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Thunada~May11 . 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Pqe 8 B • The Dally Sentinel

s.turd~

Hlp: 70s; Low: 50s .

•

Details, A3

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD.
N.Y. Yankees (Clemans 3-2) a1 Delroll

N·Y 17, SOuthern 11

·-

Southtm ................... 112 500 2 a
Nt4oon&lt;lio ......... .......830 4&lt;10 X •

11 · 13-5
17·17·2

N-Y: \lanblbt&gt;er (W) and Elliolt
Southern: Cumings, Bokor 4th (L), Warner

end Harmon

·

(N-11-11), 7:05p.m.
Kantu Clly (Botitoa 1.0) at CLEVELAND
(Witt0-1). 7:05p.m.
BoaU&gt;n (P. Martinez 5-t) at 8alttmore (Ponoon 2-1 ), 7:05p.m.
Toronto (Caopantor 3·3) at Tampa !lOY (RII&lt;or
Q-t), 7:15p.m.
•
Min..- (Mays H)lt Chicago Whlto Sox
(Parque 3-1), 11:05 p.m.
Seattle (H!IIama 4.0) at Oakland (Olivares 33) , t0:05 ~ . m .
Toxao (Davlo 0·1) at Anaheim (Sotooenewels
4-1), 10:05 p.m.

NL standings
Olvlalon II MCtlomil final

Molga: Tangy Laudormlll (W), Amy Hysell
(7) , r.ngy Laudennlll (7) and ~ Harris, Lind-

2m.

Ill

.546

4
5
5

.667

.514
NewYOrl&lt;. ........................ 1~ ~ .514
.375
Philadelphia ..................... 1

aay =~(6~o~ll~a3'~o\::·kl (L) end Wendy
Control Olvlalon
Prater
, St. Louls ...........................20 14
CINCINNATI .................... 17 15
Southern 27 ' N·Y 4
Plttlburgn ......................... 15 17
Houston .. .........................1o4 19
SOutnem ..................... 5(11)6 03 • 27·14-3
Chlcago ........................... 14 22
Nelsonv111e-Yortc .............. 000 22 ::o
4·3·5
Mllwaukee ........................ 12 22
BaHortn
Southem: Lyon&amp; (WP) and Daile~
Wettern Dlvltlan
N· Y: McCullough, Powel! 1st and Poner, Artzona ................ .. ..... ... ... 24 10
McGee
San Francisco .......... ........IS 1-i
L.osAngelea ..................... 17 16

BoullllmOivtalon
COLUMBUS (Indiana) ..... 21 14
Savannah (Aangars) ....... t8 15
Aahovlilo (Rockloa) .......... 17 16
Macon (Bravos) ............... t8 18
Cha"oston, SC(DRays) ... t .s 16
~ugusta (RodSOx\ ........... 14 20
CspHal City (Mots ........... 14 20

9~

.588

2
4
5',
.424
7
.369
.353 . 6
.708

.562
.515

SanDiego ........................ 13 20 .394

5
611,
8

1

10 ~.

Wedneada9'1 acorea "

AL standings

.687
.618
.515

2~

8

e'-4

.485
.485
.281

7
7

.600

.545
.!t5·
.471
.455
.412
.4t2

Cape Fear 8, Delmarva 3
CHARLESTON, WV 7, Hickory 6
Hagarstown 1o, Piedmont 6
Greonaboro 6, AahovHo 5
COLUMBUS 12, AuguSIS·10
Charteston, sc 4, Macon 2
Sovannan 6, Capital City 5

Cape Fear at Delmarva

Hickory at CHARLESTON, WV
Piedmont at Hagerstown
Asheville 11 Greensboro
COLUMBUS II Augusta
Macon at Charteaton, SC
Savannah at Capital City

Friday's games

Cape Fear at Delmarva
HICkory al CHARLESTON, WV
Piedmont at Hagerstown

MooonatCha~oown,SC

.500

Tonight'• game•

.531
.469

Colorado .......................... 15 1$ .455

13~

2
3

4~

5
6•.

..

6 ••,,

Tonight'• IIIIRII
Chartotto at SyrOCUit, 2:

Sevannen at Copllal City

International
League standings
ea-.. Dlvlolon

l.f.lo
(Indiana) ....... ~ t
Pawtuckoi(RedSox) ........ t6 t3
Scranton (~hllllos) ........... t8
Syracuse (BtueJaya) ........ t2
0Uawa(Expoa) ................ 10
Rpchaslor (Orioles) ......... 11

woownorvtoton

lndlanaootlo (Browero) ..... 20
Louisville (Aodo) .... .......... 16
COLUMBUS (Vankeeal ... 14
TOledo (11gers) ................. 12

~

.552
13 • .552
16 .429
17 .370
t9 .367

Soutllom OMolon
Durham (OOviiRays) ........22 8
ChlnoUe IWhlteSOx) ....... 13 15
Norfolk (Mats) .................. 15 18
Richmond (Braveo) ..... ....... 8 25
10
13
15
17

AI
d

lrdlnapolllat Durham
Nollolk It Bulfalo, 2
Ottawa It Loullvllle
Powtvckotot Toledo
Rlclwnond it SorantO!YWillols·Bomt, 2
Rochlltor 11 COLUMBUS

Friday'• genies
lndlar\11)0111 a Durham

4~

Chortotlo at srrocuaa

91
10

NorfOlk at Buffalo
Ottawa at Loulovlile
Pawtuoklt 11 Toledo

~

·

Eaattm DIYialan

J

Roohlltor 11 COWMBUS
6

8~
15~

Oallaa ..........................-4 4 o 12 11
COLUMBUS ................3 5· 1 10 11

W..tem Olvl1lon
l&lt;anau City .. .............6

NBA conference
semifinal slate

Wednesday'• ecorea

Chartotte at Syrt~cuse, DPd., rain
Durham 8, lndlanepoili;
Nonolk 3, Bu"alo 2. cornp. olauop. game
Nor1olk at Buffalo, ppd .. ·rain
Ottawa 1~ , Louisville 10
Pawtucket ~1 . Toledo 7, comp. ol ausp. game
Toledo 1, Pawtuckfl 0
Richmond at Scranton/WIIket·Barre, ppd .,
rain
COLUMBUS 13, RoChester 8

Wtdneadly'l

ei:ore•

Indiana 97, Philadelphia 88; lndlaria leado
aertea 3.0
,
L.A. Lakera 97, PhoeniM 96! L.A. L.akerslead
sane,2-o

l1

·

Tonight'• game

Portland Rt Utah, 8 p.m.

Friday'• game
Mlomlat Now York, 8 p.m.
L.A. Lakers at Phoenix, 10:30 p.m.

Asheville at GreenSboro
COLUMBUS a! "!'9USia

New Yortl. .........................22
Boston .... ... .................. 18
Toronto ..... ............. ........... 19
Bal!lmore . ................. .... t6
tampa Bay ....................... 11

9
12
17
t7
21

.710
.600
.528
.485
.344

Centr•l Dlvltlon
Chlcago ....... ..................... 19 15 .559
KansasCity ..................... 18 15 .545
CLEVELAND .................. .16 15 .516
Minnesota ............. ........... 16 19 .457
Detroit ..........
........ 9 23 .281

llll.
3~•
5~

7

11'-1 "

o

2 20 t7
3 18 15

Seanle ........................ 17
Oakland ........................... 11
Anahelm ...........................17
Texas ............................... 15

14 .548
17 .soei
18 .486
16 .454

1~

2
3

Saturday'• games
San Jose at Chk:ago, 4:30 p.m.
COLUMBUS at Tampa Bay, ~ p.m.
New England at DC United, 8 p.m.
New York-New Jersey at Kansas City, 8:30
p.m.
Los Angeles at Dallas, 8:30 p.m.
·
Mlam! at Coloraclu, ·9 p.m.

South Atlantic
standings

Frlday'a gamea

YiLI!m.fil

Factory Invoices

our

i'NEW" FORD.• LINCOLN• MERCURY.VEHICLES
You will know what we paid, so you'll NEVER PAY TOO MUCH!

State's bleak
athletic year finally
comes to conclusion
"It was a sour, difficult season
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Think Ohio State's students are right from the get-go. It never got
glad the school year's coming tQ .a comfortable."
,close? No one on campus is more
The men's .basketball team was a
:re.lieved than Andy Geiger - and qualified success, sharing the Big
be hasn't had to sit through an Ten title with eventual national
:ondergraduate final exan1 since champion Michigan State. That
1961 .
usually is cause for a parade ·down
A year after one of the most High Street.
nugical sports years ever at the
But the team had reached the
, school, Ohio State's athletics Final Four last spring, so a 23-7
director has watched as his depart- mark and second-round loss in the
ment has taken more hits than a NCAA tournament actually left
some spoiled fans disappointed.
dot.con\ stock.
"You ca nnot be wonderful
Coach Jim O'Brien was thrilled
' every single year in every single with his team's season.
sport;' Geiger said recently.
"Even the best of teams have a
There were success stories dur- very, very difficult tiine getting
ing the 1999-2000 academic year back to the Final Four," he said. "I
' -r- synchronized swinuning, tnen 's don't care if you return your exact
volleyball and the men 's and team. I think you have to have a
women's tennis teams all had ban- lot of things go your way."
.- ner seasons. But in the higher proThe women's basketball . team
file sports the Buckeyes fell far slumped after qualifying for the
.•hart of the expectations of their NCAA tournament in 1999.
More than its 13-15 record, how:liardcore followers.
The football team, bellwether of ever, the season will be remem;the department, slogged through a bered for a mysterious schism
6-6 season and ended on a three- between coach Beth Burns and
• :game losing skid. The Buckeyes the Buckeyes' top player, Michaela
_
•missed out on a bowl trip for the Moua.
• (im time in 12 years and, wone,
Moua was abrupdy kicked
: ~truggled mightily to beat a cou- the team in midseason; Burns did. pie of mediocre in-state teams, n't say why. Within days, Geiger
bhio and Cincinnati.
interceded and Moua was reinstatThe year before, the Buckeyes ed.
went 1 1-1, beat Michigan, won a
Burns and Moua barely com. bowl game and finished No. 2 in municated the rest of the year.
the nation.
Burns remained aloof even when
. • Is a tradition-rich program los- Moua was honored as the team's
ing iu mystique?
'
only senior, in front of several
' . " You lose a few ballgames, you thousand fans at her last home
~brt reading a lot into it," head game.
: coach John Cooper said. "Some
That blowup was far from the
people said we . didn't have the only black eye for Ohio State's
_leadership. Some said w~ weren't athletic department.
, 'is tough or that we didn't play as Sports information director
hard.
·
Gerry Emig was fOrced to .resign
' ""The fact is, we lost a lot of in December after it was revealed
good players off the team the year he had typed the brief bio for
~efore. And we lost to some good alumnus and TV personality
Richard Lewis. In the school's
"football teams."
With the season · still young, men's and women 's basketball
Cooper lost six recruiu and two media guides , L~vis was described
potential starters to grade prob- as .. Actor, Writer, Comedian,
·
' !ems. The o nes left behind had Drunk."
An
embarrassed
Geiger,
along
problems with chemistry, though
with OSU president William E.
not in the classroom.
'· "The team srumbled and just Kirwan. apologiz&lt;d profmely ro
.co uldn 't get iud( righted." he said. le\vis .

·.n. llltunbt·r

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

1110

so Cents

•

Pile-driving the point home
Power Team·
delivers 'strong'
•
message to
students
BY TONY M. l.ucH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Frldly'• game•

Chicago Cubs (Woolj T-1) at Montrelt (HerWedneeday'e acorea
manson 3-3), 7:05p.m.
Atlanta . (Mulholland 3-3) at Philadelphia
Kansao City 6, De1rolt 0
(Sohlllng 1·1), 7:05p.m.
• Toxas 7, Soettle 8
Milwaukee (Haynes 4·2) al Pltlsburgn
Tampa BaY at N.V. Vankees, ppd .. rain
(5ehmkH 1· 2), 7:05 p.m.
· Toron!O 7, Baltimore 2
.
Aorkla (Dempster 3-2) ot N.Y. Moll (Rusch
.. Minnesota 10, CLEVELAND 9
, Bollon S, Chicago White Sox 3 (6 lnn.-raln)
1·3), 7:10p.m.
CINCINNATI (Noeglo 4.0) at Houston (Dotal
Oakland 1, Anaheim 4
1·3), 8:05 p.m.
Loo Angeles (DretiM 2·1) at St. LouiS (Kilo 6Tonight'• gemea
Kanaas City (ifurbln 1-1) at CLEVELAND 1), 8:10p.m.
San Francisco (Nathan 2.0) al Colorado
(Wrlghl 2-2), 7:05p.m
1·3), 9:05p.m.
Boston (Wakefield t -2) at Baltimore (Rapp 3· (Arrojo
Arizona \Anderson 2.0) at San Diego
2). 7:05 p.m. .
•
Tampa Bay (Tracnset 2-2) at N.Y. Yankees (Clement 4-t , 10:05 p.m.
(Homandez 4· tl, 7:05p.m.
, Sealllo (Mocha Q-3) al Olldand (Hudaon 3·
2). 10:05 p.m.
• Tans (Rogers 3-3) at Ana~Oim (Mamker a- Le~gue
t), 10:05 p.m.
Eu1em DMol&lt;ln

4

No game• through Friday

Philadelphia (Wolf 1·2) at Montreal (Pavano.

w..tem Dlvltlon

18

Wednesday's score

Today'• glll"ll

3·0) , 7:05p.m. .
N.v. Mats (Loner 3-G)al Pittsburgh (Ander·
son 1.0), 7:05p.m.

~

15

Mlaml1 , 0C Unllod Q-OT

Aor1da 5, Atlanta 3

9

,3l.'...

Vuluntt'

1;

6
COlOrado ..................... 4 5 o 12 t2 · 22
SenJoae ..................... 2 4 2 6 1t 12
NOTE: Three points for a win and ooe poklt
for aile.
0

Pittsburgh 13, N.V. Mats 9
CINCINNATI 5, San Diego 1
Houston 5, Colorado 1
Ar1Zona 2, Los Angeles 1
San Diogo (Lopaz 0·1) &amp;~CINCINNATI (Bell
2·21, 12:35 p.m.
·
Milwaukee (Woodard 0-4} at Chicago Cube
(Downo H), 2:20 p.m.
Allan!&amp; (Millwood 3· 1) al Ronda (Grilli o-o),
7.:05 p.m.

.Melp County's

I ~ % ¥a

6"=goe-,~:::::: ::: J : ~ 1~ ~g

Los Angeles .. .............. 5

.687
.561
.463
.414

~

L:"Engtand............
Mlaml ................. ,........ 2 3 4 10 6
9
NY·NJ ..........................3 5 0 9 10 13
D.C ............................ .. 2 6 1 7 18 21

Central Dlvl1lon

.

RlcMiorod at Sorentor&gt;'WIIk..,·Barro

.733
.464
.455
.242

MLS standings ·

Phllldolphll 8, Montreal 0

Yi L 2m.

May IZ, 1000
..

Chicago Cubs 9, MHwaukee 8 (11 )
San F""ranc:lsco 4, $1. LOUIS 3

Eattern DlvltkMt

I11m

g,::•t. . . . .

10
t3
18
t8
17
17
23

Wtdneaday'l ecorea

Eeatam Dlvlalon

:.:,~:.~: :~~o!n:ty 4:.t! . ~~i:: : : : : : : : : ::i! J!

