
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Investigators believe that while ·the couple was in. the
woman's car on the street, Bolin displayed a handgun. Fnghtened Carol Bolin then drove the car over the curb and sidq~·
walk,and into the parking lot toward a·policeman who was in
his cruiser. ·
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Hi Val Cigarettes
IVIan shootS self.in parking lot . s1.35 /Pock s13.45 I Carton

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enfmcement experience, was told to take a third-shift dispatcher position or be bid off.
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A county budget shortfall forced Shenff W1lliam Barker to
send layoff notices to 14' employees this week. The layoffS take
effect in 10 days, leaving the office with just 16 employees. The
cuts mean that only one 'deputy will be patrolling county roadways during each shift, sheriff's officials said.

for me as ~overnor to participate in an event promoting trade
with China;· Taft said in a statement.
AKRON (AP) - . The overcrowded Sununil ,County jail , He noted that the crew includes Aviation Machinist 2nd
released 10 iQmates in the latest renewal of a legal fight that .Class,WendyWestbrook'from Rock Creek in northeast Ohio.
began 28 yeats ago oyer cellblock conditions. •
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Attorneys who represented inmates in the case ,complained
that prisoners are sleeping bn mattresses on the floor and that
nonviolent offenders are housed alongside dangerou1 inmates: . SIDNEY (AP} - A man wll&lt;! was sitting in a car with his
"We believe that the administratiol\ is not in •a position to estranged wife and two children shot himselfin the head as the
guarantee die safety and security of those inmates and s¢ y.oho woman pulled into· a parking lot next to police neadquarters,
.
work in the facility;' attorl,leys Robert Armbruster, and~Tho!JW authorities ~aid.
Kelley said in a motion for contempt filed with U.S. District
Dewayne Bolin, 32, of Sidney, died at Mjami Valley Hospital
C&lt;!urt in Cleveland.
.
in Dayton, where he was taken after Wednesday night's shootIn the pan cwo years, ~!\..average of 40 to 60 inmates per night mg.
.have been sleeping 01,1, the' floor or op cots, the attor.neys said.:
f&gt;ccordiJig to Sidney police, t\le couple had driven to the
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police department in separate vehicles so Boli~ could return
·r&lt;
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the coii,Ple's 3-year-old son to Ca~ol Bohn, 32, following visi-

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LOCAL BRIEFS

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Teachers; union to·sue state ove.r schools

Ohio weatl•r.
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ALL AGE S, ALL TIMFS $4 00

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CHURCH EVENTS

The Daily Sent:inel
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740 • •21• • Fa: ID-2157

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OHIO VIEWS

SATURDAY
GALLIPOLIS
Elizabeth
Chapel Chun:h is having its 4th
ennualladea' Retreat, 9 a.m. •
3 p.m. Conlact Janet Hively at
446-1643 with any questions.

VINTON - Songlest at Deer
Creek Freewill Baptist Church, 7
p.m., featuring lha singing o1
"Earthen Vessel' and with Pastor
Mickey Maynard.

Headache

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COTTAGEVILLE - Contempo!llry gospel concert, 6 p.m. at
Jaclulon Coooty Fair Grounds,
with Under Aulhority and Fire
Proof. Admission is one can of
food. There will be a lreewil
offering.

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o relief in sight for school
fonding problem
• Timet RKorder of ZmetYille: In a mere duee months,

the Ohio ~ is supp05ed to have a JDIUtion for the
sure's school funding headache. The Supreme Cow:t wants an
"adequate and equitable" system of education without the
ovcHeliance on local property taxes.
. Is the srace government going to meet the deadline? It's not
looking good.
· Only now, with the deadline looming. have the three top
R~publican leaders in the srate ... met face to face and agreed
to rome up with a common plan.
··
Exclue w, but shouldn't that have been done a year ago?
•
The (Findlay) Courier: President Bush is correct in
refusing to tegulate carbon dioxide emissions fiom power
plana in an effort to curb "global warming:'
·
The president is currendy being reamed out by environ·
menral groups and activisa who accused him .of caving in to
big oil and other fossil fuel inceresa.
.
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Those who favor the global warming theory have adopted
the Bill Clinton 'm ethod of public relations. They srate as a fact
what they wish people to believe, and. proceed as if their mes-sage is undeniable. .
.
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The truth w that there are millions of scientists in.the world,
and a good many of them do not subscribe. to the global
warming theory.
.
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Man has never been able to accurately predict the weather
ever a week in advance. How then can we rely on admittedly
imperfect computer models whose global warming forecasts
tlip--Oop fiom study to study? ·
• Newt Joumal of Mandisld: Students have the .right to
attend public schools. We're pleased to see the U.S. Supreme
.Court agrees they do not have the right to wear whatev.er they .
choose to school each day.
The nation's top court, without offering comment, rejected
a former Ohio high schocilstudent's argument that school offi·
cials could not keep him from wearing T·shirts depicting
ushoclt rock" stat Marilyn Manson.
Are we crazy when we assert that schools should always have
. the right to regulate what clothes students may wear to class?
Since when do students and parents push these cases to the
nation's highest court? Please tell us there was some other issue
.. here other than a debate ovcr the merits/ demeria of a Mari·
lyn Manson T--shirt.

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TODAY lN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCif.TED PRESS

Today is Friday, April 6, the 96th day of 2001. There are 269
days le~ i'n the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
·On April 6, -1909, expl()len Robert E. Peary and Matthew
' A: Henson btcani~ the tim men to reach the North Pole: (The
C~lt). disputed by sltep,tics, was upheld in 1989 by the Navigation ·Foundaqon.) .
On this date:
II\ 1830, the Cliurch ofJesus Christ of Latter-day Saints Was
organized by Joseph Smith in Fayette, N.Y.
,
In 11162, the Civil War ~attle of Shiloh began in Tennessee.
In 1896&gt;the first modern Olympic games formally opened ·
in Athens, Oreece.
·
In 1917. (4ngress approved a declaration of war against

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Census 'pigeonholing' aggravates ethnic divisions
It has been a year since the 2000 Ceothe 126 groups are intermatrying at high
sus was taken, and now, as the taulti tum· ·
rates. Arc of identity. indeed!
Prewitt says that.pressure for more cate·
ble out, 281 million Americans have been
divided, oflicially. into 126 racial and ethnic
gory classification is inevitable: "Prolifera·
categories: The time has come to ask
· tion hegets proliferation.... To resist would
· whether that is 125 too many. Shou\d the
be to invite an ever more intense politics of
20IO Census eliminate the questiorls on
racial measureinent." He notes that while
race and ethnicity?
Arab-American leaders reluccmdy accept·
It should. The data are geuing wone,sil·
~reg ed the government's decision not to sepalier and perhaps dangerous. The prolifera.rately count Arab-Americans in 2000, they
will surely make a more intense request in
tion Of pigeotiholes - which win contin·
ue unless it is stopped - is causing ago·
COLUMNIST
2010. If successful, that would j~ the
ments that are sharp and may become bit·
number of combinations and pemmtations
ter. I~ of slicing o~ thin and dena to "mark one or more t:ICes." 1his ofAniericans to 252.
thinner, we should say what most Amep. yields 63 potential llavors ofAmericans.
What would be sd wrong with dumpcans belie~~e, that .we are all Americans, as
(Beneath these~ are 18 additional ing the race/etlmicity catego~ies?
diverse as we want to be, reveling in, our "response categories" sooh as ':Japanese,"
Not much. It is not
data that keeps ·
unmeasured and immeasurable di\lmity. "Samoan,""Asian_Indian" and "Guamanian polls open to .~lacks m once·segregated
which nowadays should be none of the or Chamoro." Just try multiplying all that states, .1t ~ poliucal power and th~ U.S.
out!)
· . ·
· Consutuuon. ~e . courts are already (~d
government's business.
As shall be seen, this is also the general
Double the 63. Every American is fur. properly) unwmding the skein of racial
view of the distinguished political scientist ther categorized, nonracially. as uHispanic preferences. We have almost a decade to
Kenneth Prewitt. now the Dean ·of the or. Latino" or "Not Hispanic or Latino," · make whatever l7gal changes are nee~.
Gradp•te Faculty at the New Sch~l. In ·offtting.a total of 126 cateSI?ries.
·
There · would litde loss .of . scholarship,
The 2000 Census made ·Hispanics the because the data are so Weitd m
~t
1998 Prewitt was appointed director of the
Census Bureau by PreSident Clinton, a post largest minority group in America, barely an~. becaus~. a sunpler .~ategory of ances-in which he serVed with energy and dis. surpassing blacks. Hispanics now make lip try. on the . long form would gtve plenty
tinction until Jan. 20, 2001.
·
12.$ pen;ent of the population and nearly ofinforrnanon.
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What's wrong?
a thild of the California total. .
And the Census does~ t ask everything.
We don't know how to ~ure "race."
This got California state librarian Kevin There IS no Census.religton data, but vanA Texas resident lives in T~. A !)S.year. Starr excited. Starr armounc~ that "The ous religious groups have pretty good esti·
old is 68 years old. I could continue such a Anglo hegemony was only an intermittent mates. We get esnmates o? vo~g behavior
· display of deJnosraphic erudition. But ,race phase in Califurnia's an: of identity.... 1his by group fiom commercial polling~·
is different; you are what you say you are, as is a reastertion of the intrinsic demographWe ought to make that change wtth
in a public opini911 polL Prewitt says, ~The ic DNA of the lopger pattern, which is part gusto and grace. ~pie get ~ nasty
measurement of race is not groi.mded in of a California~Mexiro cqntinuum." Is about race and ethniCJty, all t:Jte ume, every·
science, as anthropologisa and biologisa Starr getting set to run for office, or for the where. Countmg that way IS so ftrY 20th
have pointed out for years:'
hills? . .
century. By stoppmg. we can serve our·
Not knowing how to do it, we .do more
'The Potential ritischief of this complex- selves weD and offer a model to the :world
of it. Under undentandable prti!Uie from ity is apparent in The New York Times ?f what a 21st.c~?~ nabon looks Jike -.
Americans of mixl:d race ancestry, we have ·h~e on the California story: "Census . muneasurably diVerse.
engaged in category creep. Once there Confirms Whi~ Are in Minority:' Why
&amp;it Hilttenllew, n senior fellow nt tilt Ameriwere three basic racial classifications oq mischief! Because most Hispanics declare · cma Enterprise Institute, is tilt host-essayist I!{the
Census forms, then lOur, theti five, now sill; themselves to be whites. Because Starr~ PBS spednl"The First Mtlil!lred Century" tmd
"white:' "black 'or African American," "inlrinsic demographic DNA" negleca co-puthor of a new .book I!{ tilt same title (AEI
.
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"AmeriCan Indian or Alaska Native:• growing cotnmunities of Koreans, Japan· Press, 2000). He is tilt host of tilt weekly pub·
"Asian:'"Narive Hawaiian .oro~ Pacific ~Russianjews,Chinese,Can3dians,Thai, lie television progmm "Think Tank." Ycl~ may
Islander" pluS "Soine Othet ~·And for ~ - and whites. Because fertility send comments · to him vin e-mail:
the first time the Census invited respon· rates in Mexico are sinking rapidly. Because Hiltmailaol.rom.

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HARTFORD- Gospel sing,
Father's House Church, 7 p.m.,
with Trials of Faith, Shadow ol
·the Cross, Paul and Mary
Nichola, Together 4 Christ and
Sheley Johnson. Love offering
to benelk Bend Area Gospel
,Jubilee.

Ridge Road, with Glorylend
Believel&amp; and Builders Quartet,
'SLI'lday 2 p.m.

·BIDWELL -

·
Poplar Ridge

Character building ·list still sounds .like Lindbergh

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In 1965, the United States launched t!ie Early Bird commu·
nicatio!U satellite.
· In 1971, Ruuian·born composer Igor Stravinsky. died in
New York City. .
In 1985,William J. Schroeder be.came the first artificial heart
recipient to be discharged .from the hospiral as he ·moved into
an apartment in Louisville, Ky.
In 1994, Supreme Court Justice Harry A. Blackmon
announced his retirement after 24 years,
In 1994, the pteSidena of Rwanda and Burundi were killed
in a mysterioqs plane crash near Rwanda's capiral; widespread
violence! erupted in Rwanda over claims the plane had been
shot dawn.
1
In 1998, c'o untry singer Thmmy Wynett~ died at her
Nashville, Tenn., home at age 55.
· Ten years: ago: ,·Iraq relucrandy agreed to accept United
N~tions conditions for ending the Persian Gui(War.
·
Five years ago: A sorrowful President Clinton was on hand
at Dover Air Force Base in Delaware to greet the arrival of 33
flag--draped caskets carrying the remains of Commerce Secretary Ron Brown and other victims of a plane c~h in Croatia.
A stolen truck carrying illegal immigrants overturned in
Temecula, Calif., killing eight people. Actress Greer Garson
died in Dallas at age 92.
One year ago: The father of Elian Gonzalez, Juan Miguel
Gonzalez, arrived ip the United States to press for the return of
· his 6·yearzOid "!n to Cuba.

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wins a,ntest

LOCAL EVENTS
..FRIDAY
.. POMEROY- Meigs High
: ~hoo) , &amp;enlor plays jnclue!ing
':Who Am I This Time?" and
"The Crazy Mlxed·Up Island of
• ·:or. Moreau: $3 for adults ·and
$2 for students.

POMEROY- Meigs County
- Chapter PERl 74, Friday, ·
- Senior CRizans Canter, noon
•·luncheon, followed by meting
and program.
" POMEROY- Fun. Food and
· Fellowship at God's NET, 6 to
10:30 p.m., Friday and Satur·
:•day. Nutritional meals. non-violent vicleo games, pool tables,
.,computer programs, and board
_games.
·
SATURDAY
.
TUPPERS PLAINS-·supl!r
,Saturt;lay at Hlc~ory HUis
' · Church of Christ near Tuppers
I• Plains. Theme Is 'An Amazing
I Change." the conversion of
.. Paul. Time machine, pu'ppets,
claases, nursery through aduh.
·. Registration 9 a.m. Program
· ·enda al 1:30; lunch provided.

Suppo-:f ,G,a,,p
. ~eeting'set.

Have a

local.news ite.m?
Gl"ve· us a call
at 992 ..]56.

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COLLEGE NEWS &amp; NOTES

Chasaqe S. Hollon of Long
State Communiry College for Clark,·both of Coolville;Valarie
.announ~1 ·· the winter term.
Karr, Long Bottom; Amber N. Bottom, Dean·V. Hill an.d Tamr.~
'
Named to the president's list Blackston and Ryan R . Rams- C. Pickens, both of Racine, and
.for · earnU!g a perfect grade burg, both of Pomeroy; Jayme Michael E. Crites of Reedsville
GALLIPOLIS - Winter point average of 4.0 were: L. Miller, Portland; and Jeremy were named to the dean's list at
, ,
the school .
quarter graduates of GaUipo)is Chrisry D. Jones and Brenda S. A. Thompson, Shade.
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Career College were: Christi· ,
na Bainter, Beth .Casto, Jaime ; . _ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
Dillon, Kelly Hager,, Tammy
Haner, Heather Lovejoy,
Michelle Montgomery, Jennifer Sowers, Lisa Spurlock,
and Sandra T¥cker.

TUESDAY ·
.
PoMEROY - CHOICE Homl! .
Educators, Tuesday, 1 to 3
p.m..at the Pomeroy Library.
For information, \ammy Jones,
992·6743.

GCC

POMEROY - Bedford Township Trustees, Tuesday, 7 p.m
at the town hall.
·

gr,~ds ·

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· RACINE - Racine Board of
Public Affairs, 7 p.m., munlci·
pal. building.

The community Calendar
11 publl1hsd aa a free ur- ·.
TUPPERS PLAINS.- Eastem vice to non-profit group•
High School .winter sport.s ban- wtlhlng to announce mHI·
lngl·and IJJICial evsnt1. The
quat, 6:30 p.m.
calendar Ia not dsalgnaclto
promote 111" or 1\lnd rateSUNDAY
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TUPPERS PLAINS - Loyalty era of any type. nama ara
printed only •• spaos pardinner meeting, VFW Post
. 9053, Tuppers Plains hall, 1:3o mila and csflnOI be guaran- .
·
Sunday. Memlilirs, auxll· tssd to be prtntsd a tpeclflc
au1181a lnvlled.. SIBle number of dave.

HonnMIIat :

Wislli~nst

MARIEU4, - A DUIJ!ber
of local students have been ·
named to the . pn;sident's list
and dean's lis~ at Washington

Spacial lUlSI
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Chad

Cbadw#IJ be signing autographs/or
tlil public from 8:30a.m. to 10:30 a.m.

Enter to win autogmpbed msrcbandlse.

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e Saturday, April 21, 2001 (Sign-up deadlins is Aprll6)

You may experience brief
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senJ&amp;ee mterrupt1ons.
Please be msured we will
do everything to·keep ·
interruptiom to :a

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,e or•ce fields - Rain or shine

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e Indivldualtrophies to top three finishing teams
e Games ~ at 8 a.m. - Double elimination
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e $SO entry
fee per team {8111611 &amp;Bwomen) .
e Must be 18 or older to play
e Register at the PVH Wellness Center
e Make all checks payable to "Make-A-Wish Foundation"

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COM«ffiir.ter Calll·80fJ-800·CABLE

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877·998-3407

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A. member ofGtmeSis Hospital
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HARRISONVILLE- Har·
· rlsonvllle Lodge 411, Saturday,
7:30 p.m. at the temple.
Refreshments .

PLAGENZ'S VIEW

I, r

Coolville student

..GALLIPOLIS
Gallipolis
J~hurch of Christ in Christi~~!~
Union will be performing an
El?ller Drama "Upon thi.s Roek"

et7p.m.

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"POMEROY"' Poplar Ridge
Free Wil Baptist Church, Poplar

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T·shirt/sweatshirt

Holy 1~eek Services

'SUNDAY

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WATTENBERG'S VIEW

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The two will conduct a question·and· KOPS best loser. Each reteiVed a cash .
answer session concerning issues relating prize and a certificate of recognition .
to Parkinson's disease. The meeting \fill
Johnson read th~ . ru)" for a new con·
be in the O'Bleness' basement conference cest tided "Its·Your Time To Shine." The ·
P
BURG .- ~Q..ciark room 8·9 .
shamrock conteSt was won by Darby and
pital wilt jQkl more than
Trout. Each recei~d a J'OPS charm.
2,000 O·~~tions 'on hpru f8 ' from
Newly elected officers are Janet
1:30 to 4: " p.m. as local hOst for the
Thomas, leader; johnson, co·leader;
Hospice FoJt(ldation of America's eighth
Rhonda Mullins, -~ecrebry; .,:hid' Ellen
Church.
· annual "LMl!g with (}riel" teleconfer·
Darby. treasurer.
·
tn~e.
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MIDDLEPORT - The Visions of
Selected as weight . recorder was
PORTER- Evilning sarvices et
"Caregivi~g· apd ·Loss: Family Needs, Hope will present "In the Shadow of the Mitchell and Trout a~ asW;tan,t weight
Clark Chapel Church are now 7
Professional
"-clpOriiej:• a life·Yia satellite Cross" on Sunday, at 6 p.m. at Hope Bap· recorder. Insrallation of oflicen was held
p.m.
video teleconftrelice,.will exa~ne ways tist Church, 570 Grant St.. Making up the onApri!_k
.
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prof~onals
~an · bettet unilersrand and cast are youth and adults of the church.
PORTER -The Rev. Don Can
Week'!y chapter meetings are held on
will preach at Clark Chapel
On Wednesday at 7 p.m. "The Medical Mondays from 10 to 11 a.m. at Cheshire
respond to the needS of family caregivers.
Church, 7 p.m.
.
The progfam v,riU ~ffer · insight and Aspects of the Crucifixion of Jesus United Methodist Church. W~igh·in is
practical'
su~ti,Ons for those assisting Christ" will be presented by M . E. from 8:30 · to 9:45 a.m. For information
GALLIPOUS - P1811Chlng serfamily caregitefs . as they respond to the Plaugher of Chillicothe Anesthesia Asso· on TOPS residents may contact Thomas
Vice at Adlison Frewill 8al)tist .
challenges of caregiving, ·rna~ critical ciates. Plaugher' will discuss the medical at 367-0274 or toll.free at (.80Q.932·
Church, 6 p.m. with Rick Barrus
preaching.
end·of·life decisions, and cope with thejr eVidence, Biblical accounts and current 8677.
grief.
··
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studies regarding the conviction, bearing
The web site is www.tops.org.
APPLE GROVE- The Mayes
&lt;
The
progfam
will
be
moderated
by
a~d
death
of
Jesus
.
The
presentation
is
Family will be singing at Barton
•
Cokie Roberts of ABC News and will . sa1d to g1ve a new understanding of the
Chapel Church, 6 p.m.
feature a distinguished panel of expertS, torture Jesus endured just prior ta His
~OINT PLEASANT.- Main
with a spe~ ial message from (ormer first death.
painting•tJ~G;·
Street Baptist Church, 1100
ladyRosalyptt Carter.
·
On the church grounds on Saturday at
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Main St., cantata 'Cornerstone•,
RIO
GRANDE
The
Universiry
of
~egistration
will
begin
at
t
p.m.
and
2
p.m.
an
E~ster
egg
hunt
and
cet;~brauon
6:30p.m.
there will be a discussion period until .ume for children of the commumry. ages Rio Grande Adult and Continuing Edu·
POINT PLEASANT- Lenten
4:30 p.m. CEUs will be offered for nurs· . 2 through II , will be held ·at Hope Bap· cation will offer a T-Shirt/Sweatshirt
cantata "Once Upon ATree• at
es, social \vorkers, counselors, funeral tist. Games will be played following the Acrylic Pamting class in j'vlay, The class
Christ Episcopal Church, 4 p.m.
will be May 3 from 6:30p.m. to 9 p.m.
directors, clergy, psychologists, physicians, egg hunt and snacks will be provided.
Helen Armstrong of Jackson is return·
Easter Sunday services at the church
and nursing home administrators. There is
MONDAY
a S20 processing fee for CI;.Us.
;-viii include Su?rise, 6:30 a.~., breakfast ing to Rio·Grande to teach this course.
POINT PLEASANT- Kids
Students who participate in the course
Bille Club, Wesleyan Holiness
Seating is limited, so early registration is m the fellowship hall followmg, Sunday
Church, 2300 Uncoln Ave.,
school, 9:45 a.m.; morning Easter. cele· are to bring a blouse, jumper, T-shirt, or
encouraged by calling 424·2650.
every Monday, 6:30-8 p.m. lor
bration at II a.m. and evening visitation sweatshirt that
without
. has been
. . \ .washed
.
ages 6 to 12. For info. call Debfabric
softener.
at
6
p.m:
bie Alexander et 675-5454 or ·
Pre-registration 'for ' the ~nurse is
Debbie Peach6y at 675-1187.
required.
·
TUESDAY
Students can regiiter by contacting
'
GALLIPOLIS · - Ohio Valley
LONG B&amp;fTOM - Holy Week ser·
On
Dale Whitt in Adult and Continuing
Youth Workers Association will
vices at Faith Full Gospel Church will
r;:.
"a l
Education
at 245-7325. The registration -"
meet 7 p.m. at GOOII News .Bapbegin·HolyWeek
services
Monday
with
CHESHIRE
A
program
on
"Pure
fee is $20 per student.
liat Church, George's Creek Rd.
a four-part movie tided "The Gospel of Energy" was given by Ann Mitchell,
when TOPS OH 1383 met recendy at
Jesus Acc.sndiog to Matthew."
WEDNESDAY
POINT PLEASANT- Wednes·
The movie Will be showe Monday, Cheshire.
day nlghl Bible cUts for
Tuesday, Wedne$day and Thursday at the
Mitchell ralked about the fast·paced
preschool up through 12111
church at Tp.m. each evening.
work and the need for a greater store of
grade, 7 to 8:15 p.m. at Gospel
Good
Friday
services
will
be
at
7
p.m.
personal energy:
ATHENS - Athehs County Family
Ughthouse Church, Neal Road.
and .will feature a hymn ~ng directed by
"Energy comes naturally when we pay and . Children 'First Council ~nnounce
Lesaons. refreshments and
special craft night once a .
Sue Matheny. Sunrise service on Easter attention to the building blodcs of good Holly Marie Dunfee, a fifth·grader at
month. l='or lnfonnation call 675morning will be he.Jd at 6:30 a.nl. with a healt~: nutritio~s e~ting~ sensible exercise, Coolville Elementary, has been .selected
7229 0( 675-6620.
choir cantata directed by Barbara Swartz suffic1ent sleep, s:ud Mitchell. She ralked the winner of its calendar art contest.
followed by• a breakfast. Pastor Steve . about how food affects the body by reg- . . Denise Swyers, intersysteins adininis· .
Reed and . the congregation ·invites the ulating ~erve functions i~cluding memo- trator for ACFCFC, said "We are' proud
.public to attend the services.
ry, appeute, menral function and mood.
to have Holly represent Athens Counry at
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Eating., small amounts throughout the the the state level; she did a wonderful job
1
day (ideaUy, about three or four hours) portraying this year's theme."
chaplain will be the speaker.
helps steady blood sugar levels, she said,
The theme was "Help · Paint Ohio's
suggesting snacks, like an energy bar, low Future Bright" (prevent child abuse and
POMEROY- Poplar Ridge .
fat granola,'C'ereal bars or fruit.
·" · • neglect), and '1t ·:was open to all' fifth'
'
Free Wll Baptist Church,
ATHENS,,
David
Purdy,
R.Ph.,
Oth.er proposals for boosting energy graders· in Athens Counry..
Poplar Ridge Road, with Glory·
regional ParJcinson's Disease. Support levels include taking a fresh air break,
land Believers and Builders
·
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Quartet, S4nday 2 p.m.
·
Group coc;&gt;~dinator for the Central changing people perspective, giving che
,
Soutp.east R,~gion, will be speaker at a right side of the brain a workout with a
· MIDDLEPORT- Hope Baptist
meeting of thlll Parkinsons' Disease Sup- physical, creative, intuitive art like paint·
Church, Sunday, 6 p.m. ·drama
'
I
port Group,Tuesday
at 2 ,p.J1l, at ,O , Beby the Visions of Hope tHied
ing. aower arranging orJWOodcarving.
"In the Shadow of the Cross."
ness Memodal. Hospital in Athens.
Pledges were led by Ellen Darby and
·Presented by voulh and aduHs
Also speaking \vill be his wife, Della Emogene. Johnson. TOPS best loser of
of Hope Baptist.
Purdy, who ·i~ the assistant coordinator. the week was Darby, with Helen Trout as
I I
MONDAY
.
CHESHIRE - ·Disabled Amari·
can Veterans, Chapter 53,
.,
Cheshire, .Monday, dinner at
6:30 p.m.; me.eling at 7 p.m.

:'7.

lenl video glllnlll. poal tables,
computer progl'lllll8. and board
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C.•a..ten-dalk to host
Hospice
CIUiafeMnce
•

BIDWEIJ.- Gotpeleing at LJy. at 2 p.m. wllh "111£ Buildell'a
ing Water Church, 839 Kerr Qulltel" 8lld "The Glofyland
Road, 6-10 p.m.
Blh.,... no.. wa be a c1nner
aflelwanle.
qllllllior •• cal
EVERGREEN - s.-~~cea a1 Pllklr Jomullick at (740)E'"!'II'iliWI &lt;::onmnty Ctud!, 593-7490. Ewrybod'fwllcoma. ·
Sprolglilld TIIWIIIIIus, 7 p.m. . ·
·
Singing by Forgiven 4 and- CHESHIRE- Msmoris1 M1v1ce
preaching by lhs Asv. John Jsl. for ' Jacob Hlcke, 3 p.m .•
fnly..
Chslhlre Uniled Methodist
•

fttdrv. Apll •~.2111

COMMUN1TY NEWS &amp; NOTES

Chun:h wl be having a ••glall

POMEROY- Ftm, Food and
F'elowehip at Gods NET, 6 to
10:30 p.m.• Friday and Salur·
day. Nutritional meals, non-v;o.

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CHURCH EVENTS

The Daily Sent:inel
(

FNDAY

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a. ,....

.' 111 Court
or. 0111o
740 • •21• • Fa: ID-2157

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Ohio Valier Publllhlng Co.
Clwtll w. Gcrtwr
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OHIO VIEWS

SATURDAY
GALLIPOLIS
Elizabeth
Chapel Chun:h is having its 4th
ennualladea' Retreat, 9 a.m. •
3 p.m. Conlact Janet Hively at
446-1643 with any questions.

VINTON - Songlest at Deer
Creek Freewill Baptist Church, 7
p.m., featuring lha singing o1
"Earthen Vessel' and with Pastor
Mickey Maynard.

Headache

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COTTAGEVILLE - Contempo!llry gospel concert, 6 p.m. at
Jaclulon Coooty Fair Grounds,
with Under Aulhority and Fire
Proof. Admission is one can of
food. There will be a lreewil
offering.

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o relief in sight for school
fonding problem
• Timet RKorder of ZmetYille: In a mere duee months,

the Ohio ~ is supp05ed to have a JDIUtion for the
sure's school funding headache. The Supreme Cow:t wants an
"adequate and equitable" system of education without the
ovcHeliance on local property taxes.
. Is the srace government going to meet the deadline? It's not
looking good.
· Only now, with the deadline looming. have the three top
R~publican leaders in the srate ... met face to face and agreed
to rome up with a common plan.
··
Exclue w, but shouldn't that have been done a year ago?
•
The (Findlay) Courier: President Bush is correct in
refusing to tegulate carbon dioxide emissions fiom power
plana in an effort to curb "global warming:'
·
The president is currendy being reamed out by environ·
menral groups and activisa who accused him .of caving in to
big oil and other fossil fuel inceresa.
.
·
Those who favor the global warming theory have adopted
the Bill Clinton 'm ethod of public relations. They srate as a fact
what they wish people to believe, and. proceed as if their mes-sage is undeniable. .
.
.
The truth w that there are millions of scientists in.the world,
and a good many of them do not subscribe. to the global
warming theory.
.
·,
·
Man has never been able to accurately predict the weather
ever a week in advance. How then can we rely on admittedly
imperfect computer models whose global warming forecasts
tlip--Oop fiom study to study? ·
• Newt Joumal of Mandisld: Students have the .right to
attend public schools. We're pleased to see the U.S. Supreme
.Court agrees they do not have the right to wear whatev.er they .
choose to school each day.
The nation's top court, without offering comment, rejected
a former Ohio high schocilstudent's argument that school offi·
cials could not keep him from wearing T·shirts depicting
ushoclt rock" stat Marilyn Manson.
Are we crazy when we assert that schools should always have
. the right to regulate what clothes students may wear to class?
Since when do students and parents push these cases to the
nation's highest court? Please tell us there was some other issue
.. here other than a debate ovcr the merits/ demeria of a Mari·
lyn Manson T--shirt.

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TODAY lN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCif.TED PRESS

Today is Friday, April 6, the 96th day of 2001. There are 269
days le~ i'n the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
·On April 6, -1909, expl()len Robert E. Peary and Matthew
' A: Henson btcani~ the tim men to reach the North Pole: (The
C~lt). disputed by sltep,tics, was upheld in 1989 by the Navigation ·Foundaqon.) .
On this date:
II\ 1830, the Cliurch ofJesus Christ of Latter-day Saints Was
organized by Joseph Smith in Fayette, N.Y.
,
In 11162, the Civil War ~attle of Shiloh began in Tennessee.
In 1896&gt;the first modern Olympic games formally opened ·
in Athens, Oreece.
·
In 1917. (4ngress approved a declaration of war against

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Census 'pigeonholing' aggravates ethnic divisions
It has been a year since the 2000 Ceothe 126 groups are intermatrying at high
sus was taken, and now, as the taulti tum· ·
rates. Arc of identity. indeed!
Prewitt says that.pressure for more cate·
ble out, 281 million Americans have been
divided, oflicially. into 126 racial and ethnic
gory classification is inevitable: "Prolifera·
categories: The time has come to ask
· tion hegets proliferation.... To resist would
· whether that is 125 too many. Shou\d the
be to invite an ever more intense politics of
20IO Census eliminate the questiorls on
racial measureinent." He notes that while
race and ethnicity?
Arab-American leaders reluccmdy accept·
It should. The data are geuing wone,sil·
~reg ed the government's decision not to sepalier and perhaps dangerous. The prolifera.rately count Arab-Americans in 2000, they
will surely make a more intense request in
tion Of pigeotiholes - which win contin·
ue unless it is stopped - is causing ago·
COLUMNIST
2010. If successful, that would j~ the
ments that are sharp and may become bit·
number of combinations and pemmtations
ter. I~ of slicing o~ thin and dena to "mark one or more t:ICes." 1his ofAniericans to 252.
thinner, we should say what most Amep. yields 63 potential llavors ofAmericans.
What would be sd wrong with dumpcans belie~~e, that .we are all Americans, as
(Beneath these~ are 18 additional ing the race/etlmicity catego~ies?
diverse as we want to be, reveling in, our "response categories" sooh as ':Japanese,"
Not much. It is not
data that keeps ·
unmeasured and immeasurable di\lmity. "Samoan,""Asian_Indian" and "Guamanian polls open to .~lacks m once·segregated
which nowadays should be none of the or Chamoro." Just try multiplying all that states, .1t ~ poliucal power and th~ U.S.
out!)
· . ·
· Consutuuon. ~e . courts are already (~d
government's business.
As shall be seen, this is also the general
Double the 63. Every American is fur. properly) unwmding the skein of racial
view of the distinguished political scientist ther categorized, nonracially. as uHispanic preferences. We have almost a decade to
Kenneth Prewitt. now the Dean ·of the or. Latino" or "Not Hispanic or Latino," · make whatever l7gal changes are nee~.
Gradp•te Faculty at the New Sch~l. In ·offtting.a total of 126 cateSI?ries.
·
There · would litde loss .of . scholarship,
The 2000 Census made ·Hispanics the because the data are so Weitd m
~t
1998 Prewitt was appointed director of the
Census Bureau by PreSident Clinton, a post largest minority group in America, barely an~. becaus~. a sunpler .~ategory of ances-in which he serVed with energy and dis. surpassing blacks. Hispanics now make lip try. on the . long form would gtve plenty
tinction until Jan. 20, 2001.
·
12.$ pen;ent of the population and nearly ofinforrnanon.
,
. .
What's wrong?
a thild of the California total. .
And the Census does~ t ask everything.
We don't know how to ~ure "race."
This got California state librarian Kevin There IS no Census.religton data, but vanA Texas resident lives in T~. A !)S.year. Starr excited. Starr armounc~ that "The ous religious groups have pretty good esti·
old is 68 years old. I could continue such a Anglo hegemony was only an intermittent mates. We get esnmates o? vo~g behavior
· display of deJnosraphic erudition. But ,race phase in Califurnia's an: of identity.... 1his by group fiom commercial polling~·
is different; you are what you say you are, as is a reastertion of the intrinsic demographWe ought to make that change wtth
in a public opini911 polL Prewitt says, ~The ic DNA of the lopger pattern, which is part gusto and grace. ~pie get ~ nasty
measurement of race is not groi.mded in of a California~Mexiro cqntinuum." Is about race and ethniCJty, all t:Jte ume, every·
science, as anthropologisa and biologisa Starr getting set to run for office, or for the where. Countmg that way IS so ftrY 20th
have pointed out for years:'
hills? . .
century. By stoppmg. we can serve our·
Not knowing how to do it, we .do more
'The Potential ritischief of this complex- selves weD and offer a model to the :world
of it. Under undentandable prti!Uie from ity is apparent in The New York Times ?f what a 21st.c~?~ nabon looks Jike -.
Americans of mixl:d race ancestry, we have ·h~e on the California story: "Census . muneasurably diVerse.
engaged in category creep. Once there Confirms Whi~ Are in Minority:' Why
&amp;it Hilttenllew, n senior fellow nt tilt Ameriwere three basic racial classifications oq mischief! Because most Hispanics declare · cma Enterprise Institute, is tilt host-essayist I!{the
Census forms, then lOur, theti five, now sill; themselves to be whites. Because Starr~ PBS spednl"The First Mtlil!lred Century" tmd
"white:' "black 'or African American," "inlrinsic demographic DNA" negleca co-puthor of a new .book I!{ tilt same title (AEI
.
'
"AmeriCan Indian or Alaska Native:• growing cotnmunities of Koreans, Japan· Press, 2000). He is tilt host of tilt weekly pub·
"Asian:'"Narive Hawaiian .oro~ Pacific ~Russianjews,Chinese,Can3dians,Thai, lie television progmm "Think Tank." Ycl~ may
Islander" pluS "Soine Othet ~·And for ~ - and whites. Because fertility send comments · to him vin e-mail:
the first time the Census invited respon· rates in Mexico are sinking rapidly. Because Hiltmailaol.rom.

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HARTFORD- Gospel sing,
Father's House Church, 7 p.m.,
with Trials of Faith, Shadow ol
·the Cross, Paul and Mary
Nichola, Together 4 Christ and
Sheley Johnson. Love offering
to benelk Bend Area Gospel
,Jubilee.

Ridge Road, with Glorylend
Believel&amp; and Builders Quartet,
'SLI'lday 2 p.m.

·BIDWELL -

·
Poplar Ridge

Character building ·list still sounds .like Lindbergh

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In 1965, the United States launched t!ie Early Bird commu·
nicatio!U satellite.
· In 1971, Ruuian·born composer Igor Stravinsky. died in
New York City. .
In 1985,William J. Schroeder be.came the first artificial heart
recipient to be discharged .from the hospiral as he ·moved into
an apartment in Louisville, Ky.
In 1994, Supreme Court Justice Harry A. Blackmon
announced his retirement after 24 years,
In 1994, the pteSidena of Rwanda and Burundi were killed
in a mysterioqs plane crash near Rwanda's capiral; widespread
violence! erupted in Rwanda over claims the plane had been
shot dawn.
1
In 1998, c'o untry singer Thmmy Wynett~ died at her
Nashville, Tenn., home at age 55.
· Ten years: ago: ,·Iraq relucrandy agreed to accept United
N~tions conditions for ending the Persian Gui(War.
·
Five years ago: A sorrowful President Clinton was on hand
at Dover Air Force Base in Delaware to greet the arrival of 33
flag--draped caskets carrying the remains of Commerce Secretary Ron Brown and other victims of a plane c~h in Croatia.
A stolen truck carrying illegal immigrants overturned in
Temecula, Calif., killing eight people. Actress Greer Garson
died in Dallas at age 92.
One year ago: The father of Elian Gonzalez, Juan Miguel
Gonzalez, arrived ip the United States to press for the return of
· his 6·yearzOid "!n to Cuba.

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eftei'GV

wins a,ntest

LOCAL EVENTS
..FRIDAY
.. POMEROY- Meigs High
: ~hoo) , &amp;enlor plays jnclue!ing
':Who Am I This Time?" and
"The Crazy Mlxed·Up Island of
• ·:or. Moreau: $3 for adults ·and
$2 for students.

POMEROY- Meigs County
- Chapter PERl 74, Friday, ·
- Senior CRizans Canter, noon
•·luncheon, followed by meting
and program.
" POMEROY- Fun. Food and
· Fellowship at God's NET, 6 to
10:30 p.m., Friday and Satur·
:•day. Nutritional meals. non-violent vicleo games, pool tables,
.,computer programs, and board
_games.
·
SATURDAY
.
TUPPERS PLAINS-·supl!r
,Saturt;lay at Hlc~ory HUis
' · Church of Christ near Tuppers
I• Plains. Theme Is 'An Amazing
I Change." the conversion of
.. Paul. Time machine, pu'ppets,
claases, nursery through aduh.
·. Registration 9 a.m. Program
· ·enda al 1:30; lunch provided.

Suppo-:f ,G,a,,p
. ~eeting'set.

Have a

local.news ite.m?
Gl"ve· us a call
at 992 ..]56.

,,

COLLEGE NEWS &amp; NOTES

Chasaqe S. Hollon of Long
State Communiry College for Clark,·both of Coolville;Valarie
.announ~1 ·· the winter term.
Karr, Long Bottom; Amber N. Bottom, Dean·V. Hill an.d Tamr.~
'
Named to the president's list Blackston and Ryan R . Rams- C. Pickens, both of Racine, and
.for · earnU!g a perfect grade burg, both of Pomeroy; Jayme Michael E. Crites of Reedsville
GALLIPOLIS - Winter point average of 4.0 were: L. Miller, Portland; and Jeremy were named to the dean's list at
, ,
the school .
quarter graduates of GaUipo)is Chrisry D. Jones and Brenda S. A. Thompson, Shade.
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Career College were: Christi· ,
na Bainter, Beth .Casto, Jaime ; . _ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
Dillon, Kelly Hager,, Tammy
Haner, Heather Lovejoy,
Michelle Montgomery, Jennifer Sowers, Lisa Spurlock,
and Sandra T¥cker.

TUESDAY ·
.
PoMEROY - CHOICE Homl! .
Educators, Tuesday, 1 to 3
p.m..at the Pomeroy Library.
For information, \ammy Jones,
992·6743.

GCC

POMEROY - Bedford Township Trustees, Tuesday, 7 p.m
at the town hall.
·

gr,~ds ·

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· RACINE - Racine Board of
Public Affairs, 7 p.m., munlci·
pal. building.

The community Calendar
11 publl1hsd aa a free ur- ·.
TUPPERS PLAINS.- Eastem vice to non-profit group•
High School .winter sport.s ban- wtlhlng to announce mHI·
lngl·and IJJICial evsnt1. The
quat, 6:30 p.m.
calendar Ia not dsalgnaclto
promote 111" or 1\lnd rateSUNDAY
..
TUPPERS PLAINS - Loyalty era of any type. nama ara
printed only •• spaos pardinner meeting, VFW Post
. 9053, Tuppers Plains hall, 1:3o mila and csflnOI be guaran- .
·
Sunday. Memlilirs, auxll· tssd to be prtntsd a tpeclflc
au1181a lnvlled.. SIBle number of dave.

HonnMIIat :

Wislli~nst

MARIEU4, - A DUIJ!ber
of local students have been ·
named to the . pn;sident's list
and dean's lis~ at Washington

Spacial lUlSI
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Chad

Cbadw#IJ be signing autographs/or
tlil public from 8:30a.m. to 10:30 a.m.

Enter to win autogmpbed msrcbandlse.

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e Saturday, April 21, 2001 (Sign-up deadlins is Aprll6)

You may experience brief
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senJ&amp;ee mterrupt1ons.
Please be msured we will
do everything to·keep ·
interruptiom to :a

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,e or•ce fields - Rain or shine

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e Indivldualtrophies to top three finishing teams
e Games ~ at 8 a.m. - Double elimination
'
e $SO entry
fee per team {8111611 &amp;Bwomen) .
e Must be 18 or older to play
e Register at the PVH Wellness Center
e Make all checks payable to "Make-A-Wish Foundation"

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COM«ffiir.ter Calll·80fJ-800·CABLE

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877·998-3407

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A. member ofGtmeSis Hospital
System·\
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HARRISONVILLE- Har·
· rlsonvllle Lodge 411, Saturday,
7:30 p.m. at the temple.
Refreshments .

PLAGENZ'S VIEW

I, r

Coolville student

..GALLIPOLIS
Gallipolis
J~hurch of Christ in Christi~~!~
Union will be performing an
El?ller Drama "Upon thi.s Roek"

et7p.m.

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.• nouncecl

"POMEROY"' Poplar Ridge
Free Wil Baptist Church, Poplar

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T·shirt/sweatshirt

Holy 1~eek Services

'SUNDAY

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Germariy.

