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•
•

Kathie lee ·leaving 'Live' show, A7
Sparky finally. makes Hall of Fame, B 1

1hur~Mv:a~

Manuel undergoes emergency colon surgery
BY TOM WITHERS
WINTER HAVEN, Fla. (AP) - Cleveland
Indians manager Charlie Manuel had emergency colon surgery and is expected to be
hospitalized for at least a week.
Manuel, who replaced Mike Hargrove as
the Indians manager in November, had eight
inches ~moved from his colon on Monday
night, the Indians said today. Doctors found his
colon had ruptured.
After experiencing cramping and stomach
discomfort the past few days, Manuel,'who has
had two heart attacks and open heart surgery,
went to Winter Haven Hospital on Monday
____and had surggy _after_b.t:ing_diagnosed with
diverticulitis.
The· new manager wiD remain in the hospital for another seven to 10 days, team vice

Ohio. H.S. glrlf!' scores

president Bob DiBiasio said, and coach Jim
Riggleman was expected to run the . dub
when it opens exhibition play on Thursday.
Rigglem•n was the Chicago Cubs manager
the past five •••sons.
Indians general m•nager John H&gt;rt scheduled • news conferei)Ce this morning to discuss Manuel's condition.
Manuel had been complaining of stomach
problems since Saturday, and felt so b2dly on
Mond•y th&gt;t he skipped his daily media intervtew sessiOn.
As he walked aroun!f the Indians clubhouse
it was obvious M•nuel wasn 't his usual funlaYing -Self. NormaUy, he would mingle with
the players •like he did for six seuons as the
team's hitting coach .
The 56-year- old Manuel has . had nlajor

Dlatrlct tournaments
' DMolonlll
Sardinia E. Brown 45, Belpre 28
WBshlngton C.H. 57. Minlord 41

Regular-eeaaon acilon
. . Ent

n

Loot

,..watk

1. Slanlold (70) ..................... 24·1 1,750 ·
2. CINCINNATI ...................... 26·2 1,658
3. AI1Zona ..... ......................... 24-4 1 ,597
~ . Cuko ......................... .........22-l 1,488
5. T~e ............ ,................. 22-4 1,403
6. OHIO ST. ............ ..... :........ 20·5 1,394
7. Michigan SI... ......... ..... ,..... Zt-7 1,271
8. Flollde ............................. :.zz.s 1,289
8. S!'IIICUae ........................... 23·3 1,065
10. fowo 51 .............. .............. 24-1 1,045 .
11. Tenneue9 ......... ,............. 22·5 1,031
12. LSU ................................. 2.1-I 839
13. Oklahoma 61... ................ 22·4 900
14.1ndlllna ............. ........... .... 19-6 753
15. Tulsa ............ ...................28·3 716
16. Texaa ............................... ZD-7 .599
17. Ma1Yiand .................. ....... 2H 610
18. Sl. John's ........ .... ............ 2D-ll 603
· 19. Aubum............................. 21-6 542
20. Pulduo ............................ 21-7 499
21. Oklahoma ....................... 22·5 446
22. Kenluclry ............ :......... ... 2D-ll 445
23. Kanaes ............................ 21-7 244
24. COnnectiCut .... ............... ... 19-8

..

'

tm

N. Iowa 81 , Wichita St. 68
SW Missouri St. 62, S. Illinois 59

B

11
21
20
18
23
22

25. 1Rinola ......................... ..... 18·8
74
Othen rocolvlng volft: Miami (Fla.) 43,
Ullh 38, Oregon 26, Ulah St 17, Vandolblft 18,
CAYTON 11, Louisville 11, SMU 10, Fresno St.
8, Pappeldlno 5, Navy 4, Salon Hall4, Vi~ginla
.3, BOWLING GREEN 2, Gonzaga 2, KENT 2,
Nollh Carolina 2, Penn 2, Alabama I, BuHi11 1.

Southwnt

Allt·Pine BI~W 106, MVSU 102-&lt;lT
TCU 68,. SMU 83
Ta)(aa 68, Kansas 54
, Tawas·Pan American 55, Washington St. 52

.

NCAA Division I
women's scores
Regular.aeaaon actio!)
Elot
AICany, N.Y. 56, Na11)' 50
. Holy Famll~ 56, Comlnlcan, N.Y. o15
St Joseph&amp;, Maine 62, Husson 58-QT
.

NBA standings .
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Allonllc Dlvlalon

.

!II! .L e;L

llll,

.818
.545
.446

5&gt;

Mlaml. ...........:.................. 36
Now YIHI&lt; ......................... 34
Phlladelpl11a ..................... 30
Ollando .. .......................... 25
Boston .... .......................... 23
Now JoiHy ...................... 22
washington ........ .............. 16

Cenvar 55, IY. Kentucl&lt;y 52
Wyoming 88, Ulah 61

South

Alabama Si. 81 , Jackaon St 6ol
Ari&lt;.·Uitle Roek 86, Centenary 50
ChnsUan BIDihers 81 , KeniUclcy St. 81

3~.
1D' •
11'•

.1104

Buftllo ........... - ...26 29 9 2 63160
MO(III'IjiL ............ 25 30 7 3 60140
8oilon ...............:.19 2617 4 58:158
~
.
{S11qu~al Dlvllllon
Floric11 .... ~ ....·.!4:". l34 25 4 5 77 190
WllllllniJOn .........32 21 10 1 75 1118

.81~

.564

101,
10~
13~~

29

.2118

34·

.207

20
21
26
31
33
34
40

CenlroiCivtllon
lndlana ............................. 38 17
Charlotte ...................... ....30 25
TOIOnlo .. ......... :................. 29 25
Detroit .............................. 28 27
Ml1waukH .................... .... 28 29
AUanta ............................... 22 32
CLEVELAND ...................22 33
Chicago ........................ .... 12 42

Fayeltevllle Sl. 78, Shaw 49

Freect--Hardeman 83, Lipscomb 1•

.843 .

.~11

~~

,

.393
.296

13
14
20

.891
.545

8

.537

B'l.

Detrol1... ..............38 20
Naotwlllo .............22 34
~ ............'..22 33

WESTERN CONFERENCE
· M l - Dlvlolon

6

6
7

Waohlnglon 3, N.Y. lslandltrl 2

il6

Oftlwa 11 Boslon, 1 p.m.
";, ; .
. Toronto al Adanta, 7:30 p.m.
· -.
Philadelphia al St. Louis, Bp.m.
,. - '
New Jerwy at Naltwllle, 8 p.m.
T• ~
E - a t Colol8do, 9 p.m.
,.:;
Vancouver at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m. • ''·
Anahalm o1 San JoH,.ID:!lO p.m.
., _

189
187
192
'183

. P.P,M_~R£J IH~Ff&gt;IJ~ORTrl OH :

t.t"EI&amp;R s£f,u'ORz:8o
lfrgli ~lll~Bt.

78 1112 140
86187 179

*liP
·1411TALIAN ·
BEAD CHAIN.

102 E. Main

882·1702

AIMCIIIJ f1011111 c•11101111•
-IOUIOH r.IOY

IIARTWEU
HOUSE

FROM STAFF REPORTS

111'1.111
All Flags &amp; Stands
through Sat. March 4

;..•t

111'1.111
Camille Beckman
Lotions through Sat.
March4
Po-.eroy

-992-7696
I

1/4

I

Needs

•..,•ar

ANDE

·111 W..2nd St.

'PM•&amp;

Pomeroy, Ohio

East Main

992-4233

992-3671

1-800~795-1110

tJ, .

,

.,;-t.~s-;

~1- :Aut'See
• Carla ~Megan

• Aim~e • $t•cy

SUPPLY
St. Rt. 248 Cheater

'

985-3308

~,Inc.

I

I

Offered Monthly

1H

'Det.a~

Three
Charlie
•Saturday, March 4th:
Cowboy ~pi~ w/':!Jpeci,al

Gue1t

Great FoOd • lee Cold Drinks .
•laqlorts bBrews

•111 w. 2nd St. To

Pomeroy, Phio .

.

3rd:

Lunch Specials
•

Pqeroy • Ohio

74o-M2·65M

'

.,

106 N. 2nd lve.
Middleport, OH
45760

'

··~

•

.'

'

• Gore wants to be •more
presidential in debate, AI

.

. '.

portable recycling buildings located at State
Route 7 and Hiland Rojd near Pomeroy.
Roy Miller is an original member of the
Meigs County Recycling and Litter Prevention Board.
Canfield noted that the ·division is cele- ·
beating its 20th anniversary culininatlng
with an event in Cleveland called "StiU
Rockin' ,StiU Rollin' and Still Recycling" 'in
keeping with the Rock 'n' RoD H:Ul of
Fame in Cleveland. '

,........ ·~ Pllp A3

Gov. George W. Bush and Sen. • Primary wins mean more .
John McCain turned their money fur McCain, .AI
..
Republican hostilities toward the
main event - Super Tuesday after the Texas governor won a ·
three-state parlay to recapture the
• In Virginia, with aU of the
lead in the struggle for the GOP precincts reporting, Bush lud
presidential nomination. They 350,185 votes, or 53 percent, an4
traded accusations of divisive, . McCain had 290,779, or 44 per7 ·
low-road campaigning, and post- cent. Alan Keyes had 20,294
ed rival victory forecasts for the ·votes, or 3 percent.
· ·'
dimac.tic tests ahead.
Virginia's was an open-tO:-all
Vic~ . President
AI Gore primary, but Republicans cast
rebuffed Bill Bradley's last-chance two-thirds of the vote and raUied
bid for headway in his faltering overwhelmingly to Bush, as they
challeQge· before Democratic have in earli~r .contests, an exit .
contests in 15 states next Tuesday poD showed.
• In North Dakota, with 100
'that could decide who wins that
nomination. ·Gore won over- percent of districts , reporting,
whelmingly in Washington state's Bush had 6,865 vOtes, or 76 perprimory, gaining no d' legates but cent,. and McCain half. •·1; 717
denying· his riVal •any basis ·on voces, or 19 per.cent. Keyes had
which to claim a boost in the 481 votes, or 5 percent.
'
next round.
• In Washington state, with 89
"This is reaDy a sweet, sweet percent · of preciocts reponing;
victory," Gore said in a confer- Bush had 196,620 votes, or .,ss
enc~ c.U to his Washingtbn sup- percent, and McCain had
porters. "We climbed another 129,194 votes, or 38 percen~.'
mountain tonight."
Keyes had 8,110 votes, or 2 perBush outdistanced McCain in · cent.
Virginia's Republican primary
The column that counts is. deland captured the North Dakota egate stren8th. and Bush regained
caucuses by a landslide. 'He won the lead McCain held briefly,
the Republican primary in Wash- Bush won :Ul 56 delegates in Vir~
Ington .state, where McCain ginia, and 14 in North Dakota,
gained his only success by leading where McCain got four and .
separate balloting among voters Keyes one. He .led for seven of
. the
affili.ated with neither political
. party.

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

.

EPA,poUution deal could affect
Sentinel , 32-other coal~fired facilities
· Today's

·(740) 992·2635
Fax (740) 992·2459

&gt;

IV

'

._.,

·'

:Z SadlaM- 11 Pqu

,_ '".:1\i· '

A6

Calendjr

BHi

· Clanifi!!ds
Comics

BZ

~,
r.o~tortau

A4
A3

·-·-

....

Obituaries
!iporg
Wt•ther

a

I

more than six members, add $4,2.30 for recent electric bill is required. Having this with Emergency . HEAP and Regular
ea&lt;:h individual member. ·
' documentation in order will get you HEAP applications at the Meigs County
The program aUows a one•time pay- thiougb the application process much CAA One Stop Office, 33091 Hiland
Road, J:'omemy.
ment of up to $175·per heating sea,son to quicker, it was noted.
restore or maintain home heating ser- ·
Home units can be arranged ·to assist
The agency has implemented the
VICes.
the elderly, disabled or homebound appointme~t system to apply for EmerWh~n applying for Emergency HEAP · unable .to get into orie ·o'f CAA 's intake gency HEAP. To schedule an appointor Regular HEAP, documentation verify~ sites.
·ment or get additional information in
Applications are also available for· the Meigs County, residents should caD 992~
ing the househ~ld's gross income is a pro"
·
gram requirement and must be provided. Regular HEAP program, which is addi- 2222; in GaUia County 446-6849.
This proof of income must be for the tiona! heating assistance of a non-emerThe HEAP hot line number is toll free i
13 weeks ~r 12-month period preceding ' gency nature. The income guidelines are 1-800-282-0880. Hearing iinpaired
the request for assistance. Also, Sotial the same for both 'programs. 'the deadline applicants with a telecommunication(
Security numbers of each ho~ehold · for both progranu is March 31, 2000.
devic,e for the deaf (TDD) c.U taU free: I~
member "and a copy of the applicants
.. CAA staff is available to assist people 800-686-1557.
'

:J'.

CULLODEN, W.Va. (AP) "This plant will provide . a
. A development official says a much-needed taX base that will
1;000-megawatt natural ·gas- improve facilities 'i n olir school
fueled power plant planned fot district;• said Gerald
CabeU Comity will 'give the 'local ;. president of the Hunti•
s'hool system a needed boost by Development Council.
· eX)landing the county's tax base.
will also · benefit from .
Panda Energy lnte•national · p&gt;rtnership which ·
Inc. announced TUesday that it in · toucH with on·-tlle-J•
~ build plant .i~ Culloden. to pology:,: •
provide electricity ro customers ·' ConstrU~n .is
ill 'West Virginia, Kentucky, Ohio begio . thC" spring of
and Indiana. . '
the
of
st&gt;rt-.
~he plant will create 500 jobs · ;in~.in
.. ·
said . .
durmg cOO$truCnon an'd 46 .fuUThe prom1se of det:ePJ•uon ·
titt)e Jobs once it.qecomes opera- in the. electric utility, in~try .is
tiona!, said Gary Hulkowich, the ·catalyst for this in~~ent;• ·
senior vice president' fot mer- !laid John R. Snider, ~utive
~hant p,lant development at director of the West Vl~inia
Pimda.
Development Office.
-~ ·
•

"

,_,

texas finn tO ·build:
Power·plant in C8bell

Ingels Furniture
&amp;

Classes·

992•4233

Feliciano encouraged local resi-

· POMEROY Applications for connection, have already had services disEmergency HEAP for the 1999-2000 ~onnected; or have less than a ten day
heating season ~ be accepted through supply of bulk.fuet
March 31, it waS announced by GalliaTo be eligible for assistance, both the
Meigs Community Action Agency.
· income . guidelines and tqe emergency
"The escalating cost .o f home heating requirements must be met. Household ·
fuel, coupled with Februory~&lt; chilling · income is \\dined as the gross income of
winds continue to create a profound all hous·ehbld members, except wages or
hardship on the working poor, as weD as salaries eamed by dependent minors
households on fixed income throughout under 18 years of age. ·
our &gt;rea," said an agency spokesman. .
Allowable income for a one-person
The Emergency HEAP program is ' ·household is $12,360; two persons,
d,irected at crisis situations and can pro- $16,590; three persons, $20,820; four per\1de linancial assistance to low-inco!Ue sons, $20,050; five .persons,. $29,280: six
households that .are threatef!ed with di1- persons, .'$33;51 0. fVr households with

'.

219 N. 2nd
Middleport, Ohio
992-56;!7

~lftee

• Bush stumps in Buckeye
S'ate. AI

'- Emel'gency.heating bill assistance available through March 3'1

Ea~np

iiCICe

ftdt

. . . .

".

Diamond
t 'l
.

Basketball
and Softball
Shoes •

•

. •,

ural

.

Drive Rlg~t

Over 20 Styles WeAre Here For
All Your Travel·
On Sale

Prevention's District 1, an&lt;! Michael Canfield, chief of the Ohio Department of· Natural Resources' Division of Recycling and Litter Control.

POMEROY - The Meigs County
dents to participate .in area
Recycling and Litter Prevention Office got
cleanup projects including the
the opportunity Tuesdoy morning to show
annual OJiio .River Sweep in June.
off some of its latest projects.
. • The office hosted a visit by Michael Can. field, c\llef of the Ohio Department of NatMeigs Recycling Djrector Kenny WigResources' Division o(Recycling and gins, accompanied by Roy and Mal,.lrita .
Litter Control, and ' Nexida Feliciano, coer- · Miller of Pomeroy, and County Comrnisdinator of the Ilivision of Recycling and sioners JeffThomton and Mick Davenport,
· Litter Prevention's Distriet 1, which incor- • showed Canfield and Feliciano some of the
.
'
porates Meigs County.
'local office's endea~ors, including two

MGI

Sprine
Carpet Sat.

to Nexida Feliciano, coordinator of the Division of Recycling Blld ·Utter

,

Historic Downtown
Pomeroy ·

'88·

RECYCUNG VISIT - Meigs Recycling Director Kenny Wiggins uses
the new recycling buildings near Pomeroy Tuesday. From left, Wiggins,
and Maurita and Roy Miller of Pomeroy show off a.recycli~ building

State recydiRg?Chief ·viSits Meigs

4te

~~&amp;ffldu

~ 5-.t;~flu .b4t

,

Performance•
4:3~ P.M.
ljiponsored y:
POMEROY /MIDDLEPORT LIONS

6ol 180 180
42 142 208

2 72 175 151

.

~. · at«t·

Gore wins popular
vote in Wash. state

TickeD CaD

WEAVING STITCHES JUST ARRIVED
GIFT SHOP

E-D1ail:

...

" '
•

. Tonlght'a game•

Middleport· Pomeroy Metchants~~~

tJe,..S~
1·740·992·1135

•·

MORE ANDLUS!
MORBTRRDI.SI
MORE EXCITEMENT!
nCKET ~CE ADULT or CHilD~
.
16.00 ON ADVANCE
,
h.oo ON IHOWDAT

With Your

110 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
45769

•

Buffllo 6, Aollda ~

'

·e . ill4114

," i

Ottawa 1, Plttlburgh 1

ea .Info S ring
.,

~-.

.

Monday's ac:orw

~.

Nol'lhult D1v111on
i
Toronto .................33 22 7 3 78 18e 16S'
011awa ................30 22 10

1

..

!•

w·19L "nn
1!11. llf 116
7 6 86198 150
1
6
3
1

Bush scores
resounding
win in Va.

-··rJJIOUI

Atlantic DMaloiit
17 11
29 8
29 9
39 7

---E:AMPA-IG-N 2000-

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NHL standings

rum

.

~~ C•·nt'

•

138 •
1 1 12 181 1~. •
7 3 70 201 ..,.

1

March 1; 2000

son~:lo· Cupy

Ohio

·-·-.."·
--·.
'

n 154

lat&amp;on tla.

128
1 83 215 188
5 55 181 187
2 53 180 11@

Dlvlolon
15 8 71 160
1P 1 67 173
7 : 5 &amp;1182
11 8. 59' 181

Detroit at Indiana, 7 p.m.
Callao al Phiodelphla, 7 p.m.
cr;cago al Toronto, 7 p.m.
Seattle al Orlando, 7:30 p.m.
Phoon!• ol CLEVELANC, .7:30p.m.
Mlamlal Son Antonio, 8 p.m.
Cllarlono al ~. 8 p.m.
L.A. Lako1111 POitlarod, 10::!10 p.m.
Vancoulltt' at sacramento, 10:30

NewJeiHy ......... 37
Philadelphia ........ 33
Pltlabu~gh ............26
N.Y. Rang81&amp;... .... 26
N.Y. Islande18 ...... 1T

Pom~;&gt;roy,

Middleport •

Volume 50, Number 187

San Joae ............. 26 30 e 7 67 116 165 ~
Anahelm .............. 26 ZT 10 1 63 170 178'
Overtime IOSsea count Ilia a 1011 and a rept:t:,,

156
151

:t.m
~L~1!11. AI!
Sllouis .... :........4o 18 . 8 o 88 192

. EASTERN CONFERENCE

.1109 . 10
.491
II
.407 15'1.
.400
18
.222 25~

P.clllc Dlvlllan
6 3

DIIIU .................. 34 23
Phoerix ............... 32 23
L,psAngeltt ........ 30 25

,·WESTERN CoNFERENCE .

.804
.818

I &amp;I
1411
178

Cerollnl ... ... ,....... 26 28 9 0 61158 172
Tampa Bly......~i~t. 15 39 1 e 43 157 229
Atlanta ............ :;... 12 43 8 4 34 t34 221

Tonlghl'l gam•

111m

FarWnt

1

I

Wednesday

Mllp COUnty'l

....•

Dallas 108, Boeton 100
Soaltle 84, Charlotte 81
Miami 85, New y01'1( 78
Utah 106, New Jerwy 101
Golden Slale 80, Atlanta 75
Houslon 96, L.A.' C~ n

Ball St 94, Cent Michigan 61
Bol\11ng Green 84, OHIO 70
Buffalo 72, Akron 55
E. Michigan 67, N. Illinois 65
Miami 78, MAR.SHALL 68

Indiana St. 56, Bradley 54

.636
.582
.455
.438

Monday'a ac:orea

llld-Amerloan eonter.nee-flrlt round

Creighton 102. Evansville 69
lllinols St 90, .Drake 88-QT

1
3
4
2

6
5
9
13
17
7
15
10
18
12
14
19

_

20
23
30
. 31

35 .386 14~.
Vancouver ........................ 18 37 .327 . 17'~

Tournaments

S. Carolina St. 98, Morgan St. 84
. Southam U. 76, Prairie View 75

Ill.
-;-,.

l!! L M
20 .&amp;13

San Antonio ............... .... 36
Utah .........•....... :.. ......... ....35
Minnesota ........... ..... ........32
Denver .............................25
Oallas ....... ........... .............24
Housoon ...........................22

PICHicDivlolon
L.A. Lakel1 .. :.......... ......... ~5 11
Portland ..............,............ 45 11
Phoeni• ................ ............ 34 21
Seattle ... .... ....................... 35 22
Sacramento ......................31 24
Golden ~........................ 18 40
l ,A. Clippers .................... 12 48

Houoton Bapllsl74, Touo Coil: 40
Langllon -54, OldahOma Science 48
MVSU 73, Allt.·Pino Bluff 70 '

Alabama A&amp;M 76, GIBmbllng St 6.9
Alabama St. 76, Jackson St. 72
Alcom St. 82, Texas Southam 65
James Madlson 67, N;C,·WIImlngton 65

:rum

,t

Saulhwoot

South

The top 25 teams in The AssoclaleQ. Press'
men's college basketball poll, wilh first-place
votes In parentheses,· records through Feb. 27 ,
total poWtt&amp; based on 25 points lor a llrst·place
vote through one point for a 25ttl·place vote anCI
previous ranking:

_,

Bethany, Kan. 90, Starting 77
Mlssour1 Western 58, Pittsburg $1. 51

Connecticut 74, Rutgers 69

AP Top 25 men's poll

111m

..

Details, A3

•

·-

Neobefry65, TuSCIIIum 58
Rollins 69, Florida Soulhem 6ol
SouthemU. 54, PralrleV!ew43
Tarf1)11 79. Bany 76-0T
TougaloO 89, XaVIer, NO S8
Trevecca Nazarene 88, Martin Melhodist 65
Virginia St. 68, Sl. Augustine's 80

NCAA Division I
men's scores

•

cti!VELAND (AP) - Central Michipns David Webber is the men~ ,
playa of the week and BaU Sate's Laurie Kitu and Bowting Green'o ·
frmcioc Miller share the women's weekly award in the Mid-American ,..
health scares. He has suffered two heart attada
COilference.
•
2nd in July 1998 had open heart surgery.
W~bber, a 6-foot-2 sophomore guard fiom Formington Hills, Mich.. ..
Manuel, who has never managed at the
icored a Rose Arena record 51 points in the Chippewaf91-80 loss at BaU •
major-le&gt;gue level, p;wed an executive physiState ill the only game in which be played lasr week.A sprained right wrist ·
cal before he was hired on Nov. t.
kept him out of the Toledo contest. Webben 51 points are the sixth highest siag1e game toea! in MAC history. He made 16-ol'-24 field goals, 7-of"People ask me about the stress of the job;'
9 three-point attempts and 12-of-15 free throws. The 51 points broke the
he 12id recendy. " Believe me, I've never felt the
arena ~ord of 49 set by Larry Bird of Indiana State.
stress. Some of the best games I've ever seen
W~ber is the brother of the S.cramento Kings' Chris Webber.
•,'
were in the 1997 postseuon when we went to
Kiru, a fitsbman from Marion, Ind., averaged 22.5 points in two games. · •
the World Series. Those were nail-biting
She hiL57 percent ofher three-point atteinpo (13 of2.3) and matched her '
games. I enjoyed every minute of them."
career ..gh of28 poinl$ in an overtime win against Central Michigan, hit- ;. :
ring eiglit three-pointers against the Chippewas.
.
.:
Hart said there should be no break in the
team's wor)&lt;out routine with Manuel out.
Milh:'ll' a sophomore fiom Kalida, bad· 17 points in an 84-71 win at :
"Char~e and his staff establislred -~ prOgram. - Akron, tll&lt;n bad 22 poilits, including 16 in the S&lt;Cond half and the game- •
for spring training and we'll continue under . winninl; tiee throws with 4.'&lt; seconds remaining, to give BG a come-fiom-&lt; :
rhe supervision of our coaching staff," Hart ._~ehind ~n over Butralo. For the wee~. she hit all 12 of her lite throws. • ,
"
said.

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TODAY'S "SCOREBOARD

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H....: ~;\ow: 101

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Bl-4,8

Lotteries
OfUO

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Pick 3: 5-7-9; Pick 4: 6-0-7"9
)Z 5: l6-21-2b-J2-36
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W:VA.

Dailr 3: .6-0-&lt;&gt; Dailr 4: 1-7-8-8 .
Q lOOO Ohio

Voll'!' Pulilnhina Co.

WASHINGTON:' (,\P) - The Environmental one of the ewe.plants from coal to natural gas and
Protection Agency reached a $1 billion agreement install new pollution devices to curtail emissions a~
Tuesday with a Florida utility to cut tens of thou- the other plant. The cost of these changes, when
sands of tons of pollution annuaUy from t:Wo power fuUy implemented by 2010, would be "approxi.:
, plants.
·
mately $1 billion," Browner said.
·
The settlement could lead to similar agreements
. The result will be a ~eduction .of r,o~ ~
to resolve a goverrunent lawsuit. seeking pollution · 120,000 tons of smcig-causmg and ac1d-or.un-&lt;ausms
reductions at 32' aging coal-fired plants in 10 states, · chemical releases annuaUy by the end of the decade;
including Ohio.
she said.
·
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The utility, Tampa Electric Co., also agreed to pay
"The (poUution) reductions we're .talking ·a bou(
a $~.5 million civil penalty for pa5t pollution and are huge," said Browner. She said nitrogen dioxide;
Will invest S10 million in environmFntal rnitig&gt;tion · a prec\\rsor of smog, will be cut by 91 percent at the: ·
anti ~hort-tetm . pollutiOn control measures, said two plants,' with significant reductions in micro-:
EPA Administrator Carol Browner.
scopic soot and virtual elimination of releases of sul-;
":rhere luve be..; violationS of public health fur dioxide.
·
,
over a significant period of time;· Browner sold in
John Rami!, president ofTampa Electric, called i~
justifying the civil penalties.The utility admitted no "a good settlement for everybody involved" and;
violations.
PluH ... IM. .... AS
'As p&gt;rt of the setdement, the utilitY will switch

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CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) -1\Yo man who sexually assaulted a woman at knifepoint and forced her to withdraw $200 from an
automatic teller machine will likely spend "the rest of their lives in
prison.
David Michael Barnes, 24, and Mark DeWllyne Best 1!, 26, both
of Marietta, Ohio, were sentenced to a maximum of 155 years by
Kanawha Circuit Jedge Irene Berger on Monday.
In December, the two pleaded guilty to breaking into a Paint
Creek mobile home on Dec. 8, 1997; and threatening the woman
~nd her two young sons for money.
.
The woman was sexually assaulted four times, then taken to the
ATM after her 14-year-old son failed to get money &amp;Om the
machine. The men theq !!~d i,rl the WQIIW)'I. car and wereJater-captured at a North Carolina motel.
·
. Barnes and Best received 120-year sentences for aggravated rob"bery, kidnappjng and burglary, and another 15 to 35 years in prison ·
for first-degree sexual assault.
.. They ·will serve the sentences concurrendy with other sentences
for kidnapping and robbing a 77-year-old woman. Both men
should be eligible for parole in 70 years; Jackson County assistant
prosecutor Greg McVey said.

PIS$enpr rail service pushed back

COLUMBUS (AP) - After purting up Dec. t accusing it of dumping dead chickens fly infestations as warm weather retumtd.
with flies and odors ever since Buckeye Egg in a field, polluting creeks and causing infesta- Investigators found so many flies in homes
Farm moved to her rural neighborhood near tions of flies , beedes and other insects.
near some of Buckeye Egg's opentions rhit
LaRue in north-central Ohio, Helen Whittak"This is a top priority in this office," Jen- they interfered with such nortnal activities--as
er is' glad the state is fighting back.
nifer Detwiler, a spokeswoman for the attar- eating, ueeping and preparing meals.
"It 4idn't seem llke anything was happening ney's general office, said Tuesday. "We'll con-·
Statements attached to the motion complain
in our favor;' she said Tuesday, a day after the tinue to aggressively pursue rhe case so that the of people trying to ueep with the covers over
attorney general's office sought a court order current, past arid future potential violations are their heads to ayoid flies, , ~tting fli_es wiP!
requiring Buckeye Egg to take action immedi- eliminated."
one hand while eating with the orher a110
ately to control the hoards of flies coming
The ,;ompany, which produces 5 millions scrubbing t1y particles from walls; ceiling1,
from its operations in Hardin, Licking and eggs daily that are shipped to grocerr store$ in tables and chairs.
,
'IJVyandot counties.
iO states, issued a statement Tuesday pledging ·Detwiler said a court hearing on.rhelaws.ujt
Like other people who live within a couple to work with the state on the latest com- 6led in December is scheduled for October.
of miles of the massive egg barns, Whittaker, plaints.
,____ll_ut_thUttorncy _gmml't 2WI&amp;--'""'--1JU!Lwan~75, saiiflhe 4Y problems have worse~ed.
"We will continue to monit&lt;&gt;"r and take to wait that long to deal wirh the lateSt
"You sit down to eat and they're around appropriate actions to mi~ze the Oy popu- tations. A. hearing has been sched'!'ed (or
you;· sh~ said. "You get a drink out of the lation on our fatms;• the statement said. "We Maich 14.
,
'
refrigerator and they're, right there."
will continue to work wirh the state of Ohio · "The citizt·ns shouk\ not have to sit by
The latest legal motion, 61ed il\ Licking 'to develop short and long-term solutions:•
suffer through these continued nuisa9ces and
County Common Pleas Court, is· part · of a
State health and environmental officials environmental problems ~mtil it goes ~ court
lawsuit the state brought against the company began receiving complaints a week ago about in .October;• she said.
·,.

:0a

Ads try t&lt;;&gt; ·lure Cincinnati air .tra.vel~rs t~ ·ather parts

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· CLJ?VELAND (AP) - The start of a p~enger train between
CINCINNATI (AP) - Some Cincinnati en route to .Grand
.Columbus and Cleveland has been pushed back because of a conair
travelers ate willing to drive 100 Rapids, Mich. The drive and extra
flict with the cost of the project.
·
miles
to other airports to, get flight meant the difference
Originally predicted to begin early this year, service between the ·
. cheaper fares rhan rhose Delta Air between $300 or a $700 tickets, he
two cities is unlikely before late next year or sometime in 2002.And
Lines charges at Cincinnati-North- said.
when service does start, only one train is likely, not th!i two origiern Kentucky · International AirDelta~ .abou~90perce,ntofthe
·
nally planned, state and railroad officials said Thesday.
po~.
. .
buSiness at ~e Cincinnati, airp~.
CSX Railroad, which owns most of rhe cortidor tracks, has estiWe
call
Lou!S"ille,
Dayton,
about
I 0 miles sourh of the Ohio
mated the project could cost more than $60 million· in improveI~napolis
and
sometimes
Riverne;u:Hebron,Ky.Deltaexecments. But the Ohio Department ofTransportation budgeted $32
million for rhe two-year pilot project and an additional $3 million · ·Columbus:' said Dan Binford, a utives say higher fares at1' rhe price
Cincinnati-based furniture whole- of having a hub ·from which the
annually for operating cos!$. ·
•
saler
.. "We circumvent Delta every alrline provi4es frequent , direct
. The initial, plan involved two trains - one leaving each city
time w~ can, not ~nly because it's flights to many U.S. and European
·simultaneously- to attract·business customers, said Kathy Wigton,
.
cheaper
but. almost out of princi- · cities.
a member of the Cleveland-Columbus Passenger Rail Steering
pie."
"We don't think you pay more
Committee. ·
Binford,
who
.
flies
about
three
f'or
less - , you pay more for more
With. only one train, a Columbus business person would not
times a month, said he once drove flights ·and more frequencies;• Delta
· reach Cleveland until after lunch, she said. ·
·
·
eight
.~~ents to Dayton, boarded a spok~man Dave Anderson said,
· "If there i$ not enough frequency. how can you build.ridership?"
Delta flight, and fiew back to "It's the hatdest thing in the world
Wigton asked. "It's almost like s.etting up something that is doome~
to failure:•
The passenger service was proposed to help ease congestion dluing a 10-year rebuilding and widening oflnterstate 71 between the
two cities.
Wigton said it would be at least spring before the steering committee is· prepared to make recommendatioi)S to the Ohio Rail
Development Commission.

-Development rescues Lorain

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'ury: Eacles dlib c.an exdude women
: AKRON (AP) -The Fraternal Order of Eagles is a private club
and does not have to include women as members, a Summit Coun~
iy jury ruled.
. : Elaine Reitz, 42, andVicki Pillitiere, 44, had 61ed a sex lfiscrimjilation lawsuit against the all-male club.
' The two women, who were long-standing members of the
Ezgles'Women's Auxiliary, applied in t 997 to become full members
at the POE Akron Aerie No. 555.
But a Summit Cl)unty Common Pleas jury found ihat the FOE
is a private club and not b~und by .the state's Public Accommodation Law, ~:Yhich requires equal access to all Otjpnizations and businesses that are open to tile public.
.
The jury did determine, however, that the local FOE retaliated
against the women for filing a complaint with the Ohio Civil
Rights Commission. Reitz was awarded $16,000 in damages, and
Pillitiere· won $6,000.
·
·
·The women say that after. they flied rhe complalnt;.they were
expeUed from the lodge and are no longer welcome.
The women are considering appealing the jury's decision, said
their attorney. Brian Williams.
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to explain.... We price to be com• ber showed that Cincinnati has the
petitive iil every market we serve:• fifth-highest average fares am~
Airport officials in Louisville and 40 airports, follo~ng San.Fraitc:MColumbus ate keenly aware rhat . co, New Yo~ Dallas and Mintheir fares ate lower. Port Colum• neapolis. ·
bus In~ern~tional Airport has
Vanguard Air-lines, a low-cost
a~d its lower fares in C~ci.tt- car~ier that fail~ ~ ~ _enou~
natt for abouttlu"&lt;.'e ~ars. Louisville business to sumve m Cmcmnad-115
International' Airport started a pullingoutofthe marltetThursdly.
Cincinnati advertising campaign in Delta foiled Vanguard's ~ond try
September. . •
.
in the marltet bY matching its
"Because' .we know that ,_
prices on flights betWeen Cincinwhether by,hearsay or by tracking pati and. Chicago.
. ,. ,.
, ..
cars in rhe p:\fking lot - pei&gt;ple
The lack of a dominant carriei
from Cincimlatl are coming heni,h has enabled the Columbus
$aid · Bill 1Uwling1, marketing to attract' discount carrierS and p~
.dim:tor for the Louisville airpQrt.
sengers from other cir;ies, siid
An . American Express Travel •David Whitaker, directo~ o( ajr ·se~Related Servii:~
survey in Deeem- . vice and
public affairs. .
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MIDDLEPORT Charles A .
Middleport, died
-'Wednesday, March 1, 2000 in Holzer Medical Center.
' ' Services will be fl. a.m. Saturday in McCoy-Moore Funeral Home,
' Winton. Burial will be in Miles Cemetery, Rudand. Friends may call at
the funeral home from 7-9 p.m . Friday.

:· ~:

Marie Robllason

": POMEROY - Marie Robinson, 96, 175 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy,
died on Thesday, Feb. 29, 2000 at Veterans Memorial Hospital in
· ~omeroy.
.
·' - She was born on May 28, 1903 in Pomeroy. daughter of the late
~hades and Catherine Rapold Schorn. She attended St. Theresa and
'.bhio University, and was a homemaker.
· ' She attended the Sacred Heart Catholic Chucch, and WllS a choir
a member of a sociiil sororfty at Ohio University.
,···: she is survived by a son and daughter-in-law, john W. and Gloria C.
Robinson of Mechanicsville, Va.; a daughter and son-in-law, Mary J.
and Dick Dudek of Concord; a sister, Mildred .Fultz of Pomeroy; and
;1~ grandchildren.
·
' ·
~ Besicjes her parents, she was preceded in death by her husband, E.E
"'Robbie" Robinson; two grandsons, Robbie Dudek and ·Mark
. Robinson; two brothers, Alphonse and Charles Schorn; and two sisters,
.
-Margaret Goett and Alma Schorn.
Services will be 10 a.m. Thursday at Sacred Heart Catholic Church,
~th Rev. Fr. Walter Heinz pfficiating. Burial will foll6W at Sacred
Heart Cemetery, Pomeroy. Friends may call at £wing Funeral Home;
Pomeroy, from 7"9 tonight, with a vigil service at 8:45 p.m.
_ , Memorial contributions may be made to Sacred Heart Carbolic
~hulh,161 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.

,~~- VALLEY .

''· Colder air flowing off the
· Great Lakes will bring return of
. seasonably cold temperatures to
i'Ohio on Thursday and some scat; tered snow showers in the north·
'east, forecasters said.
f_ ' Highs on Thursday ·will be
· inainly in rhe 40s.
The rest of the . state will see
W'Jearing skies on Thursday as high
~pressure builds into the area, the
~National Weather Service said.
Lows ·tonight will be in the
I' upper 20s to lower 30s.
~ The record-high temperature
~ for this date at the Columbus
~ weathe~ station was 65 degrees in
~ 1997 while the record low was -2
' in 1967 . Sunset tonight will be at
6:24 p.m. and sunrise Thursday at

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Bank One- 25.,

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=Bob Evans -

•

ECKRICH BOLOGNA
OR FRANKS

$.

.PAPER TOWELS

3/$

. PIG •
VAN DE KAMP'S FISH STICKS •••••
••

OR PORTIONS SEL. VAR~

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99· .••• .
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BROUGHTONS
'

TIAGE CHEESE.

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1&gt;1,

240Z

Hailey 0~- 68~
K mart- 8.,_
Kroger- 147io
Lands End-

33,.

Ud, -34
Oak Hill Filanclal13~
OVB-31~

One ValeyPeoples

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29.,

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Sears-21'1.

Shcna~ii - 1),
Wendy's- 15\
WOfthlngton- 13'4
Daly atDck repor1B
are the 4 p.m. claalng

quotes 4f the pravtoua

day's ~.pro­
vided 17)1 AdV88I of Gal- .
lpolla.

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12 at stake in ' Washington,
McCain for 5:
.j
· The state's other' 25 delegates
Publiahed'
tkrmia;h
Friday, 111 Coun St., Pomeroy, Obio, by lbe
there will be chosen by caucus
Ohio 1QIIey P&amp;!bllthlaa Company. Second
. next week, as will all~he Democclou ""''"" J"'ld 01 -.roy, Oblo.
ratic delegates.
M-.: Tile Allo&lt;:iiiOII PreP, end the Ohio
Nc.Wiplper A~Kacial:ian.
.
A candidate needs ,034 dele~
1'06'I'MASI'Eib S&lt;tt4 tteldiCII cone&lt;:tlons ta
gate
votes to win the GOP n,omThe O-ily Sentinel, 111 Court St., P~meroy,
nlok) 45769
' \
. ination. Bush now has 170 dele~ 'i tnlscJumON RATES
i gates, McCai'n 105, a'nd Keyes 5.
• •
B~C.-rorMoiorRoole
The Democratic candidate needs
Ont Wett.l: ........................................c.. $2.00
Ont Mooth ........................... ................$8.10
2,170. Gore has 42 to Bradley's
Ont Year .....................................,...... $104.00
27.
SINGLE COPYNuCE
. :Sradley spent five days in WashDIUy .................:...............................Jl Cents
Sublcriblrt not dtlirinato p11y the Cltrler may
ington state campaisnfng for at
remit In advance direct to The Dally Sentinel
least
a strong showing ·m the prion albree,lix or 12 month b'a,sis. Credit will be:
. mary and a boost into next Tues~
i.fvcn caqier ~ week.
, 1
,No 11.1btcrlption by mail pemlutd In areu
day. Instead, he suffered his fourth
where home oariler scrvb II available .
loss.
·
·
Publl1her re.Crvet the .riJht to adj1111 rates
durin&amp; the au.blcrlptlon period. Subscription
He planned a 'fiv~-minute
iate thllfl".may be hnplcmcntcd by chanaibl national television ad Thursday
'ihe duntion of lhe aiM'\ prj~. ·
night on CBS .- ' but •e vgn before
MAIL SUIISCIUPfiONS'
the setback there was sp11culation
•
'·. loulde·MelpCoulr
he might drop out. Eric Hauser,
13W..u .............................................S27.JO
.
his spokesman, denied it,
26 Woek1 ............................................. ,3.82
52 W..U ...........................................SlllS-'6
Gore said .he had no ·advice for
Bradley.
"I amjust corwnunicat13\Voe~~..~-~~$29.25
ing with·the voters;• he laid.
26 W..lai ...:.,......................................,.Sll096.~
l2 Wocka ........................ ,.. ..............
' ••
, , Tlie competition now .,escalates
into the closest thing tara nation.al primary next week,
more

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POMERQY- Regular meeting of the Meigs County Agriculture
Society has been changed to Monday. March 13, at 7:30 p.m. at the
grange hall on the fairgrounds.

OIJanlratlonal meetlnc set

Granp to meet

CHESTER - Chester Youth Ball Association will have an organizational meeting on March 9 at 6:30 p.m. at the Chester Fire House.
Questions can be directed to Keith Wood at 985-4400.

POMEROY - Meigs County Porpona Grange 46 will meet on
Friday with a poduck supper beginning at 6:30 p.m. , followed by 'a
meeting at 7:30 p.m. Athens County Pomona Grange will visit and
bring the program.
All members are urged to attend.

Rutland trustees to 111eet

EMS logs 7 calls__

RUTLAND _:_ Rudand Township Trustees will meet in regular sessron-Molnlay;5-p~;-:it-rh-e-R-utbnd-FireSta!:loi!';"rollowed at 7 p.m.- Ey""
'!on open public meeting on the Logjam Removal Program available to
POMEROY - Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical
landowners along blue line streams. All interested persons are encour- Service recorded seven calls for assistance Tuesday. Units responding
aged to attend,
included:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
2:24 a.m., Hill Street, Pomeroy, Karen Lemley, Pleasant Valley Hospital;
•
SALEM qNTER - Star Grange 778 will meet in regular session
3:29 p.m., State Route 124, Pomeroy, Maccus Ward,Veterans MemoSaturday with a potluck supper at 6:30 p.m·. followed by a mei ting at rial Hospftal;
'
8 p.m. All members urged to attend.
7:14 p.m., Brownell Alley, Middleport, Kay McHaffie, VMH ;
I
. 9:04 p.m.,· Hudson, Street, Middleport, l(aren Gibbs, treated at the
scene;
RUTLAND
RACINE - Election Day dinner will be sei:ved at the Reorganized
8:08 a.m., Cotterill Road, Brenda Cotterill, VMH, Central Dispatch
Church of Je5us Christ of Latter Day Saints, County Road 35, near squad assisted;
.
Lebanon Township garage. Serving to begin at 11 a.m.·with menu to
3:37. p.m., Dexter, Bob White, Holzer .Medical Center;
include spagherti, soup, sandwiches, desserts and soft dFinks.
11:53 p.m., New Lima Road, Darlene Spangler, HMC.

Star Grange meeting

Election Day dinner set

Cleveland-based FirstEnergy, is on our side and that we're
Illinois Power, Southern Com- . doing exactly what the law
pany, and Southern Indiana Gas intended;' said Browner.
&amp;
Electric. EPA officials have
Under the · settlement, Tampa
fmmPageA1
flamPaaeA1
said" other companies may be Electric said it would phase out
said it will result in his utility added to the lawsuit.
coal burning and switch to natFeliciano encouraged local resburning 3 million fewer tons of
Spokesmen for both Southern ural gas at its Gannon Station by idents to participate in ·area
coal a year and bring cleaner air. Co. . and American Electric 2004, reducing nitrogen oxide cleanup projects including tire
Rami) disputed allegations of Power two of the largest emissions by 30,000 tons and annual Ohio River Sweep ih
past violations.
·
· companies involved in the law- sulfur dioxide releases by 60,000 June.
"We don't believe we've don suit - said the Tampa Electric tons, EPA said.
Wiggins explained how he
· anything wrong," he said in settlement has no bearing on · New pollution control mea- acquired the two buildings which
sures and installation, beginning have openings for different recy~
Tampa.
their litigation.
The agreement, announced
"We still believe very strong- in 2008, of more sophisticated clable materials. · Roller bins
joindy by the EPA and the Jus- ly that EPA's argoments are seri- technology to control nitrogen inside the.builclings allow for eas·
tice Department, marks the first ously
flawed,"
Southern oxide ·will lead a reduction of . ier unloading. ·
30,000 tons in the smog-causing
"This will do a wonderful job ·
break in an enforcement action spokesman Buddy Eller said.
announced last November that
AEP spokesman Pat.. Hemlepp . chemical by 2010, officiah said. for us!' Wiggins said, adding that •
targeted seven l)f .the country's said the Ohio-based utility feels The agreement also requires the · he hopes to put additional build~
largest coal-burning utilities ".no press\)re at all to reach any company to stop bypassing use ings throughout the CQunty, pa~
of scrubbers to cut sulfur diox- ticularly in Tuppers Plains.
from Florida to the Ohio Valley sort of a settlemen~.
c:;anfield said the buildings
and Midwest.
"We are confident we have a ide releases.
Tampa
Electric's
two
power
demonstrate
how rural recycling
Browner.' described the Tampa strong case and we haven't done
Electric settlement a break- anything wrong." Hernlepp said plants are small compared with programs often get more " bang .
through.
AEP has no negotiation· under some of the much larger coal- for the buck"· with their limited
· It "absolutely sends a message way with the EPA or the Justic~ . fired plants in the Ohio Valley, funding as opposed· to programs
but a 1998 report by the Nat'! r- in metropolitan areas. ·
to .the other companies," said · Department. ,.....
Browner. ·"We hope that the
The government contends the aJ Resource~ Defense. Council
other (utilities) will follow their companies installed· equipment called them among the •dirtiest
example."
and made illegal repairs designed in rate. of emission, or how .
She declined to say · whether to · expand power production much poll11tion is released, given
se.ttlement talks were under way, while failing to put in new pol- the power produ.ced.
Subscribe today.
In 1998, the Gannon plant
but industry and envirol'lmental lution
control
equipment
992·2156
sources said at least one of the required in mote modern power released 32.,700 tons of nitrogen
·
oxide
and
·the
Big
Bend
plant
six other utilities named in last plants under the 1990 Clean Air
November's lawsuit is actively Act. The utilities have denied 40,000 tons, putting them 29th .
·s howing interest in settling· the the charges and argue that the and 22nd among the 50 largest .
case.
changes at the plants amounted coal-burning . power plant polluters, according to ihe NRDC.
Those. six major utility com- to needed maintenance.
panies are Columbus, Ohio"With this settlement early in
based American Electric Power, the process without having to go
Cincinnati-based
Cinergy, to trial, we have proven the law

..

MORE LOCAL NEWS.'
MORE LOCAL FOLKS:

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than half of the delegates needed
to . win the nomination a_t each
party's convention this summer at
stake. Republicans have 613 delegates at stake in 13 states; Democrats have 1,315 in 15 ·states.
"This ra~e has just ,begun;'
Bradley claimed in San Francisco.
"March 7 is the takeoff time for
this campaigu." Gore holds a runaway lead in the California polls;
Bush is ahead there, too.
"We're still the underdog;'
McCain said in Bakersfield, Calif.
· "But we're going to win next
Tuesday."
Bush said winning Virginia "in
as convincing a fashion as I did"
should · help · in . the 1.1pcoming
contests, many of which bar participation by non-Republicans,
· which could hurt McCain.
McCain failed to repeat in Virgin~ what he had done i~ open
primaries in New Hampshire and
Michigan. In those states, he won
after appealing to independents
and Democrats who crossed ove~
in large numbers and voted . for
him. 1\vo-thlrds of the voters in
Virginia identified themselves as
Rep11blicans and, among them,
69 percent supported Bush,
··according to exit _polling .by ':'oter
News Service for The Assoctated
' Press and the television networks.

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RO Shell- 52~

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NeWopaper H.oldlnp, Inc.
every aftenloon, Monday
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ROUNDY'S
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~OUNDY'S ·

Premitlt

The D.Wy Sentinel

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111 , SIUif!n. Rex, who plays Mi~ey
on Nl'fV and as an actor m the
;: . adult;fJlm industry before turn~ : ing tu.series TV. • ..

•• PEPSI PRODUCTS :
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:TAVERN BONELESS HAMS: ·
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MARCH 2nd, 3rd, and
4th
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~ BorgWamer- 32 .
Champion .- 3"'•
Qlllrmln!J Shops - 6
City Holdlug 12~ ·
· Federal Mogul- 1s'lo
if. Flistar- 17.,

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Weathet foreca1t:
Tonight .. .Mosdy ·cloudy with
a chance of sprinkles.. .Then a
chance of snow flurries late. Lows
in the mid 30s. Northwest wind
10 to 20 mph.
'
. Thursday... Pardy.
cloudy.
Highs in the ffiid and upper 40s.
' Thursday night ... Pardy cloudy.
Lows in the mid and upper 20s.
Extended forecast:
Friday... Mos!fy cloudy with a
chance of rain. Highs in the
upper 50s. ·
·.
Saturday... Mosdy cloudy with
a chance of rain. Lows in the mid
30s and highs in ithe lower . arid
mid 50s.
· Sunday...)?ardy; cloudy. Lows in
the mid 30s and highs in mid 50s.

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7:03

. BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

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' ParTUPPERS PLAINS - Eastern Local School District will hold
ent/Teacher conferences on Thursday from 4-7 p.m. Appointments
should be nude by calling the high school at 985-3329 or 985-3304.

WEATHER

:Wintry
conditions
will
return
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The Dally Sentinel • P8ge A 3

LOCAL NEWS IN BRIEF
Conferences set
Change In meetinc time

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GOLDEN RIPE
BANANAS

Pometoy,. Middleport, Ohio

DEATH NOTICES
Chattes A. ........

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: CO.L UMBUS (AP) - Four Democratic candidates for U.S. Sen~te are spending more time focusing on the man to beat in November than differences between themselves.
: At a forum on Thesday, the candidates offered similar views on a
Variety of issues, including expanding health insurance to uninsured
£hildren, preserving Medicare and social security. improving weiCare-co-work initiatives, and offering domestic partner benefits:
. : Dubbed a debate, the event was more a discussion of positions.
Candidates didn't target one another in their remarks but focused
¢n the need to oust incumbent Mike DeWine, a Republican.
: Tuesday's event, sponsored by the Columbus Metropolitan Club,
featured Ted Celeste; a rql estate broker and brother offormer Gov.
~chard Celeste; Richard Cordray, a lawyer and former state solicitor; Marvin McMickle, a minister and president of the . Shaker
.Heights school board; and Daniel Radakovich, a temp agency ·
worker.
·. After the event, Cordray and Celeste acknoWledged the similarity in·positions but denied it was a problem.
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Dems looklnc at big picture

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Dick &amp; Ruby Vaughan Invites You To Come In
Advantage ~~ Th••• Ex~,_ra Savings
Oldy At VAUGHAN'·s·SUPE·RMARKET In Mlddl~porf .:~.
THURSDAY····FRIDAY····SATURDIY

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LORAIN (AP) - An ambitious waterfront development is
expected to bring new economic life to this citj, which has lost
more than 16,000 heavy industry jobs in the last two decades.
Spitzer G~it · Lakes Ltd. Co. plans tobuild a housing and commereta! development on the site of a former shipyard in this city on
Lake Erie about 20 ffiiles west of Cleveland.
·
The goal is to give a much-needed boost to Lorain by attracting
empty-nesters and young professionals.
Years of cutbacks in the steel and automotive · industries hurt
Lorain's downtown, which still has a 40 percent vacancy rate, said
Mayor Craig Foltin.
·
·
"Our downtown has unfortunately been a ghost town;' Foltip
pid. "This project can definitely be an economic catalyst."
: The site of the new development once WllS occupied by George
Steinbrenner's American Shipbuilding Co., which built giant ore
!arrie!S and employed 1,700. But the shipyard shut down in the
early 1980s· and was purchased by auto dealer and developer Alan
~pitzer.
.
: Spitzer twice tried unsuccessfully to win voter approval for casi~o gambling on the 54-acre site, which sits along rhe east bank of
Che Black River as it runs through Lorain and into Lake Erie.
: A marina already is open, but now as many as 420 housing units
-:- including condominiums, townhouses and cottages - . will be
built starting in 2001, Cathy Murphy, director of real estate and
development for Spitzer Great Lakes, said Tues~.
; Murphy
said the developer is investing about $70 million in the
.
project
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Neighbors welcome aCtion against egg

BUCKEYE BRIEFS

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. Wednudey, Mllrch 1,2000

'

• The Dlllly 81ntiiMII

.Abou.t 20 percent of Virginia
voters described themselves as
Christian conservatives: and more
th~n 80 percent of them Voted for
Bush, die poll showed.
McCain harshly criticized two
Christian right leaders . Pat
Robertson and Jerry Falw,ell in a speech Monday in V:irginia
Beach .
McCain said rhe question for
Republicans is whether they ·
want someone who 'can win a
majority of all voters or one who
gets only GOP votes, which
wo'n 't be enough to win in
November.
·
"I'm 'not saying he can't win,
I'm saying I'm by far the stronger
candid~te; l McCain said:
Bush said McCain sounded like
a Democrat .
"It's important to . have sharp
distinctions;' he said. "We don't
need a candidate in a debate with
.AJ Gore who will not sound like
opponentS. They,will sound like a
ticket:'

- r·RIVIA
WWiam H. Macy, Felicity
Hlllfm¥, Clllnryo Manbelm
~p~d Krllten Johns&amp;on are all
members of the Atlantic Theater
Cornpl!lly.