PiedmOnt (PNtlleS) .......... .23
Hickory (Pirotaa) ............. .21
Greonaboro ~anl&lt;eH) ..... 17
HagertiOIMI BluoJays) ... 16
CaJ&gt;e Fear
18
Delmarva (
a .......... 18
Cnlnooton. WV (
o) ...V

•

•

Friday

Hillside deacons win challenge, AS
·Marauders fall tQ Devils in final, 11

RACINE - A large crowd
filled Southern High School's
gymnasium . Thursday afternoon
as John Jacobs and the Power
Team, the "world 's greatest exhibition of power, · strength and
inspiration," made th eir way
through Meigs Co unty 's three
school districts delivering motivational messages to all who would
listen.
The Power Team, featured in
People Magazine, CNN News
and "Entertainment Tonight," are
a Texas-based organization whose
. purpose is to help spread antidrug and alcohol information, as
well as the dangers of premarital .
sex, to children throughout. the
world.
The unique thing about these
motivational speakers is that they
spread their message while bending metal bars with their teeth,
breaking concrete slabs with their
arms , ripping whole phonebooks
in half and tearing open cans of
soda with their bare h:l1lds.
. Students from Syracuse Elerpentary, Portland Elementary,
and Southern Junior High aruL
Middle schools w;)t~he4.in,
~-as Siolo Tauaefa 'Ihd .
Hendrix, Pow.er' Team
members and motivational speakers, displayed feats of.strength. At
the same time, the group deliv~
ered messages of hope and
encouragement.
"Be a dream maker, not a
dream breaker," said Tauaefa.
"Don't let peer pressure guide AYtiE8iONIE STRENGTH - Hayden Hendrix, pictured above, demolishes several slabs of. concrete for
Southern Local students as The Power Team brought their message of hope to the ,Meigs County area.
(Tony M. Leaqh photo)
•
Please see ·Power, Pap AS

COKs
79 million
for U.S. 33
· Last month , $1 mi llion was
approved for the purchase of
hardship right of way acq uisitions for the Darwin project. ·
Shortly after that vote, the
Coalition Against Superfluous ,
Highways; a group opposed to
BY BRIAN ). REED
the project largely f&lt;Yt environSENTINEL NEWS STAFF
mental purposes,, filed a second
POMEROY ·- The Trans- lawsuit in an attempt to stop the
portation R eview and Advisory project.
·
.Co uncil approved $154 million
St.ory said the funding is
in funding for two major Meigs divid~ into two portions, for
County highway projects on fiscal year 2001 and FY 2002.
· Thursday.
FY 2001 begins in July, and
TheTRAC met in Columbus Story said that plans will likely
to approve funding for a number proceed unless a restraining
of projects, and voted to autho- order is filed by the federal court
rize $79 .6 million in fundin g for before that tirpe.
the construction of the local
Yesterday's '
appropnatton,
U.S. 33 proj ect.
along with last month's S1 milTRAC al so approved $7 5 lion, will see completion of th e
million in funding for three new 12-mile Super Two highphases of construction for the way between Athens and Darlong-awaited
Ravenswood wm.
Connector project.
"I'm thrill ed," Story said.
Steven L, Story of Pomeroy, "Barring an order from th e fed who se.Ves · as president of the ei-al court, we'll be riding on
Meigs County Chamber of
that road in thtee or four years."
Commerce and the chairmaa of · Nancy Pedigo of the ODOT
the -So.u theastern Ohio RegionDistrict 10 office in Marietta
al Council's U.S. Route 33
said
on Friday that engineering
'
committee, said the TRAC
work on the project is "ongoing
coordinator confirmed the vote
and nearly complete," and that
in ·a telephone call on Thursday .
ODOT will determine the conafternoon, following the TRAC
struction schedule, date of bid
meeting.
sales, and other details involved
TRAC is an appointed body
in beginning the project.
charged with the responsibility
·"This just goes to show what
of approving m'\ior highway
happens whea people who
projects and appropriating funds
PleMe see U.S. :S:S, Pep AS
for those projects. .

$75 million in
funding approved
for Ravenswood

.

Speech pathOlogists seeking to end stuttering ·problems:
with."
logical, which is from the "old school" of
"I think it's neurologically
Sisson is quick to add anytime a parent
OVP NEWS STAFF
. thought; learned behavior, which comes
based and heightened by the
is concerned about his child's speech
GALLIPOLIS - This is National from a traumatic experience or constant
communication
demands
put
on
problem or delay, he should seek help if
Stuttering Awareness Week, created in stress: and neurological, which means
1988 to in crease public understanding of something chemically or physically in them by society and their ability for no other reason to receive peace of
mind that it's only normal. ·
to dealtvith such pressllre.,.
stuttering, which affects about 3 million the brain is the cause.
"True" stuttering can be defined when
Americans.
_ "I think it's neurologically based.' and
Tr8cl Slaon, MACCCS, itolzw.svc•more
the child can recognize the problem and
Most people don't know Winston · heightened by the communication
Brench epeech pathologlet
is
bothered by it. Self awareness can exacChurchill, Marilyn Monroe, Carly demandS put on them by society and
erbare the situation 1
Simon, James Earl Jones, John Updike, ' their ability to deal with s11ch pressure;'
Disfluencies are sound-specific, perand King G'~orge VJ all stuttered. That's .. 'said T!'llCi Sisson, MACCCS, Holzer
"My job is to help som~one to control
because they overc~me their disfluencie~ . Sycamore Branch speech pathologist. .
it so it doesn't control them," Sisson said . 'son-specific and situation-specific. StutStuttering is more prevalent in chi!"A lot .of parents panic when their 3- terers then deve)op avoidances of such
and became successful adults..
.
"There is a hereditary, familial predis- dren, ahd if it continues into adolescence year-~ld stutters. The fact is that the things.
"Everyone has some form of disfluenposition for people to stutter;· said ,Beth · then it' more likely to be a lifelong child, until the age of 5, is still developcies,
but a diagnosed stutterer will fall
S! one, SLP, speech pathologist at Holzer ·· problem~
.
ing,their language skills and what we 'call
t
·
Inpatient Rehab.
.One· JW.sconception Sisson wants to 'false' stuttering usually occurs because m o one· or ·more of the following priThere are three schools of thought · dismiss il that a· speech pathologists can. their language is more advanced than mary categories: prolongation is when a
· . , · their oral. motor planning can keep 'u p specific sound is held for a long time;
regarding the cause of stuttering: psycho- "cure" ah adult stutterer.
BY KRIS

DoTSON

'

'

·Final regional airport decision
expectea by next suml'!lef' ·
~ Crec~lt~~=~

r!r.AI'IIt •
Repo • Divorce??
No Embarrassment•.. Your Treated with R•spectl

Call Mr. Ford at 740-446-9800 or 1-aocr-272-5179.

DRIVE HOME IN A CAR OR TRUCK TODAY!!

· CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
- The state Public Port Authority wants to make a firm decision
by July 1, 2001 whether to build a
regional airport ill southern West
Virginia.
.
Director Bill Jackson said the
Port Authority and the Federal
Aviation A:dministration . decided
on the .date within the past
month.
"We believe it will take that
much time to do the steps we
need to do;' Jackson said . "By the
time a year rolls around, we should
have a 'build' or 'no-build' decision."
The regional· airport between
Charleston and Huntington has .
been in discussion si nce 1991.
Many believe it's time to move

repentton is when a specific sound is
repeated several times, 'li-li-li-li-ke this;'
silent block is when a person gets stuck ·
in a motion or a sudden outburst upon
. becoming 'unstuck'."
Secondary behaviors, develop because
of the efforts to work ~rough the pri- .
manes. Se~ondanes are ncks, eye blmkmg, stom~mg feet, hea_d nods. and Jerks.
lnterestmg observattons Stsson men- .
'tioned are that most stutterers will not ·
stutter ~hen th~y are alone and most can;
smg Without , disfluency. Yet telephones .
are a stutterers rughtmare.
Stuttenng IS a vtc1ous cycle. .
.
.
. W~en a stutte~er IS confronted With a ;
SJtuatton that Will make them nervous, .
lik.
fro
·
·
· he a con nta!lon or conversatton Wit ,
PIHM - Stutter, Pip AS

ahead or put th,~roject to rest.
"I think it's}. past time," said
Kanawha CouniY Commissioner
~uke Bloo~, w~o, opposes build,mg a new :urpotf. ' Clearly now ts
an appropriatl: time to give up the
ghost. So was l~t year. I'm not '
optimistic they'ret-J!lg to do that.
"Tliey should make a· decision
to stop this foolishneSs-. stop.this
project that's going nowhere.'' '
Ned Jones, who heads a group
that supports the regional airport,
agreed it's time to decide.
"We've waited since 1991.1"
Jones said. "There have been a lot
oflapses between 1991 aild now. I
think they're ~oving and they've
got it together.
"Hopefully ~hey'll come back
with a positive result.''

I

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.1

Sentinel

2S1ttlllftS - ·11 Ptlps ·
AS

Calegdar

BH

Cla11ifieds

·coniic•
Editoriab

A4

~biluvie•

A3
I

:Weather

/

Bt-3;8
A3

Lotteries
owo
Pick 3: 3-5-0; Pick 4: 9--4+9
.Buclaoye 5: 12-21-31 -33-34
~YA.

o.i1y 3: 6-2-1•Diily 4: 8-5-0-9
-~ 2~ Ohio Va11ey· Publishing Co.
I

Bradbury cheerleaders net title.
FROM STAFF REPORTS

MIDDLEPORT - Bradbury
Yellow Jackets won the title of
National USA Cheerleading Federation Champions in recent
competition at Charlotte, N.C.
In additiol') to winning the
national · championship title, the
local cheerleaders achieved the
highest dance score on the first
· round of compeiitions. The
·received first ,place trOphies for
both events.
Making·up the squad are Chandra Stanley, first grader; Tricia
Smith and Trinity Kimes , second .
graders; Cassi Whan, a fifth grader; and Meli a Whan, C harissa
Stanley and Ashley Cook, sixth CHAMIPICINS .;.. Taking the title of National USA Cheerleading Feder&amp;- :
graders. The coach is Mary Whan tion Champions In competition at Charlotte, N.C. were the 'Bradbury :
and her assistant is Regina Kimes. Yellow Jackets, from left, Trinity Kimes, Mella Whan, Cassl When ; :
Charissa Stanley, Asnley Cook, Chandra Stanley and Trlcla Smith. •
(Contributed photo)
·
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Friday, May 12, 2000

BUCKEYE BRIEFS

OBITUARIES

-·Court offers little guidance to lawmakers

Burglar guilty In ·womanrs death
· SPRINGFIELD (AP) - A jury has found a burglar guilty of
scaring a 79-year-old woman to death.
. The sound of breaking glass and the sight of a.n intruder kicking in her kitchen door last Feb. I sent Mary Virginia Jones
screaming into the night.
. Mter reaching a neighbor's house,Jones suffered a heart attack
and was hospitalized. She died 27 days later.
Clark County prosecutors said occasional handyman Clarence
Farmer, 39, was responsible f1&gt;r Jane's' death. The jury agreed on
Thursday and found .Farmer guilty of involuntary mansla!lghter,
addition to burglary.
"He put ' her into the hospital," Assistant Prosecutor David
Smith said. "He put her through hell. He didn't mean to kill her.
I don't meao that. I mean he should be held responsible for his
actions."
·
Common Pleas Judge Richard O'Neill will sentence Farmer
on May 23. He faces up to 18 years in prison.
.· ]C?nes' daughter, Judy McFadden of Columbus, said her mother befriended Farmer and paid him to weed, mow and perform
other odd jobs around her house.
Jones also always made sure Farmer went home with a full
s_tomach, she said. ·
· "That was my mother. She c.o uld not cook a meal in her home
and not invite you to eat."
If her mother had one fault, it was that she was too trusting,
·
McFadden said.

in

1

..

Accidents kill 1r injure trooper
SANDUSKY (AP) -A motorist was killed and several' other
people injured, including a state trooper. in separate but related
accidents on the Ohio Turnpike early Friday, the State Highway
Patrol said.
· The patrol said preliminary reports indicated ·a patrol cruiser
that was stopped on the berm with another car was struck from
~ehind by a third vehicle.
' , Apparently, an occupant of that vehicle stepped out onto the
l)ighway and was hit by another car, patrol spokesman Lt.- John
J;lorn said. That person was killed, Born said.
,;, The dead and injured were not identified immediately. Born
said the injured were taken to area hospitals, but their conditions
were not known.

Hospital shooter dies
. DELAWARE (AP) -A man who shot himself in the head at
Grady Memorial Hospital after handing an admissions' clerk a
i)ote died Thursday at Riverside Methodist Hospital in Columbus.
.. Greg Houston, 46, of Delaware, walked up to the registration
desk Wednesday night and handed an envelope to the clerk. He
lhen said, "Don't worry, I won't hurt you," placed a .22-caliber
handgun to his head and shot himself, said Delaware police Capt.
Mark Drum.
• lnsige the envelope was a note detailing Houston's organ donation plan and financial information regarding his funeral. It did
not say why Houston wanted to kill himself, Drum said.

COLUMBUS (AP) -The Ohio Supreme The co11rt ordered the Legislature to
Court has again ordered the state to fix its
address the disparity in local
school-fi.mrung system. But just as it rud in
property taxes, p'i2rYgives wealthier
1997, the court offered little guidance to the
districts better schools than poorer
Legislature on how to accomplish that.
The court's 4-3 majority ruled Thursday ones, and to do so by June 15, 2001.
that although the Legislature should be
The court also found problems in
applauded for committing billions of dollars to
the school loan program, the
school construction and repair, the basic probminimum funding for each district
lems still exist as they did three years ago.
The court ordered the Legislature to
and a lack of money for new
address the disparity in local property raxes, Legislature-ordered programs. What
which gives wealthier districts better schools
the court didn't tell lawmakers was
than poorer ones, and to do so by June 15,
how to do all that.
2001. The court also found problems in the
school loan program, the minimum t\lnding in some. of the work lawmakers had done.
for each district and a Jack of money for new
· Davidson held a news conference late
Legislature-ordered programs.
Thursday,. promising that a special legislative
What the court didn't tell lawmakers was
committee. would study the court's concerns.
how to do all that, nor rud it in 1997, when it
She
said nothing critical about the court or its
found Ohio's funding formula unconstitutionjustices.
al.
The majority was careful, too, to' draw a line
In 1997, then-Gm:. George Voinovich and
of
separation among the branches of governhis Republican colleagues in the Legislature's
leadership reacted harshly to what they found ment, at least in the presentation of its opinion.
Justice Alice Robie Resnick, writing for the
to be excessive judicial activism.
J'his time, th1&gt;ugh, the reaction was mea- majority, said that in 1997, the court "did not
sured and low-key. Gov. Bob Taft, Senate Pres- require a specific funding scheme, and rud not
ident Richard Finan and House Speaker Jo instruct the General Assembly as to what legAnn Davidson, all Republicans, withheld islation should be e~acted .... The reason fot
immeruate comment on the ruling. They, this is the doctrine of separation of powers."
However, Resnick added: "Courts do poshowever, did praise the court for finding merit

Only o.ne of 'Lucky 13' ·
winners still works full-time
COLUMBUS (AP) - One of
the "Lucky 13" who won part of
the then-record $295 .7 niillion
Powerball jackpot 'hasn't been
spoiled by wealth. He's still ~ark­
mg.
Six 'll(orkers have retired from
Automation Tooling Systems iq
suburban Westerville. Six others
have. left their machine shop jobs
for other opportu.nities, said Larry

sess the ,uthority to enforce their orders, since.
the power to declare a particular law or enactment unconstitutional must include the power
to require a revision .of that enactment, ro~
ensure that is then constitutional:'
As "guidance;' the majority defined the·
specifics of a "thorough and efficient" educa..l;ion, as required by the Ohio Constitution, ~t
offered no way "to achieve theln. .,
'
Sen. Gene Watts is a Du blln Rep uBlica It
who once introduced a resolution ihar woufd,
have asked· voters to give the Legislature finil\
say on school-funding matters. He said th¢·
court's Intent had not changed since 1997;
despite Resnick's bow to the separation &lt;,\t
powers.
..
"The majority tried consciously to adopt
that to)'le, but clearly they cotitinue to, anq
egreglou~y so, usurp the Legislative functio~ .
They're telling us what to do," said Watts, who
· is leaving the Legislature after 16 years becaus~ ·
of term limits.
.
Another veteran of the school-funding case
said the court stopped short of that. John Goff
was the state superintendent from 1995 to
1998 and presided over changes ordered by the
Legislature to satisfY the court's 1997 ruling.. . .
"I don't know how much more the couq
needs to say. I don't think the court should be
in the business of telling them which tax tq
raise;' Goff said from Hilton Head Island, S.C.·1
where he now lives.