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WATTENBERG'S VIEW

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The two will conduct a question·and· KOPS best loser. Each reteiVed a cash .
answer session concerning issues relating prize and a certificate of recognition .
to Parkinson's disease. The meeting \fill
Johnson read th~ . ru)" for a new con·
be in the O'Bleness' basement conference cest tided "Its·Your Time To Shine." The ·
P
BURG .- ~Q..ciark room 8·9 .
shamrock conteSt was won by Darby and
pital wilt jQkl more than
Trout. Each recei~d a J'OPS charm.
2,000 O·~~tions 'on hpru f8 ' from
Newly elected officers are Janet
1:30 to 4: " p.m. as local hOst for the
Thomas, leader; johnson, co·leader;
Hospice FoJt(ldation of America's eighth
Rhonda Mullins, -~ecrebry; .,:hid' Ellen
Church.
· annual "LMl!g with (}riel" teleconfer·
Darby. treasurer.
·
tn~e.
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MIDDLEPORT - The Visions of
Selected as weight . recorder was
PORTER- Evilning sarvices et
"Caregivi~g· apd ·Loss: Family Needs, Hope will present "In the Shadow of the Mitchell and Trout a~ asW;tan,t weight
Clark Chapel Church are now 7
Professional
"-clpOriiej:• a life·Yia satellite Cross" on Sunday, at 6 p.m. at Hope Bap· recorder. Insrallation of oflicen was held
p.m.
video teleconftrelice,.will exa~ne ways tist Church, 570 Grant St.. Making up the onApri!_k
.
.
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prof~onals
~an · bettet unilersrand and cast are youth and adults of the church.
PORTER -The Rev. Don Can
Week'!y chapter meetings are held on
will preach at Clark Chapel
On Wednesday at 7 p.m. "The Medical Mondays from 10 to 11 a.m. at Cheshire
respond to the needS of family caregivers.
Church, 7 p.m.
.
The progfam v,riU ~ffer · insight and Aspects of the Crucifixion of Jesus United Methodist Church. W~igh·in is
practical'
su~ti,Ons for those assisting Christ" will be presented by M . E. from 8:30 · to 9:45 a.m. For information
GALLIPOUS - P1811Chlng serfamily caregitefs . as they respond to the Plaugher of Chillicothe Anesthesia Asso· on TOPS residents may contact Thomas
Vice at Adlison Frewill 8al)tist .
challenges of caregiving, ·rna~ critical ciates. Plaugher' will discuss the medical at 367-0274 or toll.free at (.80Q.932·
Church, 6 p.m. with Rick Barrus
preaching.
end·of·life decisions, and cope with thejr eVidence, Biblical accounts and current 8677.
grief.
··
·
studies regarding the conviction, bearing
The web site is www.tops.org.
APPLE GROVE- The Mayes
&lt;
The
progfam
will
be
moderated
by
a~d
death
of
Jesus
.
The
presentation
is
Family will be singing at Barton
•
Cokie Roberts of ABC News and will . sa1d to g1ve a new understanding of the
Chapel Church, 6 p.m.
feature a distinguished panel of expertS, torture Jesus endured just prior ta His
~OINT PLEASANT.- Main
with a spe~ ial message from (ormer first death.
painting•tJ~G;·
Street Baptist Church, 1100
ladyRosalyptt Carter.
·
On the church grounds on Saturday at
•
1- .!..
....
'
Main St., cantata 'Cornerstone•,
RIO
GRANDE
The
Universiry
of
~egistration
will
begin
at
t
p.m.
and
2
p.m.
an
E~ster
egg
hunt
and
cet;~brauon
6:30p.m.
there will be a discussion period until .ume for children of the commumry. ages Rio Grande Adult and Continuing Edu·
POINT PLEASANT- Lenten
4:30 p.m. CEUs will be offered for nurs· . 2 through II , will be held ·at Hope Bap· cation will offer a T-Shirt/Sweatshirt
cantata "Once Upon ATree• at
es, social \vorkers, counselors, funeral tist. Games will be played following the Acrylic Pamting class in j'vlay, The class
Christ Episcopal Church, 4 p.m.
will be May 3 from 6:30p.m. to 9 p.m.
directors, clergy, psychologists, physicians, egg hunt and snacks will be provided.
Helen Armstrong of Jackson is return·
Easter Sunday services at the church
and nursing home administrators. There is
MONDAY
a S20 processing fee for CI;.Us.
;-viii include Su?rise, 6:30 a.~., breakfast ing to Rio·Grande to teach this course.
POINT PLEASANT- Kids
Students who participate in the course
Bille Club, Wesleyan Holiness
Seating is limited, so early registration is m the fellowship hall followmg, Sunday
Church, 2300 Uncoln Ave.,
school, 9:45 a.m.; morning Easter. cele· are to bring a blouse, jumper, T-shirt, or
encouraged by calling 424·2650.
every Monday, 6:30-8 p.m. lor
bration at II a.m. and evening visitation sweatshirt that
without
. has been
. . \ .washed
.
ages 6 to 12. For info. call Debfabric
softener.
at
6
p.m:
bie Alexander et 675-5454 or ·
Pre-registration 'for ' the ~nurse is
Debbie Peach6y at 675-1187.
required.
·
TUESDAY
Students can regiiter by contacting
'
GALLIPOLIS · - Ohio Valley
LONG B&amp;fTOM - Holy Week ser·
On
Dale Whitt in Adult and Continuing
Youth Workers Association will
vices at Faith Full Gospel Church will
r;:.
"a l
Education
at 245-7325. The registration -"
meet 7 p.m. at GOOII News .Bapbegin·HolyWeek
services
Monday
with
CHESHIRE
A
program
on
"Pure
fee is $20 per student.
liat Church, George's Creek Rd.
a four-part movie tided "The Gospel of Energy" was given by Ann Mitchell,
when TOPS OH 1383 met recendy at
Jesus Acc.sndiog to Matthew."
WEDNESDAY
POINT PLEASANT- Wednes·
The movie Will be showe Monday, Cheshire.
day nlghl Bible cUts for
Tuesday, Wedne$day and Thursday at the
Mitchell ralked about the fast·paced
preschool up through 12111
church at Tp.m. each evening.
work and the need for a greater store of
grade, 7 to 8:15 p.m. at Gospel
Good
Friday
services
will
be
at
7
p.m.
personal energy:
ATHENS - Athehs County Family
Ughthouse Church, Neal Road.
and .will feature a hymn ~ng directed by
"Energy comes naturally when we pay and . Children 'First Council ~nnounce
Lesaons. refreshments and
special craft night once a .
Sue Matheny. Sunrise service on Easter attention to the building blodcs of good Holly Marie Dunfee, a fifth·grader at
month. l='or lnfonnation call 675morning will be he.Jd at 6:30 a.nl. with a healt~: nutritio~s e~ting~ sensible exercise, Coolville Elementary, has been .selected
7229 0( 675-6620.
choir cantata directed by Barbara Swartz suffic1ent sleep, s:ud Mitchell. She ralked the winner of its calendar art contest.
followed by• a breakfast. Pastor Steve . about how food affects the body by reg- . . Denise Swyers, intersysteins adininis· .
Reed and . the congregation ·invites the ulating ~erve functions i~cluding memo- trator for ACFCFC, said "We are' proud
.public to attend the services.
ry, appeute, menral function and mood.
to have Holly represent Athens Counry at
'
Eating., small amounts throughout the the the state level; she did a wonderful job
1
day (ideaUy, about three or four hours) portraying this year's theme."
chaplain will be the speaker.
helps steady blood sugar levels, she said,
The theme was "Help · Paint Ohio's
suggesting snacks, like an energy bar, low Future Bright" (prevent child abuse and
POMEROY- Poplar Ridge .
fat granola,'C'ereal bars or fruit.
·" · • neglect), and '1t ·:was open to all' fifth'
'
Free Wll Baptist Church,
ATHENS,,
David
Purdy,
R.Ph.,
Oth.er proposals for boosting energy graders· in Athens Counry..
Poplar Ridge Road, with Glory·
regional ParJcinson's Disease. Support levels include taking a fresh air break,
land Believers and Builders
·
· •'
Quartet, S4nday 2 p.m.
·
Group coc;&gt;~dinator for the Central changing people perspective, giving che
,
Soutp.east R,~gion, will be speaker at a right side of the brain a workout with a
· MIDDLEPORT- Hope Baptist
meeting of thlll Parkinsons' Disease Sup- physical, creative, intuitive art like paint·
Church, Sunday, 6 p.m. ·drama
'
I
port Group,Tuesday
at 2 ,p.J1l, at ,O , Beby the Visions of Hope tHied
ing. aower arranging orJWOodcarving.
"In the Shadow of the Cross."
ness Memodal. Hospital in Athens.
Pledges were led by Ellen Darby and
·Presented by voulh and aduHs
Also speaking \vill be his wife, Della Emogene. Johnson. TOPS best loser of
of Hope Baptist.
Purdy, who ·i~ the assistant coordinator. the week was Darby, with Helen Trout as
I I
MONDAY
.
CHESHIRE - ·Disabled Amari·
can Veterans, Chapter 53,
.,
Cheshire, .Monday, dinner at
6:30 p.m.; me.eling at 7 p.m.

:'7.

lenl video glllnlll. poal tables,
computer progl'lllll8. and board
IJIUM8·

· ~TER

'J

·~o·---·

:rase..~-~-

-·
.,.,.__,

-

C.•a..ten-dalk to host
Hospice
CIUiafeMnce
•

BIDWEIJ.- Gotpeleing at LJy. at 2 p.m. wllh "111£ Buildell'a
ing Water Church, 839 Kerr Qulltel" 8lld "The Glofyland
Road, 6-10 p.m.
Blh.,... no.. wa be a c1nner
aflelwanle.
qllllllior •• cal
EVERGREEN - s.-~~cea a1 Pllklr Jomullick at (740)E'"!'II'iliWI &lt;::onmnty Ctud!, 593-7490. Ewrybod'fwllcoma. ·
Sprolglilld TIIWIIIIIus, 7 p.m. . ·
·
Singing by Forgiven 4 and- CHESHIRE- Msmoris1 M1v1ce
preaching by lhs Asv. John Jsl. for ' Jacob Hlcke, 3 p.m .•
fnly..
Chslhlre Uniled Methodist
•

fttdrv. Apll •~.2111

COMMUN1TY NEWS &amp; NOTES

Chun:h wl be having a ••glall

POMEROY- Ftm, Food and
F'elowehip at Gods NET, 6 to
10:30 p.m.• Friday and Salur·
day. Nutritional meals, non-v;o.

e .... , .,..
'-•*-- .,.,..._...__,....
,..,_._,_ ___ AI_
_....,.._..,.
•-,.,,._ r ..... ''?I,__,. ____ ""'

__

.

Bend

PapAS

·~

,.

�Page A&amp;

•

The Dally Sentinel
WASHINGTON (AP) - Despite Democratic complaints
about his past political ,work. the lawyer nominated by President
Bush to be the administration's advocate before the Supreme
Court says he can put his politics aside if confirmed by the Senate.
"[ believe when ~ serve in the Department of Justice you
put your partisan eomiderations aside," said Theodore Olson, the
president's choice for solicitor gener.at
.
But Democrats pointed to Olson\ partisan writinp against the
Clinton administration and said he argued cases against nowestablished feder.allaws.
"i can't find any parallel in history of anyone who w:u as
actively involved in politics as you and went on to become solicitor general;' Sen. Dick Durbin, D-lli., told Olson at a Senate
Judiciary Committee confirmation hearing Thursday.

WASHINGTON (AP) - fourth-graders read about as well
as they did eight years ago, new test results show, but while the
best readers are improving, children having the most trouble are
reading more poorly.
Reading results for the 2000 National Assessment of Educational Progress, known as "the nation's report card;' show that
fourth-graders' average scores in a 500-point test came in at 217
last year - identical to the results in 1998 and 1992. The scores
were ·slighdy better than in 1994, when tbe average student
scored 214.
Bill ,while students in the top I 0 percent increased their average sT:ore a bit - from 261 to 264 - the average scores of readers in the bottom 10 percent dropped from 170 to 163.
"The results are· mixed and, in many ways, discouraging," said
·Marilyn Whirry, a high iehool English teacher in Manh~ttan
Beach, Calif., who is also a member of the National Assessment
Governing Board, Which .develops and reviews the tests.

1,2001

FDIC.recom.......iChinges···:

Powell iueets with leadership

Hilary: no presidency for me

'

I

Part of Tripp suit dismissed·

".rl

•
•

for unemployment'rising·

l:.qllt•l

.

.

.

•

,. . . . ._ ·---=

IM ... !td'-Y

a.tcllfiOUIII
Puior.Tany Stewat

A. . A . . .

Sunday Sdooo1 • 9:l0 Lm.
Wanhip • IO:lO Ltn., 7:00p.m.
We.. t y Scrvic:a 1 p.m.

...

............ a.. atCPIItot

.............
WonhipSetvice· 9Lm.

Communion ·IOa.m.
SundaySdoooi · IO:l5a.m. ·
Youth- 5:30 pn Suoday
.
Bible Sludy
7 pn

-....y

Flnlllopdot C1Mudo

, _ Mork Moavw
6lh and Palmer St., M;ddlepon

' _....,. Chm at CPIItot
Pucor: Tom Runyon

Stlnday School • 9:15 o.m.
Worah:ip - 10: IS 1.m:. 7:00p.m.
Wodnudoy Service-7:00p.m.

Sunday-. 9:l0 LID.
Wonhip s 10:30Lm.

Sil•er Rullopdot
Pastor: Steven K. Little
Sunday School- IOa.m.
p.m.

ML U-llapdd .

ll1dror7- Cllo&lt;dl atCIII'III
EY....Iilt Mitre Moon:

Sunday School-9:45a.m.

Sunday Sd100I • 9 a.m.
Wonblp • 10 I.Dl., 6:30p.m.
Wedneoday Services· 7 p.m.

Evcnine -6:30p.m.
Wedneoday S..Vh:co · 6:30p.m.
- l l o p d o t Chotrd!

.......... Cltt1odoo Clotudl
, _ RobertMuuer

ol.;, Bend, Root&lt; 124, Rao:mc, OH
P1110r : Daniel Mecea
Sundly SChool- 9:30 a.m.
Sundly Wonhip. 10:30 a.m.•
Wcdnelday B;ble Study • 6:00p.m

Sunday Scbool-9:30 Lm.
WoniUp·IO:lOLm., 7:30p.m.
W«1neoday Scnico 7:30p.m.

R

--__

I I C.... DrtldMI Clludl ,
Sunday ocbtlol • !DolO a.m.
9:30 ..,.,_,
' .Bible Salt1y- 7 p.IL

w-., .

I

HUioldol1qlloiQtudl

l •• ~ atCIIrlot

Philip Slurm
Sunday
School: 9:30 s.m.
WunhipSeJvi&lt;o: JlklOLJD.
Bible Sludy, \VIIdo
y, 6:30p.m.

Sl. ~t. 143 jUII off Rt. 7
Pastor: Rev. Jamea R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday Unified Service
Wonbip - ll¥.30a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedncolay Scrvic:Co -7 p.m.

1

Wlll.lllperintendont
SIDiay - p • IO:JO Lm.
Chrdo .. CllrPot
l-7..r1241W
EYIIIJdlat: llemil s.icn1.
Sunday Bible Study· 9:l0 a.m.
Wonblp: 10:30 a.m. lnd 6:l0 p.m.
We&lt;llooday Bible Study· 7 p.m.

·--lllpdat
1

~

;,iWf,~~~PI~&amp;q~~~~-llltfl
i
t,· ,
V

'·

..J

,

ftr-IITcr/TIV-.....,,.,. ",.,,,. OIIIM/yMI

""....- -.....,......of.
•.....
i! - HfllifiM/_..,_,_ ,

-CIIIrdoatCIIrlotla

,ML Morfob llapllot
· Founh .t Main St., M;ddkpo&lt;t
Putor: Rev. Oilbcrt Crai&amp;, Jr. ~
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:4!5 f.M.

PuiOr:Jlm. HuJhel
Sunday School - II a.m.

~u­

- ... ~-·-"'

c...,.

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

I

Worlhip · 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
- y Services · 7:l0 p.m.

( llltttilol(,nd
MI.- Clton1l at God
Mile Hill Rd., Rac:inc

Sunday EvenlltJ- 6:00p.m.

~:BriceUu

Rulland rne wmllpli.t

Sunday Sc:hool· 9:4~ a.m.
Bvealna • 6 p.m.
Wednelday Services· 7 p.m·. ·

Salem SC.
Pas!Qr: Rev. Poul Taylor
Sunday S&lt;hool- 10 Lm.
Evmina • 7 p.m.
Wednc&amp;day Service~ • 7 p.m.

_,.,,_,.ATI/T/JiMI"'-ctATIITII4/HAf..........
,_.,,•

· •

AnllqtdtJ lopllol •
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
WOI'Ihip - 10:4!5 a.m.

A

....
.
·free

r;,;:

Sundly School· 10 a,m.
Wcnlllp·lla.m.

llartford, w. v..

n.·.............. ,........,.,_,..

.·,. -CIIa&lt;dloiGod
· PIIcor. Ron.Heath
1
SundayWmhlp - IOa.m., 6 p.m.
W - y Scnlces -7 p.m.

Secoodllopllol Cllurdo

'

;

Ravenswood, WV
Pastor: David W. McClain
Sunday SchooiiO ..,.
Momina woni!ip 111m Evenina • 7 pm
Wcdneoday 7 p.m.

Sr-FinlCbo&lt;dlatGod I
Apple lnd Second Stt.
Putor: Rev. David Ruucll
Sunday School and Wonhlp- 10 Lm.
Evenll!l S..Vk:et- 6:l0 p.m.
~som--6:l0p.m.

( .t(

I

112 __ olflll. 325
Putor. Rev. O'Dell Maolcy
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip . 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service 7:30p.m.

Ito Ill

1

Cll.rdl of God tfP111t eey
OJ. Wlllte Rd. of! S1. Rt. 160 ·
Putor: P.l. Chapman

k)a...a
PuWr: Wayne R. JcweU
Sunday Serwic.eJ • 10:00 a.m. A 7:00p.m.

'rhutsday - 7:00p.m.

SundaySelvk:a: 10a.m.A.6p.m.
Servl&lt;a · 7 p.m.

r

Puton.lohn.tPauyWadc

.,

Oirton. W .Va.

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
. Wonhip 7 p.m.
Wtdllelday Service · 1 p.m.

Savice lime: Sundly 10:30 a.m.
Wedneoday7pn

.

0

0

.4... • tG.-U.L
1m S. Third St., MKidlcpon
· PutorTeresa Davia
Sunday IUVke, 10 un.
Wcdnaday len'ice. 7 p.m.

Sunday SChool • 9:15a.m.

-

Wonhip- 10 a.m.
Youth Fellowtl!ip. ,Sunday • 6 p.m.

a

.

a

_

-Calor

Laurd CIIII'Fn&lt; Medlodlt1 Qu&lt;dl
PuiOC Donald Balis
Sunday School .·9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30a.m. and6p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:00p.m.

nt:lele,en•J'IIIIwllllpMIIIIIII'J
New Lime Rd., Rut1and
Pastor: Rev. MIIJIR!I J. Robinaon
.Scnices: Wodneoday. 7:l0 p.m.
Sunday, 2:30p.m.

Sunday School • I0 a.m.
Wonhip 9 a.m.
a

~
Putoc Dewayae Stutler
Sunday School • 10 -.m.
.
Wonhip - 9a.m.
Wednuday Services - 10 a.m.

-........Church at 1 - Cll..r.t
of Lauer Day Saints
Porlland-Raci~ Rd.
Putor: Michaei'!Juhl
Sundly School 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
~)'Services 7:00p.m.

--c-alty Cllu&lt;dl
Putor. Theron Durlllln
Sunday -9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednelday- 7 p.m. · •

a

111oCUNittl-

'

'

I ttlllt·t ""

cro...r.

PineOrove

.

, .....v...,_()oo&lt;dl

M...... Star
Pootoo Dewayno Slutler
Sunday School- II o.m. •
Wonhlp- IO·a.m.

~-- ·.

laotlAtort
Putor. B r i a n Sunda)l Sclaool ~ 10 a:m.
-p-9a.m.

Thom---

1411 B...,._ Sl., Synocutc
RoY. Mike
Sunday School . 10 1.m.
Evenln1 • 6 p.m.
Wodneaday Scnico • 7 p.m.

~y-7p.m.

..... c-ooiiJQoordo
OlfRt 124
Pastor: P.d1tl Hart ,

Ourllorioorl.utllaraa Cllttrdl
Walnut and Herwy SIS., Ravenswood., W.Va.
PallOr: DaVid Rliuell

Brian Harl&lt;nen
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship· 11 a.m.
Wtdnclday 1 p.m.

Sunday School- 10:00 a.m.
Won hip: · I I a.m.

Cooi.W. Unlled Medlodlot Plrtllt

St Pou1 Lalberaa Cllu&lt;dl
Comer Sycamore &amp; Second Sl., Pomeroy
Rev. Donald C. Prill
Sunday School • 9:4!1a.'m.
WOIIhip - II a.m.

Sunday Sctlool- 9:30 Lm.
7:30p.m.

W~ip · l~:30a.m.,

ML OUvo VIii... Mllloodllt
Qff 1,~ behind WUke1ville

P"utt: Rev. Ralph sp('n:t
Sundi)' School - 9:30 ~m .

Sundl~

Belbel Clotudl 1
Towlllhip Rd., 468C
Sunday Sc:hool · 9 a.m.

Faith Geope1 CltuNit
Con, Bottom
Sunday School - 9:30
Wonhip- 10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m .

Lm.

Wollhip - IOa.m.
Wednesday Services· 10 a.m.

Hoddftipot1 Cb~B&lt;b
Onnd Street

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip • II a.m.
Wednelday Servicea • 8 p.m.

•

WOI'!Ihip- 10:30 a.m., 7 p~m.

..

Thundly Servk:eo • 7 p.m.

Ton:hChu&lt;dl

111e1p c-rod•• hrtlh

Sunday School - 9:30 Lm.
W011hip . 10:30 a.m.

Northeut Cluster
AlliN
Puwr. Jane Buttie
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhlp • II a.m., 6:30p.m.

lllone Cbopel Clou&lt;dl
AC:hool - 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.
Wednesday Scnl&lt;e . 7 p.m.

· Wonhip • 9 Lm. .'IUelday Servk.es - 7 p.m.

'

Co. Rd.63

\;1/&lt;t I"\' lit '
lllldd\&lt;port Cllun:b or die Nuareoe
Pl'ator: Aile~ fdldcap
Sunday Schooi310:JQ • .m.
Worship s 10:30 a.m. , '6~1f-1J1.
Wcdne...,_ Servkea · 7 p.m.

Putor:~·
Jane Beattie
'Mnhip · 9 a.m.

Sunday School · 10 a.m..

Pastor: Alleft Midcap

nKnday Sef"fflles - 7 p.m.

Ply•tiUo &lt;4t•aolly Cllu&lt;dl

Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

CooiviUc Chun:h
Main A Fifth SL
Sunday School • 10 a.m.

..

Bailey Rto~ Road
Pucar: Re!l. Emmen Raw10n
Su*aay Eveaina7 p.m.
Thunday Scnico • 7 p.m.

--

Rev. Donald C. Fritz
Won.hip • 9:00 a.m.
· llulldoy School - 10:00 a.m.

p....,,

'"'--·~

Sl RL 124. Racine
Pulor: WiU.iam Jfc:IMck
Sundly School- J0 a.m.
E.Yening · 7 p.m. ·

Wedoeaday Services · 1 p.m.

MWdJtport l'elllt(;Oitall
Third Ave.
Putar: Rev. Clart Balcer
Sunday School-10 1.m.
Bvenina • 6 p.m.

Wcdnnday Services - 7:00p.m.

-

l't t·,IJI It ri.ttt

'

PaMor: Rev. Kriaana RobllliOO
SundaySchooi - IOa.m.
· Worahip - II a.m.

Wonhil) ~ 9 a.m.
Sunday School - 9:4$ a.m.

11114dlepen Proobyoortan
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
_Wonhip 10 a.m.
a

\dlt llli,,

'-t lt ' lllil ll:ll
..--.---r;-

I

'

J

,~

Mulberry H11. Rd .. POITI(roy
Put.or: Roy Lawin11ky
S11urday Services:
Sobbatll School • 2 p.m.

Mt. Ollv~ Com•unlly Ch•n:h
Putor: Lawrence Buah
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Evenins • 7 p.m.
Wtdncday Sef'\llce • 1 p.m .

Worship - 3 p.m.

Untied Fallll Cbun:h
Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By-Pus
Pa5lor: Rev. Roben E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.

Fall GoopoiiJplhoolt
J304.S Hiiand Road, Pomeroy
Paslor: Roy Hunter

Sunday School · I 0 a.m:
Evenina 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday &amp; Thursday · 7:30p.m.

l

Harri1011ville Pre.hyterian Chun;b

Wednesday 7:30p.m.

Soulh Bethel New -r.-..1
Silver Ridae
Pastor: Roben Barber

Joppo
• Pu10r: Bob Randolph

- c.m,....,. Choorch

Uevina ROid, West Colwnbia. W.Va.
Clyde Femll
Sunday School 9:30 am
Sunday .even ina len'ice 6 pm
Wednesday service 1 pm

S\Uiday S.hooiiO o.m.
Evenina ·7:30p.m.
_ , _ 7 7!30jf.il.

.

Sunday Sdouol 10:20-lla.m.
Rdif:f Soolely/Prieathood 11:0!1-12:00 noon
Sacrament Service 9-10:1!1 a.m.
HomemakinJ meetinc. Itt 'Thun. - 7 p.m.

PastOr: Wayne Bakolm

Senietll: Thun. Nitea 7:00 Pin
New church No Sunday ICIVice cillblilhed:

Putor. Sam ...........

Wonhip- 10:4So.m. ..
Bll&gt;lo lltudY wed. 7:00p.m,

Rl.160,~247or446-7486

Cod'• T~ Ill Pralle
31665 McQuire Rd. Pomeroy. Ohio

'lJQudt
57S Pari St.. MKidlcpon

s - ,.-.-9;-Je·a:mr ·- ----

a...r.t.tLto-ySolllll.. -· .... ·-·

.... Gospel Cllttrdo "'lkiJriatRt.ll8. Anliquily
Puaor: Jcue Morris
Aut. Puton: Jim Morria
Sm-icet: Saturday 7:30p.m.

M''l; rtC=

.c.n.tl II•
CarmelA Buhan Rds.
Rao:iac,Chio
PuWr. Dewayno Sluder

a

a

o

s.......

I .llll-r-ll&lt;ll "ai11h

Pucor: Bill Slalen
Sunday Savica 10 a.m. 4 7 p.m.
Wednelday - 7 p.m. IL Youth 1 p.m.

Pucor: Steve Reed
Sunday School- 9:30 Lm. ·
Wonhip -9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday 7 p.m.
FridAy - fellowlhip service 7 p.m.

Pastor: Ron Fierc.e
Suaday School - 9: I !5 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:1!5 a.m.

c-

377l!Je&lt;qn C...t; Rood, Oall;potit, OH

Lona-

Wonhip- 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.

Tbunday Bible Study and Youlh - 1 p.m.

Llrt V1etorr

-

'

, .... hi! Geopo1 Qoordo

Sunday Sd!ool · 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.
lbunday Service~ - 7 p.m.

l'aRocM;keFomnan
Puior.Emeritus~­

Cllftoa ....... _ .. a.m.

601 SCOODd Ave. Muon
Til-5017

llockSprlttp
PM&amp;or: Kc:ilh Rader

lloJo1dil Ll&amp; Clotordo
ioo N. ind Ave.. Middlepan
Wonh;p. I0:00 am
Wednelday ServW;n • 7 p.m.

~ur..c­

"Full-Ootprl Cllur&lt;h"

~Rod Brower
Wanhip • 9:l0 a.m.
S.,...y School- 10:35 a.m.

Gnllam Ualled Melhodllt
Wonhip ·9:30a.m. (151 .t 2nd Sun).
7:30p.m. (3nl.t 4th Sun)
Wednelday Servi" ·7:30p.m .

Pomeroy PW:, Co. Rd.

S.ha"•c

Pulon: Rev. MaoyoodHaroldCoot

Sunday School - 9 Lm.
Wonhip- IOa.m.

,_G.... •111e- Cllordo

81. ..... Ltolloeo.-

CahiiJ -Oordo
Sunday Sdoool · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip 10:301.111.. .7:30 p.m.
Wednc:oday SaYico · 7:30p.m..

47439 lloibel Rd., a..-

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DicteM

PaS10fj Rev. Bladwood

Hayman
SundaySdouol - llkOOa:m.
Sooday S..Vico . 6:00p.m.
Wcdoelday Service-7:00p.m.

S~ySdoool - 9t.m.
WoniUp · IOun.

Sunday tcflool. 9:30 Lm. •
Sunday wonllip ·7 p.m.
Wodnudoy pqycr meetiaJ· 7 p.m.

51.

Rtv. -

1

Senilce: Friday, 7 p.m. .

MIMn••

LeadiiiJ Crr.ek Rd., RutJand
Puwr: Rev. Dewey Kina;

'

1.aaot. W.V.. RL I
"-:Brian May
s.dly Sdlool · 9:JO &amp;.Ill
Won10p - 7:fll p.t1L
- y 1lib1e Sbaly · 7,00 p.m.

-

Alb St.. Middlepon

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PuWr. Helen Kline

·. PiMor: Ariua Hun

'99
_s6ooo·.,.,._. ~ ~
• $4000 ,-·

7

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Sunday adlool 9:l0 a.m.

m N. 2nd sc. Mlddlopon

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Paaor:William-

Alii- Clttttdl

Sunday Sdaooi - 9::30 a.m.
Worahip II :00 un.

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Wunhip • IOLm., 7 p.m.
Wednelday Sin'ica -1 p.m.

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llcv. l'llill;pllidcaour

S,..ylldtool - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - IO:lOUL
Wedneoday$cn.ico- 7p•.

(ltlttt ( littrtlll,

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Haritonville ROIId
-.
..._ Charles M&lt;:K&lt;nzie
Sandoy School9: 30 a.m.
WorJh.ip - I J a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Servke 7:00p.m.

-~tiCIIrlot

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Suadoy- - 10 .....
Wonhip 9 I.JD. '

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Hyoellla- Clla&lt;dl
Rev. Mark Michael
Sunday Scholl! - 9:30 Lm.

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Sunday wonhip 10:30 a.m. ll7 n,.m.
.Wedneoday JX'81'"' ~- 7 p.m.

-a.dltiQrill
c.m. ofSt RL 124 .t a.-y Rd.
Mlniolor. Doug Sbamblin ·

Pasaor: Ioe N. Sayre

Old-,... Wlllloplltl C1ltudl
28601 St. RL 7. Middlcpoll
Sunday ~ • 10 a.m.
' Evmina .. 7:00p.m.
n..ndayScm--7:00

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Suooloy Sdooo1 ·10:00Lm.
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Sunday Sc:hool· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Youth MWawr: a;u AmbeiJer •
Sunday-. 9:l0 .....
Worship· 8:00-a.m.. 10:30 a.m.• 7:00p.m.
Wodnudoy Scnicoo • 7:00 p.m.

Wonhip-ll•.m.• 7:00p.m.

....

Wllleyu Bible- lllun:ll
75 Pearl St., M;ddlcpon.
Puto&lt;' Rev. Doug eo.
Stmday Worihip 9:30p.m.. 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Service 1:30 p.m.

-~fiQrill

Putor.Ri&lt;I&lt;Rule
-llopdot
Sundly School - 9:l0 Lm.
Wonltip • 10:40 a.m.. 7:00p.m.
Wedneoday5cnices-7:00p.m.

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SdoooJ .

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Sunday Sdlool ~ 9:30-.m.
Woniup . 10:30 a.m.. 6:10p.m.
w 1 ''J Sa-vita • 1 p.m.

-ySdoooi - IOa.m.
Wonlbip - 9a.m.

Sunday school • 9:30a.m.

0

41872 PomeroyE. L1m1r O'BI)'Illl
Sunday Sdouol • 9:l0 Lm.
Wonh;p.J0:4hm.. 7:00p.m.
. WedneJday·s.n;... .. 7:00p.m.

99 ..,.,...,m 1

31!1$1 -

Z1M a.dlflekW
.........,., l!lftiaoovUic Rd. {111.143)
, _ ..,.. WllfiOa

Wednelday &amp;:n'i'* . ,7 p.m.

.

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Sandoy Sdouol -9:)0 Lnt.
Wonhip- IO:lO Lm.. 6:30p.m.
Wed! hy Services ·6:30p.m.

FaMil)lopiiiiCIMudo
Railroad Sl., M - ·
Sundly Sctk.ol· 10 a.m.
Wotlhip. Il a.m., 6 p.m.

.~ .

ond-largest daily point gain,
after the .499.19 it rose on
March i6, 2000.
The Labor · Department
reported Thursday that initial
applications for jobless benefitS
climbed by 18,000 to a seasonally adjusted . 383,000 ' for the .
·Actual Size 1x3
workweek ending March 31.
· That was the highest level
• ·1 Person per ad
since July 4, 1998, when claimS
date Friday
stood at 384,000.' Last · \Veek's '
increase in- claims ·was bigger ~ April13th
.Kall Cunningham
than many ~nalym were
Happy Easter!
';Deadline
expecting.
Love, Mom' &amp;.. Dad
The more stable ·four-week
l : April 6th 12 noon.
moving average of jobless
~----------~~
claim~. which smooth~-s out
Mall or Drop off at the bally Sentinel
\Veek-to-week fluctuations, rose
111 ·Court Street, Pomeroy, 'Ohio 45769
last week 'to 377,500. That was
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
the highest level sine~ March 17
•
••
when claims stood at 377,750. ·
• Child's Name
•
:• From-:-------..,...:
_____;_ ________ :•
Some analysts s.1id the claims
report suggested weak growth
• Your Name
•
in new jobs added to the
: Address---'~-----'' ------- •
nation 's payrolls in March ,
•
•
whi ch is part of Friday's
, Phone"-------------~~-­ ••
employment report. But others
:
Ads Must Be Prepaid
!
suggem the level of claims may
~.~---·······
be pointing to no job S\Owth.
•

I

., ftntl!opllol
£Ill Main SL
Sunday Schooi .. 9:JO a.m.
Worship • I0:30 a.m.

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Suoday Wonbip-IO:OOLOL
SandoySctvico-7p.a

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Sandoy Scbool· JfrlO L1L

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I'IM«: Rev. Samuel W. Bli)'t

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9:30

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Wonllip • II a.m.. 6 p.lll
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s.la)' School 10:15 a.m.
Holy Eucllaria 11 :00 1.01.

Wonloip- l:l,, IO:l01.111., 7 Wodncocloy- • 7 p.IIL

p

MANSALAY, Philippines (AP) - Communist rebels released
their last remaining hos.tage Friday, making way for new peace
!;Ilks with t~e goyernment aimed at ending 30 years of insurgency.
The New People's Army turned over Army Maj,. Noel Buan in
a small mountain village about ISO miles south of Manila on
Mindora island.
.
Buan, captured in July !999, was given to ~ citizen's group and
the International Committee of the Red Cross. His wife and
daughter were present.
"This is )ong oveidue;' said Buan's wife, Cielo, said shordy
before the reunion. "I've always kept the house clean and stored
simple foods and drinks in the house for ·him."

_

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lllonl0p -10:30ua.IOIII6p.m.
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Sundly: AdWt ,....., ..... -

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WoniUp • 10:4, uo..

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ldomilll S....ico 11:00 L&amp;
, E-"'1Semce · 6:00p.&amp;
WodnudoySemce.7:30p.m.

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\¥11111 ta, Savic.a . 7 p.DJ.

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Burfulabooa •742-7606

Rebels free .last hostage

With a Daily Sentinel ·i-,:::

· Easter G · · · ·

M't # I

........
Sllllday Sd100I
• 9:)0~
LID. ·

BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP) - By pressing hard for the
eimadition ofSlobodan Milosevic, the U.N. war crimes tribunal
has hit a sore spot with th~ Serbs, who contend the court has singled them out in its quest to bring suspects to justice.
Tribunal registrar Hans Holthuis said Friday he gave Yugoslav
Justice Minister Momcilo Grubac the i":tematio~al arrest ~rrant
for Milosevic, who was indicted for crtmes agamst humaruty m
1999 for his brutal crackdown on ethnic Albanians in Kosovo.
"i handed over 'the indictment and the warrant of arrest, and
Mr. Grubac promised.to have it served on Mr. Milosevic in person," Holthuis said.
The handover of the warrant was largely symbolic, and the
government did ,no!: 'imrilediately respond.

a..-c. .. a.w

Wonloip- ltluo., 6 p.IIL
-ltlldarScrvka - 7p.&amp;

'

Exlradition move irks Serbs

I 1

s.,tlal' Sdlool • II L1L

-w.v..

HONOLULU (AP) -Jackie Thuener says she doesn'~ make
enough money as a high school biology teacher, so shes been
spending afternoons working at a kenneL .
.
Now the kennel job is all she has. Strikes by 13,000 public
5chool teachers and. 3,100 state university faculty members have
shut down Hawaii's public education system in. what is believed_
ro be the first labor actions to paralyze all public educabon m a
state.
About 180,000 public school children and 42,000 University
of Hawaii students are out of school because of the stnke.
Thuener's long hours at McKinley High School i_l) Honolulu
and her part-time job caring for dogs leave her litde tm)e at
home with h,e r 9-year-old son.
'

Make .Sdmeone ·Feel'
AL · .

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--.....-·TRA SPE I

., "

33226~··- ....

J&gt;uior, Neil T Suodly Serviceo- llkOO LID. ... 7 p.m.

I

WASHINGTON (AP) .•
· The number of Americans filing new 'claint ft!r ·state unem'
' • • ployment insurance rose last
week to the tughest level since
'I .
1998, fresh evidence that com.l
panies are sheddi!lg ,worken, to·
cope with the weak eeonomy.
Econoll)ists said Thursday's
report is consistent With their
forecasts
that the nation'!
1
'
unemployment rate for March
•
. - which is released Friday by
the governmeni - ·- 'will climb
"
to 4.3 percent from February's
4.2
percent.
••••
"The labor market is weak
but not collapsing;• said Merrill
Lynch economist K.1ren. Dex.ter. "Jobless claims ... re'main in a
•
range ,consistent with .slower
growth, but no recession."
On Wall Street, investors
focused their attention on good
•
•
earnings news finm Dell Computer and Alcoa, which gave .
stocks a big bOost. The Dow
Jones industri;il I average rose
402.63 points to close at
9,918.05.1t .was the index's sec- ·

,

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Wcnhip - 9:30 ....
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l i n l - y o l - . 7:00 , ... -

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s.day .schooi9:1S a.llll..

......... IO:lOuo., 6p.a.
... , 1)~ · 7p..a. ,

tfiC..
P.O. Box 467, 1lucldia, ~

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

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l6tiotor. Noil-

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m Gnnl s. .• Middlopod
Sunday IChool - 9:30a.m.

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212W. MaioSI.

New Lana Rood
s - y. IOa.m. ood7:lOp.a

Sunken volcano enapts

· · · . "·
•
·Number of dalms

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Wunhip • II a.m. ood 6 p.m.
WedneodaySetvice - 7p.m.

Criticism follows Davis speed•

U

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Wontlip - 10:4.S a.lll., 1 p.llL
Wee• " ' s.nns. 1 p.m.

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the government and on b~half of the
American people about thear status and
their ·welfare. And we would look for
the reassurance of actually seeing
them...
President Bush said Thursday , the
.administration was "working all diplomatic channels'; to win the Americ:ans'
release. He expressed regret that the
pilot of the Chlnese jet 6g~ter 'in the
collision over the South Ch_ma Sea was
still missing.
·
·
Bush told a convention of newspaper
editurs, however, that China must per-·
mit the crew members to return home.
And he did not yield to Chinese
demands for an aJfolOgy..

•

.'

........,..992-5191
-a....WIIIcrE.Hciu
S.. C... 4:4H: I 5p.a: 5:l0 p.a.

~fl-a.totAr I I

WASHINGTON (AP) -The Bush any details about 'the meeting or co~ern in the United States on behalf
administration, picking up the pace of explain why its start was delayed by of their families, certainly on belulf of
diplomacy with China over an Ameri- more than an hour.
can surveillance plane, is focusing its
"We are in fairly intense ullcs," he
efforts on the release of the 24 crew said-outside the U.S. Embassy.
members and contesting their deten- . In Washington, there was no immedition on legal and humanitarian ate reaction to the development.
grounds.
American diplomats had one meeting
Hopes for a resolution of the standoff ·with the crew at the outset of the
rose Friday when American diplomats standoff, and based on what they were
in China were permittc4 to meet with . told. and saw, the State Department said
the crew on a southern Chinese island. Thurklay there was no indication the
The muting was the second the crew Americans had been mistreated.
has had with U.S. officials since their . "They were in good health. They
plane made an emergency landing Sun- were in good spirits.They said they had
day on China's Hainan island after col- not been mistreated.Their living condiliding with a Chinese jet fighter.
tions were quite adequate;' department
' Ambassador Joseph Prueher spoke to spokesman Richard Boucher said. ·
reporters in Beijing but did not g•ve
And yet, he said, there is " enormous

.a ~-.

--.....

Diplomacy centers ·on U.S. access to crew

WASHINGTON (AP) - All banks should pay for deposit
insurance according to their ~isk ljlffa~ure, and the $100,000 limit
on account coverage should · be ~~ed ro inflation, the insurer
FDIC is recommending to Congre~!
Donna Tanoue, chairwoman of the Federal Deposit Insurance
COrp., said Thul'Sday the changes are needed ro keep banks safe
for depositors and keep credit flowing to Americans. .
"If we do· not begin now to change some of the rules that govern our deposit insurance system, it is likely to take a toll on the
safety and soundness of the banking industry;' Tanoue said at a
news co'nfe·rence.
•
That could happen, she warned, when a slumping t:conomy
WASHINGTON (AP) - ·The U.S. embassies iri Paraguay, brings banks and thrifts losses that deplete the federal insurance
Uruguay and Ecua.dor and the U.S. consulate in Guayaquil •. funds for those institutions.
Ecuador, will be closed on Friday because of security concerns,
a State Department official said Thursday night.
The official declined to provide details on the specific reasons
for the closures.
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) observers called
Employees are expected to report to work, ~ut the offices will Gov. Gray Davis's first statewide
the power crisis
be closed to the public.
unsatisfying and short on substance.
A de'cision will be made over the weekend on whether the .. The five-minute speech Thursday night
to deliver the
offices will reopen on Monday.
political punch Davis needed to overcome the potential fallout
__.,from blackouts and sky-high electricity bills; the observers said.
"There was an awful lot of buildup for a speech that didn't really have a .new initiative or an element of drama in it;' said D.-n
WASHINGTON (AP) - . Secretary of State Colin Powell Hallin, a political scientist at the University of California at San
spoke Thursday with Isr.aeli and Palestinian leaden after he Diego.
·
,The speech came jjS the operator of the State's power grid said
learned that Israeli soldiers fired on a convoy carrying Palestinian
security chiefS.
.
. California will see more than a month of rolling blackouts if res"We wanted to ensure that escalation would not ensue;' State idents use as mu~h power this summer as last summer.
Department spokesman Richard Boucher said.
The incident came ,after high-level security offici'als from both
side! held incondqsiVe Wks in Israel about how to halt the
bloodshed in the region•.
·
NEW YORK (AP) - . Sen. Hillary Rodham &lt;:;linton, who has
A U.S. representative attended the meeting "to facilita'te, to long bee'! speculated as a possible presidential candidate, told The
monitor and to report back any developl)1ents" to Powell, New York Post that she has ruled out running for the White
Boucher said. "We think they had a positive and useful excllange, House not just in 2004, bur in 2008 and beyond. ·
but I'm' not in a p\)sidon t~ go into detail on that particular
The statement came when the former first lady was pressed to
meettng.
clarify a comment she had made earlier, referring to the presi-·
dency as "not something I'm going to be doing."
· Clinton was asked by the Post: "So, Sen. Clinton, are you rul~
ing out a run for president not just in 2004, but' 'in 2008 and·
WASHINGTON (AP)- A federal judge ruled Thursday that . beyond?" .
Linda Tripp, the former Pentagon employee whose secredy taped
"Yes," replied Clinton, according to the Post account.
phone calls triggered the impeachment crisis of the Clinton pres-,
idency, cannot sue the White House.
The decision by US. District Judge Emmet Sullivan came in
Tripp's lawsuit against the government for releasing damaging
BROOKINGS, Ore. (AP) -A volcano has been erupting on
information about her at the height of the petjury and obstruc- the ocean floor off the southern Oregon coast since Tuesday
tion investigation of Clinton in 1998. Sullivan said the Privacy night, but1 it poses no threat to ships or coastal communities, sciAct under w~ich Tripp is suing does not cover the executive entist~ say.
'·
'
office of the presideni.
The eruption 130' miles off the coast has generated more than
The Defen5e . Department, Tripp's employer at the time, 1,000 minor earthquakes that continued late. Thursday. A few
revealed to The New Yorker that she wrote on a form that she'd quakes ha"'i beet:t powerful enough to be detected by land~based
never been allisted.ln her teens, Tripp was arrested for grand. lar- instruments, with the largest· measuring 4.5 magnitUde.
.
ceny.
. . .
Scientists with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Admil)-Portions ofTripp's suit con.ttnue against the Pentagon and two istration have been using undersea instruments to track activity at
of its employees. But Sullivan said, "The Office of the President- the volcano, on an undersea ridge that runs off southern Oregon
White House Office is not subject to the terms of the Privacy and northern California,
·
Act:' which protects the confidentiality of personal information . - - - - - - - - : : - : -.- - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
about federal employees. Tripp had alleged that the Whit~ House
- ' was behind the P~;ntagon's .release of the data.
·
.
'

f

l ttiit'd Brl'lltn·tt
ML HetiDOn United Brfthrtn
Ia Chriat O.~h
Texu Commurtity off CR 82
Past&lt;lr: Robcn Sanden
SUIIday School · 9:30a.m.
Won.hip • 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wtdnelday Services - 7:30 p.m.
Edtn United B~thrtn In Chrkl
2 In miles n011h or Reedsville
on Slate Route 124

Pastor: Rev. Robert Markley
~
Sunday School .. II il.ln.
Sunday Worship · 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services -7:30p.m.
Wednesday Youth Service · 7:30p.m.

,.

·~ .@~Jb®

t"; Run

~[L~©if~@~O©®

Friday,

. cabinetMaking
'
Syracuse

YQu'va got queptlons. We've got a~swers,®
106 North Second Ave. • Mlddlepbrt, OH 45760

(t4o

r:~992~2·a2s .

=:-.

Thurs. 9 to 12 Noon • Sat 9 to 2:30 ·

thY WOrks
unto the Lord. and tbJI
thou•hts shall be
established.
Proverbs 16:3

-A-Ways!

•.......•............••...•.

•

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I~URANCE

SERVICES
214 E. Main

. Fln.ndlll
ENCIF.S lac. Sir.icee ..

992-5130
Pomeroy

'We acc.pt P1•1eed Tranafera'

•
882-1120(1
.
Lundy Blown
Regan Btolil&lt;n I

•

SWISHER&amp;
PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors'
992·2955

Pomeroy

Dlflnlly 1nd $Mlle. Alwflys
Etllbllehecl 19' 3

992·2121

169N2ndAve.
Middleport, OH

992-7028

I

.

740-992·2844 740-992-8298

.always &amp; 'Forever
9iftSfiop

106 Bll11ERNUT AVE.

Prescriptions

•

•t.t Ul •lld yolll thoqgtltl wltfltt«J-' WI•

POMEkOY FLOWER

lnget's Carpet

NEW HAVEN
I"UNERAL HOM£

Pomeroy, Oh

992·5432

Brogan~warner

Full line at

MeitJ• County~ 0ide11 fwmt
352 East Main
•

"F•turtng K111tucky Frltd
Clean out your basement
Chlck111w
or attic with the help of the 228 W. Main St., Pomeroy
CLASSIFIED SECTION/

992-3785

Devla.Qulckel Agency Inc.

HOURS:'
M~m. 'rues, Wed &amp; Frl 9 to 5:30 ·

Craw's Family Restaurant 'fnuu:is Florist

house?

MillWork

. ltadlo Shack Dt~l... ·

'•

Time to cl••n ·

RACINE PLANING MILL

Po~Y,OH 992~6454
"Flowers for all occasions•

518 E. M•ln St.

Pomwoy, OH

"'992·1161

SNOUFFER FIRE lc
SAFElY SALES lc
SERVICE

Office SErvice &amp; Supply ·
137.C N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH
992-6376

812·7075
172 North Second Ave.
. ·Middleport, Oh
.

•

•

�Page A&amp;

•

The Dally Sentinel
WASHINGTON (AP) - Despite Democratic complaints
about his past political ,work. the lawyer nominated by President
Bush to be the administration's advocate before the Supreme
Court says he can put his politics aside if confirmed by the Senate.
"[ believe when ~ serve in the Department of Justice you
put your partisan eomiderations aside," said Theodore Olson, the
president's choice for solicitor gener.at
.
But Democrats pointed to Olson\ partisan writinp against the
Clinton administration and said he argued cases against nowestablished feder.allaws.
"i can't find any parallel in history of anyone who w:u as
actively involved in politics as you and went on to become solicitor general;' Sen. Dick Durbin, D-lli., told Olson at a Senate
Judiciary Committee confirmation hearing Thursday.