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(lll!t)Linllo~ lbSIDII.· DAY
1111
7:211, 1:10
..iloftD~If/1 a..., Chase, Mli1l Witk
- . . ,... 7:11, t4l
((

Peart S~:reet
:M:lddJ.epo~ • . Ob.:lo
(740) 992-347·1

407

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&amp; 1'ort!IJe,r
Birdhouses, Roseville Pottery,
. New Spring Gard~n Decor, .
Hand Painted Flower Pots &amp; Crocks,
Personalizing Upon Request,
Special Orders Available

518 East Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio ·

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1·740-982·1181

Committee Person In Letart Township.
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Pd. For Bv The Caadidalo

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Re~uhlican Candidate For Centra~ ·

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111
__,Keidl_
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All AGES, ALL TIMES 84.00

J()l'tf M'llllf

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lplllall) Meg Ryirl, llinl Keakri, Lla Kmw

PIICIIUCII

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CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) -1\Yo man who sexually assaulted a woman at knifepoint and forced her to withdraw $200 from an
automatic teller machine will likely spend "the rest of their lives in
prison.
David Michael Barnes, 24, and Mark DeWllyne Best 1!, 26, both
of Marietta, Ohio, were sentenced to a maximum of 155 years by
Kanawha Circuit Jedge Irene Berger on Monday.
In December, the two pleaded guilty to breaking into a Paint
Creek mobile home on Dec. 8, 1997; and threatening the woman
~nd her two young sons for money.
.
The woman was sexually assaulted four times, then taken to the
ATM after her 14-year-old son failed to get money &amp;Om the
machine. The men theq !!~d i,rl the WQIIW)'I. car and wereJater-captured at a North Carolina motel.
·
. Barnes and Best received 120-year sentences for aggravated rob"bery, kidnappjng and burglary, and another 15 to 35 years in prison ·
for first-degree sexual assault.
.. They ·will serve the sentences concurrendy with other sentences
for kidnapping and robbing a 77-year-old woman. Both men
should be eligible for parole in 70 years; Jackson County assistant
prosecutor Greg McVey said.

PIS$enpr rail service pushed back

COLUMBUS (AP) - After purting up Dec. t accusing it of dumping dead chickens fly infestations as warm weather retumtd.
with flies and odors ever since Buckeye Egg in a field, polluting creeks and causing infesta- Investigators found so many flies in homes
Farm moved to her rural neighborhood near tions of flies , beedes and other insects.
near some of Buckeye Egg's opentions rhit
LaRue in north-central Ohio, Helen Whittak"This is a top priority in this office," Jen- they interfered with such nortnal activities--as
er is' glad the state is fighting back.
nifer Detwiler, a spokeswoman for the attar- eating, ueeping and preparing meals.
"It 4idn't seem llke anything was happening ney's general office, said Tuesday. "We'll con-·
Statements attached to the motion complain
in our favor;' she said Tuesday, a day after the tinue to aggressively pursue rhe case so that the of people trying to ueep with the covers over
attorney general's office sought a court order current, past arid future potential violations are their heads to ayoid flies, , ~tting fli_es wiP!
requiring Buckeye Egg to take action immedi- eliminated."
one hand while eating with the orher a110
ately to control the hoards of flies coming
The ,;ompany, which produces 5 millions scrubbing t1y particles from walls; ceiling1,
from its operations in Hardin, Licking and eggs daily that are shipped to grocerr store$ in tables and chairs.
,
'IJVyandot counties.
iO states, issued a statement Tuesday pledging ·Detwiler said a court hearing on.rhelaws.ujt
Like other people who live within a couple to work with the state on the latest com- 6led in December is scheduled for October.
of miles of the massive egg barns, Whittaker, plaints.
,____ll_ut_thUttorncy _gmml't 2WI&amp;--'""'--1JU!Lwan~75, saiiflhe 4Y problems have worse~ed.
"We will continue to monit&lt;&gt;"r and take to wait that long to deal wirh the lateSt
"You sit down to eat and they're around appropriate actions to mi~ze the Oy popu- tations. A. hearing has been sched'!'ed (or
you;· sh~ said. "You get a drink out of the lation on our fatms;• the statement said. "We Maich 14.
,
'
refrigerator and they're, right there."
will continue to work wirh the state of Ohio · "The citizt·ns shouk\ not have to sit by
The latest legal motion, 61ed il\ Licking 'to develop short and long-term solutions:•
suffer through these continued nuisa9ces and
County Common Pleas Court, is· part · of a
State health and environmental officials environmental problems ~mtil it goes ~ court
lawsuit the state brought against the company began receiving complaints a week ago about in .October;• she said.
·,.

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Ads try t&lt;;&gt; ·lure Cincinnati air .tra.vel~rs t~ ·ather parts

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· CLJ?VELAND (AP) - The start of a p~enger train between
CINCINNATI (AP) - Some Cincinnati en route to .Grand
.Columbus and Cleveland has been pushed back because of a conair
travelers ate willing to drive 100 Rapids, Mich. The drive and extra
flict with the cost of the project.
·
miles
to other airports to, get flight meant the difference
Originally predicted to begin early this year, service between the ·
. cheaper fares rhan rhose Delta Air between $300 or a $700 tickets, he
two cities is unlikely before late next year or sometime in 2002.And
Lines charges at Cincinnati-North- said.
when service does start, only one train is likely, not th!i two origiern Kentucky · International AirDelta~ .abou~90perce,ntofthe
·
nally planned, state and railroad officials said Thesday.
po~.
. .
buSiness at ~e Cincinnati, airp~.
CSX Railroad, which owns most of rhe cortidor tracks, has estiWe
call
Lou!S"ille,
Dayton,
about
I 0 miles sourh of the Ohio
mated the project could cost more than $60 million· in improveI~napolis
and
sometimes
Riverne;u:Hebron,Ky.Deltaexecments. But the Ohio Department ofTransportation budgeted $32
million for rhe two-year pilot project and an additional $3 million · ·Columbus:' said Dan Binford, a utives say higher fares at1' rhe price
Cincinnati-based furniture whole- of having a hub ·from which the
annually for operating cos!$. ·
•
saler
.. "We circumvent Delta every alrline provi4es frequent , direct
. The initial, plan involved two trains - one leaving each city
time w~ can, not ~nly because it's flights to many U.S. and European
·simultaneously- to attract·business customers, said Kathy Wigton,
.
cheaper
but. almost out of princi- · cities.
a member of the Cleveland-Columbus Passenger Rail Steering
pie."
"We don't think you pay more
Committee. ·
Binford,
who
.
flies
about
three
f'or
less - , you pay more for more
With. only one train, a Columbus business person would not
times a month, said he once drove flights ·and more frequencies;• Delta
· reach Cleveland until after lunch, she said. ·
·
·
eight
.~~ents to Dayton, boarded a spok~man Dave Anderson said,
· "If there i$ not enough frequency. how can you build.ridership?"
Delta flight, and fiew back to "It's the hatdest thing in the world
Wigton asked. "It's almost like s.etting up something that is doome~
to failure:•
The passenger service was proposed to help ease congestion dluing a 10-year rebuilding and widening oflnterstate 71 between the
two cities.
Wigton said it would be at least spring before the steering committee is· prepared to make recommendatioi)S to the Ohio Rail
Development Commission.

-Development rescues Lorain

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'ury: Eacles dlib c.an exdude women
: AKRON (AP) -The Fraternal Order of Eagles is a private club
and does not have to include women as members, a Summit Coun~
iy jury ruled.
. : Elaine Reitz, 42, andVicki Pillitiere, 44, had 61ed a sex lfiscrimjilation lawsuit against the all-male club.
' The two women, who were long-standing members of the
Ezgles'Women's Auxiliary, applied in t 997 to become full members
at the POE Akron Aerie No. 555.
But a Summit Cl)unty Common Pleas jury found ihat the FOE
is a private club and not b~und by .the state's Public Accommodation Law, ~:Yhich requires equal access to all Otjpnizations and businesses that are open to tile public.
.
The jury did determine, however, that the local FOE retaliated
against the women for filing a complaint with the Ohio Civil
Rights Commission. Reitz was awarded $16,000 in damages, and
Pillitiere· won $6,000.
·
·
·The women say that after. they flied rhe complalnt;.they were
expeUed from the lodge and are no longer welcome.
The women are considering appealing the jury's decision, said
their attorney. Brian Williams.
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to explain.... We price to be com• ber showed that Cincinnati has the
petitive iil every market we serve:• fifth-highest average fares am~
Airport officials in Louisville and 40 airports, follo~ng San.Fraitc:MColumbus ate keenly aware rhat . co, New Yo~ Dallas and Mintheir fares ate lower. Port Colum• neapolis. ·
bus In~ern~tional Airport has
Vanguard Air-lines, a low-cost
a~d its lower fares in C~ci.tt- car~ier that fail~ ~ ~ _enou~
natt for abouttlu"&lt;.'e ~ars. Louisville business to sumve m Cmcmnad-115
International' Airport started a pullingoutofthe marltetThursdly.
Cincinnati advertising campaign in Delta foiled Vanguard's ~ond try
September. . •
.
in the marltet bY matching its
"Because' .we know that ,_
prices on flights betWeen Cincinwhether by,hearsay or by tracking pati and. Chicago.
. ,. ,.
, ..
cars in rhe p:\fking lot - pei&gt;ple
The lack of a dominant carriei
from Cincimlatl are coming heni,h has enabled the Columbus
$aid · Bill 1Uwling1, marketing to attract' discount carrierS and p~
.dim:tor for the Louisville airpQrt.
sengers from other cir;ies, siid
An . American Express Travel •David Whitaker, directo~ o( ajr ·se~Related Servii:~
survey in Deeem- . vice and
public affairs. .
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MIDDLEPORT Charles A .
Middleport, died
-'Wednesday, March 1, 2000 in Holzer Medical Center.
' ' Services will be fl. a.m. Saturday in McCoy-Moore Funeral Home,
' Winton. Burial will be in Miles Cemetery, Rudand. Friends may call at
the funeral home from 7-9 p.m . Friday.

:· ~:

Marie Robllason

": POMEROY - Marie Robinson, 96, 175 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy,
died on Thesday, Feb. 29, 2000 at Veterans Memorial Hospital in
· ~omeroy.
.
·' - She was born on May 28, 1903 in Pomeroy. daughter of the late
~hades and Catherine Rapold Schorn. She attended St. Theresa and
'.bhio University, and was a homemaker.
· ' She attended the Sacred Heart Catholic Chucch, and WllS a choir
a member of a sociiil sororfty at Ohio University.
,···: she is survived by a son and daughter-in-law, john W. and Gloria C.
Robinson of Mechanicsville, Va.; a daughter and son-in-law, Mary J.
and Dick Dudek of Concord; a sister, Mildred .Fultz of Pomeroy; and
;1~ grandchildren.
·
' ·
~ Besicjes her parents, she was preceded in death by her husband, E.E
"'Robbie" Robinson; two grandsons, Robbie Dudek and ·Mark
. Robinson; two brothers, Alphonse and Charles Schorn; and two sisters,
.
-Margaret Goett and Alma Schorn.
Services will be 10 a.m. Thursday at Sacred Heart Catholic Church,
~th Rev. Fr. Walter Heinz pfficiating. Burial will foll6W at Sacred
Heart Cemetery, Pomeroy. Friends may call at £wing Funeral Home;
Pomeroy, from 7"9 tonight, with a vigil service at 8:45 p.m.
_ , Memorial contributions may be made to Sacred Heart Carbolic
~hulh,161 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.

,~~- VALLEY .

''· Colder air flowing off the
· Great Lakes will bring return of
. seasonably cold temperatures to
i'Ohio on Thursday and some scat; tered snow showers in the north·
'east, forecasters said.
f_ ' Highs on Thursday ·will be
· inainly in rhe 40s.
The rest of the . state will see
W'Jearing skies on Thursday as high
~pressure builds into the area, the
~National Weather Service said.
Lows ·tonight will be in the
I' upper 20s to lower 30s.
~ The record-high temperature
~ for this date at the Columbus
~ weathe~ station was 65 degrees in
~ 1997 while the record low was -2
' in 1967 . Sunset tonight will be at
6:24 p.m. and sunrise Thursday at

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Bank One- 25.,

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=Bob Evans -

•

ECKRICH BOLOGNA
OR FRANKS

$.

.PAPER TOWELS

3/$

. PIG •
VAN DE KAMP'S FISH STICKS •••••
••

OR PORTIONS SEL. VAR~

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99· .••• .
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BROUGHTONS
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TIAGE CHEESE.

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240Z

Hailey 0~- 68~
K mart- 8.,_
Kroger- 147io
Lands End-

33,.

Ud, -34
Oak Hill Filanclal13~
OVB-31~

One ValeyPeoples

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Sears-21'1.

Shcna~ii - 1),
Wendy's- 15\
WOfthlngton- 13'4
Daly atDck repor1B
are the 4 p.m. claalng

quotes 4f the pravtoua

day's ~.pro­
vided 17)1 AdV88I of Gal- .
lpolla.

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12 at stake in ' Washington,
McCain for 5:
.j
· The state's other' 25 delegates
Publiahed'
tkrmia;h
Friday, 111 Coun St., Pomeroy, Obio, by lbe
there will be chosen by caucus
Ohio 1QIIey P&amp;!bllthlaa Company. Second
. next week, as will all~he Democclou ""''"" J"'ld 01 -.roy, Oblo.
ratic delegates.
M-.: Tile Allo&lt;:iiiOII PreP, end the Ohio
Nc.Wiplper A~Kacial:ian.
.
A candidate needs ,034 dele~
1'06'I'MASI'Eib S&lt;tt4 tteldiCII cone&lt;:tlons ta
gate
votes to win the GOP n,omThe O-ily Sentinel, 111 Court St., P~meroy,
nlok) 45769
' \
. ination. Bush now has 170 dele~ 'i tnlscJumON RATES
i gates, McCai'n 105, a'nd Keyes 5.
• •
B~C.-rorMoiorRoole
The Democratic candidate needs
Ont Wett.l: ........................................c.. $2.00
Ont Mooth ........................... ................$8.10
2,170. Gore has 42 to Bradley's
Ont Year .....................................,...... $104.00
27.
SINGLE COPYNuCE
. :Sradley spent five days in WashDIUy .................:...............................Jl Cents
Sublcriblrt not dtlirinato p11y the Cltrler may
ington state campaisnfng for at
remit In advance direct to The Dally Sentinel
least
a strong showing ·m the prion albree,lix or 12 month b'a,sis. Credit will be:
. mary and a boost into next Tues~
i.fvcn caqier ~ week.
, 1
,No 11.1btcrlption by mail pemlutd In areu
day. Instead, he suffered his fourth
where home oariler scrvb II available .
loss.
·
·
Publl1her re.Crvet the .riJht to adj1111 rates
durin&amp; the au.blcrlptlon period. Subscription
He planned a 'fiv~-minute
iate thllfl".may be hnplcmcntcd by chanaibl national television ad Thursday
'ihe duntion of lhe aiM'\ prj~. ·
night on CBS .- ' but •e vgn before
MAIL SUIISCIUPfiONS'
the setback there was sp11culation
•
'·. loulde·MelpCoulr
he might drop out. Eric Hauser,
13W..u .............................................S27.JO
.
his spokesman, denied it,
26 Woek1 ............................................. ,3.82
52 W..U ...........................................SlllS-'6
Gore said .he had no ·advice for
Bradley.
"I amjust corwnunicat13\Voe~~..~-~~$29.25
ing with·the voters;• he laid.
26 W..lai ...:.,......................................,.Sll096.~
l2 Wocka ........................ ,.. ..............
' ••
, , Tlie competition now .,escalates
into the closest thing tara nation.al primary next week,
more

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POMERQY- Regular meeting of the Meigs County Agriculture
Society has been changed to Monday. March 13, at 7:30 p.m. at the
grange hall on the fairgrounds.

OIJanlratlonal meetlnc set

Granp to meet

CHESTER - Chester Youth Ball Association will have an organizational meeting on March 9 at 6:30 p.m. at the Chester Fire House.
Questions can be directed to Keith Wood at 985-4400.

POMEROY - Meigs County Porpona Grange 46 will meet on
Friday with a poduck supper beginning at 6:30 p.m. , followed by 'a
meeting at 7:30 p.m. Athens County Pomona Grange will visit and
bring the program.
All members are urged to attend.

Rutland trustees to 111eet

EMS logs 7 calls__

RUTLAND _:_ Rudand Township Trustees will meet in regular sessron-Molnlay;5-p~;-:it-rh-e-R-utbnd-FireSta!:loi!';"rollowed at 7 p.m.- Ey""
'!on open public meeting on the Logjam Removal Program available to
POMEROY - Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical
landowners along blue line streams. All interested persons are encour- Service recorded seven calls for assistance Tuesday. Units responding
aged to attend,
included:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
2:24 a.m., Hill Street, Pomeroy, Karen Lemley, Pleasant Valley Hospital;
•
SALEM qNTER - Star Grange 778 will meet in regular session
3:29 p.m., State Route 124, Pomeroy, Maccus Ward,Veterans MemoSaturday with a potluck supper at 6:30 p.m·. followed by a mei ting at rial Hospftal;
'
8 p.m. All members urged to attend.
7:14 p.m., Brownell Alley, Middleport, Kay McHaffie, VMH ;
I
. 9:04 p.m.,· Hudson, Street, Middleport, l(aren Gibbs, treated at the
scene;
RUTLAND
RACINE - Election Day dinner will be sei:ved at the Reorganized
8:08 a.m., Cotterill Road, Brenda Cotterill, VMH, Central Dispatch
Church of Je5us Christ of Latter Day Saints, County Road 35, near squad assisted;
.
Lebanon Township garage. Serving to begin at 11 a.m.·with menu to
3:37. p.m., Dexter, Bob White, Holzer .Medical Center;
include spagherti, soup, sandwiches, desserts and soft dFinks.
11:53 p.m., New Lima Road, Darlene Spangler, HMC.

Star Grange meeting

Election Day dinner set

Cleveland-based FirstEnergy, is on our side and that we're
Illinois Power, Southern Com- . doing exactly what the law
pany, and Southern Indiana Gas intended;' said Browner.
&amp;
Electric. EPA officials have
Under the · settlement, Tampa
fmmPageA1
flamPaaeA1
said" other companies may be Electric said it would phase out
said it will result in his utility added to the lawsuit.
coal burning and switch to natFeliciano encouraged local resburning 3 million fewer tons of
Spokesmen for both Southern ural gas at its Gannon Station by idents to participate in ·area
coal a year and bring cleaner air. Co. . and American Electric 2004, reducing nitrogen oxide cleanup projects including tire
Rami) disputed allegations of Power two of the largest emissions by 30,000 tons and annual Ohio River Sweep ih
past violations.
·
· companies involved in the law- sulfur dioxide releases by 60,000 June.
"We don't believe we've don suit - said the Tampa Electric tons, EPA said.
Wiggins explained how he
· anything wrong," he said in settlement has no bearing on · New pollution control mea- acquired the two buildings which
sures and installation, beginning have openings for different recy~
Tampa.
their litigation.
The agreement, announced
"We still believe very strong- in 2008, of more sophisticated clable materials. · Roller bins
joindy by the EPA and the Jus- ly that EPA's argoments are seri- technology to control nitrogen inside the.builclings allow for eas·
tice Department, marks the first ously
flawed,"
Southern oxide ·will lead a reduction of . ier unloading. ·
30,000 tons in the smog-causing
"This will do a wonderful job ·
break in an enforcement action spokesman Buddy Eller said.
announced last November that
AEP spokesman Pat.. Hemlepp . chemical by 2010, officiah said. for us!' Wiggins said, adding that •
targeted seven l)f .the country's said the Ohio-based utility feels The agreement also requires the · he hopes to put additional build~
largest coal-burning utilities ".no press\)re at all to reach any company to stop bypassing use ings throughout the CQunty, pa~
of scrubbers to cut sulfur diox- ticularly in Tuppers Plains.
from Florida to the Ohio Valley sort of a settlemen~.
c:;anfield said the buildings
and Midwest.
"We are confident we have a ide releases.
Tampa
Electric's
two
power
demonstrate
how rural recycling
Browner.' described the Tampa strong case and we haven't done
Electric settlement a break- anything wrong." Hernlepp said plants are small compared with programs often get more " bang .
through.
AEP has no negotiation· under some of the much larger coal- for the buck"· with their limited
· It "absolutely sends a message way with the EPA or the Justic~ . fired plants in the Ohio Valley, funding as opposed· to programs
but a 1998 report by the Nat'! r- in metropolitan areas. ·
to .the other companies," said · Department. ,.....
Browner. ·"We hope that the
The government contends the aJ Resource~ Defense. Council
other (utilities) will follow their companies installed· equipment called them among the •dirtiest
example."
and made illegal repairs designed in rate. of emission, or how .
She declined to say · whether to · expand power production much poll11tion is released, given
se.ttlement talks were under way, while failing to put in new pol- the power produ.ced.
Subscribe today.
In 1998, the Gannon plant
but industry and envirol'lmental lution
control
equipment
992·2156
sources said at least one of the required in mote modern power released 32.,700 tons of nitrogen
·
oxide
and
·the
Big
Bend
plant
six other utilities named in last plants under the 1990 Clean Air
November's lawsuit is actively Act. The utilities have denied 40,000 tons, putting them 29th .
·s howing interest in settling· the the charges and argue that the and 22nd among the 50 largest .
case.
changes at the plants amounted coal-burning . power plant polluters, according to ihe NRDC.
Those. six major utility com- to needed maintenance.
panies are Columbus, Ohio"With this settlement early in
based American Electric Power, the process without having to go
Cincinnati-based
Cinergy, to trial, we have proven the law

..

MORE LOCAL NEWS.'
MORE LOCAL FOLKS:

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than half of the delegates needed
to . win the nomination a_t each
party's convention this summer at
stake. Republicans have 613 delegates at stake in 13 states; Democrats have 1,315 in 15 ·states.
"This ra~e has just ,begun;'
Bradley claimed in San Francisco.
"March 7 is the takeoff time for
this campaigu." Gore holds a runaway lead in the California polls;
Bush is ahead there, too.
"We're still the underdog;'
McCain said in Bakersfield, Calif.
· "But we're going to win next
Tuesday."
Bush said winning Virginia "in
as convincing a fashion as I did"
should · help · in . the 1.1pcoming
contests, many of which bar participation by non-Republicans,
· which could hurt McCain.
McCain failed to repeat in Virgin~ what he had done i~ open
primaries in New Hampshire and
Michigan. In those states, he won
after appealing to independents
and Democrats who crossed ove~
in large numbers and voted . for
him. 1\vo-thlrds of the voters in
Virginia identified themselves as
Rep11blicans and, among them,
69 percent supported Bush,
··according to exit _polling .by ':'oter
News Service for The Assoctated
' Press and the television networks.

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Recyde

EPA

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DELI SLICED-~ BOILED HAM

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Rockwell- 45}4
RO Shell- 52~

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LIMIT 4

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General Electric-

=
(VSPS 213·!160)
= Co111mualty
NeWopaper H.oldlnp, Inc.
every aftenloon, Monday
jl

ROUNDY'S
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Premitlt

The D.Wy Sentinel

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16 oz.:

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1.1

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Gamett-~ .

111 , SIUif!n. Rex, who plays Mi~ey
on Nl'fV and as an actor m the
;: . adult;fJlm industry before turn~ : ing tu.series TV. • ..

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:TAVERN BONELESS HAMS: ·
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MARCH 2nd, 3rd, and
4th
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13 !. .
~ BorgWamer- 32 .
Champion .- 3"'•
Qlllrmln!J Shops - 6
City Holdlug 12~ ·
· Federal Mogul- 1s'lo
if. Flistar- 17.,

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1321'.

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r~·-29-'

Weathet foreca1t:
Tonight .. .Mosdy ·cloudy with
a chance of sprinkles.. .Then a
chance of snow flurries late. Lows
in the mid 30s. Northwest wind
10 to 20 mph.
'
. Thursday... Pardy.
cloudy.
Highs in the ffiid and upper 40s.
' Thursday night ... Pardy cloudy.
Lows in the mid and upper 20s.
Extended forecast:
Friday... Mos!fy cloudy with a
chance of rain. Highs in the
upper 50s. ·
·.
Saturday... Mosdy cloudy with
a chance of rain. Lows in the mid
30s and highs in ithe lower . arid
mid 50s.
· Sunday...)?ardy; cloudy. Lows in
the mid 30s and highs in mid 50s.

'-~-----~·----~----------------------------------S
T:o
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7:03

. BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

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' ParTUPPERS PLAINS - Eastern Local School District will hold
ent/Teacher conferences on Thursday from 4-7 p.m. Appointments
should be nude by calling the high school at 985-3329 or 985-3304.

WEATHER

:Wintry
conditions
will
return
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The Dally Sentinel • P8ge A 3

LOCAL NEWS IN BRIEF
Conferences set
Change In meetinc time

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GOLDEN RIPE
BANANAS

Pometoy,. Middleport, Ohio

DEATH NOTICES
Chattes A. ........

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: CO.L UMBUS (AP) - Four Democratic candidates for U.S. Sen~te are spending more time focusing on the man to beat in November than differences between themselves.
: At a forum on Thesday, the candidates offered similar views on a
Variety of issues, including expanding health insurance to uninsured
£hildren, preserving Medicare and social security. improving weiCare-co-work initiatives, and offering domestic partner benefits:
. : Dubbed a debate, the event was more a discussion of positions.
Candidates didn't target one another in their remarks but focused
¢n the need to oust incumbent Mike DeWine, a Republican.
: Tuesday's event, sponsored by the Columbus Metropolitan Club,
featured Ted Celeste; a rql estate broker and brother offormer Gov.
~chard Celeste; Richard Cordray, a lawyer and former state solicitor; Marvin McMickle, a minister and president of the . Shaker
.Heights school board; and Daniel Radakovich, a temp agency ·
worker.
·. After the event, Cordray and Celeste acknoWledged the similarity in·positions but denied it was a problem.
·
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Dems looklnc at big picture

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Dick &amp; Ruby Vaughan Invites You To Come In
Advantage ~~ Th••• Ex~,_ra Savings
Oldy At VAUGHAN'·s·SUPE·RMARKET In Mlddl~porf .:~.
THURSDAY····FRIDAY····SATURDIY

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LORAIN (AP) - An ambitious waterfront development is
expected to bring new economic life to this citj, which has lost
more than 16,000 heavy industry jobs in the last two decades.
Spitzer G~it · Lakes Ltd. Co. plans tobuild a housing and commereta! development on the site of a former shipyard in this city on
Lake Erie about 20 ffiiles west of Cleveland.
·
The goal is to give a much-needed boost to Lorain by attracting
empty-nesters and young professionals.
Years of cutbacks in the steel and automotive · industries hurt
Lorain's downtown, which still has a 40 percent vacancy rate, said
Mayor Craig Foltin.
·
·
"Our downtown has unfortunately been a ghost town;' Foltip
pid. "This project can definitely be an economic catalyst."
: The site of the new development once WllS occupied by George
Steinbrenner's American Shipbuilding Co., which built giant ore
!arrie!S and employed 1,700. But the shipyard shut down in the
early 1980s· and was purchased by auto dealer and developer Alan
~pitzer.
.
: Spitzer twice tried unsuccessfully to win voter approval for casi~o gambling on the 54-acre site, which sits along rhe east bank of
Che Black River as it runs through Lorain and into Lake Erie.
: A marina already is open, but now as many as 420 housing units
-:- including condominiums, townhouses and cottages - . will be
built starting in 2001, Cathy Murphy, director of real estate and
development for Spitzer Great Lakes, said Tues~.
; Murphy
said the developer is investing about $70 million in the
.
project
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Neighbors welcome aCtion against egg

BUCKEYE BRIEFS

•
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•

. Wednudey, Mllrch 1,2000

'

• The Dlllly 81ntiiMII

.Abou.t 20 percent of Virginia
voters described themselves as
Christian conservatives: and more
th~n 80 percent of them Voted for
Bush, die poll showed.
McCain harshly criticized two
Christian right leaders . Pat
Robertson and Jerry Falw,ell in a speech Monday in V:irginia
Beach .
McCain said rhe question for
Republicans is whether they ·
want someone who 'can win a
majority of all voters or one who
gets only GOP votes, which
wo'n 't be enough to win in
November.
·
"I'm 'not saying he can't win,
I'm saying I'm by far the stronger
candid~te; l McCain said:
Bush said McCain sounded like
a Democrat .
"It's important to . have sharp
distinctions;' he said. "We don't
need a candidate in a debate with
.AJ Gore who will not sound like
opponentS. They,will sound like a
ticket:'

- r·RIVIA
WWiam H. Macy, Felicity
Hlllfm¥, Clllnryo Manbelm
~p~d Krllten Johns&amp;on are all
members of the Atlantic Theater
Cornpl!lly.

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(lll!t)Linllo~ lbSIDII.· DAY
1111
7:211, 1:10
..iloftD~If/1 a..., Chase, Mli1l Witk
- . . ,... 7:11, t4l
((

Peart S~:reet
:M:lddJ.epo~ • . Ob.:lo
(740) 992-347·1

407

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&amp; 1'ort!IJe,r
Birdhouses, Roseville Pottery,
. New Spring Gard~n Decor, .
Hand Painted Flower Pots &amp; Crocks,
Personalizing Upon Request,
Special Orders Available

518 East Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio ·

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1·740-982·1181

Committee Person In Letart Township.
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Pd. For Bv The Caadidalo

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Re~uhlican Candidate For Centra~ ·

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7:11, . .

111
__,Keidl_
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All AGES, ALL TIMES 84.00

J()l'tf M'llllf

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lplllall) Meg Ryirl, llinl Keakri, Lla Kmw

PIICIIUCII

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~~~~~~ne~a~d:a~~~M~e~~~h~1~,!~~00~~~----------------------------------~Po~m~MN~O~~~M~~~~~~~~O~h~lo~----------------~------!Th~e~O~-~II~y~Se~nU~ne~I~·P~age~~A~5~

~A4

The Daily Sentinel

-~-NATIONAL
BRIEFS

W1dn•U,• M11d11, 2000

The Daily Seriti~el

.gA~~.

AT LEAST

EstablisMd in 1948
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992·2158 • Fax: llt2·2157

on Daytona Beach

•alt':l~~r ~-

WF2VE STILL

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP)
- For the past two decades, Ken
Porter has pulled his 1979 midnight blue Corvette onto the ·
beach' and watched the daily
parade of cars pass before him.
Not anymore.
Starting today, the dragsters,
dune buggies and other vehicles
that have been part of the city's
beaches for- nearly ,a Gentuty will
be banned from a one-mile strip in
the heart of the tourist district.
It's both an effort to clean up
Daytona Beach's racy reputation
and a condi\ion set by the developen of Ocean Wal~. a $200 million
condominium and retail development scheduled to open next year.
The developers believe that cars
cruising the beach lower property
values.
·
"They're gQing to ruin it;' said .
Porter, 46, as,., jle soaked up sun
from his lounge chair. "This is a
classic car and people show right
here, and they're taking it away."
Cruising the beach has been a
favorite pastime for many in this
__ci!)' of · 65,000, home to
NASCAR's Daytona 500. Cars,
trucks, golf carts and all-terrain
vehicles rumble along the . shore
daily, blasting music and leaving
cin:les in the sand.

2/J(J)

GOT BUCHANAN.

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

No more cars

stahler@fuse.net

ChartH W. Govey

Publllher ·

Charlene Hoeflich

R. Shawn Lewla
Manqlng EdHor

Ganeral Manager

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·-No..,....,-..,

n., dtDMJ4 bf kA IINit J0D ...,., A/1 ,..,. lll"'ld,/ltf
i1t Jt»i1 luU, MllnuU.f w.,,,, ut ,.,...,Hdn

lAftnw lfl tJ.. fllllllu, Uf rr•lcwM,

-~~

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Diane Hill
ControlIa!'

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J'U otMJofU upraswl bf lit• col..-. ~Jftow lilY tll•eOIUuuJU ofllu 0..\Wfq ,..,.,.,
Co.'lldikrill bnl, Hlftt odtnvite JUJ4d.

OUR VIEW:

Trashy
••

:•

,.•

Litter control.takes
·individual commitment

:w
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I.

e hear a lot fron1local candidate~ about doing more
about 1itter control. It's a concern that wears well
not only with politicians, but with the public as

•

well. '
!. For years, we've heard much talk and seen several programs
i
instituted to curb the amount of trash
along the roadways, str~ams and
woods.
·
•
The programs work, but a key item is
education.
Teaching people not to litter has
i·
been hammered at us since the 1960s.
Remember the touching TV spots fea• •
. .
turing Iron Eyes Cody with the tear
streaming from his eye? But being human and possessed of
!· failings, we continue to toss takeout bags, cigarette wrappers
1
and beer cans out on highways and rural roads ..
f Out of sight, out of mind, right? A convenient state of mind, .
but one that creates an unfortunate attitude of negligence, and ·
taking for granted what we have in the Ohio Valley.
Tripping down an isolated country road or through a patch
of woods is something we've become accustomed to, espe• cially during spring and fall. Som~ figure it's just always there
:: .for us to enjoy, and .because it's out in the middle of nowhere,
:: what's a little trash going to hurt? Paper's biodegradable, isn't
.· it?
::
Well, bit by bit, all that trash - as well as a fewjunk cars
:: . and discarded appliances -begin to pile up, and you've got
yourself a county full of scatter~d eyesores. It may not be hap.; pening in your back yard, but give it time. Probably the best
way of educating the publie is when all that ttash gets uncom,; fortably close to our homes and neigilborhoods.
Fortunately, people have begun .to appreciate our landscape
.• and environment. That's why civic improvement groups are
, trying to make a difference.
·
Spring cleanups, free dump days, an emphasis on recycling
t: and even the annual Ohio River Sweep are c,reating a cleaner
:: landscape. When you see people walkins along and picking up
:: : trash because they've "adopted" a stretch of road, !alee that as
:·: an inspiration to· keep the property and. roads you live on free
:: of debris.
.
·
.
·
1: All it takes is one person and a commitment to keeping an
~: area devoid of trash to make a more attractive neighborhood
::; - and a cleaner region.
I

;: It may not be
:.,, happening in
;: your back
yard, but give
it time. ·

&gt;.

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TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE AssociATED

McCain can dish it out, but he ~an 't really take ·it
There's so much that's attractive abouiJohn
McCain that one is sorely tempted to throw
in the sponge and call on the Republican
Parry to nominate the man.
His incontestable heroism as a prisoner of
war in Vietnam; his predominantly conservative voting record during 18 years :is a member of the House ·and Senate from Arizona; his
genial admission of his own flaws and mistakes; his unmistakable aura of candor, truthfulness and rectitude -· these are inunense
assets, and all too rare amol;lg mainsrieam
politicians.
No wonder that m~ny independents and
Democrats have been drawn into Re.publican
r.rimaries to vote for him. And I have no
doubt that, if nominated, he would be the best
inlaginable contrast to the sleaze and corruption that have become the hallmarks of the
Clinton-Gore administration.
Why, then, should we. hesitate? Why, among
Republican · members of the Senate, who
know him b~st, have 39 endorsed George W.
Bush and only four John McCain? You can be
spre that, if McCain · is nomil;uted, the
Democrats - however mi.tch they 'may have
enjoyed helping McCain· upend Bush in the
prinlaries - will turn · on him with the
venom and skill for which they 'are famous. If
there is anything negative to be said about
him, Republicans would be well advised to
learn about it now, while there's ·still time to
consider their options.
Some of it is purely personal - . which
won't keep the Gore c~paign from making
sure you .hear about it. It is tru~ that McCain,
on returning from Vietnam, divorced the wife
who had raised their" three children while he
was a prisoner . in Hanoi and married the
wealthy young lady who now campaigns at
his side. There are also rumors of various
extramarital affairs since his remarriage.
McCain has an appeaJing way of admitting

/. ·,' Miss USA pageant

-to be held In Gary, Ind.

!·

. . GARY, Itid. (AP) Glitz.
Glamour. Gary?
1· The city that once earned the
dubious distinction as being the
n;~tion 's murder capital and a longtinle symbol of urban decay will
host the Miss USA pageant for the
next three years, beginning next
· February.
·
Maureen Reidy, president of the
Miss Univene Organization that .
runs the pageant, said the 2001
pageant will give the crumbling ·
city a chance to show .off its .revi- ·
tali:iation efforts.
''There's a ·great story here to
tell. The city is thriving;• Reidy
said Tuesday. "With' our 50th
anniversary (next year), I don't
believe there's any place that's a
)&gt;e,tter backdrop for our show." ·
·.Gary paid $1.2 million for the
~tivilege and beat out I I other
cities. It probably helped to have .
Donald Trump on its side.
.

WASHINGTON MERRY...:GO-ROUND:

Take their word for it: Don'tjly cargo
.

ing cargo, how confident can I be that they .
will safely move me?
But such a question only' arises when we
. forget about division of labor, which by the
very nature of the concept implies that each
person or business should concentrate on
doing what it does best- the corollary being
that it is quite possible, eve.n probable, that a
company efficient in one eJ;~deavor can be
utterly inefficient .when it operates in another
endeavpr.
We tried S\'Yeral airlines.
They failed to put the cargo on planes
when there was time and space to do so, find
the cargo at its destination when it was there,
and release the cargo in a timely manner
because their hours ·o f opera.tion did not ·permit it. And on and on and on.
·
·
Dut who can blame them?
They are people movers. What this means is
that they ate in the business of transporti11g

'.

Douglas
Cohn ·

..

UFS COLUMNISTS

And because reactors . and expediters are
opposite sorts of people, they belong in differ· ent divisions oflabor.
·
That's the·rub.
The airlines, logically assuming that plag"!l
m6ving people should also be able to move
. cargo, endeavor to violate the division-dlabor principles by trying to make react~iS
sinlultaneously behave ·~ expediters.
::
It cannot be done, and that is why they lc:ise
our cargo and your luggage.
Then again, the opposite might not be
true. Expediten might just be able t&lt;;&gt; behave
a;o reactors, which means we could follow die
late humorist Lewis Griuard's advice and"~
cargo:•
·
":
After all, as he not~s, when have you
heard of a cargi'l-plane crashing?
. ·'· ,

cargo,

•{' ~

•1Nnl
t•
710

Ave., Gllllpol61, Ohio
1141• Pill: Ul 3001

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111 COUrt IL; Pol'*ia Ohio 1 ,
7-2'1 ... """
-2117 ..
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COLA&amp;
MT. DEW ·
PRODUCTS,
DR PEPPER

P0 WE L1 'S
.....,,.
ROMHOUIS

Mondtiythru
Sv1dtiy

2 LITERS

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMn QUANTIDES
PRICES GOOD THRU MARCH 4, 2000

WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

MT. DEW, DR.

DOUBLE
'

PEPPER, 7 UP,
ORANGE SLICE,
~ MUG ROOT BEER,
LIPTON BRISK

3/$

PARK RIDGE, NJ. (AP) ~Qny .Electronics Inc. has issued ~
global recall of 415,000 battery.
.iSa~ks designed for use in its cam&lt;:orders, ~ortable QVD playen and
other devt . :
•,-'Three of
packs ovemeated or
SIJIOked du . g recharging, Sony
laid thi1 week. The company said
~~~ problem stenuned from a mal.ru,nclioning .welding machine that
t~used a crack in the seal cap on
battery cells:
1
;No injuries have been repotted,
~11Y said, bur overhe~ting ba:ttezy
~leks could cause burns.
·
· 'Sony said it is offering free 1•
replacements for InfoLithium bat·l!'ry. packs with model numbers
NP-F750 and NP-F550 made in
Ja~ between March and June last

year.

.

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BOSTON BUn PORK

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extravagances through the illicit smuggling
of gas and oil outside the oil-for-food program allowed under the sanctions by the
United Nations.
The smuggling operations, Rubin said,
have "reached the unprecedented level of
I 00,000 barrels per day, which puts more
than $25 million into the hands ofSaddam's
regime."
Rubin used the presentation to counter
critics who maintain the. U.N. sanctions are
causing widespread suffering by ordinary
Iraqi&amp;-- ---~~-

'

.

thinking cargo. People,' unlike inanimate
boxes, luggage and the li)te, can assist their
movers.
They can tranSfer from plane to plane, make
·new plans if a flight is canceled and raise
strenuous objestions when they are bump.ed.
Airline employees, on the other hand, are
geared 'to rumdling such cargo. In the true
spirit of diviSion of labor, these employees are
reacton.
·
They react to the requests and deman'lls of
their tJtinking cargo.
Inanimate
h0wew:r1requires a differ-.
ent so~ of handling, a different sort of
employee. It requires the wcirk of an expe(Politif&lt;!l correspondent EleatWrCiift contri,;ttp
diter, a person who acts rather than reacts to to this piece. jack Anderson and Douglas Cohn ·in·e
move the cargo along.
·
columnist.! for United Feature Syndical~.)

YOUR OPINIONS COUNT. DROP US ALINE.
,

Theyfailed to put the cargo on ,
planes when there was time and ·
. space to do so,.find the cargo at its
.destination when it was there; and'
release the cargo in a timely man~er
because their hours of operation did
not,permit it.
..

Anderson
&amp;

one in Tikrit, his hometown, in a sprawling
"The regime in Baghdad is consuming
four-square mile area.All told there are nine more than I 0,000 bottles of whiskey,
such palac~ at various ~tages of construc- 350,000 cans of beer and 700 bottles of
tion, he said.
wine per week;' Rubin said. He based the
These p:Wc~ cost billions of dollars, estimates on declassified aerial photographs,
money which the government of Iraq some ~f which he diSplayed at a bdefing.
could and should be spending on the needs
Alcoholic beverages generally are sold
of the Iraqi people, he said.
openly in Iraq at special stores for private
In addition, R.ubin said, Iraqi establish- consumption, although apparently for
ment leaders have been on a drinking binge domestic political reasons Saddam banned.
as demonstrated by the arriV2! aboard con- · them a few years ago in hotels and restau- .
tainer ships of large quantities of whiskey rants.
and smaller amounts of beer and wine._..
Rubin said Iraq.has been financing such .

·-·

Rusher

Jack

WASHINGTON (AP) - Saddam Hussein is a "mad dictator" with a penchant for
building palaces, keeping whiskey-swilling
subordinates happy - and ignoring the
needs of the lrnqi people.
This was the unflattering description of
the Iraqi leader Tuesday by State Department spokesman James P Rubin, who
scoffed at the notion that U.N. sanctions are
responsible for humanitarian suffering in
Iraq.
Sad,dam has been busy building palaces,
Rubin said,
in B~hdad and
- including- five
..•

12 PI 12 OZ. CIIS

'!, : LAS VEGAS (AP) -· A Florida .
•1 !JlUrder suspect who heard he
.,)'Vould be featured on "America's
, Most Wanted" was arrested at a Las
,,V~gas house as he watched the
. tdevision show.
,•&lt; Richard Garber, who·. is named
· o.n a murder warrant from Fort
Lauderdale, Fla.,was nabbed Satur•,day after police found him hiding
.,jn the shower.
· . "He had information that Jed
•him to believe he was geing to .be
on the show· in the next C!Juple of
weeks," Sgt. Alfredo Cervantes said.
. ~'If he was on there, he most likely
_.would have t:t:ied to change his
'
"
.appearance.
..
;, Garber didn't make Saturday's
· show, but his story was to have
·.\leen featured in the coming weeks ·
. pr months, said Avery Mann, a
,spokesman for the Fox program.
. .·· .. Garber, 54, was being held ~th­
' opt bail pending an extradition
hearing. Two Broward Counry
'..detectives were in Las Vegas on
.Monday to interview him about
, the July 1999 beating death of
1J.a.nio Moraes.

William A.

WASHINGTON - · Ever tried to use the
airlines to move cargo? If you 'haven't, take
one businessman's advice: don't.
As it turns ou.t - aild in keeping with the
historic tenets of division of labor - people
m~n are not cargo .movers.
In fact, companies involved in the ongoing
and losing proposition of moving cargo with
people-moving airlines sooner. or later ask the
queStion: If they do such a poor job of mov-

campaign against Saddam, Iraq

/: =~c;:u=

cy to indulge in some pretty rank demagogy.
He criticized Bush's proposal for a substantial
across-tjle-board tax cut because it included.
"tax cuts for the rich" (inevitably, since they
pay by far the largest share of all income
taxes). He has inveighed constantly against
unnamed "special interests," appealing to that .
streak of .paranoia in voters that always suspects somebody else is getting away with
murder. (In fact, we are all "special interests"
- none more so that the elderly, who constiNEA COLUMNIST
tute the largest and most rapacious special
interest of them all.) He· has promised the
yQung that he will "give the country back to
(and repenting) his misdeeds, but you can them," though just what this means, and how
count on the Democrats to compare he proposes to do it, is, to say. the least,
McCain.'s marital saga with the marriage ofAI unclear.
·and Tipper Gore.
·
·'finally, there is growing evidence ihat SenFar more serious, in terms of,his qualifica- ator. McCain sinlply doesn't respond well to
tions to be president, are the indications that opposition. Exhibit A was his sparling "c6.athere is something a little flaky - or, if you cession" speech after his defeat in the South
prefer, erra'tic - about John McCain. Every Caro~na primary. This seems to be the trait his
now and then, despite his generally conserva- #llow senaton have noticed and fear th'e
tive record, McCain· goes off on some spec- most. In a president, who niust be forever
tacular tangent that is anything but conserva- negotiating with Congress, not to mention
tive:The most notable of these, of coune, is his foreign countries, an inability to tolerate
support for the wildly misnamed "campaign opposition would be a potentially serious
,
finance reform" bill,. which would cripple weakness.
Republican efforts to fund their campaigns . All of these defects will be spotlighted, and
with corporate contributions. while leaving magnified, if Senator McCain is the Republilabor pnions and the liberal media free to can nominee. 'The drumbeat of accusations
back Democrats to the hilt. Not surprisingly, against hi~ - both true and false - will
McCain is almost alone among Republican · inounr to a crescendo as Election Day
senators in favoring this "reform." (The approaches. Many of the independents, and
Democrats, of course, are solidly for it.)
practically all of the Democrats, who are' vqtThen there· was McCain's support for a ing for .him in the Republican primaries in
huge ($516 billion) cigarette tax, which wcitild the fint flush of enthusiasm will decide that
have fallen in large part on low-income they had better stick with AI Gore after ill. ·
smokers. Again, he was opposed - and' And Republicans ~ · wish they had been
defeated- by his o.wn Republican colleagues allowed to choose their own nominee.
in the Senate.
. (William A. Rusher is a Distinguished Fellow
More recently. during his campaign against of the Claremont Institute for the Study of States·
Governor Bush, McC:un has shown a tenden- manship and PolitiCJJI Philosophy.)

..

Pitas

,. • Today is Wednesday, March 1, the 61st day of 2000. There are 30S
·· days left in the year.
·
Today's Highlight in History:
.
..
On March 1, 1932, the infant son of Charles and Anne lindbergh
.. ;: was kidnapped from the family home near Hopewell, NJ. (Remains
:: identified as those of the baby were found the following May.)
•,.·
On this date:
"
In 1781, the Continental Congress adopted the Articles of Con. federation.
·
··
.In 1790, Congress authorized the first U.S. Census.
·:·
In 1845, President Tyler signed a congressional resolution to annex
.. :: the Republic ofTe:cis.
.
::
In 1864, Rebecca Lee became the first black woman to receive an
·~ Americ:ln medical degree, from the New England Female Medical
·
College in Boston.
In 1867, Nebraska became the 37th state.
.
In 1872, Congress authorized creation of Yellowstone National
_ Park.
.
:
In 1940, "Native Son'' by Richard Wright was first published.
In 1954, Puerto Rican nationalists opened fire from the gallery of
the U.S. House of Representatives, wounding five congressmen.
In 1961, President Kennedy established the Peace Corps.
In 1981,. 1rish Republican Army member Bobby Sands began a
hunger strike at the Maze Prison in Northern Ireland; he; died 65 days
later.
.
:. · Five yean ago: Somalia mmtiamen loyal to warlord Mohamed Far• rah Aidid seized control of the Mogadishu airport after peackeepen
withdrew. flt the 37th annual Grammy Awards in Los Angeles, Sheryl
Crow won record of the year for "Alii Wanna .Oo" while Tony Ben• nett's "MTV Unplugged" was named best album.
,;
Today's .Birthdays: Actor Robert Clary is 74. Singer Harry Bela,
• fonte is 73. Former U.S. Solicitor Genetal Robert H.Bork is 73".Actor
: Robert .Conrad is 65.Author Ju(iith Rossner is 65. Rock singer Mike
• D' Abo (Manfred Mann) is 56. Senator John Breaux (0-La.) is .'i6.
: Rock singer Roger· Daltrey is 56. Actor Dirk Benedict is 55.. Actpr
: Alan Thicke is 53. Actor-director Ron Howard is 46. Actress Cather; ine Bach.is 46..Counrry s'ngerJanis Gill (Sweethearts oftheRodeo)
: is 46. Actor Tim D~y is 44:Singer-musidan Jon CaflOll is 43. Rock
: musician Bill Leen is 38. Actor RusseU Wong is 37. Actor John David
:~Cullum is 34.Actor Mark-Paul Gosselaar is 26.

.,

I

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~~~~~~ne~a~d:a~~~M~e~~~h~1~,!~~00~~~----------------------------------~Po~m~MN~O~~~M~~~~~~~~O~h~lo~----------------~------!Th~e~O~-~II~y~Se~nU~ne~I~·P~age~~A~5~

~A4

The Daily Sentinel

-~-NATIONAL
BRIEFS

W1dn•U,• M11d11, 2000

The Daily Seriti~el

.gA~~.

AT LEAST

EstablisMd in 1948
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992·2158 • Fax: llt2·2157

on Daytona Beach

•alt':l~~r ~-

WF2VE STILL

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP)
- For the past two decades, Ken
Porter has pulled his 1979 midnight blue Corvette onto the ·
beach' and watched the daily
parade of cars pass before him.
Not anymore.
Starting today, the dragsters,
dune buggies and other vehicles
that have been part of the city's
beaches for- nearly ,a Gentuty will
be banned from a one-mile strip in
the heart of the tourist district.
It's both an effort to clean up
Daytona Beach's racy reputation
and a condi\ion set by the developen of Ocean Wal~. a $200 million
condominium and retail development scheduled to open next year.
The developers believe that cars
cruising the beach lower property
values.
·
"They're gQing to ruin it;' said .
Porter, 46, as,., jle soaked up sun
from his lounge chair. "This is a
classic car and people show right
here, and they're taking it away."
Cruising the beach has been a
favorite pastime for many in this
__ci!)' of · 65,000, home to
NASCAR's Daytona 500. Cars,
trucks, golf carts and all-terrain
vehicles rumble along the . shore
daily, blasting music and leaving
cin:les in the sand.

2/J(J)

GOT BUCHANAN.

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

No more cars

stahler@fuse.net

ChartH W. Govey

Publllher ·

Charlene Hoeflich

R. Shawn Lewla
Manqlng EdHor

Ganeral Manager

..
;.-

.. -

'

.'

·-No..,....,-..,

n., dtDMJ4 bf kA IINit J0D ...,., A/1 ,..,. lll"'ld,/ltf
i1t Jt»i1 luU, MllnuU.f w.,,,, ut ,.,...,Hdn

lAftnw lfl tJ.. fllllllu, Uf rr•lcwM,

-~~

...

Diane Hill
ControlIa!'

...-.,. _ .. n.•• ..., ...,..._oii4,.,.,"P••

H pUIUW Lt111r7 11ttndd k
J'U otMJofU upraswl bf lit• col..-. ~Jftow lilY tll•eOIUuuJU ofllu 0..\Wfq ,..,.,.,
Co.'lldikrill bnl, Hlftt odtnvite JUJ4d.

OUR VIEW:

Trashy
••

:•

,.•

Litter control.takes
·individual commitment

:w
' ..

' ~--..,

~

~.
•'

I.

e hear a lot fron1local candidate~ about doing more
about 1itter control. It's a concern that wears well
not only with politicians, but with the public as

•

well. '
!. For years, we've heard much talk and seen several programs
i
instituted to curb the amount of trash
along the roadways, str~ams and
woods.
·
•
The programs work, but a key item is
education.
Teaching people not to litter has
i·
been hammered at us since the 1960s.
Remember the touching TV spots fea• •
. .
turing Iron Eyes Cody with the tear
streaming from his eye? But being human and possessed of
!· failings, we continue to toss takeout bags, cigarette wrappers
1
and beer cans out on highways and rural roads ..
f Out of sight, out of mind, right? A convenient state of mind, .
but one that creates an unfortunate attitude of negligence, and ·
taking for granted what we have in the Ohio Valley.
Tripping down an isolated country road or through a patch
of woods is something we've become accustomed to, espe• cially during spring and fall. Som~ figure it's just always there
:: .for us to enjoy, and .because it's out in the middle of nowhere,
:: what's a little trash going to hurt? Paper's biodegradable, isn't
.· it?
::
Well, bit by bit, all that trash - as well as a fewjunk cars
:: . and discarded appliances -begin to pile up, and you've got
yourself a county full of scatter~d eyesores. It may not be hap.; pening in your back yard, but give it time. Probably the best
way of educating the publie is when all that ttash gets uncom,; fortably close to our homes and neigilborhoods.
Fortunately, people have begun .to appreciate our landscape
.• and environment. That's why civic improvement groups are
, trying to make a difference.
·
Spring cleanups, free dump days, an emphasis on recycling
t: and even the annual Ohio River Sweep are c,reating a cleaner
:: landscape. When you see people walkins along and picking up
:: : trash because they've "adopted" a stretch of road, !alee that as
:·: an inspiration to· keep the property and. roads you live on free
:: of debris.
.
·
.
·
1: All it takes is one person and a commitment to keeping an
~: area devoid of trash to make a more attractive neighborhood
::; - and a cleaner region.
I

;: It may not be
:.,, happening in
;: your back
yard, but give
it time. ·

&gt;.

&lt;. ------------------'----••

::,.
,.
'.
,.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE AssociATED

McCain can dish it out, but he ~an 't really take ·it
There's so much that's attractive abouiJohn
McCain that one is sorely tempted to throw
in the sponge and call on the Republican
Parry to nominate the man.
His incontestable heroism as a prisoner of
war in Vietnam; his predominantly conservative voting record during 18 years :is a member of the House ·and Senate from Arizona; his
genial admission of his own flaws and mistakes; his unmistakable aura of candor, truthfulness and rectitude -· these are inunense
assets, and all too rare amol;lg mainsrieam
politicians.
No wonder that m~ny independents and
Democrats have been drawn into Re.publican
r.rimaries to vote for him. And I have no
doubt that, if nominated, he would be the best
inlaginable contrast to the sleaze and corruption that have become the hallmarks of the
Clinton-Gore administration.
Why, then, should we. hesitate? Why, among
Republican · members of the Senate, who
know him b~st, have 39 endorsed George W.
Bush and only four John McCain? You can be
spre that, if McCain · is nomil;uted, the
Democrats - however mi.tch they 'may have
enjoyed helping McCain· upend Bush in the
prinlaries - will turn · on him with the
venom and skill for which they 'are famous. If
there is anything negative to be said about
him, Republicans would be well advised to
learn about it now, while there's ·still time to
consider their options.
Some of it is purely personal - . which
won't keep the Gore c~paign from making
sure you .hear about it. It is tru~ that McCain,
on returning from Vietnam, divorced the wife
who had raised their" three children while he
was a prisoner . in Hanoi and married the
wealthy young lady who now campaigns at
his side. There are also rumors of various
extramarital affairs since his remarriage.
McCain has an appeaJing way of admitting

/. ·,' Miss USA pageant

-to be held In Gary, Ind.

!·

. . GARY, Itid. (AP) Glitz.
Glamour. Gary?
1· The city that once earned the
dubious distinction as being the
n;~tion 's murder capital and a longtinle symbol of urban decay will
host the Miss USA pageant for the
next three years, beginning next
· February.
·
Maureen Reidy, president of the
Miss Univene Organization that .
runs the pageant, said the 2001
pageant will give the crumbling ·
city a chance to show .off its .revi- ·
tali:iation efforts.
''There's a ·great story here to
tell. The city is thriving;• Reidy
said Tuesday. "With' our 50th
anniversary (next year), I don't
believe there's any place that's a
)&gt;e,tter backdrop for our show." ·
·.Gary paid $1.2 million for the
~tivilege and beat out I I other
cities. It probably helped to have .
Donald Trump on its side.
.

WASHINGTON MERRY...:GO-ROUND:

Take their word for it: Don'tjly cargo
.

ing cargo, how confident can I be that they .
will safely move me?
But such a question only' arises when we
. forget about division of labor, which by the
very nature of the concept implies that each
person or business should concentrate on
doing what it does best- the corollary being
that it is quite possible, eve.n probable, that a
company efficient in one eJ;~deavor can be
utterly inefficient .when it operates in another
endeavpr.
We tried S\'Yeral airlines.
They failed to put the cargo on planes
when there was time and space to do so, find
the cargo at its destination when it was there,
and release the cargo in a timely manner
because their hours ·o f opera.tion did not ·permit it. And on and on and on.
·
·
Dut who can blame them?
They are people movers. What this means is
that they ate in the business of transporti11g

'.

Douglas
Cohn ·

..

UFS COLUMNISTS

And because reactors . and expediters are
opposite sorts of people, they belong in differ· ent divisions oflabor.
·
That's the·rub.
The airlines, logically assuming that plag"!l
m6ving people should also be able to move
. cargo, endeavor to violate the division-dlabor principles by trying to make react~iS
sinlultaneously behave ·~ expediters.
::
It cannot be done, and that is why they lc:ise
our cargo and your luggage.
Then again, the opposite might not be
true. Expediten might just be able t&lt;;&gt; behave
a;o reactors, which means we could follow die
late humorist Lewis Griuard's advice and"~
cargo:•
·
":
After all, as he not~s, when have you
heard of a cargi'l-plane crashing?
. ·'· ,

cargo,

•{' ~

•1Nnl
t•
710

Ave., Gllllpol61, Ohio
1141• Pill: Ul 3001

'i

.
.
I,
111 COUrt IL; Pol'*ia Ohio 1 ,
7-2'1 ... """
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COLA&amp;
MT. DEW ·
PRODUCTS,
DR PEPPER

P0 WE L1 'S
.....,,.
ROMHOUIS

Mondtiythru
Sv1dtiy

2 LITERS

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMn QUANTIDES
PRICES GOOD THRU MARCH 4, 2000

WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

MT. DEW, DR.

DOUBLE
'

PEPPER, 7 UP,
ORANGE SLICE,
~ MUG ROOT BEER,
LIPTON BRISK

3/$

PARK RIDGE, NJ. (AP) ~Qny .Electronics Inc. has issued ~
global recall of 415,000 battery.
.iSa~ks designed for use in its cam&lt;:orders, ~ortable QVD playen and
other devt . :
•,-'Three of
packs ovemeated or
SIJIOked du . g recharging, Sony
laid thi1 week. The company said
~~~ problem stenuned from a mal.ru,nclioning .welding machine that
t~used a crack in the seal cap on
battery cells:
1
;No injuries have been repotted,
~11Y said, bur overhe~ting ba:ttezy
~leks could cause burns.
·
· 'Sony said it is offering free 1•
replacements for InfoLithium bat·l!'ry. packs with model numbers
NP-F750 and NP-F550 made in
Ja~ between March and June last

year.