Bring Mom to

MOM'S SMORGASBORD
138 Wdshingion .Street

Ravenswood, WV

6.99

Sunday Buffet· all you can.eat 1
Menu includes: Glazed Ham, Baked Steak, Fried Chicken,
Scall1&gt;ped Potatoes, and assorted vegetables
includes Soup, Salad &amp; Desseri Bar. .

Don't·fo~ Friday Night SeaJ~ Buffet 19.99

AND i·A~. TER

THE SAL

Mary Agnes Nelson

'jour direction in life. Tough times
clon't last, tough people do."
; Audience members also participated in a dance contest, while
several students took the opportunity to perform alongside the
Power Team during one of their
many demonstrations.
; Personal success stories were
also shared with students .during
the remainder of th~ team's program .
The power teams visit was
made possible by funds that were
ilonated by the Meigs County
Sheriff's Office, the Meigs Coun~ Prosecutor's Office, God's
NET in Pomeroy, Racine United

The Daily Sentinel
(USJ'S 113·H0)

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Publitlled every 1fternoan, Monday lhrou,p
Prldly, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
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aze ptld at Pomeroy, Ohio.

Melaber. The Auociated Preu, and the Ohio
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MAILSUBSCRimONS

r-MtlpCoooty
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szw.cu...............................................SI0$-'6

1996 LINCOLN

Rl1et Outl6de Melli CHI(Y
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Z6 Wecb................................................. $56.68
S2 Week&gt;.................................. .............$109.72

. 1996 CHEVY K 1500
·Silverado, 350, Auto, Air Cond., AMJFM Cass.,
All Power, Fiberglass TonneaU; One Owner

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Pomeroy, Ohio
1-740-992-7007

u.s. 33

from Page AI ·

share a co mmon goal work
together," Story said. "People
from throughout the r~gi1:1n saw
how important this project is to
all of us, and crossed county lines
to get things done."
Story said that proactive work
on promoting the project began
at a meeting in April, 1991, with
Elizabeth Schaad, Meigs County's
first full-time economic development director, Bruce Reed , then
of Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Co.,
and Lenny Eliason, a former
Middleport businessman who
who now serves as an Athens
County commissioner. A meeting
with ODOT District 10 leaders

Cl~lalloa.................- ........._ ...... Ext.1103
'Ciuolllod Ads.......... - .. :.. ................ DLIIOO

1995 FORD F250
Supercab 4X2, XLT, 7 .3L Oieaal, Auto, Air Cond.,
AMJFM Case .. Tilt, Crulae, All Power

AEP-36'•
Akzo-42
AmTech/SBC- 4~.
Ashland Inc. - 3571111
AT&amp;T -35't.
Bank One - 30l.
Bob Evans- 13'·
BorgWarner- 43~.
Champlon-3
Charming Shops - 6),
City Holding- 12't.
Federal Mogul- 12l.
Flrstar- 24'!;

~TOCKS

Gannett - 60'•
General Electric - 50'1.
Harley Davidson - 41 ~.
Kmart .- 7~

Kroger - 20':.
Lands End - 40).
Ud .- 49~
Oak Hill Financial - 15
OVB-29),
One V&amp;Hey - 34),
Peoples
Premier - 7'•
Rockwell - 38).

-17'•

Rocky Boots- 5~
RDShell - 61
Sears - 39
Shoney's - l.
Wai·Mart - 56
Wendy's ""- 22).
Worthington -11).
Dally stock reports are the
4 p.m. closing quotes of,
the previous day's transactions, provided by
Advest of Gallipolis.

VALLEY WEATHER ._

Storms possible for tonight
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Unseasonably warm and
unstable air could produce thunderstorm in the tri-county area
tonight - some of them possibly
severe, forecasters said.
But the weather situation wiU
change dramatically. once a low
pressure system passed through
the area.
Following highs near 90
degrees today, temperatures won't
climb out of the 70s on Saturday
and likely will remain in the 60s
on Sunday.
Sunset tonight will be at 8:38
p.m. and sunrise on Saturday at
6:18a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight...Partly cloudy during
the evening, ~hen mostly cloudy

was held a month later.
Business and community leaders from Athens, Hockingand
Fairfield counties, and Jackson
County, W.Va., later joined the
effort to push the project through
the state channels, Story said.
At that time, "there was no project," Story said, noting that any
environmental studies which had
been completed on the project
were worthless, because they
. were completed prior to most
environmental regulations being
put into place.
"We saw what other corridor
committees had done, and decided we could accomplish the same
objectives," Story said, noting t,hat
committees for U.S. 32, U.S. 35,
and other major road projects had
been successful in encouraging
state funrung.
The Ravenswood Connector
project has been diviped into
three phases, and will be sold to
bidders in FY 2002, 2003 and
2004.
The first phase of that project
'fill be funded at $33.1 miUion,
the second at $21.3 million, and
the third at $21.1 million. ·
Three of four projects needed
to complete the Columbus-toCharleston, W.Va. "Capital Corridor" are now funded and at various stages: the Ravenswood Connector, the Athens-to-Oarwin
project, and a Lancaster bypass,
Only the Nelsonville bypass
remains unfunded, but Story said
that he expects it to be approved
eventuaUy, now that discussions
· are underway with state highway
officials and members of the business community in Nelsonville,
who have objected to the p·roject.

with a chance of showers and
thunderstorms after midnight.
Lows in the mid and upper 60s,
Southwest wind 10 to 15 mph.
Chance of rain 50 percent.
Saturday... A chance of showers
and thunderstorms until midmorning, otherwise partly cloudy.
Not as hot with highs around .80.
Chance of rain 40 percent.
Saturday night. .. Pardy cloudy.
Lows in the mid 50s.
.Extended forecast:
Sunday... Partly cloudy. Highs
·in the lower 70s.
Monday... Partly cloudy, Lows
in the lower 50s and highs in the
lower 70s.
Tuesday... Partly cloudy. Lows
in the mid 50s and highs in the
r.nJd 70s.

,

Aclt~er111t.... ...-...-...- -..-·..-·..... Elt. 1104

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

Right to Life
meeting

sale on Saturday, beginning at 8:30
a.m.

POMEROY - Meigs County
Right to Life will meet on Monday at 7:30 p.m. at the Pomeroy
Library. The public is welcome.

'D'ustees to meet.
LETART - Letart Township
Trustees will meet Monday, 5 p.m
at the builrung.

Bake sale set
TUPPERS PLAINS -Tuppers
Plains Volunteer Fire Department
Ladies' Auxiliary will have a bake

cancellation
event set
SYRACUSE - Syracuse Post
Office will have a special pictorial
cancellation of the B~t Cancer
R esearch stamp on Tuesday.
The Postal Service's Breast Cancer Research stamp has raised $11
million in the past year to help
fight the rusease.
The semi-postal stamp sells for
40 ce nts, with net proceeds being
donated to research.
The sta;JtP will go ofT sale on
July 29.

Stutter

Then each person's specific primary and secondary behaviors
need to be identified.
··
Therapies include relaxation
from Page AI
techniques, decreasing the emo,
a boss, then the tension makes tiona! stress around the subject:s
him stutter more. When he stut- avoidances, deep breathing, "easy
ters, that makes the person they onset" techniques (taking a full
are talking with tense_ Then the breath and initiating that first
stutterer realizes that person is sound more slowly) and maintense which makes him even taining eye contact.
more nervous which, in turn ,
"These strategies are designed
to begin at their level of need in
intensifies the stuttering.
But there is hope.
hopes that they will carry over
Treatments include first to be into their daily communications.
diagnosed and educated .
thu s aUowing them to control
"It's both physiological and their stutter enough to lead pro::.
ductive lives," Sisson said.
emotional:' Sisson said.

Cheer
from
AI ·
Page

Melia Whan also won a first
place trophy in the inruvidualjazz
dance division and was awarded a
college .scholarship.
.,
The trip.to North Carolina was
made possible by donations from
more than 50 local businesses and
individuals who contributed to
'
the expenses.
Prior to going to the . national
contest, the cheerleaders participated in several area competitions.
• They took first place at
Southwestern Elementary contests in February;
• First place at the Rio Grande

IPIW:GVMllY CIIHMA
446 •4524

1
1 lo''''I 11
1,
fo.

&lt; !ill ~!

U.S. Cheerleading Federation
Regional Competition in February, qualifYing them to go to
nationals in North Carolina, with
Melia Whap also taki,Jg first in
individual dance;
• First place in March contests
at Kyger Creek Middle School,
where they also were overall
champions.

I

'

FRIS/12 • THURS 5/18/00

lOX Offla Will OPEN AT

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
ConceDed?
Rejlded?
Accidents?

Tickets?
New Driver?

• Sunday, May 14, 2000
I p.m. - ~other's Day Tea

JERRY ·B .IB.B .EE
Phone
740-992 ~ 2196
www~errybibbee.com

'

e Monday, May 15, ZOllO
Dress-Up Day
10 am. - 2p.m. -Quilt Shoiv
I p.m. - Proclamalion
Zp.m. -All Day Bingo

461 S. Third
Ave.
Middleport

el\laday, May 16, 2000

6:30 PM 101 MNING SHOWS
12:30 PM FOR

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driving ucord

brought you 1
1 screeching
holt?

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992·5479

Westem/Jay
a.m. - Beans &amp; Cornbread
Rooster &amp; Pig calling Contests
II

e1'ednesdiy, MaY 17, ZOllO

Western Day
I0 a.m ... Cake Walk

I p.m. · Hula Hoop Contest
2 p.m. •Banana Sptit Sale

e Thursday, May 18, 2000
jeans Day
1 p.m. - Ice Cream Social
4:30p.m. -Car Show
HotDogs, Pop &amp;. Popcorn Sold

AU AGES, AIL TIMlS S4.00

• Friday, May 19, ZOllO
1h~k Is 111111~ klllltrlll.
1M IWfl lldlril#ts 111 boiHir of
Hawaiian Day
10 a.m. -Scavenger Hnnt NMioul Nllrlilfl Hmilf w.
All nnb ~rill
11 a.m. •Grllied Chicken
Ylllky N!lmr~g &amp;
1 p.m. -Pie Eallng Contest
RtWIIIWioll Cellln, toc.lttlll
2 p.m. -Gospel Sing
JZOO S.llll IIIII RoM.

111M,,.,.,

tMt,."'"

(304) 675-5236

Pleasant Valley
Nursing&amp;
Rehabilitation
Center

•

•

•

,

.

•

•

I.

LOCAL BRIEFS

Celebrating National Nursing Home Week

.1'0°/o Off
Moy 16 - May 20
May23-27

Methodist Church and North
Pa~kersburg
(W.Va.)
Baptist
Church.
"We travel the globe in hopes
of raising students' self-esteem,"
added Tauaefa. "This generation's
children, labeled Generation
Xers, are made to feel inferior
and are told that they cannot fulfill their dreams. The Power Team
is hear to let them know that
with positive attitudes, anything
can be accomplished."
The Power Team's elaborate
night show, which showcases a
more intense display of strength
and power, can be seen .Friday
· through Sunday at North Parkersburg . Baptist Church, 3109
Emerson Ave., Parkersburg. The
program will begin each night at
7. A $2 donation is requested at
the door.
·

.LOCAL

IPO'•".,

.. • Bndbury Ydlow Jleket think lhae
tbdr ChampiouldpAAB Cutting CeUar, AcquiJidons jewelry, Always &amp; Formr Gift Shoppe, American Legion
of Mlddlepon, Anderson's Furniture, ·Perk and Vlcti Ault, Baer's Marlret, Bibbee Fotd, Bob's
Madctt, Mike &amp; MIIIJie Boceen, Body Fantasiet, Brosan .t Wuner, Clarb Jew.lry, Cleland
Realty, Computer Fmnnnance UPifadet, Court Strftt Bar &amp; Grill, Crow a Crow, Crow's
Steal&lt; House (ICFC), Dally Sentinel, Dominoes Pizza, Doo lite Motors, Downing ChUds
. MuU~n Mu,..r, Dr. Hunter, Family Dollar, Fanner's Bank, For the Botb of'lbu Beauly Shop,
"':111h, ~rest Run Ready Mix, Gheen's Painting .t Company, Bri:111 Gibbs, H&amp; R Block,
Hubbard s Green House, Jimmy's Spons Bar, Key Moton, Margie LaWson D.D.S, Charles &amp;
~Judy Lee, Locker 219, McOonaids, Middlepon Church ofChrist· Family UrC Center,
: M1ddlepon Laundry Mat, Middlepon Trophies &amp; hs, Nationwide tnsuranre, Ohio Rloer
: Bear, Ohio \!illey Check Cashing &amp; Loan, Overbrook Center, l'eoplet ,Bank.of Mlddlepo/1 &amp;:
i l'ome~, Pepsi, Pizza Hut, Pomeroy Flower Shop, Pomeroy Food Shop, PoweU.,
, Prescription Oxygen, Quality Print Shop, Jeff Rueter, Sam's Construction, David &amp;: Marie
; smith, Joe&amp;: Aneda Smith, Still Bill, Subway, Supr Run Flour Mill, Swisher&amp; Lohse, TNT
:Parts, 'll:noglla &amp;: Powell, 'IDn'y Canyout, VFW of Mason, ~ughans, Walman of Mason &amp;
:Galllpolb, W.yne's Place, Wheels &amp; Deals, :111d '!bur NeiJbborhood Lender.
·
,
On&lt;1: opln TlfANI YOVI
~. .