WASHINGTON (AP) - fourth-graders read about as well
as they did eight years ago, new test results show, but while the
best readers are improving, children having the most trouble are
reading more poorly.
Reading results for the 2000 National Assessment of Educational Progress, known as "the nation's report card;' show that
fourth-graders' average scores in a 500-point test came in at 217
last year - identical to the results in 1998 and 1992. The scores
were ·slighdy better than in 1994, when tbe average student
scored 214.
Bill ,while students in the top I 0 percent increased their average sT:ore a bit - from 261 to 264 - the average scores of readers in the bottom 10 percent dropped from 170 to 163.
"The results are· mixed and, in many ways, discouraging," said
·Marilyn Whirry, a high iehool English teacher in Manh~ttan
Beach, Calif., who is also a member of the National Assessment
Governing Board, Which .develops and reviews the tests.

1,2001

FDIC.recom.......iChinges···:

Powell iueets with leadership

Hilary: no presidency for me

'

I

Part of Tripp suit dismissed·

".rl

•
•

for unemployment'rising·

l:.qllt•l

.

.

.

•

,. . . . ._ ·---=

IM ... !td'-Y

a.tcllfiOUIII
Puior.Tany Stewat

A. . A . . .

Sunday Sdooo1 • 9:l0 Lm.
Wanhip • IO:lO Ltn., 7:00p.m.
We.. t y Scrvic:a 1 p.m.

...

............ a.. atCPIItot

.............
WonhipSetvice· 9Lm.

Communion ·IOa.m.
SundaySdoooi · IO:l5a.m. ·
Youth- 5:30 pn Suoday
.
Bible Sludy
7 pn

-....y

Flnlllopdot C1Mudo

, _ Mork Moavw
6lh and Palmer St., M;ddlepon

' _....,. Chm at CPIItot
Pucor: Tom Runyon

Stlnday School • 9:15 o.m.
Worah:ip - 10: IS 1.m:. 7:00p.m.
Wodnudoy Service-7:00p.m.

Sunday-. 9:l0 LID.
Wonhip s 10:30Lm.

Sil•er Rullopdot
Pastor: Steven K. Little
Sunday School- IOa.m.
p.m.

ML U-llapdd .

ll1dror7- Cllo&lt;dl atCIII'III
EY....Iilt Mitre Moon:

Sunday School-9:45a.m.

Sunday Sd100I • 9 a.m.
Wonblp • 10 I.Dl., 6:30p.m.
Wedneoday Services· 7 p.m.

Evcnine -6:30p.m.
Wedneoday S..Vh:co · 6:30p.m.
- l l o p d o t Chotrd!

.......... Cltt1odoo Clotudl
, _ RobertMuuer

ol.;, Bend, Root&lt; 124, Rao:mc, OH
P1110r : Daniel Mecea
Sundly SChool- 9:30 a.m.
Sundly Wonhip. 10:30 a.m.•
Wcdnelday B;ble Study • 6:00p.m

Sunday Scbool-9:30 Lm.
WoniUp·IO:lOLm., 7:30p.m.
W«1neoday Scnico 7:30p.m.

R

--__

I I C.... DrtldMI Clludl ,
Sunday ocbtlol • !DolO a.m.
9:30 ..,.,_,
' .Bible Salt1y- 7 p.IL

w-., .

I

HUioldol1qlloiQtudl

l •• ~ atCIIrlot

Philip Slurm
Sunday
School: 9:30 s.m.
WunhipSeJvi&lt;o: JlklOLJD.
Bible Sludy, \VIIdo
y, 6:30p.m.

Sl. ~t. 143 jUII off Rt. 7
Pastor: Rev. Jamea R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday Unified Service
Wonbip - ll¥.30a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedncolay Scrvic:Co -7 p.m.

1

Wlll.lllperintendont
SIDiay - p • IO:JO Lm.
Chrdo .. CllrPot
l-7..r1241W
EYIIIJdlat: llemil s.icn1.
Sunday Bible Study· 9:l0 a.m.
Wonblp: 10:30 a.m. lnd 6:l0 p.m.
We&lt;llooday Bible Study· 7 p.m.

·--lllpdat
1

~

;,iWf,~~~PI~&amp;q~~~~-llltfl
i
t,· ,
V

'·

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,

ftr-IITcr/TIV-.....,,.,. ",.,,,. OIIIM/yMI

""....- -.....,......of.
•.....
i! - HfllifiM/_..,_,_ ,

-CIIIrdoatCIIrlotla

,ML Morfob llapllot
· Founh .t Main St., M;ddkpo&lt;t
Putor: Rev. Oilbcrt Crai&amp;, Jr. ~
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:4!5 f.M.

PuiOr:Jlm. HuJhel
Sunday School - II a.m.

~u­

- ... ~-·-"'

c...,.

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

I

Worlhip · 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
- y Services · 7:l0 p.m.

( llltttilol(,nd
MI.- Clton1l at God
Mile Hill Rd., Rac:inc

Sunday EvenlltJ- 6:00p.m.

~:BriceUu

Rulland rne wmllpli.t

Sunday Sc:hool· 9:4~ a.m.
Bvealna • 6 p.m.
Wednelday Services· 7 p.m·. ·

Salem SC.
Pas!Qr: Rev. Poul Taylor
Sunday S&lt;hool- 10 Lm.
Evmina • 7 p.m.
Wednc&amp;day Service~ • 7 p.m.

_,.,,_,.ATI/T/JiMI"'-ctATIITII4/HAf..........
,_.,,•

· •

AnllqtdtJ lopllol •
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
WOI'Ihip - 10:4!5 a.m.

A

....
.
·free

r;,;:

Sundly School· 10 a,m.
Wcnlllp·lla.m.

llartford, w. v..

n.·.............. ,........,.,_,..

.·,. -CIIa&lt;dloiGod
· PIIcor. Ron.Heath
1
SundayWmhlp - IOa.m., 6 p.m.
W - y Scnlces -7 p.m.

Secoodllopllol Cllurdo

'

;

Ravenswood, WV
Pastor: David W. McClain
Sunday SchooiiO ..,.
Momina woni!ip 111m Evenina • 7 pm
Wcdneoday 7 p.m.

Sr-FinlCbo&lt;dlatGod I
Apple lnd Second Stt.
Putor: Rev. David Ruucll
Sunday School and Wonhlp- 10 Lm.
Evenll!l S..Vk:et- 6:l0 p.m.
~som--6:l0p.m.

( .t(

I

112 __ olflll. 325
Putor. Rev. O'Dell Maolcy
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip . 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service 7:30p.m.

Ito Ill

1

Cll.rdl of God tfP111t eey
OJ. Wlllte Rd. of! S1. Rt. 160 ·
Putor: P.l. Chapman

k)a...a
PuWr: Wayne R. JcweU
Sunday Serwic.eJ • 10:00 a.m. A 7:00p.m.

'rhutsday - 7:00p.m.

SundaySelvk:a: 10a.m.A.6p.m.
Servl&lt;a · 7 p.m.

r

Puton.lohn.tPauyWadc

.,

Oirton. W .Va.

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
. Wonhip 7 p.m.
Wtdllelday Service · 1 p.m.

Savice lime: Sundly 10:30 a.m.
Wedneoday7pn

.

0

0

.4... • tG.-U.L
1m S. Third St., MKidlcpon
· PutorTeresa Davia
Sunday IUVke, 10 un.
Wcdnaday len'ice. 7 p.m.

Sunday SChool • 9:15a.m.

-

Wonhip- 10 a.m.
Youth Fellowtl!ip. ,Sunday • 6 p.m.

a

.

a

_

-Calor

Laurd CIIII'Fn&lt; Medlodlt1 Qu&lt;dl
PuiOC Donald Balis
Sunday School .·9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30a.m. and6p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:00p.m.

nt:lele,en•J'IIIIwllllpMIIIIIII'J
New Lime Rd., Rut1and
Pastor: Rev. MIIJIR!I J. Robinaon
.Scnices: Wodneoday. 7:l0 p.m.
Sunday, 2:30p.m.

Sunday School • I0 a.m.
Wonhip 9 a.m.
a

~
Putoc Dewayae Stutler
Sunday School • 10 -.m.
.
Wonhip - 9a.m.
Wednuday Services - 10 a.m.

-........Church at 1 - Cll..r.t
of Lauer Day Saints
Porlland-Raci~ Rd.
Putor: Michaei'!Juhl
Sundly School 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
~)'Services 7:00p.m.

--c-alty Cllu&lt;dl
Putor. Theron Durlllln
Sunday -9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednelday- 7 p.m. · •

a

111oCUNittl-

'

'

I ttlllt·t ""

cro...r.

PineOrove

.

, .....v...,_()oo&lt;dl

M...... Star
Pootoo Dewayno Slutler
Sunday School- II o.m. •
Wonhlp- IO·a.m.

~-- ·.

laotlAtort
Putor. B r i a n Sunda)l Sclaool ~ 10 a:m.
-p-9a.m.

Thom---

1411 B...,._ Sl., Synocutc
RoY. Mike
Sunday School . 10 1.m.
Evenln1 • 6 p.m.
Wodneaday Scnico • 7 p.m.

~y-7p.m.

..... c-ooiiJQoordo
OlfRt 124
Pastor: P.d1tl Hart ,

Ourllorioorl.utllaraa Cllttrdl
Walnut and Herwy SIS., Ravenswood., W.Va.
PallOr: DaVid Rliuell

Brian Harl&lt;nen
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship· 11 a.m.
Wtdnclday 1 p.m.

Sunday School- 10:00 a.m.
Won hip: · I I a.m.

Cooi.W. Unlled Medlodlot Plrtllt

St Pou1 Lalberaa Cllu&lt;dl
Comer Sycamore &amp; Second Sl., Pomeroy
Rev. Donald C. Prill
Sunday School • 9:4!1a.'m.
WOIIhip - II a.m.

Sunday Sctlool- 9:30 Lm.
7:30p.m.

W~ip · l~:30a.m.,

ML OUvo VIii... Mllloodllt
Qff 1,~ behind WUke1ville

P"utt: Rev. Ralph sp('n:t
Sundi)' School - 9:30 ~m .

Sundl~

Belbel Clotudl 1
Towlllhip Rd., 468C
Sunday Sc:hool · 9 a.m.

Faith Geope1 CltuNit
Con, Bottom
Sunday School - 9:30
Wonhip- 10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m .

Lm.

Wollhip - IOa.m.
Wednesday Services· 10 a.m.

Hoddftipot1 Cb~B&lt;b
Onnd Street

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip • II a.m.
Wednelday Servicea • 8 p.m.

•

WOI'!Ihip- 10:30 a.m., 7 p~m.

..

Thundly Servk:eo • 7 p.m.

Ton:hChu&lt;dl

111e1p c-rod•• hrtlh

Sunday School - 9:30 Lm.
W011hip . 10:30 a.m.

Northeut Cluster
AlliN
Puwr. Jane Buttie
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhlp • II a.m., 6:30p.m.

lllone Cbopel Clou&lt;dl
AC:hool - 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.
Wednesday Scnl&lt;e . 7 p.m.

· Wonhip • 9 Lm. .'IUelday Servk.es - 7 p.m.

'

Co. Rd.63

\;1/&lt;t I"\' lit '
lllldd\&lt;port Cllun:b or die Nuareoe
Pl'ator: Aile~ fdldcap
Sunday Schooi310:JQ • .m.
Worship s 10:30 a.m. , '6~1f-1J1.
Wcdne...,_ Servkea · 7 p.m.

Putor:~·
Jane Beattie
'Mnhip · 9 a.m.

Sunday School · 10 a.m..

Pastor: Alleft Midcap

nKnday Sef"fflles - 7 p.m.

Ply•tiUo &lt;4t•aolly Cllu&lt;dl

Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

CooiviUc Chun:h
Main A Fifth SL
Sunday School • 10 a.m.

..

Bailey Rto~ Road
Pucar: Re!l. Emmen Raw10n
Su*aay Eveaina7 p.m.
Thunday Scnico • 7 p.m.

--

Rev. Donald C. Fritz
Won.hip • 9:00 a.m.
· llulldoy School - 10:00 a.m.

p....,,

'"'--·~

Sl RL 124. Racine
Pulor: WiU.iam Jfc:IMck
Sundly School- J0 a.m.
E.Yening · 7 p.m. ·

Wedoeaday Services · 1 p.m.

MWdJtport l'elllt(;Oitall
Third Ave.
Putar: Rev. Clart Balcer
Sunday School-10 1.m.
Bvenina • 6 p.m.

Wcdnnday Services - 7:00p.m.

-

l't t·,IJI It ri.ttt

'

PaMor: Rev. Kriaana RobllliOO
SundaySchooi - IOa.m.
· Worahip - II a.m.

Wonhil) ~ 9 a.m.
Sunday School - 9:4$ a.m.

11114dlepen Proobyoortan
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
_Wonhip 10 a.m.
a

\dlt llli,,

'-t lt ' lllil ll:ll
..--.---r;-

I

'

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,~

Mulberry H11. Rd .. POITI(roy
Put.or: Roy Lawin11ky
S11urday Services:
Sobbatll School • 2 p.m.

Mt. Ollv~ Com•unlly Ch•n:h
Putor: Lawrence Buah
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Evenins • 7 p.m.
Wtdncday Sef'\llce • 1 p.m .

Worship - 3 p.m.

Untied Fallll Cbun:h
Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By-Pus
Pa5lor: Rev. Roben E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.

Fall GoopoiiJplhoolt
J304.S Hiiand Road, Pomeroy
Paslor: Roy Hunter

Sunday School · I 0 a.m:
Evenina 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday &amp; Thursday · 7:30p.m.

l

Harri1011ville Pre.hyterian Chun;b

Wednesday 7:30p.m.

Soulh Bethel New -r.-..1
Silver Ridae
Pastor: Roben Barber

Joppo
• Pu10r: Bob Randolph

- c.m,....,. Choorch

Uevina ROid, West Colwnbia. W.Va.
Clyde Femll
Sunday School 9:30 am
Sunday .even ina len'ice 6 pm
Wednesday service 1 pm

S\Uiday S.hooiiO o.m.
Evenina ·7:30p.m.
_ , _ 7 7!30jf.il.

.

Sunday Sdouol 10:20-lla.m.
Rdif:f Soolely/Prieathood 11:0!1-12:00 noon
Sacrament Service 9-10:1!1 a.m.
HomemakinJ meetinc. Itt 'Thun. - 7 p.m.

PastOr: Wayne Bakolm

Senietll: Thun. Nitea 7:00 Pin
New church No Sunday ICIVice cillblilhed:

Putor. Sam ...........

Wonhip- 10:4So.m. ..
Bll&gt;lo lltudY wed. 7:00p.m,

Rl.160,~247or446-7486

Cod'• T~ Ill Pralle
31665 McQuire Rd. Pomeroy. Ohio

'lJQudt
57S Pari St.. MKidlcpon

s - ,.-.-9;-Je·a:mr ·- ----

a...r.t.tLto-ySolllll.. -· .... ·-·

.... Gospel Cllttrdo "'lkiJriatRt.ll8. Anliquily
Puaor: Jcue Morris
Aut. Puton: Jim Morria
Sm-icet: Saturday 7:30p.m.

M''l; rtC=

.c.n.tl II•
CarmelA Buhan Rds.
Rao:iac,Chio
PuWr. Dewayno Sluder

a

a

o

s.......

I .llll-r-ll&lt;ll "ai11h

Pucor: Bill Slalen
Sunday Savica 10 a.m. 4 7 p.m.
Wednelday - 7 p.m. IL Youth 1 p.m.

Pucor: Steve Reed
Sunday School- 9:30 Lm. ·
Wonhip -9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday 7 p.m.
FridAy - fellowlhip service 7 p.m.

Pastor: Ron Fierc.e
Suaday School - 9: I !5 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:1!5 a.m.

c-

377l!Je&lt;qn C...t; Rood, Oall;potit, OH

Lona-

Wonhip- 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.

Tbunday Bible Study and Youlh - 1 p.m.

Llrt V1etorr

-

'

, .... hi! Geopo1 Qoordo

Sunday Sd!ool · 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.
lbunday Service~ - 7 p.m.

l'aRocM;keFomnan
Puior.Emeritus~­

Cllftoa ....... _ .. a.m.

601 SCOODd Ave. Muon
Til-5017

llockSprlttp
PM&amp;or: Kc:ilh Rader

lloJo1dil Ll&amp; Clotordo
ioo N. ind Ave.. Middlepan
Wonh;p. I0:00 am
Wednelday ServW;n • 7 p.m.

~ur..c­

"Full-Ootprl Cllur&lt;h"

~Rod Brower
Wanhip • 9:l0 a.m.
S.,...y School- 10:35 a.m.

Gnllam Ualled Melhodllt
Wonhip ·9:30a.m. (151 .t 2nd Sun).
7:30p.m. (3nl.t 4th Sun)
Wednelday Servi" ·7:30p.m .

Pomeroy PW:, Co. Rd.

S.ha"•c

Pulon: Rev. MaoyoodHaroldCoot

Sunday School - 9 Lm.
Wonhip- IOa.m.

,_G.... •111e- Cllordo

81. ..... Ltolloeo.-

CahiiJ -Oordo
Sunday Sdoool · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip 10:301.111.. .7:30 p.m.
Wednc:oday SaYico · 7:30p.m..

47439 lloibel Rd., a..-

-.a.,.~

DicteM

PaS10fj Rev. Bladwood

Hayman
SundaySdouol - llkOOa:m.
Sooday S..Vico . 6:00p.m.
Wcdoelday Service-7:00p.m.

S~ySdoool - 9t.m.
WoniUp · IOun.

Sunday tcflool. 9:30 Lm. •
Sunday wonllip ·7 p.m.
Wodnudoy pqycr meetiaJ· 7 p.m.

51.

Rtv. -

1

Senilce: Friday, 7 p.m. .

MIMn••

LeadiiiJ Crr.ek Rd., RutJand
Puwr: Rev. Dewey Kina;

'

1.aaot. W.V.. RL I
"-:Brian May
s.dly Sdlool · 9:JO &amp;.Ill
Won10p - 7:fll p.t1L
- y 1lib1e Sbaly · 7,00 p.m.

-

Alb St.. Middlepon

I)

PuWr. Helen Kline

·. PiMor: Ariua Hun

'99
_s6ooo·.,.,._. ~ ~
• $4000 ,-·

7

o

- a t - - Clttttdl

Sunday adlool 9:l0 a.m.

m N. 2nd sc. Mlddlopon

~.,
Paaor:William-

Alii- Clttttdl

Sunday Sdaooi - 9::30 a.m.
Worahip II :00 un.

a

,_,

l'oolor:l-1!-K.....
Wunhip • IOLm., 7 p.m.
Wednelday Sin'ica -1 p.m.

..... (liS 7

llcv. l'llill;pllidcaour

S,..ylldtool - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - IO:lOUL
Wedneoday$cn.ico- 7p•.

(ltlttt ( littrtlll,

a

Haritonville ROIId
-.
..._ Charles M&lt;:K&lt;nzie
Sandoy School9: 30 a.m.
WorJh.ip - I J a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Servke 7:00p.m.

-~tiCIIrlot

1 ·t

a

Suadoy- - 10 .....
Wonhip 9 I.JD. '

c...., ....... c..p.t

Hyoellla- Clla&lt;dl
Rev. Mark Michael
Sunday Scholl! - 9:30 Lm.

'

NOO. ifj'

a

-

•

, _ _ Cia!Nit

--- -Lea
---·- - -Ottt.--y

Sunday wonhip 10:30 a.m. ll7 n,.m.
.Wedneoday JX'81'"' ~- 7 p.m.

-a.dltiQrill
c.m. ofSt RL 124 .t a.-y Rd.
Mlniolor. Doug Sbamblin ·

Pasaor: Ioe N. Sayre

Old-,... Wlllloplltl C1ltudl
28601 St. RL 7. Middlcpoll
Sunday ~ • 10 a.m.
' Evmina .. 7:00p.m.
n..ndayScm--7:00

__

,

• Putor. Gaty -

Coolvillca..t

. ,-

......

UL

wwan~...,.,

Suooloy Sdooo1 ·10:00Lm.
.......... Wonhip • 10:4S a.m.
S-ySetvice - 6:lOp.m.

Sundly- • 10 LJIL
\\Wibip II a.a

ns. l.aopvllc

-

-

I

-!Koeilh-

Gordo

Sunday Sc:hool· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Youth MWawr: a;u AmbeiJer •
Sunday-. 9:l0 .....
Worship· 8:00-a.m.. 10:30 a.m.• 7:00p.m.
Wodnudoy Scnicoo • 7:00 p.m.

Wonhip-ll•.m.• 7:00p.m.

....

Wllleyu Bible- lllun:ll
75 Pearl St., M;ddlcpon.
Puto&lt;' Rev. Doug eo.
Stmday Worihip 9:30p.m.. 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Service 1:30 p.m.

-~fiQrill

Putor.Ri&lt;I&lt;Rule
-llopdot
Sundly School - 9:l0 Lm.
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Wedneoday5cnices-7:00p.m.

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Sunday school • 9:30a.m.

0

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. WedneJday·s.n;... .. 7:00p.m.

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, _ ..,.. WllfiOa

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Wonhip- IO:lO Lm.. 6:30p.m.
Wed! hy Services ·6:30p.m.

FaMil)lopiiiiCIMudo
Railroad Sl., M - ·
Sundly Sctk.ol· 10 a.m.
Wotlhip. Il a.m., 6 p.m.

.~ .

ond-largest daily point gain,
after the .499.19 it rose on
March i6, 2000.
The Labor · Department
reported Thursday that initial
applications for jobless benefitS
climbed by 18,000 to a seasonally adjusted . 383,000 ' for the .
·Actual Size 1x3
workweek ending March 31.
· That was the highest level
• ·1 Person per ad
since July 4, 1998, when claimS
date Friday
stood at 384,000.' Last · \Veek's '
increase in- claims ·was bigger ~ April13th
.Kall Cunningham
than many ~nalym were
Happy Easter!
';Deadline
expecting.
Love, Mom' &amp;.. Dad
The more stable ·four-week
l : April 6th 12 noon.
moving average of jobless
~----------~~
claim~. which smooth~-s out
Mall or Drop off at the bally Sentinel
\Veek-to-week fluctuations, rose
111 ·Court Street, Pomeroy, 'Ohio 45769
last week 'to 377,500. That was
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
the highest level sine~ March 17
•
••
when claims stood at 377,750. ·
• Child's Name
•
:• From-:-------..,...:
_____;_ ________ :•
Some analysts s.1id the claims
report suggested weak growth
• Your Name
•
in new jobs added to the
: Address---'~-----'' ------- •
nation 's payrolls in March ,
•
•
whi ch is part of Friday's
, Phone"-------------~~-­ ••
employment report. But others
:
Ads Must Be Prepaid
!
suggem the level of claims may
~.~---·······
be pointing to no job S\Owth.
•

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Worship • I0:30 a.m.

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p

MANSALAY, Philippines (AP) - Communist rebels released
their last remaining hos.tage Friday, making way for new peace
!;Ilks with t~e goyernment aimed at ending 30 years of insurgency.
The New People's Army turned over Army Maj,. Noel Buan in
a small mountain village about ISO miles south of Manila on
Mindora island.
.
Buan, captured in July !999, was given to ~ citizen's group and
the International Committee of the Red Cross. His wife and
daughter were present.
"This is )ong oveidue;' said Buan's wife, Cielo, said shordy
before the reunion. "I've always kept the house clean and stored
simple foods and drinks in the house for ·him."

_

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Rebels free .last hostage

With a Daily Sentinel ·i-,:::

· Easter G · · · ·

M't # I

........
Sllllday Sd100I
• 9:)0~
LID. ·

BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP) - By pressing hard for the
eimadition ofSlobodan Milosevic, the U.N. war crimes tribunal
has hit a sore spot with th~ Serbs, who contend the court has singled them out in its quest to bring suspects to justice.
Tribunal registrar Hans Holthuis said Friday he gave Yugoslav
Justice Minister Momcilo Grubac the i":tematio~al arrest ~rrant
for Milosevic, who was indicted for crtmes agamst humaruty m
1999 for his brutal crackdown on ethnic Albanians in Kosovo.
"i handed over 'the indictment and the warrant of arrest, and
Mr. Grubac promised.to have it served on Mr. Milosevic in person," Holthuis said.
The handover of the warrant was largely symbolic, and the
government did ,no!: 'imrilediately respond.

a..-c. .. a.w

Wonloip- ltluo., 6 p.IIL
-ltlldarScrvka - 7p.&amp;

'

Exlradition move irks Serbs

I 1

s.,tlal' Sdlool • II L1L

-w.v..

HONOLULU (AP) -Jackie Thuener says she doesn'~ make
enough money as a high school biology teacher, so shes been
spending afternoons working at a kenneL .
.
Now the kennel job is all she has. Strikes by 13,000 public
5chool teachers and. 3,100 state university faculty members have
shut down Hawaii's public education system in. what is believed_
ro be the first labor actions to paralyze all public educabon m a
state.
About 180,000 public school children and 42,000 University
of Hawaii students are out of school because of the stnke.
Thuener's long hours at McKinley High School i_l) Honolulu
and her part-time job caring for dogs leave her litde tm)e at
home with h,e r 9-year-old son.
'

Make .Sdmeone ·Feel'
AL · .

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--.....-·TRA SPE I

., "

33226~··- ....

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I

WASHINGTON (AP) .•
· The number of Americans filing new 'claint ft!r ·state unem'
' • • ployment insurance rose last
week to the tughest level since
'I .
1998, fresh evidence that com.l
panies are sheddi!lg ,worken, to·
cope with the weak eeonomy.
Econoll)ists said Thursday's
report is consistent With their
forecasts
that the nation'!
1
'
unemployment rate for March
•
. - which is released Friday by
the governmeni - ·- 'will climb
"
to 4.3 percent from February's
4.2
percent.
••••
"The labor market is weak
but not collapsing;• said Merrill
Lynch economist K.1ren. Dex.ter. "Jobless claims ... re'main in a
•
range ,consistent with .slower
growth, but no recession."
On Wall Street, investors
focused their attention on good
•
•
earnings news finm Dell Computer and Alcoa, which gave .
stocks a big bOost. The Dow
Jones industri;il I average rose
402.63 points to close at
9,918.05.1t .was the index's sec- ·

,

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Sunday IChool - 9:30a.m.

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Sunken volcano enapts

· · · . "·
•
·Number of dalms

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~Foidl

Wunhip • II a.m. ood 6 p.m.
WedneodaySetvice - 7p.m.

Criticism follows Davis speed•

U

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the government and on b~half of the
American people about thear status and
their ·welfare. And we would look for
the reassurance of actually seeing
them...
President Bush said Thursday , the
.administration was "working all diplomatic channels'; to win the Americ:ans'
release. He expressed regret that the
pilot of the Chlnese jet 6g~ter 'in the
collision over the South Ch_ma Sea was
still missing.
·
·
Bush told a convention of newspaper
editurs, however, that China must per-·
mit the crew members to return home.
And he did not yield to Chinese
demands for an aJfolOgy..

•

.'

........,..992-5191
-a....WIIIcrE.Hciu
S.. C... 4:4H: I 5p.a: 5:l0 p.a.

~fl-a.totAr I I

WASHINGTON (AP) -The Bush any details about 'the meeting or co~ern in the United States on behalf
administration, picking up the pace of explain why its start was delayed by of their families, certainly on belulf of
diplomacy with China over an Ameri- more than an hour.
can surveillance plane, is focusing its
"We are in fairly intense ullcs," he
efforts on the release of the 24 crew said-outside the U.S. Embassy.
members and contesting their deten- . In Washington, there was no immedition on legal and humanitarian ate reaction to the development.
grounds.
American diplomats had one meeting
Hopes for a resolution of the standoff ·with the crew at the outset of the
rose Friday when American diplomats standoff, and based on what they were
in China were permittc4 to meet with . told. and saw, the State Department said
the crew on a southern Chinese island. Thurklay there was no indication the
The muting was the second the crew Americans had been mistreated.
has had with U.S. officials since their . "They were in good health. They
plane made an emergency landing Sun- were in good spirits.They said they had
day on China's Hainan island after col- not been mistreated.Their living condiliding with a Chinese jet fighter.
tions were quite adequate;' department
' Ambassador Joseph Prueher spoke to spokesman Richard Boucher said. ·
reporters in Beijing but did not g•ve
And yet, he said, there is " enormous

.a ~-.

--.....

Diplomacy centers ·on U.S. access to crew

WASHINGTON (AP) - All banks should pay for deposit
insurance according to their ~isk ljlffa~ure, and the $100,000 limit
on account coverage should · be ~~ed ro inflation, the insurer
FDIC is recommending to Congre~!
Donna Tanoue, chairwoman of the Federal Deposit Insurance
COrp., said Thul'Sday the changes are needed ro keep banks safe
for depositors and keep credit flowing to Americans. .
"If we do· not begin now to change some of the rules that govern our deposit insurance system, it is likely to take a toll on the
safety and soundness of the banking industry;' Tanoue said at a
news co'nfe·rence.
•
That could happen, she warned, when a slumping t:conomy
WASHINGTON (AP) - ·The U.S. embassies iri Paraguay, brings banks and thrifts losses that deplete the federal insurance
Uruguay and Ecua.dor and the U.S. consulate in Guayaquil •. funds for those institutions.
Ecuador, will be closed on Friday because of security concerns,
a State Department official said Thursday night.
The official declined to provide details on the specific reasons
for the closures.
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) observers called
Employees are expected to report to work, ~ut the offices will Gov. Gray Davis's first statewide
the power crisis
be closed to the public.
unsatisfying and short on substance.
A de'cision will be made over the weekend on whether the .. The five-minute speech Thursday night
to deliver the
offices will reopen on Monday.
political punch Davis needed to overcome the potential fallout
__.,from blackouts and sky-high electricity bills; the observers said.
"There was an awful lot of buildup for a speech that didn't really have a .new initiative or an element of drama in it;' said D.-n
WASHINGTON (AP) - . Secretary of State Colin Powell Hallin, a political scientist at the University of California at San
spoke Thursday with Isr.aeli and Palestinian leaden after he Diego.
·
,The speech came jjS the operator of the State's power grid said
learned that Israeli soldiers fired on a convoy carrying Palestinian
security chiefS.
.
. California will see more than a month of rolling blackouts if res"We wanted to ensure that escalation would not ensue;' State idents use as mu~h power this summer as last summer.
Department spokesman Richard Boucher said.
The incident came ,after high-level security offici'als from both
side! held incondqsiVe Wks in Israel about how to halt the
bloodshed in the region•.
·
NEW YORK (AP) - . Sen. Hillary Rodham &lt;:;linton, who has
A U.S. representative attended the meeting "to facilita'te, to long bee'! speculated as a possible presidential candidate, told The
monitor and to report back any developl)1ents" to Powell, New York Post that she has ruled out running for the White
Boucher said. "We think they had a positive and useful excllange, House not just in 2004, bur in 2008 and beyond. ·
but I'm' not in a p\)sidon t~ go into detail on that particular
The statement came when the former first lady was pressed to
meettng.
clarify a comment she had made earlier, referring to the presi-·
dency as "not something I'm going to be doing."
· Clinton was asked by the Post: "So, Sen. Clinton, are you rul~
ing out a run for president not just in 2004, but' 'in 2008 and·
WASHINGTON (AP)- A federal judge ruled Thursday that . beyond?" .
Linda Tripp, the former Pentagon employee whose secredy taped
"Yes," replied Clinton, according to the Post account.
phone calls triggered the impeachment crisis of the Clinton pres-,
idency, cannot sue the White House.
The decision by US. District Judge Emmet Sullivan came in
Tripp's lawsuit against the government for releasing damaging
BROOKINGS, Ore. (AP) -A volcano has been erupting on
information about her at the height of the petjury and obstruc- the ocean floor off the southern Oregon coast since Tuesday
tion investigation of Clinton in 1998. Sullivan said the Privacy night, but1 it poses no threat to ships or coastal communities, sciAct under w~ich Tripp is suing does not cover the executive entist~ say.
'·
'
office of the presideni.
The eruption 130' miles off the coast has generated more than
The Defen5e . Department, Tripp's employer at the time, 1,000 minor earthquakes that continued late. Thursday. A few
revealed to The New Yorker that she wrote on a form that she'd quakes ha"'i beet:t powerful enough to be detected by land~based
never been allisted.ln her teens, Tripp was arrested for grand. lar- instruments, with the largest· measuring 4.5 magnitUde.
.
ceny.
. . .
Scientists with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Admil)-Portions ofTripp's suit con.ttnue against the Pentagon and two istration have been using undersea instruments to track activity at
of its employees. But Sullivan said, "The Office of the President- the volcano, on an undersea ridge that runs off southern Oregon
White House Office is not subject to the terms of the Privacy and northern California,
·
Act:' which protects the confidentiality of personal information . - - - - - - - - : : - : -.- - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
about federal employees. Tripp had alleged that the Whit~ House
- ' was behind the P~;ntagon's .release of the data.
·
.
'

f

l ttiit'd Brl'lltn·tt
ML HetiDOn United Brfthrtn
Ia Chriat O.~h
Texu Commurtity off CR 82
Past&lt;lr: Robcn Sanden
SUIIday School · 9:30a.m.
Won.hip • 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wtdnelday Services - 7:30 p.m.
Edtn United B~thrtn In Chrkl
2 In miles n011h or Reedsville
on Slate Route 124

Pastor: Rev. Robert Markley
~
Sunday School .. II il.ln.
Sunday Worship · 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services -7:30p.m.
Wednesday Youth Service · 7:30p.m.

,.

·~ .@~Jb®

t"; Run

~[L~©if~@~O©®

Friday,

. cabinetMaking
'
Syracuse

YQu'va got queptlons. We've got a~swers,®
106 North Second Ave. • Mlddlepbrt, OH 45760

(t4o

r:~992~2·a2s .

=:-.

Thurs. 9 to 12 Noon • Sat 9 to 2:30 ·

thY WOrks
unto the Lord. and tbJI
thou•hts shall be
established.
Proverbs 16:3

-A-Ways!

•.......•............••...•.

•

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......

•
~

I~URANCE

SERVICES
214 E. Main

. Fln.ndlll
ENCIF.S lac. Sir.icee ..

992-5130
Pomeroy

'We acc.pt P1•1eed Tranafera'

•
882-1120(1
.
Lundy Blown
Regan Btolil&lt;n I

•

SWISHER&amp;
PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors'
992·2955

Pomeroy

Dlflnlly 1nd $Mlle. Alwflys
Etllbllehecl 19' 3

992·2121

169N2ndAve.
Middleport, OH

992-7028

I

.

740-992·2844 740-992-8298

.always &amp; 'Forever
9iftSfiop

106 Bll11ERNUT AVE.

Prescriptions

•

•t.t Ul •lld yolll thoqgtltl wltfltt«J-' WI•

POMEkOY FLOWER

lnget's Carpet

NEW HAVEN
I"UNERAL HOM£

Pomeroy, Oh

992·5432

Brogan~warner

Full line at

MeitJ• County~ 0ide11 fwmt
352 East Main
•

"F•turtng K111tucky Frltd
Clean out your basement
Chlck111w
or attic with the help of the 228 W. Main St., Pomeroy
CLASSIFIED SECTION/

992-3785

Devla.Qulckel Agency Inc.

HOURS:'
M~m. 'rues, Wed &amp; Frl 9 to 5:30 ·

Craw's Family Restaurant 'fnuu:is Florist

house?

MillWork

. ltadlo Shack Dt~l... ·

'•

Time to cl••n ·

RACINE PLANING MILL

Po~Y,OH 992~6454
"Flowers for all occasions•

518 E. M•ln St.

Pomwoy, OH

"'992·1161

SNOUFFER FIRE lc
SAFElY SALES lc
SERVICE

Office SErvice &amp; Supply ·
137.C N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH
992-6376

812·7075
172 North Second Ave.
. ·Middleport, Oh
.

•

•

�•

I

PegeAI • The Daly Stzlth...

Inside:

•

Offialls say they knew~·about problems

•

•

•

•
• •

WASHINGTON (AP) A
hydnuliCi · system failure compounded by software prQblems
aused a V-22 Osprey aircraft ro
crash in December. killing four
Marines, the corps said in a report
Thursday. The corps acknowledged
it had been aware since June 1999 of
a problem that could damage the
hydraulic line that failed.
"The aircrew reacted immediately
and correcdy ro the in-flight emergency, as they were trained to do,"
Maj. Cen. Martin Berndt, commander of the 2nd Marine Expeditionary Force, told a Pentagon news
conference. "We consider them to

be without fault in th6 tragedy."
Berndt said the repon recommended - . ud Marine Corps
headquarwrs concurs - dut there
be a " possible redesign of the
hydraulic system" in lhe V-22 ro
prevent uilures like the one in the
December crash.
It also reconunended a revic.'W of
the entire com purer softwne on the
V-22 to identifY design deficiencies
that "may exist," he said.
The cwh was one of two faral
Osprey crashes last yea~ that killed
23 Marines and put the fate of the
controversial, multibiUion-doUar aircraft program in jeopardy.

A wire bundle hid rub'lled agaiD.tc
a hydraulic line feeding both the
primary and backup hydraulic ~
terns to U.., left engine, cha6ng it
and eventually allowing the line to
rbpture, Berndt said.
"The investigation citeS a number
of reports daring back to jut)&lt;' 1999,
which describe chafing of hydraulic
lines by · Wire bundles within the
nacells of theV-22," he told a news
conference earlier Thursday at
Camp · Lejeune, N.C., referring to
the housing for the engines. ·
The Marines had said in January
that they were nearly Cc.'rtain the
Dec. I t crash was caused by a failure

of dte bydraulia sy~tem, which
enables the pilot to contml U..,
direction of me aimafi.
~ndt said that varying degrees
of cba6ng wen: found on all eight
renwrung Ospreys during an
inspection after the December
crash.
The investigators recommend
reviewing the entire computet tlight '
contml system and associated softw~re. and the placement of
hydraulic lines and wire -bundles
within the engine, he wd.
The Osprey 6 unique in its ability to rake off like a helicopter, rotate
its propellers 90 degrees and dy li,ke

.- ..

..

Around tilL Majon, ~ iJ2
Reds startm doi~~g well, ~ 83
Schlichtu in jail ~!fain, ~ 85

TERRE . HAUTE, Ind. (AP) ple. lt will be the first execution
......rjn little more than a month , carried out by the U.S. governTerre Haute's schools wiU dose · ment since 1963.
Many people in and around
for the day, just robe safe. Some
people will get out of rown. this quiet city of 60,000 cannot
Death penalty supporters and \Yait for May 16 tq pass.
·
foes will rally in the shadows of
"I just think it's really almost
the watchtowers and barbed- going to paralyu, in a sense, the
wire fence of the US. Peniten- whole city;' said Sister Rila
tiary.
Clare Gerardo! of the Sisters of
This self-proclaimed City of . Providence.
Character is nervously preparWhen McVeigh's execution
ing for the May 16 execution of date was set, all 1,600 hotel
Timothy McVe igh.
rooms in the city were bookc.'d
''I'm fearfuL I can't believe within hours. In addition to
that he's going to go out with- protesters, hundred of journalout something happening;• said ists and their satellite trucks are
Loretta Johnson, who lives expected to descend on terre
across the street from the Haute. People will no doubt
prison. She is so worried that. sell T-shirrs. And a grocery store
she recendy installed a powerful plans to peddle shish kebabs in
light in her back yard.
the parking lot, calling it a
McVeigh, 32~ is set to die by "McVeigh special." ..
lethal injection for the deadliest
Some reside~ts plan to leave
act of te rrorism on u.s. roil- . town,.worried about crowds or
the April19, 1995, bombing of •even the possibility M cVeigh's
the federal building in Olda- execution ·will spark another
honu
City that killed 168 peo- ace of tefl:orism.
.

.

"We really don't know whos
coming to Terre Haute that
week," said Sheriff Bill Harris.
The rime . day the execu-,
tion will be .held has not been
announced. But the 16,500studem Vign County school
system decided to dose all 30 ·of
its schools on May 16.
" We 're not exactly sure
what's going to happen in the
community;' said Ray Aur, the
school system's student services
assistant." But we didri 't want to
take any chances, and we don't
want the students getting
caught in the middle of anything."
Among other things, the
move fiees up more than a
dozen police officers who w&lt;&gt;rk
in Terre Haute schools.
The lheriffl d.,Partment has
worked with the Terre Haute
police and federal a!:l'ncies to
work out lecurity procedures,
including placing patrols on aU
roads leading into the county.

of

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRIIEH

. '.

r

.

an 2irplane.

Another Ospn:y crash killed 19
5CIVicemen in Marana. Ariz., in
April 2000. The deet h.u been

l

FRID\Y'S

grounded since the December msb
in Onslow County, near Jacksonville.
In the Nonb Carolina crash,
Berndt wd investigators found the
bydraullc systeni began to malfuncrion after the plane made a series of
lefi..band tui'IIS.
As the plane's 2irspeed slowed and
the engines began to move automatically (rom airplane fO helicopter
mode, the l)ydraulic line ruptured,
Berndt said.

HIGHLIGHIS
Melp l11wlte set
torSalunlay
ROCK SPRINGS -The
18th armual Meig. Invitational Track meet will take place
this Saturday at Meigs High
School Eleven teams will be
taking pan in the event.
Six boys teams and five girls
team will be in . the event,
Nelsonville-York,
Logan.
Alexandet, Eastern, W:Herfoni
and the host Meigs Marauders
wiU be taking pan in the boy's
division . .
In the girls division, Nel~
sonville-York,
Alexander,
Eastern, Waterfoni and Meig;i
will be participating.
Preliminary running events
will get underway ·at. IO a.m.,
with Field Events finals getting under way at the 'same
time. The finals for the running events will get underway
at 12:10 p.m . .
Last year. Wdlston .won the
boy's events wiih Meigs fin- .
· ishing as runnerup. ln the girls
·. division Vinton County took
home the crown with River
Valley finishing in second
place.

Indiana city awaits McVeigh Fear over foot-and-mouth
disease
aeate
. mess ~ in the U.S.
execution with fear , · ·
BY Jw Huata

The Daily Sentinel

•

about it;' said Gene Blew, a
veterinarian for the Oklahoma
Department of Agriculture.
"Tim particular virus is the.'
most contagious in the world."
Foot-and-mouth is dreaded
becaUSe.' it Can be transmitted
so easily - by dirt on vehicle
tires, clothes, shoes, even in the

Fear of foot-and•mouth
diSc.'ase has friendly Midwest- ·
ern brmers pulling up their
welcome mats. Zoos and
theme parks around the country are posting warning signs.
Some.' universities are canceling ovefl&lt;.'as exchange pro- 3lr.
grams and even quarantining
The virus is hannless ro
foreign students.
humans but destroys animals
Americans are closely hooves and causes mouth blish ·
L.
.
th .
. •
· ·
exanurung t e1r own cows, ters tnat rum err appetite.
h~- even giraffes- while The United States has not.had
also watching for anybody or· a confirmed case since I 929.
anything dut could carry into
In Britain, more than a milthe United Srates the highly lion animals have been concontagious disease ravaging deltUied ro slaughter in an
Britain's livestock.
attempt to contain the outAnd just in case foot-and- break, and · restrictions have
mouth sttikes thi$ country for been imposed on tourism
the first time in more dun 70 etrents and the movement of
years, officials are drawing up animals.
worst-case scenarios, fr;om
The United · States has
'destroying emiR henls o( cat- already banned imports of
de to mobilizing the National , livestock and raw meat .f rom
Guard.
Europe. Now, many of the
!·
"I wake up ,nights thinking , precautions are ainted at inter-

national travelen.
Zoos fium New York City
ro Chicago are posting signs
asking visitors who have been
ovefl&lt;.'as recendy to avoid petring zoos or other areas where
they can come in close contact
With animals. At the Busch
Gardens theme park in Tampa,
Fla:, visitors step into a disinfectant shoe bath before ·
boarding buses for tours where
th
r: d ·-"'es and ey can 1ee gtrau•
,.~.
l
to th
...l __ , __ ,_
0
c ~-- r: er ex~c iiiWiwa.
••uny .arm states
canceling agricultural tours that
bring in visitors from out of
town or overseas.
In Dlinois' Rock River Valley, farmers are redirecting foreign tours to livestock-free
attractions such as the John
Deere home. Agriculture olficials in Wisconsin advised
farmen to stop the tradition of
inviting visitors to tour the
farm aqd have breakfast in eelebration of dairy mon!h.

=

MelppH
tourney set
for May 5
ROCK SPRINGS ·- . The
eighth annual Meig, Football
GolfTournament will be held
. on Saturday, May 5 at the
Riivcriide Golf Course irl

Mason W.Va.
The tourriament will begin
with an 8:30 am shotgun
start.
·
The tournament will be a
four man scramble, bring your
own team fortll&lt;lt. The team's
handicap must be 40, or
above, with only one. team
member with a handicap
under 10.
The cost is $55 per person,
the price includes one mulligan, cart, lunch and beverages.
For more information on
the tin'lfnament you can contact Meigs football coach
Mike Chancey at 992-2158
(work) or 992-0064 (home).

Rookie shoot$
65 at Misters

Page 81 .

.

Fdd.,.. Apll ~ 2.1

..

,,

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'

'Retooled' Reds knock off
Pirates,.even season mark
CINCINNATI (AP) - The rerooled rop
of the Cincinnati Reds' lineup 6 doing its
pan. So is the srarting roration dur came in
for so many.questions.
Barry tartip lrepr geaing on base and
Dmitri Young doubled with U.., bases loaded
Thursday, leading the Reds to a 4-1 victory
over the Pittsbufgh Pir.~tes and a split of
. Cincinnati's four-game homestand.
Larkin and Young. the top two hitters in the
baaing onler, finished a productive week of
getting on base.and getting pivotal hits -jwt
what manager Bob Boone had in mind when ·
he reconfigured the llneup.