.

C

BOSTON BUn PORK

99
$ . 19
Style Ribs •••••••• ~~ .• 1
$ .19
Stea k••.•...~•...••...•v-. 1
$
Roast ••••••••••••~ •••• !~·••

FRESH

P~RK

STEAK OR COUNTRY .

U~DA BONELESS BEEF CHUCK

FRESH CENTER CUT .

·. .

Pork ,Chops ••••• J~.

$199
. .

8
9
C
Breast •••••••••••• ~~.
.

SPLIT CHICKEN .

.
129
Bacon ••••••••• ~'.o:t:i.
.
CHUCK WAGON

$149
....

USDA BONELESS CHUCK

.. .
RoasI ••••••••••••••••••

:

.
ogna •••••~·········

ARMOUR ·SLICED

·

.

$ 19
......

2/$3
Potatoes••••~••••~ •••
PARDY .
.
.
$139
d•••••••••••••••••••
·
S~trtta
UNITED VALLEY BELL LOW FAT . $199
(reg or light) 3 lba

. ,.... 21SJ
k .............
(12olo) . .

.

.

NABISCO ~REO SANDWIC~- .

.

2/$5
.

Cook1es .•..•••..•••••.•• . .

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extravagances through the illicit smuggling
of gas and oil outside the oil-for-food program allowed under the sanctions by the
United Nations.
The smuggling operations, Rubin said,
have "reached the unprecedented level of
I 00,000 barrels per day, which puts more
than $25 million into the hands ofSaddam's
regime."
Rubin used the presentation to counter
critics who maintain the. U.N. sanctions are
causing widespread suffering by ordinary
Iraqi&amp;-- ---~~-

'

.

thinking cargo. People,' unlike inanimate
boxes, luggage and the li)te, can assist their
movers.
They can tranSfer from plane to plane, make
·new plans if a flight is canceled and raise
strenuous objestions when they are bump.ed.
Airline employees, on the other hand, are
geared 'to rumdling such cargo. In the true
spirit of diviSion of labor, these employees are
reacton.
·
They react to the requests and deman'lls of
their tJtinking cargo.
Inanimate
h0wew:r1requires a differ-.
ent so~ of handling, a different sort of
employee. It requires the wcirk of an expe(Politif&lt;!l correspondent EleatWrCiift contri,;ttp
diter, a person who acts rather than reacts to to this piece. jack Anderson and Douglas Cohn ·in·e
move the cargo along.
·
columnist.! for United Feature Syndical~.)

YOUR OPINIONS COUNT. DROP US ALINE.
,

Theyfailed to put the cargo on ,
planes when there was time and ·
. space to do so,.find the cargo at its
.destination when it was there; and'
release the cargo in a timely man~er
because their hours of operation did
not,permit it.
..

Anderson
&amp;

one in Tikrit, his hometown, in a sprawling
"The regime in Baghdad is consuming
four-square mile area.All told there are nine more than I 0,000 bottles of whiskey,
such palac~ at various ~tages of construc- 350,000 cans of beer and 700 bottles of
tion, he said.
wine per week;' Rubin said. He based the
These p:Wc~ cost billions of dollars, estimates on declassified aerial photographs,
money which the government of Iraq some ~f which he diSplayed at a bdefing.
could and should be spending on the needs
Alcoholic beverages generally are sold
of the Iraqi people, he said.
openly in Iraq at special stores for private
In addition, R.ubin said, Iraqi establish- consumption, although apparently for
ment leaders have been on a drinking binge domestic political reasons Saddam banned.
as demonstrated by the arriV2! aboard con- · them a few years ago in hotels and restau- .
tainer ships of large quantities of whiskey rants.
and smaller amounts of beer and wine._..
Rubin said Iraq.has been financing such .

·-·

Rusher

Jack

WASHINGTON (AP) - Saddam Hussein is a "mad dictator" with a penchant for
building palaces, keeping whiskey-swilling
subordinates happy - and ignoring the
needs of the lrnqi people.
This was the unflattering description of
the Iraqi leader Tuesday by State Department spokesman James P Rubin, who
scoffed at the notion that U.N. sanctions are
responsible for humanitarian suffering in
Iraq.
Sad,dam has been busy building palaces,
Rubin said,
in B~hdad and
- including- five
..•

12 PI 12 OZ. CIIS

'!, : LAS VEGAS (AP) -· A Florida .
•1 !JlUrder suspect who heard he
.,)'Vould be featured on "America's
, Most Wanted" was arrested at a Las
,,V~gas house as he watched the
. tdevision show.
,•&lt; Richard Garber, who·. is named
· o.n a murder warrant from Fort
Lauderdale, Fla.,was nabbed Satur•,day after police found him hiding
.,jn the shower.
· . "He had information that Jed
•him to believe he was geing to .be
on the show· in the next C!Juple of
weeks," Sgt. Alfredo Cervantes said.
. ~'If he was on there, he most likely
_.would have t:t:ied to change his
'
"
.appearance.
..
;, Garber didn't make Saturday's
· show, but his story was to have
·.\leen featured in the coming weeks ·
. pr months, said Avery Mann, a
,spokesman for the Fox program.
. .·· .. Garber, 54, was being held ~th­
' opt bail pending an extradition
hearing. Two Broward Counry
'..detectives were in Las Vegas on
.Monday to interview him about
, the July 1999 beating death of
1J.a.nio Moraes.

William A.

WASHINGTON - · Ever tried to use the
airlines to move cargo? If you 'haven't, take
one businessman's advice: don't.
As it turns ou.t - aild in keeping with the
historic tenets of division of labor - people
m~n are not cargo .movers.
In fact, companies involved in the ongoing
and losing proposition of moving cargo with
people-moving airlines sooner. or later ask the
queStion: If they do such a poor job of mov-

campaign against Saddam, Iraq

/: =~c;:u=

cy to indulge in some pretty rank demagogy.
He criticized Bush's proposal for a substantial
across-tjle-board tax cut because it included.
"tax cuts for the rich" (inevitably, since they
pay by far the largest share of all income
taxes). He has inveighed constantly against
unnamed "special interests," appealing to that .
streak of .paranoia in voters that always suspects somebody else is getting away with
murder. (In fact, we are all "special interests"
- none more so that the elderly, who constiNEA COLUMNIST
tute the largest and most rapacious special
interest of them all.) He· has promised the
yQung that he will "give the country back to
(and repenting) his misdeeds, but you can them," though just what this means, and how
count on the Democrats to compare he proposes to do it, is, to say. the least,
McCain.'s marital saga with the marriage ofAI unclear.
·and Tipper Gore.
·
·'finally, there is growing evidence ihat SenFar more serious, in terms of,his qualifica- ator. McCain sinlply doesn't respond well to
tions to be president, are the indications that opposition. Exhibit A was his sparling "c6.athere is something a little flaky - or, if you cession" speech after his defeat in the South
prefer, erra'tic - about John McCain. Every Caro~na primary. This seems to be the trait his
now and then, despite his generally conserva- #llow senaton have noticed and fear th'e
tive record, McCain· goes off on some spec- most. In a president, who niust be forever
tacular tangent that is anything but conserva- negotiating with Congress, not to mention
tive:The most notable of these, of coune, is his foreign countries, an inability to tolerate
support for the wildly misnamed "campaign opposition would be a potentially serious
,
finance reform" bill,. which would cripple weakness.
Republican efforts to fund their campaigns . All of these defects will be spotlighted, and
with corporate contributions. while leaving magnified, if Senator McCain is the Republilabor pnions and the liberal media free to can nominee. 'The drumbeat of accusations
back Democrats to the hilt. Not surprisingly, against hi~ - both true and false - will
McCain is almost alone among Republican · inounr to a crescendo as Election Day
senators in favoring this "reform." (The approaches. Many of the independents, and
Democrats, of course, are solidly for it.)
practically all of the Democrats, who are' vqtThen there· was McCain's support for a ing for .him in the Republican primaries in
huge ($516 billion) cigarette tax, which wcitild the fint flush of enthusiasm will decide that
have fallen in large part on low-income they had better stick with AI Gore after ill. ·
smokers. Again, he was opposed - and' And Republicans ~ · wish they had been
defeated- by his o.wn Republican colleagues allowed to choose their own nominee.
in the Senate.
. (William A. Rusher is a Distinguished Fellow
More recently. during his campaign against of the Claremont Institute for the Study of States·
Governor Bush, McC:un has shown a tenden- manship and PolitiCJJI Philosophy.)

..

Pitas

,. • Today is Wednesday, March 1, the 61st day of 2000. There are 30S
·· days left in the year.
·
Today's Highlight in History:
.
..
On March 1, 1932, the infant son of Charles and Anne lindbergh
.. ;: was kidnapped from the family home near Hopewell, NJ. (Remains
:: identified as those of the baby were found the following May.)
•,.·
On this date:
"
In 1781, the Continental Congress adopted the Articles of Con. federation.
·
··
.In 1790, Congress authorized the first U.S. Census.
·:·
In 1845, President Tyler signed a congressional resolution to annex
.. :: the Republic ofTe:cis.
.
::
In 1864, Rebecca Lee became the first black woman to receive an
·~ Americ:ln medical degree, from the New England Female Medical
·
College in Boston.
In 1867, Nebraska became the 37th state.
.
In 1872, Congress authorized creation of Yellowstone National
_ Park.
.
:
In 1940, "Native Son'' by Richard Wright was first published.
In 1954, Puerto Rican nationalists opened fire from the gallery of
the U.S. House of Representatives, wounding five congressmen.
In 1961, President Kennedy established the Peace Corps.
In 1981,. 1rish Republican Army member Bobby Sands began a
hunger strike at the Maze Prison in Northern Ireland; he; died 65 days
later.
.
:. · Five yean ago: Somalia mmtiamen loyal to warlord Mohamed Far• rah Aidid seized control of the Mogadishu airport after peackeepen
withdrew. flt the 37th annual Grammy Awards in Los Angeles, Sheryl
Crow won record of the year for "Alii Wanna .Oo" while Tony Ben• nett's "MTV Unplugged" was named best album.
,;
Today's .Birthdays: Actor Robert Clary is 74. Singer Harry Bela,
• fonte is 73. Former U.S. Solicitor Genetal Robert H.Bork is 73".Actor
: Robert .Conrad is 65.Author Ju(iith Rossner is 65. Rock singer Mike
• D' Abo (Manfred Mann) is 56. Senator John Breaux (0-La.) is .'i6.
: Rock singer Roger· Daltrey is 56. Actor Dirk Benedict is 55.. Actpr
: Alan Thicke is 53. Actor-director Ron Howard is 46. Actress Cather; ine Bach.is 46..Counrry s'ngerJanis Gill (Sweethearts oftheRodeo)
: is 46. Actor Tim D~y is 44:Singer-musidan Jon CaflOll is 43. Rock
: musician Bill Leen is 38. Actor RusseU Wong is 37. Actor John David
:~Cullum is 34.Actor Mark-Paul Gosselaar is 26.

.,

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NEW YORK (AP)
- Next up for Regis
Philbin: "Who Wants
to Be Kathie Lee?'"
His daytime partner
for the past 15 years,
Kathie Lee Gifford,
surprised viewers of
"live with Regis &amp;
Kathie Lee" on Tues... . Qlfflllnl
day
with
. the
e--,.IIIUl'OOrtCCJnei:tW:hat:-stte quitting -this

Dear Ann Landen: "Rebecca in
Mississippi" wrote th'at her husband continues to give money to his grown
l:laughter, "Linda." The girl calls every
month crying about some financial
emergency or another, and her father
sends a check immediately. You told
Rebecca the problem isn't financial, it's
emotional, and that it's her husband's
ADVICE
problem, not hers.
Ann, you a~e wrong. The problem is
also financial, which means it is Rebec- overindulge their children because they
~~ ca's problem as well. She's his wife, feel guilty about not staying in the marremember? Both Rebecca and her hus" . riage. 'This is what I call "unearned
. band should make sure they have a will guilt" I almost married the sweetest mon
: that· his leech of i daughter cannot con- on earth, but he had a ' 22-year-old son
: test. Rebecca should also have an who lived at ho.me, slept all day, and par: ·income separate from her husband's, so tied. all night. Dad picked up the tab for
; her money will not be going to support food, clothes, cars, and everything else.
: the lazy bum. All their properry should The kid didn:t even do his own laundry.
: be held jointly, in both her name and her . Had Ibe~n htS. stepmother, I would have
• husband's. Otherwise, when Daddy dies, · been 111 a ternble sppt. That sweet man
; linda co uld tak; ev&lt;rything.
died a few years ago, and his irresp~.nsi. Too
many
divorced
parents ' ble son had to go to work or be on wei-

Ann
Landers

J

:on hikes

'

. POMEROY - · Honor rolls Carpenter, Megan Dunfee, Jacob Kay Ia , Bachtel, Kristin Ballard, Michelle Haley, Aaron Maxson,
: for the Meigs Local School Dis- Dunn, Autumn Ebersbach, Ash- Ashley Barber, Joyce Billings, Amanda Meadows, Josh Stone.
Grade 2: Micki Barnes, Dusry
. trier elementary schools for the ley Good, Megann Halley, Justin James Cunningham, Caleb
: second nine-weeks grading peri- Kimes, Jessica Might, Jennifer Davis, Taylor Deem, ~risten Eads, Kay)~ Graham, Be'1 Hood,
Payne, Nikki Smith, Tricia Eblin, Veronica Griinm, Ryan Brad Ho!ld, all As; Doug Jenkins,
: od have been announced.
Smith,
Cayla Taylor, Bubby Jeffers; Patience Johnson, A&lt;\am Pam Kes'singer,Jessica Shelton.
. To qualify for listing on the
Gr~~:de 3: Clayton Bolin, Lilly
· honor roll students must make a Wills, Kristine · Davis,. Brittany Lavender, Jessica McAdams,
Jacks,
Frazier,
Tyler
Fry,
Amanda
·au As; Morgan Lentes,
Kitty Newell, Ariel Nitz, Shelby
: grade of"B" .;r above in all their
: subjeCts. Making the. list in their Goode, ·Michael Gomez, Tara Ohlinger, Erin Patterson, Molly . Wyatt Ba~. Maria Meadows,
Jewell, Triniry Kimes, ·Cody Priddy, Jacob Rifle, Ryan Van- Jason Morris, Eugene Patterson.
: respective schools were:
Smith, Maranda Riggs.
·
Matre, Meri VanMeter, Cory
Grade 4: Jake Barnes, Emily
Davis, Kori Priddy, all As; Katie
Grade 3: Willie Barcus, Adri- Will. .
an Bolin, Chelsea Davis, Amber
Grade 3: Jamie Ash, Ryan Doczi, Bethany Gibbs, Cassady
Ebersbach, Sabrina Estep, Jen- Browning, Dee Cundiff, Emily Willford.
Grade · 5: Keilah Jacks,
nifer
Fife, Nicole Haley, Fields, Kindra ·Hammons,
Grade 4: Alexa Venoy, all As; Christopher Kimes, Zachary Lucreshia Howard, Sarah Hub~ Bethany King, all As; Andrea
· Ashley Ebersbach and Phillip Schwab, Chassidy Wills, Caleb bard , Jessica Jevell, Clintoll Bartrum, Amanda Miller. .
. Sisson.
LD/DH P~imary-: . Terry
Bevan, Chad Bonnett, Tara Kenlledy J holllas Klein, Tiffany
: Grade 5: Caleb Cherry, all C~pehart, Hailey Ebersbach, McAdams, Aaron Oliphant, Ale Jewell. ·
.
· As; Valerie C~rpenter, Chalsie Laura Ghenn,Amber Hockman, Patterson, Erin Perkins, Alisha
LD/DH .
Intermediate:
: Manley, Christina Miller, David Lian . Hoffman, Cara Lawless, Quillell, Calee Reeves, Kelsey Kayla Rowley, Bol?bi Smith,
: Poole, Whitney Smith, GregTay-· Nikki Lawson, Caitlin Leslie, Sauters, Jaime Simpson, Devan . Louie Wilson.
:lor and Michelle Weaver.
Courtney
M.ayes,
Ashley Soulsby,Josi VanMeter.
McHenry, Jared McKinney, Seth
Grade 4: Jonathan Allbaugh,
··
Perry, Tess Thomas, Tori Sulli~ Mic hael Ball, Kels~y Fife,
van.
Chelsea Hicks, Bradley Jones ,
DH/LD: Shawn ,Hudnall, Lindsay
McKinney; Jesse
•
.. '' Kindergarten:· Zach Sayre, A.,ron Little, Ashley Smith,Jere- Movery, Cas~andra Patt~rson,
Kindergarten: Paige Barrett,
my
Tiem'eyer,
Patricia
Clark,
Amorette
Salser,
Jordan
Smith,
Austin
King, Kassandra Mullins,
· :rorin Tindongan alld Brittany
White;
Nate
Swan.
Molly
Smith,
Kaylyn
Spradling,
Carrie
Russell Scarbury, · All A's;
· :Wheeler, all As; Ashley Ki~g and
Caidyn
Thomas.
Stephany
Durham, Benton
· l3rianna Markin.
Grade
5:
ty!eghan
Clelland,
·McCloud:
:: Grade 1: Markita Bottitta,
Cecilia
Core,
Mark
Cozart,
Grade 1: Shannon Bare,
:)'\ustin Clarida,, Daniell~ Dalton,
Ashley
DeMoss,
Heather
Eagle,
·
Shawn
Bare, Samantha Goble,
, !A.shley Edwards,
•
Rene Edmonds, Heather Elam, Jessica Rowley, Nichole Wise, all
· :: Morgan Howard, Julia Lantz
·
·
Kindergarten·
:
Cheyen~e
Kayla Grover, Scott Musser, As.
::,nd Titfany Lee, all As;· James
Grade 2: Joshua Glover,
.'l3lack, Jamie Jeffers, Briaunna Beaver, Darienne Betzing,Bryan ' Casey' Richardson. Britnee
Burt,
Olivia
Cleek
Christi11a
Sauters,
Dakota
Smith,
Tanisha
Gabriel
Hayes, all As; David
·J&lt;ing ond David Riley.
. :: Grade 2: Dawn Bissell, Ian Colburn, David Dillard, Andy Thomas, Wes Wright, Jerod Grim, Todd Johnson, Annisha
Fairchild, Breanna Gheen, .Wyatt . . Christeena Young, Ash - Kopec, Dustin McDaniel,. Shane
. ~ullington, Michael King and
Catherille Grady. Raymond ley Zielinski. .
Rose.
&gt;Hailey Williams, all As;
Jessica
Grant,
Ronnie
I
LD:
Roy
Laudermilt.
Granat,
Grade 3: Chelsea Carpenter,
: Justin Cotterill, Dean Hivley,
.MD:Gene Buckley, Patrick all As; April Oiler.
l&gt;nmmer King, Chrisry Lewis, lanillg, Morgan Johnson, Taylor
Jones,
Sue
Knight,
Destiny
LauCarey,
.Kim Deaver, JoAuana
Grade .4: Natane Adams,
}nslin Savage and Zach Young
dermilt,
Samuel
Levacy,
Bran·
Fetty,
Katie
Kibble,
Scott
.RamJoshua Burnem . .
·: Grade 3: Elsa Gardner, Travis
don
Marcinko,
Cody
Mattox.
sey.
Grade 5: Samantha Shontz . .
·;,-ticks, Mason Metts and Joannah
Jesse McConaha, Jeffrey · Roush,
.,-indongan, all As;
&gt; Bethany Lee and Joshua Price. Zachary Sheets, Heather Stew:: Grade 4: Talisha Beha, all As; . art, David Wittig, T0ri Wolfe,
:Nicole Hill, Chelsey Noel, Brit- Victoria Zeigler.
Grade ~: Jordan Anderson,
:::Uny Preast, · Daniel Runyon,
Zachary
B ~rton, Hannah Cleek,
Kindergarten: Chels~ Eads,
Kindergarten:
Courtney
·l&lt;:aylene Slater and Hannah
Brett Curtis, Seleena Dowell, Karl Gueltig, Cody Hysell, Baker, Emily Davis, Emalee
::'Williams.
:: Grade 5: Daniel Bookman, all Nathaniel Gilkey, Savannah Gra" Steven Mahr, ·Holly McGrath, Glass, Taylor Gilkey, Kaitlin
·:;As; A.J. Haning, Sarah Lantz and hani, Wade Harrison, Weston Tanisha McKinney, Jacob Nitz, Russell, Katrin·a Shockey, justin
Hickman, Brandon King, Rusty Dustin Shelton, Miranda Tanner,
.'osh Williams.
.• CC: Josepih Foley, all As; Laudermilt, Billy McAdams, Jesse Wiseman, Ashley -Woodard,
James ·McDonald, MeliJ;Ida all A's; Michael Bricker, Brooke
::Craig.Capehart.
•
Miller, Jeremiah Myers, Chelsea Buckley, Robbie Cundiff.
•
••
Gnde 1: Austin Adkins, ShefPatterson, Ravenne Reed, Gar•
rett Riffle, Kasey Rousll, lie Bailey, Whitney Hicks, Lind.••
Mackenzie
Sellers, . Hayley say . Hysell, Josh Miller, Tysoq
,•
Spradling, Katelyn Stacy, Sarah Morris, Braden Prater, Austin
Kindergarten: Golten Bell, Thomas, Cody Weaver, Tyler Sayre; Cameron Bolin, Carlee
. Xach Fink, Shelby Fltchpatrick, Will, Christian Woods, Colton Smith, all As; Jenny Farley, Justin
:-~aynee Herman, J.R. Jewell, Wright, Victoria Zahran.
Nitz, Kayla Salser, Colton Stew:J~stin Hodge, Clint McHenry,
Grade .-2: . Chelsey
Arms,
,
. art, Jessica Ellis, Adam J¥liott,
cl)iJaun Robinson, Nathan
::Rothgeb, Anita Warth, Kristo·:pher Wilson, Stephen Barcus,
:;Troy Gantt, Mailee Hoffman
:• Stephanie LeMaster, Catherine
;:GleasonCharlie Barrett,. Carly
,:Carpenter, Suzv Kimberly Curl,
·~ Nathan Mohler, Kayla Shane,
·(Republican Candidate)
:. Cassidy Tucker, Brandon Hood,
:Jeffrey Kimes, Tiffany McKin,
:;ney, Travis Mitch~ll. Ben Reed,
Preserving the: level of 1atowledse and experience which has bcea ilynOIIymOuS
&gt;Travis Tackett.
with the Clerk of Cowt's Oftlcc for OYel' 25 yean.
~' Grade 1: Vabie Conde, Tyler
Ower 25 )ftll of job ~rience In the Office of the perk of Courts . ,
;:Cundiff, Nikki Davis, Taylor
Devtlaid 10 ~ thc:~mnwns ~ mcet1ns thc: needl of the comlDunlty
·:Dowler, Kyle Johnson, Jonathan
Capable ofopcralii!I·ID ellldem and COUftCOUS·ClcrkofCoon's Oftlce ·
.:McCarthy, Shanrlon McLaughDedicated 10 proridin&amp; ~ty service .10 Meip County
.
·~ lin, Misty Morrison, Ryan
Able 10 work at thlll job on a fulklme Jlasil . · ·· ,
1
~ Payne, Joseph Powell, Daniel
GradUate of Fomaoy IIlah School and llf«oog raident of Melsa County
,•Stewart, Jose' Whitlatch, BranI fW lbe rnide~!l ofMetP County deserve to 11m the 10011 ~and
:don Bachner, Olivia Bevan, Britqualllled pet'!OII as their Clerk of Couns.
·
r
flowers, Damori Fisher, Colt
If el~, I will utilize the: authority giml to me as Clerk of Coons 10 ~t the
:Kerr; Kayla LeMaster, Kyle Rusneeds of thc: community and provide quality krvice 10 Mefp Couniy:,
: sell, Chandra Stanley, Tanner
*Your aupport 8!'d Vote In the M•rch 20011 prlma~ICtlon
~Tackett.
..
·
. would be greatly t~ppreclaled.*
~ Gnde 2: Tyler Andrews,

·aradbury
Elementary

Salem Center
Elementary

Harrisonville
Elementary

COMMUNI.T~

Rutland

•

The Community Calendar is
publilhed as a liee service m, 1· ·

non-profit groups wisbbtg_ ~.~
announce meetings and speO.,.

~nts. The calendlir is :.~ ·
de..gned ·to promote sales OJ:
fund raisers of any tYPe· I
·
are printed only.as space pel'-~
mits and cannot be
to be printed a specific ~
·
of day$.
!./'
,

·iuanbtee4

Wednesday, March 1
...,;

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Literary Oub, 2 p.m. Wednesday.
home of Ida ·Diehl. Sara Owen
review 'To Kill a Mockingbird" ~
Harper Lee.
•·•

iv

·'
PAGEVIU.E - Scipio Township
Trustees, 6:30 p.m. Wednesday, ·ill
. l'ageville rownhall.

..

· POMEROY ,
CatholiC
Women's Oub with a 7 p.m. Mass to
precede the m~g.Joanne Tat\efS911
and Sue Jean Raub to be hostesses, ,
Thursday, March 2
TUPPERS PLAINS -The Eaii~
ern Local School District will hold
. Parent/Teacher · Conferences Qh
Thursday from 4 to 7 p.nL Appoinlmen!S should be made by ~ailing ~
high school at 985-3329 or 985-

MORE LOCAL NEWS;
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

' )

Sui1Si::!'ibe today.

.·

10S lhrtternutAve,

Pomeroy, OH

}

•

•

r

Sam,; Great Menu· ALL HOMEMADE!
Soups,S~ches,Salads

Made From Scratch ~rts and Dally Speclals
Mondly ·

Open Fac:e Ro111t Beef

WldiiHdly

Chicken Noodle Dinner

Frida~ :

.

El-._men~ry

'

Beat-Ever l..llllgne, Seiad &amp; French Breed

·.' ·' Tundey anct Thul'lday Cooke Cholc:e

HOlZ£ft CliNIC

Middleport
Elementary

* VOTE EXPERIENCE•

MARLENE.HARRISON

MEIGS COUNTY CLERK OF COURTS

•
••

I

HOLZER CLlNICu:... ·
•

'

r

keeping Our Piomlsel

'

Olivia

,)

Gallon

lOib.Bag

food land

Russet
Potatoes

Reg. or uaet
Sprite,.Mello-Yellow
Diet Coke &amp; Coca Cola

•

1••!
.,~

#

~

'

.

2%Milk
'

•I

...

Items.an'd prices also'Valid at GalUpolis,
Buckeye, BJg Bend and tWin Rivers

United Vall-

·

-r Bell Orange Juice GaBon $1.99 ··

'

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.T a.&amp;~-=
.~­

Tyson
Grade 'N

£)

Whole Fryers

-----PDU UUII&amp;IIZ -

Bob vans
Farm Sa sage

.

99
Lb.

· Asst. Varieties

Food land

Diet Rite or

Saltines

RC Cola
.r Soft Drinks

1.lb.e

box""'
)'

. R.ichanlson h2s maintained the
rnergency reserve should be .
wn down only to counter suply disruptions anq not to maniple prices. But
recent ·.weeks
administration has considered.
· ·· &lt;?il"sw:ap" that essentially would
em oil companies to . borrow .
m the ~rl)lllent stockpile.
It would work this way:,
' ·
:The gaverninent could put oil
: perhaps 500,000 barrels a day
· ·. out for bid. Companies would ,
lte the oil. promising to return it
perhaps a year or two; and agree
ill.. put an additional· amount into
~;:e reserve , ..- well. No money
~uld be ex~~ged.
.
The·oil companies could profit
use the current price of.oil is
h higher than what oil costs
the fi!tures market for delivery
year or the year after. The
f!?.mpanies could buy the che~
which eventually will be
~rned to the government, 01\
• futurel inaWt. and sell the oil
tlken fiom the reserve at current
prices.
I

.,

.

For$

II•

I

"

•

FOODLAND

txt

•

~

'

WASHINGTON (AP)
with lawmakers irate over
the soaring cost of heating oil and
t!jiSOline, the . afuton administration is e~ng closer to tapping the
gvv:emment's emergency oil stockpile' as a way to force down prices.
"' Administration officials, who
~-, until recently
have . .steadfastly
insisted that no
oil would be
used fi'Dfn ' the
emergency
to .
reserve
manipulate
prices, emphasized that . no
decision has yet
been made on a
release .
" ' But President Clinton made
'Clear Thesday that he has not ruled
' but using some of the nearly 600
·million gallons of oil stored in salt
caverns on the Gulf Coast to tty to
ease tight supplies and drop prices .
~t have hovered around S30 .a ·
.
, "I .have not taken th,e petroleum
~rve issu~ off the table;· sai&lt;l
.:dlinton, calling such a release of oil
•'a pOssibility "in the event·that we
'lt0n1t seem to have · any other ·
options" to get l!asoline prices to
retreat.
Energy Secretary Bill Richard. ~n was expected to face sharp
. ~_qqestioning fiom lawmakers today
§~?out the administration5 plans for
-~aling with soaring oil costs when
,~~ appears before the House Inter~
-national Relations Committee.
' · ' Richanlson ·returned on Tues~y from a weeklong trip that took
to Mexico, the Persian Gulf
jagd Europe, including visits with '
~ ministers in Saudi Arabia and
~wait, where oil production lev!!!(! and world prices were the cent~\.£ of discus.ion.
'
.
:·\ Some oil producers, including
~udi Arabia and Kuwait, indicated
tliat they were ready to boost proPflction, but the timing and the
~ounts have yet to be deterJ4lned. The OPEC countries,
~ch curtailed production a year
tigo by 4.3 million barrels a day 1Q
~ prices, we~ to meet later tl)is
~~nth to decide proc,luction
~tegies.
..
·
'
'' ~· But administration officials were
con~emed that additional oil will
corne too late to head off continu.iifg. iilcreases in gasoline prices as
~e hea\IY-dernand summer driing season approaches. Some
'thin the administration·. have
rgued that the government's
ttategic Petroleum Reserve could
used to ease tl)e supply crunch
d force down prices in the short

Kahn's ~luxe Club or
· .· GcJrlic Bologna

m

Elect ,

:ta

.

tm. -

.

v
v
v
v
v
v

EASTMAN'S

l!ii"

The Lun.:h Line

Salisbury·

Elemen~ry

CALENDAR ·i·.;...

Young.
Grade 1: Alaine Arnold, Stevie Bunce, A,lex Day, Heath
Dettwiller, Rachel Eakins;
Justin Ellis, William folmer,
Kayla Green, Miranda Grueser,
Kelsey Howell,, Nicholas Ingels,
Danielle King, Samantha Kipg,
· Marissa , McAngus, Kelsey
Shuler, Stephanie Sm:ith,,Randy
Stewart, Connor Swartz.
Grade 2: Darby Gilmore,
Scott' Kennedy.·
Grade 3: Ja.tnie Bailey, J.T.
Evans, Adam Fairchild, Brandon
Han-ning, Morgan Kennedy,
Andrew O'Bryant, C~itlin
Swartz.
Grade 4: Amy Bim, Rebecca
Hanstine, Kaylee Kennedy, Kir.k
Legar, Aaron St?rY. Eric Wood.
Grade 5: Clayton Blackston,
Amber Burton, Shauna Clark,
Faith Dye, Ani:lrew Fairchild,
Sonny Folmer,- Andy Garnes,
Andy McAngus·, fl.fandon Pear- '·
son, Bradley ~nsburg, Dru
Reed, Jennifer Smith , . Bradley '.
Soulsby,
an&lt;l
Caitlin
Williamson .

· Pomeroy
Elementary

'

______

• •

:Clinton may
:trv to repel

Meigs·Local announces elementary honor:: rolls

Blankenship,

::.~

. J~nruner,

,..

The Deily Sentinel • Page A 7

The program's syndicators, Buena · tion for the job. Philbin has also worked and endless talk about her son, Cody.
Oprah Winfrey, Jerry Springer and Rosie
Visb Television, quickly made it known morning television shows alone.
Gilford, who recently performed a O'Donnell.
that the show will go on.
Philbin . has publicly eclipsed his co- fill-in role in the Broadway musical
Their light mix of celebrity chat aJUI
"You're going to have a wonderful star in recent months with the phenom- "Putting it Together" and was guest host entertainment begins each morning with
time seeing this parade of contestants go enal succeSs of ABC's prime-time sensa- last week for David Letterman's "Late Philbin and Gilford looking at the day.'s
by, who want to get this job;' Gifford told tion , "Who Wants to Be a Millionaire." Show;• said she rni!.se&lt; singing and acting news, or talking about what they did the
Philbin. "I tan see you salivating right He's about to strike a new deal to con- and wants to "spread my creative wings." night before.
now."
tinue as host of the game show and
Philbin and Gifford 6rst began workGilford said that's part of what has driBut Buena Vista rqay not be in such a extend his stay on the daytime talk show, ing together in 1985 on the morning ven her away.
'
,
hurry to replace Gifford, whose contract one that will reportedly pay him $20 show, then aired only in New York City. · After years of talking on the air aboqt
runs out in August.'
'
.·
million a year.
It became syndicated for a national audi- Cody,lO,~nd her clau~ter Cassidy,_7, she
One-pessibiliry is ·a. wave of short-time
He loyally stuck with Gifford tnrough · ence in 1988, and now ~ a solid doesn't want diem as the subject of
co-hosts, in !!Omething of a public audi- her tabloid scandals, bad wardrobe days fourth in the talk show derby behind attention anymon:.

,,.,__

.'

•

Pomeroy, Mldclep Ott, Ohio .

Is there life after Kathie lee Gifford for Regis Philbin? ·

Reader says many divorced pcirents overindulge their children :

•Andrew

Mlrch 1,2000

Flavorite
Deluxe

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··••••day, •• dl1. 2ofo

••
~

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(~IIRy,

NEW YORK (AP)
- Next up for Regis
Philbin: "Who Wants
to Be Kathie Lee?'"
His daytime partner
for the past 15 years,
Kathie Lee Gifford,
surprised viewers of
"live with Regis &amp;
Kathie Lee" on Tues... . Qlfflllnl
day
with
. the
e--,.IIIUl'OOrtCCJnei:tW:hat:-stte quitting -this

Dear Ann Landen: "Rebecca in
Mississippi" wrote th'at her husband continues to give money to his grown
l:laughter, "Linda." The girl calls every
month crying about some financial
emergency or another, and her father
sends a check immediately. You told
Rebecca the problem isn't financial, it's
emotional, and that it's her husband's
ADVICE
problem, not hers.
Ann, you a~e wrong. The problem is
also financial, which means it is Rebec- overindulge their children because they
~~ ca's problem as well. She's his wife, feel guilty about not staying in the marremember? Both Rebecca and her hus" . riage. 'This is what I call "unearned
. band should make sure they have a will guilt" I almost married the sweetest mon
: that· his leech of i daughter cannot con- on earth, but he had a ' 22-year-old son
: test. Rebecca should also have an who lived at ho.me, slept all day, and par: ·income separate from her husband's, so tied. all night. Dad picked up the tab for
; her money will not be going to support food, clothes, cars, and everything else.
: the lazy bum. All their properry should The kid didn:t even do his own laundry.
: be held jointly, in both her name and her . Had Ibe~n htS. stepmother, I would have
• husband's. Otherwise, when Daddy dies, · been 111 a ternble sppt. That sweet man
; linda co uld tak; ev&lt;rything.
died a few years ago, and his irresp~.nsi. Too
many
divorced
parents ' ble son had to go to work or be on wei-

Ann
Landers

J

:on hikes

'

. POMEROY - · Honor rolls Carpenter, Megan Dunfee, Jacob Kay Ia , Bachtel, Kristin Ballard, Michelle Haley, Aaron Maxson,
: for the Meigs Local School Dis- Dunn, Autumn Ebersbach, Ash- Ashley Barber, Joyce Billings, Amanda Meadows, Josh Stone.
Grade 2: Micki Barnes, Dusry
. trier elementary schools for the ley Good, Megann Halley, Justin James Cunningham, Caleb
: second nine-weeks grading peri- Kimes, Jessica Might, Jennifer Davis, Taylor Deem, ~risten Eads, Kay)~ Graham, Be'1 Hood,
Payne, Nikki Smith, Tricia Eblin, Veronica Griinm, Ryan Brad Ho!ld, all As; Doug Jenkins,
: od have been announced.
Smith,
Cayla Taylor, Bubby Jeffers; Patience Johnson, A&lt;\am Pam Kes'singer,Jessica Shelton.
. To qualify for listing on the
Gr~~:de 3: Clayton Bolin, Lilly
· honor roll students must make a Wills, Kristine · Davis,. Brittany Lavender, Jessica McAdams,
Jacks,
Frazier,
Tyler
Fry,
Amanda
·au As; Morgan Lentes,
Kitty Newell, Ariel Nitz, Shelby
: grade of"B" .;r above in all their
: subjeCts. Making the. list in their Goode, ·Michael Gomez, Tara Ohlinger, Erin Patterson, Molly . Wyatt Ba~. Maria Meadows,
Jewell, Triniry Kimes, ·Cody Priddy, Jacob Rifle, Ryan Van- Jason Morris, Eugene Patterson.
: respective schools were:
Smith, Maranda Riggs.
·
Matre, Meri VanMeter, Cory
Grade 4: Jake Barnes, Emily
Davis, Kori Priddy, all As; Katie
Grade 3: Willie Barcus, Adri- Will. .
an Bolin, Chelsea Davis, Amber
Grade 3: Jamie Ash, Ryan Doczi, Bethany Gibbs, Cassady
Ebersbach, Sabrina Estep, Jen- Browning, Dee Cundiff, Emily Willford.
Grade · 5: Keilah Jacks,
nifer
Fife, Nicole Haley, Fields, Kindra ·Hammons,
Grade 4: Alexa Venoy, all As; Christopher Kimes, Zachary Lucreshia Howard, Sarah Hub~ Bethany King, all As; Andrea
· Ashley Ebersbach and Phillip Schwab, Chassidy Wills, Caleb bard , Jessica Jevell, Clintoll Bartrum, Amanda Miller. .
. Sisson.
LD/DH P~imary-: . Terry
Bevan, Chad Bonnett, Tara Kenlledy J holllas Klein, Tiffany
: Grade 5: Caleb Cherry, all C~pehart, Hailey Ebersbach, McAdams, Aaron Oliphant, Ale Jewell. ·
.
· As; Valerie C~rpenter, Chalsie Laura Ghenn,Amber Hockman, Patterson, Erin Perkins, Alisha
LD/DH .
Intermediate:
: Manley, Christina Miller, David Lian . Hoffman, Cara Lawless, Quillell, Calee Reeves, Kelsey Kayla Rowley, Bol?bi Smith,
: Poole, Whitney Smith, GregTay-· Nikki Lawson, Caitlin Leslie, Sauters, Jaime Simpson, Devan . Louie Wilson.
:lor and Michelle Weaver.
Courtney
M.ayes,
Ashley Soulsby,Josi VanMeter.
McHenry, Jared McKinney, Seth
Grade 4: Jonathan Allbaugh,
··
Perry, Tess Thomas, Tori Sulli~ Mic hael Ball, Kels~y Fife,
van.
Chelsea Hicks, Bradley Jones ,
DH/LD: Shawn ,Hudnall, Lindsay
McKinney; Jesse
•
.. '' Kindergarten:· Zach Sayre, A.,ron Little, Ashley Smith,Jere- Movery, Cas~andra Patt~rson,
Kindergarten: Paige Barrett,
my
Tiem'eyer,
Patricia
Clark,
Amorette
Salser,
Jordan
Smith,
Austin
King, Kassandra Mullins,
· :rorin Tindongan alld Brittany
White;
Nate
Swan.
Molly
Smith,
Kaylyn
Spradling,
Carrie
Russell Scarbury, · All A's;
· :Wheeler, all As; Ashley Ki~g and
Caidyn
Thomas.
Stephany
Durham, Benton
· l3rianna Markin.
Grade
5:
ty!eghan
Clelland,
·McCloud:
:: Grade 1: Markita Bottitta,
Cecilia
Core,
Mark
Cozart,
Grade 1: Shannon Bare,
:)'\ustin Clarida,, Daniell~ Dalton,
Ashley
DeMoss,
Heather
Eagle,
·
Shawn
Bare, Samantha Goble,
, !A.shley Edwards,
•
Rene Edmonds, Heather Elam, Jessica Rowley, Nichole Wise, all
· :: Morgan Howard, Julia Lantz
·
·
Kindergarten·
:
Cheyen~e
Kayla Grover, Scott Musser, As.
::,nd Titfany Lee, all As;· James
Grade 2: Joshua Glover,
.'l3lack, Jamie Jeffers, Briaunna Beaver, Darienne Betzing,Bryan ' Casey' Richardson. Britnee
Burt,
Olivia
Cleek
Christi11a
Sauters,
Dakota
Smith,
Tanisha
Gabriel
Hayes, all As; David
·J&lt;ing ond David Riley.
. :: Grade 2: Dawn Bissell, Ian Colburn, David Dillard, Andy Thomas, Wes Wright, Jerod Grim, Todd Johnson, Annisha
Fairchild, Breanna Gheen, .Wyatt . . Christeena Young, Ash - Kopec, Dustin McDaniel,. Shane
. ~ullington, Michael King and
Catherille Grady. Raymond ley Zielinski. .
Rose.
&gt;Hailey Williams, all As;
Jessica
Grant,
Ronnie
I
LD:
Roy
Laudermilt.
Granat,
Grade 3: Chelsea Carpenter,
: Justin Cotterill, Dean Hivley,
.MD:Gene Buckley, Patrick all As; April Oiler.
l&gt;nmmer King, Chrisry Lewis, lanillg, Morgan Johnson, Taylor
Jones,
Sue
Knight,
Destiny
LauCarey,
.Kim Deaver, JoAuana
Grade .4: Natane Adams,
}nslin Savage and Zach Young
dermilt,
Samuel
Levacy,
Bran·
Fetty,
Katie
Kibble,
Scott
.RamJoshua Burnem . .
·: Grade 3: Elsa Gardner, Travis
don
Marcinko,
Cody
Mattox.
sey.
Grade 5: Samantha Shontz . .
·;,-ticks, Mason Metts and Joannah
Jesse McConaha, Jeffrey · Roush,
.,-indongan, all As;
&gt; Bethany Lee and Joshua Price. Zachary Sheets, Heather Stew:: Grade 4: Talisha Beha, all As; . art, David Wittig, T0ri Wolfe,
:Nicole Hill, Chelsey Noel, Brit- Victoria Zeigler.
Grade ~: Jordan Anderson,
:::Uny Preast, · Daniel Runyon,
Zachary
B ~rton, Hannah Cleek,
Kindergarten: Chels~ Eads,
Kindergarten:
Courtney
·l&lt;:aylene Slater and Hannah
Brett Curtis, Seleena Dowell, Karl Gueltig, Cody Hysell, Baker, Emily Davis, Emalee
::'Williams.
:: Grade 5: Daniel Bookman, all Nathaniel Gilkey, Savannah Gra" Steven Mahr, ·Holly McGrath, Glass, Taylor Gilkey, Kaitlin
·:;As; A.J. Haning, Sarah Lantz and hani, Wade Harrison, Weston Tanisha McKinney, Jacob Nitz, Russell, Katrin·a Shockey, justin
Hickman, Brandon King, Rusty Dustin Shelton, Miranda Tanner,
.'osh Williams.
.• CC: Josepih Foley, all As; Laudermilt, Billy McAdams, Jesse Wiseman, Ashley -Woodard,
James ·McDonald, MeliJ;Ida all A's; Michael Bricker, Brooke
::Craig.Capehart.
•
Miller, Jeremiah Myers, Chelsea Buckley, Robbie Cundiff.
•
••
Gnde 1: Austin Adkins, ShefPatterson, Ravenne Reed, Gar•
rett Riffle, Kasey Rousll, lie Bailey, Whitney Hicks, Lind.••
Mackenzie
Sellers, . Hayley say . Hysell, Josh Miller, Tysoq
,•
Spradling, Katelyn Stacy, Sarah Morris, Braden Prater, Austin
Kindergarten: Golten Bell, Thomas, Cody Weaver, Tyler Sayre; Cameron Bolin, Carlee
. Xach Fink, Shelby Fltchpatrick, Will, Christian Woods, Colton Smith, all As; Jenny Farley, Justin
:-~aynee Herman, J.R. Jewell, Wright, Victoria Zahran.
Nitz, Kayla Salser, Colton Stew:J~stin Hodge, Clint McHenry,
Grade .-2: . Chelsey
Arms,
,
. art, Jessica Ellis, Adam J¥liott,
cl)iJaun Robinson, Nathan
::Rothgeb, Anita Warth, Kristo·:pher Wilson, Stephen Barcus,
:;Troy Gantt, Mailee Hoffman
:• Stephanie LeMaster, Catherine
;:GleasonCharlie Barrett,. Carly
,:Carpenter, Suzv Kimberly Curl,
·~ Nathan Mohler, Kayla Shane,
·(Republican Candidate)
:. Cassidy Tucker, Brandon Hood,
:Jeffrey Kimes, Tiffany McKin,
:;ney, Travis Mitch~ll. Ben Reed,
Preserving the: level of 1atowledse and experience which has bcea ilynOIIymOuS
&gt;Travis Tackett.
with the Clerk of Cowt's Oftlcc for OYel' 25 yean.
~' Grade 1: Vabie Conde, Tyler
Ower 25 )ftll of job ~rience In the Office of the perk of Courts . ,
;:Cundiff, Nikki Davis, Taylor
Devtlaid 10 ~ thc:~mnwns ~ mcet1ns thc: needl of the comlDunlty
·:Dowler, Kyle Johnson, Jonathan
Capable ofopcralii!I·ID ellldem and COUftCOUS·ClcrkofCoon's Oftlce ·
.:McCarthy, Shanrlon McLaughDedicated 10 proridin&amp; ~ty service .10 Meip County
.
·~ lin, Misty Morrison, Ryan
Able 10 work at thlll job on a fulklme Jlasil . · ·· ,
1
~ Payne, Joseph Powell, Daniel
GradUate of Fomaoy IIlah School and llf«oog raident of Melsa County
,•Stewart, Jose' Whitlatch, BranI fW lbe rnide~!l ofMetP County deserve to 11m the 10011 ~and
:don Bachner, Olivia Bevan, Britqualllled pet'!OII as their Clerk of Couns.
·
r
flowers, Damori Fisher, Colt
If el~, I will utilize the: authority giml to me as Clerk of Coons 10 ~t the
:Kerr; Kayla LeMaster, Kyle Rusneeds of thc: community and provide quality krvice 10 Mefp Couniy:,
: sell, Chandra Stanley, Tanner
*Your aupport 8!'d Vote In the M•rch 20011 prlma~ICtlon
~Tackett.
..
·
. would be greatly t~ppreclaled.*
~ Gnde 2: Tyler Andrews,

·aradbury
Elementary

Salem Center
Elementary

Harrisonville
Elementary

COMMUNI.T~

Rutland

•

The Community Calendar is
publilhed as a liee service m, 1· ·

non-profit groups wisbbtg_ ~.~
announce meetings and speO.,.

~nts. The calendlir is :.~ ·
de..gned ·to promote sales OJ:
fund raisers of any tYPe· I
·
are printed only.as space pel'-~
mits and cannot be
to be printed a specific ~
·
of day$.
!./'
,

·iuanbtee4

Wednesday, March 1
...,;

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Literary Oub, 2 p.m. Wednesday.
home of Ida ·Diehl. Sara Owen
review 'To Kill a Mockingbird" ~
Harper Lee.
•·•

iv

·'
PAGEVIU.E - Scipio Township
Trustees, 6:30 p.m. Wednesday, ·ill
. l'ageville rownhall.

..

· POMEROY ,
CatholiC
Women's Oub with a 7 p.m. Mass to
precede the m~g.Joanne Tat\efS911
and Sue Jean Raub to be hostesses, ,
Thursday, March 2
TUPPERS PLAINS -The Eaii~
ern Local School District will hold
. Parent/Teacher · Conferences Qh
Thursday from 4 to 7 p.nL Appoinlmen!S should be made by ~ailing ~
high school at 985-3329 or 985-

MORE LOCAL NEWS;
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

' )

Sui1Si::!'ibe today.

.·

10S lhrtternutAve,

Pomeroy, OH

}

•

•

r

Sam,; Great Menu· ALL HOMEMADE!
Soups,S~ches,Salads

Made From Scratch ~rts and Dally Speclals
Mondly ·

Open Fac:e Ro111t Beef

WldiiHdly

Chicken Noodle Dinner

Frida~ :

.

El-._men~ry

'

Beat-Ever l..llllgne, Seiad &amp; French Breed

·.' ·' Tundey anct Thul'lday Cooke Cholc:e

HOlZ£ft CliNIC

Middleport
Elementary

* VOTE EXPERIENCE•

MARLENE.HARRISON

MEIGS COUNTY CLERK OF COURTS

•
••

I

HOLZER CLlNICu:... ·
•

'

r

keeping Our Piomlsel

'

Olivia

,)

Gallon

lOib.Bag

food land

Russet
Potatoes

Reg. or uaet
Sprite,.Mello-Yellow
Diet Coke &amp; Coca Cola

•

1••!
.,~

#

~

'

.

2%Milk
'

•I

...

Items.an'd prices also'Valid at GalUpolis,
Buckeye, BJg Bend and tWin Rivers

United Vall-

·

-r Bell Orange Juice GaBon $1.99 ··

'

,.

.T a.&amp;~-=
.~­

Tyson
Grade 'N

£)

Whole Fryers

-----PDU UUII&amp;IIZ -

Bob vans
Farm Sa sage

.

99
Lb.

· Asst. Varieties

Food land

Diet Rite or

Saltines

RC Cola
.r Soft Drinks

1.lb.e

box""'
)'

. R.ichanlson h2s maintained the
rnergency reserve should be .
wn down only to counter suply disruptions anq not to maniple prices. But
recent ·.weeks
administration has considered.
· ·· &lt;?il"sw:ap" that essentially would
em oil companies to . borrow .
m the ~rl)lllent stockpile.
It would work this way:,
' ·
:The gaverninent could put oil
: perhaps 500,000 barrels a day
· ·. out for bid. Companies would ,
lte the oil. promising to return it
perhaps a year or two; and agree
ill.. put an additional· amount into
~;:e reserve , ..- well. No money
~uld be ex~~ged.
.
The·oil companies could profit
use the current price of.oil is
h higher than what oil costs
the fi!tures market for delivery
year or the year after. The
f!?.mpanies could buy the che~
which eventually will be
~rned to the government, 01\
• futurel inaWt. and sell the oil
tlken fiom the reserve at current
prices.
I

.,

.

For$

II•

I

"

•

FOODLAND

txt

•

~

'

WASHINGTON (AP)
with lawmakers irate over
the soaring cost of heating oil and
t!jiSOline, the . afuton administration is e~ng closer to tapping the
gvv:emment's emergency oil stockpile' as a way to force down prices.
"' Administration officials, who
~-, until recently
have . .steadfastly
insisted that no
oil would be
used fi'Dfn ' the
emergency
to .
reserve
manipulate
prices, emphasized that . no
decision has yet
been made on a
release .
" ' But President Clinton made
'Clear Thesday that he has not ruled
' but using some of the nearly 600
·million gallons of oil stored in salt
caverns on the Gulf Coast to tty to
ease tight supplies and drop prices .
~t have hovered around S30 .a ·
.
, "I .have not taken th,e petroleum
~rve issu~ off the table;· sai&lt;l
.:dlinton, calling such a release of oil
•'a pOssibility "in the event·that we
'lt0n1t seem to have · any other ·
options" to get l!asoline prices to
retreat.
Energy Secretary Bill Richard. ~n was expected to face sharp
. ~_qqestioning fiom lawmakers today
§~?out the administration5 plans for
-~aling with soaring oil costs when
,~~ appears before the House Inter~
-national Relations Committee.
' · ' Richanlson ·returned on Tues~y from a weeklong trip that took
to Mexico, the Persian Gulf
jagd Europe, including visits with '
~ ministers in Saudi Arabia and
~wait, where oil production lev!!!(! and world prices were the cent~\.£ of discus.ion.
'
.
:·\ Some oil producers, including
~udi Arabia and Kuwait, indicated
tliat they were ready to boost proPflction, but the timing and the
~ounts have yet to be deterJ4lned. The OPEC countries,
~ch curtailed production a year
tigo by 4.3 million barrels a day 1Q
~ prices, we~ to meet later tl)is
~~nth to decide proc,luction
~tegies.
..
·
'
'' ~· But administration officials were
con~emed that additional oil will
corne too late to head off continu.iifg. iilcreases in gasoline prices as
~e hea\IY-dernand summer driing season approaches. Some
'thin the administration·. have
rgued that the government's
ttategic Petroleum Reserve could
used to ease tl)e supply crunch
d force down prices in the short

Kahn's ~luxe Club or
· .· GcJrlic Bologna

m

Elect ,

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.

tm. -

.

v
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EASTMAN'S

l!ii"

The Lun.:h Line

Salisbury·

Elemen~ry

CALENDAR ·i·.;...