Melvin Tanthorey

'J

•

MIDDLEPORT - Max 0. Davis, 82, Middleport, died Thursday,
May II , 2000 in Holzer Medical Center.
Born Dec. 4, 1917 in Dexter, and was the son of the late Burt and
Hazel Brown Davis.
Services will be Sunday at 2 p.m. at Fisher Funeral Home in Middleport. Officiating will be the Rev.James Keesee and burial will be in
Miles Cemetery, Rudand. Friends may caU on Saturday from 2-4 p.m.
and 6-9 p.m. at the funeral home.
Masonic Rites will be conducted by the Middleport Masonic Lodg~
363 at 8:30 p.m. on Saturday.
·

DEATH NOTICE

JERRY BIBBEE

.,

MaxO. Davis

RUTLAND - Betty Marie Taylor, 70, of Rutland, died on Friday,
May 5, 2000 in St. Mary's Hospital in Huntington, West Virginia,
She was born on February 4, 1930 in Goodtown, Pennsylvania, the
daughter of the late Leroy and Grace Ohler Domer.
· She was a forme( food service employee at Kent State University
and wa_s a member of the Middleport Church of fhe Nazarene.
Survwmg are three daughters and two sons-in-law, Linda and James
Starkey ofKent,Joyce and LartyTaylor ofRudand, and Barbie Jablonski of Sterling, Virginia; a son, Dale Taylor of Langsville; nine grandchildren,Jimmy Starkey, C had Taylor, Joe Starkey, Mark Taylor, Heather
Taylor, Lisa Taylor, Joshua Jablonski, Christina Jablonski and Scott Taylor; six great-grandchildren; two brothers and sisters-in-law, Jack and
June Domer of Somerset, Pennsylvania, and Nelson and Beverly '
Domer of Conneslsville, Pennsylvania; and five .sisters and four brothers-in-law, Marion Weaver of Middleport, Marjorie and Lester Taylor
COOLVILLE - Melvin Tanthorey, 64, Coolville, died Wednesday,
of Middleport, and Ethel and Bob Baysinger, Doris and Jay Hull, GloMay 10'. 2000 inSt.Joseph's Hospital, Parkersburg, W.Va.
ria and Chuck Hall, all of ConneUsville, Pennyslvania.
He was born in Mammoth, W.Va., a son of the late John and Ida
Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by her hu~band,
Clare'!ceTaylor, in 1990; and four brothers, Vern, Glenn, Jim and Ray- DarbyTanthorey. He attended Carthage Troy High School was. retired
mond Domer.
' from American Municipal Power of Marietta, and was retired as a coServices were held on Monday, May 8, 2000 at Fisher Funeral Home o~er of CoolviUe 's Hilltop Grocery, R estaurant and Grocery.
Surviving are four children and their spouses, Debbie and Jim Allen
in Middleport, with the Rev. Allen Midcap officiating: Burial followed
in Riverview Cemetery in Middleport.
of Coolville, Cheryl and Rick Lawson ofTuppers Plains, Tim and Jill
Tanthorey of c;oolviUe, and Terry and Terry Tanthorey of Little }locking; 11 grandchildren and three great-grandchildren; a brother, Charles
Hornsby of Ramsey, W.Va.; and three sisters, Marie Lanham of Cedar
GALLIPOLIS - Mary Agnes Nelson, 82, of Gallipolis, died Thurs- Grove, Mary Brown of Fayetteville, and Frances Barber of Coolville.
day, May 11, 2000 in Rocksprings Nursing and Rehabilitation Center,
He was also preceded in death by an infant son, Stephen; five brothPomeroy.
ers, including an infant brother; and a sister.
Born September 7, 1917 in Gallipolis, daughter of the late Thomas
. Services will be I p.m.Saturday in White Funeral Home in
Comer and Janie Kingery Comer, she was a retired sales clerk for G. C. Coolville, with the Rev. Seldon Johnson and the Rev. Donna Parker
Murphy Co. and Ames, and attended Elizabeth Chapel Church.
officiating. Burial will be in Coolville Cemetery. friends may call at
. Surviving are a son and daughter-in-law,James and Saridy Nelson of the funeral home from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. today.

· from Page AI

Free plant to all Moms

Pomeroy; a daughter ,and son-in-law, Janet and Jerry Pritt of Columbus; grandchildren, WiUiam (Lisa) Shepherd of Columbus, Jean
Patridge of Columbus, Kelly Nelson of Gallipolis, Janna (Ken) VanMatre of PoiJ1eroy, Buffy (Ralph} Fowler of Pomeroy, Alesha Keney of
Pomeroy, Leo Keney ofWhiteman Air Force Base, Missouri, Lisa Davis
of Chicago, Illinois, and Gerald (Debbie) Pritt of Edwards Air Force
Base, California; and a brother, Rudy Comer of Akron.
In addition to her pa~nts, she was preceded in death by a sister,
Freda Kopchick; two brothers, Cecil Comer, and one in infancy; and a
great-granddaughter.
Services will be 11 a.m. Saturday, May 13, 2000 in Willis Funeral
Home, with the Rev. Alfred HoUey officiating. Burial will be in Centenary Cemetery. Friends may call at the fl!nef3! home from 6-8 p.m .
Friday, May 12, 2000.

•

Power

Motfier's 1Jay l~nenaL

FOR GREAT SERVICE BEFORE

Murder plea nets prison time
: · DAYTON (AP) -A inan who pleaded guilty to the murder
of a former co-worker was sentenced to 20 yean to life in prison.
Craig Benton, 35, of Dayton, entered the plea and was senrenced Thursday in the fatal shooting of Amanda Massie, also of
Cayton. Massie, 23, wauhot twice in the head on Oct. 17,1999,
~ her apartment.
:. Neither assistant prosecutor David Franceschelli nor defense
'(ttorney Richard Nystrom offered an account of' what led to
lylassie's death.
·
·
• Tracey Ballard, co-counsel with Pranceschelli, said Benton's
Matements to police did not match th'! physical evidence.
: Massie's friend, Kate Crum, speculated after the sentencing that
the motive may have involve~ money Massie had lent Benton.
: Benton surrendered to authorities on an unrelated charge a few
4ays after the shooting.
·
: In addition to the murder charge, Benton also pleaded guilty
Thursday to two counts of tampering with evidence and two
c;:ounts of having a weapon while under restrictions from two
~revious convictions.

Sturtz, the Columbus lawyer who
']lUt together a trust ·so the 13
. could claim their winnings
anonymously.
Sturtz won't. ~reveal the winners' names, 'but does say they all
live in the are~.
Until this week;s Big Game
· jaclcpot of $363 million, the
"Lucky 13" had ·WOn ·America's
largest lottery prize.

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

Friday, May 12, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

P8ge A 2 • The O.lly Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

I

i['

�l.• . . . . . . . . . . . .

•

..

~~· ,.

Friday, May 12, 2000

BUCKEYE BRIEFS

OBITUARIES

-·Court offers little guidance to lawmakers

Burglar guilty In ·womanrs death
· SPRINGFIELD (AP) - A jury has found a burglar guilty of
scaring a 79-year-old woman to death.
. The sound of breaking glass and the sight of a.n intruder kicking in her kitchen door last Feb. I sent Mary Virginia Jones
screaming into the night.
. Mter reaching a neighbor's house,Jones suffered a heart attack
and was hospitalized. She died 27 days later.
Clark County prosecutors said occasional handyman Clarence
Farmer, 39, was responsible f1&gt;r Jane's' death. The jury agreed on
Thursday and found .Farmer guilty of involuntary mansla!lghter,
addition to burglary.
"He put ' her into the hospital," Assistant Prosecutor David
Smith said. "He put her through hell. He didn't mean to kill her.
I don't meao that. I mean he should be held responsible for his
actions."
·
Common Pleas Judge Richard O'Neill will sentence Farmer
on May 23. He faces up to 18 years in prison.
.· ]C?nes' daughter, Judy McFadden of Columbus, said her mother befriended Farmer and paid him to weed, mow and perform
other odd jobs around her house.
Jones also always made sure Farmer went home with a full
s_tomach, she said. ·
· "That was my mother. She c.o uld not cook a meal in her home
and not invite you to eat."
If her mother had one fault, it was that she was too trusting,
·
McFadden said.

in

1

..

Accidents kill 1r injure trooper
SANDUSKY (AP) -A motorist was killed and several' other
people injured, including a state trooper. in separate but related
accidents on the Ohio Turnpike early Friday, the State Highway
Patrol said.
· The patrol said preliminary reports indicated ·a patrol cruiser
that was stopped on the berm with another car was struck from
~ehind by a third vehicle.
' , Apparently, an occupant of that vehicle stepped out onto the
l)ighway and was hit by another car, patrol spokesman Lt.- John
J;lorn said. That person was killed, Born said.
,;, The dead and injured were not identified immediately. Born
said the injured were taken to area hospitals, but their conditions
were not known.

Hospital shooter dies
. DELAWARE (AP) -A man who shot himself in the head at
Grady Memorial Hospital after handing an admissions' clerk a
i)ote died Thursday at Riverside Methodist Hospital in Columbus.
.. Greg Houston, 46, of Delaware, walked up to the registration
desk Wednesday night and handed an envelope to the clerk. He
lhen said, "Don't worry, I won't hurt you," placed a .22-caliber
handgun to his head and shot himself, said Delaware police Capt.
Mark Drum.
• lnsige the envelope was a note detailing Houston's organ donation plan and financial information regarding his funeral. It did
not say why Houston wanted to kill himself, Drum said.

COLUMBUS (AP) -The Ohio Supreme The co11rt ordered the Legislature to
Court has again ordered the state to fix its
address the disparity in local
school-fi.mrung system. But just as it rud in
property taxes, p'i2rYgives wealthier
1997, the court offered little guidance to the
districts better schools than poorer
Legislature on how to accomplish that.
The court's 4-3 majority ruled Thursday ones, and to do so by June 15, 2001.
that although the Legislature should be
The court also found problems in
applauded for committing billions of dollars to
the school loan program, the
school construction and repair, the basic probminimum funding for each district
lems still exist as they did three years ago.
The court ordered the Legislature to
and a lack of money for new
address the disparity in local property raxes, Legislature-ordered programs. What
which gives wealthier districts better schools
the court didn't tell lawmakers was
than poorer ones, and to do so by June 15,
how to do all that.
2001. The court also found problems in the
school loan program, the minimum t\lnding in some. of the work lawmakers had done.
for each district and a Jack of money for new
· Davidson held a news conference late
Legislature-ordered programs.
Thursday,. promising that a special legislative
What the court didn't tell lawmakers was
committee. would study the court's concerns.
how to do all that, nor rud it in 1997, when it
She
said nothing critical about the court or its
found Ohio's funding formula unconstitutionjustices.
al.
The majority was careful, too, to' draw a line
In 1997, then-Gm:. George Voinovich and
of
separation among the branches of governhis Republican colleagues in the Legislature's
leadership reacted harshly to what they found ment, at least in the presentation of its opinion.
Justice Alice Robie Resnick, writing for the
to be excessive judicial activism.
J'his time, th1&gt;ugh, the reaction was mea- majority, said that in 1997, the court "did not
sured and low-key. Gov. Bob Taft, Senate Pres- require a specific funding scheme, and rud not
ident Richard Finan and House Speaker Jo instruct the General Assembly as to what legAnn Davidson, all Republicans, withheld islation should be e~acted .... The reason fot
immeruate comment on the ruling. They, this is the doctrine of separation of powers."
However, Resnick added: "Courts do poshowever, did praise the court for finding merit

Only o.ne of 'Lucky 13' ·
winners still works full-time
COLUMBUS (AP) - One of
the "Lucky 13" who won part of
the then-record $295 .7 niillion
Powerball jackpot 'hasn't been
spoiled by wealth. He's still ~ark­
mg.
Six 'll(orkers have retired from
Automation Tooling Systems iq
suburban Westerville. Six others
have. left their machine shop jobs
for other opportu.nities, said Larry

sess the ,uthority to enforce their orders, since.
the power to declare a particular law or enactment unconstitutional must include the power
to require a revision .of that enactment, ro~
ensure that is then constitutional:'
As "guidance;' the majority defined the·
specifics of a "thorough and efficient" educa..l;ion, as required by the Ohio Constitution, ~t
offered no way "to achieve theln. .,
'
Sen. Gene Watts is a Du blln Rep uBlica It
who once introduced a resolution ihar woufd,
have asked· voters to give the Legislature finil\
say on school-funding matters. He said th¢·
court's Intent had not changed since 1997;
despite Resnick's bow to the separation &lt;,\t
powers.
..
"The majority tried consciously to adopt
that to)'le, but clearly they cotitinue to, anq
egreglou~y so, usurp the Legislative functio~ .
They're telling us what to do," said Watts, who
· is leaving the Legislature after 16 years becaus~ ·
of term limits.
.
Another veteran of the school-funding case
said the court stopped short of that. John Goff
was the state superintendent from 1995 to
1998 and presided over changes ordered by the
Legislature to satisfY the court's 1997 ruling.. . .
"I don't know how much more the couq
needs to say. I don't think the court should be
in the business of telling them which tax tq
raise;' Goff said from Hilton Head Island, S.C.·1
where he now lives.

Bring Mom to

MOM'S SMORGASBORD
138 Wdshingion .Street

Ravenswood, WV

6.99

Sunday Buffet· all you can.eat 1
Menu includes: Glazed Ham, Baked Steak, Fried Chicken,
Scall1&gt;ped Potatoes, and assorted vegetables
includes Soup, Salad &amp; Desseri Bar. .

Don't·fo~ Friday Night SeaJ~ Buffet 19.99

AND i·A~. TER

THE SAL

Mary Agnes Nelson

'jour direction in life. Tough times
clon't last, tough people do."
; Audience members also participated in a dance contest, while
several students took the opportunity to perform alongside the
Power Team during one of their
many demonstrations.
; Personal success stories were
also shared with students .during
the remainder of th~ team's program .
The power teams visit was
made possible by funds that were
ilonated by the Meigs County
Sheriff's Office, the Meigs Coun~ Prosecutor's Office, God's
NET in Pomeroy, Racine United

The Daily Sentinel
(USJ'S 113·H0)

Ol!lo V1llt1 hbllo~loa Co,
Publitlled every 1fternoan, Monday lhrou,p
Prldly, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
Ohio Valley Publi1llina Comp•ny., Pomeroy,
Ohro 45769, Ph. 992·21$6. S«ond cla11 po1t·
aze ptld at Pomeroy, Ohio.

Melaber. The Auociated Preu, and the Ohio
Newspaper Auociatian.
·
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MAILSUBSCRimONS

r-MtlpCoooty
t3 W.Cts................................................. $21.30
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szw.cu...............................................SI0$-'6

1996 LINCOLN

Rl1et Outl6de Melli CHI(Y
13 Weeb............................................. .... S29.2S
Z6 Wecb................................................. $56.68
S2 Week&gt;.................................. .............$109.72

. 1996 CHEVY K 1500
·Silverado, 350, Auto, Air Cond., AMJFM Cass.,
All Power, Fiberglass TonneaU; One Owner

Reader Services
O•r Mala ceacen 11 all 1toria It to be
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It'" bow oft• error ,•• ....,.,

c:all tlte lliel"lf'OOIII at (1..0) 991-11.5$. We wll
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Wilson's Army Surplus
Storewide.Sale

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Otller Se"k:n

1994DODGE
Ram 1500 4x4,. V8, Auto, Air Cond.,·
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36198.Peachfork Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio
1-740-992-7007

u.s. 33

from Page AI ·

share a co mmon goal work
together," Story said. "People
from throughout the r~gi1:1n saw
how important this project is to
all of us, and crossed county lines
to get things done."
Story said that proactive work
on promoting the project began
at a meeting in April, 1991, with
Elizabeth Schaad, Meigs County's
first full-time economic development director, Bruce Reed , then
of Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Co.,
and Lenny Eliason, a former
Middleport businessman who
who now serves as an Athens
County commissioner. A meeting
with ODOT District 10 leaders

Cl~lalloa.................- ........._ ...... Ext.1103
'Ciuolllod Ads.......... - .. :.. ................ DLIIOO

1995 FORD F250
Supercab 4X2, XLT, 7 .3L Oieaal, Auto, Air Cond.,
AMJFM Case .. Tilt, Crulae, All Power

AEP-36'•
Akzo-42
AmTech/SBC- 4~.
Ashland Inc. - 3571111
AT&amp;T -35't.
Bank One - 30l.
Bob Evans- 13'·
BorgWarner- 43~.
Champlon-3
Charming Shops - 6),
City Holding- 12't.
Federal Mogul- 12l.
Flrstar- 24'!;

~TOCKS

Gannett - 60'•
General Electric - 50'1.
Harley Davidson - 41 ~.
Kmart .- 7~

Kroger - 20':.
Lands End - 40).
Ud .- 49~
Oak Hill Financial - 15
OVB-29),
One V&amp;Hey - 34),
Peoples
Premier - 7'•
Rockwell - 38).