"They're reaUy good." Boone said. "I'm
kind ofliking it."
Larkin walked rwice and scored, ending a .
solid homestand. In his new role as leadoff
hitter, Urkin Sc.'! up rhe offense by reaching
base in 13 of his 18 plate appear.~nces.
Young. who bats second, leads the team
with a pair of homers and six RBis, helping
it get through the absence of Ken Griffey Jr.
The center fielder was out ofthe lineup for
all four games because of a strained hamstring. and struck out in his two pinch-hii
'

PltiH- Reds, ll

BIG HIT -. Dmitri Young of the Reds rips a bases-loaded. ~
ble against the Pirates in Cincy's 4-1 win. (AP)
r

Eastem buries 5. Gallia
Lodwick~

grand slam
paces Eagles

Southern
runs past
Wildcats
in TVC

. BY ANDREW CARTER
DVP SPORTS EDITOR

EAST MEIGS - East-'
ern rolled to its sixth consecutive victory Thursday,
defeating South Gallia 150 in a game that lasted just
. five innings.
Cass Lodwick carried
.the big stick forthe Eagles
yesterday, going 3-for-3
with a double, a ttiple and
. a grand slam home run,
which came in the midst of
an eight-run founh inning.
She had five RBI altogeth1,, er and scored four runs.
'
"I just Wanted to get on·
base, I just wanted to hit .
, it," Lodwick said of her
·grand slam.
•
Juli Bailey and ' Kayla
Gibbs combined for a nohitter. Bailey (6-1) went
three innings and recorded
six strikeouts and three
walks. She faced just 12
batte[$ during her stint and
picked up her sixth wil) of
the season.
Gibbs came on in the
fourth and pitched two
tidy innings. She had two
sttikeouts and walked just
one batter. She only faced
seven Rebels in her rwo
innings of w'i'rk.
,
Robyn Harrison took
the loss for the Rebels (25) , She pitched four

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

BY ScoTT WOLFE
OVP CORRESPONDENT

RACINE- An aggressive
. base-running game and a
couple Waterford miscues
allowed. the Southern Torna'
do's to po~t an 8-4 Tri-VaHey
Conference victory oyer the
Wildcats Thursday at Star Mill
Park.
'
Souihern had ten stolen
bases in the game, and thei.rco
· aggression on the base pathS
created some r"lns in resulting
Waterford errors.
Coach Scott Wiekline wd,
" We didn't hit well and we
didn't play well, but we found
· a ,way to win. We used our
speed on the bases tonight
and had some heads up play
that helped us plate some
runs . .
" Matt Ash pitched a good
ball game. He hadn't hacl
much work this spring, but he .
came through in the dutch
tonight."
Waterford took a 2-0 lead
in the first inning when Joey
Baker singled and advanced
on an error. Dan Doebriener
then · walked and Todd
McC utcheon singled home
both Baker and Dnebriener.
Southern made it 2-1 on a
·Chad H~bbard singled, two
stolen bases and an aggressive ·
lead that forced an ·o verthrow
at third off the pick-off play.
Thai run was crucial was
Doebriener struck · out the
next two batters, the score 2.

CENTER oF. :ATTENTION - Eastern' s Cass Lodwick (center) receives "congratulations ftom
her Eagle teammates after hitting a grand slam against South Gallia ..(Anclrew Carter)

AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP)
Tiger WoodS made only o_n e
1.
birdie on a·par 5 and fipished
. Waterford went up 3-1 in
· with a meager 70 while ('4asth e second. David Miller
ters rookie Chris DiMarco
reac.hed on an error at third,
led an assault' on a relativc;ly
th e stole second, advanced on
•.
·tame Augusta National course ·
a balk, and scored when he
. RACINE When sophomore · Coach Scott.Wolfe said, "We are get- batters over, w hik• S~:Catteri n g six hits
with SFen birdies on his first
stole home. A Justin Carney
hurler Jaconda Smith fanned the _first t.ing better, but tonight we psyched and walkin g just four. Smith picked up
13 holes for a one-stroke lead
singled followed and a walk to
three batters in the Sou1hem lineup, it ourselves out a little bit. We swung at the win and-has fill ed in well in replacover Steve Stricker and Angel
David Jones, but Ash worked
sen~ a message; a message Southern did- some bad pitches and made some bad ing all-state pitcher Cassie Hara, w ho
Cabrera of Argentina;
out of the i~_'\i!!S:.
..
n't overcome until fifth inning in a too decisions that put us ih the hole, but ..led Waterford to many wins over the
' DiMarco, whose 7-J.mder
. Southern pUlied wtthtn one
' litde, too late mission thauc&amp;ult.eP. in a overall we played well against a goad·- pa.~t four seasori's. :- ~ ·
65 · gave him the . best first
when Dally hill walked, stole
74
Waterford
win.
.
team,
and
a
goo~pi:tcher.
·
Southern's
.
_
R
achel
C
hapman
also
second and third, and scored
round by a.Masten rookie in
Coming
off
a
twenty-win
season,
"We
just
need
to
work
on
our
menpitched
well
m
scattermg
seven
hits,
on a 1- 3 groundout by Aaron
11 years, Was just one of sev, Waterford lifted its record to 4-3, but tal game more than anything- have a li t- striking out three and walkm g e1ght.
O hlinger, the score 3-2.
eral stories from the opening
'two
of'its
losses
came
at
the
hands
of
tie
confidence
in
ourselves
and
o
ur
Four
of
the
Waterford
runs
were
Southern threatened in the
round of the year's first nujor.
County
abilities.
We
~re
gettin
g
much
closer
to
unearned,
a11d
were·.
a
direct
resu
lt
of
undefeated
neighbor
Morgan
third
when Matt Shain
Phil Mickelson made four
in
a
doubleheader
Saturday.
Southern
being
a
good
team,"
said
Wolfe.
·
th
e
three
Southern
errors.
walkechmd"""ice Eill si n gl~d; straight birdies_ on the back
~-=5)
dropped
the
game,
but
ma
ha;c
:
·
Waterfot'O's
Smith
didnit
stop
'With
Waterford
tooka1-0
!Cao
'iri
t)1e
first
1
a.-67. his best !tart at
played
one
of
its
better
overall
games
of the three .strikeou ts she rung up in the
Augusta in five years. James
' Pluse HI Southam, II
Plnse see Softbell, Bl
the year.
first inning, continuing oil to fan 15
Driscoll, the U.S. Amateur
•
runner-up, finished with a ·68,
the lowest score for an amateur since 1983.
Fourteen players broke 70
in the first round, the most
since 15 players in 1995.
Also finishing at 67 were
opener for Sta,rs and the sea- th e"Sp~ing 50" at K-C !~ace- C in the final race of the 2000 coming in1998.
two-time U.S. Open champiBY ScOTT WOLFE
Mike Balzano,
Besides
OVP CORRESPONDENT
son opener forK-C. The pre- way Saturday for his first season . Driving th e Ostrom
on Lee Janzen and John HusCHILLICOTHE - Final mier late model event which S't'ARS sanctioned event win Painting/ MasterSbilt. Race :moth er Parkersburg driver,
.
ton.
the
Renegade of th e year mlast yearis open- Cars/Malcuit R acin g Engin es Steve Shaver, a big winner in
preparations have been made features
' Defending champion Vijay
for one of the season's biggest STARS ~ational D irt Car er
.
N o. 12, Aukland
Racin g Florida, will return. Other
Singh got off to a conservative
Ri ck
11\uk.land
'of Pontiac Grand Prix, Auk land, drivers exp.e cted include
races as the Renegade Series late model stock cars is
start and still managed a 69,
the 2000
STARS National Dirt Car expected to not only draw th e Zanesvi lle, Ohio, captured ·his formerly of North D•kota, C hub ·Frank,
along with Mark O'Meara:
s"eries invades the 3/8 mile STARS regulars, b.ut also. dri- ftrst Renegade STARS Rae- worked his way past Mike Renegade STARS champion
Others among the 33 players
Balzano on lap 47 after sta rt- from Sugar Grove, Pa; RJ.
who · broke par were Jose · ' high ~kS of K-C Raceway vers from several other pre- · mg.
. near thiUicothe,' Ohio, for mier organizations that are
Series sancrtion ed main mg Rth ai1d then held off Conley, Rod Conley, ind
Maria Olazabal (70), while
.t he 50-lap, $8,000 to wm idle that evenin g.
event win of the season by Davey Johnson by nearly one Delmas Conley ofWheelers~
the grol!P at 71 i11duded
Spring 50 Saturday, April 7.
· Mike Balzano of Parkers- pocketing th e SIO,IlOO to wi n second to score hi s second
David Duval, Greg Norman,
-Pl11se SM K·C. 18
K-C. IO(J" at K- ,career "K-C 100", the first
The race is t~ northern , b urg,Wv po.c ket ed $8 ,000 ·m "3rd AQllua~
,.
Er~ Els and Davis Love Ill.

Torn.adoes fall to Waterford, 7-4

,.

- ·--nrnelor

,,

.'

!

r!

K-C Raceway opens 1001 season.

•

STOP IN AND. LOOK OVERYOUR NEW FARM SUPPLY OUTLET IN CHESTER.
WHILE YOU ARE THERE, You CAN HAVE .LUNCH AT OUR NEWLY REMOD.ELED RESTAURANT.
.
AT 7:00 M
ES AT 8:00 PM

•

•

•

•

·'

�•

I

PegeAI • The Daly Stzlth...

Inside:

•

Offialls say they knew~·about problems

•

•

•

•
• •

WASHINGTON (AP) A
hydnuliCi · system failure compounded by software prQblems
aused a V-22 Osprey aircraft ro
crash in December. killing four
Marines, the corps said in a report
Thursday. The corps acknowledged
it had been aware since June 1999 of
a problem that could damage the
hydraulic line that failed.
"The aircrew reacted immediately
and correcdy ro the in-flight emergency, as they were trained to do,"
Maj. Cen. Martin Berndt, commander of the 2nd Marine Expeditionary Force, told a Pentagon news
conference. "We consider them to

be without fault in th6 tragedy."
Berndt said the repon recommended - . ud Marine Corps
headquarwrs concurs - dut there
be a " possible redesign of the
hydraulic system" in lhe V-22 ro
prevent uilures like the one in the
December crash.
It also reconunended a revic.'W of
the entire com purer softwne on the
V-22 to identifY design deficiencies
that "may exist," he said.
The cwh was one of two faral
Osprey crashes last yea~ that killed
23 Marines and put the fate of the
controversial, multibiUion-doUar aircraft program in jeopardy.

A wire bundle hid rub'lled agaiD.tc
a hydraulic line feeding both the
primary and backup hydraulic ~
terns to U.., left engine, cha6ng it
and eventually allowing the line to
rbpture, Berndt said.
"The investigation citeS a number
of reports daring back to jut)&lt;' 1999,
which describe chafing of hydraulic
lines by · Wire bundles within the
nacells of theV-22," he told a news
conference earlier Thursday at
Camp · Lejeune, N.C., referring to
the housing for the engines. ·
The Marines had said in January
that they were nearly Cc.'rtain the
Dec. I t crash was caused by a failure

of dte bydraulia sy~tem, which
enables the pilot to contml U..,
direction of me aimafi.
~ndt said that varying degrees
of cba6ng wen: found on all eight
renwrung Ospreys during an
inspection after the December
crash.
The investigators recommend
reviewing the entire computet tlight '
contml system and associated softw~re. and the placement of
hydraulic lines and wire -bundles
within the engine, he wd.
The Osprey 6 unique in its ability to rake off like a helicopter, rotate
its propellers 90 degrees and dy li,ke

.- ..

..

Around tilL Majon, ~ iJ2
Reds startm doi~~g well, ~ 83
Schlichtu in jail ~!fain, ~ 85

TERRE . HAUTE, Ind. (AP) ple. lt will be the first execution
......rjn little more than a month , carried out by the U.S. governTerre Haute's schools wiU dose · ment since 1963.
Many people in and around
for the day, just robe safe. Some
people will get out of rown. this quiet city of 60,000 cannot
Death penalty supporters and \Yait for May 16 tq pass.
·
foes will rally in the shadows of
"I just think it's really almost
the watchtowers and barbed- going to paralyu, in a sense, the
wire fence of the US. Peniten- whole city;' said Sister Rila
tiary.
Clare Gerardo! of the Sisters of
This self-proclaimed City of . Providence.
Character is nervously preparWhen McVeigh's execution
ing for the May 16 execution of date was set, all 1,600 hotel
Timothy McVe igh.
rooms in the city were bookc.'d
''I'm fearfuL I can't believe within hours. In addition to
that he's going to go out with- protesters, hundred of journalout something happening;• said ists and their satellite trucks are
Loretta Johnson, who lives expected to descend on terre
across the street from the Haute. People will no doubt
prison. She is so worried that. sell T-shirrs. And a grocery store
she recendy installed a powerful plans to peddle shish kebabs in
light in her back yard.
the parking lot, calling it a
McVeigh, 32~ is set to die by "McVeigh special." ..
lethal injection for the deadliest
Some reside~ts plan to leave
act of te rrorism on u.s. roil- . town,.worried about crowds or
the April19, 1995, bombing of •even the possibility M cVeigh's
the federal building in Olda- execution ·will spark another
honu
City that killed 168 peo- ace of tefl:orism.
.

.

"We really don't know whos
coming to Terre Haute that
week," said Sheriff Bill Harris.
The rime . day the execu-,
tion will be .held has not been
announced. But the 16,500studem Vign County school
system decided to dose all 30 ·of
its schools on May 16.
" We 're not exactly sure
what's going to happen in the
community;' said Ray Aur, the
school system's student services
assistant." But we didri 't want to
take any chances, and we don't
want the students getting
caught in the middle of anything."
Among other things, the
move fiees up more than a
dozen police officers who w&lt;&gt;rk
in Terre Haute schools.
The lheriffl d.,Partment has
worked with the Terre Haute
police and federal a!:l'ncies to
work out lecurity procedures,
including placing patrols on aU
roads leading into the county.

of

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRIIEH

. '.

r

.

an 2irplane.

Another Ospn:y crash killed 19
5CIVicemen in Marana. Ariz., in
April 2000. The deet h.u been

l

FRID\Y'S

grounded since the December msb
in Onslow County, near Jacksonville.
In the Nonb Carolina crash,
Berndt wd investigators found the
bydraullc systeni began to malfuncrion after the plane made a series of
lefi..band tui'IIS.
As the plane's 2irspeed slowed and
the engines began to move automatically (rom airplane fO helicopter
mode, the l)ydraulic line ruptured,
Berndt said.

HIGHLIGHIS
Melp l11wlte set
torSalunlay
ROCK SPRINGS -The
18th armual Meig. Invitational Track meet will take place
this Saturday at Meigs High
School Eleven teams will be
taking pan in the event.
Six boys teams and five girls
team will be in . the event,
Nelsonville-York,
Logan.
Alexandet, Eastern, W:Herfoni
and the host Meigs Marauders
wiU be taking pan in the boy's
division . .
In the girls division, Nel~
sonville-York,
Alexander,
Eastern, Waterfoni and Meig;i
will be participating.
Preliminary running events
will get underway ·at. IO a.m.,
with Field Events finals getting under way at the 'same
time. The finals for the running events will get underway
at 12:10 p.m . .
Last year. Wdlston .won the
boy's events wiih Meigs fin- .
· ishing as runnerup. ln the girls
·. division Vinton County took
home the crown with River
Valley finishing in second
place.

Indiana city awaits McVeigh Fear over foot-and-mouth
disease
aeate
. mess ~ in the U.S.
execution with fear , · ·
BY Jw Huata

The Daily Sentinel

•

about it;' said Gene Blew, a
veterinarian for the Oklahoma
Department of Agriculture.
"Tim particular virus is the.'
most contagious in the world."
Foot-and-mouth is dreaded
becaUSe.' it Can be transmitted
so easily - by dirt on vehicle
tires, clothes, shoes, even in the

Fear of foot-and•mouth
diSc.'ase has friendly Midwest- ·
ern brmers pulling up their
welcome mats. Zoos and
theme parks around the country are posting warning signs.
Some.' universities are canceling ovefl&lt;.'as exchange pro- 3lr.
grams and even quarantining
The virus is hannless ro
foreign students.
humans but destroys animals
Americans are closely hooves and causes mouth blish ·
L.
.
th .
. •
· ·
exanurung t e1r own cows, ters tnat rum err appetite.
h~- even giraffes- while The United States has not.had
also watching for anybody or· a confirmed case since I 929.
anything dut could carry into
In Britain, more than a milthe United Srates the highly lion animals have been concontagious disease ravaging deltUied ro slaughter in an
Britain's livestock.
attempt to contain the outAnd just in case foot-and- break, and · restrictions have
mouth sttikes thi$ country for been imposed on tourism
the first time in more dun 70 etrents and the movement of
years, officials are drawing up animals.
worst-case scenarios, fr;om
The United · States has
'destroying emiR henls o( cat- already banned imports of
de to mobilizing the National , livestock and raw meat .f rom
Guard.
Europe. Now, many of the
!·
"I wake up ,nights thinking , precautions are ainted at inter-

national travelen.
Zoos fium New York City
ro Chicago are posting signs
asking visitors who have been
ovefl&lt;.'as recendy to avoid petring zoos or other areas where
they can come in close contact
With animals. At the Busch
Gardens theme park in Tampa,
Fla:, visitors step into a disinfectant shoe bath before ·
boarding buses for tours where
th
r: d ·-"'es and ey can 1ee gtrau•
,.~.
l
to th
...l __ , __ ,_
0
c ~-- r: er ex~c iiiWiwa.
••uny .arm states
canceling agricultural tours that
bring in visitors from out of
town or overseas.
In Dlinois' Rock River Valley, farmers are redirecting foreign tours to livestock-free
attractions such as the John
Deere home. Agriculture olficials in Wisconsin advised
farmen to stop the tradition of
inviting visitors to tour the
farm aqd have breakfast in eelebration of dairy mon!h.

=

MelppH
tourney set
for May 5
ROCK SPRINGS ·- . The
eighth annual Meig, Football
GolfTournament will be held
. on Saturday, May 5 at the
Riivcriide Golf Course irl

Mason W.Va.
The tourriament will begin
with an 8:30 am shotgun
start.
·
The tournament will be a
four man scramble, bring your
own team fortll&lt;lt. The team's
handicap must be 40, or
above, with only one. team
member with a handicap
under 10.
The cost is $55 per person,
the price includes one mulligan, cart, lunch and beverages.
For more information on
the tin'lfnament you can contact Meigs football coach
Mike Chancey at 992-2158
(work) or 992-0064 (home).

Rookie shoot$
65 at Misters

Page 81 .

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'Retooled' Reds knock off
Pirates,.even season mark
CINCINNATI (AP) - The rerooled rop
of the Cincinnati Reds' lineup 6 doing its
pan. So is the srarting roration dur came in
for so many.questions.
Barry tartip lrepr geaing on base and
Dmitri Young doubled with U.., bases loaded
Thursday, leading the Reds to a 4-1 victory
over the Pittsbufgh Pir.~tes and a split of
. Cincinnati's four-game homestand.
Larkin and Young. the top two hitters in the
baaing onler, finished a productive week of
getting on base.and getting pivotal hits -jwt
what manager Bob Boone had in mind when ·
he reconfigured the llneup.

"They're reaUy good." Boone said. "I'm
kind ofliking it."
Larkin walked rwice and scored, ending a .
solid homestand. In his new role as leadoff
hitter, Urkin Sc.'! up rhe offense by reaching
base in 13 of his 18 plate appear.~nces.
Young. who bats second, leads the team
with a pair of homers and six RBis, helping
it get through the absence of Ken Griffey Jr.
The center fielder was out ofthe lineup for
all four games because of a strained hamstring. and struck out in his two pinch-hii
'

PltiH- Reds, ll

BIG HIT -. Dmitri Young of the Reds rips a bases-loaded. ~
ble against the Pirates in Cincy's 4-1 win. (AP)
r

Eastem buries 5. Gallia
Lodwick~

grand slam
paces Eagles

Southern
runs past
Wildcats
in TVC

. BY ANDREW CARTER
DVP SPORTS EDITOR

EAST MEIGS - East-'
ern rolled to its sixth consecutive victory Thursday,
defeating South Gallia 150 in a game that lasted just
. five innings.
Cass Lodwick carried
.the big stick forthe Eagles
yesterday, going 3-for-3
with a double, a ttiple and
. a grand slam home run,
which came in the midst of
an eight-run founh inning.
She had five RBI altogeth1,, er and scored four runs.
'
"I just Wanted to get on·
base, I just wanted to hit .
, it," Lodwick said of her
·grand slam.
•
Juli Bailey and ' Kayla
Gibbs combined for a nohitter. Bailey (6-1) went
three innings and recorded
six strikeouts and three
walks. She faced just 12
batte[$ during her stint and
picked up her sixth wil) of
the season.
Gibbs came on in the
fourth and pitched two
tidy innings. She had two
sttikeouts and walked just
one batter. She only faced
seven Rebels in her rwo
innings of w'i'rk.
,
Robyn Harrison took
the loss for the Rebels (25) , She pitched four

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

BY ScoTT WOLFE
OVP CORRESPONDENT

RACINE- An aggressive
. base-running game and a
couple Waterford miscues
allowed. the Southern Torna'
do's to po~t an 8-4 Tri-VaHey
Conference victory oyer the
Wildcats Thursday at Star Mill
Park.
'
Souihern had ten stolen
bases in the game, and thei.rco
· aggression on the base pathS
created some r"lns in resulting
Waterford errors.
Coach Scott Wiekline wd,
" We didn't hit well and we
didn't play well, but we found
· a ,way to win. We used our
speed on the bases tonight
and had some heads up play
that helped us plate some
runs . .
" Matt Ash pitched a good
ball game. He hadn't hacl
much work this spring, but he .
came through in the dutch
tonight."
Waterford took a 2-0 lead
in the first inning when Joey
Baker singled and advanced
on an error. Dan Doebriener
then · walked and Todd
McC utcheon singled home
both Baker and Dnebriener.
Southern made it 2-1 on a
·Chad H~bbard singled, two
stolen bases and an aggressive ·
lead that forced an ·o verthrow
at third off the pick-off play.
Thai run was crucial was
Doebriener struck · out the
next two batters, the score 2.

CENTER oF. :ATTENTION - Eastern' s Cass Lodwick (center) receives "congratulations ftom
her Eagle teammates after hitting a grand slam against South Gallia ..(Anclrew Carter)

AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP)
Tiger WoodS made only o_n e
1.
birdie on a·par 5 and fipished
. Waterford went up 3-1 in
· with a meager 70 while ('4asth e second. David Miller
ters rookie Chris DiMarco
reac.hed on an error at third,
led an assault' on a relativc;ly
th e stole second, advanced on
•.
·tame Augusta National course ·
a balk, and scored when he
. RACINE When sophomore · Coach Scott.Wolfe said, "We are get- batters over, w hik• S~:Catteri n g six hits
with SFen birdies on his first
stole home. A Justin Carney
hurler Jaconda Smith fanned the _first t.ing better, but tonight we psyched and walkin g just four. Smith picked up
13 holes for a one-stroke lead
singled followed and a walk to
three batters in the Sou1hem lineup, it ourselves out a little bit. We swung at the win and-has fill ed in well in replacover Steve Stricker and Angel
David Jones, but Ash worked
sen~ a message; a message Southern did- some bad pitches and made some bad ing all-state pitcher Cassie Hara, w ho
Cabrera of Argentina;
out of the i~_'\i!!S:.
..
n't overcome until fifth inning in a too decisions that put us ih the hole, but ..led Waterford to many wins over the
' DiMarco, whose 7-J.mder
. Southern pUlied wtthtn one
' litde, too late mission thauc&amp;ult.eP. in a overall we played well against a goad·- pa.~t four seasori's. :- ~ ·
65 · gave him the . best first
when Dally hill walked, stole
74
Waterford
win.
.
team,
and
a
goo~pi:tcher.
·
Southern's
.
_
R
achel
C
hapman
also
second and third, and scored
round by a.Masten rookie in
Coming
off
a
twenty-win
season,
"We
just
need
to
work
on
our
menpitched
well
m
scattermg
seven
hits,
on a 1- 3 groundout by Aaron
11 years, Was just one of sev, Waterford lifted its record to 4-3, but tal game more than anything- have a li t- striking out three and walkm g e1ght.
O hlinger, the score 3-2.
eral stories from the opening
'two
of'its
losses
came
at
the
hands
of
tie
confidence
in
ourselves
and
o
ur
Four
of
the
Waterford
runs
were
Southern threatened in the
round of the year's first nujor.
County
abilities.
We
~re
gettin
g
much
closer
to
unearned,
a11d
were·.
a
direct
resu
lt
of
undefeated
neighbor
Morgan
third
when Matt Shain
Phil Mickelson made four
in
a
doubleheader
Saturday.
Southern
being
a
good
team,"
said
Wolfe.
·
th
e
three
Southern
errors.
walkechmd"""ice Eill si n gl~d; straight birdies_ on the back
~-=5)
dropped
the
game,
but
ma
ha;c
:
·
Waterfot'O's
Smith
didnit
stop
'With
Waterford
tooka1-0
!Cao
'iri
t)1e
first
1
a.-67. his best !tart at
played
one
of
its
better
overall
games
of the three .strikeou ts she rung up in the
Augusta in five years. James
' Pluse HI Southam, II
Plnse see Softbell, Bl
the year.
first inning, continuing oil to fan 15
Driscoll, the U.S. Amateur
•
runner-up, finished with a ·68,
the lowest score for an amateur since 1983.
Fourteen players broke 70
in the first round, the most
since 15 players in 1995.
Also finishing at 67 were
opener for Sta,rs and the sea- th e"Sp~ing 50" at K-C !~ace- C in the final race of the 2000 coming in1998.
two-time U.S. Open champiBY ScOTT WOLFE
Mike Balzano,
Besides
OVP CORRESPONDENT
son opener forK-C. The pre- way Saturday for his first season . Driving th e Ostrom
on Lee Janzen and John HusCHILLICOTHE - Final mier late model event which S't'ARS sanctioned event win Painting/ MasterSbilt. Race :moth er Parkersburg driver,
.
ton.
the
Renegade of th e year mlast yearis open- Cars/Malcuit R acin g Engin es Steve Shaver, a big winner in
preparations have been made features
' Defending champion Vijay
for one of the season's biggest STARS ~ational D irt Car er
.
N o. 12, Aukland
Racin g Florida, will return. Other
Singh got off to a conservative
Ri ck
11\uk.land
'of Pontiac Grand Prix, Auk land, drivers exp.e cted include
races as the Renegade Series late model stock cars is
start and still managed a 69,
the 2000
STARS National Dirt Car expected to not only draw th e Zanesvi lle, Ohio, captured ·his formerly of North D•kota, C hub ·Frank,
along with Mark O'Meara:
s"eries invades the 3/8 mile STARS regulars, b.ut also. dri- ftrst Renegade STARS Rae- worked his way past Mike Renegade STARS champion
Others among the 33 players
Balzano on lap 47 after sta rt- from Sugar Grove, Pa; RJ.
who · broke par were Jose · ' high ~kS of K-C Raceway vers from several other pre- · mg.
. near thiUicothe,' Ohio, for mier organizations that are
Series sancrtion ed main mg Rth ai1d then held off Conley, Rod Conley, ind
Maria Olazabal (70), while
.t he 50-lap, $8,000 to wm idle that evenin g.
event win of the season by Davey Johnson by nearly one Delmas Conley ofWheelers~
the grol!P at 71 i11duded
Spring 50 Saturday, April 7.
· Mike Balzano of Parkers- pocketing th e SIO,IlOO to wi n second to score hi s second
David Duval, Greg Norman,
-Pl11se SM K·C. 18
K-C. IO(J" at K- ,career "K-C 100", the first
The race is t~ northern , b urg,Wv po.c ket ed $8 ,000 ·m "3rd AQllua~
,.
Er~ Els and Davis Love Ill.

Torn.adoes fall to Waterford, 7-4

,.

- ·--nrnelor

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K-C Raceway opens 1001 season.

•

STOP IN AND. LOOK OVERYOUR NEW FARM SUPPLY OUTLET IN CHESTER.
WHILE YOU ARE THERE, You CAN HAVE .LUNCH AT OUR NEWLY REMOD.ELED RESTAURANT.
.
AT 7:00 M
ES AT 8:00 PM

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_Friday, April, 21001
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The -Daily Sentinel..
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·Olympian 1n

~DMII&lt;LIII('
PIPI'111~-~~~~~~~

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earned - and seven hits in
In his major league debut, four innings.
B;en Sheets gave up one run
Andy Ashby (1-0) won his
for each Olympic ring.
Dodgers debut, allowing four
"Between the adrenaline runs and seven hits in 6 2-3
and trying to pitch, I lost it innings, including a two-run
somewhere," Shecti after the homer by pinch-hitter Erubiel
Milwaukee Brewers lost to the Durazo and a two-run single
.
Houston Astros 8-2 Thursday · by Tony Womack.
Jeff Shaw pitched the nimh
night. ''I've got to try to stay
relaxed and not try to do too at Dodger Stadium. converting
ntpch."
\
Ius !'7th straight save chance
Sheets, who starred for the and second this season.
gold medal-winning U.S. team
last year's Sydney Games, gave
up five runs and six hits in six
innings, a contrast to his threehit shutout of Cuba in the
gold medal game.
· Pedro Astacio gave Col. "~~n't want to give up orado its third straight solid
'five ru~in six innings and a outing, and the Rockies swept
two-run home run to the a season-opening three-game
eight hitter with the pitcher series at Coors Field as· Ron
corning up next," Brewers · Gant and Todd Helton each
manager Davey Lopes said. hit three-run homers.
"I'm trying to find something
Astacio (1-0) struck out 10
good, but no ~att~r _ho':" yo~ . in eight innings, allowing one
cut It, five runs m SlX 10rungs IS run six hits and no walks.
•
not.good.
Colorado's three starters gave
"He's got to improve and, up four runs in the series for a
hopefully, he will learn and get 1.69 ERA.
better."
Matt Morris (0-1) gave up
Richard Hidalgo hit a two- 10 runs - six earned - and
run homer and Chris Truby 14 hits in three-plus innings.
got his third homer in as many
·
games for Houston, 3-0 for
E
. xpos
the first time in 13 years.
U ·.,,
"For his first big league stan,
· "Truby , .Kevin
he was very aggreSSive,
. Tapani gave up
. two
.
said. "At certain points, he hits 10 seven sh~tout 10~ngs
might have lost a little bit of a~d struck out rune at W ngl_ey
his command, but he came " \F1~ld, , and Randell W~lte
back with his fastball. When.: drove 10 ailother run aga10st
th~t works he can get a way · his old. teaiJ) ,as the Cubs, got
with a lot.':
their first' win, this seaso~.
In other NL games, it was
Jeff Fassero_ allowed .~ .twc;&gt;"
New York 1, Adanta 1; San out homer m ~e nmtl) ~
Francisco 8, San Diego 2; Los Andy Tracy, but p1cked up his
Angeles 7, Arizona 5; Col- first save since June 30, 1993,
orado 11. St. Louis 2; Chicago when he was w1th Montreal.
Tony Arntas Jr. (0-1) gave up
2 Montreal t· and Cincinnati
4: Pittsburgh j.
two runs - only one. earned
At Enron Fidd,Wade Miller and four h1ts m five
(1 -0) struck out a career-high innings.
111, allowing two runs .and six
, '
·
hits ;n 1 2-3 innings.
Milwaukee .-headed home
' '
·'
for Friday's opening of Miller
With just f~ur runs and 12
Park with an 0-4 occord, the hits in 29 innings, the Baldworst in the major leaSlJeS.
more Orioles still nunaged !O
win two of three froin the
Boston Red Sox.
Derek Lowe walked Melvin
Mora
With the bases loaded in
Rick Reed (1-0) pitche.d a
the
ninih
· in.ning Thursday
three-hitter for his first comnight,
giving
Baltimore a 2-1
plete ga'!'e since October
·
1999 and delivered a two-run victory.
get
(onfidence
in
"You
single in a three-run
., second.
New York won
two
of
three winning the series, and liiggef
t''
'
.
'
in Adartta after having lost 21 confidence. in ,. winning these
of 27 at Turner Fi~ld . . Rey type of g~mes," •· Baltimore
Ordonez added twO RBI sin- catch~r Brook f.ordyce said.
gles, and Jay Payton went 3- "Those are the kind of games
you have to. win.;' ·
for-5.
·
Held hidess by Hideo
Odalis Perez (0-1), in his
Nomo
one nigljt earlier, the
first game since July, 22, 1999,
allowed four runs _._ three Orioles managed six hits off
earned - and eight hits in Frank Castillo and three
four .innings. He missed.. last relievers.
"I know we can hit," Boston
season following reconstrucmanager
Jimy Williams said.
tive surgery on his left elbow.
"There's good hitters in that
lineup. If you pitch aqd play
'

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Thunclar'•CincinnBU 4, Pillsllurgh I
Chicago Cubs 2. Montreal I

ColorlldO 11 , Sl. LOUIS 2
N.Y. lAMS 7. AIIanla 1 •
Houolon 8, Milwaukee 2
LOS AngeleS 7, Allzona 5
• San FranCisco 8, San Diego 2· 1 ·-· .

Todor'oGChlcago CullS (Tavamz 0.01 a1 PhHadel·
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Mets 7, Braves 1

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Stlouis (Ankiel O.O)al Arizona (Will 0.0),
4:35 p.m.
Atlanta (B&lt;nl&lt;ett 0.0) al Florida (0efi1JIIer •
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San Fmnclsoo (Hernandez 1.0) allos
Angeles (Pari&lt;I.O), 10:10 p.m.

Sundoy'o O.moo
Atlanta al Florida, I 005 p.m.
N.Y. Mots ai .Montreal. 1:35 p.m.
Chicago Cubs

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Oelroit (Holt o-4) II Chicago Willie Soli
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Sunday'oTampa Bay al Bolton, 1:05 p.m.
Toronlo 01 N.Y. Yanklles. 1:05 p.m.
1
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Balllmore al Cleveland, I :05 p.m.
2
Oakland
Delroit 81 Chicago While Sox, 2:05 p.m.
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Minnesota (Mays Q-0) 81 Kansas CitV
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Delroit (Milcld 0.0) al Chicago White Sox
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Before missing the playoffS by
one game last season, Cleveland won five straight AI.
Central tides and appeared in
its first two World ~eries since
t954.The Indians are 789-621
(.560) since Hart, one of baseball's most active executives,
became GM.

'l)'ansactions

1\vins 9, Tigers 5

.. .
.
/Reds
··c•nannati ·starters ... ,...•.
1 . ·ng the job
done.so far
'

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·:

REDS NOTEBOOK
.

. CINCINNATI (AP) - AU
the talk in spring training wa5
about the Cincinnati Reds'
. unsettled rotation. Four games
into the season, the it's been
ihe steadiest part of the team.
Elmer Dessens gave the
Reds their fourth straight
solid start Thursday, going
seven innings in a 4-1 victory
over the Pittsburgh Pirates.
"They're ·giving us wh2t we
need - six or seven strong
innings every night," catcher
·
Jason LaRue said.
Like Pete Harnisch, Osvaldo
·Fernandez and Chris Reitsma
before him, Dessens threw
~trikes and kept· the game
close.
: "It's not surprising;· manager Bob Boone said. "Anybody
' who has decent stuff and can
hit spots will make our in this
.. league, and we certainly ha:ve
guys to do that.''
During · the four-game
series, the starters went at least
six innings and gave up only
three wallts in 25 1-3 innings.
The rotation picked up both
wins, while the bullpen blew
· leads and was tagged with two
"losses.
. The only ~ate with the
rotation came on a pair ofballs
'hit tip the middle Thursday.
':Dessens knocked dPWn Brian ·
"Giles'line dive in the first and
-threw him out, then took a
·:hard-hit grounder from
·•Ararnis Rarpirez off his right
·forearm to open the second

-' .

mrung.
A trainer went to the
mound and looked at Dessens'
arm, then.allowed him to continue.
"We were worried," LaRlle
said. "We didn't ltitow if it
would tighten up or not.
Obviously, it didn't."
Dessens said the forearm
didn't bother him.
.
"I felt reaUy"good," he said. •
"I left some pitches up but
lucklly, the hitters aren't as
sharp early in the season as
they will be in the middle of
the season."
REITSMA CONTENT
WITH DEBUT: Overlooked
in rhe Reds' 6-5, to~inrung
loss on Wednesday night was
Chris Reitsma's sDI,id fuajor
league debut.
'
Reitsma, making the jump
from Double-A, gave up only
three hits and one walk in six '
innings, leaving for a pinch
hitter with the Reds trailing
2-1.·
'
Reitsma, 23, said he had an
upset stomach before the
game, possibly the result of
something he ate. He got
some intravenous fluids and
felt better.
"When I walked out there, I
didn't feel anything," ·he said.
He made only one really
bad pitch, a change-up that
Adrian Brown hit for a tworun homer. Otherwise, things
went as planned.
'
"I wasn't too nervous,

Young sliced a double that 10ft popped out and· Adrim
rolkd to the base of the wall BlOWD SJOUDCied into a douin right-center for a 4-0 lead. ble play. endinJ PiasburJb's
"You can't lose it lib that," best thn;at.
.
•
Anderson said. "1 , . - 20BmWii purii'6f ii*J oaly
appearances.
501lle pitches (ia 12 .third)
'' t don't feel any pressure," and ir ends up costing us the oDe deubiC pfz.j iD&gt; 1.04 ~mes
Wt season.
said Young, who expects to
game:·
"'
old adage: l]w'• the
bat ahead of Griffey whenevThe starting roilltion, a vnty the )laD boDnces .someer the Reds' top star returns. concern for the Reds, came
times," _McQendon said, "It ·
"lfl put pressure on myself, I through during the homesdidn't bounce for 115."
couldn't be able to come rand. Dessens allowed · seven
Nod's: McClendon is leanthrough in any siruation."
hits in Seven ino.i!lgs, ·'giving
.t~sd· starting Thdd
The Pirates' pitching staft' is
the Reds their fourth straighr Ritchie m the PNC ·Park
under immeme pressure only
solid start, Bo~ losses in the , o~er on Monday,.,Ritchie
which w.as surprising 'to me;• three games into the 'season. . series were pinned •on the ·~urrendy is sc!Jc!dulecf'ta start ·
he ~id. "It was exciting, but Pittsburgh .lost yet another bullpen.
Surtday 10 H~uston. ~ ...
I've been preparing myself for starter in Cincinnati.
"Ewrybody rode our start- Reliever Bill Taylor was called
Terry Mulholland, who
this."
ing pitchers up the river, but I up from Triple-A to take
CASEY AND PNC: As ~ s1&gt;rained his left knee during a
boy growing up in western 6-5 win on Wednesday night, · knew they could give us six Mulholland's spot on the roSPennsylvania, Reds first base- was placed on the 15-day dis- or seven strong innings every ter. ... Pittsburgh has seven
man Sean Casey was a Pitts- abled list Thursday.. Fourth- night and turn ic over ro the players on · the disabled list,
bullpen;'Young said.
including five pitchers. ...
burgh fan. He's excited about
fifths of-the Jlirates' ihtation is
Mark Wohlers pitched a Anderson walked Larkin to
becoming part of Pirates hishurt, and they haven't even
tory next week.
.
. perfect eighth - he hasn't start the Reds' first ·inning. In
The Reds will open PNC opened their new PNC Park given up a hit or a walk in his · 26 starts last season,
Park on Monday, and Casey is · yet.
two innings this season Anderson retired the side in.
"There are better days
eager to see the Pirates' new
and John Riedling pitched order only six rimes in the
ahead for us," manager Lloyd
ballpark.
the ninth for his second first· inning. He also gave up
"With me being from there, McClendon said.
career save.
25 first-inning runs last seait's going to' be an experiJimmy Anderson (0-1)
The
Reds
goc
a' scare in the
son, tied with Jose Silva for
ence," Casey said. "I saw games pitched well with the excepArarnis
second
inning,
when
most on the staff.... The Reds
at Three Rivers Stadium tion of one inning. The left' sharply
hit threw three wild pitches durprobably 15' to 20 a year with bander gave up four runs on Ramirez's
!ieOec~ed
off ing the homestand. Last seamy friends in the upper deck three hits in the third, and grounder
Dessens' right forearm. He son, they set a major league
or with my dad, who could
only ~o tnore infield singles
rolled up his black shirt sleeve record with 96. .. . Ruben
usually get better seats." .
.
Casey hasn't seen any pic- in his seven innings overall.
so a trainer' could examine Rivera, who had a careerThe Reds' first five batters him, then ·threw a couple 1of
tures of the ballpark, but ht
high four hits .on .Wednesday
got reports fro!U his dad and reached safely · in the third warmup pitches.
night, started again and went'
from Pirates players during inning, when· Pokey Reese
"Not for one minute did I 0-for-3.
their three-game series in singled, stole second .and think about corning out of
Cincinnati.
came around on Jason the game," Dessens said.
"My dad '-'(ent to the first LaRue's soft single off the bat
Brian Giles hit a !Olo
exhibition game and sailf it's . handle. Anderson then walked
beautiful," Casey said. " I've Elmer Dessens (1-0) arid homer in the fourth and the
talked to some of the players Larkin to load the bases, and Pirates loaded the bases with
none out in the fifth. Anderand they said it's beautiful,
too?'
Since the Reds bat first,
Casey might get a ch~nce to·
get the first regular-season hit
or RBI at ·PNC.
,
The Daily Sentinel
"It would reaDy be near to
'
be a .Part of that- and to get
a first-something," he said.
Subscribe today • 992-2156
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11 • .

NewYo!k

L

Chris Carpenter (1 -0)
allowed four hits and struck
out a career-high I 1 in eight
innings for visiting Toronto,
improving to 5-1 against
Tampa Bay.
Darrin Fletcher's two-run
double keyed a four-run first
after Ben Grieve misJudged
American League
' Raul Mondesi's fly ball to
BOSTON RED SOXright for a two-base error, and Signed C Jason Varitek to a
Vinny Castilla misplayed Brad .• three-year contract extension
· Fullmer's
bases-loaded through the 2004 season.
grounder to third, allowing
CLEVELAND
INDItwo runs to score.
ANS- AnnouncedJohn Hart,
Tampa Bay made five errors general manager, ~ll step
and just two of seven runs off doWn after this season, · aqd
Bryan Rekar (0-1) were remain with the team as ·a sp~­
earned.
cial consultant. Named assi~tant general manager Ma~k .
Shapiro general manag~r.
effective Nov. I. Rescinded
UCKIN8 HIS CHOPS- Houston's Wade Miller prepares to go · Todd, Jones (0-1) wasted a the March 27 option ofRHP
ninth-inning lead at Detroit, Jamie Brown and placed him
to the plate against Milwaukee. (API
rhen allowed three more runs on the 15-day disabled list,
in the lOth.
, retroa.ctive, to, Marc~ 25. · ,
l
'
DIJ9g
Mientkiewicz
'hit
a
TORONTO
BU~E
like that, you'll win.''
time ·world Series champions
. Placed • 2B . f.iom.er
In other AL games, it w.as have opened the · season 3-0 tying sacrifice fly. in the ninth JAYSNew York 1, Kansas City 0; for the first rime since' 1995. . and, after Jones loaded the ~ush on the IS-day disable~
Mariano Rivera got four bases in the 1Oth, Corey list. Recalled INF Cesar Iztuns
Anaheim 10, Texas 3; Toronto
II, Tampa Bay 0; and Min- outs for his. first
save of the Koskie hit a .sacrifice fly off · f~m Syracuse of the lnterna-.
.
C.J. Nitkowski, who then nona! LeaB?e.
nesota 9, Detroit-5.
seasop.
threw a run-scoring wild pitch
National League ;
At Camden Yards, Buddy
CINCINNATI ' REDS.
and allowed a \wo-run double
Groom (1-0) got two outs in
to Denny Hocking.
Placed RHP Scott :Williarns~ri
the nitith after Jason Johnson,
Eddie Guardado· (1 -0) · on the 60-day disabled ~st.
1-10 a year ago, gave up ,one
allowed
ail RBI double ro Called up RHP Scott Wmrun and seven hits in 8 1-3
..
innings,
Wally Joyner homered and Tony Clark · in the bottom chester from LouisvW,~ of t?e
PCL.
'
"To be able to take two out hit an RBI single in his first half
LOS
ANGEL~S
of three f{om the Red Sox start for the Angels sine~ 1991 .
DODGERS-Placed ..f]'!F
:with (Pedro) Martinez pitch- · Troy Glaus · homered twice
Tim Bogar on the 15-day ~is­
ing one of those games is and Ramon Ortiz (1~0) struck ·
abled list, retroactive tj) April
nice," Orioles manager Mike out I 0 at Arlihgton~ becoming
i!. Purchased the contract of .
Hargrove said.
the . first Anaheim pitcher to
3B
Phil Hiatt' from L~s Vegas 1
CLEVELAND (AP)
reach !louble digits since
'
Chuck Finley in August 1999. John Hart, who inherited a ofthe PCL. !
NEW YORK METS-So.ld
Ryan, Glynn (0-1) gave up team that lost 105 games in
the
contract of LH'P Jeff
five runs and eight hits ih 5 1- 1991, announced that he will
3 innings and left after he was step down as Cleveland's gen- Kubenka to 'Chiba l:.otte pf
Mike .Mussina (1-0) made a hit on his pitching shoulder1by eral manager on Nov. 1 and be the Japanese.Pacifia League. ;
•
sparkling debut for New York, a liner off the bat of Glenallen replaced by his assistant, Mark · PITTSBURGH :
PIRATES-Pia~t.;l. ~ LfiP
allowing five hits in 7 2-3 Hill.
Shapiro.
"J::erry
M.ulhoUarid ·on the 16innings.
Alex ROdriguez was 0-forUnder H~rt's guidance, th,e
':There Were a lot of places I 4, dropping to 4-for-16 Y(ith Indians have enjoyed , ~heir day ·disabled . list~~ Called ~P
c;ould h~ve gon~ ":!here they no RBis.
longest stretch. of success since RHP Bill · Taylor from
.
,
would have sentme..out as the
the late 1940s and ~arly '50s. Nashville of tlie PCL.
'
·'
"
opening-day starter and
expected me . to , win 22
games," said Mussina, who
signed with the Yankees after
•
10 seasons in .Baltimore.
• •
"That's not the case here."
Paul O'Neill homered in
'·
the first inning off Dan
Reichert· (0-1). The three-

1 800 822-o417. (304) 344-5947
••

w

Blue Jays 11,
Devil Rays 0

......

Jeff Kent hit a tiebreaking
three-run homer off Bobby J.
Jones in the third as San F~n­
cisco completed a seasonopening three-game .sweep of.
visiting San Diego.
·
Jones (1-0) pitched a onehit shutout for the New York
Mets to eliminate the Giants
in the first round of last year's ·
NL playoffs, allowing only a
fifth-inning double to Kent. ,
Russ Ortiz (1-0) gave up 1
two runs :ind eight hits in 5 23 innings.
·

,.