Young.
Grade 1: Alaine Arnold, Stevie Bunce, A,lex Day, Heath
Dettwiller, Rachel Eakins;
Justin Ellis, William folmer,
Kayla Green, Miranda Grueser,
Kelsey Howell,, Nicholas Ingels,
Danielle King, Samantha Kipg,
· Marissa , McAngus, Kelsey
Shuler, Stephanie Sm:ith,,Randy
Stewart, Connor Swartz.
Grade 2: Darby Gilmore,
Scott' Kennedy.·
Grade 3: Ja.tnie Bailey, J.T.
Evans, Adam Fairchild, Brandon
Han-ning, Morgan Kennedy,
Andrew O'Bryant, C~itlin
Swartz.
Grade 4: Amy Bim, Rebecca
Hanstine, Kaylee Kennedy, Kir.k
Legar, Aaron St?rY. Eric Wood.
Grade 5: Clayton Blackston,
Amber Burton, Shauna Clark,
Faith Dye, Ani:lrew Fairchild,
Sonny Folmer,- Andy Garnes,
Andy McAngus·, fl.fandon Pear- '·
son, Bradley ~nsburg, Dru
Reed, Jennifer Smith , . Bradley '.
Soulsby,
an&lt;l
Caitlin
Williamson .

· Pomeroy
Elementary

'

______

• •

:Clinton may
:trv to repel

Meigs·Local announces elementary honor:: rolls

Blankenship,

::.~

. J~nruner,

,..

The Deily Sentinel • Page A 7

The program's syndicators, Buena · tion for the job. Philbin has also worked and endless talk about her son, Cody.
Oprah Winfrey, Jerry Springer and Rosie
Visb Television, quickly made it known morning television shows alone.
Gilford, who recently performed a O'Donnell.
that the show will go on.
Philbin . has publicly eclipsed his co- fill-in role in the Broadway musical
Their light mix of celebrity chat aJUI
"You're going to have a wonderful star in recent months with the phenom- "Putting it Together" and was guest host entertainment begins each morning with
time seeing this parade of contestants go enal succeSs of ABC's prime-time sensa- last week for David Letterman's "Late Philbin and Gilford looking at the day.'s
by, who want to get this job;' Gifford told tion , "Who Wants to Be a Millionaire." Show;• said she rni!.se&lt; singing and acting news, or talking about what they did the
Philbin. "I tan see you salivating right He's about to strike a new deal to con- and wants to "spread my creative wings." night before.
now."
tinue as host of the game show and
Philbin and Gifford 6rst began workGilford said that's part of what has driBut Buena Vista rqay not be in such a extend his stay on the daytime talk show, ing together in 1985 on the morning ven her away.
'
,
hurry to replace Gifford, whose contract one that will reportedly pay him $20 show, then aired only in New York City. · After years of talking on the air aboqt
runs out in August.'
'
.·
million a year.
It became syndicated for a national audi- Cody,lO,~nd her clau~ter Cassidy,_7, she
One-pessibiliry is ·a. wave of short-time
He loyally stuck with Gifford tnrough · ence in 1988, and now ~ a solid doesn't want diem as the subject of
co-hosts, in !!Omething of a public audi- her tabloid scandals, bad wardrobe days fourth in the talk show derby behind attention anymon:.

,,.,__

.'

•

Pomeroy, Mldclep Ott, Ohio .

Is there life after Kathie lee Gifford for Regis Philbin? ·

Reader says many divorced pcirents overindulge their children :

•Andrew

Mlrch 1,2000

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P9 A 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Wedn11dey, M8rch 1, 2000

The Daily Sentinel

Gore plans 'more presidential' approach to debate

BUSH AND THE BUCKEYES - Republican presidential hopeful
George w. Bush addesses followers Tuesday In Cincinnati' after being
i~troduced by Gov. Bob Taft. (AP photo)

.

GOP establishment

rallies for Bush .
. CINc'H -INATI
(AP)
. cutting taxes,.rebuilding the iniliRepublican loyalists gearing up tary and punishing criminals, par. for next Tuesday's primary gave ticularly those who use guns.
Texas Gov. George W. Bush a
"That accountability is called
hearty welcome to what Ohio jail," Bush said.
Gov. Bob Taft called "the bean of
He alluded to McCaiq's
. Bush Country.".
remarks earlier this· week in VirAdmission to Tuesday night's girua about the party's . rela.t ion- 1
rally was by ticket only, and the ship with religious leaders Pat
Hamilton County Republican Robertson and Jerry Falwell, call. Pany distributed the tickets, guar- ing McCain's comments divisive.
.· an teeing a raucous reception in
"I just got good news from the
Commonwealth of. Virginia,"
700-seat Memofial Hall.
A half dozen teen-age girls Bush s~id, announcing a victory
. with pompons were on stage "just in that state's primary. "Tonight
to be loud;' Counry Prosecutor we are one step closer to victory.
Mike Allen said. Party chairman The voters of Virginia rejected
Joe Deters - who also is Ohio's the politics of pitting one religion
treasurer - urged the crowd to against another."
give Bush a greeting that would
Bush spent Tuesday on a
make his ears ring.
.
Cleveland-to-Columbus-to. "I want this ,place · really . Cincinnati campaign trek, three
· rockin' ,"Deters said. "I want peo- days after McCain visited the
pie dancing in the aisles."
same cities and one week before
Arizona Sen. John McCain, the state's •March 7 primary.
While meeting with executives
Bush's opponent in the race for
the GOP presidential nomina- from Catholic Charities in
tion,' stliyei:llonger and dri!'Yi1iirg; '" l1ic5cese of ClevelanCi, 'l'~ush ~:;w•
er crowds - including many he regretted causing "needless
Democral3"":- to a book·&gt;ligning . offense" by appeal;ing tt l•"l~'&lt;Y,.:
and omdoor rally here Saturday. Jones University, despite the
But Bush drew the influential South Carolina school's interra· cia! dating ban and anti-Catholic
party establishment.
.A half dozen . judges · and a views.
.
· dozen more elected officials from
In Cincinnati, which has a
Cincinnati and neighboring large Roman Catholic populacounties wete introduced, along tion, Deters referred to himself as
with state GOP leaders and Rep. "an old alter boy" and had a
Rob Portman, R-Ohio, who Catholic priest from Dayton give
once worked in the White House the invocation that preceded
run by Bush's father.
Bush's speech. ·
"Believe me, I wbuld have
Republican City Councilman
liked to have &lt;lone it in the park .Charles Winburn said the appearacross the street because we ance helped energize Bush's core
would have had about 10 times as supporters.
"I think it's good to rally your
many people wanting to be here
tonight;' Deters said after Bush base, it's good to make sure your
delivered a 15-minute stump message is reconfirmed among
speech, shook a few hands and the American people;' Winburn
departed..
said.
"This (regiol!) was a huge asset
"What you had that•was great
for his father, and it's going to be here was a diverse group of pe&lt;&gt;. the same here for George W pie - . Catholic, Baptists, Church
Bush;' Deters sai4. "Southwest· of God in Christ, blacks, whites,
Ohio can crank out major Hispanics ·- you had a whole
Republican votes, and we're room full of diverse people, and I
think that's what George Bush
going to see it this year."
Bush hit on familiar themes- represents:'

LOS ANGELES (AP) - · AI
Gore and Bill Bradley, who duked
it out before a boisterous crowd
in New York City last week. enter
what could be their final debate
with divergent agendas.
Bradley, who suffered a disappointing showing in Tuesday's
nonbinding presidential primary
in Washington state, will again
nuke the case that he is "a better
Democrat, more trustwonhy, certainly more committed· to
reform," said his spokesman, Eric
.
Hauser.
But Gore, 'w ho has lie
=
gu
=n~::­
look past Bradley to the fall cam~
paign, is expected to take what
aides caJled "a more presidential"
approach.
.
Gore's camp believes it has the
MEET THE PRESS- Vice President AI Gore talks to the press Tues"Super Tuesday" states locked up
day after winning the Washington State popular vote primary over. Bill
· and must now. look ahead to a
Bradley. (AP photo)
general election campaign where
the challenge will be to. have
·Americans view him as more sponsored by CNN and the Los 10-year basketball career with the
· than just Pre$ident · Clinton's Angeles Times.
· New York Knicks.
und!rsrudy.
· ·
Gore's pre-debate schedule was
While not ruling out another
Gore and Bradley exchanged blank, except for the possibility of trip .west, Hauser said Bradley's
charges and countercharges in a jog. Bradley planned to speak weekend schedule ·will focus on
.their last face-off Feb. 21 at the · about health care during a morn- the Northeast, including possible
Apollo Theater in Harlem..Gore ing vhlt to a health center in trips to Maine and Rhode Island.
accused Bradley of attack tactics Huntington Park, Calif.
After losses to Gore in the
that "divide· us Democrats," while
Bradley's campaign originally Iowa caucuses and the New
Bradley described the vice presi- planned to remain in California · Hampshire prinury, Bradley had
dent as a closet conservative after the debate. But it now plans hoped for a strong showing in
whose past record rendered him to fly overnight to New York, . Washington stat~C to give him
unworthy ofleading the patty.
where Bradley's political hopes momentum for ·next Tuesday,
Tonight's 90-minute ilebate is are boosted by memories of Iris . when 15 states, including Califor-

.

nia, New York. and Ohio choose
delegates to the Democratic con.'
venllon.
.
But Gore came away with the
win.
.
"This is by far, the biggest victory yet just in terms of the raw ·
numbers and I'm very grateful for
all of the hard work. that went
into it," Gore said in a telephone
call' to supporters.
.
Hauser said Bradley's camp was
"a little disappointed" but still
please&lt;! with "the energy, ~e
enthusiasm we generated m
Washington state." ~ ·
No delegates were at stake in
Wa1hington's primary. They will
l:e assigned at party caucuses
throughout the state next Tuesday.
With some Democratic party
leaders around the country urging Bradley to drop out, Hauser
denied speculation that he would
quit befm;e Tuesday.
One high-level aide said the
. campaign worked to finalize
where ·staff would be deployed
between noW and March 14,
when there is another· round of
primaries in the South.
Bradley ,and his aides also.were
·
completing work on an unusual,
five-minute television commercial to be broadcast nationwide
Thursday on CBS - .. at 10:54
p.m. in the Eastern and Pacific
time zones and 9:54 p.m. in the
'c entral and Mountain Z!'nes.

Page 11

•

1

WEDNESDAY S

•

Spa

HIGHLIGHTS
Prep Basketbal

Wecln11d.y, M&amp;:d:l, 2010

goes to Coo

8Y BEN WAI.IID

ing a ·hat for his plaque, and
cbqse thc.Rcd.i &lt;Ner Detroit.
TAMI'A, Fla. - To Sparky
"It was so hard;' he said. "I
"Divlalon II 111m1ct Toumament
at The Comlo, Athena
An'derson, there could lie no spent nine years in Cincinnati
• lbu., March 2
more ·perfect place for a Reds and 17 in Detroit, and they treatMcClain v. Alexander, 6:15
reuruon.
ed. me like a king in both
Portsmouth v. Fairfield Union, 8:00
The only manager to Win l_!laces."
·
In the end, he decided to
World Series chan'lpionships in
Frf., March 3
· GaHia Academy v. Hillsboro, 6:15
both leagues is off to Cooper- thank former Reds general
Sheridan v. Athens, 8:00
stown, having been elected Tues- njanager Bob Howsam.
day to the Hall of Fame by the · "He hired a 35-year-old
Veterans Committee.
nobody knew, and he had the
Dlvlalon Ill Dlatrlct Tournament
On July 23,Anderson will join courage · and fortitude to do ·
at The Convo, Athena
Sat., March 4
former Big Red Machine first that," Anderson said. "Had he
Chesapeake v. Valley, 3:00
baseman Tony Perez and long- not done that, I doubt very
Westfall v. Wheelersburg, 4:45 .
time Ci.n cinnati broadcaster much in all hbnesty that I yvould
Eastern Brown v. Oak Hill, 6:30
Marty Brennaman in the upstate have managed in the major
~lpre v. Huntington, 8:15
New York village,
leagues. And I owe that to him."
Anderson,. who t~.~Tned 66 last
"In a way, I broke in Marty,"
Dlvlalon IV Dlttrtct Tournament
Anderson
.
said.
"Marty
came
in
week,
was elected in his first of
· at The Convo, Athena
'74 and we did a lot of visiting eligibility, easily outdistancing
Mon., March 8
and
a lot of talking and became former manager Whitey Herzog.
Eastern v. New lloston, 6:15
Leesburg Fairfield v. Trimble, 8:00
such good friends.
Third on baseball's career vic"In all honesty, I think I can tory list; Anderson is the only
.
Tue., March 7
say
for Tony and myselfboth that manager to post 100-win seaGreen v. Beaver Eastern, 6:15
we
have great respect for each sons in both leagues.
Southam v. WhHeoak, 8:00 ·
other. I think it means so much . "I never wore a World Series
to have a player going in with ring, but I will wear this one
you that you're fond of".
every day until I die;' he said
Anderson has seen the baseball from his ·home in Thousand
shrine, but has never stepped · Oaks, Calif. "That, to me, is how
much difference there is
inside.
"I didn't ever Want to go into be~een the Wotld Series and
NEW YORK (AP) _ Erick
the most precious place in the Hall of Fame." .
Barkley of St. John's was declared
world unless I bejonged there,"
Anderson was 863-586 with
he said.
the Reds fiom 1970-78 and led
ineligible by the NCAA, the second time this season the sophoAlong with Anderson, the Vets them to Series tides in 1975-76.
more guard missed games because
elected 19th q:ntury infielder He was 1,331-1,248 with the
of rules violations.
Bid McPhee, who played his Tigers from 1979-95 and guided
St. John's, in a statement
entire career in Cincinnati, and them to the 1984 championship.
released at halftime of the Red ·
· Negro leagues outfielder Turkey
Anderson, who made two
· Storm's game against Seton Hall
Stearnes.
'
other Series appearances; is the
In which Barkley did . not play,
But for the '·first time since only manager to lead rwo teams
said it had notified the NCAA
1993, Ted Williams, Stan Musial in career wins. His victory total
during the morrung that its inves-.
and the 14-m:in Vets pan':l failed . ranks him behind just Connie
Cigation into possible rules violato select any fpr111~r ma~or ,lea- Mack (3, 731) and John McGraw
gons concerning financial ;tid he · , gu~r. • J3l.p M~J.~lci, ~m_;;, ,rlpse, (2,784).
received while a stuaent at Maine ·~ . ye~fl'i ll fl'it&lt;!geS, Mel · Perez and Boston catcher
Central Institute in the 1997-98
Harder and Doni DiMaggio also Carlton Fisk, whose Game 6
'academic year concluded there
fell short.
home run beat the Reds in the
was no violation.
"We hoped someone would. 1975 World Series, were both
~e . there, we really did,:: first- elected in January by the BaseThe NCAA responded in the
aft~rnbon that it judged there had
~~m~. member Hank Aaron satd. ball Writers' . Association of
been a violation and informed St.
It JUSt got too ~·Maybe next America. .
.
. .
John's to declare Barkley ineligi~·
· year."
McPhee· batted .271 and stok
ble.
Anderson faced the difficult
BOUND FOR THE HALL - Former Reds and Tigers manager Sparky Anderson addresses reporters Tues- put enviable - task of pick- PIIIH ... SfNIItly, hp a:a day
following the announcement of his election to the Baseball Hall of Fame. (AP)
1\P BASEBALl WRtl£R

. ==·
•

..

pllyoff
on sale

Lakers win West showdown with Blazers

-

EAST . MEIGS - Tickets are
on sale now for Eastern's Division
IV district playoff game .against
New Boston. The game is set for
next Monday, at 6:15 p.m. at the
. Ohio University Convocation
Center.
Tickets are $5 each. The high
school will receive $1 from the
sale of tickets locally.
·

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

the fourth quaner, but a .3-pointer by .Greg
For the first time · in NBA history, rwo Anthony tied it at SO with 4:46 to play. and
teams with 1 1-gan't~ winning sireaks played Scottie Pippen's 3-pointer fiom 27 feet
each other.
away gave the Blazers the lead with 3:07
The Los Angeles Lakers, not the Ponland left.
.
Trail Blazers, came away \vith a 12-game
Both teams sputtered for the next few
streak.
minutes, but the Lakers inched ahead on
Shaquille O'Neal .had 23 ,points and two free throws by Bryaitt and another by
Kobe Bryant scored 22 Tuesday night in a 'Ron Harper' put th.e Lakers ahead 87-85
thrilling battle be~een. the NBNs rwo best with 34.3 seconds left.
teams.
After Damon Stoudarnire missed an 18"This. was a good g:ime for our confi- footer, O'Neal was fuuled and made one of
dence, knowing we·can come in here and . rwo for an 88-85 lead. Pippen rushed
win;'. the Lakers' Glen Rice said after Los another long 3~pointer, and Steve Smith's ·
Angeles also snappW Portland's 16-game · shot ·off a !Qng . offensive rebound was
·
·
)lome winning sn.;ak,
nowhere close.
The Lakers led by many 35, ·11 early in
In other NBA games, Indiana defeated

Tomaclo PlaYoff ,
tlx avaOable ·
.:RACINE - . Tickeis .are on sale
now for Southern) Division IV
district playoff gaine against
Whiteoak. ·The game is set for
ti~xt Tuesday, at 8 p.m. at the
Ohio University Convocation
Center.
: Tickets are $5 each. Th,e. high
s'!:hool will receive $1 from ~e
"!de of tickets locally.

Primary wins ·put $10M

in McCain's bank account
close the financial gap between
himself and Bush, who has set
records fur fund raising and spending. Bush. declined to release his
February numbers on Tuesday.
Through Jan. 31, McCain had
raised $18.2 million, including $2
million transferred from his Senate
account, while Bush had taken in
more than $70 million.
The McCain campaign last
week reponed that he had around
$9 million to spend, including
ful\lre federal funds. Bush's campaign treasury dropped below $15
million.
.
· Bush raised. just $1.5 million
during the 6rst twO weeks of February. To replenish his . depleted
bank· account, he is beginning .
another round. of fund raising this
month, including events in Palm
Beach, Fla., and New York City.
Veteran Republican fund-raiser
Ted Welch said there still is' plenty
of money out there for Bush to

•

Spring training roundup, Page B2
Bowe gets 30 days in jail, Page B4
Buckeye hoop preview, Page B8

St. John's player
suspended aiain

.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Seri.
· John McCain got some good news
amid new primary losses in Virginia and Washington state: He
raised about S10 rnWion last
month, his biggesi haul of the preS::
idential campaign.
:
McCain's fund-raising peaked
following his win in New Hampshire at the beginning of February,
and got another boost with his victory in Michigan . later in the
month.
More than 40 percent of
McCain's February money- $4.3
million -came fiom donors wh9
used the Internet to make their
contribution. And because so many
came in small contributions,
McCain will qualify, for an .additional $5 million windfall in federal matching funds ..
Since Intern~ donors use credit cards to make their contributions, McCain has been able to use
the contributions immediately to
purchase television time. And he is
taking in that money without
.spending much on fund raising.
The influx has enabled him to

•

as
.

St. 'Joe's

upsets · -

Reltate

PlUS

No.. 5' OWls ·.

Co defenclint
!:·wants:oWn trial

6.~APR

'

.
.
; ATLANTA · (AP)
One of
. ~ay Lewis' cd-defendants is
· D:questing a separate trial in the
killings of ~0 men outside an
l,.t!anta mghtclub,
.
; The lawyet for Reginald Oak·
li;);, 31, also requested that his
~lil:nt be allowed separate trials
fOr the muxder and assault charges • ·
he
faces
in
the Jan. 31 .deaths.
• .
.
'i

..

u.s. Soccer

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

chlefreilcns

'

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..·.:

:•CHICAGO (AP)
Hank
Steinb,:echer resigned as execufiv.e director of the U.S. Soccer
·~deration, more than rune years
qaer taking over as day-to-day ·
!)Cad of the governing body.

nuse.
He said many people did not
give · to Bus)!. earlier because they
felt he didn't nee&lt;l the money.

\1&lt;1•1111

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DettQit 115-105 1 San Antonio crushed
Miami 93-69, Charlotle beat Minnesota
92-87, Philadelphia topped Dallas 106-87,
Toronto downed Chicago 87-80, Orllildo
defeated Seattle I 03-94, Phoenix beat
Cleveland 100-93 and Sacramento topped
Vancouver 112-87.
The Lakers improved to 46-11, one game
ahead of the Blazers in the Pacific Division.
Los Angeles also tied the.season series 2-2,
preventing the. Blazers from clinching the
head-to-head ti.ebreak~r · should the teams
finish the regular season tied.
·/
Lakers coach Phil Jackson said ~hoever
won this game would probably go on to
win the division. Asked whether the Lakers
could win it, O'NeaJ· said, "If we don't have

.

PHILADELPHIA (AP) -' A
week after defeating the nation's
top"ranked team, Temple got 1
similar treatment froin unrankeq .
city rival St. Joseph's. ,
,
.
The fifth-ranked Owls, *e
best in ·a. city craey for college
basketball, lost 62-59 to the
.
Hawks on Tuescby night.
'l'im Brown's 3-pointer -with
just under 1W9 minutes left gave
the Hawks a ·60-57 lead, and
Na'im Crenshaw added rwo free
throws with 16 'seconds left to
seal theif'first win in ihe rivalry
ENTRY PASS- Nal'm Crenshaw of St. Joe's (left) tries to pass the
since 1995.
ball around T'emple's Pepe simchez during Tuesday's aame. (AP)
Temple (22-5, 13-2 Atlantic
10) had a chance to tie, \rut Mark
Karcher rni~ed a 3-poili'ter with motion," said Martelli, who
,..;We got the shot 'we wanted;'
two seconds left - .a s)tot thai finally beat the ·Owls after 10 Owls coach John Chaney said of
Hawks .coach Phil Martelli ~aid straight losses in his fuie seasons ~he finai 3-point attempt. "It was
took forever ro hit the rim.
at St. joseph's. "That was ~ great
"It seemed like it was in slow Philadelphia set&lt;ies game."
,. ...... Top 11, ..... BJ

.

•
•

any more slippage, like we had after our 16game streak was broken, then I believe we
will win it."
Pacen 115, Pistons 105
Reggie Miller scored 24 points and Jalen
Rose had 20 as Indiana overcame the
absence ofDale Davis and AI Harrington to
extend its home winning streak to 23
gam es.
•
Grant Hill led the Pistons with 37 points,
and Jerry Stackhouse added 32, but they got
little help from their teammates. ·
Davis sat out with a pulled hamstring and
H.arrington had a bruised calf muscle.
Rik. Smits had 18 points and 13

PIMH ... NBA. Pip a:a

Madness
begins for .URG
BY MARK WtWAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

· CEDARVILLE - The seeds
have been posted ·for the
upcoming American · Mideast
Conference Division I tournament. The men's tournament
will begi~ Thursday.
The women's tourney began
last night with semifinal games
set for March 4, and the finals
on March 7. The tournament
winners will draw an automa!ic
bi&lt;\ the · NAJA Division I
National Tournament.
Rio Grande (22-8) is the third
seed in the men's tournament.
The Redmen must win three
games to make the big dance .
Rio ,Qpens with Point Park on
Thursday night at 7:30 p.m. at
the Newt Oliver Arena.
If the Redmen win, they travef to Central State on Saturday
for a 7:30 game in the semifi-

nals. If the. Redmen advance to
the championship, they would
likely face top seed Saint Vincent in Latrl&gt;be, Pa., on March 7.
. Rio would host the game if
the Cedarville/ Geneva winner
were to spring the upset of the
Bearcats.
The Redwomen (2S-7) are
the number two seed in the
tournament, meaning they
receive .a first round bye. Rio
Grande won the AMC tourna-,
ment last year as the number
two seed.
·Rio will face Central State on
Saturday, at 2 p.m. at the Newt
Oliver Arena. Central Statedefeated Seton Hill 84-59 Tues- ·
day night. In the other first
round game, Cedarville edgtd
Geneva 79-76 and now meets'
top seed Saint Vincept.
The finals will be played on
Tuesday, March 7, at 7 p.m.

�'
\

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

P9 A 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Wedn11dey, M8rch 1, 2000

The Daily Sentinel

Gore plans 'more presidential' approach to debate

BUSH AND THE BUCKEYES - Republican presidential hopeful
George w. Bush addesses followers Tuesday In Cincinnati' after being
i~troduced by Gov. Bob Taft. (AP photo)

.

GOP establishment

rallies for Bush .
. CINc'H -INATI
(AP)
. cutting taxes,.rebuilding the iniliRepublican loyalists gearing up tary and punishing criminals, par. for next Tuesday's primary gave ticularly those who use guns.
Texas Gov. George W. Bush a
"That accountability is called
hearty welcome to what Ohio jail," Bush said.
Gov. Bob Taft called "the bean of
He alluded to McCaiq's
. Bush Country.".
remarks earlier this· week in VirAdmission to Tuesday night's girua about the party's . rela.t ion- 1
rally was by ticket only, and the ship with religious leaders Pat
Hamilton County Republican Robertson and Jerry Falwell, call. Pany distributed the tickets, guar- ing McCain's comments divisive.
.· an teeing a raucous reception in
"I just got good news from the
Commonwealth of. Virginia,"
700-seat Memofial Hall.
A half dozen teen-age girls Bush s~id, announcing a victory
. with pompons were on stage "just in that state's primary. "Tonight
to be loud;' Counry Prosecutor we are one step closer to victory.
Mike Allen said. Party chairman The voters of Virginia rejected
Joe Deters - who also is Ohio's the politics of pitting one religion
treasurer - urged the crowd to against another."
give Bush a greeting that would
Bush spent Tuesday on a
make his ears ring.
.
Cleveland-to-Columbus-to. "I want this ,place · really . Cincinnati campaign trek, three
· rockin' ,"Deters said. "I want peo- days after McCain visited the
pie dancing in the aisles."
same cities and one week before
Arizona Sen. John McCain, the state's •March 7 primary.
While meeting with executives
Bush's opponent in the race for
the GOP presidential nomina- from Catholic Charities in
tion,' stliyei:llonger and dri!'Yi1iirg; '" l1ic5cese of ClevelanCi, 'l'~ush ~:;w•
er crowds - including many he regretted causing "needless
Democral3"":- to a book·&gt;ligning . offense" by appeal;ing tt l•"l~'&lt;Y,.:
and omdoor rally here Saturday. Jones University, despite the
But Bush drew the influential South Carolina school's interra· cia! dating ban and anti-Catholic
party establishment.
.A half dozen . judges · and a views.
.
· dozen more elected officials from
In Cincinnati, which has a
Cincinnati and neighboring large Roman Catholic populacounties wete introduced, along tion, Deters referred to himself as
with state GOP leaders and Rep. "an old alter boy" and had a
Rob Portman, R-Ohio, who Catholic priest from Dayton give
once worked in the White House the invocation that preceded
run by Bush's father.
Bush's speech. ·
"Believe me, I wbuld have
Republican City Councilman
liked to have &lt;lone it in the park .Charles Winburn said the appearacross the street because we ance helped energize Bush's core
would have had about 10 times as supporters.
"I think it's good to rally your
many people wanting to be here
tonight;' Deters said after Bush base, it's good to make sure your
delivered a 15-minute stump message is reconfirmed among
speech, shook a few hands and the American people;' Winburn
departed..
said.
"This (regiol!) was a huge asset
"What you had that•was great
for his father, and it's going to be here was a diverse group of pe&lt;&gt;. the same here for George W pie - . Catholic, Baptists, Church
Bush;' Deters sai4. "Southwest· of God in Christ, blacks, whites,
Ohio can crank out major Hispanics ·- you had a whole
Republican votes, and we're room full of diverse people, and I
think that's what George Bush
going to see it this year."
Bush hit on familiar themes- represents:'

LOS ANGELES (AP) - · AI
Gore and Bill Bradley, who duked
it out before a boisterous crowd
in New York City last week. enter
what could be their final debate
with divergent agendas.
Bradley, who suffered a disappointing showing in Tuesday's
nonbinding presidential primary
in Washington state, will again
nuke the case that he is "a better
Democrat, more trustwonhy, certainly more committed· to
reform," said his spokesman, Eric
.
Hauser.
But Gore, 'w ho has lie
=
gu
=n~::­
look past Bradley to the fall cam~
paign, is expected to take what
aides caJled "a more presidential"
approach.
.
Gore's camp believes it has the
MEET THE PRESS- Vice President AI Gore talks to the press Tues"Super Tuesday" states locked up
day after winning the Washington State popular vote primary over. Bill
· and must now. look ahead to a
Bradley. (AP photo)
general election campaign where
the challenge will be to. have
·Americans view him as more sponsored by CNN and the Los 10-year basketball career with the
· than just Pre$ident · Clinton's Angeles Times.
· New York Knicks.
und!rsrudy.
· ·
Gore's pre-debate schedule was
While not ruling out another
Gore and Bradley exchanged blank, except for the possibility of trip .west, Hauser said Bradley's
charges and countercharges in a jog. Bradley planned to speak weekend schedule ·will focus on
.their last face-off Feb. 21 at the · about health care during a morn- the Northeast, including possible
Apollo Theater in Harlem..Gore ing vhlt to a health center in trips to Maine and Rhode Island.
accused Bradley of attack tactics Huntington Park, Calif.
After losses to Gore in the
that "divide· us Democrats," while
Bradley's campaign originally Iowa caucuses and the New
Bradley described the vice presi- planned to remain in California · Hampshire prinury, Bradley had
dent as a closet conservative after the debate. But it now plans hoped for a strong showing in
whose past record rendered him to fly overnight to New York, . Washington stat~C to give him
unworthy ofleading the patty.
where Bradley's political hopes momentum for ·next Tuesday,
Tonight's 90-minute ilebate is are boosted by memories of Iris . when 15 states, including Califor-

.

nia, New York. and Ohio choose
delegates to the Democratic con.'
venllon.
.
But Gore came away with the
win.
.
"This is by far, the biggest victory yet just in terms of the raw ·
numbers and I'm very grateful for
all of the hard work. that went
into it," Gore said in a telephone
call' to supporters.
.
Hauser said Bradley's camp was
"a little disappointed" but still
please&lt;! with "the energy, ~e
enthusiasm we generated m
Washington state." ~ ·
No delegates were at stake in
Wa1hington's primary. They will
l:e assigned at party caucuses
throughout the state next Tuesday.
With some Democratic party
leaders around the country urging Bradley to drop out, Hauser
denied speculation that he would
quit befm;e Tuesday.
One high-level aide said the
. campaign worked to finalize
where ·staff would be deployed
between noW and March 14,
when there is another· round of
primaries in the South.
Bradley ,and his aides also.were
·
completing work on an unusual,
five-minute television commercial to be broadcast nationwide
Thursday on CBS - .. at 10:54
p.m. in the Eastern and Pacific
time zones and 9:54 p.m. in the
'c entral and Mountain Z!'nes.

Page 11

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1

WEDNESDAY S

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Spa

HIGHLIGHTS
Prep Basketbal

Wecln11d.y, M&amp;:d:l, 2010

goes to Coo

8Y BEN WAI.IID

ing a ·hat for his plaque, and
cbqse thc.Rcd.i &lt;Ner Detroit.
TAMI'A, Fla. - To Sparky
"It was so hard;' he said. "I
"Divlalon II 111m1ct Toumament
at The Comlo, Athena
An'derson, there could lie no spent nine years in Cincinnati
• lbu., March 2
more ·perfect place for a Reds and 17 in Detroit, and they treatMcClain v. Alexander, 6:15
reuruon.
ed. me like a king in both
Portsmouth v. Fairfield Union, 8:00
The only manager to Win l_!laces."
·
In the end, he decided to
World Series chan'lpionships in
Frf., March 3
· GaHia Academy v. Hillsboro, 6:15
both leagues is off to Cooper- thank former Reds general
Sheridan v. Athens, 8:00
stown, having been elected Tues- njanager Bob Howsam.
day to the Hall of Fame by the · "He hired a 35-year-old
Veterans Committee.
nobody knew, and he had the
Dlvlalon Ill Dlatrlct Tournament
On July 23,Anderson will join courage · and fortitude to do ·
at The Convo, Athena
Sat., March 4
former Big Red Machine first that," Anderson said. "Had he
Chesapeake v. Valley, 3:00
baseman Tony Perez and long- not done that, I doubt very
Westfall v. Wheelersburg, 4:45 .
time Ci.n cinnati broadcaster much in all hbnesty that I yvould
Eastern Brown v. Oak Hill, 6:30
Marty Brennaman in the upstate have managed in the major
~lpre v. Huntington, 8:15
New York village,
leagues. And I owe that to him."
Anderson,. who t~.~Tned 66 last
"In a way, I broke in Marty,"
Dlvlalon IV Dlttrtct Tournament
Anderson
.
said.
"Marty
came
in
week,
was elected in his first of
· at The Convo, Athena
'74 and we did a lot of visiting eligibility, easily outdistancing
Mon., March 8
and
a lot of talking and became former manager Whitey Herzog.
Eastern v. New lloston, 6:15
Leesburg Fairfield v. Trimble, 8:00
such good friends.
Third on baseball's career vic"In all honesty, I think I can tory list; Anderson is the only
.
Tue., March 7
say
for Tony and myselfboth that manager to post 100-win seaGreen v. Beaver Eastern, 6:15
we
have great respect for each sons in both leagues.
Southam v. WhHeoak, 8:00 ·
other. I think it means so much . "I never wore a World Series
to have a player going in with ring, but I will wear this one
you that you're fond of".
every day until I die;' he said
Anderson has seen the baseball from his ·home in Thousand
shrine, but has never stepped · Oaks, Calif. "That, to me, is how
much difference there is
inside.
"I didn't ever Want to go into be~een the Wotld Series and
NEW YORK (AP) _ Erick
the most precious place in the Hall of Fame." .
Barkley of St. John's was declared
world unless I bejonged there,"
Anderson was 863-586 with
he said.
the Reds fiom 1970-78 and led
ineligible by the NCAA, the second time this season the sophoAlong with Anderson, the Vets them to Series tides in 1975-76.
more guard missed games because
elected 19th q:ntury infielder He was 1,331-1,248 with the
of rules violations.
Bid McPhee, who played his Tigers from 1979-95 and guided
St. John's, in a statement
entire career in Cincinnati, and them to the 1984 championship.
released at halftime of the Red ·
· Negro leagues outfielder Turkey
Anderson, who made two
· Storm's game against Seton Hall
Stearnes.
'
other Series appearances; is the
In which Barkley did . not play,
But for the '·first time since only manager to lead rwo teams
said it had notified the NCAA
1993, Ted Williams, Stan Musial in career wins. His victory total
during the morrung that its inves-.
and the 14-m:in Vets pan':l failed . ranks him behind just Connie
Cigation into possible rules violato select any fpr111~r ma~or ,lea- Mack (3, 731) and John McGraw
gons concerning financial ;tid he · , gu~r. • J3l.p M~J.~lci, ~m_;;, ,rlpse, (2,784).
received while a stuaent at Maine ·~ . ye~fl'i ll fl'it&lt;!geS, Mel · Perez and Boston catcher
Central Institute in the 1997-98
Harder and Doni DiMaggio also Carlton Fisk, whose Game 6
'academic year concluded there
fell short.
home run beat the Reds in the
was no violation.
"We hoped someone would. 1975 World Series, were both
~e . there, we really did,:: first- elected in January by the BaseThe NCAA responded in the
aft~rnbon that it judged there had
~~m~. member Hank Aaron satd. ball Writers' . Association of
been a violation and informed St.
It JUSt got too ~·Maybe next America. .
.
. .
John's to declare Barkley ineligi~·
· year."
McPhee· batted .271 and stok
ble.
Anderson faced the difficult
BOUND FOR THE HALL - Former Reds and Tigers manager Sparky Anderson addresses reporters Tues- put enviable - task of pick- PIIIH ... SfNIItly, hp a:a day
following the announcement of his election to the Baseball Hall of Fame. (AP)
1\P BASEBALl WRtl£R

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pllyoff
on sale

Lakers win West showdown with Blazers

-

EAST . MEIGS - Tickets are
on sale now for Eastern's Division
IV district playoff game .against
New Boston. The game is set for
next Monday, at 6:15 p.m. at the
. Ohio University Convocation
Center.
Tickets are $5 each. The high
school will receive $1 from the
sale of tickets locally.
·

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

the fourth quaner, but a .3-pointer by .Greg
For the first time · in NBA history, rwo Anthony tied it at SO with 4:46 to play. and
teams with 1 1-gan't~ winning sireaks played Scottie Pippen's 3-pointer fiom 27 feet
each other.
away gave the Blazers the lead with 3:07
The Los Angeles Lakers, not the Ponland left.
.
Trail Blazers, came away \vith a 12-game
Both teams sputtered for the next few
streak.
minutes, but the Lakers inched ahead on
Shaquille O'Neal .had 23 ,points and two free throws by Bryaitt and another by
Kobe Bryant scored 22 Tuesday night in a 'Ron Harper' put th.e Lakers ahead 87-85
thrilling battle be~een. the NBNs rwo best with 34.3 seconds left.
teams.
After Damon Stoudarnire missed an 18"This. was a good g:ime for our confi- footer, O'Neal was fuuled and made one of
dence, knowing we·can come in here and . rwo for an 88-85 lead. Pippen rushed
win;'. the Lakers' Glen Rice said after Los another long 3~pointer, and Steve Smith's ·
Angeles also snappW Portland's 16-game · shot ·off a !Qng . offensive rebound was
·
·
)lome winning sn.;ak,
nowhere close.
The Lakers led by many 35, ·11 early in
In other NBA games, Indiana defeated

Tomaclo PlaYoff ,
tlx avaOable ·
.:RACINE - . Tickeis .are on sale
now for Southern) Division IV
district playoff gaine against
Whiteoak. ·The game is set for
ti~xt Tuesday, at 8 p.m. at the
Ohio University Convocation
Center.
: Tickets are $5 each. Th,e. high
s'!:hool will receive $1 from ~e
"!de of tickets locally.

Primary wins ·put $10M

in McCain's bank account
close the financial gap between
himself and Bush, who has set
records fur fund raising and spending. Bush. declined to release his
February numbers on Tuesday.
Through Jan. 31, McCain had
raised $18.2 million, including $2
million transferred from his Senate
account, while Bush had taken in
more than $70 million.
The McCain campaign last
week reponed that he had around
$9 million to spend, including
ful\lre federal funds. Bush's campaign treasury dropped below $15
million.
.
· Bush raised. just $1.5 million
during the 6rst twO weeks of February. To replenish his . depleted
bank· account, he is beginning .
another round. of fund raising this
month, including events in Palm
Beach, Fla., and New York City.
Veteran Republican fund-raiser
Ted Welch said there still is' plenty
of money out there for Bush to

•

Spring training roundup, Page B2
Bowe gets 30 days in jail, Page B4
Buckeye hoop preview, Page B8

St. John's player
suspended aiain

.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Seri.
· John McCain got some good news
amid new primary losses in Virginia and Washington state: He
raised about S10 rnWion last
month, his biggesi haul of the preS::
idential campaign.
:
McCain's fund-raising peaked
following his win in New Hampshire at the beginning of February,
and got another boost with his victory in Michigan . later in the
month.
More than 40 percent of
McCain's February money- $4.3
million -came fiom donors wh9
used the Internet to make their
contribution. And because so many
came in small contributions,
McCain will qualify, for an .additional $5 million windfall in federal matching funds ..
Since Intern~ donors use credit cards to make their contributions, McCain has been able to use
the contributions immediately to
purchase television time. And he is
taking in that money without
.spending much on fund raising.
The influx has enabled him to

•

as
.

St. 'Joe's

upsets · -

Reltate

PlUS

No.. 5' OWls ·.

Co defenclint
!:·wants:oWn trial

6.~APR

'

.
.
; ATLANTA · (AP)
One of
. ~ay Lewis' cd-defendants is
· D:questing a separate trial in the
killings of ~0 men outside an
l,.t!anta mghtclub,
.
; The lawyet for Reginald Oak·
li;);, 31, also requested that his
~lil:nt be allowed separate trials
fOr the muxder and assault charges • ·
he
faces
in
the Jan. 31 .deaths.
• .
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'i

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u.s. Soccer

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

chlefreilcns

'

:•.

..·.:

:•CHICAGO (AP)
Hank
Steinb,:echer resigned as execufiv.e director of the U.S. Soccer
·~deration, more than rune years
qaer taking over as day-to-day ·
!)Cad of the governing body.

nuse.
He said many people did not
give · to Bus)!. earlier because they
felt he didn't nee&lt;l the money.

\1&lt;1•1111

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DettQit 115-105 1 San Antonio crushed
Miami 93-69, Charlotle beat Minnesota
92-87, Philadelphia topped Dallas 106-87,
Toronto downed Chicago 87-80, Orllildo
defeated Seattle I 03-94, Phoenix beat
Cleveland 100-93 and Sacramento topped
Vancouver 112-87.
The Lakers improved to 46-11, one game
ahead of the Blazers in the Pacific Division.
Los Angeles also tied the.season series 2-2,
preventing the. Blazers from clinching the
head-to-head ti.ebreak~r · should the teams
finish the regular season tied.
·/
Lakers coach Phil Jackson said ~hoever
won this game would probably go on to
win the division. Asked whether the Lakers
could win it, O'NeaJ· said, "If we don't have

.

PHILADELPHIA (AP) -' A
week after defeating the nation's
top"ranked team, Temple got 1
similar treatment froin unrankeq .
city rival St. Joseph's. ,
,
.
The fifth-ranked Owls, *e
best in ·a. city craey for college
basketball, lost 62-59 to the
.
Hawks on Tuescby night.
'l'im Brown's 3-pointer -with
just under 1W9 minutes left gave
the Hawks a ·60-57 lead, and
Na'im Crenshaw added rwo free
throws with 16 'seconds left to
seal theif'first win in ihe rivalry
ENTRY PASS- Nal'm Crenshaw of St. Joe's (left) tries to pass the
since 1995.
ball around T'emple's Pepe simchez during Tuesday's aame. (AP)
Temple (22-5, 13-2 Atlantic
10) had a chance to tie, \rut Mark
Karcher rni~ed a 3-poili'ter with motion," said Martelli, who
,..;We got the shot 'we wanted;'
two seconds left - .a s)tot thai finally beat the ·Owls after 10 Owls coach John Chaney said of
Hawks .coach Phil Martelli ~aid straight losses in his fuie seasons ~he finai 3-point attempt. "It was
took forever ro hit the rim.
at St. joseph's. "That was ~ great
"It seemed like it was in slow Philadelphia set&lt;ies game."
,. ...... Top 11, ..... BJ

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•
•

any more slippage, like we had after our 16game streak was broken, then I believe we
will win it."
Pacen 115, Pistons 105
Reggie Miller scored 24 points and Jalen
Rose had 20 as Indiana overcame the
absence ofDale Davis and AI Harrington to
extend its home winning streak to 23
gam es.
•
Grant Hill led the Pistons with 37 points,
and Jerry Stackhouse added 32, but they got
little help from their teammates. ·
Davis sat out with a pulled hamstring and
H.arrington had a bruised calf muscle.
Rik. Smits had 18 points and 13

PIMH ... NBA. Pip a:a

Madness
begins for .URG
BY MARK WtWAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

· CEDARVILLE - The seeds
have been posted ·for the
upcoming American · Mideast
Conference Division I tournament. The men's tournament
will begi~ Thursday.
The women's tourney began
last night with semifinal games
set for March 4, and the finals
on March 7. The tournament
winners will draw an automa!ic
bi&lt;\ the · NAJA Division I
National Tournament.
Rio Grande (22-8) is the third
seed in the men's tournament.
The Redmen must win three
games to make the big dance .
Rio ,Qpens with Point Park on
Thursday night at 7:30 p.m. at
the Newt Oliver Arena.
If the Redmen win, they travef to Central State on Saturday
for a 7:30 game in the semifi-

nals. If the. Redmen advance to
the championship, they would
likely face top seed Saint Vincent in Latrl&gt;be, Pa., on March 7.
. Rio would host the game if
the Cedarville/ Geneva winner
were to spring the upset of the
Bearcats.
The Redwomen (2S-7) are
the number two seed in the
tournament, meaning they
receive .a first round bye. Rio
Grande won the AMC tourna-,
ment last year as the number
two seed.
·Rio will face Central State on
Saturday, at 2 p.m. at the Newt
Oliver Arena. Central Statedefeated Seton Hill 84-59 Tues- ·
day night. In the other first
round game, Cedarville edgtd
Geneva 79-76 and now meets'
top seed Saint Vincept.
The finals will be played on
Tuesday, March 7, at 7 p.m.

�'

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"" Pllge a 2 • The O.lly Sentinel

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Wedn11~, Milch 1, zoOo

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Pomeroy, Mldcleport, 01)10

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SPRING TRAINING 2000

I '

abound early as players ·prepare for new season .

I: ••

BY TME ASSOCIATED PRESS

I , Here's a sure sign of the spring: ac.hes and pains,
: and even a broken bone or two.
l Chicago White Sox catcher Brook Fordyce broke
j a. bone on the top of his left foot during an
j iJitnsquad game Tuesday in Tucson, Ariz., feeling it
&lt; crack when he tried running from first base to sec: \lfld on a pitch in the dirt.
"I don't know what happened,". Fordyce said. "I
• .felt a crack and then it felt like my foot split in
: half."
_
_.
_
_
_
l . The 29-year-old catcher, who signed-a $1.5 mile
lion, two-year contract with the White Sox on Nov.
l 17, is out 4-6 weeks.
• , "I can't iaY I'm frustrated because things hapl pen;' Fordyce said. "I just need to think about what
l I need to do to get back on the field as soon as pos,sible."
··
,. Tom Lampkin, Seatrle's backup catcher, needs
: _arthroscopic surgery to repair torn cartilage in his
: right knee and also will be sidelined 4-6 weeks.
• "This is a minor item they'll fix, and ·then I'll be
ready for the rest of the season;' he said in Peoria,_
' Ariz.
•
He felt the pain this spring, but assumed nothing
. . serious· was wrong - until the team's first sliding
.
'
, drills on Sunday. ·
j· "I didn't hurt it duripg sliding drills, but I noticed

l

!

.I
!

.l

it then," Lampkin said. "I already had blocked balls,
caught pitchers · and run after that. It was a full
workout. I couldn't sleep that night and then I gnt
up yesterday morning and knew something was
wrong with it."
.
Arizona pitcher Jim Corsi sustained a concussion
after getting hit in the head with a line drive while
pitching for batting practice Tuesday in Tucson.
Corsi was being held at Kino Hospital overnight
for observation.
·
Los Angeles Do&lt;lgers relievef Mike ~etters,
impressive in the early days of spring training,
strained a left·quadriceps muscle duri~g a rundown
in an intrasquad game in Vero Beach, Fla.
''I'll be all right in a couple days, I think," said
.Fetten, a .35~year-old right-hander who signed a
minor league contract with the Dodgers in
December. "I'll know more in the morning. I'm
trying to make the ballclub, I came into camp in the
best shape of my life. This thing ain't going to stop ·
me, I won't let it. I came here for one reason- to ·
be a Dodger. I won't setrle for anything less."
Dodgers manager Davey Johnson initiaDy said he
thought Fetters might be out a couple weeks. When
informed of ,Fetters' appraisal, Johnson smiled and
said, "'What would you expect him to say? ! .hope
it's not as severe as we thought."
After skipping his throwing program two days in

Jason Dickson, who missed all of last season due
a row because of shoulder stiffness, Philadelphia
to
shoulder-surgery, gave up three runs and five hits
Phillies pitcher Curt Schilling felt well enough to
in just one-third of an inning in the Anaheim
continue hil rehab Tuesday in Clearwater, Fla.
.
Schilling, who had arthroscopic surge.ry Dec. B Angels' opening intrasquad game.
In Jupiter, Fla., Monrreal manager Felipe Alou
and probably will miss at least the fint six weeks of
said
Dustin Hermanson is expected to pitch the
the season, played catch for 13 minutes with
regular-season opener against Los Angeles on Ap.-il
bullpen catcher Ramon Henderson.
3.
"There was some tightness, but not enough to
At Port St. Lucie, the Mets said AI Leiter and
not throw," Schilling said. "It's just really kind of like ·
Bobby
J. Jones will remain behind when they open
a pinball. I have to bump and roll here, and what
the se•son-in :Japan against the €ubs, then pi~ch- rbe
ever happens,-happens, and· I've got to accept it.
·
first
two _home games against San Diego the folSchilling lobbed 100 throws in the outfield,grass
lowing
week. John Rocker, suspended until May 1
at the Carpenter Complex, the first 75 from 60 feet
for his offensive commentJ against gays. foreigners
and the rest from 90 feet.
,
"Throwing 100 pitches at 20 percent was cer- and minorities, agre'e d to a one-year contract with'
tainly better than no throws, but I want to ' keep · the Atlanta Braves.
Terms of the contract with not immediately
pushing to start·getting the workload that matters;•
available. The 25-year-old left-bander was one .of
Schilling said.
·
In nearby Dunedin, Toronto Blue Jays catc)ler the Braves'lowestcpaid players last year at $217,500.
Rocker had 38 saves, one short of the franchise
Darren Fletcher started rehabilitation of his ~ight
knee less ·than 24 hours after arthroscopic surgery record, but does not have enough major league service to. be eligible for arbitrati.on. That severely limto repair a slight tear.
' "
. '" I'm ready to go;' Fletcher said. "I am shoot,ing ited his bargaining power and probably meant a
for two weeks. I want to be as close to game ready contract of$300,000 to $350,000.
The players association . has appealed Rocker's
as I should normally be at that point. Today, I'm
suspension,
which covers all of spring training and
going to do some range and motion, aiid lift srime
weights. Obviously, since I had the surgery less than 'the first 28 days of the regular season. A decision by
24 hours ago, the knee is going to be a little s~ff." arbitrator Shyam Das is expected this week.

l Yanks cautious, but supportive concerning Strawberry
j

TAMPA, Fla. (AP)- Over and over, New

h~me

Cruz homers in Tribe'c
••nt•asqua·d aame
O
..

orily 2,9, he already had 280
runs •lid
832 RBis.
·
,..,
1
this it for Darryl Strawberry, the end of his
But legal trouble slowed him while drug
. ·~ baseball career?
·
··
and alcohol problems almost stopped him. He .
I
I · "Reality is hitting pretty hard," David Cone
had stays in the Smithers Genter and ihe Betty
.Ford Ceriter.Then, duringthe 1998 playoffs,
1J
1 saidTuesday,onedayafterStrawberrywassus1 ' ..
l ·pended for one year because he tested positive
he was diagnosed with colon cancer. ·
WINTER HAVEN, Fla. (AP) Manuel
had
emergency
l 'for cocaine.
Denlc Jeter, Yllll"-a -.n.ta on
"I think his major concern is taking care of - Jacob Cruz has . taken the s!lrgery to remove ·part ·of his
l "I'm extremely depressed;' said Cone, per-......ry'alatMI run-In with drug•
his illness before he thinks about doing any- · lead in the center field derby.
colon. Asked what he might
j haps the Yankee closest to Strawberry. "It's
thing," outfielder Tim' Raines said. "He's been
Cruz, • competing for the tell Manuel of the exhibition,
1 ·tough watching dose friends stumble again.
having had a tough time over the last couple Indians' starting job in center pitching coach Dick Pole saUl,
l Because he's suspended and Won't be aYankee
years. We hope he gets helped, and that's -our field, went 2-for-3 and hit a "Nobody got hurt."
~ this year doesn't affect our friendship. I'm sure expected to be the primary designated hitter main concern."
home , run ·· Tuesday during
Bobby Witt, who went 7-15
i everybody in here feels the same:'
· · for the two-time World Series chal:npion~ this
Strawberry returned last season and hit .327 Cleveland's ·intrasquad game.
with a 5.84 · ERA last year· for
: ·· · Commissioner Bud Selig imposed the ban season at a salary of $750,000.
with three homers and six RB!s in 24 games.
Cruz is battling with Lance Tampa Bay, started and got the
I 'and did not make any provision for the trou- "I think we have a designated hitter in He hit .333(5-for-15) with two home runs in Johnson and Dave Roberts this win with a hitless inning, but
:bled star to return early for good behavior. It camp, even if it's a number of. people doing I the po~tseilson, and the Yankees celebrated spring to be 'the Indians' every- . two of the ' outs were lined
1 'is the third C&lt;!Caine-related penalty of Strawonejob;'Yankees manager Joe Torre said."We their second straight Series sweep with no~- day center fielder while Kenny shots. Charles Nagy took the
berry's career.
·
just go on. We're going to miss him, no ques- alcoholic beverages, out ·of respect to Straw- Lofton recovers from offseason loss, allowing two . ruris and
l · ."First and foremost, he's got to get his life. tion, but you don't have him and you can't do
berry.
shoulder surgery.
three hits in his inning.
on track and get his addiction under control;' anything about it."
' Strawberry was ·suspended in 1995 for 60 .
Cruz bulked up during the
Russell Branyan had two h~ts
;:{:one said. "What we can do as his friends is
Instead, Strawberry's third drug suspension ·~ys following a positive test for cocaine use. winter, addirig 15 pounds of and David Justice hit an Rbl
:;1o tk~ and _:,onv.~nce him there are thing;s, to since 1995 left his future in doubt. Family In 1999, Selig banned him again from April muscl~, .and h~ shhow!:d '1£.f his. triple for the Gators. J'i,m
1 10rwa1U to.
;,,oo
friends who spoke with· StraWberry on Thes- 24 to A.ug. 4 after Strawberry .was arrested for ·power ·· with ' 'oi' s ot -- over the Thome· dro\le in· t\Yo' runs" fbr
;:• While .tltey hope he can c0 me . back next day said he was depressed.
cocaine poSsession and soliciting a prostitute. center-field wall against Jamie. the Terrapins.
.
'
r.¥ear, Strawberry's teammates know there's a
"A baseball career means · nothing at this
Strawberry pleaded no contest to the Brewington. ·
Notes: The Indians will p)ay
::chance his baseball ·career is over.
point;' shortstop Derek Jeter said. "You have charges last year and was undergoing regular
Johnson went O"for-2 at the another intrasquad game tod~y
::: "I just don't know at his age;' first baSeman to take it ()ne step at a time. He has to do it drug tests as part of his legal punishment. His plate and allowed a run to before opening . their exhil1i:• :nno Martinez 'said. "I think this was going to himself. He has to want to .do it, and I feel he 'Jan. 19 test came back positive and led to the score when · he overran a tion _schedule on Thursday at
::~e his last year anyway. I think it would be wants to do it.''
.
. latest penalty.
grounder for an er.ror. Roberts home against the Philadelpltia
:; hard to miss the whole year and come back."
· Strawberry is ~• career .259 hitter with 335
If Strawberry wants to, he could play with singled in hiS only at-bat.
Phillies. Bartolo Colbn will
;
Mattinez said he thought Strawberry v.io~ld home runs and 1,000 RB!s, and a legacy ·o f the independent Northern League or with
Tlie teams were managed by start. After playing the ·Ph_ilrfes
t~: be "intrigued" by a future opportunity to tape-measure shots. The NL Rookie of the the Newark Bears iit the Atlantic League, a coaches Jim Riggleman and on Friday in Clearwater, the
~- . work with one the Yankees'two minor league Year with the New York Me!s in 1983, he team owned by former Yankees catcher Rick Grady Little. Riggleman's Ter- Indians fly to Toronto to play
', reams based in Tampa.
·
seemed headed toward greatness. .
Cerone.
rapins beat Grady's Gators 4-3. the Blue Jays on Saturday arid
;'::: Strawberry, an eight-timeAII-Star,had been
By the end of the 1991 season, at the age of
On, Tuesday, the Indians Sunday.
·
·
~. :~-------------------------...;.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __.,_,______ learrled that manager Charlie

1York Yankees players wondered out loud: Is

l

.