-17'•

Rocky Boots- 5~
RDShell - 61
Sears - 39
Shoney's - l.
Wai·Mart - 56
Wendy's ""- 22).
Worthington -11).
Dally stock reports are the
4 p.m. closing quotes of,
the previous day's transactions, provided by
Advest of Gallipolis.

VALLEY WEATHER ._

Storms possible for tonight
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Unseasonably warm and
unstable air could produce thunderstorm in the tri-county area
tonight - some of them possibly
severe, forecasters said.
But the weather situation wiU
change dramatically. once a low
pressure system passed through
the area.
Following highs near 90
degrees today, temperatures won't
climb out of the 70s on Saturday
and likely will remain in the 60s
on Sunday.
Sunset tonight will be at 8:38
p.m. and sunrise on Saturday at
6:18a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight...Partly cloudy during
the evening, ~hen mostly cloudy

was held a month later.
Business and community leaders from Athens, Hockingand
Fairfield counties, and Jackson
County, W.Va., later joined the
effort to push the project through
the state channels, Story said.
At that time, "there was no project," Story said, noting that any
environmental studies which had
been completed on the project
were worthless, because they
. were completed prior to most
environmental regulations being
put into place.
"We saw what other corridor
committees had done, and decided we could accomplish the same
objectives," Story said, noting t,hat
committees for U.S. 32, U.S. 35,
and other major road projects had
been successful in encouraging
state funrung.
The Ravenswood Connector
project has been diviped into
three phases, and will be sold to
bidders in FY 2002, 2003 and
2004.
The first phase of that project
'fill be funded at $33.1 miUion,
the second at $21.3 million, and
the third at $21.1 million. ·
Three of four projects needed
to complete the Columbus-toCharleston, W.Va. "Capital Corridor" are now funded and at various stages: the Ravenswood Connector, the Athens-to-Oarwin
project, and a Lancaster bypass,
Only the Nelsonville bypass
remains unfunded, but Story said
that he expects it to be approved
eventuaUy, now that discussions
· are underway with state highway
officials and members of the business community in Nelsonville,
who have objected to the p·roject.

with a chance of showers and
thunderstorms after midnight.
Lows in the mid and upper 60s,
Southwest wind 10 to 15 mph.
Chance of rain 50 percent.
Saturday... A chance of showers
and thunderstorms until midmorning, otherwise partly cloudy.
Not as hot with highs around .80.
Chance of rain 40 percent.
Saturday night. .. Pardy cloudy.
Lows in the mid 50s.
.Extended forecast:
Sunday... Partly cloudy. Highs
·in the lower 70s.
Monday... Partly cloudy, Lows
in the lower 50s and highs in the
lower 70s.
Tuesday... Partly cloudy. Lows
in the mid 50s and highs in the
r.nJd 70s.

,

Aclt~er111t.... ...-...-...- -..-·..-·..... Elt. 1104

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

Right to Life
meeting

sale on Saturday, beginning at 8:30
a.m.

POMEROY - Meigs County
Right to Life will meet on Monday at 7:30 p.m. at the Pomeroy
Library. The public is welcome.

'D'ustees to meet.
LETART - Letart Township
Trustees will meet Monday, 5 p.m
at the builrung.

Bake sale set
TUPPERS PLAINS -Tuppers
Plains Volunteer Fire Department
Ladies' Auxiliary will have a bake

cancellation
event set
SYRACUSE - Syracuse Post
Office will have a special pictorial
cancellation of the B~t Cancer
R esearch stamp on Tuesday.
The Postal Service's Breast Cancer Research stamp has raised $11
million in the past year to help
fight the rusease.
The semi-postal stamp sells for
40 ce nts, with net proceeds being
donated to research.
The sta;JtP will go ofT sale on
July 29.

Stutter

Then each person's specific primary and secondary behaviors
need to be identified.
··
Therapies include relaxation
from Page AI
techniques, decreasing the emo,
a boss, then the tension makes tiona! stress around the subject:s
him stutter more. When he stut- avoidances, deep breathing, "easy
ters, that makes the person they onset" techniques (taking a full
are talking with tense_ Then the breath and initiating that first
stutterer realizes that person is sound more slowly) and maintense which makes him even taining eye contact.
more nervous which, in turn ,
"These strategies are designed
to begin at their level of need in
intensifies the stuttering.
But there is hope.
hopes that they will carry over
Treatments include first to be into their daily communications.
diagnosed and educated .
thu s aUowing them to control
"It's both physiological and their stutter enough to lead pro::.
ductive lives," Sisson said.
emotional:' Sisson said.

Cheer
from
AI ·
Page

Melia Whan also won a first
place trophy in the inruvidualjazz
dance division and was awarded a
college .scholarship.
.,
The trip.to North Carolina was
made possible by donations from
more than 50 local businesses and
individuals who contributed to
'
the expenses.
Prior to going to the . national
contest, the cheerleaders participated in several area competitions.
• They took first place at
Southwestern Elementary contests in February;
• First place at the Rio Grande

IPIW:GVMllY CIIHMA
446 •4524

1
1 lo''''I 11
1,
fo.

&lt; !ill ~!

U.S. Cheerleading Federation
Regional Competition in February, qualifYing them to go to
nationals in North Carolina, with
Melia Whap also taki,Jg first in
individual dance;
• First place in March contests
at Kyger Creek Middle School,
where they also were overall
champions.

I

'

FRIS/12 • THURS 5/18/00

lOX Offla Will OPEN AT

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
ConceDed?
Rejlded?
Accidents?

Tickets?
New Driver?

• Sunday, May 14, 2000
I p.m. - ~other's Day Tea

JERRY ·B .IB.B .EE
Phone
740-992 ~ 2196
www~errybibbee.com

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e Monday, May 15, ZOllO
Dress-Up Day
10 am. - 2p.m. -Quilt Shoiv
I p.m. - Proclamalion
Zp.m. -All Day Bingo

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Ave.
Middleport

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a.m. - Beans &amp; Cornbread
Rooster &amp; Pig calling Contests
II

e1'ednesdiy, MaY 17, ZOllO

Western Day
I0 a.m ... Cake Walk

I p.m. · Hula Hoop Contest
2 p.m. •Banana Sptit Sale

e Thursday, May 18, 2000
jeans Day
1 p.m. - Ice Cream Social
4:30p.m. -Car Show
HotDogs, Pop &amp;. Popcorn Sold

AU AGES, AIL TIMlS S4.00

• Friday, May 19, ZOllO
1h~k Is 111111~ klllltrlll.
1M IWfl lldlril#ts 111 boiHir of
Hawaiian Day
10 a.m. -Scavenger Hnnt NMioul Nllrlilfl Hmilf w.
All nnb ~rill
11 a.m. •Grllied Chicken
Ylllky N!lmr~g &amp;
1 p.m. -Pie Eallng Contest
RtWIIIWioll Cellln, toc.lttlll
2 p.m. -Gospel Sing
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(304) 675-5236

Pleasant Valley
Nursing&amp;
Rehabilitation
Center

•

•

•

,

.

•

•

I.

LOCAL BRIEFS

Celebrating National Nursing Home Week

.1'0°/o Off
Moy 16 - May 20
May23-27

Methodist Church and North
Pa~kersburg
(W.Va.)
Baptist
Church.
"We travel the globe in hopes
of raising students' self-esteem,"
added Tauaefa. "This generation's
children, labeled Generation
Xers, are made to feel inferior
and are told that they cannot fulfill their dreams. The Power Team
is hear to let them know that
with positive attitudes, anything
can be accomplished."
The Power Team's elaborate
night show, which showcases a
more intense display of strength
and power, can be seen .Friday
· through Sunday at North Parkersburg . Baptist Church, 3109
Emerson Ave., Parkersburg. The
program will begin each night at
7. A $2 donation is requested at
the door.
·

.LOCAL

IPO'•".,

.. • Bndbury Ydlow Jleket think lhae
tbdr ChampiouldpAAB Cutting CeUar, AcquiJidons jewelry, Always &amp; Formr Gift Shoppe, American Legion
of Mlddlepon, Anderson's Furniture, ·Perk and Vlcti Ault, Baer's Marlret, Bibbee Fotd, Bob's
Madctt, Mike &amp; MIIIJie Boceen, Body Fantasiet, Brosan .t Wuner, Clarb Jew.lry, Cleland
Realty, Computer Fmnnnance UPifadet, Court Strftt Bar &amp; Grill, Crow a Crow, Crow's
Steal&lt; House (ICFC), Dally Sentinel, Dominoes Pizza, Doo lite Motors, Downing ChUds
. MuU~n Mu,..r, Dr. Hunter, Family Dollar, Fanner's Bank, For the Botb of'lbu Beauly Shop,
"':111h, ~rest Run Ready Mix, Gheen's Painting .t Company, Bri:111 Gibbs, H&amp; R Block,
Hubbard s Green House, Jimmy's Spons Bar, Key Moton, Margie LaWson D.D.S, Charles &amp;
~Judy Lee, Locker 219, McOonaids, Middlepon Church ofChrist· Family UrC Center,
: M1ddlepon Laundry Mat, Middlepon Trophies &amp; hs, Nationwide tnsuranre, Ohio Rloer
: Bear, Ohio \!illey Check Cashing &amp; Loan, Overbrook Center, l'eoplet ,Bank.of Mlddlepo/1 &amp;:
i l'ome~, Pepsi, Pizza Hut, Pomeroy Flower Shop, Pomeroy Food Shop, PoweU.,
, Prescription Oxygen, Quality Print Shop, Jeff Rueter, Sam's Construction, David &amp;: Marie
; smith, Joe&amp;: Aneda Smith, Still Bill, Subway, Supr Run Flour Mill, Swisher&amp; Lohse, TNT
:Parts, 'll:noglla &amp;: Powell, 'IDn'y Canyout, VFW of Mason, ~ughans, Walman of Mason &amp;
:Galllpolb, W.yne's Place, Wheels &amp; Deals, :111d '!bur NeiJbborhood Lender.
·
,
On&lt;1: opln TlfANI YOVI
~. .

Melvin Tanthorey

'J

•

MIDDLEPORT - Max 0. Davis, 82, Middleport, died Thursday,
May II , 2000 in Holzer Medical Center.
Born Dec. 4, 1917 in Dexter, and was the son of the late Burt and
Hazel Brown Davis.
Services will be Sunday at 2 p.m. at Fisher Funeral Home in Middleport. Officiating will be the Rev.James Keesee and burial will be in
Miles Cemetery, Rudand. Friends may caU on Saturday from 2-4 p.m.
and 6-9 p.m. at the funeral home.
Masonic Rites will be conducted by the Middleport Masonic Lodg~
363 at 8:30 p.m. on Saturday.
·

DEATH NOTICE

JERRY BIBBEE

.,

MaxO. Davis

RUTLAND - Betty Marie Taylor, 70, of Rutland, died on Friday,
May 5, 2000 in St. Mary's Hospital in Huntington, West Virginia,
She was born on February 4, 1930 in Goodtown, Pennsylvania, the
daughter of the late Leroy and Grace Ohler Domer.
· She was a forme( food service employee at Kent State University
and wa_s a member of the Middleport Church of fhe Nazarene.
Survwmg are three daughters and two sons-in-law, Linda and James
Starkey ofKent,Joyce and LartyTaylor ofRudand, and Barbie Jablonski of Sterling, Virginia; a son, Dale Taylor of Langsville; nine grandchildren,Jimmy Starkey, C had Taylor, Joe Starkey, Mark Taylor, Heather
Taylor, Lisa Taylor, Joshua Jablonski, Christina Jablonski and Scott Taylor; six great-grandchildren; two brothers and sisters-in-law, Jack and
June Domer of Somerset, Pennsylvania, and Nelson and Beverly '
Domer of Conneslsville, Pennsylvania; and five .sisters and four brothers-in-law, Marion Weaver of Middleport, Marjorie and Lester Taylor
COOLVILLE - Melvin Tanthorey, 64, Coolville, died Wednesday,
of Middleport, and Ethel and Bob Baysinger, Doris and Jay Hull, GloMay 10'. 2000 inSt.Joseph's Hospital, Parkersburg, W.Va.
ria and Chuck Hall, all of ConneUsville, Pennyslvania.
He was born in Mammoth, W.Va., a son of the late John and Ida
Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by her hu~band,
Clare'!ceTaylor, in 1990; and four brothers, Vern, Glenn, Jim and Ray- DarbyTanthorey. He attended Carthage Troy High School was. retired
mond Domer.
' from American Municipal Power of Marietta, and was retired as a coServices were held on Monday, May 8, 2000 at Fisher Funeral Home o~er of CoolviUe 's Hilltop Grocery, R estaurant and Grocery.
Surviving are four children and their spouses, Debbie and Jim Allen
in Middleport, with the Rev. Allen Midcap officiating: Burial followed
in Riverview Cemetery in Middleport.
of Coolville, Cheryl and Rick Lawson ofTuppers Plains, Tim and Jill
Tanthorey of c;oolviUe, and Terry and Terry Tanthorey of Little }locking; 11 grandchildren and three great-grandchildren; a brother, Charles
Hornsby of Ramsey, W.Va.; and three sisters, Marie Lanham of Cedar
GALLIPOLIS - Mary Agnes Nelson, 82, of Gallipolis, died Thurs- Grove, Mary Brown of Fayetteville, and Frances Barber of Coolville.
day, May 11, 2000 in Rocksprings Nursing and Rehabilitation Center,
He was also preceded in death by an infant son, Stephen; five brothPomeroy.
ers, including an infant brother; and a sister.
Born September 7, 1917 in Gallipolis, daughter of the late Thomas
. Services will be I p.m.Saturday in White Funeral Home in
Comer and Janie Kingery Comer, she was a retired sales clerk for G. C. Coolville, with the Rev. Seldon Johnson and the Rev. Donna Parker
Murphy Co. and Ames, and attended Elizabeth Chapel Church.
officiating. Burial will be in Coolville Cemetery. friends may call at
. Surviving are a son and daughter-in-law,James and Saridy Nelson of the funeral home from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. today.