Ealt-

Chk:ago Cubo (Bora 0.0) at~
(0..1 0.0). 1:05 p.m.
N.Y. Melo (Tracfllel 0.0) al M&lt;XI1nlal
(Vazquez 0.0), 2:05p.m.
Clnclnnlti (He.-, CHI) at - (Wrlghl Q-1), 2:05p.m.
.
Pillsburgll (Arroyo().()) al Houllon (Bel·

Cardinals l

C bs •

SM Diogo 11 ~. 3!05 p.m.
Sl.l..ouio 1 1 - . 4:35 p.m.
SM FranciocO II Loa ~•.1:05 p.m.

The Deily SuiiMI• Pege B 3

•

'

Clncilo. . llllt ·' ,2:o5p.m.
,....,..., II . - . 2:35p.m.

man ()-0), 7:05 p.m.
(Modlilx CHI) 1 1 - (~ 1-o),
7;05 p .m.
(Bell 0.0)
(0'·co o-4), 8:05p.m.
Pi11lllurgll (Oholteo 0.0) at (Oolel 0.()), 8:05 p.m.
-Diogo (EaiOIIO.()) al ~
(llollano&lt;l 0.0). t:05 p.m.
I
$1. Loulo (Honnonoon CHI) a1 Arizona
(RoynoeoO.O), !0:05p.m.
SM Francllco (Ealel 0.0) at LDo Angllles
(P""""'""O.O), IO:IO,p.m.

Rockies 11,

..

Pagell

Baseball

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. Pomeroyt Mllldllport. Ohio

l'llpter, WV

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Gene H. Abels, M.D., board certified in internal medicine; accepting
new patients; practice limited to heart disease, hypertension, lipid
abnormalities (cholesterol abnormalities) and any associated
diabetes. Special interest in conges.tlve heart failure.
'
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Balusamy Subbiah, M.l&gt;., board certified in internal medicine a~d
pulmonary disease; accepting new patients; practice ·limited to
chronic lung disease, asthma, emphysema,_black lung, a 'stosis. _·
Gerald E. Vallee, M.D. board certified in internal
pulmonary disease. ·

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_Friday, April, 21001
'·

•

•

The -Daily Sentinel..
~

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·Olympian 1n

~DMII&lt;LIII('
PIPI'111~-~~~~~~~

3

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earned - and seven hits in
In his major league debut, four innings.
B;en Sheets gave up one run
Andy Ashby (1-0) won his
for each Olympic ring.
Dodgers debut, allowing four
"Between the adrenaline runs and seven hits in 6 2-3
and trying to pitch, I lost it innings, including a two-run
somewhere," Shecti after the homer by pinch-hitter Erubiel
Milwaukee Brewers lost to the Durazo and a two-run single
.
Houston Astros 8-2 Thursday · by Tony Womack.
Jeff Shaw pitched the nimh
night. ''I've got to try to stay
relaxed and not try to do too at Dodger Stadium. converting
ntpch."
\
Ius !'7th straight save chance
Sheets, who starred for the and second this season.
gold medal-winning U.S. team
last year's Sydney Games, gave
up five runs and six hits in six
innings, a contrast to his threehit shutout of Cuba in the
gold medal game.
· Pedro Astacio gave Col. "~~n't want to give up orado its third straight solid
'five ru~in six innings and a outing, and the Rockies swept
two-run home run to the a season-opening three-game
eight hitter with the pitcher series at Coors Field as· Ron
corning up next," Brewers · Gant and Todd Helton each
manager Davey Lopes said. hit three-run homers.
"I'm trying to find something
Astacio (1-0) struck out 10
good, but no ~att~r _ho':" yo~ . in eight innings, allowing one
cut It, five runs m SlX 10rungs IS run six hits and no walks.
•
not.good.
Colorado's three starters gave
"He's got to improve and, up four runs in the series for a
hopefully, he will learn and get 1.69 ERA.
better."
Matt Morris (0-1) gave up
Richard Hidalgo hit a two- 10 runs - six earned - and
run homer and Chris Truby 14 hits in three-plus innings.
got his third homer in as many
·
games for Houston, 3-0 for
E
. xpos
the first time in 13 years.
U ·.,,
"For his first big league stan,
· "Truby , .Kevin
he was very aggreSSive,
. Tapani gave up
. two
.
said. "At certain points, he hits 10 seven sh~tout 10~ngs
might have lost a little bit of a~d struck out rune at W ngl_ey
his command, but he came " \F1~ld, , and Randell W~lte
back with his fastball. When.: drove 10 ailother run aga10st
th~t works he can get a way · his old. teaiJ) ,as the Cubs, got
with a lot.':
their first' win, this seaso~.
In other NL games, it was
Jeff Fassero_ allowed .~ .twc;&gt;"
New York 1, Adanta 1; San out homer m ~e nmtl) ~
Francisco 8, San Diego 2; Los Andy Tracy, but p1cked up his
Angeles 7, Arizona 5; Col- first save since June 30, 1993,
orado 11. St. Louis 2; Chicago when he was w1th Montreal.
Tony Arntas Jr. (0-1) gave up
2 Montreal t· and Cincinnati
4: Pittsburgh j.
two runs - only one. earned
At Enron Fidd,Wade Miller and four h1ts m five
(1 -0) struck out a career-high innings.
111, allowing two runs .and six
, '
·
hits ;n 1 2-3 innings.
Milwaukee .-headed home
' '
·'
for Friday's opening of Miller
With just f~ur runs and 12
Park with an 0-4 occord, the hits in 29 innings, the Baldworst in the major leaSlJeS.
more Orioles still nunaged !O
win two of three froin the
Boston Red Sox.
Derek Lowe walked Melvin
Mora
With the bases loaded in
Rick Reed (1-0) pitche.d a
the
ninih
· in.ning Thursday
three-hitter for his first comnight,
giving
Baltimore a 2-1
plete ga'!'e since October
·
1999 and delivered a two-run victory.
get
(onfidence
in
"You
single in a three-run
., second.
New York won
two
of
three winning the series, and liiggef
t''
'
.
'
in Adartta after having lost 21 confidence. in ,. winning these
of 27 at Turner Fi~ld . . Rey type of g~mes," •· Baltimore
Ordonez added twO RBI sin- catch~r Brook f.ordyce said.
gles, and Jay Payton went 3- "Those are the kind of games
you have to. win.;' ·
for-5.
·
Held hidess by Hideo
Odalis Perez (0-1), in his
Nomo
one nigljt earlier, the
first game since July, 22, 1999,
allowed four runs _._ three Orioles managed six hits off
earned - and eight hits in Frank Castillo and three
four .innings. He missed.. last relievers.
"I know we can hit," Boston
season following reconstrucmanager
Jimy Williams said.
tive surgery on his left elbow.
"There's good hitters in that
lineup. If you pitch aqd play
'

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Chicago Cubs 2. Montreal I

ColorlldO 11 , Sl. LOUIS 2
N.Y. lAMS 7. AIIanla 1 •
Houolon 8, Milwaukee 2
LOS AngeleS 7, Allzona 5
• San FranCisco 8, San Diego 2· 1 ·-· .

Todor'oGChlcago CullS (Tavamz 0.01 a1 PhHadel·
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Mets 7, Braves 1

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San Diego (WIIIioms 0·1) at ColorlldO
(Ha"'4"on 1.01, 3:05p.m.
Stlouis (Ankiel O.O)al Arizona (Will 0.0),
4:35 p.m.
Atlanta (B&lt;nl&lt;ett 0.0) al Florida (0efi1JIIer •
0·1), 7:05p.m.
San Fmnclsoo (Hernandez 1.0) allos
Angeles (Pari&lt;I.O), 10:10 p.m.

Sundoy'o O.moo
Atlanta al Florida, I 005 p.m.
N.Y. Mots ai .Montreal. 1:35 p.m.
Chicago Cubs

at Philadelphia, 1:35 p.m.

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Oelroit (Holt o-4) II Chicago Willie Soli
(BueiVIe o-4), 2:05 p.m.
(lledman 0.()) .. - . CHy
(~ Q-1), 2:05p.m.
Anaheim~ 0.0) al OOidol1d (Hudson 0.0), 4:05 p.m.
·
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'

Sunday'oTampa Bay al Bolton, 1:05 p.m.
Toronlo 01 N.Y. Yanklles. 1:05 p.m.
1
Anahalm
2
I
Balllmore al Cleveland, I :05 p.m.
2
Oakland
Delroit 81 Chicago While Sox, 2:05 p.m.
,
Todoy'o- ,
MJnnoSOia all&lt;ansas Clly, 2:05p.m. ·.
Ba (R
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8
Tampa Y upe
• Anaheim 31 Oakland. 4:05p.m.
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Minnesota (Mays Q-0) 81 Kansas CitV
(Meadows 0.01. 2:05p.m.
Delroit (Milcld 0.0) al Chicago White Sox
(Paique ().()),4:05p.m .

Saa11le
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Before missing the playoffS by
one game last season, Cleveland won five straight AI.
Central tides and appeared in
its first two World ~eries since
t954.The Indians are 789-621
(.560) since Hart, one of baseball's most active executives,
became GM.

'l)'ansactions

1\vins 9, Tigers 5

.. .
.
/Reds
··c•nannati ·starters ... ,...•.
1 . ·ng the job
done.so far
'

•

·:

REDS NOTEBOOK
.

. CINCINNATI (AP) - AU
the talk in spring training wa5
about the Cincinnati Reds'
. unsettled rotation. Four games
into the season, the it's been
ihe steadiest part of the team.
Elmer Dessens gave the
Reds their fourth straight
solid start Thursday, going
seven innings in a 4-1 victory
over the Pittsburgh Pirates.
"They're ·giving us wh2t we
need - six or seven strong
innings every night," catcher
·
Jason LaRue said.
Like Pete Harnisch, Osvaldo
·Fernandez and Chris Reitsma
before him, Dessens threw
~trikes and kept· the game
close.
: "It's not surprising;· manager Bob Boone said. "Anybody
' who has decent stuff and can
hit spots will make our in this
.. league, and we certainly ha:ve
guys to do that.''
During · the four-game
series, the starters went at least
six innings and gave up only
three wallts in 25 1-3 innings.
The rotation picked up both
wins, while the bullpen blew
· leads and was tagged with two
"losses.
. The only ~ate with the
rotation came on a pair ofballs
'hit tip the middle Thursday.
':Dessens knocked dPWn Brian ·
"Giles'line dive in the first and
-threw him out, then took a
·:hard-hit grounder from
·•Ararnis Rarpirez off his right
·forearm to open the second

-' .

mrung.
A trainer went to the
mound and looked at Dessens'
arm, then.allowed him to continue.
"We were worried," LaRlle
said. "We didn't ltitow if it
would tighten up or not.
Obviously, it didn't."
Dessens said the forearm
didn't bother him.
.
"I felt reaUy"good," he said. •
"I left some pitches up but
lucklly, the hitters aren't as
sharp early in the season as
they will be in the middle of
the season."
REITSMA CONTENT
WITH DEBUT: Overlooked
in rhe Reds' 6-5, to~inrung
loss on Wednesday night was
Chris Reitsma's sDI,id fuajor
league debut.
'
Reitsma, making the jump
from Double-A, gave up only
three hits and one walk in six '
innings, leaving for a pinch
hitter with the Reds trailing
2-1.·
'
Reitsma, 23, said he had an
upset stomach before the
game, possibly the result of
something he ate. He got
some intravenous fluids and
felt better.
"When I walked out there, I
didn't feel anything," ·he said.
He made only one really
bad pitch, a change-up that
Adrian Brown hit for a tworun homer. Otherwise, things
went as planned.
'
"I wasn't too nervous,

Young sliced a double that 10ft popped out and· Adrim
rolkd to the base of the wall BlOWD SJOUDCied into a douin right-center for a 4-0 lead. ble play. endinJ PiasburJb's
"You can't lose it lib that," best thn;at.
.
•
Anderson said. "1 , . - 20BmWii purii'6f ii*J oaly
appearances.
501lle pitches (ia 12 .third)
'' t don't feel any pressure," and ir ends up costing us the oDe deubiC pfz.j iD&gt; 1.04 ~mes
Wt season.
said Young, who expects to
game:·
"'
old adage: l]w'• the
bat ahead of Griffey whenevThe starting roilltion, a vnty the )laD boDnces .someer the Reds' top star returns. concern for the Reds, came
times," _McQendon said, "It ·
"lfl put pressure on myself, I through during the homesdidn't bounce for 115."
couldn't be able to come rand. Dessens allowed · seven
Nod's: McClendon is leanthrough in any siruation."
hits in Seven ino.i!lgs, ·'giving
.t~sd· starting Thdd
The Pirates' pitching staft' is
the Reds their fourth straighr Ritchie m the PNC ·Park
under immeme pressure only
solid start, Bo~ losses in the , o~er on Monday,.,Ritchie
which w.as surprising 'to me;• three games into the 'season. . series were pinned •on the ·~urrendy is sc!Jc!dulecf'ta start ·
he ~id. "It was exciting, but Pittsburgh .lost yet another bullpen.
Surtday 10 H~uston. ~ ...
I've been preparing myself for starter in Cincinnati.
"Ewrybody rode our start- Reliever Bill Taylor was called
Terry Mulholland, who
this."
ing pitchers up the river, but I up from Triple-A to take
CASEY AND PNC: As ~ s1&gt;rained his left knee during a
boy growing up in western 6-5 win on Wednesday night, · knew they could give us six Mulholland's spot on the roSPennsylvania, Reds first base- was placed on the 15-day dis- or seven strong innings every ter. ... Pittsburgh has seven
man Sean Casey was a Pitts- abled list Thursday.. Fourth- night and turn ic over ro the players on · the disabled list,
bullpen;'Young said.
including five pitchers. ...
burgh fan. He's excited about
fifths of-the Jlirates' ihtation is
Mark Wohlers pitched a Anderson walked Larkin to
becoming part of Pirates hishurt, and they haven't even
tory next week.
.
. perfect eighth - he hasn't start the Reds' first ·inning. In
The Reds will open PNC opened their new PNC Park given up a hit or a walk in his · 26 starts last season,
Park on Monday, and Casey is · yet.
two innings this season Anderson retired the side in.
"There are better days
eager to see the Pirates' new
and John Riedling pitched order only six rimes in the
ahead for us," manager Lloyd
ballpark.
the ninth for his second first· inning. He also gave up
"With me being from there, McClendon said.
career save.
25 first-inning runs last seait's going to' be an experiJimmy Anderson (0-1)
The
Reds
goc
a' scare in the
son, tied with Jose Silva for
ence," Casey said. "I saw games pitched well with the excepArarnis
second
inning,
when
most on the staff.... The Reds
at Three Rivers Stadium tion of one inning. The left' sharply
hit threw three wild pitches durprobably 15' to 20 a year with bander gave up four runs on Ramirez's
!ieOec~ed
off ing the homestand. Last seamy friends in the upper deck three hits in the third, and grounder
Dessens' right forearm. He son, they set a major league
or with my dad, who could
only ~o tnore infield singles
rolled up his black shirt sleeve record with 96. .. . Ruben
usually get better seats." .
.
Casey hasn't seen any pic- in his seven innings overall.
so a trainer' could examine Rivera, who had a careerThe Reds' first five batters him, then ·threw a couple 1of
tures of the ballpark, but ht
high four hits .on .Wednesday
got reports fro!U his dad and reached safely · in the third warmup pitches.
night, started again and went'
from Pirates players during inning, when· Pokey Reese
"Not for one minute did I 0-for-3.
their three-game series in singled, stole second .and think about corning out of
Cincinnati.
came around on Jason the game," Dessens said.
"My dad '-'(ent to the first LaRue's soft single off the bat
Brian Giles hit a !Olo
exhibition game and sailf it's . handle. Anderson then walked
beautiful," Casey said. " I've Elmer Dessens (1-0) arid homer in the fourth and the
talked to some of the players Larkin to load the bases, and Pirates loaded the bases with
none out in the fifth. Anderand they said it's beautiful,
too?'
Since the Reds bat first,
Casey might get a ch~nce to·
get the first regular-season hit
or RBI at ·PNC.
,
The Daily Sentinel
"It would reaDy be near to
'
be a .Part of that- and to get
a first-something," he said.
Subscribe today • 992-2156
..

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Angels 10,
Rangers :I

'Mbe's Hart
to retire

Yankees 1,
Royals o

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, LS EJIInded Clb «Jr. Z71414

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.... MEDICAL ASSOCIATES OF GALLIPOLIS
PRACTICING AT THE MEDICAt.. PLAZA
936 State Route 160
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
·telephone: 740-446;...9620

'·

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Thomas Price, M.D. board certified in obstetrics and gynecology;
'accepting new patients; practice limited omce gynecology, _yearly
exam, pelvic.exams, pap tests, and.mammograms.
'

Wonderful opportunltlll ar, aYIIIable In T9m
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ExCELLENT PAYMINT PLAN
GREAT BENI!FIT8 (INCLUDING DIMO ~f!OGR,AM)

WORK AT THE #1 DEALIRIHIP.

Col! TQ Sch!dyle An lnteMew;

Tom Peden Country
ChllrOh

•
11 • .

NewYo!k

L

Chris Carpenter (1 -0)
allowed four hits and struck
out a career-high I 1 in eight
innings for visiting Toronto,
improving to 5-1 against
Tampa Bay.
Darrin Fletcher's two-run
double keyed a four-run first
after Ben Grieve misJudged
American League
' Raul Mondesi's fly ball to
BOSTON RED SOXright for a two-base error, and Signed C Jason Varitek to a
Vinny Castilla misplayed Brad .• three-year contract extension
· Fullmer's
bases-loaded through the 2004 season.
grounder to third, allowing
CLEVELAND
INDItwo runs to score.
ANS- AnnouncedJohn Hart,
Tampa Bay made five errors general manager, ~ll step
and just two of seven runs off doWn after this season, · aqd
Bryan Rekar (0-1) were remain with the team as ·a sp~­
earned.
cial consultant. Named assi~tant general manager Ma~k .
Shapiro general manag~r.
effective Nov. I. Rescinded
UCKIN8 HIS CHOPS- Houston's Wade Miller prepares to go · Todd, Jones (0-1) wasted a the March 27 option ofRHP
ninth-inning lead at Detroit, Jamie Brown and placed him
to the plate against Milwaukee. (API
rhen allowed three more runs on the 15-day disabled list,
in the lOth.
, retroa.ctive, to, Marc~ 25. · ,
l
'
DIJ9g
Mientkiewicz
'hit
a
TORONTO
BU~E
like that, you'll win.''
time ·world Series champions
. Placed • 2B . f.iom.er
In other AL games, it w.as have opened the · season 3-0 tying sacrifice fly. in the ninth JAYSNew York 1, Kansas City 0; for the first rime since' 1995. . and, after Jones loaded the ~ush on the IS-day disable~
Mariano Rivera got four bases in the 1Oth, Corey list. Recalled INF Cesar Iztuns
Anaheim 10, Texas 3; Toronto
II, Tampa Bay 0; and Min- outs for his. first
save of the Koskie hit a .sacrifice fly off · f~m Syracuse of the lnterna-.
.
C.J. Nitkowski, who then nona! LeaB?e.
nesota 9, Detroit-5.
seasop.
threw a run-scoring wild pitch
National League ;
At Camden Yards, Buddy
CINCINNATI ' REDS.
and allowed a \wo-run double
Groom (1-0) got two outs in
to Denny Hocking.
Placed RHP Scott :Williarns~ri
the nitith after Jason Johnson,
Eddie Guardado· (1 -0) · on the 60-day disabled ~st.
1-10 a year ago, gave up ,one
allowed
ail RBI double ro Called up RHP Scott Wmrun and seven hits in 8 1-3
..
innings,
Wally Joyner homered and Tony Clark · in the bottom chester from LouisvW,~ of t?e
PCL.
'
"To be able to take two out hit an RBI single in his first half
LOS
ANGEL~S
of three f{om the Red Sox start for the Angels sine~ 1991 .
DODGERS-Placed ..f]'!F
:with (Pedro) Martinez pitch- · Troy Glaus · homered twice
Tim Bogar on the 15-day ~is­
ing one of those games is and Ramon Ortiz (1~0) struck ·
abled list, retroactive tj) April
nice," Orioles manager Mike out I 0 at Arlihgton~ becoming
i!. Purchased the contract of .
Hargrove said.
the . first Anaheim pitcher to
3B
Phil Hiatt' from L~s Vegas 1
CLEVELAND (AP)
reach !louble digits since
'
Chuck Finley in August 1999. John Hart, who inherited a ofthe PCL. !
NEW YORK METS-So.ld
Ryan, Glynn (0-1) gave up team that lost 105 games in
the
contract of LH'P Jeff
five runs and eight hits ih 5 1- 1991, announced that he will
3 innings and left after he was step down as Cleveland's gen- Kubenka to 'Chiba l:.otte pf
Mike .Mussina (1-0) made a hit on his pitching shoulder1by eral manager on Nov. 1 and be the Japanese.Pacifia League. ;
•
sparkling debut for New York, a liner off the bat of Glenallen replaced by his assistant, Mark · PITTSBURGH :
PIRATES-Pia~t.;l. ~ LfiP
allowing five hits in 7 2-3 Hill.
Shapiro.
"J::erry
M.ulhoUarid ·on the 16innings.
Alex ROdriguez was 0-forUnder H~rt's guidance, th,e
':There Were a lot of places I 4, dropping to 4-for-16 Y(ith Indians have enjoyed , ~heir day ·disabled . list~~ Called ~P
c;ould h~ve gon~ ":!here they no RBis.
longest stretch. of success since RHP Bill · Taylor from
.
,
would have sentme..out as the
the late 1940s and ~arly '50s. Nashville of tlie PCL.
'
·'
"
opening-day starter and
expected me . to , win 22
games," said Mussina, who
signed with the Yankees after
•
10 seasons in .Baltimore.
• •
"That's not the case here."
Paul O'Neill homered in
'·
the first inning off Dan
Reichert· (0-1). The three-

1 800 822-o417. (304) 344-5947
••

w

Blue Jays 11,
Devil Rays 0

......

Jeff Kent hit a tiebreaking
three-run homer off Bobby J.
Jones in the third as San F~n­
cisco completed a seasonopening three-game .sweep of.
visiting San Diego.
·
Jones (1-0) pitched a onehit shutout for the New York
Mets to eliminate the Giants
in the first round of last year's ·
NL playoffs, allowing only a
fifth-inning double to Kent. ,
Russ Ortiz (1-0) gave up 1
two runs :ind eight hits in 5 23 innings.
·

,.

Ealt-

Chk:ago Cubo (Bora 0.0) at~
(0..1 0.0). 1:05 p.m.
N.Y. Melo (Tracfllel 0.0) al M&lt;XI1nlal
(Vazquez 0.0), 2:05p.m.
Clnclnnlti (He.-, CHI) at - (Wrlghl Q-1), 2:05p.m.
.
Pillsburgll (Arroyo().()) al Houllon (Bel·

Cardinals l

C bs •

SM Diogo 11 ~. 3!05 p.m.
Sl.l..ouio 1 1 - . 4:35 p.m.
SM FranciocO II Loa ~•.1:05 p.m.

The Deily SuiiMI• Pege B 3

•

'

Clncilo. . llllt ·' ,2:o5p.m.
,....,..., II . - . 2:35p.m.

man ()-0), 7:05 p.m.
(Modlilx CHI) 1 1 - (~ 1-o),
7;05 p .m.
(Bell 0.0)
(0'·co o-4), 8:05p.m.
Pi11lllurgll (Oholteo 0.0) at (Oolel 0.()), 8:05 p.m.
-Diogo (EaiOIIO.()) al ~
(llollano&lt;l 0.0). t:05 p.m.
I
$1. Loulo (Honnonoon CHI) a1 Arizona
(RoynoeoO.O), !0:05p.m.
SM Francllco (Ealel 0.0) at LDo Angllles
(P""""'""O.O), IO:IO,p.m.

Rockies 11,

..

Pagell

Baseball

'

. Pomeroyt Mllldllport. Ohio

l'llpter, WV

,
. , .: , ...

Gene H. Abels, M.D., board certified in internal medicine; accepting
new patients; practice limited to heart disease, hypertension, lipid
abnormalities (cholesterol abnormalities) and any associated
diabetes. Special interest in conges.tlve heart failure.
'
..
Balusamy Subbiah, M.l&gt;., board certified in internal medicine a~d
pulmonary disease; accepting new patients; practice ·limited to
chronic lung disease, asthma, emphysema,_black lung, a 'stosis. _·
Gerald E. Vallee, M.D. board certified in internal
pulmonary disease. ·

me~lcine and

On site x-ray, EKG, ultrasounds, sttess testing, bone density testing,
pulmonary function te~;tlng and extensive laboratory testing•
•

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APril 8th 1'llrol9l Ap~ lllh.
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Every Saturday Noghl al 6p.m ,
Aucttoneer Raymond Johnson
(740~

90

Wanted to Buy

AbiOiule Top Dollar. U S Sliver,
Gold Coina, ... Diamonds,
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II.T.S. Coon Shop, 151 Second
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en, New Bathroom. New Floors,
1618 Co...,ed Porch, Central Air,
$5,0011 (7.0)441-8389
14170 Bay-. Naw Since 97, Cl
A, Wallr Hoalhtr, Furnace Price
lnc:ludea Stove, Refrigerator,
Porch, Shod &amp; Woodin Fence,
S72DO Call (304)675-3008 &amp;atore
3prn
14170 Southern Draam. fru De·
livery frao Setup only $111195 1·

886·928·3426
tt79 Fairmont 14a70 wiEtpando,
3BR, 1Bath, Completely Remodllocl, Gao Hoal, 2 WindoW AIC's,
$7,000 (740)379-2405

a

Bride BlOck E.,..,._nca Or WNI
work For Contractor (304)175·
1183

GROWING BUSINESS NEEDS
HELPI Work 11om hoftlll llelloGt•

dlrlEoCommorca. S5:12+iiloaok PT

ClUB AlB COL Drivers , Good
Poy, Bonellll, 401K. Vacation, In·
Homt Evenings Call

~

Furnished 2 &amp; 3 Room Apart·
manta. Cfaan, No Pall, No Smok·
lng, Ae1oroncos &amp; Deposit Ro·
qulred
Udllllea Furnished.
17401"8-1519

Oallia Manor Apartments, Now
Accepdng Applications For 1 BR,
HUD, Subsidized Apart- For
Eldorly And Han&lt;!iceppad, Equal
Houoong Opportunoty. 1740)44846311

350 Loll a Acreage
13 Acres With Beautiful Lake
View Sileo $50,000 18 Acres
With Largo Lake. Mobile Homo
With Add On $79,500 Galloa
County On Blacl&lt;top Road.
1740)381H1678

Gracious loving 1 and 2 badroom
apartments at Village Manor and
Riverside Apartments on Middl•
pori. From $278·$348. Call 741)..

-Land

•
740-441·1492
CllfllaCo.· Chathlro,man·a farm. Largo Home On
Nice 47 Aall Witll Coeek,
Shedl, Much More $89,0001

992·5064
Equal Housrng Oppor·
lunilie$.
' I'

Alao.
Same """ 6 $11.500 or 37 Acres $33,!100°
Ken Rood, 8 Acrlol21,000 or 5

AcraiWkhBarns$31,000 Rio •
Grinde. 10 Aaas Will Pond,
12S.DDDOr8AcraaS19,000 Eu-

reka. 33 Aaas Of Wiklfe

$31,0011TjCCMLakaAr8a, 10
Acraa$11.8001
llolgl Co~ Tupper Pial.,..
SR861, NlceWOodad 5 Acres
With
$12,0001 same Arlll.
23 Acroai23.DDD Or 31 Ac:roo
127.900 can Road. 6 Actoa
$12,0011 Or 6 AcraaWkh XLarga
Polo Sam $30.500 Dallllillo, Nlca
Wooded$ Acres, $13.500 Rulland, 9 Acoes $6,5001

c,....

For &amp;ate· 10 952 Acres on
Friendly Ridge Rd. Crown City
(740)368 0864 or 1740)386 9336

RNIEI~
Wantfd •

1 ·3 Bedrooma

New Haven, onja bedroom

Foreclosed

1 Bedroom, $2001mb plus deposit
and Ullilioa, Appliancaa Included,
tn 1111 City of Galllpolla, (740!25&amp;8681
2 Bedrom HOUIO, 15 Mile South
On 7, Evenings After 7pm, Doposit I Roflroncos, 1740)441-,
1917
2 Bedroom House In ~ureka For
Roni, $300 Per Month, $300 Dopool!, No Pots Call Ahar 5:00 pn
(740)3&amp;1-2580

2 Bedroom Hou.., FUll 8aoamon1
In Point Pteaaanf, References
And Depoall, No Pats, (304)675·
8678

3 BR. 2 bath homo ronls lor $600/
mo. and 3 BA, 1 bath horne rants
for $550/ mo Cl011 to lown Ref·
erences and deposit required
Wiseman Roal Estate, Inc.
1740)446-3644
'

Nice 1 &amp; 2 bedroom aparlmenls,
equipped kitchens, AJC, uttlllles
lncluded, relerence and deposit
roqurred Phone 740-1182-6951 af·
lor Spm.
Now Taking Appllcallons- 35
, West 2 Bedroom Townhouaa
Aparlm•nts, Includes Water
Sewage, Trash. $350/Mo., 7.0·
448 01108.
One bedroom apartment, $225
month plus ullllties &amp; depooll,
Third Street, Racine, 740·247·

4292.
River a.nd Place Now Accaptlng
AppliCations ror 1 Bo,droom Hud
Subsided Apartment lor Elderly
an~ Disabled. EOH, 1304)882·
3121 Or(3D4)882·3214

Tara . Townhouse Apartments,
Very Spacious , 2 Bedrooms. 2
Floors, CA, 1 112 88111, F!JIIy Carpoled , Adult P"ool &amp; Baby Pool,
Pallo, Start $365/Mo No Pels,
Laaao Plus Socunly Deposit Required, Days' 740·446·3481:
Evenings: 740· 387·0502, 740·
~101

Twin RlverT.-o now aocopllng
applications for I BR.
HUD oubsldlzod apl for elderly
and disablocl. EOH.1304)675-

and experience to Sdlathtrn

Main Strut, Pt. Pioaoant , wv
2~550

~-W-D_R_K:-:F:::ROII:::::-:-:HOM~:::E:---S!IOQ.S1,500 Mo FuiiTima
PAIDVACATIONS
•
1·801J.4to-3019

490

For leB1!8

Boautoful,1800 Sq. Feet, RosiDfad
2nd Floor Apartment In Historic
Dlairlct taoal For Prolesslonal
Couple. All Modern Amanilloo 3
Bedrooms: Spacious Living: 1·112
Balha, Rear Doell. HVAC. $800/
mo.' Plus Ulllille,. Security And
Key Deposit No Poll Rtferencao
Required (740)446-4425 Or
(740)«1-3938

f INAI~CIJ\l

210

INOTICII '
,
OHIO VA~LEY PUBLISHING CO.
rol:ommondo thai you do bull•
noaa with pOO~Ia you know, arid
NOT to lind money !~rough lhl
mall until you havt lnveollgatod
,:..;.;..,;_,..:._..._
lhO OlleNng
•

510

HouHhold •
Goods .

!lppllances·

Reconditioned

Washer&amp;, Dryers, Ranges, Aetrl·

______

GOOD USED APPLIANCE&amp;
Washers. dr'yers. refrlgeratora,
ranges . Skaggs N&gt;PIIances, 78
Vine Streol, Call.740·4•8·7398,
1·868-818.() 128
IHAL[~;TAH

Mollohan Carp•t. 202 Clar~ '
Chapel Rd. Porter, OH Froo Esll·
me101. Eaay Financing or 90 days

eame as cash vrsa, Mast•rcard

Accoplo&lt;l, '1740)445-7444 or 1·
677-1130-8182

A VENDING GOLDIIINE·ACT
NOW! Machlnu vend tiorohoy
candy AND phOno caHII (UC/
min. U.S) Eom $8DD+Iwkly, Work
8·9 hri/Wk Grootiocational 800·
1511-1 m. lnv roq, Fin Mi.

I
Movlngll Everything Must Gull
This Week. Only. 1228 Davia
Road , Off•Teens Run, Thurs·Sat
(740)2541 el54 '

'

EARN SSOO·SIOO par wook In
110ur bathrObe &amp; llippall Low In•
vellmonl 1·800·272·01t3• awe·
aomaarltlng cam ,

Main StrHI F.umllu111
(304)875-1422
515 Main Stroot, Point Pleaaa~l

Uaod Fumlure '
New 2 Piece Llvlngroom Sillloo.
$398 Buy, SoD, Tradl

,...., a

Earn
NOT
I

New And u11d Furniture Store
Balow Holiday Inn. Kanauga We
Sell Grave Monumonta And
vasea 1740)4411-4782

GET YOUR FORTUNE IN MO·
TIONI' Earn $100·$500/dally plue
bonuoaol No hype! No conluaiool
No oaporlonco noceuaryl We'll
train Not MLM , Aflcrdablo COli
Toll !rae t·6n·8to-632t .

August for a scheme in which
he took money to buy tickets
to Indiana Pacers, Indianapolis
Colts and NCAA Final Four
'games, but never bo~ght the
ackets. Instead, he offered to
pay the investors with checks
he had stolen from his father.
Schlichter, who has several
poor conVJctioru, will have to
wear an elecrmnic-monitoring device for six months after
he is released from pnson. He
will not be allowed to use reU
phones, credit cards or computers.
Dazey saad Schlichter asked
tf he couW patttcipate m a
gambling ·addiction program
while in prison.

- -ICommen:laf
financlngUnHI
FREE Cdor Cllelog
Cal Today 1-eoD-711.01118

www..,etaancom

AUTOS . . _ $1011.110
Fol1ca ,_.,... &amp; R-1
TOIIOIBa. Chevy's, Joopst
Plolao Call for Lisllngl,
1-eoo-451-()500 EaLC9117

~~!!b~~~~~~~~
&amp; Football Cards
Topps, Bowan,
Many S1ar Cards, 1 Glass Show
cases, Cen After 5pm.l304)675·
2473
Computers· WE FINANCE DELL
COMPUTERS! Even with lass
than pertecl credlrl t·800·otn9018. Coda AC14 www omes&lt;&gt;\ulfori.com
EZPETRX.COM Seve up 10 50%
on AU,. pel madicel!&lt;Jns and suppll... Including Hearlgsrd, lnllr·
ceptor. Frontline, moralll FREE
SHIPPING. 0 - online www E•·
pftAa.com HID0.844· 1427
For Sale· 7 graW~o,

aeacr. GrOVII

COmetary, cal412·257~.