I N D IAN s NoTE s

"A baseball career means nothing
at th~s point. You laave to take it,_
one step at a time. He has to do it
hirruellf. He. Ia as to want to do it,
and I foe/ he wants to do if,"

1

•

•

!
l

NBA

f.;

£:
::: '

MoRE·LOCI NE·ws·..Mo·RE LOC·'

flam Pap: 81

:::

'•:
;:: and Mark Jackson added 13 points and 13
:::usis!s for the Pacers.
.
l: • Indiana has not lost at Conseco Fieldhouse
::4ince Detroit .beat the Pacers 107-99 on
::l'hanksgiving Day.
;•: Spurs 93, Heat 69
·
:::: At San Antonio, David Robinson scored 19
;: }&gt;oints as the Spurs took control early and
::t:ruised to an easy vi_ctory. holding Miami to a
;: }eason-low point total.
·
::: Terry Porter added 15 points and Avery
::johnson 14 for San Antonio, which played i!s
· ::third straight game without the injured Tim
:: buncan, who is sidelined with a lower ·
;. abdominal strain. San Antonio has won
three
.
•·:Of its last four ~mes.
::: Miami, playing without Alonzo Mourning,
·• :Jud a f&lt;;&gt;ur-game winning streak snapped.
Hornets 92,Timberwolves 87~
.
:-: Elden CampbeU scored 22 poin!s and Char;:jottesnapped a three-game losing skid de$pite
•: the absence of Derrick Coleman.
··
;:: Coleman, the Hornets' second-leading
::iocorer and rebounder, sat out with a sprained
:: Eight ankle, which he injJJred in Charlotte's
:::loss to Seattle on Monday night.
. .
~

5:

.·-...

Host Minnesota went cold in the final 'five gi;eOrlando iis first victory since Feb. 16.
----....------------------....-minutes af~er er:ising an 11-point secondSuns 100, Cavaliers 93
quarter deficit, and lost for the first time in . Jason Kidd's third steal of the game helped
AI
AT F.
five games.
Phoenix finish the game at Cleveland with an
11L
11L
76en 106, Mavericks 87
8-0 nin.
At Philadelphia, Allen Iverson played with a
Penny Hardaway scored 22 points to lead
partially torn rotator cuff and shot 15-of-18 six Suns in double figures. Kidil scored 21,and.
for 35 points.
his steal of a weak pass by Shawn Kemp with
.Iverson was 7-for-9 in the first quarter for less than 40 seconds to play helped Phoenix
15 points. Thea Ratliff added 19 poin!s on 9- hold the Cavaliers scoreless for the final 2:35.
for~ tO shooting, and the Sixers shot a ~easonKings 112, Gr_izzlies 87
high 63 percent (46-for-73).
.
At Sacramento, Chris Webber had 23
'
'
I .
. Michael Finley led Dallas with 15 points. poin!s, nil)e rebounds and seven assists as the
In the life of a nuralng home ..,.ldtint. ,,, •.
De_nnis Rodman played just 19 minutes, Kings snapped a four-game losing strealt.
grabbed three rebounds and did not atte,mpt ,a
It was a much-needed victory for the
.
Improve the quality of the'r 1"-. (,
shot.
·
·
Kings, who had lost six of seven ~mes sinc·e
·· · Empc»wer them •o' atand up f&lt;»r their rlghtaF
· Rapton 87, Bulb 80
.
the All-Star break to slip into the eighth spot
·Klndne" Is long remembered.
, •..
At Toronto,Vince Carter had 26 points and in the Western Conference.
The ten hour VC»Iunteer training 11 free. Hm.iij
Tracy McGrady tied his career-high with 15
Peter Flllk (Colwnbo) was diag~n be ech4Kiuled your CQnvenlence.,,::. ·
rebounds.
nosed with a malignant tumor at
The Raptors went on a 1'1-2 run late in the
''
740-374-9436 .
the at~e of 3. The actor lost his
'
.'J
right eye to lhe,._.
fourth quarter to send the Bulls to their fifth
_,_
ask
~yce or cathy at
straight loss. Toronto tied a franchise record
Aging
with in 30th win of the season.
BuCkeye Hill• HCM:klng V.lley
Magic 103, SuperSonics 94 . .
At OrlandO, Ron Mercer scored 27 points
.O.V.Iopment.DIIItrlct
·
and the Magic never trailed in breaking a 'fivegame losing streak.
·
·
Seattle cut Orlando's lead to 99~92 on a ..
la}rup by Gary Payton with 1:37left, but Mercer responded 'with consecutive jump shots to

Subscribe today.
992-2156

__

.

'

'· •

·

'•:

:~: and stole 568 bases from 1882-1899. A second .

:: }&gt;aseman, he resisted wearing a glove until late in his.
:-:fareer.
,
.
:.:· Stearnes hit .359 over 18 seasons in the Negro·
;: teagues. He began his career With the Detroi~ Stan
': ~n 1923 and led or shared the league lead in home
six times. ·
.
, '
·
:: The chewed-up pens and half-eaten chocolate
: J:ake inside the Vets' meeting room told the story of
• what happened in the player category. Despite five
:~oun of discussion, it was a shutqut .- it took 11
:.votes for election, and Mazeroski just missed with
' 10.
"It built my hopes up, but not~ the poi~t where

:runs

·,

·"

fint-year college athletes - as having an College Test.
.. ...
"unjustified disparate impact against MricanProposition 16 requires minimum score;\' ~if
Americans."
820 on the SAT or 16 on the ACT, a eore ..
In avert urrung
·
tha1 d ec!Sion,
··
th e appeaJs group of high school courses and a minimum' '
court ·said that since the NCAA did not grade-point average in that core for freshmen
directly receive federal funding, it cannot be in the NCAA's 302 Division I schools.
.sued for "disparate impact" discrimination
The amended complaint. seeks an injuncunder Title VI of the 1964 Civil Rights Act. tion prohibiting -the NCAA from using a cutThe law forbids discrimination on the basis of off score requirement and allowing all affectrace, color or national origin in programs that ed student-athletes to regain their lost-year of
directly-reGeive federal funds ·
.
athletic-e}igibility.
·
Rather than arguing the case as a-" disparate
"What the NCAA has done up to this point
impact" claim, the plaintiffs attorneys w.int to is to have the cale decided 'in its favor on a
resubmit their claim using a new legal argu- technicality;' Dennis said. " It is our position
ment of ."purposeful discrimination." They that the NCAII. has a flawed rule that is discontend that the latter charge can be brought criminatory ... which means we will continue
against . organizati.ons that indirectly receive to press for the change of that rule."
federal funding- such .,. the NCAA. ·
NCAA officials did not rerum a call seeking
·The appeals court never addressed the mer- comment Tuesday. In a statement released
its of the lower court's decision that the Monday,- -NCA/1. spokesman Wally Renfro
NCAA's use of standardized .test scores dis- rejected the plaintiffs' claims.
criminates against minority athletes.
"There . are more . tharr 330,000 athletes
The NCAA standards were chaUenged by involved in NCAA competition. There is no
four bl~ck athletes who contended they were intentional discrimination by thjs association
d~nied ,athletic scholarship$ or spor!s eligibili- · with regard to any ofthein;' Renfro said. "For
ty because they did not score the minimum the plainiiffi to introduce this argument at this
on the S'cholastic Assessment Test or American late hour is certainly a questionable move:'
'

'

'

'

PORTSMOUTH - The Rio Grande Redmen baseball team
split a double header last Saturday with Hillsdale College.
After a 14-4 loss to Shawnee State on Friday, the Redmen (3-5)
;struggled in the first game, managing only three hits in a 4-0 loss to
1-iiDsdale. Joe Thomas recorded two of the hils and Ja$on King collected the other.
'
Brandon Hutchinson (1-1) pitched weD despite absorbing the loss.
Hutchinson struck out nine in sever! innings with only two walks
and three earned runs on three hits.'IWo of the three knocks against
Hutchinson were home runs.
·
In game two, the bats came alive for tbe Redmen, wrapping out
13 hits in a 13-11 slugfest. Rio Grande jumped out to a 7-2 advan tage..after-two innio~. before Hillsdale-eame-reuing-baek to lea:d-I 0-7 in the sixth.
Redmen rookie catcher Chris Good came off the bench an~
ripped a run-scoring double to send Rio back out on top, 11-1 ~·
Good wo.uld later add· an insurance run with a sacrifice fly.
Jonathan Ervin (2-0) pitched innin~ in relief to collect the win.
Jamie Lambert picked up his first save, throwing one pitch and ge£.
ting a game ending double play.
'
Freshman Jimmy Knight went 2-for-3 at the plate and drove in 11
run, as weU as recording ·his sixth stolen base of the season. Keerian
Perry also produced a 2~for-3 effort, scoring two runs and knockirrg
in two more. Brandon Hutchinson clubbed a home run and Cory
Maynard· left the yard twice and knocked in four. Brian Karlet was a
perfect 4-for-4 at the plate with two runs scored.
The Redmen were scheduled to face Johnnie Lemaster's Pikeville
College Bears· on Saturday, but poor weather forced a postponement.
No make-up date has been scheduled.
The Redmen will travel to Athens today to tangle with the Ohio
Bobcats.
·'·

·-pBA Hall of Famer Webe, suspended for ~he rest of the year
AKRON, Ohio (AP) -The 'pro Bowlers
Weber was verbally abusive to people at the
· '1\ssociation has suspended and banned Pete Janes iq an alcohol~related incident during the
·~eber, the tour's second-leading career pro-am portion of the Bay Cicy Classic. Weber
money winner, for the rest ·of the ye.ar.
was_ already on probation at. the time for
Weber, the 37-year-old .son of bowling unproFsional conduct.
·
·
great Dick Weber, was suspended Thesday for
We6er did not return a call Tuesday to the
"conduct unbecoming .a professional" last fall only phone listing under his name in his
during a PBA event at Bay ~anes in Bay City, hometown ofSt.Ann, Mo. · ·
·. Mich., the A.kron-based PBA said in a 'news
PBA Tour commissioner Mark Gerberich
· ' ' •release.
.
issued· the suspension, which ·Lists until Dec.

Rio's Roberts places 24th
at NAIA nationals

31. Weber, who appealed the suspension last
fall, will remain on probation through Jan. 30,
·'
2002.
Weber, a member of the PBA HaD of Fame,
has earned $2.2 million on the PBA Tour,
trailing only Walter Ray Williams Jr. on the
t;our's. money list.
Be has 25 career titles and orily needs one
more victory to tie his father.

. LINCOLN, Neb. - Rio Grande freshman Ashly Roperts COqlpeted with. the NAJA's best at the national indoor track and fie!s:J
meet last weekend in Lincoln, Nebraska. Roberts, a River Valley
alumnus and the URG record holder in the 20-lb. weight throw, finished 24th out of 35 competitors in the event.
·
Roberts' top effort was 41 feet, 7.25 inches. The winning distanae
was 56 feet, 8 inches by A.pril Kockrow of Doane College, who abo
won the shot put.
Roberts' coach Juan McCabe was proud of his young protege. ,,
"I thought she performed well for a freshman at the natiolllll
championships;• Mcwabe said. "It was a great learning experienc:e·
for her."
I'
'
"She knows what it takes to get there;' McCabe added.
T~ia Cole finisjled sixth in the race walk, which qualified her for
All-American status, but she was later disqualified on a controversial'
ruling concerning technique. Rio Grande Head Coach Bob Wille~r
filed a protest with the NAJA, but it was to no avail and the ruling
stood.

J •.•

....

"'5
10p 6.

-r,

··

drawing even twice in the final eight minutes. makers out of first place in the Big Ten and
Th~ Hawks took their biggestlead at 47-34 likely cost them a shot at the ~onference
.
on
Bill Phillips' 3-pointer with 13:48 remain- championship. Mike Robinson·had 23 poin!s
''· .
,, .
Page 81
ing. ,
.
for Purdue (21-8, 12~4), which needs both
1,,:
b·
. .
RaJCher, who was 6-of-18 from the field, hit Ohio State and Michigan State to lose at least
" .;. probably the orily pattern we tried that a 3-pointer with 10:30 left to spark a 9-0 run. one of their final two games in order to claim
r :rvork&lt;;p weD tonight." . .
Greer also added four free throws to tie it at a share of the title.
·
Marvin O'Connor scored 20 points and . 49 with 8:26 remaining:
. No. 18 St. John's 66, Seton Hall 60 .
O'Connor hit a 3-pointer to put the Hawks
Bootsy Thornton scored 28 points to lead
. . &lt;;:renshaw and Damian Reid each had io for
l l ~t.Joseph.'s (12-14, 7-8), which had lost four ahead 57-51 with 5:40 left.
the ~ed Storm (21-6, 12-3 Big East) to their
. .in a ~w. St. Joseph's hadn't beaten. such a
Tewple responded with six straight points eighth straight win despite not having leading
~'Jp'gljly . ~nkecj, team ;sincA downing N&lt;l• ·.2 · to tie it at 57 -with 3:42 remaiiling.
scorer Erick Barkley, who was ruled ineligibl~
DePaul in 1984.
.
. ·
BrQwn's 3-pointer broke the tie and earlier Tuesday for breaking NCAA rules. It
;, "We've.lost a lot. of close games. It's about Karcher's basket with 1:35 Jefr pulled Temple was the sophomore guard's second suspension
· !&gt;y the NCA/1. this season- the other was for
.; ,?me we won one, and against the No.5 team .withjn a point. .
· . QUke~ it even better;' O'Connor said.
. "We've had two or three games that we shot two games for exchanging cars with a family
;," Karcher scored 16 points and Lynn Greer extreqtely well. This one we had to win with friend. The victory at _Madison Square Garden
s }~dec\ 11 for Temple, which saw in 13-game our heads. You can't depend on shooting to completed an 8-0 month for St.John's, its first
perfect February since going 7-0 in 1973-74.
1 :~nning streak come to an end. That streak get o~t of trouble;• Chaney said.
"We have a very talented team, but I don't
' Shaheen Holloway had "22 points for the
included a 77-69 win Feb. 21 over then-No.
. : Tcincinnati.
· know if we are smart enough yet:'
Pirates (19-8, 10-6), who have lost four of
·. '. In other games involving ranked teams
Temple uncharaCteristically committed 11 five, including their last fo.ur conference
. j: 'tuesday, it was No. 14 Indiana 79, No. 20 Pur- turnovers, including three· by point guard games.
. due 65; No. 18 St: John's 66, Seton Hall 60; Pepe Sanchez, against the Hawks' aggressive
No. 22 Kentucky 73, Mississippi St. 61
Jamaal Magloire and Tayshaun Prince each
and No. 22 Kentucky 73, Mississippi State 61. man-to-man defense.
Down '35-30 at halftime, Temple pressed full
The Owls hav~ beaten the Hawks in 15 of scored 16 points for the Wildcats (21-8, 11-4
• courH,efore falling back into i!s trademark . 16 games dating to Feb. 19, 1993, and lead the Southeastern Conference), who missed their
match~up zone to increase pressure on . the 'series 72-49 since the city rivals began playing first 11 J-(iointers and finished 5-for-27 from
Haw~. who made 11 '3~pointeri in the gaine. .each other in 1931.
.
.
beyond the arc. Antonio Jackson and Michael
"I've ken their zone before, and sometimes
No.' 14 Indiana 79, No. 20. Purdue 65
Gholar each had 12 points for the Bulldogs
you can get sho!s froll). \he perimeter. They . AJ. Guyton scored 17 points in his final (13-15, 4-11), who lost to Kentucky at honte
want you to shoot the 3;'' 0'Connor said. · home game as the Hoosiers (20-6; 10-5) for the fifth straight time.
Temple trailed most of the game until jumped to a 17~2 lead, knocked the Boiler-

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fNm .... 81

• PHILADELPHIA (AP) -The four black
' "student-athletes who sued the NCAA and lost
are going back to court. Their lawyers are
L 'armed with new argumen!s they believe will
·.'win their racial discrimination case regarding
1
the use of test scores to determine eligibility.
r
:·T.her~'s ~ore _th~n one way to prove dis" :cr~nunatl,on, ,,Plai~_tlffs lawy~r ~ndre Dennis
;, ~d Tuesday. This time, were _confide~! . we_
_ can prove that the NC:AA has •mpernumbly
.. used ra~e as a. discn~n~tory factor and has
~ ~cted With de~berate md1fferen~~ by contlnu;, ~ng to mamtam PropoSI~on 16.
•
·
· Instead of taking ~heu appeal to the ~.S.
·'.Supreme Court, as many .expected, the plai~~: ·ttffs la~ers filed a motion to amend th~1r
,complamt m an _attempt to correct lla':"s 1~
·' theu argument cited by the 3rd U.S. ·C1rcu1t
-'' Court of Appeals.
· ..
. ,. In t&gt;ecember, the three:jud~ ~pp~als panel
· ~verturned a lower courts decmon m Cure-.
,. l?n vs. National CoDegiate Athletic Associa. tton. The lower court stru~k down the test
; -score. co~p?nent of Propc:&gt;•llon 16 -. a r~le
-' semng nummum standardized test scores on

••

~ Sp~,l~g

:::

::

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Redmen basebaH squad eams split:

fc)r

.

$ pa""
1

Bv JOANN LOVIGLIO

",

URG SPORTS NOTES

at

:. :
1"':'..,

·Athletes by new argument
in racial lawsuit aga
NCAA

a3

MAKE A:· DIFFERENCE· ·

Oarden Teel•

-

The 0111y s.nune1 • P9

Pomeroy, Mlddl..,... Ohio

1

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_ _ _......__ _ _ _ _i'--_ _ _ _ _..._,...:.,.,,.....-...:.....,---___,..,.-•
'

OLKS.·

Wedn11dey,Merch 1, 2000
:;.

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this is-a big letdown:·~ Maieroski, .Y.orking an
spring training insrru~ro,t for Pittst&gt;urgh.
·.
Mazeroski was a seven-lime All•Star and· ;won
eight Gold Gloves, be&lt;;oming one of the best.fielding .second baseman ever. He also hit one of the dra•
matic home runs in history, a bottom-of-die-ninth
shot that lifted the Pirates over the Yankees in Game
7 of the 1960 World Series.
. ,.
1 • • ·• • .
Ted Williams, an influential voice in .the meetingroom, pushed for Harder, 223-186 for the Cleveland .
, Indi~ns.
• "
'
·
Hodges was backed by an intense letter-writing
campaign frOm fans nationwide. The late Brooklyn
first baseman hit 370 home runs and also managed
the 1969 Miracle Me!s to the World Series tide.
"It wai very disappoin~ng we didn't pick one;•
pan~l member Yogi Berra said. "Tliat's what we
come here once a year to dO. B11-t we didn't do it:'

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SPRING TRAINING 2000

I '

abound early as players ·prepare for new season .

I: ••

BY TME ASSOCIATED PRESS

I , Here's a sure sign of the spring: ac.hes and pains,
: and even a broken bone or two.
l Chicago White Sox catcher Brook Fordyce broke
j a. bone on the top of his left foot during an
j iJitnsquad game Tuesday in Tucson, Ariz., feeling it
&lt; crack when he tried running from first base to sec: \lfld on a pitch in the dirt.
"I don't know what happened,". Fordyce said. "I
• .felt a crack and then it felt like my foot split in
: half."
_
_.
_
_
_
l . The 29-year-old catcher, who signed-a $1.5 mile
lion, two-year contract with the White Sox on Nov.
l 17, is out 4-6 weeks.
• , "I can't iaY I'm frustrated because things hapl pen;' Fordyce said. "I just need to think about what
l I need to do to get back on the field as soon as pos,sible."
··
,. Tom Lampkin, Seatrle's backup catcher, needs
: _arthroscopic surgery to repair torn cartilage in his
: right knee and also will be sidelined 4-6 weeks.
• "This is a minor item they'll fix, and ·then I'll be
ready for the rest of the season;' he said in Peoria,_
' Ariz.
•
He felt the pain this spring, but assumed nothing
. . serious· was wrong - until the team's first sliding
.
'
, drills on Sunday. ·
j· "I didn't hurt it duripg sliding drills, but I noticed

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it then," Lampkin said. "I already had blocked balls,
caught pitchers · and run after that. It was a full
workout. I couldn't sleep that night and then I gnt
up yesterday morning and knew something was
wrong with it."
.
Arizona pitcher Jim Corsi sustained a concussion
after getting hit in the head with a line drive while
pitching for batting practice Tuesday in Tucson.
Corsi was being held at Kino Hospital overnight
for observation.
·
Los Angeles Do&lt;lgers relievef Mike ~etters,
impressive in the early days of spring training,
strained a left·quadriceps muscle duri~g a rundown
in an intrasquad game in Vero Beach, Fla.
''I'll be all right in a couple days, I think," said
.Fetten, a .35~year-old right-hander who signed a
minor league contract with the Dodgers in
December. "I'll know more in the morning. I'm
trying to make the ballclub, I came into camp in the
best shape of my life. This thing ain't going to stop ·
me, I won't let it. I came here for one reason- to ·
be a Dodger. I won't setrle for anything less."
Dodgers manager Davey Johnson initiaDy said he
thought Fetters might be out a couple weeks. When
informed of ,Fetters' appraisal, Johnson smiled and
said, "'What would you expect him to say? ! .hope
it's not as severe as we thought."
After skipping his throwing program two days in

Jason Dickson, who missed all of last season due
a row because of shoulder stiffness, Philadelphia
to
shoulder-surgery, gave up three runs and five hits
Phillies pitcher Curt Schilling felt well enough to
in just one-third of an inning in the Anaheim
continue hil rehab Tuesday in Clearwater, Fla.
.
Schilling, who had arthroscopic surge.ry Dec. B Angels' opening intrasquad game.
In Jupiter, Fla., Monrreal manager Felipe Alou
and probably will miss at least the fint six weeks of
said
Dustin Hermanson is expected to pitch the
the season, played catch for 13 minutes with
regular-season opener against Los Angeles on Ap.-il
bullpen catcher Ramon Henderson.
3.
"There was some tightness, but not enough to
At Port St. Lucie, the Mets said AI Leiter and
not throw," Schilling said. "It's just really kind of like ·
Bobby
J. Jones will remain behind when they open
a pinball. I have to bump and roll here, and what
the se•son-in :Japan against the €ubs, then pi~ch- rbe
ever happens,-happens, and· I've got to accept it.
·
first
two _home games against San Diego the folSchilling lobbed 100 throws in the outfield,grass
lowing
week. John Rocker, suspended until May 1
at the Carpenter Complex, the first 75 from 60 feet
for his offensive commentJ against gays. foreigners
and the rest from 90 feet.
,
"Throwing 100 pitches at 20 percent was cer- and minorities, agre'e d to a one-year contract with'
tainly better than no throws, but I want to ' keep · the Atlanta Braves.
Terms of the contract with not immediately
pushing to start·getting the workload that matters;•
available. The 25-year-old left-bander was one .of
Schilling said.
·
In nearby Dunedin, Toronto Blue Jays catc)ler the Braves'lowestcpaid players last year at $217,500.
Rocker had 38 saves, one short of the franchise
Darren Fletcher started rehabilitation of his ~ight
knee less ·than 24 hours after arthroscopic surgery record, but does not have enough major league service to. be eligible for arbitrati.on. That severely limto repair a slight tear.
' "
. '" I'm ready to go;' Fletcher said. "I am shoot,ing ited his bargaining power and probably meant a
for two weeks. I want to be as close to game ready contract of$300,000 to $350,000.
The players association . has appealed Rocker's
as I should normally be at that point. Today, I'm
suspension,
which covers all of spring training and
going to do some range and motion, aiid lift srime
weights. Obviously, since I had the surgery less than 'the first 28 days of the regular season. A decision by
24 hours ago, the knee is going to be a little s~ff." arbitrator Shyam Das is expected this week.

l Yanks cautious, but supportive concerning Strawberry
j

TAMPA, Fla. (AP)- Over and over, New

h~me

Cruz homers in Tribe'c
••nt•asqua·d aame
O
..

orily 2,9, he already had 280
runs •lid
832 RBis.
·
,..,
1
this it for Darryl Strawberry, the end of his
But legal trouble slowed him while drug
. ·~ baseball career?
·
··
and alcohol problems almost stopped him. He .
I
I · "Reality is hitting pretty hard," David Cone
had stays in the Smithers Genter and ihe Betty
.Ford Ceriter.Then, duringthe 1998 playoffs,
1J
1 saidTuesday,onedayafterStrawberrywassus1 ' ..
l ·pended for one year because he tested positive
he was diagnosed with colon cancer. ·
WINTER HAVEN, Fla. (AP) Manuel
had
emergency
l 'for cocaine.
Denlc Jeter, Yllll"-a -.n.ta on
"I think his major concern is taking care of - Jacob Cruz has . taken the s!lrgery to remove ·part ·of his
l "I'm extremely depressed;' said Cone, per-......ry'alatMI run-In with drug•
his illness before he thinks about doing any- · lead in the center field derby.
colon. Asked what he might
j haps the Yankee closest to Strawberry. "It's
thing," outfielder Tim' Raines said. "He's been
Cruz, • competing for the tell Manuel of the exhibition,
1 ·tough watching dose friends stumble again.
having had a tough time over the last couple Indians' starting job in center pitching coach Dick Pole saUl,
l Because he's suspended and Won't be aYankee
years. We hope he gets helped, and that's -our field, went 2-for-3 and hit a "Nobody got hurt."
~ this year doesn't affect our friendship. I'm sure expected to be the primary designated hitter main concern."
home , run ·· Tuesday during
Bobby Witt, who went 7-15
i everybody in here feels the same:'
· · for the two-time World Series chal:npion~ this
Strawberry returned last season and hit .327 Cleveland's ·intrasquad game.
with a 5.84 · ERA last year· for
: ·· · Commissioner Bud Selig imposed the ban season at a salary of $750,000.
with three homers and six RB!s in 24 games.
Cruz is battling with Lance Tampa Bay, started and got the
I 'and did not make any provision for the trou- "I think we have a designated hitter in He hit .333(5-for-15) with two home runs in Johnson and Dave Roberts this win with a hitless inning, but
:bled star to return early for good behavior. It camp, even if it's a number of. people doing I the po~tseilson, and the Yankees celebrated spring to be 'the Indians' every- . two of the ' outs were lined
1 'is the third C&lt;!Caine-related penalty of Strawonejob;'Yankees manager Joe Torre said."We their second straight Series sweep with no~- day center fielder while Kenny shots. Charles Nagy took the
berry's career.
·
just go on. We're going to miss him, no ques- alcoholic beverages, out ·of respect to Straw- Lofton recovers from offseason loss, allowing two . ruris and
l · ."First and foremost, he's got to get his life. tion, but you don't have him and you can't do
berry.
shoulder surgery.
three hits in his inning.
on track and get his addiction under control;' anything about it."
' Strawberry was ·suspended in 1995 for 60 .
Cruz bulked up during the
Russell Branyan had two h~ts
;:{:one said. "What we can do as his friends is
Instead, Strawberry's third drug suspension ·~ys following a positive test for cocaine use. winter, addirig 15 pounds of and David Justice hit an Rbl
:;1o tk~ and _:,onv.~nce him there are thing;s, to since 1995 left his future in doubt. Family In 1999, Selig banned him again from April muscl~, .and h~ shhow!:d '1£.f his. triple for the Gators. J'i,m
1 10rwa1U to.
;,,oo
friends who spoke with· StraWberry on Thes- 24 to A.ug. 4 after Strawberry .was arrested for ·power ·· with ' 'oi' s ot -- over the Thome· dro\le in· t\Yo' runs" fbr
;:• While .tltey hope he can c0 me . back next day said he was depressed.
cocaine poSsession and soliciting a prostitute. center-field wall against Jamie. the Terrapins.
.
'
r.¥ear, Strawberry's teammates know there's a
"A baseball career means · nothing at this
Strawberry pleaded no contest to the Brewington. ·
Notes: The Indians will p)ay
::chance his baseball ·career is over.
point;' shortstop Derek Jeter said. "You have charges last year and was undergoing regular
Johnson went O"for-2 at the another intrasquad game tod~y
::: "I just don't know at his age;' first baSeman to take it ()ne step at a time. He has to do it drug tests as part of his legal punishment. His plate and allowed a run to before opening . their exhil1i:• :nno Martinez 'said. "I think this was going to himself. He has to want to .do it, and I feel he 'Jan. 19 test came back positive and led to the score when · he overran a tion _schedule on Thursday at
::~e his last year anyway. I think it would be wants to do it.''
.
. latest penalty.
grounder for an er.ror. Roberts home against the Philadelpltia
:; hard to miss the whole year and come back."
· Strawberry is ~• career .259 hitter with 335
If Strawberry wants to, he could play with singled in hiS only at-bat.
Phillies. Bartolo Colbn will
;
Mattinez said he thought Strawberry v.io~ld home runs and 1,000 RB!s, and a legacy ·o f the independent Northern League or with
Tlie teams were managed by start. After playing the ·Ph_ilrfes
t~: be "intrigued" by a future opportunity to tape-measure shots. The NL Rookie of the the Newark Bears iit the Atlantic League, a coaches Jim Riggleman and on Friday in Clearwater, the
~- . work with one the Yankees'two minor league Year with the New York Me!s in 1983, he team owned by former Yankees catcher Rick Grady Little. Riggleman's Ter- Indians fly to Toronto to play
', reams based in Tampa.
·
seemed headed toward greatness. .
Cerone.
rapins beat Grady's Gators 4-3. the Blue Jays on Saturday arid
;'::: Strawberry, an eight-timeAII-Star,had been
By the end of the 1991 season, at the age of
On, Tuesday, the Indians Sunday.
·
·
~. :~-------------------------...;.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __.,_,______ learrled that manager Charlie

1York Yankees players wondered out loud: Is

l

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I N D IAN s NoTE s

"A baseball career means nothing
at th~s point. You laave to take it,_
one step at a time. He has to do it
hirruellf. He. Ia as to want to do it,
and I foe/ he wants to do if,"

1

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NBA

f.;

£:
::: '

MoRE·LOCI NE·ws·..Mo·RE LOC·'

flam Pap: 81

:::

'•:
;:: and Mark Jackson added 13 points and 13
:::usis!s for the Pacers.
.
l: • Indiana has not lost at Conseco Fieldhouse
::4ince Detroit .beat the Pacers 107-99 on
::l'hanksgiving Day.
;•: Spurs 93, Heat 69
·
:::: At San Antonio, David Robinson scored 19
;: }&gt;oints as the Spurs took control early and
::t:ruised to an easy vi_ctory. holding Miami to a
;: }eason-low point total.
·
::: Terry Porter added 15 points and Avery
::johnson 14 for San Antonio, which played i!s
· ::third straight game without the injured Tim
:: buncan, who is sidelined with a lower ·
;. abdominal strain. San Antonio has won
three
.
•·:Of its last four ~mes.
::: Miami, playing without Alonzo Mourning,
·• :Jud a f&lt;;&gt;ur-game winning streak snapped.
Hornets 92,Timberwolves 87~
.
:-: Elden CampbeU scored 22 poin!s and Char;:jottesnapped a three-game losing skid de$pite
•: the absence of Derrick Coleman.
··
;:: Coleman, the Hornets' second-leading
::iocorer and rebounder, sat out with a sprained
:: Eight ankle, which he injJJred in Charlotte's
:::loss to Seattle on Monday night.
. .
~

5:

.·-...

Host Minnesota went cold in the final 'five gi;eOrlando iis first victory since Feb. 16.
----....------------------....-minutes af~er er:ising an 11-point secondSuns 100, Cavaliers 93
quarter deficit, and lost for the first time in . Jason Kidd's third steal of the game helped
AI
AT F.
five games.
Phoenix finish the game at Cleveland with an
11L
11L
76en 106, Mavericks 87
8-0 nin.
At Philadelphia, Allen Iverson played with a
Penny Hardaway scored 22 points to lead
partially torn rotator cuff and shot 15-of-18 six Suns in double figures. Kidil scored 21,and.
for 35 points.
his steal of a weak pass by Shawn Kemp with
.Iverson was 7-for-9 in the first quarter for less than 40 seconds to play helped Phoenix
15 points. Thea Ratliff added 19 poin!s on 9- hold the Cavaliers scoreless for the final 2:35.
for~ tO shooting, and the Sixers shot a ~easonKings 112, Gr_izzlies 87
high 63 percent (46-for-73).
.
At Sacramento, Chris Webber had 23
'
'
I .
. Michael Finley led Dallas with 15 points. poin!s, nil)e rebounds and seven assists as the
In the life of a nuralng home ..,.ldtint. ,,, •.
De_nnis Rodman played just 19 minutes, Kings snapped a four-game losing strealt.
grabbed three rebounds and did not atte,mpt ,a
It was a much-needed victory for the
.
Improve the quality of the'r 1"-. (,
shot.
·
·
Kings, who had lost six of seven ~mes sinc·e
·· · Empc»wer them •o' atand up f&lt;»r their rlghtaF
· Rapton 87, Bulb 80
.
the All-Star break to slip into the eighth spot
·Klndne" Is long remembered.
, •..
At Toronto,Vince Carter had 26 points and in the Western Conference.
The ten hour VC»Iunteer training 11 free. Hm.iij
Tracy McGrady tied his career-high with 15
Peter Flllk (Colwnbo) was diag~n be ech4Kiuled your CQnvenlence.,,::. ·
rebounds.
nosed with a malignant tumor at
The Raptors went on a 1'1-2 run late in the
''
740-374-9436 .
the at~e of 3. The actor lost his
'
.'J
right eye to lhe,._.
fourth quarter to send the Bulls to their fifth
_,_
ask
~yce or cathy at
straight loss. Toronto tied a franchise record
Aging
with in 30th win of the season.
BuCkeye Hill• HCM:klng V.lley
Magic 103, SuperSonics 94 . .
At OrlandO, Ron Mercer scored 27 points
.O.V.Iopment.DIIItrlct
·
and the Magic never trailed in breaking a 'fivegame losing streak.
·
·
Seattle cut Orlando's lead to 99~92 on a ..
la}rup by Gary Payton with 1:37left, but Mercer responded 'with consecutive jump shots to

Subscribe today.
992-2156

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:~: and stole 568 bases from 1882-1899. A second .

:: }&gt;aseman, he resisted wearing a glove until late in his.
:-:fareer.
,
.
:.:· Stearnes hit .359 over 18 seasons in the Negro·
;: teagues. He began his career With the Detroi~ Stan
': ~n 1923 and led or shared the league lead in home
six times. ·
.
, '
·
:: The chewed-up pens and half-eaten chocolate
: J:ake inside the Vets' meeting room told the story of
• what happened in the player category. Despite five
:~oun of discussion, it was a shutqut .- it took 11
:.votes for election, and Mazeroski just missed with
' 10.
"It built my hopes up, but not~ the poi~t where

:runs

·,

·"

fint-year college athletes - as having an College Test.
.. ...
"unjustified disparate impact against MricanProposition 16 requires minimum score;\' ~if
Americans."
820 on the SAT or 16 on the ACT, a eore ..
In avert urrung
·
tha1 d ec!Sion,
··
th e appeaJs group of high school courses and a minimum' '
court ·said that since the NCAA did not grade-point average in that core for freshmen
directly receive federal funding, it cannot be in the NCAA's 302 Division I schools.
.sued for "disparate impact" discrimination
The amended complaint. seeks an injuncunder Title VI of the 1964 Civil Rights Act. tion prohibiting -the NCAA from using a cutThe law forbids discrimination on the basis of off score requirement and allowing all affectrace, color or national origin in programs that ed student-athletes to regain their lost-year of
directly-reGeive federal funds ·
.
athletic-e}igibility.
·
Rather than arguing the case as a-" disparate
"What the NCAA has done up to this point
impact" claim, the plaintiffs attorneys w.int to is to have the cale decided 'in its favor on a
resubmit their claim using a new legal argu- technicality;' Dennis said. " It is our position
ment of ."purposeful discrimination." They that the NCAII. has a flawed rule that is discontend that the latter charge can be brought criminatory ... which means we will continue
against . organizati.ons that indirectly receive to press for the change of that rule."
federal funding- such .,. the NCAA. ·
NCAA officials did not rerum a call seeking
·The appeals court never addressed the mer- comment Tuesday. In a statement released
its of the lower court's decision that the Monday,- -NCA/1. spokesman Wally Renfro
NCAA's use of standardized .test scores dis- rejected the plaintiffs' claims.
criminates against minority athletes.
"There . are more . tharr 330,000 athletes
The NCAA standards were chaUenged by involved in NCAA competition. There is no
four bl~ck athletes who contended they were intentional discrimination by thjs association
d~nied ,athletic scholarship$ or spor!s eligibili- · with regard to any ofthein;' Renfro said. "For
ty because they did not score the minimum the plainiiffi to introduce this argument at this
on the S'cholastic Assessment Test or American late hour is certainly a questionable move:'
'

'

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PORTSMOUTH - The Rio Grande Redmen baseball team
split a double header last Saturday with Hillsdale College.
After a 14-4 loss to Shawnee State on Friday, the Redmen (3-5)
;struggled in the first game, managing only three hits in a 4-0 loss to
1-iiDsdale. Joe Thomas recorded two of the hils and Ja$on King collected the other.
'
Brandon Hutchinson (1-1) pitched weD despite absorbing the loss.
Hutchinson struck out nine in sever! innings with only two walks
and three earned runs on three hits.'IWo of the three knocks against
Hutchinson were home runs.
·
In game two, the bats came alive for tbe Redmen, wrapping out
13 hits in a 13-11 slugfest. Rio Grande jumped out to a 7-2 advan tage..after-two innio~. before Hillsdale-eame-reuing-baek to lea:d-I 0-7 in the sixth.
Redmen rookie catcher Chris Good came off the bench an~
ripped a run-scoring double to send Rio back out on top, 11-1 ~·
Good wo.uld later add· an insurance run with a sacrifice fly.
Jonathan Ervin (2-0) pitched innin~ in relief to collect the win.
Jamie Lambert picked up his first save, throwing one pitch and ge£.
ting a game ending double play.
'
Freshman Jimmy Knight went 2-for-3 at the plate and drove in 11
run, as weU as recording ·his sixth stolen base of the season. Keerian
Perry also produced a 2~for-3 effort, scoring two runs and knockirrg
in two more. Brandon Hutchinson clubbed a home run and Cory
Maynard· left the yard twice and knocked in four. Brian Karlet was a
perfect 4-for-4 at the plate with two runs scored.
The Redmen were scheduled to face Johnnie Lemaster's Pikeville
College Bears· on Saturday, but poor weather forced a postponement.
No make-up date has been scheduled.
The Redmen will travel to Athens today to tangle with the Ohio
Bobcats.
·'·

·-pBA Hall of Famer Webe, suspended for ~he rest of the year
AKRON, Ohio (AP) -The 'pro Bowlers
Weber was verbally abusive to people at the
· '1\ssociation has suspended and banned Pete Janes iq an alcohol~related incident during the
·~eber, the tour's second-leading career pro-am portion of the Bay Cicy Classic. Weber
money winner, for the rest ·of the ye.ar.
was_ already on probation at. the time for
Weber, the 37-year-old .son of bowling unproFsional conduct.
·
·
great Dick Weber, was suspended Thesday for
We6er did not return a call Tuesday to the
"conduct unbecoming .a professional" last fall only phone listing under his name in his
during a PBA event at Bay ~anes in Bay City, hometown ofSt.Ann, Mo. · ·
·. Mich., the A.kron-based PBA said in a 'news
PBA Tour commissioner Mark Gerberich
· ' ' •release.
.
issued· the suspension, which ·Lists until Dec.

Rio's Roberts places 24th
at NAIA nationals

31. Weber, who appealed the suspension last
fall, will remain on probation through Jan. 30,
·'
2002.
Weber, a member of the PBA HaD of Fame,
has earned $2.2 million on the PBA Tour,
trailing only Walter Ray Williams Jr. on the
t;our's. money list.
Be has 25 career titles and orily needs one
more victory to tie his father.

. LINCOLN, Neb. - Rio Grande freshman Ashly Roperts COqlpeted with. the NAJA's best at the national indoor track and fie!s:J
meet last weekend in Lincoln, Nebraska. Roberts, a River Valley
alumnus and the URG record holder in the 20-lb. weight throw, finished 24th out of 35 competitors in the event.
·
Roberts' top effort was 41 feet, 7.25 inches. The winning distanae
was 56 feet, 8 inches by A.pril Kockrow of Doane College, who abo
won the shot put.
Roberts' coach Juan McCabe was proud of his young protege. ,,
"I thought she performed well for a freshman at the natiolllll
championships;• Mcwabe said. "It was a great learning experienc:e·
for her."
I'
'
"She knows what it takes to get there;' McCabe added.
T~ia Cole finisjled sixth in the race walk, which qualified her for
All-American status, but she was later disqualified on a controversial'
ruling concerning technique. Rio Grande Head Coach Bob Wille~r
filed a protest with the NAJA, but it was to no avail and the ruling
stood.

J •.•

....

"'5
10p 6.

-r,

··

drawing even twice in the final eight minutes. makers out of first place in the Big Ten and
Th~ Hawks took their biggestlead at 47-34 likely cost them a shot at the ~onference
.
on
Bill Phillips' 3-pointer with 13:48 remain- championship. Mike Robinson·had 23 poin!s
''· .
,, .
Page 81
ing. ,
.
for Purdue (21-8, 12~4), which needs both
1,,:
b·
. .
RaJCher, who was 6-of-18 from the field, hit Ohio State and Michigan State to lose at least
" .;. probably the orily pattern we tried that a 3-pointer with 10:30 left to spark a 9-0 run. one of their final two games in order to claim
r :rvork&lt;;p weD tonight." . .
Greer also added four free throws to tie it at a share of the title.
·
Marvin O'Connor scored 20 points and . 49 with 8:26 remaining:
. No. 18 St. John's 66, Seton Hall 60 .
O'Connor hit a 3-pointer to put the Hawks
Bootsy Thornton scored 28 points to lead
. . &lt;;:renshaw and Damian Reid each had io for
l l ~t.Joseph.'s (12-14, 7-8), which had lost four ahead 57-51 with 5:40 left.
the ~ed Storm (21-6, 12-3 Big East) to their
. .in a ~w. St. Joseph's hadn't beaten. such a
Tewple responded with six straight points eighth straight win despite not having leading
~'Jp'gljly . ~nkecj, team ;sincA downing N&lt;l• ·.2 · to tie it at 57 -with 3:42 remaiiling.
scorer Erick Barkley, who was ruled ineligibl~
DePaul in 1984.
.
. ·
BrQwn's 3-pointer broke the tie and earlier Tuesday for breaking NCAA rules. It
;, "We've.lost a lot. of close games. It's about Karcher's basket with 1:35 Jefr pulled Temple was the sophomore guard's second suspension
· !&gt;y the NCA/1. this season- the other was for
.; ,?me we won one, and against the No.5 team .withjn a point. .
· . QUke~ it even better;' O'Connor said.
. "We've had two or three games that we shot two games for exchanging cars with a family
;," Karcher scored 16 points and Lynn Greer extreqtely well. This one we had to win with friend. The victory at _Madison Square Garden
s }~dec\ 11 for Temple, which saw in 13-game our heads. You can't depend on shooting to completed an 8-0 month for St.John's, its first
perfect February since going 7-0 in 1973-74.
1 :~nning streak come to an end. That streak get o~t of trouble;• Chaney said.
"We have a very talented team, but I don't
' Shaheen Holloway had "22 points for the
included a 77-69 win Feb. 21 over then-No.
. : Tcincinnati.
· know if we are smart enough yet:'
Pirates (19-8, 10-6), who have lost four of
·. '. In other games involving ranked teams
Temple uncharaCteristically committed 11 five, including their last fo.ur conference
. j: 'tuesday, it was No. 14 Indiana 79, No. 20 Pur- turnovers, including three· by point guard games.
. due 65; No. 18 St: John's 66, Seton Hall 60; Pepe Sanchez, against the Hawks' aggressive
No. 22 Kentucky 73, Mississippi St. 61
Jamaal Magloire and Tayshaun Prince each
and No. 22 Kentucky 73, Mississippi State 61. man-to-man defense.
Down '35-30 at halftime, Temple pressed full
The Owls hav~ beaten the Hawks in 15 of scored 16 points for the Wildcats (21-8, 11-4
• courH,efore falling back into i!s trademark . 16 games dating to Feb. 19, 1993, and lead the Southeastern Conference), who missed their
match~up zone to increase pressure on . the 'series 72-49 since the city rivals began playing first 11 J-(iointers and finished 5-for-27 from
Haw~. who made 11 '3~pointeri in the gaine. .each other in 1931.
.
.
beyond the arc. Antonio Jackson and Michael
"I've ken their zone before, and sometimes
No.' 14 Indiana 79, No. 20. Purdue 65
Gholar each had 12 points for the Bulldogs
you can get sho!s froll). \he perimeter. They . AJ. Guyton scored 17 points in his final (13-15, 4-11), who lost to Kentucky at honte
want you to shoot the 3;'' 0'Connor said. · home game as the Hoosiers (20-6; 10-5) for the fifth straight time.
Temple trailed most of the game until jumped to a 17~2 lead, knocked the Boiler-

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fNm .... 81

• PHILADELPHIA (AP) -The four black
' "student-athletes who sued the NCAA and lost
are going back to court. Their lawyers are
L 'armed with new argumen!s they believe will
·.'win their racial discrimination case regarding
1
the use of test scores to determine eligibility.
r
:·T.her~'s ~ore _th~n one way to prove dis" :cr~nunatl,on, ,,Plai~_tlffs lawy~r ~ndre Dennis
;, ~d Tuesday. This time, were _confide~! . we_
_ can prove that the NC:AA has •mpernumbly
.. used ra~e as a. discn~n~tory factor and has
~ ~cted With de~berate md1fferen~~ by contlnu;, ~ng to mamtam PropoSI~on 16.
•
·
· Instead of taking ~heu appeal to the ~.S.
·'.Supreme Court, as many .expected, the plai~~: ·ttffs la~ers filed a motion to amend th~1r
,complamt m an _attempt to correct lla':"s 1~
·' theu argument cited by the 3rd U.S. ·C1rcu1t
-'' Court of Appeals.
· ..
. ,. In t&gt;ecember, the three:jud~ ~pp~als panel
· ~verturned a lower courts decmon m Cure-.
,. l?n vs. National CoDegiate Athletic Associa. tton. The lower court stru~k down the test
; -score. co~p?nent of Propc:&gt;•llon 16 -. a r~le
-' semng nummum standardized test scores on

••

~ Sp~,l~g

:::

::

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Redmen basebaH squad eams split:

fc)r

.

$ pa""
1

Bv JOANN LOVIGLIO

",

URG SPORTS NOTES

at

:. :
1"':'..,

·Athletes by new argument
in racial lawsuit aga
NCAA

a3

MAKE A:· DIFFERENCE· ·

Oarden Teel•

-

The 0111y s.nune1 • P9

Pomeroy, Mlddl..,... Ohio

1

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•
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_ _ _......__ _ _ _ _i'--_ _ _ _ _..._,...:.,.,,.....-...:.....,---___,..,.-•
'

OLKS.·

Wedn11dey,Merch 1, 2000
:;.

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this is-a big letdown:·~ Maieroski, .Y.orking an
spring training insrru~ro,t for Pittst&gt;urgh.
·.
Mazeroski was a seven-lime All•Star and· ;won
eight Gold Gloves, be&lt;;oming one of the best.fielding .second baseman ever. He also hit one of the dra•
matic home runs in history, a bottom-of-die-ninth
shot that lifted the Pirates over the Yankees in Game
7 of the 1960 World Series.
. ,.
1 • • ·• • .
Ted Williams, an influential voice in .the meetingroom, pushed for Harder, 223-186 for the Cleveland .
, Indi~ns.
• "
'
·
Hodges was backed by an intense letter-writing
campaign frOm fans nationwide. The late Brooklyn
first baseman hit 370 home runs and also managed
the 1969 Miracle Me!s to the World Series tide.
"It wai very disappoin~ng we didn't pick one;•
pan~l member Yogi Berra said. "Tliat's what we
come here once a year to dO. B11-t we didn't do it:'

a.

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HARDWARE
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Has Moved To ANew .uu"a

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Then's
olltff....t kind of lnten!et In lawn, Yos this lawn. Your tawn. Our ·t.m..lut
hoMst·to·•.
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Hours: 8 AM to 5 PM
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· Pqe B 4 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5

~~Ex-boxing champ Bowe smiles after gelling 30-day prison ter11~
•:

BY PAUL NOWELL

::
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
•: CHARLOTIE, N C (AP)
:; -Former heavywetght champion
·:Riddick Bowe was happy after a
-;~udge sentenced him to 30 days m
pnson for
ktdnappmg hts
-estranged wtfe and thett five chtldren and ordered htm to get treatmenr for bram IOJUrtes he suffered
m the nng
Mter avotding a much longer
pnson sentence that was called for
tn a plea agreement Wtth the government, Bowe md he learned
from hts mistake
. " ! thtnk~firsLamLforemo•t I
have a different outlook on hfe,"
• he satd after hts sentencmg on
;Tuesday "As far as anythmg other

than that, I'll have to wa.t and see
what happens"
Bowe, 32, could have been sentenced to 18-24 months m federa! pnson for the abducuons Feb.
25, 1998 But US Dtstnct Judge
Graham Mullen satd Bowe's head
tnJunes persuaded htm to be
lement
"Wtthout this bram tn)Ury and
substanually reduced capaCity; thiS
matter would not have happened,"
Mullen said. He alSo satd statements made by family members
convmced htm Bowe never
mtended VIolence
- Bowe pleaded~guilty m June
1998 to a federal mterstate domesttc vwlence charge as part of a
plea bargam He tmttally faced

Cowboys focus
on comerback position

tRVtNG.~~rA~i~~,~a~sefo~~~~

focusmg on
the co rnerback posttton thiS week, mtervtewmg a couple of fl'!e
agents m advance of All-Pro Dewn Sanders' departure.
Free agent cornerback Ryan McNeil, who started for the
Cleveland Browns last season, was mtervtewed Tuesday The Co,wboys were expected to offer McNetl a contract today The stx-year
veteran led the Nauonal Football League With nme mtercepttons
Ill 1997
Phtlhppt Sparks, another free agent cornerback, gets hts turn
today
"I would hope that we can make a dectston and get somethmg
worked out," Cowboys owner Jerry Jones sa~d
McNett of Mtanu, who appears to be the Cowboys' top chotec,
was persuaded by the team to remam m Dallas Tuesday mght
mstead of returmng home. He spent Tuesday discussmg his role and
how he fits mto the Cowboys' defenstve scheme wtth Jones , VICe
prestdent Step hen Jones, coach Dave Campo and defenstve coordmator Mtke Ztmmer
Sparks, an etght-year veteran and full-ttme starter \VIth the New
York Gtants, arnved m Dallas at 5 p.m Tuesday He was scheduled
to meet wtth Cowboys' management and coaches today.
Jones sa1d other cornerbacks could be mv1ted to the team's Valley Ranch headquarters along Wtth "three or four quarterbacks"
from whtch one wtll be stgned to replace Jason Garrett as Troy Aikman's backup
The Cowboys wtll hkely not pay $12.7 nulhon to keep Sanders,
who has publicly mdicated hts days m Dallas are over.

federal lcidnappong charges.
krufe, handcuffS, duct tape and hope I can get this treatment so I
BeSides the 30-day sentence, pepper spray. He fo,rced her and can go on and be a productive
Bowe must serve four years' pro- the yo11ngsters uuo a vehicle and member of sooety," he sa~d m a
barton and stx months' house set out for hiS Fort Washington, barely audible votce
arrest after he ,; released from Md , home
Judy Bowe did not attend the
pmon He also was fined $5,000
At a restaurant m South Hill, . sentencing heanng.
and ordered to continue treatment Va ,Judy Bowe called her ststcr in
Bowc's
attorney,
Johnme
for his bram tnjunes. Bowe wtll North Carolma, who gutded Cochran Jr., who successfully
remam free until a place at the police to the restaurant. She was defended OJ Stmpson, was not
federal pemtenttary at
superfietally
stabbed, present for the sentencmg He
Butner, N C , becomes
reportedly by Bowe argued during the two-day hearavailable
Mullen, however, sa1d mg that the sentence Bowe agreed
Mullen also ordered
Tuesday he concluded to accept under the plea bargam
Bowe to stay out of the
the wound was mflicted should have been lessened because
boxmg nng unul hts proneghgently, nor mten- h1s bram InJUries tmpatred h\s
banon ends
twnally
judgment.
.
Two years ago, Bowe
Before
Mullen
Assistant U .S. Attorney Ken Bell
went to Judy Bowe 's
tmposed the sentence, expressed disappomtment m the
Charlotte home and
Bowe apologtzed to the hght sentence, but declined to say
threatened her wtth a
• Bowe
court and hts fanuly "I whether the government wtll

appeal. It has 30 days to do so.'
"The court found that he did tt
with no viOlence. We disagree," he
said of Mullen's ruling. "We
believe tt was erroneous."
Bell referred to the sentence: as
"the boxer's excepuon"
"I don't think there's anything
like a boxer's exception," defense
attorney Billy Maron sa.td "Ht: ts
suffering now and he was at the
ttme of the metdent." ,
Bowe outpomted Evander
Holyfield for the undtsputed
heavyweight championsh1p on,
Nov 13, 1992 He lost the WBC
utle when he didn't fight Lennox
Lewts. He lost the WBA and IBF
utles when he was decmoned by
Holyfield on Nov 6 , 1993.
'

Critics flog commissioners for private decisions
CINCINNATI
(AP)
Hamilton County comnuss10ne rs
pnvately agreed
to
spend
$710,000 last yea r to make the
new taxpayer-financed home of
the Ctncmnatt Bengals smtable for

soccer.
CommtsStoner Bob Bedmghaus told The Cmcmnau EnqUirer
for a story today that the decmon
to place removable concrete slabs
m each corner of Paul Brown Stadium tS m lme wtth the tmttal
purpose of the stadmm and wtl!
make tt more useful
But cnucs say that 1s not the
pomt and that making dectStons m
pnvate ts one reason why the stadmm proJect ts $35 millton to $45
million over Its $287 mtllion bud-

get.
"How they go about makmg
these decmons ts the pomt,"
Hanulton County Audttor Dusty
Rhodes satd "ThiS ought to be a
concern to every taxpayer Tlits ts
the kmd of thtng that got us m
thts 1ness "

Permanent slabs were part of
the ongmal destgn The decmon
to add the ren1ovable slabs was
made at the request of sponsors
trymg to bnng the Olymptcs to
Cmcmnatt m 2012. They satd
more stdeltne room was needed to
mternatwnal
accommodate
matches , tndudmg World Cup
games
Removable slabs wtll allow
more than 1,000 seats to be taken

out for soccer games
A construction audttor the
county htred blamed most of the
overruns on changes m the onginal stadtum plan that were
approved wtth httle overstght
Conummoners and county
adnumstrators satd they never saw
the change orders and that county
staff approved them
Bedinghaus s:ud county admmtstrator Dave Krmgs talked \VIth
each commtsstoner about the
chan~ to accommodate soccer.
"Thts IS JUSt the way we wanted to do busmess," he told the
newsp~per "When I say that, I
mean ntamtaining the fleXIbtlity
to present World Cup soccer m
the facility."

ArH&lt;OUNCEf,JENT S

005
Pertonels
Gentloman SHI&lt;Ing Companslon.
ohlp From Nice Female F&lt;lr Talk&amp;,
Walkl &amp; Friendship Send Aeplltl To 553 Second Avenue ,
Apartment t403, Galllpolla, OH

A5831

Why walt? Start meeting Ohio
alngles tonight Call toll free 1·

'

80().766-2tl23, -.~~on 8176

30 Announcement•
, ; Now To 'lbu Thrm St_.
9 W101 Sll-noon. Alh&amp;na
7oi0-S92·1842
8(10.530

' • 01llee of Or Edword L Howard Is

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1Ae11rornenl}

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30213rd St , Mason, wv

Pupplos, falher Rollwellor molher

Australian Hus ~y. 5 weeks o td ,

7oi0-247-7806

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SALT LAKE
(AP) -The Utah Legtslature agreed to gtve up
- $13 rmllion tn Olymptc sales tax m exchange for Salt Lake Ctty's word
'that the state ~on 't be !table for any mumctpal costs related to the

played through shoulder pa.tn to beat Hernan
Gumy 6-2, 7-6 (5) tn the first round of tile
CttrJx Tennts Championsliips.
:'
Jusun G1melstob, Chrts Woodruff, Stephan
Koubek, Alex Calatrava and Xavter Maltsse
also advanced.