· from Page AI

Free plant to all Moms

Pomeroy; a daughter ,and son-in-law, Janet and Jerry Pritt of Columbus; grandchildren, WiUiam (Lisa) Shepherd of Columbus, Jean
Patridge of Columbus, Kelly Nelson of Gallipolis, Janna (Ken) VanMatre of PoiJ1eroy, Buffy (Ralph} Fowler of Pomeroy, Alesha Keney of
Pomeroy, Leo Keney ofWhiteman Air Force Base, Missouri, Lisa Davis
of Chicago, Illinois, and Gerald (Debbie) Pritt of Edwards Air Force
Base, California; and a brother, Rudy Comer of Akron.
In addition to her pa~nts, she was preceded in death by a sister,
Freda Kopchick; two brothers, Cecil Comer, and one in infancy; and a
great-granddaughter.
Services will be 11 a.m. Saturday, May 13, 2000 in Willis Funeral
Home, with the Rev. Alfred HoUey officiating. Burial will be in Centenary Cemetery. Friends may call at the fl!nef3! home from 6-8 p.m .
Friday, May 12, 2000.

•

Power

Motfier's 1Jay l~nenaL

FOR GREAT SERVICE BEFORE

Murder plea nets prison time
: · DAYTON (AP) -A inan who pleaded guilty to the murder
of a former co-worker was sentenced to 20 yean to life in prison.
Craig Benton, 35, of Dayton, entered the plea and was senrenced Thursday in the fatal shooting of Amanda Massie, also of
Cayton. Massie, 23, wauhot twice in the head on Oct. 17,1999,
~ her apartment.
:. Neither assistant prosecutor David Franceschelli nor defense
'(ttorney Richard Nystrom offered an account of' what led to
lylassie's death.
·
·
• Tracey Ballard, co-counsel with Pranceschelli, said Benton's
Matements to police did not match th'! physical evidence.
: Massie's friend, Kate Crum, speculated after the sentencing that
the motive may have involve~ money Massie had lent Benton.
: Benton surrendered to authorities on an unrelated charge a few
4ays after the shooting.
·
: In addition to the murder charge, Benton also pleaded guilty
Thursday to two counts of tampering with evidence and two
c;:ounts of having a weapon while under restrictions from two
~revious convictions.

Sturtz, the Columbus lawyer who
']lUt together a trust ·so the 13
. could claim their winnings
anonymously.
Sturtz won't. ~reveal the winners' names, 'but does say they all
live in the are~.
Until this week;s Big Game
· jaclcpot of $363 million, the
"Lucky 13" had ·WOn ·America's
largest lottery prize.

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

Friday, May 12, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

P8ge A 2 • The O.lly Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

I

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_rh_e_n_ai..::..Iy_Se_nti_·n_ei_ _ _ _ _ _.,...__O.;;:;

pinion

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PageA4

_Jh_e_D_a_ily;;..._Se_n_tin_e_l

Friday. May 12. 2000

).

Bend

Page AS
Friday, May 12, 2000

Dad disagreeS with wife about adult sons that live at home

The D~ily Sentinel
'EstaDfislid In 1948

Dear Ann Landers: My wife and I
cannot agree on what to do about our
sons. They are 19 and 21 years of age,
both have good jobs, and they live at
home with no plans to move out that
we know of.
My wife insists on doing everything
for "her boys ," which includes cooking
their meals, cleaning their rooms, and
doing their laundry. They contribute a
modest amount for rent, but give us
nothing beyond that. My wife says they
. are adults and can do as they please. I
say they are living in our house, and
ought to assume some of the domestic
responsibilities.
:I work overtime to pay the household bills, and should not have to do
ex~ra work at home wllen there are
able-bodied adults around. I absolutely
refuse to fold laundry while my grown
sons are lounging on the sofa watclling
television. My w.ife also works full time,
and is wearing herself out taking care of
these lazy bums, eliminating any chance

111 Court Sl, Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992-2156 • Fax: 992-2157

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charlea W. Govey
Publlaher
Charlene Hoeftlch
General Mtlnager

R. Shawn Lewla

Managh1g Editor
Diane Kay Hill
Controller

Lllny Boyer

Advertlelng Director

n,

L.tttn to ''" eliror,. wkollft.
,,.,14 H ,_, rlla11 JIJD worrll. AU,.,., .,.,. t llb}«t
to crdltiltJ omi11Uul H •1J111d •lfli lltciiUI• .UNa 11M t#ll,luHr•lnlatbn. No tuU/fPJH Matrt wiU
H pu/Jitsllld. Ltam 1MNU H Ill ~0011 ,.,,,, Ullrfltllll
110t ,ffRHir"dn.
n. opiNiolts upn11H u. ,,., "CWe•~tiMiow .,.. tA• ceM•••u oftlu 011111 ~ Pdlllltillr
Co. ';r ulil0rltllllot;u4. "'"'" odttrwLtct •«M

lu'"'•

OHIO VIEWS

Overdue

•

Cut in state income tax
long time in coming
A look at
what state
newspapers
are sayrng

'

:TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Friday, May 12, the 133rd day of2000. There are 233 days
Jeft in the year.
, Today's Highlight in History:
· On May 12, 1820, the founder of modern nursing, florence
1
Nightingale, was born in Florence, Italy.
:. On this date:
In I 870, Manitoba entered Confederation as a Canadian province.
In .1932. the body of the kidnapped son of Charles and Anne Lind)&gt;ergh was found in a wooded area of HopeWell, NJ. ·
. In 1937, Britain's ~ George \1 was crowned at Westminster
.
Abbey.
: In 1943, during World War U, Axis forces in North Afrita surrendered.
·
·
: In 1949, th~ Soviet Union announced an end to the Berlin Blockade.
: In 1965, West Gerrm;ny and Israel exchanged letters establishing
):liplomatic relations.
·
·
: In 1970, the Senate voted unanimously to confinn Harry A. Black:mun as a Supreme Court justice.
· In 1975, the White House announced the new Cambodian government had seized an American merchant ship, the Mayaguez, in inter·
national waters.
' In 1978, the Commerce Department said hurricanes would no
longer be given only female names.
In I '.182, in Fatima, PortUgal, security guards overpowered a Spanish
priest who was trying to reach Pope John Paul !I armed with a bayont:t.

Ten years ago:The presidents of Estonia, Latvia and LithUania forged
a united front by reviving a 1934 politic:j) alliance in hopes of enhancing their ~ive for independence fi:om the Soviet Union.
Today's Birthdays: Actress Katharine Hepburn is 93. Journalist
Howard K. Smith 86. Critic John Simon 75. Baseball Hall-ofFarner Yogi · Berra is 75. Composer Burt Bacharach is 7 I. Talk show
host Tom Snyder is 64. Comedian George Carlin is 63.Actress Millie
Perkins is 62. Former White 1-Iouse press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler
is 61. Country singer Billy Swan is 58. Actress Linda Dano is 57. Musician Jan Me Lagan is ?5. Actress Lindsay Crouse is 52. Singer-musician
Steve Winwood is 52. Actor Gabriel Byrne is 50.Actor 13ruce Boxleitner is 50. Singer Billy Squier is 50. Country singer Kix Brooks is 4 .
Actress Kim Greist is 42. Actor Ving Rhames is 39. Rock musician
Billy Duffy is 39. Actor Emilio Estevez is 38. Actress Vanessa WiUiams
(formerly on "Melrose Place") is 37.

a

•

a

ADVICE
for us to enj'oy time together as a couple.
I have tried to set some guidelines,
but no one pays any attention to them.
What can be done about this galling
situation?- Overworked Dad in New
York
Dear Overworked Dad: The cards
are stacked against you, and your wife is
holding the deck. Relief might come
when one or both of the "lazy bums"
meets some unsuspecting young
woman and decides to move out- and
probably move in with a woman who

'S OCIETY NEWS

•111•

Onclnnetl Enquirer: It looks ~ though the Ohio General Assembly soon will enact a permanent cut in state income taxeS.
They're long overdue. Ohio's per capita
income is 5 percent below the national
average, while its personal income tax burden is. eighth highest in the nation, according to a Clemson University study.
In the past tWo decades, Ohio's income.
•
tax has grown five times faster than personal income and 50 times faster than its population, the Buckeye Institute reported last
month. High taxes hamper the state's ability to attract businesses and
add good-paying jobs, Buckeye and other groups have argued. .
•o.yton O.lly News: About 20,000 fourth-graders ... haven't
·come dose to passing the state's fourth-grade reading proficiency test.
' Unless the state invests in programs to help these children, Ohio's
·touted Fourth Grade Guarantee may be ensuring failure for these students in 2002. In two years, state law mandates that fourth-graders
-(with certain ·exceptions) cannot be promoted to the fifth grade until
.they pass the test.
Wisely, the Children's Defense Fund-Ohio does ·not recommend
dropping the Fourth Grade Guarantee. Instead, it proposes that the
state invest in success - not in punishment.
Among many proposals, the group recommends the state .monitor
-and assess students for reading abilities in first, second and third grades.
It s.uggests beginning with today's second-graders by supporting special courses - offered alter school, on Satu~ and during summers.
This report shows clearly that a Fourth Grade ·Guarantee cannot
merely be a slogan. It must also be an investment.
• 'l1le (llcladot ll1d1: A federal commission formed to resolve
issues involving Internet taxes has failed to reach a consensus, but Congress still has time to pass worthwhile legislation to spur e-business.
The 19-member Advisory Commission on Electronic Commerce
came ·up with an anti-tax report written by 10 pro-business members,
but the document appears to have been crafted more to make a politIcal point than out of genuine concern for solving important e-commerce 1ssues.
· Despite .disagreement on the issue of levying sales taxes on goods
purchased over the World Wide Web, most commission members
reportedly back three key proposals: a ban on taxing Internet access;
'repeal of the 3 percent telephone excise tax enacted in 1898 to finance
the Spanish-American War; and a five-year extension of the current
Tederal ban on new or discriminatory Internet taxes.
: Despite its defects, the report has ratcheted up the debate on e-comrnerce and identified some issues on which Congress could take quick
)lction. In that respect, the panel's year-long work wasn't a total loss.

Ann
Landers

will also do the cooking and cleaning. that rarely receives recqgnition) to
Your wife would be doing her sons a rehabilitate people to their fullest funchuge favor if she gave them three tional levels .
weeks ' notice to find other lodging and
Please give credit to each of these
learn to fend for themselves.
disciplines. so your readers will stop
Dear Ann Landen: This is in thinking of them all as "physical theraresponse to the letter from "Grateful py."We do a variety of things, and work
Parents in Illinois;' who praised the together to achieve the best results. If
benefits of physical and occupational you print this Jetter, it will make every
therapy services for their son. Unfortu- occupational and speech therapist in
nately, the letter discussed OIIIY physical the country proud. - Sue in New York
Dear Sue: Here's your letter. It's the
therapy techniques.
I am an occupational therapist. We least I can do for those people who give
work in rehabilitation centers, hospitals, of themselves so generously, and make
nursing homes, outpatient clinics, early- such a huge difference in the lives of so
intervention centers and schools. Occu- many. Thanks for sending up the flag.
Dear Ann Landers: Here's another
pational therapy helps teach the "jobs"
of daily life. We help people learn to one for yo ur stu pid crooks file. It
feed themselves, dress themselves, appeared in many Texas papers. Please
shower, get the mail, drive a car, and so print it. -Joyce in Pearland, Texas
Dear Joyce: It's 'a thigh-slapper, all
on. Our goal is to help people regain
these "occupations," in and effort to right. You were good to send it on .
Someone broke into a Corpus
make them as independent as possible.
We work closely witll physical and Christi, Texas, warehouse and stole a
speech therapists (another· discipline Coca-Cola van. According to police,

...·.....

THINK TANK

Facts don't prove boys are the privileged sex
(Editor's note: Ben IM!tteuberg is workiug 011 a
PBS special titled "Tire First Measured Century,"
wlliclr will be broadcast in the fall. Until thm, we
are retitling Iris coll11nn "Think Tank." Bm will
continue to write the column up to trvice n month,
and the remaining columtrs will be written by guest
contributors. Taday's guest columnist, Karl Zinsmeister, is editor-i~r-clriif of The America.r Enterprise and a frequent participant on Ben's "Tirink
Tank" program on PBS.)

receive them.
The writer Leon Podles has phrased it
this way: "Put a boy in a school with a curriculum designed for g'irls and taught by
women whose main desire in life is that boys
behave like girls," and you've got a recipe for
failure.
The idea that there might be specifically
male tendencies toward aggressiveness, stoicism, shorter attention span, lower verbal
and relational skills, higher spatial and logi!Jv KARL ZINSMEISTER
cal skills, and so forth, and chat society
We sometimes hear claitns that . males are should accept and work with these tendenthe privileged sex. The facts, however, don't cies, has in many places become politically
wholly square with that.
incorrect. If boys act differently from girls,
Boys outnumber girls by more than 2 to too many liberal educators believe, that's an
1 in special education classes. Communica- individual defect to be cured.
tion disabilities such as stuttering and
It would be unfair to blame all .the stress-,n
dyslexia are several times more prevalent
es on boys today on overzealous feminism.
among males than females . Reading blockBut those feminists . who rail against everyages and other learning problems are three
thing from professi.lnal sports to toy swords
to five times as common. Male1 are more
(sometimes With the best of intentions) are
often color-blind and left-handed and suffer
more night terrors. They are three times as surely part of the problem. Rather than fantasizing that all boys, can be re-made into '
likely to be autistic, and they experience ·
much more schizophrenia, hyperactiviry, pliant, expressive, non-violent little model
delinquency, suicide and homicide than students, we ought tQ be seeking ways to
females. They are more likely to be homo- direct male rambunctiousness into construetive uses.
sexual.
That will often require that boys be
One expert has described the male as "a
bundle of energies that is always threatening · exposed to more authentic masculinity, not
to disintegrate. The female is much more less. After all , the most dangerous boys in
stable and secure." So anyone arguing that America are those .raised in our inner-city
males are the "higher" sex has a lot . of matriarchies. Those rap anthems about
thumping wom en come out of a world
explaining to do.
Males may not be better; but they are dif- wholly devoid of male authority.
To compensate for the shortage of male
ferent . Which is where an important new
book called "The War Against Boys," by exemplars in inner cities we should experiChristina Hoff Sommers, a colleague of ment with str'ict, all-male, urban boarding
mine at the American Enterprise Institute, schools. Perhaps these could be staffed by
comes in. Sommers argues that our feminist- deco mmissioned military officers -- who
influenced cultural establishment has too know something about ·how to· build disci often refused to . accept that boys and girls pline and productivity in restless young
are not the same, with the result that many charges.
young boys are now · ill-matched to the
J\las, recent efforts to set up even fairly
schools and other social institutions that conventional schools for endangered boys

....-..
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.

have often been squashed by feminist absJ)..::
lutism. A few years ago I interviewed tl}e;
principals of two elementary schools tl}:i~
Detroit and Milwaukee had tried to establish
specifically for troubled inner-city boys.:
These were smart, tough, black men tryi~
to address a mortal crisis in their communi:J
ties. And rhey were livid thar out-of-town:
lawsuits brought by the National Organiz~_;
tion for Women and the American Ciillf
Liberties Union had blocked their projects.
It isn't just underclass children who a~e
being hurt by the taboo against acknowl"
edging sex differences . Over the last couple
decades, fewer and fewer boys have beerj
succeeding in school. Two-thirds of U.S. kid~
who don't make it to college these days ire
male. Boys of all income groups, races an\_!
ethnicities are now less likely than compara- '
ble girls to work themselves into the college
pipeline. But it is boys from poorer families
who are particularly at risk. Among youngsters in families earning $80,000 IQ
$100,000 per year, girls are 8 percent more
likely to be on a college track than their
brothers; at family incomes of $10,000 io
$20,000, this swells to 56 percent.
':
An upshot: Only 41 percent of bachelor)
degrees will go to men by the time today~
ninth-graders leave college, according to th~
National Center for Education Statistics\
That's down from 57 percent in 1970.
"When you see the aspirations of boys
and girls at an earlier age, they're high," edu.
cator Gilberta Ramon recently told the San
Antonio Express-News. Yet, Ramon notes,
by age 18 the number of men who are still
successful and motivated sllrinks substanrially. "So something happens between the time
they have those aspirations and the time
they graduate." That "something" ought to
concern us.