FARr,1 SUPPLIES

710 Autos for Sale

&amp; LivESTOCK

610 Farm Equipment
1950 8N Ford Rebuilt Englna,
New Tires And Ballery $2200
OBO 1304)675·5021

Culll· Garar Harrow, 12ft, $900:
JD Wheel Dllk, IOU $800, NH
479 Haybone. 911 $3500. NH Hay
Rake, 256, $1200, Sperry! NH
Tedder, 158, 14ft, $1200, Kasten
S1lage Wagon WI AVCO· Nil Gear
Sl200 (304)516-9009
John 08ere MT With EquiPfMnt,
lnlernetlo'nal 240, John Deere
Baler For Parts 1304)458-1050
After &amp;pm
~~~Stv

820 Wanted to Buy,
1950's &amp; 1960'1 45, 3~ , RPM
Records, OJ, Store , ,Stock.
Collections 1937)675-2930 Allar
,6:00pm

Bock Bumper &amp; J!raceo For 1950
Dodge 1/2 Ton l'lck·up 131!'\)895-

~

'

'

Wanted Good Ustd - l!obllo
Homo, In Tho 80's, ~ 'rQr 3
Bedroom, (740)446-0H8 Or
1304)675-5965
'

I)' vartenea of Oreg&lt;in Dahlias to
110ur frlendl. family, younolf. VlsM

us.8hllp'J- oregond11111a.com !

Grubb's Plano- Tuning ll Rapelrs.
Problema? NoadTunad? cart Tho
Plano Dr 740-446-4525
,..;.pe
· ndonl Herbalill Distributor:
Op
CaH For PrOduct Or
portunlty
(740)441-1862

1983 Jeep CJ7, Runa Good ,
740137
$600 Calll
9-

::'"Body,

one '"' or Jlka new bun~ bed•
vsry well modo 1225. (74D)37g..
2140

v

. I

•

' i

.,,
f

-.

fourth~ pic~ i!J~tbe· 1982

dratt. .l ie -~ s~~~~Jor a
~in 1983-by tJye:. NFL for
gambling, returnid_'·to the
Colts in 1984, then was
released the following season.
He was released from an
Indiana pmon in September
1999, _after. serving I~ rhan
half of a four-yeat ~ntenc~ for
stealing $800,000 . to sypport·
hts gambling habat While m
prison, he was charged' with
four counts of illegal g:imbling
for allegedly placing numerous
b~ts on spotting events from a
prison telephone.

1987 Bronco II XLT, 4WD, Sport

1986 Ford Taurus , For Parts
Only, Btsl Oiler (304)695-3013

sunroof, 5 speed, arnlfmiCD, air,
$3800, 740-949-2641. ·

1986 Subaru GL 4WD Wagon
$1600, 1987 CIMlller Z·24, $1200
I740)38H113

t997 Old&amp; Achleva, 61,0011 miles,
$6900 , Blue Book Value $7900,
4..:.·- - - - -.I
;..17_40..:,)--U;.8_262_

Stripes. $3495, Looks And Runs
Good. 5 Speed, 86.300 Moles.
AIC , Tinted Windows , AMfFM
Casselle, Tow Package. Roo!
Rack , Zoebart Splash Guards &amp;
Running Boards (304)875·5964

1989 Dodge Aries. Very Clean,
Red Flreblrd.
Very Good Condition, Very De· .._ n111es.
power T-top, Ow,ned
pendablo, Evanlngs, (740)245- and driven by woman. Haw all oil
9239
chango
recerpls
Payoff
1740)448 3344
1990 GED Prism, 4 dr., 51j)., ami
fm cassette, new ares, plus dla~
1999 Pontiac Grand Prix GT,
lr~butor, ilrakos, liming ball, 740. While, 4 Door, 24·000 Miles, Well
992·2558
Taken Care 01 Calll740)441 199 1 Grand Prla STE, GOOd t,lo- 0216 Or 1740)591-7110
lor &amp; ,TransmiSSIOn, 1989 Chevy: 2000 Pont1ac Grand Am GT. au·
Corsica, Runs. Good Body, Both tomallc. ram air, V·6, red, power
Cars $500.17401388-8269
ounrool, compleloly loaded,
16,500 mllas,lloklng $17,500 no1991 OldsmotVIe Bravada All gollal&gt;lo, 74().992-4017.
Whlll Drive, Sport Uiollly Vehicle
Clean . Needs Motor. $3000 89 Chevy CorsellO. V·6. 2 8 en·
1740)367-7235
gino, Auto, 4 Door, All electric,
1508 miles. Runs Good.
1992
Plymouth
Voyager
S.E
..
PI
(304)895-3739
W, V·8, 3.0, AIC, Cruise, Eacel·

tti93 Cadillac l:tdt'redo, $7,000
Eocellenl Condition (304.678·
5929 01:1304)675-6581
~ 1194 Buick LeSabro LimNed v-e,
Grey/ Groen. 4 Ooor. Well
Equipped , Nice Cor. $4500
(740)«1-7438
19114 COrsica, Loaded, Like Now,
$3,395, )994 a 111113 Grand Am,
V·6. $3.19~. 1998 Ranger, 70K,
$3,195, 1994 S.tO, $3,495, 0111era In Stock, Trade-Ina Ar;;:ceptld CDOK MOTORS (740)446·
0103

JET -

'MOBILE HOME OWNERS
Fair Pigs For &amp;ale. Bilm &amp;
In GoUla County $75
(740)2.5-'5419

Announcement

Fair pigs ready 10 go: butchlrtnq
hogs, 230·2501, 740·949·2017 or
740-949·2908

'

NEW AND USED STEEL Stool
Besmo. Pipe Rebar For Concrete.
Angle, Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Grallng For Drains, Driveways &amp;
Walkways L&amp;L Scrap Metals
(740)446-7300

Gun Shoot

'

fORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN CLUB
1~n~1ay, AprilS, 2001

12 noon
1/2 slugs

97

Chryalor· " SabFing • ' JJGI
Milos,
Loai!eb $6,7e'6 OBO (740):i5B1252(740)25&amp;'-1818 '

Convorll~ll, • 74,500

98 H :Clvlc~aclc, Air.
1740
Auto,
'
' 99 Cavalior. '4 Door, 4 Cylinder,
Auto, Air Condition, AMIFM, Cassene, 13•000 Miles 1 7500
(740)«1-0337
99 Chavy Cavalier, 2 door, Au·
tomelic/Overdrlve. Power LOCks
and mirrors. 1111. cruise. spoiler.
Aluminum wt1eels~ tinted glass,
Cheyenne Red, 19,600 miles.
$9000 080 1740)256-1011

evenings

spaghelll straps, lilted., floor
length, one side, matc~lng sash ,
eiogant, $75 OBO, 740·992·8679.
RESIOENllAL HDIIE OWNERS

JBif and·Pam ,
Newell announce
the birth of thalr

sawmill $3.795 New Super LumDermalo 2000. larger cepacllies,
more options Manufa,cturer of
sawmills. edger&amp; and skldders
NORWOOD INDUSTRIES 252
Sonwoll Drive, Buffalo, NY 14225
F.REE lnlormallon 1·800·576·
1363 EXT. 2DD·U

Hay For Sale, 45 Round ~;~atu.
And 250 Square Sales ' &lt;lall
1740)446- bt15 or (740)4! 67843 After 6.0Qpm "
•,

Stool B~lldlngo , New Mus1 Sell
30x40x12 wu $10,200 now
18.980. 40x80&lt;12 wao $16,400
now $10 ,971. 50&lt;100x18 wu
$27,590 now $19,990 80&gt;200x15
was $56,780 now $42,990 1·800·
406·5126

HIW ~ Brlghtli'll&lt;t lle'Straw· :'it~r
'Round Dllivorr &amp; Yolumlbto·

SUN'SAND'SURF Whi1e sandy
beaches, fabulous aunaetsl De·
luxe roomsfkllehenettas &amp; balConies overlooking lhe gulf of Mexl·
t:O leland Inn SeaQh r Resort
Treasure Island. FLA. 800·241·

9980 www lalancfinnresort com
Naar Sl Pelarlburg.

Tandem Bicycle Built For Two.
Excollenl Conallion, (304)675·
5028
Watorllhe Special: 314 200 PSI
$21.95 Per 100, 1' 200 PSI
$37.00 Per 100: All Bra11 Com·
prosolon Finlnga In Stock
RON EVAN8 INTIRPRISES
Jaciloon, Ohio 1-800.537·9528

SBOQ[Id son,

'·DIWion
'
Mlcl'ael

, on.

October 29,2000.
Thslntant
1 lb. 15 oz. at
was 14 lnlll~ss
long. He Is
brother
ol
Jonat~on Zackarla
at·hDme. HI is thB
grandson ol John
and Mary Newell,
Robert and Norma
Wright. The great
grandson ol
and ths late Hobart
Newell, The late
Marvin and
Walker, Robart
Naoma
Wright,
and the late Walter
and Helen Sams.

Squ. . !)lilf, oqod. IIJI¥8'i~1 S1
&amp;IQf.Od I~ 'barp Le!41:1 Ia,

bJ rnOYtll,l40;aG'1

; I

count "Avallablt., ~tlilage, F~m
1304)875-5724. • .
"'

650 Seed

a Fertlll;rel'
"

Tobacco Plants For Sale.' Call
1740)446-7843
Tobacco Plants- Order NoW To
Guarsnlee Early Spring Plantings
Increase Allotments Mean Extra

Plants ThaAk You For Your Business Call Danny Dew~urs1 ·
Leave Message (3D~)895• 374p
Ori3D4)895·3789

HlANSPORTATION

Autos lor
1998 Hyundal Elontra, 4 0001\ CD
player, Sunrool, Auto. ' 37 000
Mles, s.t9SD 080 (740)25612521740)256-,1618

.' .

\

'•

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

Budget Priced Tran1mla11ona
All Types, Access To Oval"'
10,000 Transmlsstons. Transfer
Cases, 740-245· 5677 Cell 339·
3765
Very Good Ford ,302 Engone &amp;
Trans.mlsslon, Still In Car, Can
Hear U Run. New Carb. Starter,
Volt Reg $300 For All , Call
1740)388,-0159

790

•

camjiers .. '
Motor Homes -

1990 Class A Gull Stream , 37
Foot. 460 Ford/ OshKost) Chassoel Fully Equipped Including A
1998 Saturn Pull Car. Both Eaco~
)
lent, And Low Mileage. (740 245-

_57c-52------~--:-:-

1991 COleman Pop·up. AJC, Bike
Rack, mini Condition . $2900
78_ _ _ _ __
Astra 1894 conversoon van, ;..(7_40..;.12_4_5-_59_
Loaded, 170.000 Miles. 1 Owner,
Dutchman 30 Foot Travel
Naeds To Sell (304)675·1150 E.a
Arlsrocral Sarles, Loaded,
274
JJ~~~.~~m~Condlilo~
. $8000 .
, , •

.A,. Motorcycl M

, 1..,. •• :

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

1 , ·

SERVIC~;,

'250
Yahama
~·Wheeler
(740)446 )1687 Allor 3pm
1995 Harley Svperglldt, 13,000
Milos, Excollenr Condition. 80cl,
Boaulllul leal Extras, $13,6dO

810

1999 Kawuak1220 Bayou, Utility
Model. Rode Lesa Than B Hours
Eacellenl Condlilon, Asking
$2SDD(304)862·2817

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guarantee
local references furnished. Es·
tabllshad 1975. Call 24 Hrs. (7401
4o16 0870 1·800·287-0576 Rog ers Wa1err;rooflng

(740~7438

450 Foreman 4x4, Electric Shill 4·
wheeler. 1,300 Miles. Excellent
Condition, $4500, 6.2 Die..i En·
gine. $300 (740)44&amp;-21147

Card of Thanka

720 Trucks lor Sale

17' Mark Twa1n Wilh Walk
Through WindShield 115 HP,
Mercury Motor. Runs Good,
$100li(740.)367-~
•

96 Toyota Tacoma. PB, PS, AIC,
Lots 01 Extr11,1304)675-1183

CARS FROM $500 • Pollee im·
pounds &amp; tax seizures Hondas
Chevys , Fords, &amp; more For listings, call nowl 1·800·719·3001
o.a A010

In Memory

,

78 Ford 4a4, Suspension lift. New
Wheals, To Many New Parts To
lr&amp;t. Call
51740124 9056

97 Honda Rebel 250, EMCellon(
Condition, 2100 miles, asking
$2000, (740)446-7943
I

1992 Ford Ranger Sporl, 4x4
P1ckup. Extra mce , $3995, 1995
For Ranger Eatra Cab 65,000
Miles , $3995: '996 Dodge 4x4,
Extra Cab Pickup, Sharp, $10,500
B&amp;D Auto Sales. Highway 160
North, (740)44~865

Tappan HI Elllclency 90% Gas
Furnaoel. 011 Furnaces, 12 Seer
Heat Pump &amp; Air Conditioning
Systems Free 8 Year Warranty
Bennetts Heating &amp; Cooling, 1·
800·872· 5967 www orvb com/ben·
non

1994 Ford F·150, 4&lt;4, Whole ,
E
With Towing Package, xcellent
Condition, 1304)675·4721 Days,
1304)675-4249Evenings

99 Grand Am GT, w~llo, ladY drl·
van, one owner, 18,000 mllea,
loaded, altcellanl condition. Sell
(Or payof1 Cal 740·992·2358 after
4 OOpm weekdays, anytime weekends Serious inquiries only

1988 F·250 Eotended CaD, Ford
XLT Lariat 7 3 Diesel, Auto
Transmluion, All Power, A/C,
Asking $4695, Call (304)882·
1148 01: 1304)692·2617

Prom dress· alze 7·8, light blue ,

1987 Ford F·250, 4a4, Rabulll 6 9
Liter Baan .Painted, Nlca Wheel&amp;
And Tires. Nice Truck $7800
)36&amp;-98
75 _ _ _ __
1740
.:._.:.__ _

Moton.

· for Sa~

760

730 Vane &amp; 4-WDs
U11hty 2 Door, Silver With Blue

lonl Condlllon, $3500.1740)245-;

pony wllh blue ayes,
949-2494 after 4pm.

1995 Ford Probe GT, 24V, V·6, 5.
Speed . Red Good Condition.
$5800Shsrpear (740)446-7438

88 1 Ton Dodge Wrlh Ullllly Bod
And Racks, 380 Aulomalic With
Matching Utility Style Tra11ar AU
Doors &amp; Locks Work On The
Truck And Trailer, $3000~
1740)441-9389

1995 Ford Taurus SHO, green

-~llar5pn

1~:~~·~~~~~~,~~
(i

1994 Dodge Sha-. Good C.,.
dillon. 115,000 motoo , $2600,
Smith Electric Guitar, $1000. coli
phonei304)817-Q976

750 Boats a

720 TNcks for Sale

•

Home
Improvements

All lypes of m.,sonry brick, .,lock

&amp; stone Frit estimates, 304·
173·9550
C&amp;C

Gena iel 'Home Malntenence· Painting, vmyl Siding,

carpentry, dOOrs, windows, baths,
mobile home repa1r and more, For
free estlmale call Chel. 740·992·
6323

The fiUIIIIY of
Dawson Michael
Newell would like td
expresS It's most
heartfell thanks to
everyone for lhelr
cards, prayers, gifts,
and support during
Dawson's hospital
stay. we would rlso
like to thank a of
those who helped ·
and supported the
benefit for Dawson.
Special thanks lo
the Aelker, ColOns,
Sauvage, Edwards,
White, Maxey,
Shriver and Guess
families for all of
their hard worllln
organizing the
.benefit. May God
· Bless eaCh and
every one of you.

E&amp;S Lawn SerYICI Dealgn, lm·
plementatlon, And Service Available For Spnng Clean Up. FertHIZ·
tng And Planting Free Es11ma1es
Satisfaction Guaranteed. Greg
,Milhoan (304)875-4628

Livingston's Basement Wa1er
Pr9oflng, all baaemenl repair•
dohe tree estimates, Ufellma
guaran1ee. 14yrs on job experl·
enca (304)895-3867
Superior Home Mal.~;tteriance We
Do All RepairB1 On Homes Car·
pentry Plumbing Decks, Et&lt;; •
Eve's Spouts, Storage Sulldlngs.
All s~es (740)441..0113

840 EleCtrical and
Refrlgaratlon
Residential or commercial wiring
new service or repatrs Master Ll·
censed etectrlcien Ridenour
Electrical , WV000306. 304·675·
1706

You Don't Ho..e fo Loot For
To Spy rht 8r11 8&amp;~ylllt

til&lt; Ciodlfi&lt;dl

110 Help Wantll!'d :
In l.olllnll Memol'll of
HELEN JEFFERS
who Puaed awlll
APril 'l, 199'l
Gone Is the face we·loved

so dear.
Sllenlls the voiCe we
loved to hear.
Too.l1r awa~ for slllht or
SPeech.
But not too fir lor
thoUIIhf to reacll
Sweet to remember her
. who once wu here
Who. thouah absent. Is

Just 11 dear.
Sadlll mtaed b~ husband
Boblr Famll~

' .

Pleasant Valley Hospital
Pleasant Valley Private Duty has
immediate openings for personal care
aides/nursing assistants In
Gallla, Meigs pod Mason Counties.
Excellent pay and flexible sch~uling.
For more information contact ltia Wooten
at (304) 675-7400 or 1-800-746-1t076 or
apply in person at
1011 Viand St. Pt. Pleasant, WV 25550
ANEOE

I

1'

'

that ·swn:d' wlteri the thenBalJimore Colts ma&amp;,him the

w•th gray lealher interior, power

I .~~;

AERATION MOTORS
Rapalrod, Naw &amp; ReDUIII In Stock.
Cal Ron Evans, 1·80().537·9528

Huge Inventory, Discount Prices,
On Vinrl Skirting. Doors, Wind·
ows, Anchors, Water H&amp;aters,l
Plumbing &amp; Electrical Parts, Fur·
nacea &amp; ·Heat Pumps Bennetts
Mobile Homo Supply, 740·44~·
9418 wwworvb com/bennen

$0 DOWN CARS! POLICE Ill·
POUNDS &amp; REPOSI HONDA'S,
CHEVY'S, .JEEP'S. LOW AS $291
MO. 2'4 MO'S 0191"' FOR
LISTINGS, CALL f.&amp;OD-451.0050
ext. C.0612

710 Autos for Sale

MERCHANDISE

' For Sale: Atcondllioned wuh•
ers, Clryera and rtfr.lgeraton .
Thompaons Appliance. 3407
JaOii&amp;On ""'nui. l304)875-7386.

Bulin••'
OppOrtUnity

AMIIZINGI.V LOW PIIICEI
WOLFFTAII•G BEDS
Buy Fat:1ory Dirocl
fx I' nt Service

Full Service Restaurant Available
In Vinton County, Ohio Ha~
Beer/ Wino License Equipment
Included In Lease Seats so In
Dining Lease Long Term $1500
Per Month 1740)710.0007 '

740-4&lt;16-7795

OTR drivlr nooded for owner OJ)·

Salary/ Commlllton Comrn.n1u..
ra11 with exptrltncl end dealre
Sand Rllumot lo 11ox JA 23, 200

Mobile Home Lot, Will Take
12'•· 14'o, 16's Wldea. $125/mo.
SIOQ/dop . Need Releronces,
17411)448-9175

'

2·112 Ton Central Air Unol, 8,000
BTU. F - o Air .CondiUonors,
(740)379-2405

GIVE THE BEAUTY o1 ...., twon·

gratoro, Up To 90 Days Guar·
antHdl We Sell New Moytag Ap·
pliances. French City Mavtag,

Noadld EKp.rlonctd Crow lor
Selling and Finishing sectional
Housing. Send Pricing lnfortnallon

kends, some through the week,
no orientation. Apply today, start
tomorrow. Cioll 740·1182·5384, ~no
anawer ..... moasaga. .

lur~

nlshed ·apartment, has washer
and dryer, no ptla, dlposH a ...~
........ 740-992.0165

460 Space for Rent

Homos From Slllf&lt;"', 4% DoWn,
30 Yeara at 8.510 APA . For List·
i)gl, IID().31S.3323 Exl1708.

eralor, no east coalt, hOme w. .

Himatawen

cu (740)11118-

192·5231 .

410 HOUNI for Rent

Homes, PO Boa 828, Jackaon,
OH4584D

-mad.

For Rani In Dooo.-

For rent· one bedroomlumillled
In lliddlaport, cal 740-

ingl

!i01P warilld in Odull .,.,... homo,

Mature babylttlor wanted In my
home, Racine, two Cillldrtn 5
&amp; 9. Some houukuplng and
cooking, 740-049-2458

Schlichter was sentencea
Thursday 1o five yean in fe4eol prison for credit-card
mud and money bundering.
The 1982 tint-round NFL
drafi pick. who pleaded guilty
in jailuary, was also on:lered to
pay neady $170,000 in restitution and faces three yean of
supervised release.
Schlichter still could face
.state
in Indiana and
Ohio.
"This was not a surpnse. lt's
sort of a relief," sa~d Bill
Dazey.~ Schlichter's lawyer. "I
think he was very forthright
in expressmg hiS remone and
. regret for the cnmes Hts main
focus is to be gtven treat-

AKC 81. .k Lab. Female, 3
llontha, Altnoll HouH T(ained,
Sholl,
$150 (740)258-.
6814
,It

Putges

With 1500 Sq.f'ell. 3 Bellroom, I ·
112 Bath HOme WHh Oak Trim,
And Lorga Kilchen Has A Largo
Garage And Barn With .o~ Toll·
able Acres. Excellent tocallon
Near Roo Grande. Asking
Sl2t,toO. IT.o)380-0259 Even-

F1HJ1Al S

aay and night shin, call 740-1182·
5023.

..r

13D4J1754!t5

• (7~1
GellipOiio, 7174

..

Schlichter:s ~g· habit
INDIANAPOUS (AP) - ment."
Scblicliter was indicted in ended a buading NFL career
Former Colts quarterbxk Art

410 Flr11 Avenue, 1 Bedroom
~ar tm enta, $215 + Damage
Deposit, References Required,

6679

-.drum2blroo.com

2 Full BloodOd Pokineao, Male·
All White, Female, Brow11 W1th
111ec1&lt; Mau. &amp;mo Old. EIICIIIonl
Wilh Children To Good Home,
$75.00 Each Or $1211 Bot~

CFA

$1000·$4000/wk FT 800·921 ·

8538

charges .

330 ""arms for Sale

RHI estate wanlod· l'am forced
OUI of my hOUII lor highway lm·
provamont Looking tor old !arm
houae In Meigs County with
acreogo, call 740-7t7·t303, 740119;1!-8132. )
'

81~UL3234

wntera.

1~,;;..:.-.-='-=--::::""::::''::::::::
86 Acto F - For Sale By O...

360

Govarn01ont Jobo S11.00·
S~3 oo per hour potanllll. Paid
Trtl~lnglfull Benelllo. For mora
1n1orma11on call 0111 1·888·874-

Buy or ull. AlvetN Antiques,
1121 Eaot on SA 124 E. Pomao.i&gt;y, No-9112·25211 or 740-11112·

1!13!1-Moore, .......

sa'-"

To Buy A New 11omo?
Don1 Have Land? W8 00!11 Hurry
Cl!lly 10 LoiiiAII, 304-738-7285.

sao

txctll•nt Income. Easy claims

SchuH Dii!JIIY

1180 14x70 3 Bedroom, H/2
8ath. $8Qf!DJ~)578-2f118
1982 14170 Fojr,..i Townhouao,
2 - · 1 largo bath with heal
pump &amp; ale. $1,500, 740·591·
4043 or 740-1182-G8311.

120 Pocket Walcloos In Good
Condollon And Wooden Books
For-. " ' - (740!+18-1815.
4222nd ......... Gollpols.

eoo-231-4417

Loo~lng

POSTAL JOBS to Sl8.351hr·
WILDLIFE JOBS IO $21.80/hr In·
clude"l Bontllll No Ekperlenco
Nocoadry. For Appllcallon and
$522+1wetk PT $1000·$4,0001 Eram Info, call 1·600·992·7054
wook FT. lull Training. Fru llaok· -~• .. F 8 ~-s 00pm
lot www craalocreaml1fe com ...- - ,..,.
(800) 755-4800
Someone to mow lawn with yOur
ATTENTION
WORK FROM oqulpmonf(740)245-9393
HOME mail ordariE commerce · URGENTLY NEEDED· plasma
Bualnooo St,500·S7,200 month donora, earn $4510
for 2 or 3
PTIFT Froo lnformoHon. 1·800· houro weakly. Call Sara·Toc, 740·
824-D874
592·8651 .
www.StrlvaToSUCCIId.oom
wantod Aogr.eulve Team Play•
AVON! All Aroaal To 8uy or &amp;all
or wrth lnltlallvo 10 work In 1 faol
~lllrloy Spaora, 304·875-1429.
paced, growth or~tnlod, Ell•b·
CAREER OPPORTUNITY! Earn llshed lnouranco Agency. Mull
ba Prompt, ReNabll, DopondaDio,
proc:eaalng Full training Home,
PC requlrod. Call Phyolclan &amp;
HUIIMart Devalopmenll lOll•
~H 1 ·800.77~ ·5933 erl 2070

111111

eat-in-· 2 bollwaoma, laJge
LA. lom1li DR. pine ...,_ IJMI

bedroom home on 8 acresi
$32,500, 740-9112·2786.

~.com

High lahool Dlplomo at Home
Stall Ullad Privlll Bchool. Now,

Fne JIukl 4 WhHior With The Pur·
c11a11 01 l;etoclid 5d1ult Dilplay
Homes. frii1Ch City Homla,
Golipolis, 01110 1740J44IHI340 Or
1-t00-231-44f7
Special 01 .Tho Week• Schull
28a48, Country Kitchen - 2a8
Welts, luxury Bath, Oeluae car·
pol Roducod To $34,99S- frlnch
City Homes. Inc. GaNipolls, Ohio
0
00 231
1740 1446- 9340 r 1 ' 8 •
•
""'

(740,....._

llodroom--

1
For - I n
Rio Gnlndo Walking Dllbinco 1b
Collage. AU UUIIIIII Plld. 10"'
DIICOUftl On Firll Months Rani
(740)245-5100
'

Must sel due 10 employment· 3-4

Servlcel

BLACKSTONE
PARALEGAL
STUDIES. Homo Study, Ap·
prOYid, AlforcloDio, COIIIProhln·
alva, legal training since 1810.
FREE Cotafog: 800.826·1221.
wrlo. P.O. Boo 701448, Dllu, TX
75370 NA or hllp:/- bllekllo-

HOMES FROM $1119.30/UO. I ·
38R Repoli Forecloauras, IH,
4"' For UollllgstP-rment
1-eD0-7194001 a1115
HUD Hornaa Paymenll Based
On Income. Umi1ed ,.__ Hurry!

uaoro

llovlllll Sail. Saturdoy, April 1. g.

c-

•
'• • •
• '.
''

t'Dm S2e15.

Jawotry Bonchman· Ropllr, 8~·
lng, Stone 8olllng Of Fino J-lry.
Full·llme- Immediate Opening,
:1154":'.:"~::':"~:":"~~':"::"-:"I
Apply AI Acquloltlono:,;Ftna
friday 4/t~ lllurday 417, t ·
Jewelry, 1St Second 'Avanua,
1
Rood'' Ciotltat, Elc.ll34 A NEW CAREER, EMim lnlorma· GeHipOIIi.
•I ' '
lion· Poatal Joba Up 10 $16 351
:-"'"--::"":'""~'"'":-:-:'-:-1 hour BontliiiiPonalon 1·818• Lifeguards (Mull Be Cer11flod.;
Goraga Sale, Saiur&lt;loy &amp; Sunday 728-1083 al70 t
Concoaaion Workers, And Ad·
71h And llh, 71 Burnett lload, -A.,.ba...;o.;,lu-lo-:-1-y-F:-r-o-a-ln-lo-1-1-nt-o-rn~ot mlaalon Workers, AI Gallipolis
MuniCipal Pool Applications M-r
Gelllpoiil
Users Wanted Si!.OOO· $5,0001 Be plcko~ up AI Tho Gallipolis
John1on'a TraJitr
mo. www.•nst-dreams.~m ,.
Park' And Recreation Office LO•
catod In ThO Municipal Building,
1'huradoy· Sunday. Trll!,~kiloa&lt;i ABSOLUTELY FREE INFO
518 Sacond Avanuo. Gallipolis,
From Columbua. Tapoa,
lnttrnet
wanlld
Ohio
Dldnail April12. 2001.
- · JOina, Colli
$200D·S5000/mo

..

•

Exparoencod Caretaker Nlldod
For 2417 llva In Clro For Elderly
Woman In Point Ploaaanl,
(304)675-2153- epm

nacaaao1,. =~~~formation &amp;

C0-11011.

--

Sunogalw Naadod. - - In

Gollpalla Cltilor

••Pif!l-

mone~

pipH:-Wind-

Ciludl

Roo G r -. OH Call 7.0·245·
5121 .

SchuH 32li&amp;O, 3 - -· Willi .
P1ren1s Retreat Room· 2xe

Wallo· Tbermo Windows. Free
Kawaukl 4 WhHier With ThiS
- Fr8nch City _ . _ .
polls, Ohio (740~ Or 1·

'"ACCESS TO A COMPUTER?
Put II 10 -kl S2511Y•$75/hr. FTI
PT. FREE info. 800 .. 71-8045 all.
801-lohornoblz.oom

:f:c.':

..

wv

on-

•

MEDICAL BlUING Unllmited Income ,.,....,..,_No

car oa- (7.0)387-

FORECLOSED GOVT HOMES!
$0 OR LOW DOWN! TAX
REPO'S &amp; BANKIIUPTCIESI OK
CREDm FOR LISTING! CALL 1·
.:»-sot-tm ... 9113.

C/o BUIIIID ,Raoura~
2520 Vllley Df,
Pt. Pleuaat, wv 25550
orlujo
(304) 675-6975.
AA/EOE

Friday &amp; Saturday. Hpm. 2 Mllal
Eall Ol Portar On Still Routa

•'

Experienced Floral Designer,
Sand Reaume Til JRD2, 200 Main
Shatl, Folnt PloOIIrll,
25550

e.

can 740·742·

Como One
For Everyone,
One Mila From
On 81111 llouta
AQII7th,M

•
'

EASY WORK! GREAT PAYI Eam
$500 Pluo a Week Ao11mbllng
P - II Homo No Eocporlonca
Necesoary. Call Toll FrH 1-800·
267·394ol1138

Full-limo Poalllon Available AI
Scenic Hilla
Center.
Or•••

eunently hu openings

•

••
. ;.'

EARN $25.000 TO $50,000/yr.
Medical Insurance Blllrng. N-·
ad Immediately! Home Computer
Noodod . FREE lnllmol, 1·800·
291-4883 Dept I 109

Experienced Truck Mechanic
NHdad, 401 K Retirement, MOdi·
cal. Dental &amp; VIsion Insurance,
Vacation Pay Buod On Eape(~
.... Clll (740--J.e83
' '

Pleasant Valley ~1181

vwaa1e

1o

porlonco n-od 2 week CDL
training. $34,000/yr roar plua
Full Bonolill a Paid Training.
Drivers baNd in Midwoll 1·877·
230·6002. Sunday tom·5pm.
Mon.-Fri. Bam-Spm

1987.85 WEEKLY! Processing
HUDifHA Mortgaga Ralundl. No
E•parlonce Required. For FREE
lnlonnatton Call 1-800.50 1·8632
011. 1300.

!.tii'WIO:!

prominent undetlllll,
'Auolln'. Lilt attn
Mldtlltport. PIMP

ex~

or • -

Beco"::.f A Surrogato? Your

150

Day Porter/ Janitorial lmmedlata
Opening, 24 - - Weak, 11Th tlaydrnO, Friday N~ Sldlg
satary S7 .00/ Hour. Celts Accapl·
Od M-F 10.2pm (740~131

1

ro&lt;2031oou.odu

...,_
e3 - ·- 2,...·
...
COIOOill8rtck
li Owner.
~

Ona · interior hal ......
.,.._,.,_.
- . . .. 710-&amp;-2117.
·
- - -. .
-

Pleuant Valley
Hoepital

Loll: bllcl&lt; malo DOberman, a"'
. . . . 10 •QoHte•, hu long 81rt.
Laat on THui Road. Mldd'-"
pdr1. ...... oall140-742-1332.

....

7.0)44 -

IUiisml

Pt. ..._.t. wv w:50J 1
orruto

Eaperlencod Cashier 13041895·
3603

Roplacod
.

1ft-

2520 Vde)' Dll

Cook To Do On Grill, And Lorga
lloalo. Inquire AI Oflloo 01 ~lnl
Ploaunt Moose Lodga, II- 3pm.
11-F Or Cal (304)675-1880

I00-73N334

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

5 llao"' HouH With Eatra Lot.
(7..,___

a.lht, 2
7001

BlOCk.-· -

320 Mobile HomM
tors.le
N..
FIMhooOd.
18d0,
$19-.00. 3 - 2 - . 1·
m •110.
877· -

............ 7--411112.

Slluallons.,
w.nted

~ 0111o Modald ..._,
or looking lot .........,.
of .....,. C.a SorvicN.
E....- • IIIIDO lcllool a
......,_1
15 . - - H
h

C/oH-~

Dotall1124l
1-800-449-4825 E.a. 5700

11ct S.d.t••tel Value, Plclurts
That Can't
(304)57&amp;4'49

HOipltal

Drtvere· P.A M Ttansporl. NO

IIIATTENTIONIII

·-SIIINon.-.

•

PlaaatVallef

120

T

IHATTENTIONIII

;

r :

Pleasaat ~y Hospilal
currendy 1111 openillp
for:
Medlall
RecepCiallllt/Medkal
Alllllutlud
Licallecl Pndlcal
NIU'Iel
for Physician Offices
Exc:cUent pay and
benefits.
Send resume to:

C&gt;EHVICES

110

7 ....,., lallbr ....... llnlliOII

If I'OIJ MUST WORK, WORK
AT HOME! Build your """' auc·
caollul bullness llall·ardariE·

Hoepital

Lal. ......

-.S1U00(7~

-

5pn. Sunday

Ricll Paoraon Allclion Company.
tuu tune euctioneer, complete
•ucttOn
nrvice. UcenHCI
186,0hio &amp; Well Vlrgonla. 30477'3-$715 Or 304-713-~7.

. :. ,.; ~:.

..._

IIIMQing· - · -fill.... 7 ...,.

(304)87~113

Sob~~~¥ 411 411 12-Spm

4-. 1-. .._

""'-' ,... .....323.00 yr. -

Mite. Furniture I House·

Approailllallly 3 3 MIIU Eut

f

....

_
__
No------ -.....................
.. -......... _

310 lton*lar....

110 ....., ........

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

Moving/ Garaga Sala, LaaiMr

I

.

110

1821 ...................
IIOf, Range, NC - · _ .
, _ Dapolit a -...... HUD
..,__ Q40!441-1518

.,

'

•

�Senllnei•PIIgt85

•

I

l

___ _

....
soe..

I.

From Route 82.

eo

Auction
and Fl.- Mlrlull

•

Rlverolda Auction Barn, Sale
Every Saturday Noghl al 6p.m ,
Aucttoneer Raymond Johnson
(740~

90

Wanted to Buy

AbiOiule Top Dollar. U S Sliver,
Gold Coina, ... Diamonds,
Gold Ringl, U.S. CurrenCy,·
II.T.S. Coon Shop, 151 Second
-·Gallipolis, 7-2842.

005

..

2 ·50 aaoa of land local·

-

.........

Od In ""' Mligl
COUnty 740·149·
· immediate
pouoaalon

2844.
START DATING TONIGHTf
fun
ollgiblo linglll
In
your
call
lor - · lnfor·
01111on I·IOO· ROIIANCE,
nt.
1738

U.1~LOYt.1Er,

....una

HelpWanled

-eoor.....,
e_,gng
Worl From
Home or Of1lco

TAIWIO GIIILI LIYil

JUST CALL
1«J0.32H130 Ext 7173

SS00.00.$6,0011.00/mo PTIFT

llaiOrdorPIIId Tralo!lngiVocali

$3.89 Par lllnuto, Mull So 18
..... BlnHI (118)818 • •

Clll1-800 548 0922

30 Announcemlllll
Now 1b 'lllu TltriiiSIICIIIfll

-eoor.....,
e_,gng
Worl From
Home or Ollco
SS00 00.$6,0011.00/mo PTIFT
llsll Ordor/lrll•not
Pllld Traorwng/Va(:allona
Cell 1-800·228-0317
-,CaohOnThoT-com

7-·1812
QueKtr clothing and houoohold
llomo. $1 .00 boa ulo avorr
Thurlday. llolon~ thru Sllurclay
I:GN:OO.
Ohio
Bigfoot
Conlerenco.
Saturday April 7th 3pm·10pm,
Nowcomera Town Middle School
(177, Routa 38 Eall) Fru
Admlulon, info (740)oltiH878

.
••

40

•

Giveaway

1 Hullhy Pupplot, 1304)875·
~77

Free to good home In country,
one year old opoyod black lob
mil, ~ &amp; !un-loving. 740-0653818.
Small Black Dog 1b Giveaway.
Houoo Trained And Friandly, For
lnlormallon, Phone (740)448-

22t4

IllATTENTION Ill
·
-Compony
Eocpandlng
WOrl From
Homo or 011lco
$500.oo.,a.ooo.OO/mo. PTIFT
llsll Ordorllnlornol
Plld 'frllrllr9'Vacollona

Cliii.JID0.548-ot22

12.000 WEEKLY! llalllnt 400
brochuresl Satlafaclion Guar·
aniHdl Poatege &amp; SuppUeo provided! Rush Seii· Addrollod
Slim~ Envelope! GICO, DEPT
5, Boa lf38, ANTIOCH, TN.
37011·1438 Slorll~
1125 WEEKLYIJio
-Money Hilping Paoplo .
Rocolvo GcMnm!nt Returns

)

10 l.oet lnCI Found
REWARD• LOBT· . _ Puraa w/
thouldor Strop AI Holzer Clinic
Thurtdll', Marc« 211ifi. KIIP All
Caah, I Jull Wont Tho Contanls
lo

__ _

I

1332.

for:

Jtealllterecl Nune for r
ICCU
Lie. Prsctkal Nane'1

rorllllloon
Send resume to:
Pl-at Valley
HOipltsl

.r
1.

J

'1: •
;, ; .~

'

• • '!,1

• 1 .
. ' .

.r;

www o-cominblz n01

5pm, "Big Vorlaty Of llomo. 21
Elllltl Hllgilll.
Saturday 1 •, s:OO·? 117 Lo·
Granda Blvd. Noma Brand
Clotpao, !'rom Drotltl, Coals,
Woidan Rocillr, Oho~l, Ullllly
~llllr, • • Cluilll, ""'''Avon.

AN UNUSUAL OPPORTUNITYII
work !rom homo with no boast
Viol! wwwdon!worryberlch net or
Cei18()1).2611-IIIID8
ANYONE CI\N DO ITI $25/1751
H~·PTII'T. Wolll ot ho..,.. 1..00r

Oillr-.

"'* OIMiic.

·

.,_,_

.

'

.._.

niii'III'OYo

'

I

Middleport

lVIcl"~

110. 8ig Aumtnt~ga $Itt- lnlidll

..

out. Thurs .. Fri .. &amp; 111 .. 1·5, El•
baroUold worohouoo, 740·742·

1408.
, . &amp; Saturday, at Rutland Flro
Sllllon, 3 llmily

•

Gtregt *ala• 4th, S!h. llh, 314
milo on Now Umt R' , Rutland
Dolls, Euler llama. boyo 12
monlfll Ill 2T and more. 740-742·
2718.

.

Yard on4 bake sale, April 5·6,
1·00·? Long Bollom Community

•

lluilellng.

•

'

Pl. PleiNnl
VIcinity

a

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3 Family GMge .......... 4pll!.

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www.ThlnllllgDvliaN....,

Saturd-r, April 7, Road Btolda
Tluolting, Toddllr Eatter

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Flnoncing avallebla. (100) 322•
l13l,
EXT 050 www.bullnell·tlar·

~;!~~Nol!..;_:'~:-:u_..~~~a::
i140
8utlnela
Training

Colllle

(ca.- ca. Til-)

CIIITodlyl7-7,
1-t00-21-. 01
Aog HO-O!I-12748.

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5 ·STAR
PROFESSIONAL
TRUCK DANING SCHOOL ofllra 1 14 d8y CDL TRAINING
PROGRAM . lmOiedlalo Opon·
ingl. 131.000+ 1st,..,. Non Ex·
parltnclll: t-1100·448 8888. E•·
parlincod w/CDL 1..00•158·

2383.

1Wt A rrav.i Apocy: Aaca1ve
Training, • - ' - ' - Your

own
Travel -silo
Jnd
DiacouniS/Perks.
Earn
BigTravel
SSS.

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Slarillp COSH 1 - - . .
0001 Or w -.EarnBucksFrom·

1-

Start Your Buo1na11 Tod-r...
Primo Shoppong Contor Space
Avlillllle At Allordablo Rate

Stmg ~PloD. Clil7o40-44&amp;-

0101.
WORK FROM HOME. EARN
$1500 PIT TO $5000 Flf·monlhlll
CAll TODAY 1·80IJ.185-D319 or
-.-247.com
WORK FROM HOME .. . Earn
$500·17000/monlh PT/FT. Full
Tn1lnlng. Free InformatiOn Call
Now114C11Jo2110.8t14

ww oahitudl•111.cam

230

P~1lonll

.-.com.

EARN VOUR COLLEGE DEGREE
QUICKLY, BachelOrs, llallarl,
Doctorate, br correepondtnce
based upon p~or Oducatton and
ahorl study courae. For FREE In·
rormetlon booklet phone CAM~
iiRIDGE STATE UNIVERSITY I·
801J.IIIIW318

Unique, Fact ..Program, Failure·

Proof, Lowoat Tulllon, College
Ouar~~ntee. Call Fr11 Nowf Fret

-

1«l0 11813H1'.

180 Wanted To Do
B&amp;B Counotrucllon. Roollng.
Siding
Conoroto. Interior &amp;1
EK!orlor Painting. All Phuu Of
Homo Repairs For A frH
Eollmolo Call (304)875-7738
Allor 5 pn.
"

a

M_,..-a. '1'8'/ stone, 3 -4 bed-

- . a.roo _.., -

Rivarcroot Lane, Well' Cot~mbla,
April Sih &amp; llh, Thura~y &amp; Erl·
dly. Organ To .Givtl'l'av. Prom
Gowria, Guitar, Iloilo, Sawing
llechlnt, Clolhti, Avon a..to,
Loll ol Mioc.,...._ Prlnttr

AIIIMILY AT HOMEII Crallo,
Toys, JO'i'Oiry, Wood, Sowing,
'f1plng ... Groat P,ayl CALL 1·800·
795-0380 Eldt 201(24hll) ,
ATTENTION II !IOU have lo work,
Work from home $20 to $50 hr
l't.IFI. FrH Dotalil.
-tttaucooaacom
ATTENTION OWN A COMPUT·
ER? Mall·ordor/E-Commerce

bedroom. full unfinished base·
ment, &amp;loam heel aHuated on 3
villaga lois, one car ga-. new
lldlwalb, new roof. farga fro~t
porch, dock, small outburlding,
qultl llreol, lined basketball
oourt/ parllng anoo. will consider
all raaoonablo offen;. 7.0'1192·
7388
Uuot SHI BMullful 3 Bedmom. 2
bath, CIA, FR With Flraplaca, 2
lots, Now Rool, Refrogerator,
Stove. OW, Largo 2 car Garaga,
Big Yard, Largo Rooms. Lots 01
Eltrao, Relocating Out 01 Stale,
$67,0011. CaN (304)773.53111

$ FREE CABH NOW$ from
_ . . , _ .. _ o g _
of dolla11, to f!elp minimize IMir
laaes WrHa lmmadlalaly. WIND·
FAUS, 3010 WILSHIRE BLVD.
188, LOS ANGELES, CAI.IFOR·
NIA 911010
$$NEED A LOAN?
Try Dlbl Conte~ !I' 'hw1l
Ctl Parjmootll Up To eo%.
Same Dtty ..,..,_
1-877-78HI186

Nice 1· 112 Story, 2800 Square
Foot With Updatea. I 87 Acroa.
Private. Convenient. $92,000
(740)245-9ol48
R•molded 3 Bedroom. Wood
Floors, 1·112 Bath , Beaulilul
Aroptaoo. 2
Garage, 573.000
(740)388-9151

car

320 MObile Homes
for Sale

... NEEO CASH?? WE pay
cash for remaining payments on
P._ly SOtdl llortgagaal Annul·
Ileal SoUiemantol Immediate
Ouoitslll 'Nobody beals our pric·
oa? National Contract Buyora
(800) 490-0731 ... 101 www.na·
CASH LOANS $2000·$~000.
Conoolldlllon to :$200,000. a.dl
No Crodll. Cradlt·Cards. Mortgoon For lnformallon 1·800·

338-7812..... 3822
CONBOLtDATI! YOUR WAY
OUT DF DEBT! Reduct monthly
paymenll · Poy one biiUmonth
EASY lo get llarted. Financial
Froadom Cl\rlotlan Counaallng,
800·141
1111.
CC3

12150 Mobile HOme, Now Klich·
en, New Bathroom. New Floors,
1618 Co...,ed Porch, Central Air,
$5,0011 (7.0)441-8389
14170 Bay-. Naw Since 97, Cl
A, Wallr Hoalhtr, Furnace Price
lnc:ludea Stove, Refrigerator,
Porch, Shod &amp; Woodin Fence,
S72DO Call (304)675-3008 &amp;atore
3prn
14170 Southern Draam. fru De·
livery frao Setup only $111195 1·

886·928·3426
tt79 Fairmont 14a70 wiEtpando,
3BR, 1Bath, Completely Remodllocl, Gao Hoal, 2 WindoW AIC's,
$7,000 (740)379-2405

a

Bride BlOck E.,..,._nca Or WNI
work For Contractor (304)175·
1183

GROWING BUSINESS NEEDS
HELPI Work 11om hoftlll llelloGt•

dlrlEoCommorca. S5:12+iiloaok PT

ClUB AlB COL Drivers , Good
Poy, Bonellll, 401K. Vacation, In·
Homt Evenings Call

~

Furnished 2 &amp; 3 Room Apart·
manta. Cfaan, No Pall, No Smok·
lng, Ae1oroncos &amp; Deposit Ro·
qulred
Udllllea Furnished.
17401"8-1519

Oallia Manor Apartments, Now
Accepdng Applications For 1 BR,
HUD, Subsidized Apart- For
Eldorly And Han&lt;!iceppad, Equal
Houoong Opportunoty. 1740)44846311

350 Loll a Acreage
13 Acres With Beautiful Lake
View Sileo $50,000 18 Acres
With Largo Lake. Mobile Homo
With Add On $79,500 Galloa
County On Blacl&lt;top Road.
1740)381H1678

Gracious loving 1 and 2 badroom
apartments at Village Manor and
Riverside Apartments on Middl•
pori. From $278·$348. Call 741)..

-Land

•
740-441·1492
CllfllaCo.· Chathlro,man·a farm. Largo Home On
Nice 47 Aall Witll Coeek,
Shedl, Much More $89,0001

992·5064
Equal Housrng Oppor·
lunilie$.
' I'

Alao.
Same """ 6 $11.500 or 37 Acres $33,!100°
Ken Rood, 8 Acrlol21,000 or 5

AcraiWkhBarns$31,000 Rio •
Grinde. 10 Aaas Will Pond,
12S.DDDOr8AcraaS19,000 Eu-

reka. 33 Aaas Of Wiklfe

$31,0011TjCCMLakaAr8a, 10
Acraa$11.8001
llolgl Co~ Tupper Pial.,..
SR861, NlceWOodad 5 Acres
With
$12,0001 same Arlll.
23 Acroai23.DDD Or 31 Ac:roo
127.900 can Road. 6 Actoa
$12,0011 Or 6 AcraaWkh XLarga
Polo Sam $30.500 Dallllillo, Nlca
Wooded$ Acres, $13.500 Rulland, 9 Acoes $6,5001

c,....

For &amp;ate· 10 952 Acres on
Friendly Ridge Rd. Crown City
(740)368 0864 or 1740)386 9336

RNIEI~
Wantfd •

1 ·3 Bedrooma

New Haven, onja bedroom

Foreclosed

1 Bedroom, $2001mb plus deposit
and Ullilioa, Appliancaa Included,
tn 1111 City of Galllpolla, (740!25&amp;8681
2 Bedrom HOUIO, 15 Mile South
On 7, Evenings After 7pm, Doposit I Roflroncos, 1740)441-,
1917
2 Bedroom House In ~ureka For
Roni, $300 Per Month, $300 Dopool!, No Pots Call Ahar 5:00 pn
(740)3&amp;1-2580

2 Bedroom Hou.., FUll 8aoamon1
In Point Pteaaanf, References
And Depoall, No Pats, (304)675·
8678

3 BR. 2 bath homo ronls lor $600/
mo. and 3 BA, 1 bath horne rants
for $550/ mo Cl011 to lown Ref·
erences and deposit required
Wiseman Roal Estate, Inc.
1740)446-3644
'

Nice 1 &amp; 2 bedroom aparlmenls,
equipped kitchens, AJC, uttlllles
lncluded, relerence and deposit
roqurred Phone 740-1182-6951 af·
lor Spm.
Now Taking Appllcallons- 35
, West 2 Bedroom Townhouaa
Aparlm•nts, Includes Water
Sewage, Trash. $350/Mo., 7.0·
448 01108.
One bedroom apartment, $225
month plus ullllties &amp; depooll,
Third Street, Racine, 740·247·

4292.
River a.nd Place Now Accaptlng
AppliCations ror 1 Bo,droom Hud
Subsided Apartment lor Elderly
an~ Disabled. EOH, 1304)882·
3121 Or(3D4)882·3214

Tara . Townhouse Apartments,
Very Spacious , 2 Bedrooms. 2
Floors, CA, 1 112 88111, F!JIIy Carpoled , Adult P"ool &amp; Baby Pool,
Pallo, Start $365/Mo No Pels,
Laaao Plus Socunly Deposit Required, Days' 740·446·3481:
Evenings: 740· 387·0502, 740·
~101

Twin RlverT.-o now aocopllng
applications for I BR.
HUD oubsldlzod apl for elderly
and disablocl. EOH.1304)675-

and experience to Sdlathtrn

Main Strut, Pt. Pioaoant , wv
2~550

~-W-D_R_K:-:F:::ROII:::::-:-:HOM~:::E:---S!IOQ.S1,500 Mo FuiiTima
PAIDVACATIONS
•
1·801J.4to-3019

490

For leB1!8

Boautoful,1800 Sq. Feet, RosiDfad
2nd Floor Apartment In Historic
Dlairlct taoal For Prolesslonal
Couple. All Modern Amanilloo 3
Bedrooms: Spacious Living: 1·112
Balha, Rear Doell. HVAC. $800/
mo.' Plus Ulllille,. Security And
Key Deposit No Poll Rtferencao
Required (740)446-4425 Or
(740)«1-3938

f INAI~CIJ\l

210

INOTICII '
,
OHIO VA~LEY PUBLISHING CO.
rol:ommondo thai you do bull•
noaa with pOO~Ia you know, arid
NOT to lind money !~rough lhl
mall until you havt lnveollgatod
,:..;.;..,;_,..:._..._
lhO OlleNng
•

510

HouHhold •
Goods .

!lppllances·

Reconditioned

Washer&amp;, Dryers, Ranges, Aetrl·

______

GOOD USED APPLIANCE&amp;
Washers. dr'yers. refrlgeratora,
ranges . Skaggs N&gt;PIIances, 78
Vine Streol, Call.740·4•8·7398,
1·868-818.() 128
IHAL[~;TAH

Mollohan Carp•t. 202 Clar~ '
Chapel Rd. Porter, OH Froo Esll·
me101. Eaay Financing or 90 days

eame as cash vrsa, Mast•rcard

Accoplo&lt;l, '1740)445-7444 or 1·
677-1130-8182

A VENDING GOLDIIINE·ACT
NOW! Machlnu vend tiorohoy
candy AND phOno caHII (UC/
min. U.S) Eom $8DD+Iwkly, Work
8·9 hri/Wk Grootiocational 800·
1511-1 m. lnv roq, Fin Mi.

I
Movlngll Everything Must Gull
This Week. Only. 1228 Davia
Road , Off•Teens Run, Thurs·Sat
(740)2541 el54 '

'

EARN SSOO·SIOO par wook In
110ur bathrObe &amp; llippall Low In•
vellmonl 1·800·272·01t3• awe·
aomaarltlng cam ,

Main StrHI F.umllu111
(304)875-1422
515 Main Stroot, Point Pleaaa~l

Uaod Fumlure '
New 2 Piece Llvlngroom Sillloo.
$398 Buy, SoD, Tradl

,...., a

Earn
NOT
I

New And u11d Furniture Store
Balow Holiday Inn. Kanauga We
Sell Grave Monumonta And
vasea 1740)4411-4782

GET YOUR FORTUNE IN MO·
TIONI' Earn $100·$500/dally plue
bonuoaol No hype! No conluaiool
No oaporlonco noceuaryl We'll
train Not MLM , Aflcrdablo COli
Toll !rae t·6n·8to-632t .

August for a scheme in which
he took money to buy tickets
to Indiana Pacers, Indianapolis
Colts and NCAA Final Four
'games, but never bo~ght the
ackets. Instead, he offered to
pay the investors with checks
he had stolen from his father.
Schlichter, who has several
poor conVJctioru, will have to
wear an elecrmnic-monitoring device for six months after
he is released from pnson. He
will not be allowed to use reU
phones, credit cards or computers.
Dazey saad Schlichter asked
tf he couW patttcipate m a
gambling ·addiction program
while in prison.

- -ICommen:laf
financlngUnHI
FREE Cdor Cllelog
Cal Today 1-eoD-711.01118

www..,etaancom

AUTOS . . _ $1011.110
Fol1ca ,_.,... &amp; R-1
TOIIOIBa. Chevy's, Joopst
Plolao Call for Lisllngl,
1-eoo-451-()500 EaLC9117

~~!!b~~~~~~~~
&amp; Football Cards
Topps, Bowan,
Many S1ar Cards, 1 Glass Show
cases, Cen After 5pm.l304)675·
2473
Computers· WE FINANCE DELL
COMPUTERS! Even with lass
than pertecl credlrl t·800·otn9018. Coda AC14 www omes&lt;&gt;\ulfori.com
EZPETRX.COM Seve up 10 50%
on AU,. pel madicel!&lt;Jns and suppll... Including Hearlgsrd, lnllr·
ceptor. Frontline, moralll FREE
SHIPPING. 0 - online www E•·
pftAa.com HID0.844· 1427
For Sale· 7 graW~o,

aeacr. GrOVII

COmetary, cal412·257~.

FARr,1 SUPPLIES

710 Autos for Sale

&amp; LivESTOCK

610 Farm Equipment
1950 8N Ford Rebuilt Englna,
New Tires And Ballery $2200
OBO 1304)675·5021

Culll· Garar Harrow, 12ft, $900:
JD Wheel Dllk, IOU $800, NH
479 Haybone. 911 $3500. NH Hay
Rake, 256, $1200, Sperry! NH
Tedder, 158, 14ft, $1200, Kasten
S1lage Wagon WI AVCO· Nil Gear
Sl200 (304)516-9009
John 08ere MT With EquiPfMnt,
lnlernetlo'nal 240, John Deere
Baler For Parts 1304)458-1050
After &amp;pm
~~~Stv

820 Wanted to Buy,
1950's &amp; 1960'1 45, 3~ , RPM
Records, OJ, Store , ,Stock.
Collections 1937)675-2930 Allar
,6:00pm

Bock Bumper &amp; J!raceo For 1950
Dodge 1/2 Ton l'lck·up 131!'\)895-

~

'

'

Wanted Good Ustd - l!obllo
Homo, In Tho 80's, ~ 'rQr 3
Bedroom, (740)446-0H8 Or
1304)675-5965
'

I)' vartenea of Oreg&lt;in Dahlias to
110ur frlendl. family, younolf. VlsM

us.8hllp'J- oregond11111a.com !

Grubb's Plano- Tuning ll Rapelrs.
Problema? NoadTunad? cart Tho
Plano Dr 740-446-4525
,..;.pe
· ndonl Herbalill Distributor:
Op
CaH For PrOduct Or
portunlty
(740)441-1862

1983 Jeep CJ7, Runa Good ,
740137
$600 Calll
9-

::'"Body,

one '"' or Jlka new bun~ bed•
vsry well modo 1225. (74D)37g..
2140

v

. I

•

' i

.,,
f

-.

fourth~ pic~ i!J~tbe· 1982

dratt. .l ie -~ s~~~~Jor a
~in 1983-by tJye:. NFL for
gambling, returnid_'·to the
Colts in 1984, then was
released the following season.
He was released from an
Indiana pmon in September
1999, _after. serving I~ rhan
half of a four-yeat ~ntenc~ for
stealing $800,000 . to sypport·
hts gambling habat While m
prison, he was charged' with
four counts of illegal g:imbling
for allegedly placing numerous
b~ts on spotting events from a
prison telephone.