__L

$2S.$751hr

To CLA 495, c/o Gallipolis Dally
Tribune, 825 Third Avenue Galli
polls OH 45631

Lost Black And White Female
Cat In The VIcinity Of Memorial

Field, 740,448·1000 Reward!

• Lost Keys, Has Letter •H• Key·
• ehain, Also Has Kroger's Card

On l(eycftltln, 740-441·0401

70

304-67S.I957

Handyman malntenanc• servk:e
earpenlry, painting aiding, rooting,
dry-wall, and electrical, 740·949·

1035

Excellent care tor per&amp;on In my
home non-smoker and Mobile

Very ~easonabla (304}882·3880

l Monday odltlon·
1;00pm Frldoy

Natd 7 ladles To Sell Avon, 740·
44&amp;3358
~eed Someone To Mow Grass

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Big yard sale tst·3rd, 43410
Dutchtown Rd , Racine. clothes.
t~ys, swing set babv clothes,
mise

Mar 41h, 9-2, clothing, books.

dishes, mise
Po·

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~

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t tlon Fundraislng, Steven Betz AI
t Indian Creek, 7&lt;40-24~5747
·

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Ask F&lt;lr Jasalca

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Opportunity

The ROBERT TRENT JONES GoLF TRAIL is 378 holes of

Part Time Secretary Needed For
A Fast · Paced Gallipolis Bust
ness Applicant Needs To Be Fa -

:' 90

cedllles Telephone CommuniCa tions, And Computers Must

Wanted to Buy
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championship golf on a seriestf&gt;f eight spectacular sites ·
spanning the length of Alabama's natural beauty. Designed .

Sit-

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~ • M T S Cotn Shop, 151 Second

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, Avenue, Galllpol~ 740-448·2842
•' Will offer $100 1or good 1844

HOTEL REsoRT AND
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1AYon Produoll. Star! your own In·
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, SOOKKEIPER WANTED - Min
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To CLA 497 c/o Gallipolis Dally
pois, OH 45831

Pleaaant Valley Hospital Is cur·
rtntlv accepting resumes/appll·
cations lor a FlscaJ Coordinator
fat Phyalclan Practice Services
Must have an asaoclat• degree
In accounting or related field A
minimum of three years ot physi-

cian offlcolphy•lclan billing ••·

perienee Three years of muiUapeclallv physician office man agement Please submit resume
to Pleasant Valle~ Hosplt,l, cto

Personnel, 2520 Valley Drive PI

ARE YOU READY
FOR AN E.COMMERCE
BUSINESS?
121 471/HR, PT 1FT

grand resort on the Tr.ill.

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EMPLOYMENT
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pool, sailing in the bay or exploring scenic trails
10n

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1199 GaDipolls, Ohio 46631

Part-Time Waitress /Bartender
Needed Please Send Resume

of The Gamblers Mirror,
, cash for other books. old pam·
* phiets , diaries, letters We also

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Frlendt~.

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Service Technician Wanted Ap ·

ply AI Big Boyo Walar Toys
Cltoalllre Ohio, 415e20
URGENTLY NEEDED for plasma
donbra, earned $35 to $45 tor :2
or 3 houra w11kly Call Sera·Tee

740-S92·8e51
WANTED: Your Support Will Bo
Approclalld In Tho Marc~ 71h
Primary. Volt AopUbtlcan, Carloa
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IPekf For BY Carloo P Wood
3952SllloRaulo141
Golllpolls. OH 4&amp;e31

, edge 01 Qulckbooks Soflware
• Poyroll /Job Coaling lAP IAR •
• Ability To Handle MuiUpiO Taoko I we are now accepting applica Con11rucllon Knowlodga APlua I tions Apply In pers&lt;ln No phone
No Phone Calls Accepted /Send
Raauma To Chrlttlen's Conet

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4M3 I.
WO~K FROM HOME, Aro you
~ Now accepting eppllcatlona at llrod of making your bOll rlch7
~ Eldorado Adult Home 740·992·
$~00·54,000 pllltlmo, 1·800·720·
( 5039
0328, wwwer.opportunitycom

•

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Fuoll. Oft SR 140 &amp; SA 233

23 ACRES -$21,000
SR 7 S0&lt;1lh Of Gall lpolla No
AIOiricUonal NEEDS TLC, $2,300
Down On land ContrBCl
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CHEAPER THAN DIRT

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p+ece living room sultl, very good

Spring Yallay Plaza Call 740.446· Condition, $100 7oi0-992.Q802.

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1982 1&lt;4 x70 Fllltwood 2 Bed·

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Professional
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TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSt?
No Fee Unlm We WinI •
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room•. 2 Balha, CIA, Now Undor·
Porches, E•cellon1 Condition,
$10 000 7oi0-36H105

pinning &amp; Block, Front &amp; Back

1982 14x70 Manaton 2 Bed·

rooms 1 Balh 19811 14•70 Schuh
3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths, AC , 740 ·

,•
All real estate advertising In
this newspaper Ia subject tO
the Federal Fair Hou•ng Act
ol 1968 which makes It illegal
to advertise •a nv preteraoce
llmHaUon or dlscrimlnatlop
based on race color, religion,
sex familial status or national
origin, or
intennon to
make Any such preference
Umilatlon or ctscrlmlnatiOn •

anv

Th1s newspaper will not
knowingly accept ,
acl\lertlsements tor rear estate
which Is Jn violation of the
law Our reader1 are hereby

Informed Ural all dwellings
ad-vertised In thls newspaper
are available on an equal
basis

446-2516 Alllr6 ~M
1985 14&lt;70 Mobllo Homo 3 Bod·
roomo, 2 Balho, Make OHer, Unlll
March 8th, 740·446·3888 Unlll
5oo. 74Q.448.44n Aller e
1987 24'&lt;40' Doublewldo New

Root. New Vinyl Windows, Some
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Musl Be Movadl 740·388·8743
Between 5 And 7 PM In Even·
lngs
1988 Mobllo Homo, 2BR, 14x70,
Ready to move In on rented lot

$12,000

1~}675-5108

(304)578·2101/or

1111 Flemming 14x70, central
air. new carpet 2 lull batha

Decks (304}675·3955
I304}87S.3249

or

Far LANDI
Even If Ill llsttd
20 ·500 Acros
Cell Ryon

mova,$11,500 7ol0-949-9016

1991, 14x65, two bedroom 1 belh,
new carpet new bathroom. asldng

$10.000, 740.992.0149

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~squired 304-736-7295

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FISHING. BOAJ!NQ. HUNIINQ
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rage fruit trees, country living,
minutes from town, Bradbury

$3UOO, 740·367-7785

3 Bedroom Brick Home, Double
Garage, large lot, Finished
Basement Maintenance Freel

740·448-8329

Green Township 3 Bedrooms
With Garage Outbuilding , 1 1/2
A cres MIL L.ow Utilities Many
Extrasi74D-446-0744
Bl Level In Spring vanev Area 3
Bedrooms, 2 Baths, Family ~oom.
2 Car Garage, 740-446-8607
Brick Home 3 Bedrooms, FA, LA
Large laundry 2·112 Baths, Eve·

rythlng Updalad Only $120,000,
Owner Relocating, 7olo-441o0641
For Sate B~ Owner 4 Bedrooms,
3 Bathrooms, New Rool And Sid·
lng, New Carpet, Atletched Ga·
rage, Plenty 01 Storage Space,
Nice Neighborhood Leas Than 2..

t.lllea From Holzer Roady For Im-

Price

Ovo~ooklng

Sale. 2 Garages EkCallen1 Loco·

Nlco Loaded, Your Cholet $998
Down Hurry Won'l laol Oakwood,
GallipOlis, 740-448·3093.
1 Lett $299/MO

lncludel LOt,

304-736-721/S

MobiiO ltome wllh fuU

lion, three bedroom two bath,
26'x65' on one acre, localed t • tl
3 mile out 143 olf Rt 7 call

lnga, 7ol0-992·2517

...,.n-

lly room. two nreplacea two apar~·
menta, four (fir garage end two

o1orage building• plaue call
740 992 2292

Middleport· corner ol HlgP'I Strut

Powell Slreol, 2 btdroom homo

with dining room living room and
kitchen Newer oerpet and kitchen
cabinets makes tht kitchen with

brlghl AlsO I

large lot Cute 11 can be Re·

1152 Fourth Avenue, Gallipolis, 3

Btdrooma WID Hook·Up, $3751
Mo., Oopooll Reoulrsd, 1·888·
840.()521

For aale or rent· 2 bedroom
hauae In Pomeroy $350 month
plus dapoalt, wm sell on contract
with good referencea. no pets ,

740-868·7244
FOR LEASE OR SALE 5 Year
Old 2,000 Sq Ft 3 Bedrooms 2

Baths, Energy Ettlclent Home ,
Neor Clltfoklo GOlf Club $885/Mo

74Q.4.48-2957

Pilot Program, Renters Needed

304-736-7295

Pilot Program, Ranten Needed,

304-738-7295
420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

For 6 Moo Only 0 Oakwood,
Galllpolta, 740-448·3093

Land Home Packages All Ar.eas

All Credl1 ~loks 740-44tlo3563

$260-$300, 740-992·2167

2 Btdroom Trallar Bttautlful ~lver

$499 Down. Only AI Oakwood
Hamel In Barbouraville, 90&lt;4·

Contract Available Frtl Mapa. 1·

7404-1 .

'

350 Loll &amp;, Acruge
1· 1!2 Acre, mortJieu, with
House Trailer I Barn. Ml!latone

Rd

(304)~78·3033

11/tl acrea on Lincoln Hta ,

$17,500, flnonco ovolloblo, t%·
IOyr. balloon, 740·982·2828 or
132 Butlemut, ~
2 « Acrea, Winding Crotaroada

Subdlvlalon, vory Nlco Araa,
Convenlant Locatlott, G•lllpOIII

- · m.ooo 7oi0-24Hne.

ducod 10 $33 ,000 Plouo call 5 Acroa Blacktop Fronlaga a
Oolllo Turnor ~oolly, Oottl• S lakiVIew, S32,ooo Moro Acreage
Avolablo, 740-318-8671.
TIJrner, Brol&lt;M at 740·992·2886

710 Auto• for Sele

Block, brick , sewer pipes . wmd·
OWl linitiS IIC ClauM Winters
R io Gr.mde OH Call 740·245-

9·22' Trusses ·120

Roof Tru&amp;lies

Each 9 23 5' Truasu $20 Eech,

8·28'4 " Trusses $30 Ea ch, 2·
28'4" Gable Trusea ·$35 Each
t 1 -34'5" Trusses $50 Each , 9·
40 2" Pole Barn Tru1111 -$60
Each, Miscellaneous Lumber,

pori From $273-$336 Call 740· Good F&lt;lr Farm ProjOCII, Sold By
EquaJ Housing Oppor- The Bundle Only - Save SSS CoH
lufiltos
740.992-8ol96
Modern 1 Bedroom ~partment. 560
Pete for Sale
7~
992-5064

460 Space for Rent
600 square feet office building
$350/mo , mobile home spaces

$120/mo , 2 bodroom mo~lle
home, $300/mo , Riverpark Po
rneroy, 7ol0-949-2093

Advertise your business in this
vis ible location on well traveled
highway Will put up and maintain

AKC Black Mate Poodle $ t 00
Blue &amp; Gold Yorkshire Female

Household
Gooda

Appllancll
Re conditioned
Waahara, Cryer&amp; Ranges Relrlgratora, 90 Day Guarantee!

Below Holiday Inn Kanauga
Qood Ulld Bed a, Dressers.
Couches. Olnettas Etc Big sav
lnga On New Furniture 740·448·

4762

R&amp;O'e Used Furniture Great Sa
teetlon, Priced To Sell! ·come
And Browse • Corner Of Route 7
&amp; Addison P.lke, · we Buy Furnl
ture• 740-367·0280

530

Antiques

7 Piece Antique Bedroom Suite 2
Antique Oak Parlor Table. 3 New·
er Oriental Rugs Two 5x8, One
3x 5 All For S1,000 Ftrm, 740·

379·2923 Leave t-tessage

Buy or sell Riverine Anliques
1124 East Main on SA 124 E Pomeroy 740·992·2526 or 740·992
1539 Russ Moore, owner

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

2 Bedrooma, 1 Bath, In Country

HUO Appii)';B(J, 740·387.Q544

216, $275/Mo , Includes Waler
Tfaah, $1SO Oaposll 740-2566767

~ and

Apartments
for Rent
2 bedroom apartments fur·

nlahad and unfurnished, security
depoalt required. no pets, 740-

992-2218
1 Bodroom Apartmen1 Furnlohed

Utllltlea Paid On VIand Street,
PI Pl1asant $275 par month

(304 }J'36.51iS4

1 Bedroom, Near Arbor's Nursing

Home, Economical Utilities Quiet

local/on, $279/Mo , • Ullhlles. No
Pelo,74Q.4.48-2957

2 Bedroom Apartment Adjacent
To Rio &lt;lfande CAmpus, 740.245-

room tumlahtd apartment

utilities
paid, deposit &amp; references. no

po•. 740-992·0185

Chrlaty's Family Living, apartmenta, home &amp; trailer rentals,
7•0·992·,.1514, apartments avail·
able turnisntd &amp; unlurnished

.

Now Taking Applications- 35
Weal 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments , Includes Water
446.()008

One Bedroom furnished Apartment In Pt Pleasant Very Clean
and Nice No pets Phone

1304}67S.1386.

dlopon. 740.9912·9191
Spring Valley Greon Ono Bod·
room Apartments, Appliances

Furnished, C.II74Q.4.48-1fi99
Toklng Al&gt;Picatlono for 1 B~ Apl

In Pofnt Pleasant $350 + Oepos·

11 No Polo/No
(304}67S.S867

Smoking

T1r1 Townl'louee Apartments

2 While Dryers Kenmore &amp; Hot
point $65 Each 2 While Wash·
era, $75 Each Both Whirlpool CaD
After S 30 PM 740-446·9066
Baby bed, stroller, car seal,
swing. htgh cha ir walker play

pen 304·675-2801

Complete DISH Network salelhte
system brand new $99. 740
992·1182 or 304~773·5305 alter

6pm

For Sale Or Trade 400 Cummons
3208 Cat 1983 Full Size Truck

Bad Ford 740·256·6365

For Sale

Bu ck Stove. Fan &amp;

Grubb's Plano tuning &amp; repairs
Problems? Need Tuned? Call the

plano Or 740-446-4525

Hot Springs hot tub " person
good condition, some chemicals
included call 740 992·5053 after

5pm

JANITROL HEATING AND
COOLING EQUIPMENT
INSTALLED

' II Yov Don f Call Us We 9oth

Lose • Free Esllmatesr 740-446·

6308, 1·11(10.291·0098
JET
.AERATION MOTORS
Repalrtd New &amp; ~ebulh In Slock
Call Ron Evans 1 BOO 537·9528

Mag1c Chel Electric Range, Super

Capaclly $250, 740-245-11206
MOBILE HOME OWNERS

Huge Invento ry, Discount Prices
On Vinyl Skirting Doors , Windows. Anchors Water Heaters,
Plumbing &amp; Electrical Pa rts Fur
nacea &amp; Heat Pumps Bennetts

Mobile Home Supply 740·446·
9416

New Mlllenlum Dietl Eat All Day
And Me lt Away, Call Tracy At

7oi0-44 1·1982
RESIDENTIAL HOME OWNERS

Tappan HI Efficiency 90% Gas
Furnaces 011 Furnaces 12 Seer
Heat Pump &amp; ~J r Cond1tlonlng
Syatema Free 6 Year Parts &amp; La·
bor Warranty Bennetts Heating &amp;

Cooling 1·600 872 5987
Ron 1 Gun Shop, 74Q. 742 84 12

Vary Spacloua, 2 Badroomo, 2
Floora, CA, 1 1/2 Balh, Fully Car· Silver prom draas alza 3/4
pllod, A4ul1 Pool &amp; Baby Pool , bough11all yoar $150 OBO call
Polio, Slarl 1360/Mo No Pols, 740.992·5747
Loaeo Plua Socurlly Otposll Re· Three piece blue beige &amp; mauve
qulrod, 74Q.448.3o481
living room auite, $500 740-992·
38SII
Twin Towers now accepting ap·

pllcatlona lor 1 BR HUD 1Ub81d-

lzed apl for oldorly and handl·

ClllPid

EOH.(~}67HI79

Wanted· RCA or Huges Direct
TV system will pav top do lla r
Wottle 7,.0·949·3315 leave mea·

Upllalro Apartmonl 1350/Mo , oago
Plul Dopo111, No Poll, 740•258· Wa1erllno Spoclal 314 200 PSI
1249.
$21 95 Ptr roo. 1' 200 PSI
VIllage Green Apartmenll· 2 $37 00 Por 100, All Brasa Com·
Flllfngo In SIOOk
btdroorno, lOIII oltclr1c, oppHanc· proulon
RON
EVANS
ENTERPRISES
01 1urnloltod, laundry room lacUI·
Uta and ctooa 1o octtool. opollco· Jockaon. Ohio, 1·11(10.537 9528
11ono IYIIIablo 11 office. 740·992· Wedding Dr••• · Size e, lvroy
3711 TOO 1-:1111&amp;-233-Uiol Equal Shaalh Styto, long lialn, Vory El·
oganl. $325, 740·446·8e33
-~ Opportunlly

"

1998 Pontiac Trans-Am 350 V·8
lS 1 Corveue Engine Automatle
Tran1mi51 10n, Fa ctory Chrome
Wheals T- Tops, Fully loaded
500 WI Mo nsoon Stereo Svattm
Wlth 10 Speakera And 12 Oiac
CO Changer In Trunk Cassetta In
Ouh, Deep Navy Me tallic With
Dark Gre~ Leather Interior Any
Reasonab le Offer Conaidertd

Escort 76 ooo Mites, N. .da
Transm ission Can Be Sean From

12·10·99 $300 74Q.258·1421

Jack Fluuell te rrier pups lalla
docked, shots wormed 740 698

7055

2 To 4 PM March 2. 2000 AlTho

Gallipolis Dally Tribune Sealed
Bids WIH Be Acc ep ted Through

5 00 PM March

9

2000 Oh io

Valley Publishing Reserves Tht

Look ing for female

longhair

Factory Cancallallonsl Brand
New, Still Erattdl Urgent Must
Sell Quonset Arch Stvle One Is
40x60 Selling For Balance Only1

Good

1304}67S·1545.
For Sale
245-5121

50 Ser·
$4 500

Shape

Tobacco Sticks

740·

Older John Deere Model A Trac·
tor With Some Equipment &amp; Approximately 20 Round Balas Of
Hay, You Hauf 740-245-5801

630

Ohio 4SII31

720 Truck• for Sele

610 Farm Equipment
2 Unclalmoc! Slool Bulldlngat

lea

Righi To ~oj oct Any And All Bids

Terms Cash At Time 01 Sale All
Bids Shou ld Be Submitted In
Wrlllng To Ohio Valley Publi&amp;hlng
Co Attn Publi sher B2e Th ird

A'llllUO, Gallipolis

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Livestock

2 Quarter Horses Broke Sound &amp;
Safe Trail Ridden Or 4-H Project

740.386·8504

1988 Dodge Ram 1500, &lt;4x&lt;4 5
speed manual , A/C AM I FM
Canette with topper, 19,000

miles 116 000 Call

(30 4 }~75·

4288

1991 Ford F·1SO XLT 2 WO, 8
Bad. 6 Cylinder Automatic, AJC

PS PB, PW AM/FM CO, 70,000
Milos $7,200 740-446-3868
1994 • 1500 Series. Chevy Pick·

Up 108K Miles Auto • Air New
Bt: Goodrich Tire• &amp; Alum Cen·
ter Li ne Alms Red w/Biack
Teunty Cover $6,900 (304)87!1·

2029 $6900
1994 Chevy Silverado Step Skit
Loaded Excellent Condition, New
Tires $8 000 Fir m 7,.0·2415-

9252
1995 White Ford Explorer XLT 4 •
Wheel Drive 4Door, New Tlrt&amp;,

48 OOOMIIes Moon Roo11CO,

Loaded $15,500 Firm Financing

1304}675·1602
1997 black Chevy S 10 Stepeldo

Avallo~a

E)(lended Cab 3 door, l91d1d,
25,000 miles, very sharp fulllar-

lngo $12,000 740·949·2045 or
740·949·2203

7 Year Old Non Registered Stud
Quater Horae, Broke To Rid e

$700 740-367·n55

Special Spring Feeder Call Sale
Saturday Marc!'! 4, 2000 At 1 00
PM All Consglnments Welcome,
Hauling Available Cattle Accept·
ed At " P:M Friday, Athens Live·

stock Sale. 740·592-2322 Or
740 698-3531

Boyd Befl Caute Perlormance
Tested Bull Sale 50 Angus And
10 Polled Herefords Monday
March 6 AI 6 30 P: U At The New
OK Livestock Auction On The
AA Hwy In Maysville KY For
More Information Call Charlie
Boyd 606 763-6888
Butche1'HogS 740 256-e510
Re gi stered Angus He ifers &amp;
Bulls Regtstered Polled Slmmen·
tal Bull Red &amp; BlaCk llmousln Bull

740.25&amp;-6510

640

Hay &amp; Grain

Rou nd bales of nay 740-742·

2302

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs
1988 ChO"f S-1 0 4X4, V-6, Vory
Good Condition Call after 4 OOPm
740 386 9032
t 986 Dodge Ram 4x4 Au tomatic,

CO Player, 49,000 Miles $5.500
740-446-8050

1993 GMC Work Van New
Trans, ladder Rack. 350 c Well
Taken Care of Non-Smoker,

$3100 OBO 1304}773·5054
1995 Ford 150 XLT 4x4 6 Cylln·
der. 5 Speed. Loaded , 88

1304}67S.S724
650 Seed &amp; Fertilizer
Tobacco Plants

Now tak1ng orders for this Spring
Ftrsl Orders will Guarantee Best&amp;
Earliest
Plant s
Dewhurst

Farms.l304}89S.3740/895·3789

TRANSPORTATION

ooo

Milos $11,000 080 740·446
1900

1~96 Dodge Grand Caravan ES,
All Power Leather Interior Excellent Cond tt ion. 740-446 -2 107

Days 740·245·9164 Af1er8
1997 Ford ~anger Eklandod Cob.

V·6 AT New Tires. Low Mileage,
740-256-1925
1998

Va n

'
Ford

$14 000 (304}675-1105

Straw Bnght Wire Tie Straw Year
Round Delivery &amp; Volume Dis
count Available Heritage Farm

Tltar $250 Calll304}882·3247

Gateway Computer Less. Than 1
Year Old, Printer Included, 740·
4-41-o996 Call After 4 PM

1998 Dodge Sport Noon 23,000
Milas 4 Doors Spoiler s Spetd
$6,000 080 740.258-1233

AKC Registered We imaraner 2
Females, ShOts &amp; Wormed Born

lohan Carpel, 202 Clark Chapel 1·600-82S·5059 Ellloll.
Road Porllr, Ohio. 740-448·7444
Farm Tractor Ferguson
For Sale Reconditioned wash ·
era dr~ers and refrigerators
Thompsona Appliance 3407

l.v Mes&amp;age If Not Home 7&lt;40441 9575

740-446-4548 Or 740-446-7375
TO BE SOLD AS IS 1992 Ford

MERCHANDISE

510

1879 Bulctt Eloclto EkCtllenl 2nd
Vehicle Or F&lt;lr New Young Dthlor
Mechanically Sound, $500 OBO.

(No Papers} S50 740-441 9575

your sign Call 740·992·6398 or Dachshund to breed , Please call
740·992·2272
740.446·20551eava rneuago

Vlaw, In Kanauge No Pets, 740-

441.0181

One btdroom apartment In Mid·

Put You Tax Refund To Work,

Gracloua living 1 and 2 bedroom
BPI!rtmenta at Vlllage Manor and
Rlvlttkte Apartmen ts In Mlddla·

Between Athena and Pomeroy, 2
&amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes,

Slwaga, Trash, $315/Mo., 740·

Loaded Singlew'ldea Muat Got
Save Thouaandsl No Lot Rent

Building
Supplies

For Ltatlnga &amp; Payment Details, JIICf&lt;son Avenue 1304}875-7386
11(10.319-3323 Ekl 1709
GOOD USED APPLIANCES Fo rd 600 Tractor Live Hydrau·
Washers , dryers refrigerators. Ilea, Grader Blade Better Than
11!2 Fourth Avenue, Galllpollo. 3 rangea.
Skaggs Appliances, 76 Vlagral $3,600 1~}675-3824
Badrooma WID Hook·Up, S37SI
Vine
Street,
Call 7,.0·446-7398,
Mo , Dopoall ~oqulred, 1-888· 1-888-818.0126
Gehh Hayblne 9 Foot Cut Verv
840-0521.
Good Condlllon 1304187S.21 45
New And Used Furniture Store

addf.

longlh

$149,000 1304}675-11403

both&amp;, formal living room ond lam·

Homoa From $199/t.lo , 4% Down

BHch Street, Middleport, 2 bed-

uon Owner will help finance
Lovely tlf'l acres In a country nt·
ung, four bedroom&amp;, two and half

Bedrooms • Foreclosed

Lacg11t Nt:w Inventory In South·
ern Onto Specials On Homes
And Financing tn Progreu. Call

738-3409
$89,500 00 740·44&amp;1069
For Sale By Owner 3BR, 2BA , 330 Farms for Sele
large family room &amp; office , new
IACREU POND
roof, guttering, 1 c ar garage
Wllh Boaulllul Building Silo Bo·
2812 Ann l&amp;ton Drive , PI Pleas·
hind Pond Oatwen GelllpoUI &amp;
ant,l304}675-2606
Jackson. 2 Mlloa Off SR 35 land
Well-Maintained 4 BR House For

1 ·3

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK•
SON ESTATES, 52 Weatwood
Orlvo trom $289 10 $370 Walk 10
1hop a movloo Call 740-448·
2561 Equal Housing Opporrunlly

2 Lot Models Must Go, Extra

740-44&amp;-1519

Berner Sale In Stock Items Mol·

!1858

For Details 1·86&amp;-!l8S.Q187.

Furnlahed 3 Rooms &amp; Bath
Downstairs, Clean, No Pets, Ref
ereneu &amp; Deposit Required ,

RENTALS

410 Hou- for Rent

550

~121

French Clly Maylag, 740·446·
7795

Blue Lake To VIew 740-ototl·

9539
FLeETWOOD HOliES OJ Proc·
!Orville OhiO, GRAND OPENING

Homellead Roally 1304)875

100121!-8381
Anl1tony land Company LTD
www 001 rrtrytyme com

440

1991 Mansion mobile home,
1&lt;4x60 two bedroom, one bath ,
central air total electric, ready to

7~·3093

REAL ESTATE

loll ol WindOWS very

W.Poy~

Apertmenle
for Rent

5540

Reel Estate
Wanted

2 Bedrooms Yard 5 Miles South

Pay Closing Coals

&amp;

Riverview lot, tultable for houae
or trailer, never flooded! $14,000,
located In Syracuse, OH, 740·

ound $200 P'r Monlh Coli. 1·
800·948-SII78

1he offering
....;;_,...:;__.....,.
____ I 131 16k80, $254 Por Monlh, Low

Poseaalon

WWN coun~ com

nanclng, 2 and 3 Bedroom Ar·

(2 ) 14' Wide. S187 Per Montn
Low Down Payment, 1·800·881 ·

mediate

••o.ooo 5+ ~eros For $8.500
Call For Froo Mops ANTHONY
LAND CO , LTD, 1-600.213-8365

per

recommends that you do business wtth people you know, end
NOT to und money through the
mall until you have Investigated

Overbrook Center has part time
pos itions available lor AN's &amp;
LPN's all ShiHs tor more informa·
Uon please stop &amp; ftll out an appll
calion or call740-992-6472 EOE

; n3-S785 Or 304·n3·5447
~ Wedemeyer's Auction Service,
, Gallipolis, Ohio 7ol0-379 2720

u $408

0HIO VAllEY PUBLISHING CO. 8Q0.691-67n

payroll , and benefits admlnlstra·
tlon experience preferred Send
resume to Point Pteasant Center/
Genesis Eldercare, C/0 PO
8o)( 575. Point Pleasant, WV

www lmproyed!lfe net

All Wooele&lt;l, With Road That
Cont1nu11 Into Wayne National

Drywaii··4BR , 32k80..ovor 2348

Month Low Down Payment, 1-

Office Manager: 68-bed lnterme
dlate care nursing facllity High
school diploma or GED required
Accounts Receivable, Medicare

time auctioneer complete

One Lorge Lol Appro• 1Q1'•171
City Water, sewer Natural Gas.
EIIC1riC , All Art Available Lot
117ToVIow,74Q.4.48-9538
AIDIICED PRICIES
ao ACREB -111.!!!!!L

(1) .....AMAZING . ....

INOTICEI

Now Taking Applications From
Dominos Pizza. Gallipolis &amp; Po·
meroy Only 7oi0-446-4040

Put liTo Work
$300 ·$800 Por Wook
1-886·90().8065

bQI Mlll!l yALLEJ

380

7

Business

21 0

March 15 2000 Send Bids To
~0 Bok 527, Kerr, OH 45643

Own A Computer

320 Mobile Homes
for Sele

5 Bedrooms, 2 Balhl, o~r 2.000
sq It , for loss lhan $450 mo
:: ~E Delivery &amp; sat HOCHl48·

'

As Needed Will Take Bids Unlll

t auction
service
Licensed
r t66,0hto &amp; West VIrginia, 304·

and something Grand at the end of the 'frail.

GRAND

__________

992·S700,$t50, 000

(3) .....LOOK'""..

FINANCIAL

On Weekly Baols &amp; Trim Hodges

~ Rick Pearson Auction Company,

gulf coast on 1·10 there is incredible golf along the way ...

Times called "some of the

--~~__:_

An Older HOUII In Crown Clly

121 Flrsl Time Buyoto Eooy Fl·

Mlddloporl. Ohio &amp; WV License.
l -7ol0~9~~~~=~~~-------­ 25550. EOE

r Ohio. 740-992·7502
! Professional Auction

Vlnnol Fenco New U Siding, And
NtwAool Cal/7~59

Wanted To Do, Paint Wall Char·
actersf Cartoons Landscapea,
Ect For Nurseries, Childrena

and Medicaid bllllng/collecllons,

' Bill Moodlspaugh Auctioneering.
~ buy/sell estates, consignment
~ auction everv Thursday 6pm,

Work Shop, On Acre Lot, Whlte

9568, Or 7ol0-388·9648

5275

S~ndar

larga Ullily Room. 1 Car Gorogo,

sq It Payments low
mo t 80Q.948-S878

Moms Wanted America's 11
Home Buslnesa, Moms Work At
Home Free Cassette. 1·888·613-

'

4 Bedrooms , 2 eatha, 5 Mlnutll
To Holzer Hospital To Galllpolla,
Family Room, Sl~ng Room, Dining
Room , Eat-In Kitchen, Sunroom.

C0111ge Apartment $250 month

882·5700.

for an appotntmenl
We lOOk forM!rd 10 -ting yool

day before the 1d 11 to run,

3BR Home For Sal• or Rent Ga'l~b Firly Area. (304}117S.1105

~M

Wanted To Do, Mounts :rree
Service Bucket Truck Servlc•.
Top Trim Removal Stump Grind·
ing, Fully Insured Free Eatlmatu Bidwell Ohio 1-800·838·

Call 1-11(10.929-5753

Advanco. Deodllno: I:DOpmtho

1740}11611-8062

15 ecr11, wood«&lt; great hunting,
oil At 33 aolld farm house wnh
barrV&amp;hlda, watt~r rtMrvo ir, gasl
ol wolf, pond Meigs County, 740.

Gauranteed1740-44&amp;-2947

new caraer with us!

•All Yard S.let Muat Be Paid In

111e

corner of Blrct11Eirn In Meadowbrook Addition , PI Pltaunt wl
Fireplace. 2 FamllyRoom, 1Bath,
Full-Basement, Large Corner
lots CentraiAir, Fenced Back·
yard. New Hot·Water Tank. N•w
carpettfam room Oiglllf ThermoStat, Newly refinlthtd Htrdwood

440

8 Acres, $5,000, 10 Aeres

able 401KIMedlcai/DenlaiiPald
vacations avajl&amp;ble 3 shills dally
Flexllle ochoduing Slart your

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

3BR Brlct&lt; Rancn, locltod on

350 Lola &amp; Acreage

Would Make AGood Rtnlal Price
$17,000 740-2!18·6883
Lori'S Helping Hand Cleaning
Service, Will Do Frood Clean·Up, Nice 3 Or • Bodroom Ranch W~h
Free EsttmatfUI, Low Rates, 7&lt;40· Full Bailment, Heat Pump On
361-5043
1 78 Acres In Countrv On 8 ..11
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Management opportunities avaH·

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'•

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Ia to run Suncloy
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I

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Remodeling , Addltlona. Oeckl

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Dechy defeated fifth-seeded Conchita Martmez 3-6, 6-3, 6-4, and No. 7 seed Sandrme
Testud rallied for a 3-6, 6-3, 6-2 vtctory over
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DELRAY BEACH, Fla (AP) - Patrick
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{(roger Co , the Cmcinnati-based superJerry Carroll, ch:urman and co-owner of
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In other first round matches, N athahe

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1304)67S-4057

CINCINNATI (AP) - The Kentucky
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mtd-June openmg and ts adding corporate
sponsors along the way, owners of the auto
racmg track said Tuesday.
Track offictals announced at a Cmcmnatt
' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - ' news conference that F1rstar Bank, w!uch has
operanons m Cmcmnau"and Milwaukee, will

:utah exchlft eS s11M sales tax for liability

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EOE

992·6387 Wed·Sal I304}67S·
5951i

Free Kittens, 10 gOOd home Litter
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80

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We at Virginia certification required Point Pleaunt Clnlll,
State Route 62, Route 1, B01c

IS

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Oolllpollo c- Colllll
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ltema 11 oo bag sate e'f'ery
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Ctncmnatt lawyer Ttm Mara
beheves the decmon to modtfY
the stadtum could have been tilegal tf tt were made dunng a
closed-door executtve semon
1nstead of m public.
"That's thetr standard operatmg
procedure,'' satd Mara, who led the
campatgn agamst the sales tax
mcrease approved m 1996 to pay
for new stadiums for the"" Bengals
and Cmcmnatt Reds "They h~ve
no concept of domg the public's
busmess m front of the public."
Krmgs said he could not reoall
how the dectston was made to
modtfY the field, but 1t was the
right deciSion.
"Perhaps 11 should have bee!') a
pubhc debate," he satd.

110

Wlndst'-r

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1993 Suzuki 125 AM 2 Stroke,
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�•

· Pqe B 4 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5

~~Ex-boxing champ Bowe smiles after gelling 30-day prison ter11~
•:

BY PAUL NOWELL

::
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
•: CHARLOTIE, N C (AP)
:; -Former heavywetght champion
·:Riddick Bowe was happy after a
-;~udge sentenced him to 30 days m
pnson for
ktdnappmg hts
-estranged wtfe and thett five chtldren and ordered htm to get treatmenr for bram IOJUrtes he suffered
m the nng
Mter avotding a much longer
pnson sentence that was called for
tn a plea agreement Wtth the government, Bowe md he learned
from hts mistake
. " ! thtnk~firsLamLforemo•t I
have a different outlook on hfe,"
• he satd after hts sentencmg on
;Tuesday "As far as anythmg other

than that, I'll have to wa.t and see
what happens"
Bowe, 32, could have been sentenced to 18-24 months m federa! pnson for the abducuons Feb.
25, 1998 But US Dtstnct Judge
Graham Mullen satd Bowe's head
tnJunes persuaded htm to be
lement
"Wtthout this bram tn)Ury and
substanually reduced capaCity; thiS
matter would not have happened,"
Mullen said. He alSo satd statements made by family members
convmced htm Bowe never
mtended VIolence
- Bowe pleaded~guilty m June
1998 to a federal mterstate domesttc vwlence charge as part of a
plea bargam He tmttally faced

Cowboys focus
on comerback position

tRVtNG.~~rA~i~~,~a~sefo~~~~

focusmg on
the co rnerback posttton thiS week, mtervtewmg a couple of fl'!e
agents m advance of All-Pro Dewn Sanders' departure.
Free agent cornerback Ryan McNeil, who started for the
Cleveland Browns last season, was mtervtewed Tuesday The Co,wboys were expected to offer McNetl a contract today The stx-year
veteran led the Nauonal Football League With nme mtercepttons
Ill 1997
Phtlhppt Sparks, another free agent cornerback, gets hts turn
today
"I would hope that we can make a dectston and get somethmg
worked out," Cowboys owner Jerry Jones sa~d
McNett of Mtanu, who appears to be the Cowboys' top chotec,
was persuaded by the team to remam m Dallas Tuesday mght
mstead of returmng home. He spent Tuesday discussmg his role and
how he fits mto the Cowboys' defenstve scheme wtth Jones , VICe
prestdent Step hen Jones, coach Dave Campo and defenstve coordmator Mtke Ztmmer
Sparks, an etght-year veteran and full-ttme starter \VIth the New
York Gtants, arnved m Dallas at 5 p.m Tuesday He was scheduled
to meet wtth Cowboys' management and coaches today.
Jones sa1d other cornerbacks could be mv1ted to the team's Valley Ranch headquarters along Wtth "three or four quarterbacks"
from whtch one wtll be stgned to replace Jason Garrett as Troy Aikman's backup
The Cowboys wtll hkely not pay $12.7 nulhon to keep Sanders,
who has publicly mdicated hts days m Dallas are over.

federal lcidnappong charges.
krufe, handcuffS, duct tape and hope I can get this treatment so I
BeSides the 30-day sentence, pepper spray. He fo,rced her and can go on and be a productive
Bowe must serve four years' pro- the yo11ngsters uuo a vehicle and member of sooety," he sa~d m a
barton and stx months' house set out for hiS Fort Washington, barely audible votce
arrest after he ,; released from Md , home
Judy Bowe did not attend the
pmon He also was fined $5,000
At a restaurant m South Hill, . sentencing heanng.
and ordered to continue treatment Va ,Judy Bowe called her ststcr in
Bowc's
attorney,
Johnme
for his bram tnjunes. Bowe wtll North Carolma, who gutded Cochran Jr., who successfully
remam free until a place at the police to the restaurant. She was defended OJ Stmpson, was not
federal pemtenttary at
superfietally
stabbed, present for the sentencmg He
Butner, N C , becomes
reportedly by Bowe argued during the two-day hearavailable
Mullen, however, sa1d mg that the sentence Bowe agreed
Mullen also ordered
Tuesday he concluded to accept under the plea bargam
Bowe to stay out of the
the wound was mflicted should have been lessened because
boxmg nng unul hts proneghgently, nor mten- h1s bram InJUries tmpatred h\s
banon ends
twnally
judgment.
.
Two years ago, Bowe
Before
Mullen
Assistant U .S. Attorney Ken Bell
went to Judy Bowe 's
tmposed the sentence, expressed disappomtment m the
Charlotte home and
Bowe apologtzed to the hght sentence, but declined to say
threatened her wtth a
• Bowe
court and hts fanuly "I whether the government wtll

appeal. It has 30 days to do so.'
"The court found that he did tt
with no viOlence. We disagree," he
said of Mullen's ruling. "We
believe tt was erroneous."
Bell referred to the sentence: as
"the boxer's excepuon"
"I don't think there's anything
like a boxer's exception," defense
attorney Billy Maron sa.td "Ht: ts
suffering now and he was at the
ttme of the metdent." ,
Bowe outpomted Evander
Holyfield for the undtsputed
heavyweight championsh1p on,
Nov 13, 1992 He lost the WBC
utle when he didn't fight Lennox
Lewts. He lost the WBA and IBF
utles when he was decmoned by
Holyfield on Nov 6 , 1993.
'

Critics flog commissioners for private decisions
CINCINNATI
(AP)
Hamilton County comnuss10ne rs
pnvately agreed
to
spend
$710,000 last yea r to make the
new taxpayer-financed home of
the Ctncmnatt Bengals smtable for

soccer.
CommtsStoner Bob Bedmghaus told The Cmcmnau EnqUirer
for a story today that the decmon
to place removable concrete slabs
m each corner of Paul Brown Stadium tS m lme wtth the tmttal
purpose of the stadmm and wtl!
make tt more useful
But cnucs say that 1s not the
pomt and that making dectStons m
pnvate ts one reason why the stadmm proJect ts $35 millton to $45
million over Its $287 mtllion bud-

get.
"How they go about makmg
these decmons ts the pomt,"
Hanulton County Audttor Dusty
Rhodes satd "ThiS ought to be a
concern to every taxpayer Tlits ts
the kmd of thtng that got us m
thts 1ness "

Permanent slabs were part of
the ongmal destgn The decmon
to add the ren1ovable slabs was
made at the request of sponsors
trymg to bnng the Olymptcs to
Cmcmnatt m 2012. They satd
more stdeltne room was needed to
mternatwnal
accommodate
matches , tndudmg World Cup
games
Removable slabs wtll allow
more than 1,000 seats to be taken

out for soccer games
A construction audttor the
county htred blamed most of the
overruns on changes m the onginal stadtum plan that were
approved wtth httle overstght
Conummoners and county
adnumstrators satd they never saw
the change orders and that county
staff approved them
Bedinghaus s:ud county admmtstrator Dave Krmgs talked \VIth
each commtsstoner about the
chan~ to accommodate soccer.
"Thts IS JUSt the way we wanted to do busmess," he told the
newsp~per "When I say that, I
mean ntamtaining the fleXIbtlity
to present World Cup soccer m
the facility."

ArH&lt;OUNCEf,JENT S

005
Pertonels
Gentloman SHI&lt;Ing Companslon.
ohlp From Nice Female F&lt;lr Talk&amp;,
Walkl &amp; Friendship Send Aeplltl To 553 Second Avenue ,
Apartment t403, Galllpolla, OH

A5831

Why walt? Start meeting Ohio
alngles tonight Call toll free 1·

'

80().766-2tl23, -.~~on 8176

30 Announcement•
, ; Now To 'lbu Thrm St_.
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8(10.530

' • 01llee of Or Edword L Howard Is

CLOSED
1Ae11rornenl}

40

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Pupplos, falher Rollwellor molher

Australian Hus ~y. 5 weeks o td ,

7oi0-247-7806

Cl~

SALT LAKE
(AP) -The Utah Legtslature agreed to gtve up
- $13 rmllion tn Olymptc sales tax m exchange for Salt Lake Ctty's word
'that the state ~on 't be !table for any mumctpal costs related to the

played through shoulder pa.tn to beat Hernan
Gumy 6-2, 7-6 (5) tn the first round of tile
CttrJx Tennts Championsliips.
:'
Jusun G1melstob, Chrts Woodruff, Stephan
Koubek, Alex Calatrava and Xavter Maltsse
also advanced.

__L

$2S.$751hr

To CLA 495, c/o Gallipolis Dally
Tribune, 825 Third Avenue Galli
polls OH 45631

Lost Black And White Female
Cat In The VIcinity Of Memorial

Field, 740,448·1000 Reward!

• Lost Keys, Has Letter •H• Key·
• ehain, Also Has Kroger's Card

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70

304-67S.I957

Handyman malntenanc• servk:e
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1035

Excellent care tor per&amp;on In my
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Very ~easonabla (304}882·3880

l Monday odltlon·
1;00pm Frldoy

Natd 7 ladles To Sell Avon, 740·
44&amp;3358
~eed Someone To Mow Grass

f

Big yard sale tst·3rd, 43410
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t~ys, swing set babv clothes,
mise

Mar 41h, 9-2, clothing, books.

dishes, mise
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~

Service
r Farm, Estate, Inventory Reduc·
t tlon Fundraislng, Steven Betz AI
t Indian Creek, 7&lt;40-24~5747
·

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Ask F&lt;lr Jasalca

•

~ lull

Opportunity

The ROBERT TRENT JONES GoLF TRAIL is 378 holes of

Part Time Secretary Needed For
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:' 90

cedllles Telephone CommuniCa tions, And Computers Must

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championship golf on a seriestf&gt;f eight spectacular sites ·
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Sit-

~
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~ • M T S Cotn Shop, 151 Second

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, Avenue, Galllpol~ 740-448·2842
•' Will offer $100 1or good 1844

HOTEL REsoRT AND
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• buy old oil palnllngs, 740·593·

)1

•

!

Alabama coast. Enjoy your5c:If lounging by the

.

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•

I 8.. eoo.e33t EXT. 1211

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.,

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II'

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t

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1 Houra, EnJoy Unllmlltd Earninga

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AVONI All Aresol To Buy or Soli
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1AYon Produoll. Star! your own In·
: ~~~~~~~=88=3=8~-------­
, SOOKKEIPER WANTED - Min
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'

RESORT AND GOLf CLUI •

-·=:o":"""

I

..
,.

To CLA 497 c/o Gallipolis Dally
pois, OH 45831

Pleaaant Valley Hospital Is cur·
rtntlv accepting resumes/appll·
cations lor a FlscaJ Coordinator
fat Phyalclan Practice Services
Must have an asaoclat• degree
In accounting or related field A
minimum of three years ot physi-

cian offlcolphy•lclan billing ••·

perienee Three years of muiUapeclallv physician office man agement Please submit resume
to Pleasant Valle~ Hosplt,l, cto

Personnel, 2520 Valley Drive PI

ARE YOU READY
FOR AN E.COMMERCE
BUSINESS?
121 471/HR, PT 1FT

grand resort on the Tr.ill.

-MAARIOTT'S--=:-----:-

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

'
t 711-:-:0:--":":H~el~p":":W:-a-:nted-:-:---:-

pool, sailing in the bay or exploring scenic trails
10n

CLA, Apply In Person, Medical
Plaza, 936 Slall Roul8 160 Ga~ ·
poHs

'nll~une, 825 Third Avenue, Galli

••

•
•

by Conde Nan magazine, is waiting for you on the

Pan-Time Registered MLT Or

! copy

: 8915 eveNng

named one of the best places in the world to stay

Have Enjoy Dealing Wllh Ths
ft.l&gt;llc Send Resume To P 0 Bok
1199 GaDipolls, Ohio 46631

Part-Time Waitress /Bartender
Needed Please Send Resume

of The Gamblers Mirror,
, cash for other books. old pam·
* phiets , diaries, letters We also

'

miliar Wllh Basic Ofhce Pro·

Frlendt~.

Knowl·

Pt1aaant , WV 255ISO , or fax to

1304167U975. AAIEOE

Service Technician Wanted Ap ·

ply AI Big Boyo Walar Toys
Cltoalllre Ohio, 415e20
URGENTLY NEEDED for plasma
donbra, earned $35 to $45 tor :2
or 3 houra w11kly Call Sera·Tee

740-S92·8e51
WANTED: Your Support Will Bo
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3952SllloRaulo141
Golllpolls. OH 4&amp;e31

, edge 01 Qulckbooks Soflware
• Poyroll /Job Coaling lAP IAR •
• Ability To Handle MuiUpiO Taoko I we are now accepting applica Con11rucllon Knowlodga APlua I tions Apply In pers&lt;ln No phone
No Phone Calls Accepted /Send
Raauma To Chrlttlen's Conet

ca111 pltall, Harts Kountry
Kitchen , 3rd I Pearl Street

1403 Eao1orn INa , Gallipolis, OH lllclni.Ohlo
4M3 I.
WO~K FROM HOME, Aro you
~ Now accepting eppllcatlona at llrod of making your bOll rlch7
~ Eldorado Adult Home 740·992·
$~00·54,000 pllltlmo, 1·800·720·
( 5039
0328, wwwer.opportunitycom

•

11

'

Fuoll. Oft SR 140 &amp; SA 233

23 ACRES -$21,000
SR 7 S0&lt;1lh Of Gall lpolla No
AIOiricUonal NEEDS TLC, $2,300
Down On land ContrBCl
liE lOS COUNlY
CHEAPER THAN DIRT

OH

111 1 ooublewlda, $249 Por

A re you connected? Internet us
ers wantedl $500 to $1000 a
week 888· 869·8372www stay·
home net
Start Your Busll')en Today
Prime Shopping Center Space
Available At Aflor.dable Rate

em

Down Payment, Free Air 1-800·
69t-6n7
1976 14X70 mobile home, two
bedroom. two bath, like new lit·
ling on 2· 114 acrea, rudy to
move Into, $26,000 firm, 1110 3
p+ece living room sultl, very good

Spring Yallay Plaza Call 740.446· Condition, $100 7oi0-992.Q802.

0101

1982 1&lt;4 x70 Fllltwood 2 Bed·

230

Professional
Services
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSt?
No Fee Unlm We WinI •
1-888-582·3345

room•. 2 Balha, CIA, Now Undor·
Porches, E•cellon1 Condition,
$10 000 7oi0-36H105

pinning &amp; Block, Front &amp; Back

1982 14x70 Manaton 2 Bed·

rooms 1 Balh 19811 14•70 Schuh
3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths, AC , 740 ·

,•
All real estate advertising In
this newspaper Ia subject tO
the Federal Fair Hou•ng Act
ol 1968 which makes It illegal
to advertise •a nv preteraoce
llmHaUon or dlscrimlnatlop
based on race color, religion,
sex familial status or national
origin, or
intennon to
make Any such preference
Umilatlon or ctscrlmlnatiOn •

anv

Th1s newspaper will not
knowingly accept ,
acl\lertlsements tor rear estate
which Is Jn violation of the
law Our reader1 are hereby

Informed Ural all dwellings
ad-vertised In thls newspaper
are available on an equal
basis

446-2516 Alllr6 ~M
1985 14&lt;70 Mobllo Homo 3 Bod·
roomo, 2 Balho, Make OHer, Unlll
March 8th, 740·446·3888 Unlll
5oo. 74Q.448.44n Aller e
1987 24'&lt;40' Doublewldo New

Root. New Vinyl Windows, Some
New Carpet, In Good Shape!

Musl Be Movadl 740·388·8743
Between 5 And 7 PM In Even·
lngs
1988 Mobllo Homo, 2BR, 14x70,
Ready to move In on rented lot

$12,000

1~}675-5108

(304)578·2101/or

1111 Flemming 14x70, central
air. new carpet 2 lull batha

Decks (304}675·3955
I304}87S.3249

or

Far LANDI
Even If Ill llsttd
20 ·500 Acros
Cell Ryon

mova,$11,500 7ol0-949-9016

1991, 14x65, two bedroom 1 belh,
new carpet new bathroom. asldng

$10.000, 740.992.0149

Country Living 3 Or • Bedrooms,

a Move

In

Ooublewldo On Lo1 $250 Oepoal1
~squired 304-736-7295

'

310 Homes for Sate

FISHING. BOAJ!NQ. HUNIINQ
Or Just Relaxing In Your Own

Camper &amp; Car111sllo

2-3 badroom hOuse, 2 acres, ga·
rage fruit trees, country living,
minutes from town, Bradbury

$3UOO, 740·367-7785

3 Bedroom Brick Home, Double
Garage, large lot, Finished
Basement Maintenance Freel

740·448-8329

Green Township 3 Bedrooms
With Garage Outbuilding , 1 1/2
A cres MIL L.ow Utilities Many
Extrasi74D-446-0744
Bl Level In Spring vanev Area 3
Bedrooms, 2 Baths, Family ~oom.
2 Car Garage, 740-446-8607
Brick Home 3 Bedrooms, FA, LA
Large laundry 2·112 Baths, Eve·

rythlng Updalad Only $120,000,
Owner Relocating, 7olo-441o0641
For Sate B~ Owner 4 Bedrooms,
3 Bathrooms, New Rool And Sid·
lng, New Carpet, Atletched Ga·
rage, Plenty 01 Storage Space,
Nice Neighborhood Leas Than 2..

t.lllea From Holzer Roady For Im-

Price

Ovo~ooklng

Sale. 2 Garages EkCallen1 Loco·

Nlco Loaded, Your Cholet $998
Down Hurry Won'l laol Oakwood,
GallipOlis, 740-448·3093.
1 Lett $299/MO

lncludel LOt,

304-736-721/S

MobiiO ltome wllh fuU

lion, three bedroom two bath,
26'x65' on one acre, localed t • tl
3 mile out 143 olf Rt 7 call

lnga, 7ol0-992·2517

...,.n-

lly room. two nreplacea two apar~·
menta, four (fir garage end two

o1orage building• plaue call
740 992 2292

Middleport· corner ol HlgP'I Strut

Powell Slreol, 2 btdroom homo

with dining room living room and
kitchen Newer oerpet and kitchen
cabinets makes tht kitchen with

brlghl AlsO I

large lot Cute 11 can be Re·

1152 Fourth Avenue, Gallipolis, 3

Btdrooma WID Hook·Up, $3751
Mo., Oopooll Reoulrsd, 1·888·
840.()521

For aale or rent· 2 bedroom
hauae In Pomeroy $350 month
plus dapoalt, wm sell on contract
with good referencea. no pets ,

740-868·7244
FOR LEASE OR SALE 5 Year
Old 2,000 Sq Ft 3 Bedrooms 2

Baths, Energy Ettlclent Home ,
Neor Clltfoklo GOlf Club $885/Mo

74Q.4.48-2957

Pilot Program, Renters Needed

304-736-7295

Pilot Program, Ranten Needed,

304-738-7295
420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

For 6 Moo Only 0 Oakwood,
Galllpolta, 740-448·3093

Land Home Packages All Ar.eas

All Credl1 ~loks 740-44tlo3563

$260-$300, 740-992·2167

2 Btdroom Trallar Bttautlful ~lver

$499 Down. Only AI Oakwood
Hamel In Barbouraville, 90&lt;4·

Contract Available Frtl Mapa. 1·

7404-1 .

'

350 Loll &amp;, Acruge
1· 1!2 Acre, mortJieu, with
House Trailer I Barn. Ml!latone

Rd

(304)~78·3033

11/tl acrea on Lincoln Hta ,

$17,500, flnonco ovolloblo, t%·
IOyr. balloon, 740·982·2828 or
132 Butlemut, ~
2 « Acrea, Winding Crotaroada

Subdlvlalon, vory Nlco Araa,
Convenlant Locatlott, G•lllpOIII

- · m.ooo 7oi0-24Hne.

ducod 10 $33 ,000 Plouo call 5 Acroa Blacktop Fronlaga a
Oolllo Turnor ~oolly, Oottl• S lakiVIew, S32,ooo Moro Acreage
Avolablo, 740-318-8671.
TIJrner, Brol&lt;M at 740·992·2886

710 Auto• for Sele

Block, brick , sewer pipes . wmd·
OWl linitiS IIC ClauM Winters
R io Gr.mde OH Call 740·245-

9·22' Trusses ·120

Roof Tru&amp;lies

Each 9 23 5' Truasu $20 Eech,

8·28'4 " Trusses $30 Ea ch, 2·
28'4" Gable Trusea ·$35 Each
t 1 -34'5" Trusses $50 Each , 9·
40 2" Pole Barn Tru1111 -$60
Each, Miscellaneous Lumber,

pori From $273-$336 Call 740· Good F&lt;lr Farm ProjOCII, Sold By
EquaJ Housing Oppor- The Bundle Only - Save SSS CoH
lufiltos
740.992-8ol96
Modern 1 Bedroom ~partment. 560
Pete for Sale
7~
992-5064

460 Space for Rent
600 square feet office building
$350/mo , mobile home spaces

$120/mo , 2 bodroom mo~lle
home, $300/mo , Riverpark Po
rneroy, 7ol0-949-2093

Advertise your business in this
vis ible location on well traveled
highway Will put up and maintain

AKC Black Mate Poodle $ t 00
Blue &amp; Gold Yorkshire Female

Household
Gooda

Appllancll
Re conditioned
Waahara, Cryer&amp; Ranges Relrlgratora, 90 Day Guarantee!