(Karl Zinsmeiste; is editor of The American
Enterprise, a nntional magazine of politics, culture
and business.)
·
' .

PLAGENZ.'S. VIEW

Raise your voice in song
I wcmt to church on Easter morning, eager
to raise my "gladsome voice" in the triumphant strains of "Christ the Lord is Risen
Today" and "Welcome, Happy Morning." I
got in a little practice while I was driving to
church. I was in good form.
.
That turned out to be the only chance I
would get to hear myself- or anybody else
- sing that morning.
The music in church made the rafters ring,
but it was the organist - not the congregation- that supplied rhe volume.
What do you do when the organist at your
church 'plays too loud? One of the things you
don't do is tell him or her. The organist who
played for morning chapel at the college I
attended pulled out all the stops. I once complained to the dean about this. I think he
agreed with me, but he said, "If you think Mr.
Woodworth play~ too loud, you tell him."
Organists often have the temperament of
artists (which they sometimes are, of course),
and it is difficult to give them suggestions. I
once wrote that the organist · at an Episcopal
cathedral played too loud. A reporter from the
Detroit Free Press asked for his reaction to my

Church challenge

.

over the org~n

George R.
Plagenz
NEA COLUMNIST

The problem is not confined to the organist. Choir directors are also inclined to let their
superior musical tastes dictate what th e less
musically educated congregation will sing.
At the h~art of the music crisis in our
churches may be a basic disagreement over the
· purpo~e of hymns and anthems in the worship
servtce.
Is church music "an offering to God of the
best music we can find," as contended by
Archibald Davison, former music professor at
Harvard Universi_ty?
Or is church music intended to heighten
the congregation's mood and make the re~ ­
criticism.
gious exper ience more vivid?
He replied, "Johann Sebastian Bac h
A church organist and choir dire ctor once
received the same criticism. Anyway, Plagenz is asked me, " Is it not better to raise the sights of
not a .c ompetent music critic."
worshippers who may have little appreciation
I plead guilty. But I know loud.
of an anthem's ar~stic beauty than to bring the

'.

choir down to their level?"
In answer to her question, I ·q uoted the
words of the late Willa.rd Sperry, dean of Harvard Divinity School.
"One has the suspicion," Sperty said, "that.
the choice of much church music is prompt~
ed by a pedagogic attempt to improve out
musical tastes. We do not go to church ... io:
have our musical tastes developed."
A former music critic at The New York
Times once echoed Sperty's point of vie\V
when he said, "Churches are not primaril.y
purveyors of culture.''
· ·
The music performed in church - hynin~
as well as choir anthems - must be a fitting
vehtcle to express the religious feelings al:td
emotions of the people ih the congregation.
Anthems of praise are offered to God, but they
are for our ears as well and should be understandable and helpful to us.
If choir directors and church organists go ~o
heaven - and if I do - there is bound to
some discord in the harmony we are told we
can expect there.
But I have a feeling that I'll get along fine
with the organist at the Methodist church' J
attended on Good Friday. We sang "Were You
There?" and "The Old Rugged Cross." That
was heavon. .
·
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·

be

(George R. Plagenz is a columnist for Newspdper Enterprise Association)

I

D.j!ACONS ENJOY PIES - Adam and Jeremiah
Warden look on as Hillside Baptist Church deacons Steve Walters, Henry Hoppe, Joe Humphrey,
t;&gt;'avid Johnson, Ron Clonch, Mike Burns and Dafl
~ood take pies In the face at a recent' event.
Hood challenged church members to have 150
people In the congregation on Easter Sunday. The
challenge grew to Include a deacone for ever person over the count. When 177 people attended,
the deacons met the challenge and wers hit with
pies from the 91 people present at the event.

The election of officers will be held at the May
meeting.
Barbara Fry pres~nted the program.
Presentations were made by Phyllis Skinner, on
leg pain; Susie Mash, on the heartbeat; Frances
Goeglein, exercises for rhe mjnd; Dorothy Jeffers
on sinusitis; and Barbara Fry, common poisonous
plan~.
·
A contest was presented by Dorothy Jeffers.
Barbara Fry and Phyllis Skinner were winners.
The May meeting will be held at the home of
Phyllis Skinner; with Skinner and Nancy Grueser
as hostesses. Mash will present the program, and
Goeglein will have the contest. Dorothy Jeffers is
in charge of co-op for May. ·
Refreshments were served by Mash. Melyla
Mash was a guest.

Lydia Clrde rece.-tly meets

BRADBURY - Marjorie Davis was hostess at
the recent meeting of the Bradford Churcll of
Cllrist Lydia Circle, which met recendy at the
church.
President Carolyn Nicholson opened the
meeting with. prayer requests. Prayer was led by
Paula Pickens.
Devotions, "Mean Moms;• were shared by
Davis.
Gerry Lightfoot and' Terry McGuire received
the May sunshine baskets.
·
Kitchen supp~es for May will be bathroom tissue,
and pack th~ pantry items' are canned meats.
LONG
BOTTOM
A thank yt\u note was received. from Krystal
Christy Riley of Long Bottom
Bolin
for a sunshine basket.
has been named a United States
Nicholson will se~ as hostess for the June 12
National Award Winner for her
meeting,
and Suzie :Will will be in charge of com-·
honor roll achievements.
A student at Eastern munion.
The August 6 meeting will be a family picnic
High School, Riley was nominated by her teacher, Sheryl at the Ohio Valley Christian Assembly. ·
Refreshments were served to Kathy, Megan and
Roush.
She will appear in the Madison Dyer, Tracy Davidson, Charlotte. HanUnited States Achievement ning, Madeline Painter, Jack.i Reed, Diane
Riley
Academy Official Yearbook, Maxwell, t;lecky Amberger, Suzie Will, Paula Pick"
ens, Cherie and C~itlin Williamson, Charlotte Van
.
which is published annually.
· . She is the daughter ofJohn and Kathy Riley of Meter, Carolyn Nicholson and Nancy Morris.
Lpng Bottom and the grandparents of Paul· and
{'auline Riley of Long Bottom and George and
Louise Staats ofTuppers Plains.
ALFRED - Alfred United Methodist Women
met recently at the home of Florence Ann
Spencer.
••
The meeting was opened with prayer by Thel• 'poMEROY - Members of the Meigs County Churches of Christ enjoyed a wiener roast dur- ma Henderson and a gf?up reading of the UMW
irig their meeting. recently. at the Ohio Valley "Purpose." Secretary and Treasurer reports were
read and approved, and 33 frhmdship calls wc:re
Christian Assembly campgrounds.
recorded.
Pat Thoma had the opening prayer prior to the
A reading program, Mission Today report and
business meeting, and devotions were shared by
the
making of sewing ·kits for African women
Paula Pickens of the Bradford Church, titled "God
were discussed. ·
·
is God Anyway," by Barbara Johnson.
Spencer had the Prayer Calendar and chose
Ann Lambert gave a reading, ''jesus and the
Nina Conrad, an evangelist at First United
Egg."
•
..Prayer was asked for Herbert Hoover, who has Methodist Church in Wasilla, Ala. The society
•
signed a birthday card for her.
~en diagnosed with cancer. Reports were read
Henderson 'gave the mission report, "From Her
arid approved.
·Mother's
Arrns," about Beatriz Ferrari, who
,. Announcements included the National Day of
Prayer on May 4, Senior Saints Day at the camp- worked to help women and children in Latin
grounds with George Pickens as speaker, Vacation American countries.
The program was "Remembering Motllers,"
~ible School at Bradford Church,June 5-9, and at
with
members givi,ng readings, poems, and perZion Church of Christ, July 16-22 at 6:30p.m.
: There will be a cleaning session at the camp in sonal memories of mothers, and history of Mothp~paration for youth camp.
. er's Day.
Spencer served sandwiches, Bugles, and cookies ·
·. ,The next meeting will be held at Middleport
during
the social hour. Pastor Jane Beattie gave
Churcll of Christ May 25. Dexter Church will
have devotions, with a quilt display and a demon- the grace. Other mem,bers attending were Martha
sqation of making a quilt block with Ann Lam- Poole, Charlotte Van Meter, Sarah Caldwell, Osie
Follrod, 'Nina Robinson, Mary Jo Barringer, and
&amp;~rt in charge.
·
Nellie Parker: Eleanor Boyles, Pat Mayhew, David
·, l'aula Pickens gave the closing prayer.
Beattie, and Richard Spencer were guests.
The next meeting will be held on June 13 with
.~
Van Meter as program leader and Parker as host, ROCKSPRINGS - The Rocksprings Better . ess.

~amed to

USAA pu~lcatlon

Allied UMW meet recently

.. Churches of Christ meet

the thief then drove next door to the
Pepsi plant, and stole 47 cases from a
locked Pepsi delivery truck. Police .aid
they didn't know why anyone would
steal the Pepsi after successfully breaking into the Coke plant. A Pep~ i spokeswoman said, "Our guess is he liked
Pepsi, and figured he could sell it easier
than Coke.'' A 20-year-old man was
arrested · in the case.
Is alcohol ruining your life or the life
of a loved one? "Alcoholism: How to
Recognize It, How to Deal With It,
How to Conquer It" can turn things
around. Send a self-addressed, long,
business-size envelope and a check or
money order for $3 .75 (this includes
postage and handling) to: Alcohol, c/o
Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11562, Chicago,
Ill. 60611-0562. (In Canada, send
$4.55 .) To find out more about Ann
Landers and read her past columns, visit
the Creators Syndicate web page at
www.creators.com.

COMMUNITY CALENDAR

•••

FRIDAY, May 12
MIDDLEPORT - Widows
Fellowship, Friday, noon at the
Middleport Church of Chris•.
.Old and new members welcor..c.
POMEROY - Special service, Faith Valley Tabernacle, 7
p.m. Friday with Rev. Clarence].
Woodbridge of Chillicothe.
POMEROY - Open enrollment into VA Health Care Sys.,.
tern, by VA Outreach Team of
Chillicothe, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Bring discharge documents,
insurance and Social Security
card for veteran and spouse,
income verification information
and information about dependent children. Those who have
not used tile system for the past
three years must re-register.
Blood pressure, glucose and cholesterol .screenings also . ~vailable.

•••

SATURDAY, May 13
SYRACUSE Ladies for
the &lt;Loi:d meeting, First. Church
of God, 10 a.m. All women welcome. For more information,
Betty Johnson, 441-1415 or Jan
Swigger, 992-6667.
CHESTER Saturday', 7
p.m. and Sunday 6 p.m. revival,
Harvest Outreach Church,
Reibel Road, Chester. Evangelist, Michael Vance of Columbus.
Special singing, Michael Cadle
of Cabin Creek, W.Va.
BURLINGHAM- Burlingham Camp, Modern Woodmen
of American, Potluck dinner,
.S~wrd~y. 6 p.m. at the hall.
Mothers to be recognized.

••• •

SU~AY,

May 14

RACINE - A hymn sing,
Sunday, 6 p.m. featuring .the
Southern Gospel Aires at the Mt.
Moriah Church of God, located
off Dorcas Road. Take 124 to
Apple Grove to Dorcas and follow signs to church.

•••

MONDAY, May 15
MIDDLEPORT
The
OhKan Coin Club will met
Monday at the Trolley House in
Middleport, 7 p.m. There will be
an auction and refreshments.
New members will be accepted.
Membership fees are $10 per
year for adults and $5 per year
for children under the age of.\6.

through Sunday, 7 p.m. Tim
Hammaker, evangelist. Dewey
King, pastor.
RACINE - Racine Village
Council wiU meet in recessed
' building
session at the municipal
at 7:30p.m. on Monday.

•••

TUESDAY, May 16

SYRACUSE - Special pictoPOMEROY Organiza- rial cancellation of the Breast
tional meeting, Monday Evening Cancer Research Stamp, Syra•
Ladies League at Pine Hills Golf cuse Post Office. Stamp sells for
Course, Monday at 6 p.m. Nine40 cents, with net proceeds
hole scramble will follow a short
going to research. Stamp goes off
organizational meeting. All substitutes are invited to participate sale July 29. Special cancellation
in the scramble. League play by Postmaster Bonnie Brown.
consists of two person teams participating in match play. Teams The Community Calendar is
who want to participate in the
published as a free service
league or anyone who wants to
to non-profit groups wish-.
play as a substitute may sign up at
ing to announce meetings ·
the clubhouse or call 992-3710
and special events. The calor 949-2530 by Friday.
endar is not designed to
promote sales or fund raisRACINE Census test,
ers of any type. ltema are
Monday, 6 p.m., Racine Public
printed only as space perLibrary.
mitl and cannot be guaran•
RUTLAND -Revival, Rose . teed to be printed a specific
of Sharon Holiness Churcll,
number of days.

enter Inn
"l'ake Mam O,JII ...., Dlanar "l"lda

Sunday, llay 141hl
Cum• Ia 'l'he Carpenter Inn and
enJuy a acrumpllaua lluflel In a .
relaxing almaapbare.
Beef Tips with mushrooms and peppers,
Turkey and Stuffing, Shrimp Scampi,
Crab Legs, Vegetable Marinara, Stir
Fried Vegetables, Assorted Salads,
Pastas, rice &amp; potatoes, Chef's selection·
of deserts, Beverages - $18.95

NEW SUNDAY HOURS
11:00 A.M. to 5:00P.M.
Friday and Saturday Nights
5:00P.M. to 9:00P.M.

Call For Re•ervations
740-698-2450 or 800~644-2422

..Mash hosts health club

tkalth Club met recently at the home of Susie ·
~ash for the May meeting. Mas~ served as host- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ess.
~ Barbara Fry, president, opened the meeting
with the Lord's Prayer and the Pledge to the
.(\merican Flag.
, · Mash had devotions, titled, "~ove in Every
Room," and "What Kids Do -Easter."
Subscribe today.
Reports of officers were given, and a thank you
992-2156
n&lt;!te from the Carleton Schpol's Special Olympic.
was read.

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

Mon.-Thurs. 9-5
Fri. 9-6 • Sat. 9·4

I

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pinion

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_Jh_e_D_a_ily;;..._Se_n_tin_e_l

Friday. May 12. 2000

).