1987 Bronco II XLT, 4WD, Sport

1986 Ford Taurus , For Parts
Only, Btsl Oiler (304)695-3013

sunroof, 5 speed, arnlfmiCD, air,
$3800, 740-949-2641. ·

1986 Subaru GL 4WD Wagon
$1600, 1987 CIMlller Z·24, $1200
I740)38H113

t997 Old&amp; Achleva, 61,0011 miles,
$6900 , Blue Book Value $7900,
4..:.·- - - - -.I
;..17_40..:,)--U;.8_262_

Stripes. $3495, Looks And Runs
Good. 5 Speed, 86.300 Moles.
AIC , Tinted Windows , AMfFM
Casselle, Tow Package. Roo!
Rack , Zoebart Splash Guards &amp;
Running Boards (304)875·5964

1989 Dodge Aries. Very Clean,
Red Flreblrd.
Very Good Condition, Very De· .._ n111es.
power T-top, Ow,ned
pendablo, Evanlngs, (740)245- and driven by woman. Haw all oil
9239
chango
recerpls
Payoff
1740)448 3344
1990 GED Prism, 4 dr., 51j)., ami
fm cassette, new ares, plus dla~
1999 Pontiac Grand Prix GT,
lr~butor, ilrakos, liming ball, 740. While, 4 Door, 24·000 Miles, Well
992·2558
Taken Care 01 Calll740)441 199 1 Grand Prla STE, GOOd t,lo- 0216 Or 1740)591-7110
lor &amp; ,TransmiSSIOn, 1989 Chevy: 2000 Pont1ac Grand Am GT. au·
Corsica, Runs. Good Body, Both tomallc. ram air, V·6, red, power
Cars $500.17401388-8269
ounrool, compleloly loaded,
16,500 mllas,lloklng $17,500 no1991 OldsmotVIe Bravada All gollal&gt;lo, 74().992-4017.
Whlll Drive, Sport Uiollly Vehicle
Clean . Needs Motor. $3000 89 Chevy CorsellO. V·6. 2 8 en·
1740)367-7235
gino, Auto, 4 Door, All electric,
1508 miles. Runs Good.
1992
Plymouth
Voyager
S.E
..
PI
(304)895-3739
W, V·8, 3.0, AIC, Cruise, Eacel·

tti93 Cadillac l:tdt'redo, $7,000
Eocellenl Condition (304.678·
5929 01:1304)675-6581
~ 1194 Buick LeSabro LimNed v-e,
Grey/ Groen. 4 Ooor. Well
Equipped , Nice Cor. $4500
(740)«1-7438
19114 COrsica, Loaded, Like Now,
$3,395, )994 a 111113 Grand Am,
V·6. $3.19~. 1998 Ranger, 70K,
$3,195, 1994 S.tO, $3,495, 0111era In Stock, Trade-Ina Ar;;:ceptld CDOK MOTORS (740)446·
0103

JET -

'MOBILE HOME OWNERS
Fair Pigs For &amp;ale. Bilm &amp;
In GoUla County $75
(740)2.5-'5419

Announcement

Fair pigs ready 10 go: butchlrtnq
hogs, 230·2501, 740·949·2017 or
740-949·2908

'

NEW AND USED STEEL Stool
Besmo. Pipe Rebar For Concrete.
Angle, Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Grallng For Drains, Driveways &amp;
Walkways L&amp;L Scrap Metals
(740)446-7300

Gun Shoot

'

fORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN CLUB
1~n~1ay, AprilS, 2001

12 noon
1/2 slugs

97

Chryalor· " SabFing • ' JJGI
Milos,
Loai!eb $6,7e'6 OBO (740):i5B1252(740)25&amp;'-1818 '

Convorll~ll, • 74,500

98 H :Clvlc~aclc, Air.
1740
Auto,
'
' 99 Cavalior. '4 Door, 4 Cylinder,
Auto, Air Condition, AMIFM, Cassene, 13•000 Miles 1 7500
(740)«1-0337
99 Chavy Cavalier, 2 door, Au·
tomelic/Overdrlve. Power LOCks
and mirrors. 1111. cruise. spoiler.
Aluminum wt1eels~ tinted glass,
Cheyenne Red, 19,600 miles.
$9000 080 1740)256-1011

evenings

spaghelll straps, lilted., floor
length, one side, matc~lng sash ,
eiogant, $75 OBO, 740·992·8679.
RESIOENllAL HDIIE OWNERS

JBif and·Pam ,
Newell announce
the birth of thalr

sawmill $3.795 New Super LumDermalo 2000. larger cepacllies,
more options Manufa,cturer of
sawmills. edger&amp; and skldders
NORWOOD INDUSTRIES 252
Sonwoll Drive, Buffalo, NY 14225
F.REE lnlormallon 1·800·576·
1363 EXT. 2DD·U

Hay For Sale, 45 Round ~;~atu.
And 250 Square Sales ' &lt;lall
1740)446- bt15 or (740)4! 67843 After 6.0Qpm "
•,

Stool B~lldlngo , New Mus1 Sell
30x40x12 wu $10,200 now
18.980. 40x80&lt;12 wao $16,400
now $10 ,971. 50&lt;100x18 wu
$27,590 now $19,990 80&gt;200x15
was $56,780 now $42,990 1·800·
406·5126

HIW ~ Brlghtli'll&lt;t lle'Straw· :'it~r
'Round Dllivorr &amp; Yolumlbto·

SUN'SAND'SURF Whi1e sandy
beaches, fabulous aunaetsl De·
luxe roomsfkllehenettas &amp; balConies overlooking lhe gulf of Mexl·
t:O leland Inn SeaQh r Resort
Treasure Island. FLA. 800·241·

9980 www lalancfinnresort com
Naar Sl Pelarlburg.

Tandem Bicycle Built For Two.
Excollenl Conallion, (304)675·
5028
Watorllhe Special: 314 200 PSI
$21.95 Per 100, 1' 200 PSI
$37.00 Per 100: All Bra11 Com·
prosolon Finlnga In Stock
RON EVAN8 INTIRPRISES
Jaciloon, Ohio 1-800.537·9528

SBOQ[Id son,

'·DIWion
'
Mlcl'ael

, on.

October 29,2000.
Thslntant
1 lb. 15 oz. at
was 14 lnlll~ss
long. He Is
brother
ol
Jonat~on Zackarla
at·hDme. HI is thB
grandson ol John
and Mary Newell,
Robert and Norma
Wright. The great
grandson ol
and ths late Hobart
Newell, The late
Marvin and
Walker, Robart
Naoma
Wright,
and the late Walter
and Helen Sams.

Squ. . !)lilf, oqod. IIJI¥8'i~1 S1
&amp;IQf.Od I~ 'barp Le!41:1 Ia,

bJ rnOYtll,l40;aG'1

; I

count "Avallablt., ~tlilage, F~m
1304)875-5724. • .
"'

650 Seed

a Fertlll;rel'
"

Tobacco Plants For Sale.' Call
1740)446-7843
Tobacco Plants- Order NoW To
Guarsnlee Early Spring Plantings
Increase Allotments Mean Extra

Plants ThaAk You For Your Business Call Danny Dew~urs1 ·
Leave Message (3D~)895• 374p
Ori3D4)895·3789

HlANSPORTATION

Autos lor
1998 Hyundal Elontra, 4 0001\ CD
player, Sunrool, Auto. ' 37 000
Mles, s.t9SD 080 (740)25612521740)256-,1618

.' .

\

'•

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

Budget Priced Tran1mla11ona
All Types, Access To Oval"'
10,000 Transmlsstons. Transfer
Cases, 740-245· 5677 Cell 339·
3765
Very Good Ford ,302 Engone &amp;
Trans.mlsslon, Still In Car, Can
Hear U Run. New Carb. Starter,
Volt Reg $300 For All , Call
1740)388,-0159

790

•

camjiers .. '
Motor Homes -

1990 Class A Gull Stream , 37
Foot. 460 Ford/ OshKost) Chassoel Fully Equipped Including A
1998 Saturn Pull Car. Both Eaco~
)
lent, And Low Mileage. (740 245-

_57c-52------~--:-:-

1991 COleman Pop·up. AJC, Bike
Rack, mini Condition . $2900
78_ _ _ _ __
Astra 1894 conversoon van, ;..(7_40..;.12_4_5-_59_
Loaded, 170.000 Miles. 1 Owner,
Dutchman 30 Foot Travel
Naeds To Sell (304)675·1150 E.a
Arlsrocral Sarles, Loaded,
274
JJ~~~.~~m~Condlilo~
. $8000 .
, , •

.A,. Motorcycl M

, 1..,. •• :

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

1 , ·

SERVIC~;,

'250
Yahama
~·Wheeler
(740)446 )1687 Allor 3pm
1995 Harley Svperglldt, 13,000
Milos, Excollenr Condition. 80cl,
Boaulllul leal Extras, $13,6dO

810

1999 Kawuak1220 Bayou, Utility
Model. Rode Lesa Than B Hours
Eacellenl Condlilon, Asking
$2SDD(304)862·2817

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guarantee
local references furnished. Es·
tabllshad 1975. Call 24 Hrs. (7401
4o16 0870 1·800·287-0576 Rog ers Wa1err;rooflng

(740~7438

450 Foreman 4x4, Electric Shill 4·
wheeler. 1,300 Miles. Excellent
Condition, $4500, 6.2 Die..i En·
gine. $300 (740)44&amp;-21147

Card of Thanka

720 Trucks lor Sale

17' Mark Twa1n Wilh Walk
Through WindShield 115 HP,
Mercury Motor. Runs Good,
$100li(740.)367-~
•

96 Toyota Tacoma. PB, PS, AIC,
Lots 01 Extr11,1304)675-1183

CARS FROM $500 • Pollee im·
pounds &amp; tax seizures Hondas
Chevys , Fords, &amp; more For listings, call nowl 1·800·719·3001
o.a A010

In Memory

,

78 Ford 4a4, Suspension lift. New
Wheals, To Many New Parts To
lr&amp;t. Call
51740124 9056

97 Honda Rebel 250, EMCellon(
Condition, 2100 miles, asking
$2000, (740)446-7943
I

1992 Ford Ranger Sporl, 4x4
P1ckup. Extra mce , $3995, 1995
For Ranger Eatra Cab 65,000
Miles , $3995: '996 Dodge 4x4,
Extra Cab Pickup, Sharp, $10,500
B&amp;D Auto Sales. Highway 160
North, (740)44~865

Tappan HI Elllclency 90% Gas
Furnaoel. 011 Furnaces, 12 Seer
Heat Pump &amp; Air Conditioning
Systems Free 8 Year Warranty
Bennetts Heating &amp; Cooling, 1·
800·872· 5967 www orvb com/ben·
non

1994 Ford F·150, 4&lt;4, Whole ,
E
With Towing Package, xcellent
Condition, 1304)675·4721 Days,
1304)675-4249Evenings

99 Grand Am GT, w~llo, ladY drl·
van, one owner, 18,000 mllea,
loaded, altcellanl condition. Sell
(Or payof1 Cal 740·992·2358 after
4 OOpm weekdays, anytime weekends Serious inquiries only

1988 F·250 Eotended CaD, Ford
XLT Lariat 7 3 Diesel, Auto
Transmluion, All Power, A/C,
Asking $4695, Call (304)882·
1148 01: 1304)692·2617

Prom dress· alze 7·8, light blue ,

1987 Ford F·250, 4a4, Rabulll 6 9
Liter Baan .Painted, Nlca Wheel&amp;
And Tires. Nice Truck $7800
)36&amp;-98
75 _ _ _ __
1740
.:._.:.__ _

Moton.

· for Sa~

760

730 Vane &amp; 4-WDs
U11hty 2 Door, Silver With Blue

lonl Condlllon, $3500.1740)245-;

pony wllh blue ayes,
949-2494 after 4pm.

1995 Ford Probe GT, 24V, V·6, 5.
Speed . Red Good Condition.
$5800Shsrpear (740)446-7438

88 1 Ton Dodge Wrlh Ullllly Bod
And Racks, 380 Aulomalic With
Matching Utility Style Tra11ar AU
Doors &amp; Locks Work On The
Truck And Trailer, $3000~
1740)441-9389

1995 Ford Taurus SHO, green

-~llar5pn

1~:~~·~~~~~~,~~
(i

1994 Dodge Sha-. Good C.,.
dillon. 115,000 motoo , $2600,
Smith Electric Guitar, $1000. coli
phonei304)817-Q976

750 Boats a

720 TNcks for Sale

•

Home
Improvements

All lypes of m.,sonry brick, .,lock

&amp; stone Frit estimates, 304·
173·9550
C&amp;C

Gena iel 'Home Malntenence· Painting, vmyl Siding,

carpentry, dOOrs, windows, baths,
mobile home repa1r and more, For
free estlmale call Chel. 740·992·
6323

The fiUIIIIY of
Dawson Michael
Newell would like td
expresS It's most
heartfell thanks to
everyone for lhelr
cards, prayers, gifts,
and support during
Dawson's hospital
stay. we would rlso
like to thank a of
those who helped ·
and supported the
benefit for Dawson.
Special thanks lo
the Aelker, ColOns,
Sauvage, Edwards,
White, Maxey,
Shriver and Guess
families for all of
their hard worllln
organizing the
.benefit. May God
· Bless eaCh and
every one of you.

E&amp;S Lawn SerYICI Dealgn, lm·
plementatlon, And Service Available For Spnng Clean Up. FertHIZ·
tng And Planting Free Es11ma1es
Satisfaction Guaranteed. Greg
,Milhoan (304)875-4628

Livingston's Basement Wa1er
Pr9oflng, all baaemenl repair•
dohe tree estimates, Ufellma
guaran1ee. 14yrs on job experl·
enca (304)895-3867
Superior Home Mal.~;tteriance We
Do All RepairB1 On Homes Car·
pentry Plumbing Decks, Et&lt;; •
Eve's Spouts, Storage Sulldlngs.
All s~es (740)441..0113

840 EleCtrical and
Refrlgaratlon
Residential or commercial wiring
new service or repatrs Master Ll·
censed etectrlcien Ridenour
Electrical , WV000306. 304·675·
1706

You Don't Ho..e fo Loot For
To Spy rht 8r11 8&amp;~ylllt

til&lt; Ciodlfi&lt;dl

110 Help Wantll!'d :
In l.olllnll Memol'll of
HELEN JEFFERS
who Puaed awlll
APril 'l, 199'l
Gone Is the face we·loved

so dear.
Sllenlls the voiCe we
loved to hear.
Too.l1r awa~ for slllht or
SPeech.
But not too fir lor
thoUIIhf to reacll
Sweet to remember her
. who once wu here
Who. thouah absent. Is

Just 11 dear.
Sadlll mtaed b~ husband
Boblr Famll~

' .

Pleasant Valley Hospital
Pleasant Valley Private Duty has
immediate openings for personal care
aides/nursing assistants In
Gallla, Meigs pod Mason Counties.
Excellent pay and flexible sch~uling.
For more information contact ltia Wooten
at (304) 675-7400 or 1-800-746-1t076 or
apply in person at
1011 Viand St. Pt. Pleasant, WV 25550
ANEOE

I

1'

'

that ·swn:d' wlteri the thenBalJimore Colts ma&amp;,him the

w•th gray lealher interior, power

I .~~;

AERATION MOTORS
Rapalrod, Naw &amp; ReDUIII In Stock.
Cal Ron Evans, 1·80().537·9528

Huge Inventory, Discount Prices,
On Vinrl Skirting. Doors, Wind·
ows, Anchors, Water H&amp;aters,l
Plumbing &amp; Electrical Parts, Fur·
nacea &amp; ·Heat Pumps Bennetts
Mobile Homo Supply, 740·44~·
9418 wwworvb com/bennen

$0 DOWN CARS! POLICE Ill·
POUNDS &amp; REPOSI HONDA'S,
CHEVY'S, .JEEP'S. LOW AS $291
MO. 2'4 MO'S 0191"' FOR
LISTINGS, CALL f.&amp;OD-451.0050
ext. C.0612

710 Autos for Sale

MERCHANDISE

' For Sale: Atcondllioned wuh•
ers, Clryera and rtfr.lgeraton .
Thompaons Appliance. 3407
JaOii&amp;On ""'nui. l304)875-7386.

Bulin••'
OppOrtUnity

AMIIZINGI.V LOW PIIICEI
WOLFFTAII•G BEDS
Buy Fat:1ory Dirocl
fx I' nt Service

Full Service Restaurant Available
In Vinton County, Ohio Ha~
Beer/ Wino License Equipment
Included In Lease Seats so In
Dining Lease Long Term $1500
Per Month 1740)710.0007 '

740-4&lt;16-7795

OTR drivlr nooded for owner OJ)·

Salary/ Commlllton Comrn.n1u..
ra11 with exptrltncl end dealre
Sand Rllumot lo 11ox JA 23, 200

Mobile Home Lot, Will Take
12'•· 14'o, 16's Wldea. $125/mo.
SIOQ/dop . Need Releronces,
17411)448-9175

'

2·112 Ton Central Air Unol, 8,000
BTU. F - o Air .CondiUonors,
(740)379-2405

GIVE THE BEAUTY o1 ...., twon·

gratoro, Up To 90 Days Guar·
antHdl We Sell New Moytag Ap·
pliances. French City Mavtag,

Noadld EKp.rlonctd Crow lor
Selling and Finishing sectional
Housing. Send Pricing lnfortnallon

kends, some through the week,
no orientation. Apply today, start
tomorrow. Cioll 740·1182·5384, ~no
anawer ..... moasaga. .

lur~

nlshed ·apartment, has washer
and dryer, no ptla, dlposH a ...~
........ 740-992.0165

460 Space for Rent

Homos From Slllf&lt;"', 4% DoWn,
30 Yeara at 8.510 APA . For List·
i)gl, IID().31S.3323 Exl1708.

eralor, no east coalt, hOme w. .

Himatawen

cu (740)11118-

192·5231 .

410 HOUNI for Rent

Homes, PO Boa 828, Jackaon,
OH4584D

-mad.

For Rani In Dooo.-

For rent· one bedroomlumillled
In lliddlaport, cal 740-

ingl

!i01P warilld in Odull .,.,... homo,

Mature babylttlor wanted In my
home, Racine, two Cillldrtn 5
&amp; 9. Some houukuplng and
cooking, 740-049-2458

Schlichter was sentencea
Thursday 1o five yean in fe4eol prison for credit-card
mud and money bundering.
The 1982 tint-round NFL
drafi pick. who pleaded guilty
in jailuary, was also on:lered to
pay neady $170,000 in restitution and faces three yean of
supervised release.
Schlichter still could face
.state
in Indiana and
Ohio.
"This was not a surpnse. lt's
sort of a relief," sa~d Bill
Dazey.~ Schlichter's lawyer. "I
think he was very forthright
in expressmg hiS remone and
. regret for the cnmes Hts main
focus is to be gtven treat-

AKC 81. .k Lab. Female, 3
llontha, Altnoll HouH T(ained,
Sholl,
$150 (740)258-.
6814
,It

Putges

With 1500 Sq.f'ell. 3 Bellroom, I ·
112 Bath HOme WHh Oak Trim,
And Lorga Kilchen Has A Largo
Garage And Barn With .o~ Toll·
able Acres. Excellent tocallon
Near Roo Grande. Asking
Sl2t,toO. IT.o)380-0259 Even-

F1HJ1Al S

aay and night shin, call 740-1182·
5023.

..r

13D4J1754!t5

• (7~1
GellipOiio, 7174

..

Schlichter:s ~g· habit
INDIANAPOUS (AP) - ment."
Scblicliter was indicted in ended a buading NFL career
Former Colts quarterbxk Art

410 Flr11 Avenue, 1 Bedroom
~ar tm enta, $215 + Damage
Deposit, References Required,

6679

-.drum2blroo.com

2 Full BloodOd Pokineao, Male·
All White, Female, Brow11 W1th
111ec1&lt; Mau. &amp;mo Old. EIICIIIonl
Wilh Children To Good Home,
$75.00 Each Or $1211 Bot~

CFA

$1000·$4000/wk FT 800·921 ·

8538

charges .

330 ""arms for Sale

RHI estate wanlod· l'am forced
OUI of my hOUII lor highway lm·
provamont Looking tor old !arm
houae In Meigs County with
acreogo, call 740-7t7·t303, 740119;1!-8132. )
'

81~UL3234

wntera.

1~,;;..:.-.-='-=--::::""::::''::::::::
86 Acto F - For Sale By O...

360

Govarn01ont Jobo S11.00·
S~3 oo per hour potanllll. Paid
Trtl~lnglfull Benelllo. For mora
1n1orma11on call 0111 1·888·874-

Buy or ull. AlvetN Antiques,
1121 Eaot on SA 124 E. Pomao.i&gt;y, No-9112·25211 or 740-11112·

1!13!1-Moore, .......

sa'-"

To Buy A New 11omo?
Don1 Have Land? W8 00!11 Hurry
Cl!lly 10 LoiiiAII, 304-738-7285.

sao

txctll•nt Income. Easy claims

SchuH Dii!JIIY

1180 14x70 3 Bedroom, H/2
8ath. $8Qf!DJ~)578-2f118
1982 14170 Fojr,..i Townhouao,
2 - · 1 largo bath with heal
pump &amp; ale. $1,500, 740·591·
4043 or 740-1182-G8311.

120 Pocket Walcloos In Good
Condollon And Wooden Books
For-. " ' - (740!+18-1815.
4222nd ......... Gollpols.

eoo-231-4417

Loo~lng

POSTAL JOBS to Sl8.351hr·
WILDLIFE JOBS IO $21.80/hr In·
clude"l Bontllll No Ekperlenco
Nocoadry. For Appllcallon and
$522+1wetk PT $1000·$4,0001 Eram Info, call 1·600·992·7054
wook FT. lull Training. Fru llaok· -~• .. F 8 ~-s 00pm
lot www craalocreaml1fe com ...- - ,..,.
(800) 755-4800
Someone to mow lawn with yOur
ATTENTION
WORK FROM oqulpmonf(740)245-9393
HOME mail ordariE commerce · URGENTLY NEEDED· plasma
Bualnooo St,500·S7,200 month donora, earn $4510
for 2 or 3
PTIFT Froo lnformoHon. 1·800· houro weakly. Call Sara·Toc, 740·
824-D874
592·8651 .
www.StrlvaToSUCCIId.oom
wantod Aogr.eulve Team Play•
AVON! All Aroaal To 8uy or &amp;all
or wrth lnltlallvo 10 work In 1 faol
~lllrloy Spaora, 304·875-1429.
paced, growth or~tnlod, Ell•b·
CAREER OPPORTUNITY! Earn llshed lnouranco Agency. Mull
ba Prompt, ReNabll, DopondaDio,
proc:eaalng Full training Home,
PC requlrod. Call Phyolclan &amp;
HUIIMart Devalopmenll lOll•
~H 1 ·800.77~ ·5933 erl 2070

111111

eat-in-· 2 bollwaoma, laJge
LA. lom1li DR. pine ...,_ IJMI

bedroom home on 8 acresi
$32,500, 740-9112·2786.

~.com

High lahool Dlplomo at Home
Stall Ullad Privlll Bchool. Now,

Fne JIukl 4 WhHior With The Pur·
c11a11 01 l;etoclid 5d1ult Dilplay
Homes. frii1Ch City Homla,
Golipolis, 01110 1740J44IHI340 Or
1-t00-231-44f7
Special 01 .Tho Week• Schull
28a48, Country Kitchen - 2a8
Welts, luxury Bath, Oeluae car·
pol Roducod To $34,99S- frlnch
City Homes. Inc. GaNipolls, Ohio
0
00 231
1740 1446- 9340 r 1 ' 8 •
•
""'

(740,....._

llodroom--

1
For - I n
Rio Gnlndo Walking Dllbinco 1b
Collage. AU UUIIIIII Plld. 10"'
DIICOUftl On Firll Months Rani
(740)245-5100
'

Must sel due 10 employment· 3-4

Servlcel

BLACKSTONE
PARALEGAL
STUDIES. Homo Study, Ap·
prOYid, AlforcloDio, COIIIProhln·
alva, legal training since 1810.
FREE Cotafog: 800.826·1221.
wrlo. P.O. Boo 701448, Dllu, TX
75370 NA or hllp:/- bllekllo-

HOMES FROM $1119.30/UO. I ·
38R Repoli Forecloauras, IH,
4"' For UollllgstP-rment
1-eD0-7194001 a1115
HUD Hornaa Paymenll Based
On Income. Umi1ed ,.__ Hurry!

uaoro

llovlllll Sail. Saturdoy, April 1. g.

c-

•
'• • •
• '.
''

t'Dm S2e15.

Jawotry Bonchman· Ropllr, 8~·
lng, Stone 8olllng Of Fino J-lry.
Full·llme- Immediate Opening,
:1154":'.:"~::':"~:":"~~':"::"-:"I
Apply AI Acquloltlono:,;Ftna
friday 4/t~ lllurday 417, t ·
Jewelry, 1St Second 'Avanua,
1
Rood'' Ciotltat, Elc.ll34 A NEW CAREER, EMim lnlorma· GeHipOIIi.
•I ' '
lion· Poatal Joba Up 10 $16 351
:-"'"--::"":'""~'"'":-:-:'-:-1 hour BontliiiiPonalon 1·818• Lifeguards (Mull Be Cer11flod.;
Goraga Sale, Saiur&lt;loy &amp; Sunday 728-1083 al70 t
Concoaaion Workers, And Ad·
71h And llh, 71 Burnett lload, -A.,.ba...;o.;,lu-lo-:-1-y-F:-r-o-a-ln-lo-1-1-nt-o-rn~ot mlaalon Workers, AI Gallipolis
MuniCipal Pool Applications M-r
Gelllpoiil
Users Wanted Si!.OOO· $5,0001 Be plcko~ up AI Tho Gallipolis
John1on'a TraJitr
mo. www.•nst-dreams.~m ,.
Park' And Recreation Office LO•
catod In ThO Municipal Building,
1'huradoy· Sunday. Trll!,~kiloa&lt;i ABSOLUTELY FREE INFO
518 Sacond Avanuo. Gallipolis,
From Columbua. Tapoa,
lnttrnet
wanlld
Ohio
Dldnail April12. 2001.
- · JOina, Colli
$200D·S5000/mo

..

•

Exparoencod Caretaker Nlldod
For 2417 llva In Clro For Elderly
Woman In Point Ploaaanl,
(304)675-2153- epm

nacaaao1,. =~~~formation &amp;

C0-11011.

--

Sunogalw Naadod. - - In

Gollpalla Cltilor

••Pif!l-

mone~

pipH:-Wind-

Ciludl

Roo G r -. OH Call 7.0·245·
5121 .

SchuH 32li&amp;O, 3 - -· Willi .
P1ren1s Retreat Room· 2xe

Wallo· Tbermo Windows. Free
Kawaukl 4 WhHier With ThiS
- Fr8nch City _ . _ .
polls, Ohio (740~ Or 1·

'"ACCESS TO A COMPUTER?
Put II 10 -kl S2511Y•$75/hr. FTI
PT. FREE info. 800 .. 71-8045 all.
801-lohornoblz.oom

:f:c.':

..

wv

on-

•

MEDICAL BlUING Unllmited Income ,.,....,..,_No

car oa- (7.0)387-

FORECLOSED GOVT HOMES!
$0 OR LOW DOWN! TAX
REPO'S &amp; BANKIIUPTCIESI OK
CREDm FOR LISTING! CALL 1·
.:»-sot-tm ... 9113.

C/o BUIIIID ,Raoura~
2520 Vllley Df,
Pt. Pleuaat, wv 25550
orlujo
(304) 675-6975.
AA/EOE

Friday &amp; Saturday. Hpm. 2 Mllal
Eall Ol Portar On Still Routa

•'

Experienced Floral Designer,
Sand Reaume Til JRD2, 200 Main
Shatl, Folnt PloOIIrll,
25550

e.

can 740·742·

Como One
For Everyone,
One Mila From
On 81111 llouta
AQII7th,M

•
'

EASY WORK! GREAT PAYI Eam
$500 Pluo a Week Ao11mbllng
P - II Homo No Eocporlonca
Necesoary. Call Toll FrH 1-800·
267·394ol1138

Full-limo Poalllon Available AI
Scenic Hilla
Center.
Or•••

eunently hu openings

•

••
. ;.'

EARN $25.000 TO $50,000/yr.
Medical Insurance Blllrng. N-·
ad Immediately! Home Computer
Noodod . FREE lnllmol, 1·800·
291-4883 Dept I 109

Experienced Truck Mechanic
NHdad, 401 K Retirement, MOdi·
cal. Dental &amp; VIsion Insurance,
Vacation Pay Buod On Eape(~
.... Clll (740--J.e83
' '

Pleasant Valley ~1181

vwaa1e

1o

porlonco n-od 2 week CDL
training. $34,000/yr roar plua
Full Bonolill a Paid Training.
Drivers baNd in Midwoll 1·877·
230·6002. Sunday tom·5pm.
Mon.-Fri. Bam-Spm

1987.85 WEEKLY! Processing
HUDifHA Mortgaga Ralundl. No
E•parlonce Required. For FREE
lnlonnatton Call 1-800.50 1·8632
011. 1300.

!.tii'WIO:!

prominent undetlllll,
'Auolln'. Lilt attn
Mldtlltport. PIMP

ex~

or • -

Beco"::.f A Surrogato? Your

150

Day Porter/ Janitorial lmmedlata
Opening, 24 - - Weak, 11Th tlaydrnO, Friday N~ Sldlg
satary S7 .00/ Hour. Celts Accapl·
Od M-F 10.2pm (740~131

1

ro&lt;2031oou.odu

...,_
e3 - ·- 2,...·
...
COIOOill8rtck
li Owner.
~

Ona · interior hal ......
.,.._,.,_.
- . . .. 710-&amp;-2117.
·
- - -. .
-

Pleuant Valley
Hoepital

Loll: bllcl&lt; malo DOberman, a"'
. . . . 10 •QoHte•, hu long 81rt.
Laat on THui Road. Mldd'-"
pdr1. ...... oall140-742-1332.

....

7.0)44 -

IUiisml

Pt. ..._.t. wv w:50J 1
orruto

Eaperlencod Cashier 13041895·
3603

Roplacod
.

1ft-

2520 Vde)' Dll

Cook To Do On Grill, And Lorga
lloalo. Inquire AI Oflloo 01 ~lnl
Ploaunt Moose Lodga, II- 3pm.
11-F Or Cal (304)675-1880

I00-73N334

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

5 llao"' HouH With Eatra Lot.
(7..,___

a.lht, 2
7001

BlOCk.-· -

320 Mobile HomM
tors.le
N..
FIMhooOd.
18d0,
$19-.00. 3 - 2 - . 1·
m •110.
877· -

............ 7--411112.

Slluallons.,
w.nted

~ 0111o Modald ..._,
or looking lot .........,.
of .....,. C.a SorvicN.
E....- • IIIIDO lcllool a
......,_1
15 . - - H
h

C/oH-~

Dotall1124l
1-800-449-4825 E.a. 5700

11ct S.d.t••tel Value, Plclurts
That Can't
(304)57&amp;4'49

HOipltal

Drtvere· P.A M Ttansporl. NO

IIIATTENTIONIII

·-SIIINon.-.

•

PlaaatVallef

120

T

IHATTENTIONIII

;

r :

Pleasaat ~y Hospilal
currendy 1111 openillp
for:
Medlall
RecepCiallllt/Medkal
Alllllutlud
Licallecl Pndlcal
NIU'Iel
for Physician Offices
Exc:cUent pay and
benefits.
Send resume to:

C&gt;EHVICES

110

7 ....,., lallbr ....... llnlliOII

If I'OIJ MUST WORK, WORK
AT HOME! Build your """' auc·
caollul bullness llall·ardariE·

Hoepital

Lal. ......

-.S1U00(7~

-

5pn. Sunday

Ricll Paoraon Allclion Company.
tuu tune euctioneer, complete
•ucttOn
nrvice. UcenHCI
186,0hio &amp; Well Vlrgonla. 30477'3-$715 Or 304-713-~7.

. :. ,.; ~:.

..._

IIIMQing· - · -fill.... 7 ...,.

(304)87~113

Sob~~~¥ 411 411 12-Spm

4-. 1-. .._

""'-' ,... .....323.00 yr. -

Mite. Furniture I House·

Approailllallly 3 3 MIIU Eut

f

....

_
__
No------ -.....................
.. -......... _

310 lton*lar....

110 ....., ........

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

Moving/ Garaga Sala, LaaiMr

I

.

110

1821 ...................
IIOf, Range, NC - · _ .
, _ Dapolit a -...... HUD
..,__ Q40!441-1518

.,

'

•

�..

.

The Deily Senllnel• P8ge B !

.

•••
P.,..oy, Middleport, Ohio

··!IMJII

Sawe

Trucklna

UNDA'S
PAINTING

46314 St. At. 248 Chutv, OhJ.
(740) 915-3301

•TaM c1oe paiA out
dD Ufor yw"
t

lelore6p.lll.
IJM I' ••
Allrr6p!ll

:"rout ··

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l-314,67!-'IDI
' .....
Rlli ' a • C
c:ial Mar C! , wlkw
Sooleo Senice ...........
!If I 7 ' 5 Ia Sloeol Mel.! llwtw111lt
"1\
• Sooleo a Sonlce for
ud Mello('-. Llasiiid ud r-.1
wv 115176

Maka Trac~r&lt;•l
EquipiM!It Parts

F.aory Authort.d

I&lt;ENSINGTON
WIIOOWI H!AT
-IIOR 'IICHIIOl.OGY
KEEPS '!liE
SUIIII!Rllil! HEAT
OUT NIO WINTER
1111! HEAT IN
BLOCKS OUT811.R
·OF DAIIAOING
ULTRAYlOLET RAYS
PAC'IORV DIRECT ,
PRICIIG

c......_,

A&amp;DAito
Truck seats, car scats, headliners, truck tarps,
convenible &amp;. vinyl tops, Four wheeler seats,
motorcycle seats, boat c:ovcn, carpets, etc,

OUALITY
WINDOW
SYSTEMS

Mon·Frl 8:30 • 5:00
Over~ yra experience

(740) 742-8888
1-888-521..()916

1oS00-291·5800
• Pomaro~.?~
PRO • ..,_ EI1'IUTD •....a • IIUIVINCI" •

Cue-IH Parts
Dalen
1000 St. lit 7 Soulll

~-. OH46723

.

•Gravel

._
,

Bulldozer Senlc:es

'

Llcenltd • IntuNe~
Trane • Jenlltol • Tlltrmlll Zo!ll' • LAnnax

YOUNG'S

S.rvtng C'II!Olrltrt 1,1,yeert

__...

.. Toll Free 1..aee.913-8595
Ripley

·---e!!d--

• Vlnylllkllng ............
• l'lltlo

Tree Service

• Top • R•movcal···Trim

992-6215

County~ Ohio.

~lng

IIIII .vlollltlon by
OIIJIA, thl Wlter
ilupply Wll, required
to lmmtdllltely heve
thl drinking wlter
•lllvz•d lor lha allcMI
jllfiiMtlrl. The

definite delorlpllon ol
uld Lot No. 11 and
Lot No. 17.

Music by At. 33
Members &amp;guests

(4) 4, e, 1 3 to

•

•

Public Notice
•
Notice 11 herelly
given thlll the'annual
• m..tll'lll ·of thl
·~ ehereholdere
of
Plrmlrt Blnclhll'll,
Inc. will 1111 held 111 !he

VolumeM, PIQII01.

I lid

preml .. a

IOOIIted It 421 Dt 1111111
.ltre~t.
Tuppera

Plelnt, OhiO, 41713.
Slid premllla
lpprelatd II\ Ninety•
Hllln Thouund Five
Hundred end no/1 DO
Dollera (fi7,100.DO)
and oennot Ill IOid
for 1111 then two·
lhlrdl Of thlllamount.
Tlrme of Sell: Tan
peroant (10%) of the
ule price In caah or

..•
•

,

.

• •

Public Notice

•• •

within thirty (30) c111,a
Of . . cJate Of 1111:

.

.

.'

.

••

Attorney

.. :13,20

Windows "'
Welded Frams•

Sash 0-1 01 United
lnchel

.

,

,

Additionr. Oar~ ·

- .In this
space for
I

More
'
~ I
..
We CGn MGke.Yow ·
~reGm A Jleaiity! ·
I

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....

,t

. .• L\

.

s1ils.oo lnstouect

J&amp;L
155N2i1d

...sso per:..
·.. :month~

·.

..

'

.

.

Phone
992·2155

t
In purauenee ol an •1..;.------:-;-------~...;..-----'
•I
.

'

~40)

949-2804

....w•••

.

-d•.

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..

.

39563 Sum,., Road

Pomeroy, Ohio 46769

I

•

"Secving f{undreds of Satisiioi
Customers For Over2216ars!" ' 1
• PROVEN
., ' DEPENDABLE

Slhlrday, "pril 7, lOOI
• If you want lo realize lhe ·
full' body or. your luck in lhe .
year ahead, rely solely on your,
self and not on Olhers, The
more independent you are, lhe
more you'll achieve unencum-

., ',-

• STEADY

Sei'VIce. Center

•t

1120 W. Main St:
Pomeroy, OH 45769

740-985-4212

hered.

.

·Full se~ auto center

Sat 9-1

....

JACK a LINDA PfloVucE

(740) 992~1393

' Open
Mon·Frl 9-5:30

' '

Locllly owned and opal lied by

(101'011 from Pizza Hut)

Racine ·
Mower
.CUnic

• Pt. ol

J &amp; L SANITATION

MiddlepOrt

992-2772

• I'MIIII pert
lllfoll; ... II Dlellllllln
IIIIIIIIIIIY
btnl

'

I

low as·s25.

18HI!RIFF'8 'IALI OF
RIAL ESTATE
The Btlte of Ohio,

Dllandantl
'
Cue No. DO CV 141

748·741·340
FREE ESTIMATES!
,.

Replacement

1"

1

··
.
'
f
or
as
.

(3) 25, (4) I,

lnlng•
Blnk,
Plaintiff, va. Cleyton P.
Conklin, Sr., lkl
Cliyton Conklin,
Klran 11. Conklin, 'llcl
Karen Conkllll,

446-4995

O.nlal A. Foun,

your business
page .for

·on

New H0111e1, Room

Pole Buildings; '
'Siding, Dec:U;•
Kitchenr. Drywall A

DoubleHunv

a •
z=:-•.
a ....... ,

1:--TI-TI;"'-,r--1

Advertise

Cor1 .truclron

(FICIOry Olltlet)
All vertlcol Lllado ...,
made to orderII our
loeallea
UPTO 70%0t'F
0
' • Vertlcolo • Wood

Sheriff

llllaa CountY, OhiO

.

Mela• Counly, lllrlldtl

•'
,•

~lllf1',Pt H&lt;1lllt'

Ralph E. Tru1H11

certllild check "' the
t1m1 ol the ula wltli
the lllllance In oaeh
or certified check

,.

Public Notice

•• •

The CRAFTY,

• MiD. E•ti
' 144l)lnl An. ....

Pomeroy Ullrary, 211

. Will lle,ln Street,
"-DV. Ohio, on the
. third w,dneeday· of
April, 2001, at 4:00
, p.m. according to Ita
bylawe, for the
purpo11 of 1leotlng
dlreotorl •nd the
tranaaotlon of auch
other llulllnna aalllly
· pro:r:rly come before
... meatlng.
JoAnn Crlep,

1!'877-353-~

BLIND SPOT

· Sunday, April 8th
11 :00 am to 2:00 pm
American Legion Annex
Middleport, OH

FtM Ellll•lltei.~
740-742-8015 !II'

992·3203

Dance Sat Night 9-1 ·

euppller will
· lllpe to eniUra
Prior lnatrumant
edlquate monitoring Reference: O.R.-

.....

Plllol,~
2S ytlll eape.1tncl

or

1ZQo ............
,. Dlvlnt lllnl • tt.vy:a Ylm
·(lou!! lOCk
:14 lhld ..
illullc)
• ell...... In .........
hlnldrr 44 11oe1 1111n0

-In

IIi

au.y DrlvlwiYe.

Mason vt-1&lt;111

DOWN

•

Rule of Eleven
ATaT
30 ~end
10 ~-UIIIQtlll
I fla IMII(I
Created by bridge
l1lllt
pros to
:14
12 Clloppfllg
II P111Poetool
Confound
the
~a:-·
.,_
UIIJ
prabllm
novice
Mary-Frazier
Ftll· AWA., 11 ·
Paul, Fort Pierce, Fla;
Well, let's hope
any n,ovice reading
this column is wiser
after doing so, not confounded or confused.
· The Rule of Eleven
is part of a good player's trick-one repertoire. If the lead is
fourth-highest -- and
only if the lead is
fourth-highest -· by
NOv/, TtfAT'S JUST
subtracting the value
of the card led from
/ T.OO MUG.tl
11, you learn how
many cards are ·higher
PfteSSUrfl
than that' one in the
other three hands comCELEBRITY CIPHER
bined .
by Lule Cimpoe ·
Sometimes
this •
~ c:tpt,.. ci';piCQ!- ore crMiod 110m C!U*IIonolrf I11110U1
benefits the defense,
'*'*'put end...-, Elch
1M c:ipMr - l o r IIIOII!or.
so~times the declarToctly'l Clut: E equtll G
er, and sometimes
U II H.T
X
UBPXTZ
YKT
nobody. Which is it in
• ••
today's deal? DefendX Y' Z
XQ
KIWWV.JBBF,
ii-\E.. \oJO~D t lf.£0 It&gt;\ YOU~ ing against three notrump, West leads the
EVi'J..U~:no~ w~
IIGI'
WXHT I II
IXNY.
).,~00'\JW\I:E'&lt;-1'( (!liM~ spade six. .
TPTG
VKTV
South's sequence, a
ZIUTYXUTZ
strong, artificial and
UT
NBL
XV.'
R •uy
forcing two clubs followed by three_ nou 11 L y x 0 z 8 a L z T z T
trump, shows a balanced 2S-27 poinis .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'Compoul'l ehould.bt very humble.
· ·· sout
· h ~"""'
"' -~· fi·- . ...... The lblllly to ccmpo11la 1 gttt from God. ~
Gtan C•rlo
1
stans wtt.
Menonl
•
•
eight top tricks: one
spade (given the lead),
'::~::~'
~ ~ ~lf~e
"""'.,..,~,..,.~ three hearts, th~ dia- - - - - - - 14.... lor C:IAY L POUAN
monds
pne club. ;· '
Clearly· the extra trick 0 ••orrange lenero af lh• f!".~'-~-..,~:::"'"1
fc~z:~~~~~ will come from clubs. low four
I&lt;IGIWbled
wordl b•
ta fann
fovr ..,..,..
Next, though, apply ,--~~~~~.,
.the Rule of 'Eleven . . ,
F R Q.f . E T
~:::6rl Six from II is five. So,
there are five spades . . . . . . r::--~'tll'}-1 higher than the six in
Z 1. R E P
the North, East and
.
3
South · hands com· •·1
1 I .1' 1
bined. And Soulh can '-·--'-....--'·'"""•·--'
see all five. Brgo, East
has no high spade. So,
"Why do people always want
Kt.I~CKLE BALL ..
~
South should call for
things lhey can;rh~ve?" I asked
dummy's 10. When it
·s.--..., granny. She smilecl, "What else
wins, as he knew it ,__,E,...,.,M'"'='o"'!"~T~'~
would they • - - - • - •?"
·
v
would, he takes the
A Complete the chu&lt;:kle quoted
club finesse. When 1--,~~6~71,
•
V by lillinv In th• milling words
that succeeds too, L.....l.....L....JL-..1-...L.~ yo~ dov•lop lrom step No. 3 below.
declarer cruises home
with two overtricks.
Note that if South
wins trick one ih hand,
''
East will get in with ·
SCIAM.J.ETS ANSWERS I
his club king and push '
'
a spade through, giv· Appall- Fetal- Windy· Dumbly- UP WELL .
"I've discovered," lhe new molher sighed, "that people
' ing West four tricks in
the suit and killing the
without children think they know more about bringing
contract
them UP WELL"
.

and

CONCRETE
CONNECTION

Begins at11 :00 a.m.

,_

S{Q\'lu\}lJ\

VOUB

Ia Ht

out and duorlbtd In
Plllt Book No.4, Pege
I, In 1111 OffiCI Of 1111
llelge
County
Rnonllr, reference
to which pllt le
hereby ll!ade for 1

t~t.~-~~71.

FLI\\\UC!&gt;f&gt;'( WAA1~ .
WIZO'I'E N!lOl:n" IN:. I~ .
1'1-'C. Lf\1E.:Ii (VN.Ut\1100

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

time p~rlod 11 Townlhlp, llectlon a,
I'IIIUII'ICI lly 1111 Olllo Town 4 North, Ringe
lnvlrw.-dll
1I w..t, llelga

•

BORN LOSER

··stump ~rlndlng '·
•, B.uck&amp;t Truck .

740-992-7599

Racine Fire Dept.
Chicken BBQ
Sunday, April 8th

ICfST

lOIII'

Estimales
V. C. YOUNG Ill
Free

COMMIICIAlllld IISIIIIIIW. .
FREE ESTIMATES

8\llltlm from " " entry . . . . . . .,
polntl d"lgnlted Billig Loll No. 11
EP001 end EPODI end
17
of
durl!'ll .July 1 to Wellthermln'•
December 31,
Sulldlvlelon, Drange

Tt4~

Of YOU#l L.lff

• - . Plumll!llfl

•Roo~~ngaouao..

Wl•dowo•aAddltlou•Roon.a

The VILLAGE OF lllcMieulllled IICf!IOn,
IIIDDLIPORT did not Will ontr for eale
monitor 81111 Nport fllr pulllla auction, It the
the preeeno1 of: front etepe of ,tile
•r.. nlo, fluoride·, Court Hou" 1 1n
11111..,.,_
llerylllull!, P~r. In the
nlcket, · thllllull!, nemed County,
ll·erlum,
1\lnclly 1M 22nd
chromium, mercury, Of 118\1. 2001', 1t 111,!1111
and nlenlum 111,. the o'clock
public drinking wat.r followlnJI

wlll• 1111 pertomlld In

OF

~~-·

Sici!DI • New Glrqes
•Rtplace-t

PUIUC HOllCE·.

""future.
, Till drlnlll'l! Wiler
- MmPied 1ti!PG01
IIIII I!POCia fllr ._ fore
IMII!Iontd lteme. The
Ieveii Of eaoh Wll
below OEPA al'-1111
._.,,
II you
have
qu..tlon•, contact
Brant llenlay It 740-

TtU.f MINlJTf IS'
T~f fi,ST fiiiN\JTt

GtM a Sherrie Fink, OWner

CARPENTER
.SERVICE
'"-'
,

IUILDIRIINC.
New Hotila • vi17l

Public Notice

-ttloolld

·

BISSELL

'

Pautwllci!n 'ltllOJ.
Upon bllng IIOIIIIed Of

Alr
'WII Service All MSkes"
w~r Heating &amp; CooHng. 1~.
· Und!M' 1)8W ownerstlp ~ I• now

992·3470

' f'omltoV, OfliO

Public Notice

(
Plumbl(ll

1\lploll • FUIIMrt
• Mulch '

591~11

MGIIJ.O•I

992-2975

'

llllllr. '
II I nnr tly II Y*'' .
11 Lilli
• III'OIIIdl
UnooJn
• Fflllt

=:C.

Sales &amp; 'Service ·
204 Condor St.
Pomeroy

Roofing • tfo!ne ,
Malntlfllnce.Gutters- Down
Spout '
Frtl Edmllttt
949-1405 ~

vlciOIY

10 ••• ,.~

'

BY Puw.no AI.DI!It

BLI1'E MECHANICAL COHI'RACTORS

HowardL.
Wrlteset

"-'

Routine....

11wn mover or weed trimmer.