Below Holiday Inn Kanauga
Qood Ulld Bed a, Dressers.
Couches. Olnettas Etc Big sav
lnga On New Furniture 740·448·

4762

R&amp;O'e Used Furniture Great Sa
teetlon, Priced To Sell! ·come
And Browse • Corner Of Route 7
&amp; Addison P.lke, · we Buy Furnl
ture• 740-367·0280

530

Antiques

7 Piece Antique Bedroom Suite 2
Antique Oak Parlor Table. 3 New·
er Oriental Rugs Two 5x8, One
3x 5 All For S1,000 Ftrm, 740·

379·2923 Leave t-tessage

Buy or sell Riverine Anliques
1124 East Main on SA 124 E Pomeroy 740·992·2526 or 740·992
1539 Russ Moore, owner

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

2 Bedrooma, 1 Bath, In Country

HUO Appii)';B(J, 740·387.Q544

216, $275/Mo , Includes Waler
Tfaah, $1SO Oaposll 740-2566767

~ and

Apartments
for Rent
2 bedroom apartments fur·

nlahad and unfurnished, security
depoalt required. no pets, 740-

992-2218
1 Bodroom Apartmen1 Furnlohed

Utllltlea Paid On VIand Street,
PI Pl1asant $275 par month

(304 }J'36.51iS4

1 Bedroom, Near Arbor's Nursing

Home, Economical Utilities Quiet

local/on, $279/Mo , • Ullhlles. No
Pelo,74Q.4.48-2957

2 Bedroom Apartment Adjacent
To Rio &lt;lfande CAmpus, 740.245-

room tumlahtd apartment

utilities
paid, deposit &amp; references. no

po•. 740-992·0185

Chrlaty's Family Living, apartmenta, home &amp; trailer rentals,
7•0·992·,.1514, apartments avail·
able turnisntd &amp; unlurnished

.

Now Taking Applications- 35
Weal 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments , Includes Water
446.()008

One Bedroom furnished Apartment In Pt Pleasant Very Clean
and Nice No pets Phone

1304}67S.1386.

dlopon. 740.9912·9191
Spring Valley Greon Ono Bod·
room Apartments, Appliances

Furnished, C.II74Q.4.48-1fi99
Toklng Al&gt;Picatlono for 1 B~ Apl

In Pofnt Pleasant $350 + Oepos·

11 No Polo/No
(304}67S.S867

Smoking

T1r1 Townl'louee Apartments

2 While Dryers Kenmore &amp; Hot
point $65 Each 2 While Wash·
era, $75 Each Both Whirlpool CaD
After S 30 PM 740-446·9066
Baby bed, stroller, car seal,
swing. htgh cha ir walker play

pen 304·675-2801

Complete DISH Network salelhte
system brand new $99. 740
992·1182 or 304~773·5305 alter

6pm

For Sale Or Trade 400 Cummons
3208 Cat 1983 Full Size Truck

Bad Ford 740·256·6365

For Sale

Bu ck Stove. Fan &amp;

Grubb's Plano tuning &amp; repairs
Problems? Need Tuned? Call the

plano Or 740-446-4525

Hot Springs hot tub " person
good condition, some chemicals
included call 740 992·5053 after

5pm

JANITROL HEATING AND
COOLING EQUIPMENT
INSTALLED

' II Yov Don f Call Us We 9oth

Lose • Free Esllmatesr 740-446·

6308, 1·11(10.291·0098
JET
.AERATION MOTORS
Repalrtd New &amp; ~ebulh In Slock
Call Ron Evans 1 BOO 537·9528

Mag1c Chel Electric Range, Super

Capaclly $250, 740-245-11206
MOBILE HOME OWNERS

Huge Invento ry, Discount Prices
On Vinyl Skirting Doors , Windows. Anchors Water Heaters,
Plumbing &amp; Electrical Pa rts Fur
nacea &amp; Heat Pumps Bennetts

Mobile Home Supply 740·446·
9416

New Mlllenlum Dietl Eat All Day
And Me lt Away, Call Tracy At

7oi0-44 1·1982
RESIDENTIAL HOME OWNERS

Tappan HI Efficiency 90% Gas
Furnaces 011 Furnaces 12 Seer
Heat Pump &amp; ~J r Cond1tlonlng
Syatema Free 6 Year Parts &amp; La·
bor Warranty Bennetts Heating &amp;

Cooling 1·600 872 5987
Ron 1 Gun Shop, 74Q. 742 84 12

Vary Spacloua, 2 Badroomo, 2
Floora, CA, 1 1/2 Balh, Fully Car· Silver prom draas alza 3/4
pllod, A4ul1 Pool &amp; Baby Pool , bough11all yoar $150 OBO call
Polio, Slarl 1360/Mo No Pols, 740.992·5747
Loaeo Plua Socurlly Otposll Re· Three piece blue beige &amp; mauve
qulrod, 74Q.448.3o481
living room auite, $500 740-992·
38SII
Twin Towers now accepting ap·

pllcatlona lor 1 BR HUD 1Ub81d-

lzed apl for oldorly and handl·

ClllPid

EOH.(~}67HI79

Wanted· RCA or Huges Direct
TV system will pav top do lla r
Wottle 7,.0·949·3315 leave mea·

Upllalro Apartmonl 1350/Mo , oago
Plul Dopo111, No Poll, 740•258· Wa1erllno Spoclal 314 200 PSI
1249.
$21 95 Ptr roo. 1' 200 PSI
VIllage Green Apartmenll· 2 $37 00 Por 100, All Brasa Com·
Flllfngo In SIOOk
btdroorno, lOIII oltclr1c, oppHanc· proulon
RON
EVANS
ENTERPRISES
01 1urnloltod, laundry room lacUI·
Uta and ctooa 1o octtool. opollco· Jockaon. Ohio, 1·11(10.537 9528
11ono IYIIIablo 11 office. 740·992· Wedding Dr••• · Size e, lvroy
3711 TOO 1-:1111&amp;-233-Uiol Equal Shaalh Styto, long lialn, Vory El·
oganl. $325, 740·446·8e33
-~ Opportunlly

"

1998 Pontiac Trans-Am 350 V·8
lS 1 Corveue Engine Automatle
Tran1mi51 10n, Fa ctory Chrome
Wheals T- Tops, Fully loaded
500 WI Mo nsoon Stereo Svattm
Wlth 10 Speakera And 12 Oiac
CO Changer In Trunk Cassetta In
Ouh, Deep Navy Me tallic With
Dark Gre~ Leather Interior Any
Reasonab le Offer Conaidertd

Escort 76 ooo Mites, N. .da
Transm ission Can Be Sean From

12·10·99 $300 74Q.258·1421

Jack Fluuell te rrier pups lalla
docked, shots wormed 740 698

7055

2 To 4 PM March 2. 2000 AlTho

Gallipolis Dally Tribune Sealed
Bids WIH Be Acc ep ted Through

5 00 PM March

9

2000 Oh io

Valley Publishing Reserves Tht

Look ing for female

longhair

Factory Cancallallonsl Brand
New, Still Erattdl Urgent Must
Sell Quonset Arch Stvle One Is
40x60 Selling For Balance Only1

Good

1304}67S·1545.
For Sale
245-5121

50 Ser·
$4 500

Shape

Tobacco Sticks

740·

Older John Deere Model A Trac·
tor With Some Equipment &amp; Approximately 20 Round Balas Of
Hay, You Hauf 740-245-5801

630

Ohio 4SII31

720 Truck• for Sele

610 Farm Equipment
2 Unclalmoc! Slool Bulldlngat

lea

Righi To ~oj oct Any And All Bids

Terms Cash At Time 01 Sale All
Bids Shou ld Be Submitted In
Wrlllng To Ohio Valley Publi&amp;hlng
Co Attn Publi sher B2e Th ird

A'llllUO, Gallipolis

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Livestock

2 Quarter Horses Broke Sound &amp;
Safe Trail Ridden Or 4-H Project

740.386·8504

1988 Dodge Ram 1500, &lt;4x&lt;4 5
speed manual , A/C AM I FM
Canette with topper, 19,000

miles 116 000 Call

(30 4 }~75·

4288

1991 Ford F·1SO XLT 2 WO, 8
Bad. 6 Cylinder Automatic, AJC

PS PB, PW AM/FM CO, 70,000
Milos $7,200 740-446-3868
1994 • 1500 Series. Chevy Pick·

Up 108K Miles Auto • Air New
Bt: Goodrich Tire• &amp; Alum Cen·
ter Li ne Alms Red w/Biack
Teunty Cover $6,900 (304)87!1·

2029 $6900
1994 Chevy Silverado Step Skit
Loaded Excellent Condition, New
Tires $8 000 Fir m 7,.0·2415-

9252
1995 White Ford Explorer XLT 4 •
Wheel Drive 4Door, New Tlrt&amp;,

48 OOOMIIes Moon Roo11CO,

Loaded $15,500 Firm Financing

1304}675·1602
1997 black Chevy S 10 Stepeldo

Avallo~a

E)(lended Cab 3 door, l91d1d,
25,000 miles, very sharp fulllar-

lngo $12,000 740·949·2045 or
740·949·2203

7 Year Old Non Registered Stud
Quater Horae, Broke To Rid e

$700 740-367·n55

Special Spring Feeder Call Sale
Saturday Marc!'! 4, 2000 At 1 00
PM All Consglnments Welcome,
Hauling Available Cattle Accept·
ed At " P:M Friday, Athens Live·

stock Sale. 740·592-2322 Or
740 698-3531

Boyd Befl Caute Perlormance
Tested Bull Sale 50 Angus And
10 Polled Herefords Monday
March 6 AI 6 30 P: U At The New
OK Livestock Auction On The
AA Hwy In Maysville KY For
More Information Call Charlie
Boyd 606 763-6888
Butche1'HogS 740 256-e510
Re gi stered Angus He ifers &amp;
Bulls Regtstered Polled Slmmen·
tal Bull Red &amp; BlaCk llmousln Bull

740.25&amp;-6510

640

Hay &amp; Grain

Rou nd bales of nay 740-742·

2302

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs
1988 ChO"f S-1 0 4X4, V-6, Vory
Good Condition Call after 4 OOPm
740 386 9032
t 986 Dodge Ram 4x4 Au tomatic,

CO Player, 49,000 Miles $5.500
740-446-8050

1993 GMC Work Van New
Trans, ladder Rack. 350 c Well
Taken Care of Non-Smoker,

$3100 OBO 1304}773·5054
1995 Ford 150 XLT 4x4 6 Cylln·
der. 5 Speed. Loaded , 88

1304}67S.S724
650 Seed &amp; Fertilizer
Tobacco Plants

Now tak1ng orders for this Spring
Ftrsl Orders will Guarantee Best&amp;
Earliest
Plant s
Dewhurst

Farms.l304}89S.3740/895·3789

TRANSPORTATION

ooo

Milos $11,000 080 740·446
1900

1~96 Dodge Grand Caravan ES,
All Power Leather Interior Excellent Cond tt ion. 740-446 -2 107

Days 740·245·9164 Af1er8
1997 Ford ~anger Eklandod Cob.

V·6 AT New Tires. Low Mileage,
740-256-1925
1998

Va n

'
Ford

$14 000 (304}675-1105

Straw Bnght Wire Tie Straw Year
Round Delivery &amp; Volume Dis
count Available Heritage Farm

Tltar $250 Calll304}882·3247

Gateway Computer Less. Than 1
Year Old, Printer Included, 740·
4-41-o996 Call After 4 PM

1998 Dodge Sport Noon 23,000
Milas 4 Doors Spoiler s Spetd
$6,000 080 740.258-1233

AKC Registered We imaraner 2
Females, ShOts &amp; Wormed Born

lohan Carpel, 202 Clark Chapel 1·600-82S·5059 Ellloll.
Road Porllr, Ohio. 740-448·7444
Farm Tractor Ferguson
For Sale Reconditioned wash ·
era dr~ers and refrigerators
Thompsona Appliance 3407

l.v Mes&amp;age If Not Home 7&lt;40441 9575

740-446-4548 Or 740-446-7375
TO BE SOLD AS IS 1992 Ford

MERCHANDISE

510

1879 Bulctt Eloclto EkCtllenl 2nd
Vehicle Or F&lt;lr New Young Dthlor
Mechanically Sound, $500 OBO.

(No Papers} S50 740-441 9575

your sign Call 740·992·6398 or Dachshund to breed , Please call
740·992·2272
740.446·20551eava rneuago

Vlaw, In Kanauge No Pets, 740-

441.0181

One btdroom apartment In Mid·

Put You Tax Refund To Work,

Gracloua living 1 and 2 bedroom
BPI!rtmenta at Vlllage Manor and
Rlvlttkte Apartmen ts In Mlddla·

Between Athena and Pomeroy, 2
&amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes,

Slwaga, Trash, $315/Mo., 740·

Loaded Singlew'ldea Muat Got
Save Thouaandsl No Lot Rent

Building
Supplies

For Ltatlnga &amp; Payment Details, JIICf&lt;son Avenue 1304}875-7386
11(10.319-3323 Ekl 1709
GOOD USED APPLIANCES Fo rd 600 Tractor Live Hydrau·
Washers , dryers refrigerators. Ilea, Grader Blade Better Than
11!2 Fourth Avenue, Galllpollo. 3 rangea.
Skaggs Appliances, 76 Vlagral $3,600 1~}675-3824
Badrooma WID Hook·Up, S37SI
Vine
Street,
Call 7,.0·446-7398,
Mo , Dopoall ~oqulred, 1-888· 1-888-818.0126
Gehh Hayblne 9 Foot Cut Verv
840-0521.
Good Condlllon 1304187S.21 45
New And Used Furniture Store

addf.

longlh

$149,000 1304}675-11403

both&amp;, formal living room ond lam·

Homoa From $199/t.lo , 4% Down

BHch Street, Middleport, 2 bed-

uon Owner will help finance
Lovely tlf'l acres In a country nt·
ung, four bedroom&amp;, two and half

Bedrooms • Foreclosed

Lacg11t Nt:w Inventory In South·
ern Onto Specials On Homes
And Financing tn Progreu. Call

738-3409
$89,500 00 740·44&amp;1069
For Sale By Owner 3BR, 2BA , 330 Farms for Sele
large family room &amp; office , new
IACREU POND
roof, guttering, 1 c ar garage
Wllh Boaulllul Building Silo Bo·
2812 Ann l&amp;ton Drive , PI Pleas·
hind Pond Oatwen GelllpoUI &amp;
ant,l304}675-2606
Jackson. 2 Mlloa Off SR 35 land
Well-Maintained 4 BR House For

1 ·3

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK•
SON ESTATES, 52 Weatwood
Orlvo trom $289 10 $370 Walk 10
1hop a movloo Call 740-448·
2561 Equal Housing Opporrunlly

2 Lot Models Must Go, Extra

740-44&amp;-1519

Berner Sale In Stock Items Mol·

!1858

For Details 1·86&amp;-!l8S.Q187.

Furnlahed 3 Rooms &amp; Bath
Downstairs, Clean, No Pets, Ref
ereneu &amp; Deposit Required ,

RENTALS

410 Hou- for Rent

550

~121

French Clly Maylag, 740·446·
7795

Blue Lake To VIew 740-ototl·

9539
FLeETWOOD HOliES OJ Proc·
!Orville OhiO, GRAND OPENING

Homellead Roally 1304)875

100121!-8381
Anl1tony land Company LTD
www 001 rrtrytyme com

440

1991 Mansion mobile home,
1&lt;4x60 two bedroom, one bath ,
central air total electric, ready to

7~·3093

REAL ESTATE

loll ol WindOWS very

W.Poy~

Apertmenle
for Rent

5540

Reel Estate
Wanted

2 Bedrooms Yard 5 Miles South

Pay Closing Coals

&amp;

Riverview lot, tultable for houae
or trailer, never flooded! $14,000,
located In Syracuse, OH, 740·

ound $200 P'r Monlh Coli. 1·
800·948-SII78

1he offering
....;;_,...:;__.....,.
____ I 131 16k80, $254 Por Monlh, Low

Poseaalon

WWN coun~ com

nanclng, 2 and 3 Bedroom Ar·

(2 ) 14' Wide. S187 Per Montn
Low Down Payment, 1·800·881 ·

mediate

••o.ooo 5+ ~eros For $8.500
Call For Froo Mops ANTHONY
LAND CO , LTD, 1-600.213-8365

per

recommends that you do business wtth people you know, end
NOT to und money through the
mall until you have Investigated

Overbrook Center has part time
pos itions available lor AN's &amp;
LPN's all ShiHs tor more informa·
Uon please stop &amp; ftll out an appll
calion or call740-992-6472 EOE

; n3-S785 Or 304·n3·5447
~ Wedemeyer's Auction Service,
, Gallipolis, Ohio 7ol0-379 2720

u $408

0HIO VAllEY PUBLISHING CO. 8Q0.691-67n

payroll , and benefits admlnlstra·
tlon experience preferred Send
resume to Point Pteasant Center/
Genesis Eldercare, C/0 PO
8o)( 575. Point Pleasant, WV

www lmproyed!lfe net

All Wooele&lt;l, With Road That
Cont1nu11 Into Wayne National

Drywaii··4BR , 32k80..ovor 2348

Month Low Down Payment, 1-

Office Manager: 68-bed lnterme
dlate care nursing facllity High
school diploma or GED required
Accounts Receivable, Medicare

time auctioneer complete

One Lorge Lol Appro• 1Q1'•171
City Water, sewer Natural Gas.
EIIC1riC , All Art Available Lot
117ToVIow,74Q.4.48-9538
AIDIICED PRICIES
ao ACREB -111.!!!!!L

(1) .....AMAZING . ....

INOTICEI

Now Taking Applications From
Dominos Pizza. Gallipolis &amp; Po·
meroy Only 7oi0-446-4040

Put liTo Work
$300 ·$800 Por Wook
1-886·90().8065

bQI Mlll!l yALLEJ

380

7

Business

21 0

March 15 2000 Send Bids To
~0 Bok 527, Kerr, OH 45643

Own A Computer

320 Mobile Homes
for Sele

5 Bedrooms, 2 Balhl, o~r 2.000
sq It , for loss lhan $450 mo
:: ~E Delivery &amp; sat HOCHl48·

'

As Needed Will Take Bids Unlll

t auction
service
Licensed
r t66,0hto &amp; West VIrginia, 304·

and something Grand at the end of the 'frail.

GRAND

__________

992·S700,$t50, 000

(3) .....LOOK'""..

FINANCIAL

On Weekly Baols &amp; Trim Hodges

~ Rick Pearson Auction Company,

gulf coast on 1·10 there is incredible golf along the way ...

Times called "some of the

--~~__:_

An Older HOUII In Crown Clly

121 Flrsl Time Buyoto Eooy Fl·

Mlddloporl. Ohio &amp; WV License.
l -7ol0~9~~~~=~~~-------­ 25550. EOE

r Ohio. 740-992·7502
! Professional Auction

Vlnnol Fenco New U Siding, And
NtwAool Cal/7~59

Wanted To Do, Paint Wall Char·
actersf Cartoons Landscapea,
Ect For Nurseries, Childrena

and Medicaid bllllng/collecllons,

' Bill Moodlspaugh Auctioneering.
~ buy/sell estates, consignment
~ auction everv Thursday 6pm,

Work Shop, On Acre Lot, Whlte

9568, Or 7ol0-388·9648

5275

S~ndar

larga Ullily Room. 1 Car Gorogo,

sq It Payments low
mo t 80Q.948-S878

Moms Wanted America's 11
Home Buslnesa, Moms Work At
Home Free Cassette. 1·888·613-

'

4 Bedrooms , 2 eatha, 5 Mlnutll
To Holzer Hospital To Galllpolla,
Family Room, Sl~ng Room, Dining
Room , Eat-In Kitchen, Sunroom.

C0111ge Apartment $250 month

882·5700.

for an appotntmenl
We lOOk forM!rd 10 -ting yool

day before the 1d 11 to run,

3BR Home For Sal• or Rent Ga'l~b Firly Area. (304}117S.1105

~M

Wanted To Do, Mounts :rree
Service Bucket Truck Servlc•.
Top Trim Removal Stump Grind·
ing, Fully Insured Free Eatlmatu Bidwell Ohio 1-800·838·

Call 1-11(10.929-5753

Advanco. Deodllno: I:DOpmtho

1740}11611-8062

15 ecr11, wood«&lt; great hunting,
oil At 33 aolld farm house wnh
barrV&amp;hlda, watt~r rtMrvo ir, gasl
ol wolf, pond Meigs County, 740.

Gauranteed1740-44&amp;-2947

new caraer with us!

•All Yard S.let Muat Be Paid In

111e

corner of Blrct11Eirn In Meadowbrook Addition , PI Pltaunt wl
Fireplace. 2 FamllyRoom, 1Bath,
Full-Basement, Large Corner
lots CentraiAir, Fenced Back·
yard. New Hot·Water Tank. N•w
carpettfam room Oiglllf ThermoStat, Newly refinlthtd Htrdwood

440

8 Acres, $5,000, 10 Aeres

able 401KIMedlcai/DenlaiiPald
vacations avajl&amp;ble 3 shills dally
Flexllle ochoduing Slart your

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

3BR Brlct&lt; Rancn, locltod on

350 Lola &amp; Acreage

Would Make AGood Rtnlal Price
$17,000 740-2!18·6883
Lori'S Helping Hand Cleaning
Service, Will Do Frood Clean·Up, Nice 3 Or • Bodroom Ranch W~h
Free EsttmatfUI, Low Rates, 7&lt;40· Full Bailment, Heat Pump On
361-5043
1 78 Acres In Countrv On 8 ..11
Route 775, Peal 0 0 Molntyro
Need An Electrician Or Carpent· Park Call740.441·16&amp;9, Ahor 6
er? Beat High Prlcaa All work

w"h quarterly salary reviews
Management opportunities avaH·

: meroy Thurs. Frl &amp; Sat , 9-5

V V Valley, down I-85 from the Carolinas, or along the

'•

rue, Galllpol~

7ol0-388-8931

Georges Portable Sawmill, don t
haul your lOgs to the mill just call

Slartlng wage Is $6/hr

Ia to run Suncloy
oc!ldon • 2:00 p.m.
F~cloy. Mondly odltlon
• 10:00 o m. Solunloy.

1Yard sale on Lovers lane

"{X Jhether you're driving down 1·65 from the Ohio

The Grand Hotel
Point Clear

Manager Retail Jewelry Store,
~stall Sales And Computer Ex
perience Necessary Benefits
Available App1v Acquisitions
Fine Jewelry, 151 Second Ave ·

Pon:he6

ston calling center
We are now setting up
Interview appointments for
outbound teleaervlce posttons
No experience necessary

DffDUNE: 2:00p.m.

I

Fioora. $76 000

Grand opening of Ill new Wall

1he cloy boforollto od

l 80

Carpentl)' From Frame To Flnlah
Remodeling , Addltlona. Oeckl

Is pleased to announce the

Gallipolis
&amp; VlclnHy
A1J. Yonl Sllea Mull
11tt Pora In AriVItnco.

9-7,

310 Homea for Sete

Mlllettnlum Toltaervlcta

Yard Sele

• Billy Goble Auctioneer Pomeroy,

And now the famous

Equal Opportunlly Employer

Maintenance Position FuU·Time
Must Have Some Electrical
' Plumbing Air Condttloning, HeatIng Experlenee, Send Reaume &amp;
Quallflcatlona With ~eferencea

l

lead

Excellent team atmosphere, ex·
ceptlonal co-workers. bene llta
and good Surve~ History Inter·
ested canct6datea should apply to
Rocksprin gs Rehabilitation Cen·
ter 367!59 Rocksprings Road Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 ann Carol
Greening, RN , DlreciOf of Nursing,
Internet Marketing

\ Tuppers Plains St, Paul U M
Church- basement sate Mar 3rd,

roads on the
to the

1QO bad •killed nursing faclllly

Lost and Found

brief

Dechy defeated fifth-seeded Conchita Martmez 3-6, 6-3, 6-4, and No. 7 seed Sandrme
Testud rallied for a 3-6, 6-3, 6-2 vtctory over
Donuruque Van Roost No 8 Barbara Scherr
DELRAY BEACH, Fla (AP) - Patrick
Rafter, m hts first smgles match m stx months,

Experience d ANIMDS Nurse lor

1-888·818-I 882

agreement wtth the Sparta, Ky., speedway, 1 S-mile, trt-oval track on Its opemng weeitlocated 35 miles southwest p£ Cmcmnati The end. Tile NASCAR Craftsman l"ruck Senes
deal mcludes advertmng stgns at the track and event, a 225-mile race, IS to be televised live on
proVIding automated teller banking machmes ESPN
there.
{(roger Co , the Cmcinnati-based superJerry Carroll, ch:urman and co-owner of
market company, has already stgned on as Kentucky Speedway, sold the Turfway Park
sponsor of the Kroger 225, a June 17 mght horse racingtrackmJanuary 1999 to concen.::b.:.e...:a:.....::c:::or:rp.:.o::ra:::te:.....::spt.:o::n:::.so::;r~un::;d:.:e::..r...:a:._;;~h:::r.:.ee:..-J..Ye:.:a::..r...:;ra::c.:.e..::th:::a::..t.:.:lo:.:o:.:m:::s:..:a:::.s-:th::;e:..::firs:::.t:..m=aJt::O:..r~ev.:..:e:::n::..t:::•t:..:t:::h::.e...:::tra:::t::e...:o:.:n:..:b:.:u:::il:::di::n3g2c:t:.:he:..$:.:1:::5=2c:milli=::o:::nc:s.l:.pe:.:e:::d:::wac.::y~,;,_

SCOTTSDALE, Anz (AP) Anna
Kourmkova needed only 45 mmutes to beat
games.
Alina Jldkova 6-2,6-1 and advance to the sec- Leaders m ctttes Wtth Olymptc venues have expressed concern about ond round of the State Farm Women's Temm
•mumet pal costs related to the 2002 Wmter Games, such as plowtng ClaSStc
roads, tncreased law enforcement and transportatton costs
In other first round matches, N athahe

740-

www any-1-can·earn com

Kentucky track moves toward June opening, Kroger 22~

Tennis in

Mixed· Breed
Can
See the motnar

1304)67S-4057

CINCINNATI (AP) - The Kentucky
Speedway ts progressmg toward tts scheduled
mtd-June openmg and ts adding corporate
sponsors along the way, owners of the auto
racmg track said Tuesday.
Track offictals announced at a Cmcmnatt
' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - ' news conference that F1rstar Bank, w!uch has
operanons m Cmcmnau"and Milwaukee, will

:utah exchlft eS s11M sales tax for liability

328, Polnl Pleasant wv 25550
EOE

992·6387 Wed·Sal I304}67S·
5951i

Free Kittens, 10 gOOd home Litter
Trained Can be seen anytime

80

Certified Nur.e Aldte· Rotating
shifts Intermediate care center
We at Virginia certification required Point Pleaunt Clnlll,
State Route 62, Route 1, B01c

IS

8ueln"'
Trelnlng
Oolllpollo c- Colllll
(c.r.er. CIOOO To Homo}
CAll Todoyt 74Q.446.43e7,
I 800 214-04S2
Reo t90-05·1274B
180 Wanted To Do

140

CaM Man~gtment Poaltton- An
Outpatie nt Alcohol ~nd Other
Drug Counaellng Agency Locat·
ed In Gallla And Jackson Coun·
ties, Is Setktng A Case Manager
To Work With Adults And Adolescents Providtng Screeninba
Evalu ations , Intakes Referrals,
General Case Management Servlcll Anct Etc Must Have Knowl·
edge In The Field 01 Chemical
Dependency Bachelors Degree
And /Or Experience CCOC A
Plua. §1!!!1 Boltnne.Sy Mttn:h 10,

Dancers wa nted Top

Giveaway

Puppies
come &amp;

Help W1ntec1

2000 To FACTS 4S Olivo Slreel,
Ga llipolis, Ohio 4S631 Or FAX
7~-8014 EOE, Mlfili

Quality clothing and household
ltema 11 oo bag sate e'f'ery
Thurldey Monday thru Saturday

Ctncmnatt lawyer Ttm Mara
beheves the decmon to modtfY
the stadtum could have been tilegal tf tt were made dunng a
closed-door executtve semon
1nstead of m public.
"That's thetr standard operatmg
procedure,'' satd Mara, who led the
campatgn agamst the sales tax
mcrease approved m 1996 to pay
for new stadiums for the"" Bengals
and Cmcmnatt Reds "They h~ve
no concept of domg the public's
busmess m front of the public."
Krmgs said he could not reoall
how the dectston was made to
modtfY the field, but 1t was the
right deciSion.
"Perhaps 11 should have bee!') a
pubhc debate," he satd.

110

Wlndst'-r

740 Motorcycles
1993 Suzuki 125 AM 2 Stroke,
$1 200 OBO 7·0·245-5018 Or
352-4605leave Mesoage
Auto Parte &amp;
Acceseorles

760

Budget Priced Transmrsslons ~II
Types Access To Over 10 opo
Transmissions, CVC Joint&amp;, 740·

245·56n
710 Autoe for Sele
'92 Pontiac Bonneville, tour door
exceKe nt condition Sharp, $4650
74().949·2045 evenings

Motor From 85 Pontiac Flreblrd
2 8 litre Fuel Injected Aecen):ly
~ebulll Call 740·441-0335, 740
446 3232

· ~

1980·90 Hondas From $29/Mo ,
Impounds! o Down, 24 Months 0

SERVICES

19 9% llsllngs, 800.319-3323 Exl
3901

1986 ford Tempo runs good,
had new parts put on $800 090,

810

740.378·9806

1987 Chrysler LeBa ron 2 Doors,
Automatic With Air, PW, POl,
Great Gas Mileage l ooks &amp;
Runs Good, $1 895, 740-446-

6981

1990 Buick LeSabre , 4 door, all
power, e•callent condiUon $3995,

740·992-2529 or 740-446-7194

1990 Nlssan Maxima Accepting
Sealed Bids Thru March 8th ,

Please Phone 740·367-5055,
Balwoen 7 30 &amp; 4 ~M

1991 Caprice Stallonwagon Good
Condition, 3 HP Outboard Motor,

74().379·2228

1991 lumina Euro 2 Doors 1993
Grand Am 2 Ooora, 1992 cavalier

RIS 2 Doors. Four S 10 Plck·Upo

1985 Chavy Full Size &lt;4x4 Cook

Molors, 740-446.0103
1992 Dodge Splrll PS. PB AC.

Good Gas Mileage We ll Main·

1alned $1,995 080, 740·2588647

1994 Cadillac Designer Edition,

89 k milaa all leather, all options,
pearlized cream color. tan cloth
top, e•c&amp;llent condition, garage

kopl, $12,000 llrm. call 740·992·

7508, leave message or call after

5pm

1994 Grand Prix. S E.,

SunRoof,

Loaded Good Condition $8!500
l~l458o15n

Home
lmptovemente
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Uncondtt lon~l llletlme guarant'e
local referen ces furnished lis

labllshed 1975 Call 24 Hrs 1740}
446· 0870, 1·800·287·0576 ~&lt;111·
era Waterproollng
•
Appliance Parts And Service . All
Name Brands Over 25 Years experience All Work Guarantetd ,

French Clly Maytag, 740·4'\)1
7795

C&amp;C

General Home MaM'I·
tenence- Painting. vinyl sldl~
carpenlf'l, doors wlnd6wa bat s,
mobile home repair and more tx
free estimate call Chet 740·9Q2-

8323

DIGITAL
CONSIGNMENT
SALES Do You H..., Sornelhl~g
You Want To Sell? Have You
Been On Tradio More Than Onc:a
Or Twice with No Sale? Have Ylu
Been l ilted tn The Local Nevtlpaper And Bu11etin Boards? L)t
Us Adverllae Your Product Woad
Wide On The t.nternet AuctiorM
You Keep Your Merchandlll Un·
Ill It Sells Sail Your Merchand~o
To Collectors And Get Mo 1
Money For Ill Advert ise To
I·
Ilona 01 Internet user&amp; Toda)lll
Call 304·675·4493
-

a

Jtma Drywall
Conatructlotl
New Construction &amp; Remodfll
Drywall Siding, Roora , Addl·

lloni Palnll ng . ole 1304}874·
«23
or (~}874.0155
•
1996 Muolong , Purple, 35000

mites, Tinted Wlndowa St0,900

Livingston s Beaement Water

1304}117S.4154
Proofing, all baa•ment repaih
fr11 estimate&amp; UfeUme
1998 Subaru Logscy Sodan, All done,
guarantee 1 :2yra on job exptrlWheol Drive, 3,452 Milos, Load· onco {~)895·3887
oc1 $13,900 740-379-2218
Mome Maintenance Artd
1997 Grand Prix . GT, Black, 2 Superior
Plumbing Wo Do All ~opa lra On
door Loaded, Good Con~lllon Homea
A.nd Trtllera, F11t Serv·
(304}882·2825.
lcei740-441.Q113

�·Pllge B I • The Dally Sentinel

-

.. .

r,:.r
• W.dnu dry, llerch 1, 2000

Weclnttdey, ~ 1, 2000

Public NOIIce

. · -;:NO;;;T;;;ICI~Of';;'~"~CTJ~ION~;ON;;-

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

I

The Dally Sentinel • P8ge B 7

OOP

NBA Cr011word Punle

TAX L1VY IN IXCESI Of

THI 'I"'H MILL UIIITATION
RM1ud Cocle,Stctlo.-le
31101.11(0), 1701.11,1701..21
NOTICE II hereby t!wn
• . 1hllt In purauenoe of 1
• - IIHOiutlon of the Vllllgl
; • Counoll of thl VII.... of '
• · ~ Ohio, pllled on

to

: .. the llh d8y ot Dtotmber,
, ... there will ..... nlllld
to a o1 the p nple of

aald aubdlvlalon at 1
Primary EIIOUOn to be hlld
In lhl Vlllltl of lyt'HUII,
Ohio, lit lhl .......r "'"-"
ol voting tllereln, on lhl :hh
, · day of March, 2000, the
• . quelllan of llvytng 1 tiX, In
IXOell of lhl len mill
: llmltltlon, torro:;l'the:.,~:~!
• Syracuae VI

your

Paying $80.00

perp,-

message

$300.00 Covenlll
Proi~rttalvt· top

: •purpoM

J eld
rwplaCIIMIII tax
1 mill
Public Notice
II I rill not IXCIIdlng 1
(ant) milia for IICh one
NOTICE OF ELEcnQN ON
dollar ol valuation, which . TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
amounta to len centa
THE TEN MILL UMITATION
(t0.1 0) lor 11ch one
Reviled Code, Sectlone
hundrad
doll ere
ol 3!01.110(0),1701.11, 5705..21
. viiUitlon, lor llw (5) yeera.
NOTICE Ia hereby given
The Polle lor eald lhet In pureuence of •
lllctlon will be open at 11:.30 Reeolutlon of lhe laird o1
o'clock A.M. end remeln Townehlp Tru11111 ol the
open unUI 7:30 o'clock P.lll. Townehlp ot Orange, Ohio,
of Hid day.
peelld on the 7th dey of'
order of the Boerd of S.pllmblr, 11111 there will
E ectlona, of lllelg1 County, bl lubmltted to 1 vote. of
Ohio
the people of 11ld
Dated: J1nuary 4, 20110
IUbdiVIIIDn II e Prlm1ry
John N. lhle, Chllrmen
Election to bl held ' In the
·Rllll D. Smith, DII'ICior·
Townehlp of Orange, Ohio,
(2) 11, 18, 23 (3) 1 4TC
at the regular placll of
voting therein, on the 7th
Public Notice
day ol March, 2000. the
que.Uon of levying • tiX, In
. NOncE OF ELECTION ON
exceea of the ten mill
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
llmlllltton, lor tha blneflt of
THE TEN MILL UMITATION
Oranga Town1hlp lor tha
RIVtled Code, SlctloM
purpoee ol Fire Prolectlon
3801.11(0), 5705.11,5705.25
Slid Tex being:• A
NOTICE II hereby given ra-1 alan exllllng tax of
11111 In . pureuance ol e 2 milia II 1 rate nc:ot
.R1aolutlon of till vm.., exceeding 2 milia lor nell
Council of the Vlllege of .
dollar of valuation,
lyracun, Ohio, p. .Hd on .1· -•·•~• 1mount.1 .to twenty
the lth dey ot December, cent• (to.20) tor each one ,
1111thlrwwlllblaubmlttld hundred · dollara of
to a vote ol the people ol valueilon, tor IIIII (5) y11ra.
18ld aubdlvlalon 11 1 · The · Palla tor eeld
Primary EIICUon to bl held EIICUon wllltM open It 11:30
In the Ylllege ot Syi'acull, o'clock A.lll. end remeln
Ohio, at tha reguler plecn open until 7:30 o'clock P.lll.
of YOUng lhlrlln. on lhl 7th ofuld dly.
dey at lllerch, 2000, the By order ol the Baird ol
quelllon ollevylng a tax, In Electlone, of Melge County,.
IXCIII Ol thl tan mill Ohio
llmlllotlon, tor the blntflt of Dated: Januery 4, 2000
SyrtCUII Vlll1g1 lor thl John N. lhle, Chllnnan
po11 ol Current Rill D. Smith, Dli'actor
n-.
(2) 9, 111, 23 (3) 1 4TC
ld TIX belng:l A
· replacament ol tex ot 1.8
mllll II I .rate not IXCiedlng
'i
1.8 milia tor 11ch one dollar
Of VIIUIUon, which lmDUntl .
to elghtNn cenll (t0.11) for
IICh one hundred dollara of
Ylluallon, tor llw (5) yeerw.
The Poll• lor aald
Election will bl open at 11:30
o'clock A.lll. end remeln
open unUI 7:30 o'clock P.M.
of Aid day.
.
By order of the Baird ot
I!IICUona, of Melga County,
OhiO
Dated: Jenuery.4, 20110
John N. lhlt, Chllrinln
Rllll D. Smith, Director·
(2) 11, 18, 23 (3) f . 4TC

•r.

f'

•

line.

Public Notice

Remodeling,
Roofing New
Additions, Pole
Buildings, Etc.
Free Estimates
2/17100 1 mo Jl!d·

BISSEll IMIIILU
INC.

.

New Homes • Vinyl

The Home Natlonel Blnk
re11rv11 the right to reject
eny or 111 bldl or to ramav1
eny unit from thl All It

•Eitctrlell ll'lumblng
•Roollng • OUIIIrl
•VInyl Sieling • Plllntlng
•PIIIIo &amp; Pon:lllllc:b

• Replacement Windows
• Room Additions

• Roofing .
COMMERCIAL and IESIDENTIAL

anytlml.
Arrangement• mey bl
medt to lnepect eny ol the
1bove nam~ vehlclel prior
to the All by cllllng 740.
949--2210.
•
Georg•
Lawrence,
CoiiiCUon Olftctr
(3j 1, 3, 7, 10 4TC

FREE ESTIMATES

j

740·992·7599
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

• DtiVIWI~

•r., ,.,, &amp;...1111 c.,.t

• •••••tH..Servl••
u.

frH Dtllve;y

•LI 1 ~t

740-7 42-950 I
'Toll Free

.... !I ton

')&lt;Jl

-·-

840 Eleclrlcel and
Refrigeration
.._._,lion: Now Healing.And COOlIng Shop Dlllr1 Groao Ratea And
E.-o Sllvk;e. Lot OU! Experience TtchniciJ~n Give You A
Fr10 E1llmoto Today And Baal
The $p&lt;lng llulh. Coli Adv11100&lt;1
Comfort Syatema At' 740·«6-

.

Rolldonllol or commorclal wtnng,

Malter Li-

uaU.•~•DIUIMI•~•
BEPTICTANKS,LEIOHIEDS IHSToiiJ.EO. WA!BI.QAELECTRIC
UNES, IIASEIIENf.fOOTEAS, I!OSilE HOllE SET UPS, ~
III,)II.DIN(l-W«l CLfARIIIG. HOIUONTAL ~ r
IIOANG, CREEK &amp; FIELD lliWNifii1.PONO ·
•

J67 0317
.

.

Scrubbed &amp; ·'
cleaned
Clean &amp; Scotch
Guard '40 -Any .
Normal Size Room.

CREDrr

No Credit • Slilw Credit • Bankruptcy

-

I
'

---,

Repo • Dtvorded

~

STOP1
/

.

:

·~!!!!!!;"'-!\

: I..!.J.J!~!LJ.lrtr

: fjt~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~LtJ

You're TrNted with RHpecll _
Cell Now lor
I**
_•

i

l

740~6-1141 ·
...

' I ' )

•

~!

740·742·2706

'-O:.~c:..·­

, . '· .
..

I

~~I

. BlJRKFS

.

~

THE BORN

P'[l(f;

·.

J~T TOLD !lot: t.eoJr ~tOO "'~

~

NE\o.l

.

~lo.T T'tl'{. OF

BANKRIJPT£Y

nwr-y,...,...hr.., .......

Wharathl
DillS ANI
·
.
.

..

Ill """"" ..... ..-....

l'ar lnlarrnlltlon regarding
Blnkruptay aontact:

Hend!3rson, WV

William Safranek, Attorney

'I .

(740) 582-5025 Athena

OLASSIFIEDSI

~Ira.

1

,l

SliCE 1964

'

·t

1711-2417 ar 441-1428
.

•

THEN "•IH"T l't\ AIIOUT

I

Cell Phone 674-3311

Fax 304,-675-141~

iO 00 TO YOU. WI~~
.&amp;E AN ENTIRELY

•Driveways . •Tennis Courts ·:i
ePorking Lots • Playgrounds ·;i
' .
.. •Roods • Streets
•

HOSODY

OUT

TRA~H -TI\1..1&lt;!.

HEW ANI&gt; HUI111LIN&amp;

11E . .

~--

EXPEir.tENCE.

&gt;

If this is what your caddie looks like...
..
•
·•
.
·• •

•

•

)

•

•

•
•

WV Contractors Lie.

BURKE'S ·

...

CARPET ·. SERVICE ·

,.

...

..

•

. ..

t

•

STORACE

.If

SL RL

.

lOX IOS·tO

••

.t

I

I 0 X 20 $60

992- 171 7
·.New Homes
·• Garagea
·Complete
Remodeling
Stop ·&amp; Compare ·

you need to .hit.The Trai~ ·
WINTER. What a miserable time for golf. ·unless you head for the sumiy
South
and the red,hot Robert Trent Jones
Trail. Last ~ar, over 5,000
.
' Golf
. .
.
golfers from 'Minnesota took advantage of
~e bejlutiful courses, the nice
.
.
weather and the low rates .to experience what the
New York-Times-~allt.A "ao•e of the best public
golf on Earth. • And while we can't gu~rantee
the weather, we ~can pro~ise you great golf. ···
~
.
'
Call for information aboufour 3-day/2-night golf
and hotel packages as low as $162 ..

FREE
ESTIMATES
740 892·1171

.-

7/221TFN

'

'

.

'

'

M.-.TrattO..&amp;
f.t(aip-nt P~~~t~o
Factory AUihot:h:ed

'

c.-IHPar~~t

1·800-949·4444 or

www..rtfgolf.com

Dealen~
101l0
7toulfl
Ccallire. OH ·4 61D

St."'·

I

•

Eloctrlcol, WV000308, 304·675·
17tle.

. • Siding• Drywall )
• Ptlntlng • Plumbing

•

·;

Joseph
Jack•'
.

740-992·2068:
1111100 t mo. ' ,

..
1':

HOWARD · 1
EXCAVATING CO.

.......
s

.

•
••

.I JaiiJorlf" &amp; Baelrlooe
• Senrifleo
Houie &amp; Trailer Siteo

Land Clearing &amp;
Grading

.

, • • i 11£1

JUeh

···,,y·
'

;- ~ )
,

I&lt;
1

.

Self~Stor•e•

33795 HilG~ Rd.
Po~roy, Ohw

740~99t~Sih
1JM.OO 1 mo. pd.

."
•
. •
il ·:

,
'

I

..

'

\~

tYPetil ......nily

- t o you tliom a ellaIIIII' be In 1111n tor yoo in

Slay"' dole toudl

wilb Mllldo fll!l'"" cle1181oped
·w~~o Hoe fer • ...,..
PISCI!S (M. 2().MIIdl 20)
Mlb o:eo11in whit you wOik C,
todly it !lilly whit yoa - . 10
Iller you
haWI tout YCIIfo'
oeltwby you 1\'0111 thro!olh 1111 tllll
.tmuble in tho fini pr-. ltaow
· ~ ·to IOQt for IOIIIIIICe lild ·
yoa'U ftDd It: The ~
Malclimeker n\'1111 inllllltlj
which ..... -ft!lk'IIIY ~
Coot tor you. Moil $175 tor.fllcb.:
lllllllli', cJo tbi1 ,.......,.., P.O•
11os ma. Murray IDII Stlollol.

-·t

New Yort. NY 10t56.

AltiiiS (Meidl 21-April 19)

•

lllould yoa -

lnio

I .......

· ,:, ~.tltberwltby-..lforwllll

~· ... fOil --'1te.
yoa oolld tilt fountW CNI of a
fiiCfec:dy 100!1 (llloulo_

'

•

•Mon:b 2. ·2000

the,_ ....

(740) ttJOJAI

.
.
' , yoar objeqives musi ~ cleuly
defined todll)' if you hope to pt
enylhiJiJ daM. ·Without I 1111110
plan,· you oould aet quiokly
-.ell off coune.

t....._.

dill

. Seplic sro~erru &amp;:
. ' Ut~

\

, , 'tAiiRUS (April :W:.Moy 20) ·
· Don'o Jive In too easily llhould
coodliions over whicb you have
· liUle control
to inhibit
'' · · y,our pn&gt;du&lt;:oivioy. ·IO!ilx· Try to
jlnlneuv. arouri;d them.

•

qU

wJTo

ll(ewlleatlaa

. '

ctnltd electrician . • Ridenour

· • CoaUng • Gutters ~

'7

34 lnCuralon
35 ThrUitr writer
~

• Bnch light
11 Actor Foxx
1~ Capilli ol ....leo
12-.)
13

11 - Ungua
(airline)
.
20 Flnnllh llrst

-

21 Concllft ,

Mr. Koppel .

22 lilrl. MlrcOI

23 Egyptian

s•
Pau

••
·••
Dbl.
AU pan

Norill
2o

24

Eul
39
Pus

Since today is St. David's Day,
named for the patron saint of
Wales, let's look at the third
Cardiff Cafe Charity Bridge Drive, held last July: The temperature
was in the 80s, with brilliant sunshine (honest). However, as play
took place outside seven cafes, the
breeze caused more trouble than
bad suit splits. Fifty pairs played
30 deals, 10 at each of three cafes.
1be youngest competitors were
sisters Catherine and Claire
Evans,' aged 13 and 10, respectively. They scored a cold top
against their parents in this deal.
Counting three points for her
singleton, East made a three-heart
limit raise, showing four-plus
trumps and 10-12 support points.
Now Claire did well to introduce
her spade suit. Overlooking o11ly
five high-card points and a void in
partner's suit, she realized that the
7-1-5-0 distribution had great
trick•taking potential if she could
find a fit.
It isn't clear where West found
his double, but I suppose it was a
matter of Dadts .honoFJ.
As you can see, Ciaire had no
trouble collecting an overtrick
for plus 690. .
East-West must have been even
more pained to realize that they
could have made five hearts if
North had led, say, a spade (not
that Claire would have let them
play there once she received a
spade raise from her. partner).
After drawing trumps, declarer
(West) would have led a diamond
to dummy's kirig, ·then finessed
through .South on the second
ro11nd. (Yes, maybe North should
lead ~he club ace at trick one.)
At the prize-giving, a check for
1,400 pounds was given to the
.George Thomas Hospice Care
organization.

ec:.lf.)

-

25 C

oo,lor

27 Slept like

.....

.

,,

;

OEMINI (Moy 21-1- 20) It

will be lmponllll todly dw you
not ollow younelf to II, wishywally concemi111 • clec:islon that
needs to be lllllle. It IIIOIIId open
lhf dear far IIIIOiher, union you

mike.-

eiiS •

opinst your bett

.

i*-

CANCER ' (June 21-July 22)
luuln1 di~tives to others usuolly oomes·euy, but oon you show
tho- i:a)silll!ftOy when opply-

. if. : Ilia thlo to y,CIIIell'l Wild! yllla'
I owor pouductivit)l.
. ·
. , LI!O (July 23-AUI• 22) Don't
Jl.,.in to llkinr lllvontqe of en
·opportunity to even ~ tcere
willl someone with wham yoo
hold • pudp. lt'llro lpinst yoa
in tho'-""'·
VJROO (A... 23-Sepc. 22)
......, your Judrmeoll of 1 per-

-""""'wham otben ... '"Yint

uatiad lhillp. Yoa would be wile
to . . tbillndividul'llide of tho
-.y, .... decldo tor )'OIIIIIIf.
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 23) All

..

SCORPIO (O.:L 24-Nov. 22)
Be .ellln J&gt;Ndent today obout
,...,. dw·alfect ypur monetory
• · po~ition or yoadnllmoheourity.
Finonc:iol ttends may not be.too
lavonble for you 11 ohis time. .
SAOmAlUUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) If you ollow nae to sovem
your reason todly, a situa~:ion
lhll Could bio oully cloalt wllh In
1 oool, losi&lt;:al fashion

~f ~and

will aet out

fro,.

and blown Into a bia
Cu.
..
CAPRICORN (l&gt;et- 22·lon.
t9) Study ony imp6nan1 millers
from every enp end welsh ..1of

•

·your aloematlves todoy before .
, lnakln1 ony blndin&amp; oommit·
men11. 1fyoudon'~ you could end

up oqmoins io.

.
AQUARIUS (Jon. :ZO.I'el&gt;. 19)
By scri"'l'ins in Older oo sove a
few penates today, you could end
up ollowina dollars to slip 111rouJ!1
your finJeiS, Keep your priorities
in Older 10 you - lib Wllntlp of whet "'"-·Ilene·
'

'

28 Peralenell
:N •-•nee .for

.

31 Teech

.
33 Runner
Zlfopek
31 Singing
lyll40 CondHcend
41 ......
42 Dleompoll
43 Tlki- (ICknawledge
lppiiUU)
44 Region .

41AIIIIItiiW
IIIIP
.

~DI--=hld
·
50 Woat- .. :
wuhlng

.

l'llldul
52 AduRmlle '
53 Airline
~

Into

•

!

•

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by lull Campoe

.

Clflbcll) ClpherayptogtamlarecreetedtromquOtalionl by famous peop&amp;e, past
ptetenl. Each '-ttet In the cipher llandl for another.

a~

1
J

Today's c/yo: F equals W

' DVUAUDPKA

DZIIIOGOPO

BZN

PVK

EZ

JZNAPV

ZM '

ZJ

PVGAE

'"tAGKO . ' -

BULKO

FVUP

UME
U.

LGDVKMKA
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'I consider promiscuity Immoral. Not because sox I~
evn, but because sex is too.good and too lmponanr. • - Ayn Rand

.,

0

Reo...,nge lt-. of !he
four IC!Ombled -~~~ .,..
• low 10 fOrm lour simple wards .

ARCYEM

I

.. : .,

I'111''1, I
NUWOD

M0 T p E ~

Granny taught me to have sensible
reasoning power. She be15 I I lueved that reasons were not like
~-~-==·===·=-~·g~rme(lts, the worse for- - ~· . - • -

I
I

1---.:,.:....;;....:...,.;.....;..~

.

l

Tl

II

~

.GI

EI·

Ie

l
.....1.-.L-__,_
L .....J.I..-.1.--L-

•

~~~~~r:J~~~~ETTEIS I'

.• g~F=\~

. '·

~

Complete ,.,, chuckle quoted

·by filling In tflo missing wordt
you devolap from otop No. 3 below.

lETIEIS TO

J

r I' r I' I' r 1
I

I I ·I I I I I I '

SCIAM LITS ANSWERS

Damage - While - Prone - Bleach - CHAf'!.GE

• Life," the psychology professor lectured, IS a pro-

cess of getting used to the lh1ngs you started out to .
CHANGE."

H1

.

•

Weat
19

Sentinel

New Flooft • RtPII,_

•

S.Uib

To get a current weather
report, check the

A·.

'

'

IT 5 \RADITIONAL ..THE WORST

JACKS ROOFINCf'
&amp; CONSTRUCTioM
.
'

'

101111 II~SILL
CONSTRUCIIO.N

.

.

Mt'ER ~5 fl,/4{5 RI6IIT FIELD.
't'OliRE OUR WORSt PI.A'(ER ••

Road
Racine, Ohio
45771 .. 740-949-2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x. 30' '
· l:loura I
·
7:00 AM ·· 8,PM

fl'll EltltiiiiH

-

+:'?

~

,,

29870 .Baahan

74().7 42·2'706
.740.446·1141

HARIWFIJ .

'

SELF STOR"O~

Clean &amp; .Scotch
Guard $40 - Any
Normal Size Room~
'

.

BY PIDLLIP ALDER

1

..,,.,., ...... al""""" II; 1r....r ....,..,._........., al.....,
.... .,...,. A - ;oit;lln.;. ltaoliilplct
fiiiiiii1Y. " ., ........ """"" r. .... "" ............ .,..., lncitdo ............
dolhot. ............. ...._
,......loftrilplcy ..

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE

new Hrvlce or

Free Esilmalel
740·742·3411
Bry!ID Reeves
www;sun ·o e.com

1

e.g.

..._.

Nothlnfl but
3 Coltori
buncltt
4 Rubber tree .
5 •v.tvat• ftnllh
8 Rln Into
7 ~ ltory
I GlOomy

32 .._. -~ 2

Bridge in cafes

·

•

NOTICE OF ELECTION ON .
TAX LEVY IN EXC!SS OF
THE TEN IIIILL LIIIITATlON.
RIVtled Cadi, Sectlonl •
31101.00(0),1701.11, 5705.25
. NOTICE II hlrtby given .
thet In purauence of 1 ·
R110lutlon ol till Baird of
Townehlp Trutllll ol the
Townahlp of Selem, Ohio,
= o n tha 13th d1y ol .
blr, 111111 - • will
be aubmltted to 1 vall ol
the people ol aoild
aubdlvlelon II 1 Prlmery
Election to be held In thl
Townehlp of Slllllll, Ohio, II
the ... ular pi•- of voting
therein, on the 1111 dey ol
'lllerch, 2000, the qu..UOn of
levying I tax, In IXCIII of
the lin mill llmltltlon, tor
the benefit of Selem
Townahlp tor thl pufPOII of
lllllntelnlng and operating
C111111......
Seld Tax being:• . A
- • 1 ot an exllllng tax of
.5 mille 11 1 rete not
exCeeding 1/2 miU1tor IICh
·one dOllar ol VIIUIIIO",
whiCh amount• to llw centa
($0.05) · lor eech one
hundrad
dollera
ol
valulllon, lor !Iva (5) v-ra.
Tha Polla lor aald
EltcUiin will bl open It 8:30
o'clock A.lll. end remain
ope~;~ until 7:30 o'clock P.M.
ol11ld dey.
By order of the Boerd of
Electlona, of lllllga County,
Ohio
Dated: Januery 4, 2000
John N. lhll, Chlll'lllln
Rllll D. Smith, Director
(2) 9,18, 23 (3) 1 4TC

0818.

s....

• Ll.........,.,Ill

All replacement
parts

Public Notice

't

1111 ISJiiUffS·i
IIIIUOIIAHI~

1 "No ......, - -

Openil)g lead: • 6

RESIDENTIAL · INDUSTRIAL!

c.tl Alillie 0.. .t.r.-tSeatlc:e

ltlolodt ,.,.,

BARNEY

I

I SEE WHAT
YOU MEAN

V.C. YOUNG Ill

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

WO..IMt
I.,IDoimt•l

':i.

a,\u\1\9
... fld\t\lp

COMMERCIAL

DOWN

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: West

...
Gc'

27 IJUiy (to)
30 "_... PlriY

311 Turf
27 tong31 Finger, e.g.

eJ751S

20 yrs. Exp. •lns. OWner: Ronnie Jones ·:

Cabinets- Vinyl Sidi'1&amp;-

Pomeroy, Ohio

.

oKJ851S2

(740) 367-0266
1·800-950-3359

Roofs - Decks - Gerqea

22 yn. Local

.

57 t::::d)
·

· - - ·• •.,

211 F - 1111m11

_,

New Construction &amp;
Remodeling - Kitc;hen

992·6215

..

• 4

.

...
48 0n11114801¢1111

20 or vNitl ~meg~~
23 Plent llrmly •

loath

JORII'

• :t:£1111)
11*\xluaon

IWIIId

Eut

·

,., !ltlnwiN

•

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42 .._

l~ :.l."':;.,

• Q
•AJ8al2
WeA

='=

1 l'lo•kll(-

=

• K 10 1 a 2
• Q• as s
• ·" • 2 ..--'-- - • · K 10 a a
• Q 10- 9 3
o K75

••...,Rom•
c............

•.._ lddltlone' Rlmadlllng
. oJitw GlrlgH

Phone (740) :&gt;!1-'••00

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

40 QPin

10
._.
·-· ~ ..
12 ...... (l - ) 11 llrunch order
14 Ac:trtee Dlhl 54 llothar 158rlng...,.n10owy
18 Folnowty
55

10 I 7

9 .A J

~·

lOUNI'S

CAIPIITEI SEmCE

Siding • New Garages

No
o Q

r·

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins...
992...5479

740-992-1709

cuh.

""'i""""

·..alLLR

CONSTRUCTION

LEQAL NOTICE
On Sltardey, March 11,
20110 at 10:00 a.m. the Horne
Netlonll Bank will olllr tor
nle II public auction on lhl
Benk parking tot the
following Ylhlclea:
1188 CHEVY ASTRO VAN
Yln 11GNDM15ZXJB1111172
1188MAZDA
,
Yln I.JIII1BF23211.101582t0
1115 JIMIIIY
·VIn'f1GKCT18W852110118111
1188 CHEVY 4X4 .
Yln
11 W2ic:EK14NOG1113031
1115 CHEVY BLAZER
Yln 11G8CT181XF011141118
The llrma ol the Hie 1r1

ALDER

'

Larry Schey

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701
"A Better

1·888·521.;.0916

PSI-

_

,

(740). 7 42-8888

tsOO.OO SWburwt

$8.00 column inch Weekdays
$10.00 column Inch Sundays

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle
'
Sales Representativ ~

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

P~y,OH

u;:,c

story·
Rutland, Ohio

Club Bingo
Thu...claya
AT 8:30P.M.
Main 8t,

ACROSS

PHILLIP

'

•

�·Pllge B I • The Dally Sentinel

-

.. .

r,:.r
• W.dnu dry, llerch 1, 2000

Weclnttdey, ~ 1, 2000

Public NOIIce

. · -;:NO;;;T;;;ICI~Of';;'~"~CTJ~ION~;ON;;-

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

I

The Dally Sentinel • P8ge B 7

OOP

NBA Cr011word Punle

TAX L1VY IN IXCESI Of

THI 'I"'H MILL UIIITATION
RM1ud Cocle,Stctlo.-le
31101.11(0), 1701.11,1701..21
NOTICE II hereby t!wn
• . 1hllt In purauenoe of 1
• - IIHOiutlon of the Vllllgl
; • Counoll of thl VII.... of '
• · ~ Ohio, pllled on

to

: .. the llh d8y ot Dtotmber,
, ... there will ..... nlllld
to a o1 the p nple of

aald aubdlvlalon at 1
Primary EIIOUOn to be hlld
In lhl Vlllltl of lyt'HUII,
Ohio, lit lhl .......r "'"-"
ol voting tllereln, on lhl :hh
, · day of March, 2000, the
• . quelllan of llvytng 1 tiX, In
IXOell of lhl len mill
: llmltltlon, torro:;l'the:.,~:~!
• Syracuae VI

your

Paying $80.00

perp,-

message

$300.00 Covenlll
Proi~rttalvt· top

: •purpoM

J eld
rwplaCIIMIII tax
1 mill
Public Notice
II I rill not IXCIIdlng 1
(ant) milia for IICh one
NOTICE OF ELEcnQN ON
dollar ol valuation, which . TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
amounta to len centa
THE TEN MILL UMITATION
(t0.1 0) lor 11ch one
Reviled Code, Sectlone
hundrad
doll ere
ol 3!01.110(0),1701.11, 5705..21
. viiUitlon, lor llw (5) yeera.
NOTICE Ia hereby given
The Polle lor eald lhet In pureuence of •
lllctlon will be open at 11:.30 Reeolutlon of lhe laird o1
o'clock A.M. end remeln Townehlp Tru11111 ol the
open unUI 7:30 o'clock P.lll. Townehlp ot Orange, Ohio,
of Hid day.
peelld on the 7th dey of'
order of the Boerd of S.pllmblr, 11111 there will
E ectlona, of lllelg1 County, bl lubmltted to 1 vote. of
Ohio
the people of 11ld
Dated: J1nuary 4, 20110
IUbdiVIIIDn II e Prlm1ry
John N. lhle, Chllrmen
Election to bl held ' In the
·Rllll D. Smith, DII'ICior·
Townehlp of Orange, Ohio,
(2) 11, 18, 23 (3) 1 4TC
at the regular placll of
voting therein, on the 7th
Public Notice
day ol March, 2000. the
que.Uon of levying • tiX, In
. NOncE OF ELECTION ON
exceea of the ten mill
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
llmlllltton, lor tha blneflt of
THE TEN MILL UMITATION
Oranga Town1hlp lor tha
RIVtled Code, SlctloM
purpoee ol Fire Prolectlon
3801.11(0), 5705.11,5705.25
Slid Tex being:• A
NOTICE II hereby given ra-1 alan exllllng tax of
11111 In . pureuance ol e 2 milia II 1 rate nc:ot
.R1aolutlon of till vm.., exceeding 2 milia lor nell
Council of the Vlllege of .
dollar of valuation,
lyracun, Ohio, p. .Hd on .1· -•·•~• 1mount.1 .to twenty
the lth dey ot December, cent• (to.20) tor each one ,
1111thlrwwlllblaubmlttld hundred · dollara of
to a vote ol the people ol valueilon, tor IIIII (5) y11ra.
18ld aubdlvlalon 11 1 · The · Palla tor eeld
Primary EIICUon to bl held EIICUon wllltM open It 11:30
In the Ylllege ot Syi'acull, o'clock A.lll. end remeln
Ohio, at tha reguler plecn open until 7:30 o'clock P.lll.
of YOUng lhlrlln. on lhl 7th ofuld dly.
dey at lllerch, 2000, the By order ol the Baird ol
quelllon ollevylng a tax, In Electlone, of Melge County,.
IXCIII Ol thl tan mill Ohio
llmlllotlon, tor the blntflt of Dated: Januery 4, 2000
SyrtCUII Vlll1g1 lor thl John N. lhle, Chllnnan
po11 ol Current Rill D. Smith, Dli'actor
n-.
(2) 9, 111, 23 (3) 1 4TC
ld TIX belng:l A
· replacament ol tex ot 1.8
mllll II I .rate not IXCiedlng
'i
1.8 milia tor 11ch one dollar
Of VIIUIUon, which lmDUntl .
to elghtNn cenll (t0.11) for
IICh one hundred dollara of
Ylluallon, tor llw (5) yeerw.
The Poll• lor aald
Election will bl open at 11:30
o'clock A.lll. end remeln
open unUI 7:30 o'clock P.M.
of Aid day.
.
By order of the Baird ot
I!IICUona, of Melga County,
OhiO
Dated: Jenuery.4, 20110
John N. lhlt, Chllrinln
Rllll D. Smith, Director·
(2) 11, 18, 23 (3) f . 4TC

•r.

f'

•

line.

Public Notice

Remodeling,
Roofing New
Additions, Pole
Buildings, Etc.
Free Estimates
2/17100 1 mo Jl!d·

BISSEll IMIIILU
INC.

.

New Homes • Vinyl

The Home Natlonel Blnk
re11rv11 the right to reject
eny or 111 bldl or to ramav1
eny unit from thl All It

•Eitctrlell ll'lumblng
•Roollng • OUIIIrl
•VInyl Sieling • Plllntlng
•PIIIIo &amp; Pon:lllllc:b

• Replacement Windows
• Room Additions

• Roofing .
COMMERCIAL and IESIDENTIAL

anytlml.
Arrangement• mey bl
medt to lnepect eny ol the
1bove nam~ vehlclel prior
to the All by cllllng 740.
949--2210.
•
Georg•
Lawrence,
CoiiiCUon Olftctr
(3j 1, 3, 7, 10 4TC

FREE ESTIMATES

j

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(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

• DtiVIWI~

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u.

frH Dtllve;y

•LI 1 ~t

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'Toll Free

.... !I ton

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840 Eleclrlcel and
Refrigeration
.._._,lion: Now Healing.And COOlIng Shop Dlllr1 Groao Ratea And
E.-o Sllvk;e. Lot OU! Experience TtchniciJ~n Give You A
Fr10 E1llmoto Today And Baal
The $p&lt;lng llulh. Coli Adv11100&lt;1
Comfort Syatema At' 740·«6-

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Rolldonllol or commorclal wtnng,

Malter Li-

uaU.•~•DIUIMI•~•
BEPTICTANKS,LEIOHIEDS IHSToiiJ.EO. WA!BI.QAELECTRIC
UNES, IIASEIIENf.fOOTEAS, I!OSilE HOllE SET UPS, ~
III,)II.DIN(l-W«l CLfARIIIG. HOIUONTAL ~ r
IIOANG, CREEK &amp; FIELD lliWNifii1.PONO ·
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'-O:.~c:..·­

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THE BORN

P'[l(f;

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J~T TOLD !lot: t.eoJr ~tOO "'~

~

NE\o.l

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~lo.T T'tl'{. OF

BANKRIJPT£Y

nwr-y,...,...hr.., .......

Wharathl
DillS ANI
·
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Ill """"" ..... ..-....

l'ar lnlarrnlltlon regarding
Blnkruptay aontact:

Hend!3rson, WV

William Safranek, Attorney

'I .

(740) 582-5025 Athena

OLASSIFIEDSI

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SliCE 1964

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THEN "•IH"T l't\ AIIOUT

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OUT

TRA~H -TI\1..1&lt;!.

HEW ANI&gt; HUI111LIN&amp;

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EXPEir.tENCE.

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•

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WINTER. What a miserable time for golf. ·unless you head for the sumiy
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and the red,hot Robert Trent Jones
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golfers from 'Minnesota took advantage of
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.
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weather and the low rates .to experience what the
New York-Times-~allt.A "ao•e of the best public
golf on Earth. • And while we can't gu~rantee
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tYPetil ......nily

- t o you tliom a ellaIIIII' be In 1111n tor yoo in

Slay"' dole toudl

wilb Mllldo fll!l'"" cle1181oped
·w~~o Hoe fer • ...,..
PISCI!S (M. 2().MIIdl 20)
Mlb o:eo11in whit you wOik C,
todly it !lilly whit yoa - . 10
Iller you
haWI tout YCIIfo'
oeltwby you 1\'0111 thro!olh 1111 tllll
.tmuble in tho fini pr-. ltaow
· ~ ·to IOQt for IOIIIIIICe lild ·
yoa'U ftDd It: The ~
Malclimeker n\'1111 inllllltlj
which ..... -ft!lk'IIIY ~
Coot tor you. Moil $175 tor.fllcb.:
lllllllli', cJo tbi1 ,.......,.., P.O•
11os ma. Murray IDII Stlollol.

-·t

New Yort. NY 10t56.

AltiiiS (Meidl 21-April 19)

•

lllould yoa -

lnio

I .......

· ,:, ~.tltberwltby-..lforwllll

~· ... fOil --'1te.
yoa oolld tilt fountW CNI of a
fiiCfec:dy 100!1 (llloulo_

'

•

•Mon:b 2. ·2000

the,_ ....

(740) ttJOJAI

.
.
' , yoar objeqives musi ~ cleuly
defined todll)' if you hope to pt
enylhiJiJ daM. ·Without I 1111110
plan,· you oould aet quiokly
-.ell off coune.

t....._.

dill

. Seplic sro~erru &amp;:
. ' Ut~

\

, , 'tAiiRUS (April :W:.Moy 20) ·
· Don'o Jive In too easily llhould
coodliions over whicb you have
· liUle control
to inhibit
'' · · y,our pn&gt;du&lt;:oivioy. ·IO!ilx· Try to
jlnlneuv. arouri;d them.

•

qU

wJTo

ll(ewlleatlaa

. '

ctnltd electrician . • Ridenour

· • CoaUng • Gutters ~

'7

34 lnCuralon
35 ThrUitr writer
~

• Bnch light
11 Actor Foxx
1~ Capilli ol ....leo
12-.)
13

11 - Ungua
(airline)
.
20 Flnnllh llrst

-

21 Concllft ,

Mr. Koppel .

22 lilrl. MlrcOI

23 Egyptian

s•
Pau

••
·••
Dbl.
AU pan

Norill
2o

24

Eul
39
Pus

Since today is St. David's Day,
named for the patron saint of
Wales, let's look at the third
Cardiff Cafe Charity Bridge Drive, held last July: The temperature
was in the 80s, with brilliant sunshine (honest). However, as play
took place outside seven cafes, the
breeze caused more trouble than
bad suit splits. Fifty pairs played
30 deals, 10 at each of three cafes.
1be youngest competitors were
sisters Catherine and Claire
Evans,' aged 13 and 10, respectively. They scored a cold top
against their parents in this deal.
Counting three points for her
singleton, East made a three-heart
limit raise, showing four-plus
trumps and 10-12 support points.
Now Claire did well to introduce
her spade suit. Overlooking o11ly
five high-card points and a void in
partner's suit, she realized that the
7-1-5-0 distribution had great
trick•taking potential if she could
find a fit.
It isn't clear where West found
his double, but I suppose it was a
matter of Dadts .honoFJ.
As you can see, Ciaire had no
trouble collecting an overtrick
for plus 690. .
East-West must have been even
more pained to realize that they
could have made five hearts if
North had led, say, a spade (not
that Claire would have let them
play there once she received a
spade raise from her. partner).
After drawing trumps, declarer
(West) would have led a diamond
to dummy's kirig, ·then finessed
through .South on the second
ro11nd. (Yes, maybe North should
lead ~he club ace at trick one.)
At the prize-giving, a check for
1,400 pounds was given to the
.George Thomas Hospice Care
organization.

ec:.lf.)

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25 C

oo,lor

27 Slept like

.....

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OEMINI (Moy 21-1- 20) It

will be lmponllll todly dw you
not ollow younelf to II, wishywally concemi111 • clec:islon that
needs to be lllllle. It IIIOIIId open
lhf dear far IIIIOiher, union you

mike.-

eiiS •

opinst your bett

.

i*-

CANCER ' (June 21-July 22)
luuln1 di~tives to others usuolly oomes·euy, but oon you show
tho- i:a)silll!ftOy when opply-

. if. : Ilia thlo to y,CIIIell'l Wild! yllla'
I owor pouductivit)l.
. ·
. , LI!O (July 23-AUI• 22) Don't
Jl.,.in to llkinr lllvontqe of en
·opportunity to even ~ tcere
willl someone with wham yoo
hold • pudp. lt'llro lpinst yoa
in tho'-""'·
VJROO (A... 23-Sepc. 22)
......, your Judrmeoll of 1 per-

-""""'wham otben ... '"Yint

uatiad lhillp. Yoa would be wile
to . . tbillndividul'llide of tho
-.y, .... decldo tor )'OIIIIIIf.
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 23) All

..

SCORPIO (O.:L 24-Nov. 22)
Be .ellln J&gt;Ndent today obout
,...,. dw·alfect ypur monetory
• · po~ition or yoadnllmoheourity.
Finonc:iol ttends may not be.too
lavonble for you 11 ohis time. .
SAOmAlUUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) If you ollow nae to sovem
your reason todly, a situa~:ion
lhll Could bio oully cloalt wllh In
1 oool, losi&lt;:al fashion

~f ~and

will aet out

fro,.

and blown Into a bia
Cu.
..
CAPRICORN (l&gt;et- 22·lon.
t9) Study ony imp6nan1 millers
from every enp end welsh ..1of

•

·your aloematlves todoy before .
, lnakln1 ony blndin&amp; oommit·
men11. 1fyoudon'~ you could end

up oqmoins io.

.
AQUARIUS (Jon. :ZO.I'el&gt;. 19)
By scri"'l'ins in Older oo sove a
few penates today, you could end
up ollowina dollars to slip 111rouJ!1
your finJeiS, Keep your priorities
in Older 10 you - lib Wllntlp of whet "'"-·Ilene·
'

'

28 Peralenell
:N •-•nee .for

.

31 Teech

.
33 Runner
Zlfopek
31 Singing
lyll40 CondHcend
41 ......
42 Dleompoll
43 Tlki- (ICknawledge
lppiiUU)
44 Region .

41AIIIIItiiW
IIIIP
.

~DI--=hld
·
50 Woat- .. :
wuhlng

.

l'llldul
52 AduRmlle '
53 Airline
~

Into

•

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•

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by lull Campoe

.

Clflbcll) ClpherayptogtamlarecreetedtromquOtalionl by famous peop&amp;e, past
ptetenl. Each '-ttet In the cipher llandl for another.

a~

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J

Today's c/yo: F equals W

' DVUAUDPKA

DZIIIOGOPO

BZN

PVK

EZ

JZNAPV

ZM '

ZJ

PVGAE

'"tAGKO . ' -

BULKO

FVUP

UME
U.

LGDVKMKA
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'I consider promiscuity Immoral. Not because sox I~
evn, but because sex is too.good and too lmponanr. • - Ayn Rand

.,

0

Reo...,nge lt-. of !he
four IC!Ombled -~~~ .,..
• low 10 fOrm lour simple wards .

ARCYEM

I

.. : .,

I'111''1, I
NUWOD

M0 T p E ~

Granny taught me to have sensible
reasoning power. She be15 I I lueved that reasons were not like
~-~-==·===·=-~·g~rme(lts, the worse for- - ~· . - • -

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Complete ,.,, chuckle quoted

·by filling In tflo missing wordt
you devolap from otop No. 3 below.

lETIEIS TO

J

r I' r I' I' r 1
I

I I ·I I I I I I '

SCIAM LITS ANSWERS

Damage - While - Prone - Bleach - CHAf'!.GE

• Life," the psychology professor lectured, IS a pro-

cess of getting used to the lh1ngs you started out to .
CHANGE."

H1

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•

Weat
19

Sentinel

New Flooft • RtPII,_

•

S.Uib

To get a current weather
report, check the

A·.

'

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IT 5 \RADITIONAL ..THE WORST

JACKS ROOFINCf'
&amp; CONSTRUCTioM
.
'

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101111 II~SILL
CONSTRUCIIO.N

.

.

Mt'ER ~5 fl,/4{5 RI6IIT FIELD.
't'OliRE OUR WORSt PI.A'(ER ••

Road
Racine, Ohio
45771 .. 740-949-2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x. 30' '
· l:loura I
·
7:00 AM ·· 8,PM

fl'll EltltiiiiH

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+:'?

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74().7 42·2'706
.740.446·1141

HARIWFIJ .

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SELF STOR"O~

Clean &amp; .Scotch
Guard $40 - Any
Normal Size Room~
'

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BY PIDLLIP ALDER

1

..,,.,., ...... al""""" II; 1r....r ....,..,._........., al.....,
.... .,...,. A - ;oit;lln.;. ltaoliilplct
fiiiiiii1Y. " ., ........ """"" r. .... "" ............ .,..., lncitdo ............
dolhot. ............. ...._
,......loftrilplcy ..

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE

new Hrvlce or

Free Esilmalel
740·742·3411
Bry!ID Reeves
www;sun ·o e.com

1

e.g.

..._.

Nothlnfl but
3 Coltori
buncltt
4 Rubber tree .
5 •v.tvat• ftnllh
8 Rln Into
7 ~ ltory
I GlOomy

32 .._. -~ 2

Bridge in cafes

·

•

NOTICE OF ELECTION ON .
TAX LEVY IN EXC!SS OF
THE TEN IIIILL LIIIITATlON.
RIVtled Cadi, Sectlonl •
31101.00(0),1701.11, 5705.25
. NOTICE II hlrtby given .
thet In purauence of 1 ·
R110lutlon ol till Baird of
Townehlp Trutllll ol the
Townahlp of Selem, Ohio,
= o n tha 13th d1y ol .
blr, 111111 - • will
be aubmltted to 1 vall ol
the people ol aoild
aubdlvlelon II 1 Prlmery
Election to be held In thl
Townehlp of Slllllll, Ohio, II
the ... ular pi•- of voting
therein, on the 1111 dey ol
'lllerch, 2000, the qu..UOn of
levying I tax, In IXCIII of
the lin mill llmltltlon, tor
the benefit of Selem
Townahlp tor thl pufPOII of
lllllntelnlng and operating
C111111......
Seld Tax being:• . A
- • 1 ot an exllllng tax of
.5 mille 11 1 rete not
exCeeding 1/2 miU1tor IICh
·one dOllar ol VIIUIIIO",
whiCh amount• to llw centa
($0.05) · lor eech one
hundrad
dollera
ol
valulllon, lor !Iva (5) v-ra.
Tha Polla lor aald
EltcUiin will bl open It 8:30
o'clock A.lll. end remain
ope~;~ until 7:30 o'clock P.M.
ol11ld dey.
By order of the Boerd of
Electlona, of lllllga County,
Ohio
Dated: Januery 4, 2000
John N. lhll, Chlll'lllln
Rllll D. Smith, Director
(2) 9,18, 23 (3) 1 4TC

0818.

s....

• Ll.........,.,Ill

All replacement
parts

Public Notice

't

1111 ISJiiUffS·i
IIIIUOIIAHI~

1 "No ......, - -

Openil)g lead: • 6

RESIDENTIAL · INDUSTRIAL!

c.tl Alillie 0.. .t.r.-tSeatlc:e

ltlolodt ,.,.,

BARNEY

I

I SEE WHAT
YOU MEAN

V.C. YOUNG Ill

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

WO..IMt
I.,IDoimt•l

':i.

a,\u\1\9
... fld\t\lp

COMMERCIAL

DOWN

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: West

...
Gc'

27 IJUiy (to)
30 "_... PlriY

311 Turf
27 tong31 Finger, e.g.

eJ751S

20 yrs. Exp. •lns. OWner: Ronnie Jones ·:

Cabinets- Vinyl Sidi'1&amp;-

Pomeroy, Ohio

.

oKJ851S2

(740) 367-0266
1·800-950-3359

Roofs - Decks - Gerqea

22 yn. Local

.

57 t::::d)
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· - - ·• •.,

211 F - 1111m11

_,

New Construction &amp;
Remodeling - Kitc;hen

992·6215

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48 0n11114801¢1111

20 or vNitl ~meg~~
23 Plent llrmly •

loath

JORII'

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c............

•.._ lddltlone' Rlmadlllng
. oJitw GlrlgH

Phone (740) :&gt;!1-'••00

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

40 QPin

10
._.
·-· ~ ..
12 ...... (l - ) 11 llrunch order
14 Ac:trtee Dlhl 54 llothar 158rlng...,.n10owy
18 Folnowty
55

10 I 7

9 .A J

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lOUNI'S

CAIPIITEI SEmCE

Siding • New Garages

No
o Q

r·

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins...
992...5479

740-992-1709

cuh.

""'i""""

·..alLLR

CONSTRUCTION

LEQAL NOTICE
On Sltardey, March 11,
20110 at 10:00 a.m. the Horne
Netlonll Bank will olllr tor
nle II public auction on lhl
Benk parking tot the
following Ylhlclea:
1188 CHEVY ASTRO VAN
Yln 11GNDM15ZXJB1111172
1188MAZDA
,
Yln I.JIII1BF23211.101582t0
1115 JIMIIIY
·VIn'f1GKCT18W852110118111
1188 CHEVY 4X4 .
Yln
11 W2ic:EK14NOG1113031
1115 CHEVY BLAZER
Yln 11G8CT181XF011141118
The llrma ol the Hie 1r1

ALDER

'

Larry Schey

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701
"A Better

1·888·521.;.0916

PSI-

_

,

(740). 7 42-8888

tsOO.OO SWburwt

$8.00 column inch Weekdays
$10.00 column Inch Sundays

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle
'
Sales Representativ ~

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

P~y,OH

u;:,c

story·
Rutland, Ohio

Club Bingo
Thu...claya
AT 8:30P.M.
Main 8t,

ACROSS

PHILLIP

'

•

�•

PeDe a a •n. Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

east.to face Penn State

No. 6 OSU goes
STATE COLLEGE, Pa: (AP)

4 Temple and twice apiece to No.
7 Michigan State, No. 14 Indiana,
has threatened lineup changes for . No. 25 Illinois. They are 0-9
tonight's game against No. 6 Ohio against Top 25 teams.
State: He knows his Nittany Lions
It's not just tanked teams who
really need to do something dif- arc giving them trouble, either.
ferent to beat a Top 25 team for The Lions have lost three in a row
the first time this season. .
and seven of their last nine games
" I thought our team was play- overall.
ing soft," Dunn said a day after
Sunday's loss particularly stung
Penn State's 88-71 loss to Purdue a "disgusted" Dunn. His team
this weekend. "I'm going to find committed 25 turnovers in getting
five guys who can stick their noses blown out at Purdue. .
in there for five minutes."
"I don't think that has anything
With the Buckeyes steaming to do with the losi~ streak,"
toward a-Big Ten title, even a shur--Dunn said:"! just think that in
fled starting five might not help.
these last two games, we have not
Coach after coach has professed defended well and have not taken
great concern about playing care of the basketball. We're not
D~nn's tough, talented team making stops when . we have to.
especially top scorers Jarrett I'n1 not sure if it's effort or if we're•
Stephens and Joe Crispin. But the not showing enough grit."
f&gt;ct is, Penn State has yet to win a
At 13-12, Penn State needs to
big game this season, losing to No. beat Ohi o State on Wednesday. or

~ Penn State coach Jerry Dunn

Iowa on Saturday just to qualifY ment.
for the NIT. They're holding out
As usual, 'coach Jim O'Brien is
hope that their fortunes will sudfocusing on Stephens and Crispin,
denly turn in the conference tourwho scored 25 points each in
nament.
Ohio State's 88-75 victory three
"We're definitely not packing it weeks ago.
in," Titus Ivory said. "We have the
"They've always been a tough ,
Big Ten tournament, and that's
another season for us. We've dug matchup for us. 'Fhey have been
ourselves a hole, and . we have to for everybody in the conference.
dig ourselves out."
Jarrett Stephens; in my mind, ·
The Buckeyes, meanwhile, are deserves to be a first-feam all-conin control of their own fate after ference pick. He's continually getdouble-doubles
with
. ..
.d
beating Illinois on Sunday. With ung
In.dian~'s las~-second victo!:)'· QYirr-~~bounds ,an~ pomts, he sat •
Michigan State, the Buckeyes· Cuspm IS a very
moved into a tie for second place guard. He,seems to play. very well
behind Purdue.
agamst us.
Ohio State (20-5, 11-3) now
·unfortunately for Penn State,
needs road victories against the Michael Redd has played even
Lions and Minnesota to earn at better for the Buckeyes. He averleast a share of the conference title .ages 26.4 points against the Lions,
- and. with tiebreakers, the top including 25 points in the last
seeding in the conference tourna- game.

NFL lifts suspension on Cleveland's Brown
Bv TOM WITHERS

accidentally struck Brown in the could have lost S125,000 . pet
right eye.
game, based on his S2. 1 million
Brown, whose father is blind salary for the upvoming season.
from glaucoma , said concern for
The Browns said the league is
his eyesight ca used him to storrn srill co nsidering Brown's appeal for
back to the field and shove · lost income resulting from the susTriplette. Brown was hospitalized pensiOn.
for six days with bleeding behind
The player's agent, Tom Conthe eye.
don, did not rc:turn a phone call
After his suspension, Brown seeking comment.
·
pleaded his case over the phone to
Brown says he still has blurred
NFL commissioner Paul Tagli- vmon.
.
abue.
"I am relieved the commissionThe 6-foot-7, . 350-pound er has terminated my indefinite
Brown sat out the final two weeks suspension," Brown said ii) a stateofthe season - the Browns were ment released by the ·Browns. "I
off in Week 17 - costing him look forward to regaining my
$49,000. If he was suspended for vision and again participating m
part of the 2000 season, Brown club-related activities."

M' SPORTS WRITER

After hitting Orlando Brown
wit h a penalty fl ag, the NFL
decided to pick it up.
The Cleveland Browns · said
Tuesday that · the league decided
that Brown has been punished
enough for forcefully pushing Jeff
Triplette to the ground in a gag1e
against Jacksonville last Dec. 19.
As a result, the offensive tackle's
indefinite suspension was lified,
effective today, allowing Brown to
rejoin the team.
Brown was suspended on Dec.
22 for knocking Triplette down
after the official threw a penalty
flag - . weighted with BBs - that

The Browns were initially disap~
pointed by Brown's conduct, but
later softened thei r stance when it
was learned he was seriously
injured. Brown has not been able
to engage in strenuoUs workouts
because of the ~ onditi on of his
eye.
Team president Carmen Policy
said the team was glad to finally
have the matter resolved.
"Although we were willing to
accept any: decision handed down
by the commissioner, we certainly
look forward to Orlando Brown
approaching the 2000 season and
his physical rehabilitation without
having to be concerned about any
further tamifications," Policy said.

,.

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD
SE Mlssourt 76, TeM.-Marun 74.

. NCAA Division I
women's scores

MLB exhibition slate ·

Regular·-::.,~n .action

Today•• opener

COnnecticut 102, Providence 68
Fran~il Pl...., 70, Brictaepon 52
Goorgelown 76, weat lifrglnla 47

. Thursday'• games

U. of Georgia vs. Atlanta at Klsai'nmee, Fla.,
1:05 p.m.
Philadelphia vs. CLEVELAND at Winter

Rutgars76, Villanova 60
S . Connectlcur 53, New Hampshire c;o,t.
St. John's 59, Selon Hall 54

Haven, Fla., 1:05 p.m. ·
·
New York Yankees vs. Toronto at Dunedin,
Fla .. 1:05 p.m.
Manatee CC vs. Pittsburgh at Bradenton·,
Fla .. 1:05 p.m.
Milwaukee vs. Oakland at Phoenix, 3:05

so

SauthwHt
Incarnate Word 72, St. Mary's, TaKas 71
Ouachita 82, E. New MaJdco 87
SE Oklahoma 72, AtHiene Christian 71·0T
TaMas A&amp;M·Kingavllle 88, NE Oklahoma 47
TaMas Tech 105, Baylor 52

Houston vs. Los Angeles at Vero Beach,
1:05 p.m.
·
.. New York Mets vs. St. Louis at Jupiter, Aa.,
1:05 p.m.
• Kansas City vs. Atlanta at Kissimmee. Fla.,
. t:OS p.m.
"· Minnesota (ss) vs. CINCINNATI (ss) at
Sarasota, Fla., 1:05 p.m.
• CLEVELAND vs . Philadelphia at Clearwater,
rtla ., 1:05 p.m.
Pittsburgh vs. Detroit at Lakeland, Fill,, 1:05
~Ia . ,

:

F1rWnt
San Jose St. 73, UTEP 68

.

·~. m.

'

... Boston College vs. Boston at Fort Myera,
: ~a . , 7:05 p.m. .

Toronto 4, Atli.nta 0
St. louis 3, Phl-.,hle 2
New Jersey 2, Nashville 1
Edmonton 3, Colorado 1

Toronto al Booton, 7 p.m.
U1ah II Detroit, 7:30 p.m.
Washington at Atllnta, 7:30 p.m.
New Jaraey at Denver, 9 p.m.
Vancouver at L.A. Lakera, 10:30 p.m.

. Vancouver 1, Loa Angeles 1·tie
Anahalm 4, San Jose 2

Tonlghl'a gam. .

Bullalo at N.Y. Ranger~, 7:30p.m.
Washington at Tampa Bay, 7:30p.m. ·
Tororno at Florida, 7:30p.m.
Montreal at Chicago, 8:30 p.m . .
Philadelphia a1 Dallas, 8:30 p.m.
Pittsburgh at calgary, 9 p.m.
Carol_lna at Phoenix, 10 p.m.

Phladelphla at Washington,. 7 p.m.
Milwaukee at New York, 7:30 p.m.
Seattle vs. Miami, 7:30 p.m.
Charlotte al 011ando, 7:30 p.m.
sacramento at Houston, 8:30 p.m.
Minnesota at San Antonio, 8:30 p.m.
CLEVELAND at Chicago, 6:30 p.m.
New Jelley at Dalla, 8:30p.m.
Indiana at PhDanix, 9 p.m.

Thureday'e gam. .

Montreal at Boston, 7 p.rn. . · .
Ottawa al N.Y. Islanders, 7:30p.m.
StLouis at Atlanta, 7:30 p.m.
New Jersey at Cotorado, 9 p.m.
Anaheim at vancouver, 10 p.m.
Carolina at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m.
Nashville at San Joae, 10:30 p.m.

NHL standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Dlvlllon

Ium

lll L I 8I !Ia. Gf IIA

New Jerse~ ......... 38
Philadelphia ........ 33
Plttsbtugh ............ 26
N.Y. Rangers ...... :28
N,Y. Is18nders ...... 17

Tournaments
ClAA Taum•ment-eecond round
Ellzabtth City St. 82, Winston-Salem n
N.C. Cemral 71 , Johnson C. Smllh 66

CINCINNATI (ss) vs. Baltimore at Fort LaudAa., 1:05 p.m. ·
. Florida vs. Tampa Bay at· Sr. Petersburg,
Fla., 1':05 p.m.
.
·
' Texas vs. Minnesota (ss) at Fort' Myers, Aa .,
(:05 p.m.
.
, Toronto vs. New Yon&lt;, Yankees at Tampa,
IOta., 1:15 p.m.
·
Arizona (ss} vs. Colorado at Tucson, Ariz.,
3:05 p·.m.
.
: San Diego vs. San Francisco at Scottsdale,
Ariz., 3:05p.m.
• Oakland vs. Milwaukee at Maryvale. Ariz.,
3:05p.m.
·
• ChlcaQo White Sox {ss) vs. Chicago Cubs at
t.'lesa, Ariz., 3:05p.m.
, Chicago White Sox (ss) vs. Arizona (H) at
:Tucson, Ariz.. 3:05 p.m.
' Anahei'n vs. Seattle at Pecrta, Ariz., 3:05

~ irdale,

Dakota St 79, S. Dakota Tech 71
Dominican, Ill. 63, St. Francis, Ill. 58
Mlnn.·Duluth 83, Mlnn.·Mon1s 35
Nebtaaka·Keamey BO, Cdlorado Christian.

SouthWest St., Mnn. 90, BemidJI St. 69

Friday's games

Tueeday's scores .
Ottawa 5, Boston 3

Thursday's games

Mldwoll

Arizona vs. Chicago Wtllte SOx at Tucson,
Ariz., 3:05p.m.
San Diego vs. Seattle at Peoria, Ariz., 3:05
p.m. (charity)
·
Boston vs. Minnesota at Fon Myers, Fla.,
1:05 p.m.

P.m.

44

SOuth ·
Miami 80. Plttaburgh·6(J

p.m.

Anahalm .............. 27 .27 "tO 1 85 174 178
Overtime tosieS count as a loss and a regulation tie.
,._
.

Tonlght'a games ·

Boston COllege 80, Syracuse 80

Arizona 'State vs. Anaheim at Tempe, Ariz.,
3;05 p.m.

.··.

Toronto II'/. Chicago 6(J
Orlando 103, Beallle 94
. Phoenbl100, CLEVELAND 93
San Antonio 93, Miami 69
CharioHe 92, Minnesota 87
Sacramento 112, Vancouvet 87
LA. LBkera 90, Portland 87

NYCAC Taurnarntnt-que"ertlnlll
St. Rose 87, C:W. Post 38
Narthuat10 Taurnement-quarterfln1l1
American lntematlonal 70, Stonehlll 63

Ohio Valloy Conf...,~ll~t round
Austin Peay 90, TeM.-Manin 60
Middle Tennessee 76, SE MIS6ourl 57
Mu"ay St 67, E. Kentucky 61
Tennessee Tech 68, E. Illinois 48
· P~nnoytvonla Conf'"""OMI-Inolo
Indiana, Pa. 63. Slippery Rook 58
South AUintlc Contertnc.e.cond round
Preabyterlan 64, Nowt&gt;erry 58

19 7
16 11
29 8
29 9
39 7

Nonhealt
Toronto ................ 34 22
Ottawa ................31 22
Bulalo ................. 28 28
Montreal. ..:.......... 25 30
l)oston ................. 19 27

88 198 151
76 184 143
56 187 179
64 180 180
42 142 206

Dlvlllon
7 3 78
10 2 74
9 2 63
7 3 60
17 4 59

Southtaot Dlvlllon
Flonoa ............... .. 34 25 ~ 5 n
Washlnglon .........32 21 10' 1 75
Carolina ..............28 28 9 ' o 61
Tampa Bay .......... 15 39 7 6 43
Atlanta ............... ._12 44 6 4 34

190
180
16()
140
161

165
16()
164
146
183

100
188
156
157
134

156
151
172
229
231

Conllll Dfvlalon

Ium

lll L I 8I !Ia. Gf llA

6 o ee 195 130
6 1 63 215 188
6 5 55 162 169
7 .. 2 53 180 199

Northwest Dlvl1lon

NBA standings
Ohio H.S. girls' scores
District tournaments
Dlvlolon I

Cola. Mifflin 52, LDndon 46-0T
Hebron Lakewood 45, Be&gt;iley 32

..

Dl¥lolon Nl
Albany AleKBnder 52, lynchbtlrg Clay 31
Beverly Ft. Frye n, sandy Volley 58
.
Chillicothe Zane Trace 76, Chooapaake 60

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Illm

Ahntlc Dlvlolan

.

ll L I!GL

lia

.618
.554
.456

4~

Mlaml ...............................3fl 21
New '\&gt;rk .........................34 21
Phlladolphla .".................. 31 25
Orfando ............... ............. 26 31

men's scores
. Regular-eeason action
Ellt
Al&gt;any, N. v: 86, Colaata 10

American U. 97, Iii. Commonweallh 8830T
,
• George Wlahlngton 67, Massachu..Us 66
Mloml 74, Plttlburgh 68
91. Jofln'a 86. SetOn Hall 6(J
St. Joleph'o 62, Temple 5V

.

-

Kentucky 73, Mleoloolfllll St. 61
loulavllte 76, South Florida 66

Mt.- t

lncMeM.79, Purdue 85
UMKC &amp;1, lnd.·Pur.-lndpls. 73

Tournaments .
E.Ohio
Illinois
107, Auotln
v.Jiey
· Peay·1
" ' 00,
· 20T
'Mk:klkl Tenneaaee 87, Tennessee TlltCh 70
Munay St. 83, Tennessee St. 58

1

Now Je11fY ......................22 34 .3113
WallllngJon ... .................. 16 40 .286

M-UI&lt;H ........................28

A11onte ............................. .22
CLEVElAND .................. .22
Chlcago ............................12

.554
8
.545 . 8~
.500
11
28 .491
32 .w
34 .393
17
43 .218 28~

'1~

--ion

. ll I. I!GL

San Antorilo ..................... 37 20 .648

Utah ..................:.............. 35
Mlnn810ta ........................32
Denver .............................25
Dallls .................:............. 24
Houston ...........................22
V.ncouvot ........................ 18

lia

20
24
30
32
35
38

. .6311
.571
, .456
.429
.388
.321

PICfllc Dlvlalon
L.A. L.akan; ...................... 48 11
POftland .. ,........................45 12
Phoonlx ............................ 35 21
Beettle .............................. 35 23
sacramento ... .................. 32 24
Golden Steto .................... 16 40
. LA. C~ro .................... 12 46

.807
.789
.625
.603
.571
.286

. 11 ~~

.2111

34&lt;

Tueeday'a icor. .·
PhlladllphOt 106, DoUao 87
.Jndlana115, Delrolt 105

-

MILWAUKEE BREWERS: Agreed to Ianna
RHP Roci&lt;)' Coppinger and C Bobby Hugh·

·Edmonton ........... 25 .25 15 6 73
Colorado ............. 28 V 10 1 67
Cllgary ............... 28 30 7 5 64
Vancouver ........... 21 ' 30 12 6 60

1a3
174
162
162

110
170
192
184

PKIIIc Dlvlolan
Dallaa .................. 34 23 8 3
Pho&amp;nlx ............... 32 23 1 1
Los Angeloo ........ 30 25 8 3
San Jose ............. 26 31 6 7

154
1a1
202
178

139
184
181
169

PHILADELPHI'- PJ11LLIES: Agreed to terms
RHP· Randy Wolf and RHP Wayne Gomes ·
on one-year conlracts.

. Football
Notional FoottM!IlARIZONA CARDIN'-LS: Named Don
Lawrence tight end8 coach.
·
INDIANAPOLIS &lt;;OLTS: Signed 01. Wllver·
ly Jaellaon, K DaMy l(ight, 0L Larry Moore, OS,
Pa1a Gonzaltlz, as K'elly Holcorrt&gt;, Q8 au..
Oma1NI, and Q8 Brad Fraeman.
KANSAS CITY CHIEFS: Nomed lynn S111ea

Ylca.P!Hiden1.

77
· 12
11
67

'

.

OAKLAND RAIDERS: Slgnec,I"WR 'Otvkl

·cunn.

·

··

WASHINGTON REDSKINS: Slgnad OE

Melp County's

e New

1

4~

11

12 ~

15

18~ ..

Read Across ~America

1

1D~I

-··
13',

••••

Elect
ANDYBAER

REED

OMEROY- Elementary schools,
public libraries, the
Rock and · Roll
Hall of Fame and
even the New York
Stock Exchange will observe the
kick off of the third annual Read
Across i)merica campaign tqday.
Read Across America is orga-·
nized each . year by the National
Education Association, a. teachers' union representing 2.5 million educators, to remind adults
to encourage children 'to .read.
"The goal of the campaign is
to ensure that on March 2, every
child is reading with an adult,"
NEA President Bob Chase said.
"Yet reading is a year-round
campaign that relics on entire

Improvement plan
meetings·kick off

plans for the building project.
Plans now call to build the new
Meigs Middle School on the are:t
of the softball field overlooking
Meigs High. Suitability of th e soil
FROM STAFF REPORTS
and location was a concern for
POMEROY - The Meigs the · new elementary building on
Local School bistrict held its first State Route 143 near Wolf Pen .
district-wide mee ting Tuesday
Buckley said the h;&gt;cation near
night at Meigs High School
Rutland wpuld have enough
qis(uss its continUous improve- room for ·two elementary buildment plan. ·
ings, one for studentS grades
The · state has mandated that kindergarten through two, and
schools that f.11l into the category the other for grades 3-5.
of academic emergency and acadThe elementary buildings
emic watch must file a plan for would share a common area for
improvement by July I.
lunch and other activities and
The plan must show how the would also be available for comdistrict plans to improve the 27 munity u s~ as a meeting area. Disstate standards (proficiency tests trict residents were encouraged to
in citizenship, math , ,reading, call the school district at 992writing and science for grades 2153 with any que~tions or confour, six.• nine, I 0,and 12.) Stuqent cerns.
attendance rate and graduation
·The meeting then broke into ·
rate is ·also included on the four building-level meetings to
im.provement plan.
discuss wl)at each building want•
Meigs Local has met eight of ed as their belief, vision and ntis- .
the 27 standards.
sion for the continuous improve- ;
Wertdy Halar, assistant superin- ment plan. Each group ele~;~~
tendent, and Dennis Eichinger, co-chairs to serve on !he d.~Meigs High School principal, mittee and ·participate in the disgave an overview of test scores .in trict-wide team. ·
·
the district for the past three
. The next building-level meet- ,
years, showing an overall gain ings will be held Monday at
eac h. year.
M eig. High, 6:30 p.m. in the
They also reviewed .the process library; Meigs Middle School,
of the continuou s improvement 6:30 p.m. in Room 103; Rutland
plan and what is needed to com- Elementary (Rutland, Bradbury,
plete the plan to be submitted to Salem Center and Middleport) at
the state department.
6 p.m. an~ Pomeroy Elementary
John Lentes, Meig. County (Pomeroy, Salisbury and Harprosecuting attorney, was elected risonville) at 6:30p.m. The public
to serve as co-c hair with Halar on is invited ta attend.
· the distri ct-wide committee.
The next district-wide meetMeigs Local Superintendent ing will be held March 13, 6:30
Bill Buckley discussed possible p.m. at Meigs High.

to

parents, volunteers

and teacheri, working together
to guarantee that every child
learns to read ."
Why March 2? Because today
would have been the 96th birthday ofThe odor Seuss, a,k.a, "Dr.
Seuss." Even the most casual
observers, might see the familiar .
red and white-striped top hat
~o!n_ l)y one o( Seuss's peloved
characters,The Cal in,the Hat; as
readers get into the Seuss Spirit
for the special day of reading.
In fact, at Wright-Patterson
Air Force. Base in Dayton, offi- .
cers, enlisted personnel, medical
staff and scientists will don their
Seuss hats and read to children
under the wing. of airplanes at
the base.
.
At the Rock and Roll Hall of ·
Fame Museum in Cleveland,
Cleveland natives Eric Carmen
("All by Myself') and Eddie

&lt;

nME I'OR SEUSS...,. Today would have been Dr. Seuss's 96th birthday, and the National Education Association has set aside the day to kick off 'Read Across America, ' a campaign to encciur· ·
age adults to read to children. Emily Bass, the children's librarian for the Meigs County District Public Library, donned her 'Cat in the Hat• headgear during .Wednesday's Children's Story Hour. The
Seuss classics ' Green Eggs and Ham• and .'The Foot Book" were read to the children, and other
activities were lncluded;;,:($jan J ..Reed photo)
·
·

House votes to

Social Security limit

WASHINGTON (AP) - In a rare· show go to younger workers. The nation's ·good
of bipartisan unit)', the House Wednesday economic times have caused a .scramble
unanimously passed legislation lifting the among employers searching for skilled, expeearning. limit for · 800,000 Sociai Security rienced workers. ·
recipients age 65 through 69. President Clin-.
"Why in the world would we want to diston endorsed the bill.
courage any Nmerican, whether they're 17 or
By a 422-0 vote, the House sent the bill to ' 67, from working?" said Rep. Bill Archer. R. ihe Senate, where it has equally strong sup- Texas, chairman of the, House Ways and
port among Republioans and Democrats . Means Committee. "Americans are living
eager to accomplish something iit this elec- longer now, an!! oldet.Americans can work,
tion year f0 r the important senior citizen · they want to ..VOrk, and they shouldn't be
vote - especially since longer-term Social punished by an outdated law."
.
Security and Medicare reforms are unlikely.
In a letter t1l' .congressional leaders, ClioSponsors said the time had come to repeal . tol' p.romised to sign a "sttaightforward" bill
the earnings limit, enacted with Social Secu- · into law if it reaches his desk wiihout too
rity during the Depression so t\tatjobs would. many changes.
.
~·

Sentinel·
' 2 Sld1Di11..,. 12 .....

'

.

-

Meigs County.Clerk of Court

*ExtelidH Office Hours In T••
. rlt'e Department* '
• Education • Experience
• Accessibility
Your Vote and Support
Appreciated/
Pd. lor

35 Cent-

discu
report card

BRIAN J.,
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

PIMH-Ie,H.PapAl '

&gt;~n~:le "'P•

~

Program aims
to improve
literacy rates . '

'lbday's

Ideas • Positive Changes.

,.,.,

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Vulunu· '•IJ. Numbt•r IIHl

communiti~s,

March 2, 2000

"As the baby boomers begin to retire, it is
.more important than ever that older Americans who are willing and able to work should
not have their Social Security benefits
deferred when they do," Clinton said .
Sen. William Roth, \'t-Del., who chairs
tb e Senate Finance Committee, promised to
push the Senate to act promptly on the bill .
"Abolishing the earning. limit is the first step
in preparing Social Security for the 21st
Century," he said.
.
The ·bill would repeal a law in whi ch
about 800,000 people age 65 through 69
now lose $1 in · Social Security benefits for

Pleue -

Elimlnp• Pip A3

•

Lyons named EMS chief
POMEROY D. Gene
a
dispatcher
Lyons of Racine has been named .
and
t\ten
the new director of Meig. Counmoved into the
ty Emergency Medical Services
training departupon the retirement of former
ment.
She
Director Robert Byer.
received. h er
Lyons formerly served as assis- "
·Instructor
tant administrator/training coorTrainer certifidinator of the age ncy.
cation for Red
She started her service with
Cross
cla$ses
EMS on Oct. 1, 1984. Prior to
Ly, and is also a
moving to EMS, she was an 11certified Public
year employee of th e Meigs Safety Service Instructor. ·
County Health Department. She
She has also received training
was also a 12-year member of. the in the emergency management
Racine Emergency Squad.
aspect of the agency and is also
Lyons started her EMS career as . trained paramedic.
·.

a

Maroc Coteman to a llx·ytlr oonnct.

&lt;

.696

. WESTERN CONFERENCE
Illm

one-year contracts.

Details, A3

BY

niu

Buckeye Eggs faces contempt charges, A2
Herd rocks Buffalo; Rio batmen tie OU, 81

Hlp:T:t-~

10

12~
13~
)8~

Boston ............ ........ ..........23 33 .-411

. Cen1rol Dlvlllon
· Indiana ......................:......39 17
Charfot1o ..........................31 25
1'oronto .................: ...........30 25
Dairolt ......:., .....................28 28

NCAA Division I ·

.632

B-ball
American LHgue
ANAHeiM ANG~LS: Agreed to tem\s with C
Bangle Molina, RHP Lou Pota, OF Norm
Hutchins and INf Larrv Barnes on one·vear
contracts.
. '
SEATTLE MARINERS: Agreed 10 tennaIF-QF Chartes Gipson and LHP Steve Sinclair
on one·year contracts.
TEXAS RANGERS: Agreed do · tonna with
INF Frank Catalanono on a one -year contract
TORONTO BLUE JAYS: Agread lo terms
· with RHP Aoy Holaday on a th..,o·year cornract
and 1B KIVin wttt and INF Chris Woodward on
one-year contracta.
Nlil-1 Laoguo
ATLANTA BRAVES: Agreed 1o Ierma with ·
LHP John Rooker and INF Freddy Garcta on

es on one-year conlracta.

WESTERN CONFERENCE
St. Louls .... ..........41 16
Detroit.. ...............38 20
Nalhvtlla .............22 ·35
Chlcago ............... 22 33

. _ A U - Loogue-llrot ""'nd
Wlngote 68, Lenolr-Rhyne 65

5
1
6
3
1

•

•

'
Calender
Clanifieds
Comics '
Editorials
Obituaries
Snorts·
Weatber

AS

BJ-4
85 .
A3
BH,6
' A3

Lotteries

'

436115 Foreot RUD

OHIO
Pick 3: 3-9-5; Pick 4:0-7-3-6
Super LIIUo: f&gt;.l0-16-32-42-45
Kidlor: 3-3-~9-9

'EVA.

1

Dally 3: 9-2-tD.U,-4: ~7
C 20()o Ohio Valky Publi!h.ing Co.

G:olorft,d'~ongressma~ takes on biggest primary fight
&lt;

•

,

T

YOUNGSTOWN (AP)
James Thlfi- Ht in 11okes "Beam me up!"- a .
· cant Jr. has had 16 colorful yi!ll'rs in the U:S.
· House,- often tailing · agains,ll~ the governline borrowed from TV~ "St1Jr .
ment with scathing speech~ punctuated
'nek" _._ to show his disgust 11t
by his sigl;lature "Beam me qp!" line. '
so.inething in government Ire finds
His unruly gray . h~ir and affinity fo~ · . particularly outrageous..The t~x
polyester or plaid make him one of the
d
·
.most recognizable figures on ~apitol Hill.
cp e was one target.
He has a tendency ~o side with Republicans. He beat the charges in a 1983 cor- · fighting his personal battles with FBI ~nd
ruption trial, though he ~~ects to be IRS," said Robert Hagan, a state senator
indicted aJt.un soon.
who is running against Ttaficant in Tues.But ¢ "i gruff former sheriff 'and long-· day's pri,nary.
time Democrat isn ~t just fighting the govThe other c:lndidates." are . Ma.IJoning
ernment or prosecutors these·dayi
' .
County Auditor ,George Tablack and
For the 6rst time, Traticant faces a pri- schoolteacher Christopher Doutt, a politimary battle, against opponents who say cal novice. All must .oveitome Trafioant's
eastern 'Ohio is finolly ready ~~ a change unique image. ,
fiom.Traficap.fs blustery style a'4M the actu- , He invokes "Beam me uplv - a li!'le
sal!ons of mob ties and improJ!!1: behavior borrpwed from TV's "Star Trek" - to
that follow him around.
•
show his disgost .at so\llething in govern"Our battle is getting someone w}Jo ~ ment he finds particularly outrageous.The
rcpresentipg us in Wasl)ingto~ and not, , tax code was one target.
'
'

Colleagues admire his way with words,
giving him sta nding ovations afte~ particularly impassioned speeches. Any derision of
him as a showboater is not for attribution.
Though differing with the GOP 0 n
labor and trade, Traficant . votes with the
Republicans more than half the time and is
a reliable anti-abortion vote.
· He rep,resents the rustiest spot in Ohio's
rust belt, the Mahoning Valley, an area that
has long suffered from two major problems: empty steel mills· and mob influence.
you.ngstown lost more than 20,000 steel ,
jqbs s~rting in the late 1970s and never
fully recoveted.
.
·'
ln 1963, the Saturday Evening Post
'dubbed the dry "Crime Town USA" after
a series of' lllob-related bombing.. ~s
recently as 1996, mobsters shot and
wounded the county prosecutor-elect.
Traficant, 58, seems' to thrive on controversy.
.
In 1983; be beat federal charges of tak-

.,

ing bribes from mobsters. Though he wasn't an attorney, Ttaficant defended himself
and suc cessfully argued that h e took
$163,000 in mob money only to use as
evidence.
'T he self-defense helped create a wave of
popularity that carried him to elec;tion tO
Congress in 1984.
More recently, Traficant said ·he ·expects ·
to be indicted again as the result
a new ..
probe that has netted mofll than 50 convictions, including a former aide.
'·
"You're talking to the only AmericA!I
that embattassed the Justi ce Departtnent in
a RICO (organized crime) c:llie without
being an '-a' ttorney," Tra(icaqt recendy told
reporters. "There's been a hell of a ·long '
grudge. And right now, I'll tell ynu what
I've got a grudge, too." ·
'
• l'raficant shook up the primary cam- .•
paign by. announcing Jan. 28 rllat he ' hail '

of

~

PluH ... Pil

I _,."1"
- ....
a_•

•.

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