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

II JlozlnOo

t loalll

'

4 A 1• I

-or • AlAI. DEAL on 1 MW lawn tractor,

f

• If I

I K .It
9 A I Q l.
, Ar Q

get 1 FREE Blade Sharpening.
N.w «JUipiMnt arriving rMJiy .
,S H M8nnlng, w.yM or Jim

Medicare Supplement; Life lnrunnce;
Burial and Final Expeucs; C9llege,
Retirement,
Emergency Funds; Mortgage;
Major Medical• Nursing Home~

......-·--·- -....
......-··

I I It

..-=WI'Y Spring TUne-Up

11't r)

." .

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•

.......

9 ol itT I
... u tl

• I I I

..

· Drlltll_..repalrWIIIt
we'll.-!1111 . . . fir

t I I

......

•VoiUt

740-915-4180

H ·, ~. q Htlrll

....
·- A,.,.

• I I I

FREE ESTIMATES

MONUMENTAL UFE INSURANCE CO.

•

'::',

Interior

'

'

PHII.LIP
ALDIR

of~-Lee­

Uonel, MTH, K-Une,
Att...lm, Atlas, Bachmann
&amp; Accessories
0, HO, &amp; N Guage
Estes Rockets

f

REA Cro••word Puz•l•

Hlll'e ·telf 1
st11e1e ·.

~ ·f(ei~tU~f
High &amp; J)ry

'

"

28170 llnhan llold
llaclne Ohio ·
'
'
. 41771

Self-Storage.
33795 Hilar~d Rd:
Pomeroy, Ohio

•

'

'

. .II: .

'

eff Warner Ins.
992-5479

Slztl5' X 10' '
lo 10' X 30'
. Holn
7:00AM· 8:00PM

N1mb.

Cellular
'

740-840.2217

740-992·5232;

.

~7':'}-u.- ~.

,I I

'
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•

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'.
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•

ARIES (March 21-Aprill9)
-· Even thouJh you may have
a common obj«d'Je you want
lo achieve. you and your associate might see opposiiC ways.
of re11ehin1 your goal. Unle"
you pull together in a compromise, il will no1 be realized.
Trying to polch up a broken
romance? The ASiro·Graph
Matchmaker can help you ·
unde1111nd what to do to mike
the relationship wort. Mait
$2.75 lo Matchmaker. clo this
newspaper, P.O. Bo• 1758,
Murray Hill Station, New
York, NV 10156.
- TAURUS (April 20-May
2Ql -- Enjoy your:&lt;elf today, bui
· don't tal or drink tn 1he point
you overtax your . phy~ical
endurance . Be exlrJ mindful of
s~nsihle limits when out ha"ing
il good lin~ with your pals .
GEMINI tMay 21·luno·20J
·- If you behave tou llmnhoyantly todi1y. ma:-ml:k·rs 111' thl'
oppo.'\ilc JCm.k•r won 't sec ym1
as ~h&lt;l(j!ltlllllic us ynu 'd li~c lo

believe you arc, and· y•it• will
end up with a puetl:turc~ egn
1tt..;tcacJ.
CANCER (June ~1 - July n1
" v.x,·n.hk gelling pegged lor
trespassing hxlay if You try to
throw your weight around in
areas outside of your pcrimelcn&lt;. Slay we)l within your
sphere of. ope: ration.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) ..
Unfortunately. when not living
up 10 your higher self, your
~sign
can sometimes be
e&lt;lremely intokrant of anyone
who isn't in complete uccord

with your ideas. Don't51oop 10
this today.
VIRGO (Au&amp;, 23-Sept 22)
-· ThiR could be one of 1hose
rainy days wilh your wallet
holding nolhing but faded photograph. Unfortunately if you
"haven'l save your pennies for
such limes, you~ II have 10 do ..
without.
LIBRA (Sept, 23·0cl. 23) •
· When it comes to one-on·one
nssoeialionsloday, you"ll have
to be more diplomatic than
usual. Any hint of assertiveness
could be misconstrued as
demanding 01hcrs to do your
bidding.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov..
22) -- There could he a lesson
in lhc making "for you today ,.;./ ~

•.

'

I

•

whin yo~ kum about some·
thing_ unJnuttering said aboul
you loy u rerson. you recently
put dnwn. II' II still he . what
ioes around comes ;around.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 2JIkc . 21) ~· Bdorc you gan1hlc .
tndHy em a tip offcn.."!) by a
wcll-mc~minl! friend. hcncr
chcd: amund fnr a !'cconll or

third source of conforn1:.11ion .

Wlmt wus told lo you might
hollllinlc suhslomcc.
CAPRICORN (l)cc . 22-lan .
II.J, -- S~t tht: example. notlhl'
rUles when deo11ing with fami ly members today. Be L:UIZ.-

•

nizant of everyone's feelings,
notjusl your own or you'll ri~k
provokin~ har.h resp&lt;inses lo

.'

grufT demands. '
AQUARIUS (Inn. 20-Feb.
19) .. Imposing your ideas
where they art! not welcomed
could weaken a good relation·
. •hips you presently enjoy. A
philosophy thai works for you
tnay nol fit the needs of your
friend .
•
PISCES (Feb, 20-March 20)
-- That slight edke you may
have in a commercial arrange·
menl might be more thin than
you realize . However, you'll
quickly discover ils fragility
today if you push things 100 far.
I

.·

�..

.

The Deily Senllnel• P8ge B !

.

•••
P.,..oy, Middleport, Ohio

··!IMJII

Sawe

Trucklna

UNDA'S
PAINTING

46314 St. At. 248 Chutv, OhJ.
(740) 915-3301

•TaM c1oe paiA out
dD Ufor yw"
t

lelore6p.lll.
IJM I' ••
Allrr6p!ll

:"rout ··

....

\'Jill!

1 H';

; •

i.1t(jnlqHH'

l,

(Jt1t

...

.

m

'

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

~

.

-~

.
I

/rU,MII'I&gt; SO.,

Oh

lSI-,.,

l-314,67!-'IDI
' .....
Rlli ' a • C
c:ial Mar C! , wlkw
Sooleo Senice ...........
!If I 7 ' 5 Ia Sloeol Mel.! llwtw111lt
"1\
• Sooleo a Sonlce for
ud Mello('-. Llasiiid ud r-.1
wv 115176

Maka Trac~r&lt;•l
EquipiM!It Parts

F.aory Authort.d

I&lt;ENSINGTON
WIIOOWI H!AT
-IIOR 'IICHIIOl.OGY
KEEPS '!liE
SUIIII!Rllil! HEAT
OUT NIO WINTER
1111! HEAT IN
BLOCKS OUT811.R
·OF DAIIAOING
ULTRAYlOLET RAYS
PAC'IORV DIRECT ,
PRICIIG

c......_,

A&amp;DAito
Truck seats, car scats, headliners, truck tarps,
convenible &amp;. vinyl tops, Four wheeler seats,
motorcycle seats, boat c:ovcn, carpets, etc,

OUALITY
WINDOW
SYSTEMS

Mon·Frl 8:30 • 5:00
Over~ yra experience

(740) 742-8888
1-888-521..()916

1oS00-291·5800
• Pomaro~.?~
PRO • ..,_ EI1'IUTD •....a • IIUIVINCI" •

Cue-IH Parts
Dalen
1000 St. lit 7 Soulll

~-. OH46723

.

•Gravel

._
,

Bulldozer Senlc:es

'

Llcenltd • IntuNe~
Trane • Jenlltol • Tlltrmlll Zo!ll' • LAnnax

YOUNG'S

S.rvtng C'II!Olrltrt 1,1,yeert

__...

.. Toll Free 1..aee.913-8595
Ripley

·---e!!d--

• Vlnylllkllng ............
• l'lltlo

Tree Service

• Top • R•movcal···Trim

992-6215

County~ Ohio.

~lng

IIIII .vlollltlon by
OIIJIA, thl Wlter
ilupply Wll, required
to lmmtdllltely heve
thl drinking wlter
•lllvz•d lor lha allcMI
jllfiiMtlrl. The

definite delorlpllon ol
uld Lot No. 11 and
Lot No. 17.

Music by At. 33
Members &amp;guests

(4) 4, e, 1 3 to

•

•

Public Notice
•
Notice 11 herelly
given thlll the'annual
• m..tll'lll ·of thl
·~ ehereholdere
of
Plrmlrt Blnclhll'll,
Inc. will 1111 held 111 !he

VolumeM, PIQII01.

I lid

preml .. a

IOOIIted It 421 Dt 1111111
.ltre~t.
Tuppera

Plelnt, OhiO, 41713.
Slid premllla
lpprelatd II\ Ninety•
Hllln Thouund Five
Hundred end no/1 DO
Dollera (fi7,100.DO)
and oennot Ill IOid
for 1111 then two·
lhlrdl Of thlllamount.
Tlrme of Sell: Tan
peroant (10%) of the
ule price In caah or

..•
•

,

.

• •

Public Notice

•• •

within thirty (30) c111,a
Of . . cJate Of 1111:

.

.

.'

.

••

Attorney

.. :13,20

Windows "'
Welded Frams•

Sash 0-1 01 United
lnchel

.

,

,

Additionr. Oar~ ·

- .In this
space for
I

More
'
~ I
..
We CGn MGke.Yow ·
~reGm A Jleaiity! ·
I

I

....

,t

. .• L\

.

s1ils.oo lnstouect

J&amp;L
155N2i1d

...sso per:..
·.. :month~

·.

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Phone
992·2155

t
In purauenee ol an •1..;.------:-;-------~...;..-----'
•I
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~40)

949-2804

....w•••

.

-d•.

I
I r 'I f I. ;

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39563 Sum,., Road

Pomeroy, Ohio 46769

I

•

"Secving f{undreds of Satisiioi
Customers For Over2216ars!" ' 1
• PROVEN
., ' DEPENDABLE

Slhlrday, "pril 7, lOOI
• If you want lo realize lhe ·
full' body or. your luck in lhe .
year ahead, rely solely on your,
self and not on Olhers, The
more independent you are, lhe
more you'll achieve unencum-

., ',-

• STEADY

Sei'VIce. Center

•t

1120 W. Main St:
Pomeroy, OH 45769

740-985-4212

hered.

.

·Full se~ auto center

Sat 9-1

....

JACK a LINDA PfloVucE

(740) 992~1393

' Open
Mon·Frl 9-5:30

' '

Locllly owned and opal lied by

(101'011 from Pizza Hut)

Racine ·
Mower
.CUnic

• Pt. ol

J &amp; L SANITATION

MiddlepOrt

992-2772

• I'MIIII pert
lllfoll; ... II Dlellllllln
IIIIIIIIIIIY
btnl

'

I

low as·s25.

18HI!RIFF'8 'IALI OF
RIAL ESTATE
The Btlte of Ohio,

Dllandantl
'
Cue No. DO CV 141

748·741·340
FREE ESTIMATES!
,.

Replacement

1"

1

··
.
'
f
or
as
.

(3) 25, (4) I,

lnlng•
Blnk,
Plaintiff, va. Cleyton P.
Conklin, Sr., lkl
Cliyton Conklin,
Klran 11. Conklin, 'llcl
Karen Conkllll,

446-4995

O.nlal A. Foun,

your business
page .for

·on

New H0111e1, Room

Pole Buildings; '
'Siding, Dec:U;•
Kitchenr. Drywall A

DoubleHunv

a •
z=:-•.
a ....... ,

1:--TI-TI;"'-,r--1

Advertise

Cor1 .truclron

(FICIOry Olltlet)
All vertlcol Lllado ...,
made to orderII our
loeallea
UPTO 70%0t'F
0
' • Vertlcolo • Wood

Sheriff

llllaa CountY, OhiO

.

Mela• Counly, lllrlldtl

•'
,•

~lllf1',Pt H&lt;1lllt'

Ralph E. Tru1H11

certllild check "' the
t1m1 ol the ula wltli
the lllllance In oaeh
or certified check

,.

Public Notice

•• •

The CRAFTY,

• MiD. E•ti
' 144l)lnl An. ....

Pomeroy Ullrary, 211

. Will lle,ln Street,
"-DV. Ohio, on the
. third w,dneeday· of
April, 2001, at 4:00
, p.m. according to Ita
bylawe, for the
purpo11 of 1leotlng
dlreotorl •nd the
tranaaotlon of auch
other llulllnna aalllly
· pro:r:rly come before
... meatlng.
JoAnn Crlep,

1!'877-353-~

BLIND SPOT

· Sunday, April 8th
11 :00 am to 2:00 pm
American Legion Annex
Middleport, OH

FtM Ellll•lltei.~
740-742-8015 !II'

992·3203

Dance Sat Night 9-1 ·

euppller will
· lllpe to eniUra
Prior lnatrumant
edlquate monitoring Reference: O.R.-

.....

Plllol,~
2S ytlll eape.1tncl

or

1ZQo ............
,. Dlvlnt lllnl • tt.vy:a Ylm
·(lou!! lOCk
:14 lhld ..
illullc)
• ell...... In .........
hlnldrr 44 11oe1 1111n0

-In

IIi

au.y DrlvlwiYe.

Mason vt-1&lt;111

DOWN

•

Rule of Eleven
ATaT
30 ~end
10 ~-UIIIQtlll
I fla IMII(I
Created by bridge
l1lllt
pros to
:14
12 Clloppfllg
II P111Poetool
Confound
the
~a:-·
.,_
UIIJ
prabllm
novice
Mary-Frazier
Ftll· AWA., 11 ·
Paul, Fort Pierce, Fla;
Well, let's hope
any n,ovice reading
this column is wiser
after doing so, not confounded or confused.
· The Rule of Eleven
is part of a good player's trick-one repertoire. If the lead is
fourth-highest -- and
only if the lead is
fourth-highest -· by
NOv/, TtfAT'S JUST
subtracting the value
of the card led from
/ T.OO MUG.tl
11, you learn how
many cards are ·higher
PfteSSUrfl
than that' one in the
other three hands comCELEBRITY CIPHER
bined .
by Lule Cimpoe ·
Sometimes
this •
~ c:tpt,.. ci';piCQ!- ore crMiod 110m C!U*IIonolrf I11110U1
benefits the defense,
'*'*'put end...-, Elch
1M c:ipMr - l o r IIIOII!or.
so~times the declarToctly'l Clut: E equtll G
er, and sometimes
U II H.T
X
UBPXTZ
YKT
nobody. Which is it in
• ••
today's deal? DefendX Y' Z
XQ
KIWWV.JBBF,
ii-\E.. \oJO~D t lf.£0 It&gt;\ YOU~ ing against three notrump, West leads the
EVi'J..U~:no~ w~
IIGI'
WXHT I II
IXNY.
).,~00'\JW\I:E'&lt;-1'( (!liM~ spade six. .
TPTG
VKTV
South's sequence, a
ZIUTYXUTZ
strong, artificial and
UT
NBL
XV.'
R •uy
forcing two clubs followed by three_ nou 11 L y x 0 z 8 a L z T z T
trump, shows a balanced 2S-27 poinis .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'Compoul'l ehould.bt very humble.
· ·· sout
· h ~"""'
"' -~· fi·- . ...... The lblllly to ccmpo11la 1 gttt from God. ~
Gtan C•rlo
1
stans wtt.
Menonl
•
•
eight top tricks: one
spade (given the lead),
'::~::~'
~ ~ ~lf~e
"""'.,..,~,..,.~ three hearts, th~ dia- - - - - - - 14.... lor C:IAY L POUAN
monds
pne club. ;· '
Clearly· the extra trick 0 ••orrange lenero af lh• f!".~'-~-..,~:::"'"1
fc~z:~~~~~ will come from clubs. low four
I&lt;IGIWbled
wordl b•
ta fann
fovr ..,..,..
Next, though, apply ,--~~~~~.,
.the Rule of 'Eleven . . ,
F R Q.f . E T
~:::6rl Six from II is five. So,
there are five spades . . . . . . r::--~'tll'}-1 higher than the six in
Z 1. R E P
the North, East and
.
3
South · hands com· •·1
1 I .1' 1
bined. And Soulh can '-·--'-....--'·'"""•·--'
see all five. Brgo, East
has no high spade. So,
"Why do people always want
Kt.I~CKLE BALL ..
~
South should call for
things lhey can;rh~ve?" I asked
dummy's 10. When it
·s.--..., granny. She smilecl, "What else
wins, as he knew it ,__,E,...,.,M'"'='o"'!"~T~'~
would they • - - - • - •?"
·
v
would, he takes the
A Complete the chu&lt;:kle quoted
club finesse. When 1--,~~6~71,
•
V by lillinv In th• milling words
that succeeds too, L.....l.....L....JL-..1-...L.~ yo~ dov•lop lrom step No. 3 below.
declarer cruises home
with two overtricks.
Note that if South
wins trick one ih hand,
''
East will get in with ·
SCIAM.J.ETS ANSWERS I
his club king and push '
'
a spade through, giv· Appall- Fetal- Windy· Dumbly- UP WELL .
"I've discovered," lhe new molher sighed, "that people
' ing West four tricks in
the suit and killing the
without children think they know more about bringing
contract
them UP WELL"
.

and

CONCRETE
CONNECTION

Begins at11 :00 a.m.

,_

S{Q\'lu\}lJ\

VOUB

Ia Ht

out and duorlbtd In
Plllt Book No.4, Pege
I, In 1111 OffiCI Of 1111
llelge
County
Rnonllr, reference
to which pllt le
hereby ll!ade for 1

t~t.~-~~71.

FLI\\\UC!&gt;f&gt;'( WAA1~ .
WIZO'I'E N!lOl:n" IN:. I~ .
1'1-'C. Lf\1E.:Ii (VN.Ut\1100

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

time p~rlod 11 Townlhlp, llectlon a,
I'IIIUII'ICI lly 1111 Olllo Town 4 North, Ringe
lnvlrw.-dll
1I w..t, llelga

•

BORN LOSER

··stump ~rlndlng '·
•, B.uck&amp;t Truck .

740-992-7599

Racine Fire Dept.
Chicken BBQ
Sunday, April 8th

ICfST

lOIII'

Estimales
V. C. YOUNG Ill
Free

COMMIICIAlllld IISIIIIIIW. .
FREE ESTIMATES

8\llltlm from " " entry . . . . . . .,
polntl d"lgnlted Billig Loll No. 11
EP001 end EPODI end
17
of
durl!'ll .July 1 to Wellthermln'•
December 31,
Sulldlvlelon, Drange

Tt4~

Of YOU#l L.lff

• - . Plumll!llfl

•Roo~~ngaouao..

Wl•dowo•aAddltlou•Roon.a

The VILLAGE OF lllcMieulllled IICf!IOn,
IIIDDLIPORT did not Will ontr for eale
monitor 81111 Nport fllr pulllla auction, It the
the preeeno1 of: front etepe of ,tile
•r.. nlo, fluoride·, Court Hou" 1 1n
11111..,.,_
llerylllull!, P~r. In the
nlcket, · thllllull!, nemed County,
ll·erlum,
1\lnclly 1M 22nd
chromium, mercury, Of 118\1. 2001', 1t 111,!1111
and nlenlum 111,. the o'clock
public drinking wat.r followlnJI

wlll• 1111 pertomlld In

OF

~~-·

Sici!DI • New Glrqes
•Rtplace-t

PUIUC HOllCE·.

""future.
, Till drlnlll'l! Wiler
- MmPied 1ti!PG01
IIIII I!POCia fllr ._ fore
IMII!Iontd lteme. The
Ieveii Of eaoh Wll
below OEPA al'-1111
._.,,
II you
have
qu..tlon•, contact
Brant llenlay It 740-

TtU.f MINlJTf IS'
T~f fi,ST fiiiN\JTt

GtM a Sherrie Fink, OWner

CARPENTER
.SERVICE
'"-'
,

IUILDIRIINC.
New Hotila • vi17l

Public Notice

-ttloolld

·

BISSELL

'

Pautwllci!n 'ltllOJ.
Upon bllng IIOIIIIed Of

Alr
'WII Service All MSkes"
w~r Heating &amp; CooHng. 1~.
· Und!M' 1)8W ownerstlp ~ I• now

992·3470

' f'omltoV, OfliO

Public Notice

(
Plumbl(ll

1\lploll • FUIIMrt
• Mulch '

591~11

MGIIJ.O•I

992-2975

'

llllllr. '
II I nnr tly II Y*'' .
11 Lilli
• III'OIIIdl
UnooJn
• Fflllt

=:C.

Sales &amp; 'Service ·
204 Condor St.
Pomeroy

Roofing • tfo!ne ,
Malntlfllnce.Gutters- Down
Spout '
Frtl Edmllttt
949-1405 ~

vlciOIY

10 ••• ,.~

'

BY Puw.no AI.DI!It

BLI1'E MECHANICAL COHI'RACTORS

HowardL.
Wrlteset

"-'

Routine....

11wn mover or weed trimmer.

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

II JlozlnOo

t loalll

'

4 A 1• I

-or • AlAI. DEAL on 1 MW lawn tractor,

f

• If I

I K .It
9 A I Q l.
, Ar Q

get 1 FREE Blade Sharpening.
N.w «JUipiMnt arriving rMJiy .
,S H M8nnlng, w.yM or Jim

Medicare Supplement; Life lnrunnce;
Burial and Final Expeucs; C9llege,
Retirement,
Emergency Funds; Mortgage;
Major Medical• Nursing Home~

......-·--·- -....
......-··

I I It

..-=WI'Y Spring TUne-Up

11't r)

." .

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9 ol itT I
... u tl

• I I I

..

· Drlltll_..repalrWIIIt
we'll.-!1111 . . . fir

t I I

......

•VoiUt

740-915-4180

H ·, ~. q Htlrll

....
·- A,.,.

• I I I

FREE ESTIMATES

MONUMENTAL UFE INSURANCE CO.

•

'::',

Interior

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PHII.LIP
ALDIR

of~-Lee­

Uonel, MTH, K-Une,
Att...lm, Atlas, Bachmann
&amp; Accessories
0, HO, &amp; N Guage
Estes Rockets

f

REA Cro••word Puz•l•

Hlll'e ·telf 1
st11e1e ·.

~ ·f(ei~tU~f
High &amp; J)ry

'

"

28170 llnhan llold
llaclne Ohio ·
'
'
. 41771

Self-Storage.
33795 Hilar~d Rd:
Pomeroy, Ohio

•

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'

. .II: .

'

eff Warner Ins.
992-5479

Slztl5' X 10' '
lo 10' X 30'
. Holn
7:00AM· 8:00PM

N1mb.

Cellular
'

740-840.2217

740-992·5232;

.

~7':'}-u.- ~.

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ARIES (March 21-Aprill9)
-· Even thouJh you may have
a common obj«d'Je you want
lo achieve. you and your associate might see opposiiC ways.
of re11ehin1 your goal. Unle"
you pull together in a compromise, il will no1 be realized.
Trying to polch up a broken
romance? The ASiro·Graph
Matchmaker can help you ·
unde1111nd what to do to mike
the relationship wort. Mait
$2.75 lo Matchmaker. clo this
newspaper, P.O. Bo• 1758,
Murray Hill Station, New
York, NV 10156.
- TAURUS (April 20-May
2Ql -- Enjoy your:&lt;elf today, bui
· don't tal or drink tn 1he point
you overtax your . phy~ical
endurance . Be exlrJ mindful of
s~nsihle limits when out ha"ing
il good lin~ with your pals .
GEMINI tMay 21·luno·20J
·- If you behave tou llmnhoyantly todi1y. ma:-ml:k·rs 111' thl'
oppo.'\ilc JCm.k•r won 't sec ym1
as ~h&lt;l(j!ltlllllic us ynu 'd li~c lo

believe you arc, and· y•it• will
end up with a puetl:turc~ egn
1tt..;tcacJ.
CANCER (June ~1 - July n1
" v.x,·n.hk gelling pegged lor
trespassing hxlay if You try to
throw your weight around in
areas outside of your pcrimelcn&lt;. Slay we)l within your
sphere of. ope: ration.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) ..
Unfortunately. when not living
up 10 your higher self, your
~sign
can sometimes be
e&lt;lremely intokrant of anyone
who isn't in complete uccord

with your ideas. Don't51oop 10
this today.
VIRGO (Au&amp;, 23-Sept 22)
-· ThiR could be one of 1hose
rainy days wilh your wallet
holding nolhing but faded photograph. Unfortunately if you
"haven'l save your pennies for
such limes, you~ II have 10 do ..
without.
LIBRA (Sept, 23·0cl. 23) •
· When it comes to one-on·one
nssoeialionsloday, you"ll have
to be more diplomatic than
usual. Any hint of assertiveness
could be misconstrued as
demanding 01hcrs to do your
bidding.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov..
22) -- There could he a lesson
in lhc making "for you today ,.;./ ~

•.

'

I

•

whin yo~ kum about some·
thing_ unJnuttering said aboul
you loy u rerson. you recently
put dnwn. II' II still he . what
ioes around comes ;around.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 2JIkc . 21) ~· Bdorc you gan1hlc .
tndHy em a tip offcn.."!) by a
wcll-mc~minl! friend. hcncr
chcd: amund fnr a !'cconll or

third source of conforn1:.11ion .

Wlmt wus told lo you might
hollllinlc suhslomcc.
CAPRICORN (l)cc . 22-lan .
II.J, -- S~t tht: example. notlhl'
rUles when deo11ing with fami ly members today. Be L:UIZ.-

•

nizant of everyone's feelings,
notjusl your own or you'll ri~k
provokin~ har.h resp&lt;inses lo

.'

grufT demands. '
AQUARIUS (Inn. 20-Feb.
19) .. Imposing your ideas
where they art! not welcomed
could weaken a good relation·
. •hips you presently enjoy. A
philosophy thai works for you
tnay nol fit the needs of your
friend .
•
PISCES (Feb, 20-March 20)
-- That slight edke you may
have in a commercial arrange·
menl might be more thin than
you realize . However, you'll
quickly discover ils fragility
today if you push things 100 far.
I

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�••

••

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Softball

.•

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' to lead off the fourth, they
found themselves stranded on
three straight ruikeouts.
Waterford had a "give-me"
fnNIIPep81
run in the fourth for a 5-0
when
Brianne
Dailey lead as Baltzer walked and
walked, Maggie Wainwright scored frofl\ first on an overwalked and Jennifer Baltzer throw on a steal attempt that
singled. After two scoreless ·rolled to route 338 allowing
Southern frames,Alana Miller the junior speedster to score,
singled, Ccystal Bauerbach 5-0.
walked, Southern made an
The first two batters in the
error to load the bases in what fifth inning reached on errors
would have been the third and scored for Waterford to
. out, and Wainwright and push the ~core to 7-0 before
Bethany Huck each singled · Southern ri!sponded.
home runs, the score 3-0. ·
With rwo out, Kati Cummins
reached on an error,
Waterford went up 4-0 in
the third on a walk and error. Brigette Barnes singled,
The Tornadoes left · one Chapman walked, Fryar sinstranded in the third inning gled home two runs, Macyn
then after
Chapman and Ervin walked, and Katie Sayre
Fryar had back to back singles had an RBI single. A SHS

baserunner was picked off to
~nd the rally.
Both teams played error
free ball the last rwo innings
as Waterford pulled off the 74 win.
Southern hitters were Fryar
2-4 with a double, with singles each by Barnes, Chapman, Ervin, and Sayre.
Huck and Baltzer each had
two hits for Waterford, while
Dailey singled, MiDer singled,
and Hill doubled:
Southern goes to MiDer
today.
SOulllomi,W-..rd•

Walerford

5ou111em

1 2 1 1 2 0 0- H./)

ooo o•oo- ......a ,

SmiHl (W) and Hll. Chapman (L) and
Sayre.

Soldhem

Waterford added another was led by Baker with a sinrun in the sixth on a Joshua gle, Doebriener a double,
Eichhorn
walk,
a McCutcheon two singles, and
McCutcheon single, an error · Carney a single.
Page 81
and a fielderis choice. South- · Ash fanned twelve Waterbut both were left stranded ern added some insurance in ford batters arid walked just
the sixth inning when Bran- four batters in picking up the
o"' three consecutive outs.
· The Tornadoes whirled to don Hill singled, Aaron win. Doebriener struck out
their first lead in the· fifth, Ohlinger walked, Justin Allen . ten and walked six in sufferwhen with two out, Brice was hit with a pitch, and Matt ing the loss.
Hill singled, Chad Hubbard Shain was hit . with a pitch.
Southern goes to Miller
and Matt Ash walked, and rwo Two more SHS errors today.
straight times, overthrows at .allowed home runs as SHS
SOUih8m 1 W8terford 4
third allowed runs to score. A held a 7-4 edge to the dura- Waterlord
21 0 0 o 1 0- 4·5·10
Southam
1 1 o o 3 3 x - 8·4·3
third run, Ash, came home tion.
Ash (W) and Pierce. Doebrelner (L),
when
Brandon
Pierce
·Brice Hill had two singles, Cunnlngh:Jm
and Jones.
reached on an error., the score Hubbard a single, and Bran5-3.
don Hill a single. Waterford

from

•

•

•

•

1

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load the bases and Calaway
followed with an RBI single,
setting t!Je table for Lodwick.
Lodwick and Harrispn battled to a full count with the
Eastern·freshman hitting severa! deep foul balls before she
straightened one out, and beltcd the ball over the !eli field
fence to clear the bases and
give the Eagles a t 0-0 cush-

Eagles
f1w.Pqell

baserunner. She induced a
pop-up and rwo ground balls:
in her first inning of work in :
the fourth.
!
Met surrendering a lead-'
off walk- to Angel Wright in
the filth, Gibbs struck ou.,t the
next rwo batters and got a:
ground ball tO end the inning.'
"We got off to a slow start,
today," said Eastern head
coach Pam Douthitt. "I think ·
they were a little OI!Cr-excited
, about the game with Belpre.:
They're about the best hitting:
team we've had around here'
in a long time."
•
Chevalier went 3-for-3
with rwo RBI and scored rwo
runs for Eastern. Wiggins was,
2-for-3 and scored twice. Cal-:
away was 2-for-4 with rwo;
RBI and scored rwo runs. :
Gibbs was 2-for-2 and;
sdored once. Bissell went 1-'
. for-3 and Hensley was ·t-for2.
Eastern plays at FederalHocking today.
·
South Galli a travels to;
Fairview for a doubleheader:
Saturday.

innings and gave up 13,hits.
She had one strikeout and
wallced seven batters. Harrison faced 28 Eagle batters.
· Eastern (6-1) srruggled at
bat in the first two innings,
but still led 3-0 after taking 10n.
Bailey follo\ved with a sinadvantage of four walks in the
first to score all three runs. gle .and Gibbs, who was BaiKristen Chevalier opened the )ey's courteJy runner, scored
home half of the first with a on a single to right by Tammy
walk, and Carrie Wiggins. Bissell. BisseD then scored on
Cass Lodwick and Juli Bailey a single by Chevalier to round
also drew walks.
· out , the scoring as Eastern
Chevalier, Wiggins and padded its lead to 12-0.
Lodwick all scored without · . The ·Eagles added three
the benefit of an RBI to put runs in the fifth with Powell,
Calaway and Lodwick scoring
the Eagles ahead.
Eastern came up with t\vo the decisive runs. Calaway and
hils in the second, but failed Lod"&lt;,i_ck each had an RBL
to score, leaving the bases Gibbs had a bunt single in· the
,
loaded. Chevalier and Wig- mnmg. 1
B~iley retired three of the
.gins had the Eagles hits and
both were left on base along first four batters she faced in
with Sandy Powell when the the game and got out of a jam
in the second by striking out
inning ended on a pop-up.
Lodwick: got the motor the side with runners at sec~
running for the Eagles in the ond and third. Joanie Fellure
1 5 , - Qollill 0
third with a triple that hit the and Sarah Wright drew con- s. Gallla000 00
- 0.0.2
30 1 83
- 11H3-0 bottom of the left field fence secutive walks to put Bailey EAS1em
Robyn Horrioon (l) and c u - Man·:
on the fly. She then scored on behind the eight baD befo~ non, Tracy Cheney (4). Jul Bolloy (W).
a .passed ball to give Eastern a the senior mowed down the Kayla Gibbs (4) and Arnlndo " - ··
sanely Powell (5).
•
next three batters to end the ea.. Lodwlclc 3-3, as. double. ,..,.., s.:
4-0 lead.
. RBI, 4 runs; Krislen CileYOHer 3-3. 2 doU··
Tiffany Hensley opened the threat.
ble, 2 RBI, 2 runs; Came Wlaalna 2-3, 2
Bailey retired the side in · runs; Janol Calaway 2-4, 2 1181, 2 rune;
explosive fourth inning with a
GibOs 2·2, run; Tammy Bl8a8ll 1·3,
base hit, and scored on a .dou- order in the third with a fly Kayle
run; llftany Henalay 1-2, run. ·
Recor&lt;I....SOUffl Galllo 2·5, Eastem 6·1 ..
_ble by Chevalier. Wiggins sin- ball and two strikeouts.
gled and Powell walked _tv . Gibbs allowed just one

lime to bloom
in Meigs County

River Valley, ·
\

•

K-.
c
from

W.Va.;
Bart
Hartman, divisions this week an4 the
Zanesville, Ohio; and Ste'l&gt;e next two weeks wiD be held
Francis, Ashland, Ky. An as a rain date for this premier
Page XX
excellent crop of Rookie dri- STARS event. Regular racvers will be starting their . ing begins Saturday, April 28
with the first Always Cocaburg, Ohio; Gary Stuhler, 2001 campaigns as well.
Greencastle, Pa; Aaron Scott, · 2000 K-C Raceway cham- Cola race for Sprints, Late .
O.hio;
Todd -.Npion Larry Bond and brother Models, and Modific;ds. That
Newark,
Andrews, Eldred, Pa; Greg Andy are expected Ito be on event pays $2,000 for the
Lucas, Whitesbu'rg,
Ky; hand along with Jeff Houser sprints. ·
Saturday's special admission
Thomas Ware, Cynthiana, and Mark Frazier of ChilliKy; Davey Johnson, Greens- cothe,
is $20 for general admission
burg, Pa; Tim Hitt, Weston,
There will be no support and $25 pits.

'

Pit gates are slated -to open
at 4 p.m. with spectator gates
opening at 4:30 pm. Warmups begin at 6 p.m. with. time
trials at 6:30 p.m. and racing
at 7:3d p.m. 'K-C Raceway is
located twelve miles south of
Chillicothe,OH on U.S.
Route 23, two miles west of
Alma,Ohio, on Blain High- ·
way. For further information
phone K-C Raceway at 74066.3-4141.

We love it when people say
nice things about us.
Golf J?igest recently lis~ed
Alabama's Robert Trent Jones Golf
Trail among the top 50 gQlf
destinations in the world!
And in its current Places to
Play ratiJl.gS, Golf Digest gave
most of the Trairs courses
4 stars-and some even got 4'/z .
Not bad when you consider that
S stars only go to those once-ina-lifetime courses. And all of the
· Trairs courses got top honors for
service.
Frequent Flyer Magazine listed
us among its top 10 trips in the

n

.' ,

Keep up to date with your favorite
Meigs County teams in the
" .Daily §entinel!

•

Sales
revenue
falling
in
••
Me1gs Co.
'

IY~KEu.Y
••

·TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF

.

GALLIPOLIS - The possibility of additional cuts in
Ohio's budget are one more
worry for Gallipolis Developmental Center workers already
working to maintain stafliqg
and client services at . present
BY BRIAN J. REED
levels.
TIMES.SENTINEL STAfF
· To· draw attenPOMEROY - A significant drop in sales tax
tion to the issue,
WHIN:
revenue has Meigs County .officials concerned 6 p.m.
a rally in support
and the future looks even more worrisome.
1\pril 12 of GDC and the
Meigs County collects a I percent sales tax on
state's 11 other
taxable purchases, in addition to Ohio's 5 percent
WHIU: developmental
sales tax, and receipts for the first three months of
Gallipolis centers will be
2001 indicate a sharp reduction in collections.
City Park held in the · City
Figures provided by County Auditor Nancy
Park on April 12
Parker Campbell show sales tax revenue collected
at 6 p.m.
.
. so far in 2001 is nearly $16,000 below lasi year's ·
To save .. Supporters ·of
collections through March . .
CiDC jobs GDC staff arid
Sales 't ax coDections are received in Campbell's
;·
clients are urged
office once a month, and are received rwo months
t'!&gt; attend becaqse a united
after collection. That ,is. March's sales tax . check
lJQnt may coqvince ·lawmakers
teptesems the county's Sales tax coUec~d in Janu!p restore !Pnding to the budary.
get proposal, said Sandy
In January, the county received $108,296.53,
McCreedy.
.
compared to $10!:1,445.25 injanuary,;!OOO. In Feb•
• McQreedy. ,js president of
ruary, the county received $86,470.31, compared
.
T
.T.'
J
·
"No matter who or who,m gets
"I have a tremendous belief in
(i)hio Civil setvice Employees
to $99,660.48 in 2001, and in March, the county
IC
caught, God's vengeance will be God and somewhere, sometime,
~on l.Qcat2110, which .
receive&lt;! $99,805.33, compared to March 2000's
~:
fullillea:• said NancyJua4..wW~l!' sdmeone 'will be brought to jus~Is GDC employees.
.
receipts of$1 02,385.66.
;,"l"'thtrik If we ·AA~ShoW
·datJghtet.
1: tic.e;:.Mrs.Judd .,;d. "What hurts
. This month'! 1receipts, -"nQ those for M~y. are
~
affllli!fli
,...,~. ·m
.,.. /;,~ ~ I ~'
""' ·JI'1)e~
meligtti antt · vo~ee'1lll c51etJ!eetl!f!fo be•reduced even ,'aM~ If .
tn
OU
rtO
Gary
Young.
37,
at
eir
1\lice
went
out.
,
. %erns, tegis)ators ~ ~~l!nsisJ­
last year's' receip~. be,cause of die Closing of. the
'
Road residence near Ewington
• '
"To 'go fiom the deaths b~ing
er ilie1e reductions;'1 she s;p&amp;~
Jerry Bibbee Ford dealership in Middlc;port la.st
' B.Y KEVIN KW.V ·
on Feb. 17.
··
attributed to smoke inhalation,
: Gov. Bob Taft's '2001-03
month, and the imminent closing of the Parnida ·
AND MIUISiiA Rvlaar·
"J:he
couple
W;ls
.found
by
Vinand
less
than
12.hours
later
l~arn­
discount
store in Pomeroy.
budget proposal calls for fund. TIMES;SENTINEL STAFF
ton volwlteer firefighters·after the ing otherwi,'e tilled' me with
ing cuis ' io several agencies:
Campbell said the loss of sales tax on Bibbee's
lN:fON - The mobile home they •s!Jared had · anger and wanting to know why
car sales, in particular, will result in a serious hit in
the Department of Mental
mother of one of been set ablaze.
anyone would want to do that to
sales tax revenue, but added that the decline is not
Rell!rdation/Pevelol'mental
the victims in a
The crime has left. family and them," she added,
just in Meigs County, but is felt across the state.
Disabilities, which . oversees
double homicide frien&lt;ls with a mixture of sorrow,
Mrs.
Judd
said
she
had
not
"The revenue from sales tax all across the state is
CDC, is due for a 4.1 percent
believes a resoluhe~
anything
new
on
th~vesdown tremendously," Campbell said, "and it's liketion .to the case will be eventual- anger and questions - especially
~duction if the budget is ,
over
why
the
myrders
were
com·
e'nacted as is on July 1.
ly reached.
mitted.
'
.PluM M1 ll!&amp;tlat, AI
; But in an effort: to produce
dollars and resolve inequities
in the school funding system,
Taft recently suggested 'additional cuts. In MR/DD's case,
~ .J6 percent cutback is possi~le, McCreetjy said. .
.'
,.
.~
'
.
"We don't •know if that's
· FROM STAFF REPORTS
anchor span and the suspended span. surfuce, the. structure has to be closed engineers agreed with inspectors and
connng or not; but the direcPOMEROY -The Ohio DepartThe repai~ are necessary due' to •the . while we carry out the work," John- engineers for URS that repairs to the
tor of the Department of
ment,ofTransportation (ODOT) ,will rusted conditions of the knee braces son said.
problem area would be necessary
Health said that kind of reducbe
~losing
thel
Pomeroy,
Mason
and
channel
support
~helf, said ·Don
•
The
·problem
area
was
discoyered
sometime during the coming
tion could desrroy his depart~
·
Bridge
on
Thesday,
starting
at
8:30
Johnson,
roadway
services
supervisor
during
the
annual
in-depth
inspecmonths, ODOT decided to take
inent:' she said. "There woulda.m.,
for
rep;1irs
.
.
fo(
District
10.
'
tion
of
the
structure
by
URS
Corp.,
advantage
of the scaffolding that
n't be mpch qf ~ l\1R}DD
Although
The
t~mporary dos11re may last as,
QDOT
would
h&lt;tve
pre:.
Cin¢inna?.
The
inspection
began
last
URS already has in place and make
~ithef."
long
as
thtee
days,
as
ODOT
District
ferred·
to
have
kept
the-bridge
op'en
week,
and
is
still
under'
way,
so
a
final
the repairs now.
Compounding the P,roblem
1 ,
10's
bridge
c'rew
out
·of
Marietta
to
lfaffic,
"it's
irJpossible."
.
insp~c!=ion report has not yet been ·
·
Johnson has already developed a
fur DC worken is MR!bm ·
repairs three stringer support assem~
"Since th~ , Slfingers, are .n~ai': 1 the, prepared.
.
plan for the repairs and the bridge
push to outsourcc! cli~nts ·and ,
t
' '
'
~
..
blies whj:re .the floor stringer ties to
'enter of 't he deck- a~d ·need to be
The ,problem has not been deemed
floor
li'eam
between
the
Wesi
Virginia
suppoiteq
tio'
m
the
d~ck
•
an
emergency, however, since ODOT
Plun ....Brtdp. AI
temporarily
l'lun ... GDC.AI
'
.

WHY:

Subscribe today.
992-2156

tm s mother
.''·''fli• •' , ·
..lcrod ,- ~r;
'le answers
;n.
,..,.ue

'

world and.The New York Times
called us "... some of the best
public golf on earth."
Golf Magazine listed THE
.SENxtOR
'
course at our new Capitol '
Hill l'Ocation among its top new
courses in the country and THE
LEGISLATOR course in the top 25
newcomers. And wait until you
see THE JUDGE!
'
So, ·we hope .you1l understand
when; like all good golfers, we
like to brag about out scores.
Call today to boo~ -your golf ,
and hotel package and get ready
for one of the best golf trips in .
the world. ·

•

..

OXMOOR VALLEY

An"Uu"/Gtulltlen

s;,,.;y~m,.

54 HOLES

3e HOLES

a

:&gt; '·

·, GRAND NATIONAL

O,.IIU/A..tn... ··

\

!W HOLliS

54 HOLES

ROBERT ThEN
MHOLES .

HIGHLAND OAKS

DolhtJ..
36 HOLES

MACONOLIA GRO)IE
Motile
S..

'

HOLI.S

CAPITOL HILL

Prw,.llt. '
.

:

.·!'(

BY CHAIII.IIIIi Hoiucw

~

'

' '

life sl9lls Wilhin .the family unit by ty Family and. Children First Council,
American Cancer Society's Relay for
·:
.
TIMES.SENTINI!LSTAW
offering'health and ioclal education.
, Ohio , Sta~e University Extension Life, starting Ffiday night, will continue
;, POMEROY- ''The Mei~ Coup.- · ·, Planning meetings for the event by Pflice, Ohia ·UniversitY ,Collef!e of . througli the.morning until noon on the
. ~ Family Fun Fest is olle biB multi tepresentariv'es of cori'!munity based Osteopathic M~dicine~Are.a H,eal~li football field.
generational event rpat cen!ets ·on the h~alth .care agencies .I!Qt undet:Way' last , Education Center,.and~eteran&amp; Met11oCh,ester Fire Department will display .
family;• said ~argle ,Skidmore in " November alld;' have cohtinued since rial Hospital;" . . . , •
• ·, , jts fire truclls and equipment, and an
announdng the third annual event, set then. · · ... 1 . "'~~ ·
, l:h~ ,wide 'V¥lety , of activities, wilL·~'tMS Sf!uad will be on hand. Car seat
~r Eastern Elementary sl:hool on/opril
Participarilig:m the vy:ide-ranged pro- begin at 10 i·.in. aqd '?~tim/~U.~~i(~~~'~pecrlons and programs on motorcy28.
, .
·
,., gram \Viii be the::NleigS Cnunty Health · p.m. · . · r •
,
•. ·
·' de safety, drug prevennon, tobacco use
. Skidmo!e, direcror of nursing at the Department, ACtESS,Health Recov~
. Th~re wi!J.~ health sge~nin~ and &gt; \&gt;.revention, bicycle helmet safety,
Meigs County Health. Department, said ery ServiceS, Holzer M~dical Center, learrung actiVJttes, as well as a·varaety of immunizations and gun safety are also
fun fest will feature "something fo~ Holzer Meigs Clinic; Meigs ·Coqnty mteracnve . games and entertainment
every()rte" through its focus on positive Job and Family Services, Meigs Counroughdut the day.
PIMH HI Fun Ftlst, A8
..

•

'

.-

~aMy's

~imes­
~entinel

'·

4 Sections - J2 .....

calendars
Classlfleds
Comics
Editorials
Money
Obituaries
Sports

C3

02-7

jnsert

A4

Pl. 7-B
A6
81-B

Tem~PQ

Weather

Cl-B

A3.5

·I

•

•

&amp;6 HOLES

I

•
I, ,

Alab~'a Robert Trent ·Jones Golf Trail 3}8 holes of world-clau golf\' eight ~ite&amp;

:

close Tuesday

AgenCies.to ·host.third 'annual FamilY Fun.FeSt

SILVE~ LAKES

CAMBRIAN RIDGE
GrYenPille

'-,.

.

ALABAMA'S

GOLF

3~iii~!,~trer
. - wtm

..

HHn,..il/e

HAMPTON COVE

t'•

. POm~roy-Nia~n: Bridge_wi

•

· . April is American .
·OccuF?ational Therapy Month -

"Skills for the Job 6f living" .

•

•
'

1.800.949.4444 .

Moizer ,Medical Center salutes ourt\

Mvtv.rifgo!fcom
/

•,

•
•

.•1.25 .

GDC staff,
supporters
!O rally 1n park

·~~

I t

'

.

'

•

shop providesG.fix

.

.

;

.. •',

Meigs girls win

tmeJ

.v

.

Electronics repair

•

'

. Therap,lsta•

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Holzer Dl{ference.

,

t ~----------~~----------~----------~~------------------~--~~--------------------~

,----.---~··' ---~---· ...,!.__

....

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