Bend

Page AS
Friday, May 12, 2000

Dad disagreeS with wife about adult sons that live at home

The D~ily Sentinel
'EstaDfislid In 1948

Dear Ann Landers: My wife and I
cannot agree on what to do about our
sons. They are 19 and 21 years of age,
both have good jobs, and they live at
home with no plans to move out that
we know of.
My wife insists on doing everything
for "her boys ," which includes cooking
their meals, cleaning their rooms, and
doing their laundry. They contribute a
modest amount for rent, but give us
nothing beyond that. My wife says they
. are adults and can do as they please. I
say they are living in our house, and
ought to assume some of the domestic
responsibilities.
:I work overtime to pay the household bills, and should not have to do
ex~ra work at home wllen there are
able-bodied adults around. I absolutely
refuse to fold laundry while my grown
sons are lounging on the sofa watclling
television. My w.ife also works full time,
and is wearing herself out taking care of
these lazy bums, eliminating any chance

111 Court Sl, Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992-2156 • Fax: 992-2157

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charlea W. Govey
Publlaher
Charlene Hoeftlch
General Mtlnager

R. Shawn Lewla

Managh1g Editor
Diane Kay Hill
Controller

Lllny Boyer

Advertlelng Director

n,

L.tttn to ''" eliror,. wkollft.
,,.,14 H ,_, rlla11 JIJD worrll. AU,.,., .,.,. t llb}«t
to crdltiltJ omi11Uul H •1J111d •lfli lltciiUI• .UNa 11M t#ll,luHr•lnlatbn. No tuU/fPJH Matrt wiU
H pu/Jitsllld. Ltam 1MNU H Ill ~0011 ,.,,,, Ullrfltllll
110t ,ffRHir"dn.
n. opiNiolts upn11H u. ,,., "CWe•~tiMiow .,.. tA• ceM•••u oftlu 011111 ~ Pdlllltillr
Co. ';r ulil0rltllllot;u4. "'"'" odttrwLtct •«M

lu'"'•

OHIO VIEWS

Overdue

•

Cut in state income tax
long time in coming
A look at
what state
newspapers
are sayrng

'

:TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Friday, May 12, the 133rd day of2000. There are 233 days
Jeft in the year.
, Today's Highlight in History:
· On May 12, 1820, the founder of modern nursing, florence
1
Nightingale, was born in Florence, Italy.
:. On this date:
In I 870, Manitoba entered Confederation as a Canadian province.
In .1932. the body of the kidnapped son of Charles and Anne Lind)&gt;ergh was found in a wooded area of HopeWell, NJ. ·
. In 1937, Britain's ~ George \1 was crowned at Westminster
.
Abbey.
: In 1943, during World War U, Axis forces in North Afrita surrendered.
·
·
: In 1949, th~ Soviet Union announced an end to the Berlin Blockade.
: In 1965, West Gerrm;ny and Israel exchanged letters establishing
):liplomatic relations.
·
·
: In 1970, the Senate voted unanimously to confinn Harry A. Black:mun as a Supreme Court justice.
· In 1975, the White House announced the new Cambodian government had seized an American merchant ship, the Mayaguez, in inter·
national waters.
' In 1978, the Commerce Department said hurricanes would no
longer be given only female names.
In I '.182, in Fatima, PortUgal, security guards overpowered a Spanish
priest who was trying to reach Pope John Paul !I armed with a bayont:t.

Ten years ago:The presidents of Estonia, Latvia and LithUania forged
a united front by reviving a 1934 politic:j) alliance in hopes of enhancing their ~ive for independence fi:om the Soviet Union.
Today's Birthdays: Actress Katharine Hepburn is 93. Journalist
Howard K. Smith 86. Critic John Simon 75. Baseball Hall-ofFarner Yogi · Berra is 75. Composer Burt Bacharach is 7 I. Talk show
host Tom Snyder is 64. Comedian George Carlin is 63.Actress Millie
Perkins is 62. Former White 1-Iouse press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler
is 61. Country singer Billy Swan is 58. Actress Linda Dano is 57. Musician Jan Me Lagan is ?5. Actress Lindsay Crouse is 52. Singer-musician
Steve Winwood is 52. Actor Gabriel Byrne is 50.Actor 13ruce Boxleitner is 50. Singer Billy Squier is 50. Country singer Kix Brooks is 4 .
Actress Kim Greist is 42. Actor Ving Rhames is 39. Rock musician
Billy Duffy is 39. Actor Emilio Estevez is 38. Actress Vanessa WiUiams
(formerly on "Melrose Place") is 37.

a

•

a

ADVICE
for us to enj'oy time together as a couple.
I have tried to set some guidelines,
but no one pays any attention to them.
What can be done about this galling
situation?- Overworked Dad in New
York
Dear Overworked Dad: The cards
are stacked against you, and your wife is
holding the deck. Relief might come
when one or both of the "lazy bums"
meets some unsuspecting young
woman and decides to move out- and
probably move in with a woman who

'S OCIETY NEWS

•111•

Onclnnetl Enquirer: It looks ~ though the Ohio General Assembly soon will enact a permanent cut in state income taxeS.
They're long overdue. Ohio's per capita
income is 5 percent below the national
average, while its personal income tax burden is. eighth highest in the nation, according to a Clemson University study.
In the past tWo decades, Ohio's income.
•
tax has grown five times faster than personal income and 50 times faster than its population, the Buckeye Institute reported last
month. High taxes hamper the state's ability to attract businesses and
add good-paying jobs, Buckeye and other groups have argued. .
•o.yton O.lly News: About 20,000 fourth-graders ... haven't
·come dose to passing the state's fourth-grade reading proficiency test.
' Unless the state invests in programs to help these children, Ohio's
·touted Fourth Grade Guarantee may be ensuring failure for these students in 2002. In two years, state law mandates that fourth-graders
-(with certain ·exceptions) cannot be promoted to the fifth grade until
.they pass the test.
Wisely, the Children's Defense Fund-Ohio does ·not recommend
dropping the Fourth Grade Guarantee. Instead, it proposes that the
state invest in success - not in punishment.
Among many proposals, the group recommends the state .monitor
-and assess students for reading abilities in first, second and third grades.
It s.uggests beginning with today's second-graders by supporting special courses - offered alter school, on Satu~ and during summers.
This report shows clearly that a Fourth Grade ·Guarantee cannot
merely be a slogan. It must also be an investment.
• 'l1le (llcladot ll1d1: A federal commission formed to resolve
issues involving Internet taxes has failed to reach a consensus, but Congress still has time to pass worthwhile legislation to spur e-business.
The 19-member Advisory Commission on Electronic Commerce
came ·up with an anti-tax report written by 10 pro-business members,
but the document appears to have been crafted more to make a politIcal point than out of genuine concern for solving important e-commerce 1ssues.
· Despite .disagreement on the issue of levying sales taxes on goods
purchased over the World Wide Web, most commission members
reportedly back three key proposals: a ban on taxing Internet access;
'repeal of the 3 percent telephone excise tax enacted in 1898 to finance
the Spanish-American War; and a five-year extension of the current
Tederal ban on new or discriminatory Internet taxes.
: Despite its defects, the report has ratcheted up the debate on e-comrnerce and identified some issues on which Congress could take quick
)lction. In that respect, the panel's year-long work wasn't a total loss.

Ann
Landers

will also do the cooking and cleaning. that rarely receives recqgnition) to
Your wife would be doing her sons a rehabilitate people to their fullest funchuge favor if she gave them three tional levels .
weeks ' notice to find other lodging and
Please give credit to each of these
learn to fend for themselves.
disciplines. so your readers will stop
Dear Ann Landen: This is in thinking of them all as "physical theraresponse to the letter from "Grateful py."We do a variety of things, and work
Parents in Illinois;' who praised the together to achieve the best results. If
benefits of physical and occupational you print this Jetter, it will make every
therapy services for their son. Unfortu- occupational and speech therapist in
nately, the letter discussed OIIIY physical the country proud. - Sue in New York
Dear Sue: Here's your letter. It's the
therapy techniques.
I am an occupational therapist. We least I can do for those people who give
work in rehabilitation centers, hospitals, of themselves so generously, and make
nursing homes, outpatient clinics, early- such a huge difference in the lives of so
intervention centers and schools. Occu- many. Thanks for sending up the flag.
Dear Ann Landers: Here's another
pational therapy helps teach the "jobs"
of daily life. We help people learn to one for yo ur stu pid crooks file. It
feed themselves, dress themselves, appeared in many Texas papers. Please
shower, get the mail, drive a car, and so print it. -Joyce in Pearland, Texas
Dear Joyce: It's 'a thigh-slapper, all
on. Our goal is to help people regain
these "occupations," in and effort to right. You were good to send it on .
Someone broke into a Corpus
make them as independent as possible.
We work closely witll physical and Christi, Texas, warehouse and stole a
speech therapists (another· discipline Coca-Cola van. According to police,

...·.....

THINK TANK

Facts don't prove boys are the privileged sex
(Editor's note: Ben IM!tteuberg is workiug 011 a
PBS special titled "Tire First Measured Century,"
wlliclr will be broadcast in the fall. Until thm, we
are retitling Iris coll11nn "Think Tank." Bm will
continue to write the column up to trvice n month,
and the remaining columtrs will be written by guest
contributors. Taday's guest columnist, Karl Zinsmeister, is editor-i~r-clriif of The America.r Enterprise and a frequent participant on Ben's "Tirink
Tank" program on PBS.)

receive them.
The writer Leon Podles has phrased it
this way: "Put a boy in a school with a curriculum designed for g'irls and taught by
women whose main desire in life is that boys
behave like girls," and you've got a recipe for
failure.
The idea that there might be specifically
male tendencies toward aggressiveness, stoicism, shorter attention span, lower verbal
and relational skills, higher spatial and logi!Jv KARL ZINSMEISTER
cal skills, and so forth, and chat society
We sometimes hear claitns that . males are should accept and work with these tendenthe privileged sex. The facts, however, don't cies, has in many places become politically
wholly square with that.
incorrect. If boys act differently from girls,
Boys outnumber girls by more than 2 to too many liberal educators believe, that's an
1 in special education classes. Communica- individual defect to be cured.
tion disabilities such as stuttering and
It would be unfair to blame all .the stress-,n
dyslexia are several times more prevalent
es on boys today on overzealous feminism.
among males than females . Reading blockBut those feminists . who rail against everyages and other learning problems are three
thing from professi.lnal sports to toy swords
to five times as common. Male1 are more
(sometimes With the best of intentions) are
often color-blind and left-handed and suffer
more night terrors. They are three times as surely part of the problem. Rather than fantasizing that all boys, can be re-made into '
likely to be autistic, and they experience ·
much more schizophrenia, hyperactiviry, pliant, expressive, non-violent little model
delinquency, suicide and homicide than students, we ought tQ be seeking ways to
females. They are more likely to be homo- direct male rambunctiousness into construetive uses.
sexual.
That will often require that boys be
One expert has described the male as "a
bundle of energies that is always threatening · exposed to more authentic masculinity, not
to disintegrate. The female is much more less. After all , the most dangerous boys in
stable and secure." So anyone arguing that America are those .raised in our inner-city
males are the "higher" sex has a lot . of matriarchies. Those rap anthems about
thumping wom en come out of a world
explaining to do.
Males may not be better; but they are dif- wholly devoid of male authority.
To compensate for the shortage of male
ferent . Which is where an important new
book called "The War Against Boys," by exemplars in inner cities we should experiChristina Hoff Sommers, a colleague of ment with str'ict, all-male, urban boarding
mine at the American Enterprise Institute, schools. Perhaps these could be staffed by
comes in. Sommers argues that our feminist- deco mmissioned military officers -- who
influenced cultural establishment has too know something about ·how to· build disci often refused to . accept that boys and girls pline and productivity in restless young
are not the same, with the result that many charges.
young boys are now · ill-matched to the
J\las, recent efforts to set up even fairly
schools and other social institutions that conventional schools for endangered boys

....-..
'.•,.._
.

have often been squashed by feminist absJ)..::
lutism. A few years ago I interviewed tl}e;
principals of two elementary schools tl}:i~
Detroit and Milwaukee had tried to establish
specifically for troubled inner-city boys.:
These were smart, tough, black men tryi~
to address a mortal crisis in their communi:J
ties. And rhey were livid thar out-of-town:
lawsuits brought by the National Organiz~_;
tion for Women and the American Ciillf
Liberties Union had blocked their projects.
It isn't just underclass children who a~e
being hurt by the taboo against acknowl"
edging sex differences . Over the last couple
decades, fewer and fewer boys have beerj
succeeding in school. Two-thirds of U.S. kid~
who don't make it to college these days ire
male. Boys of all income groups, races an\_!
ethnicities are now less likely than compara- '
ble girls to work themselves into the college
pipeline. But it is boys from poorer families
who are particularly at risk. Among youngsters in families earning $80,000 IQ
$100,000 per year, girls are 8 percent more
likely to be on a college track than their
brothers; at family incomes of $10,000 io
$20,000, this swells to 56 percent.
':
An upshot: Only 41 percent of bachelor)
degrees will go to men by the time today~
ninth-graders leave college, according to th~
National Center for Education Statistics\
That's down from 57 percent in 1970.
"When you see the aspirations of boys
and girls at an earlier age, they're high," edu.
cator Gilberta Ramon recently told the San
Antonio Express-News. Yet, Ramon notes,
by age 18 the number of men who are still
successful and motivated sllrinks substanrially. "So something happens between the time
they have those aspirations and the time
they graduate." That "something" ought to
concern us.

(Karl Zinsmeiste; is editor of The American
Enterprise, a nntional magazine of politics, culture
and business.)
·
' .

PLAGENZ.'S. VIEW

Raise your voice in song
I wcmt to church on Easter morning, eager
to raise my "gladsome voice" in the triumphant strains of "Christ the Lord is Risen
Today" and "Welcome, Happy Morning." I
got in a little practice while I was driving to
church. I was in good form.
.
That turned out to be the only chance I
would get to hear myself- or anybody else
- sing that morning.
The music in church made the rafters ring,
but it was the organist - not the congregation- that supplied rhe volume.
What do you do when the organist at your
church 'plays too loud? One of the things you
don't do is tell him or her. The organist who
played for morning chapel at the college I
attended pulled out all the stops. I once complained to the dean about this. I think he
agreed with me, but he said, "If you think Mr.
Woodworth play~ too loud, you tell him."
Organists often have the temperament of
artists (which they sometimes are, of course),
and it is difficult to give them suggestions. I
once wrote that the organist · at an Episcopal
cathedral played too loud. A reporter from the
Detroit Free Press asked for his reaction to my

Church challenge

.

over the org~n

George R.
Plagenz
NEA COLUMNIST

The problem is not confined to the organist. Choir directors are also inclined to let their
superior musical tastes dictate what th e less
musically educated congregation will sing.
At the h~art of the music crisis in our
churches may be a basic disagreement over the
· purpo~e of hymns and anthems in the worship
servtce.
Is church music "an offering to God of the
best music we can find," as contended by
Archibald Davison, former music professor at
Harvard Universi_ty?
Or is church music intended to heighten
the congregation's mood and make the re~ ­
criticism.
gious exper ience more vivid?
He replied, "Johann Sebastian Bac h
A church organist and choir dire ctor once
received the same criticism. Anyway, Plagenz is asked me, " Is it not better to raise the sights of
not a .c ompetent music critic."
worshippers who may have little appreciation
I plead guilty. But I know loud.
of an anthem's ar~stic beauty than to bring the

'.

choir down to their level?"
In answer to her question, I ·q uoted the
words of the late Willa.rd Sperry, dean of Harvard Divinity School.
"One has the suspicion," Sperty said, "that.
the choice of much church music is prompt~
ed by a pedagogic attempt to improve out
musical tastes. We do not go to church ... io:
have our musical tastes developed."
A former music critic at The New York
Times once echoed Sperty's point of vie\V
when he said, "Churches are not primaril.y
purveyors of culture.''
· ·
The music performed in church - hynin~
as well as choir anthems - must be a fitting
vehtcle to express the religious feelings al:td
emotions of the people ih the congregation.
Anthems of praise are offered to God, but they
are for our ears as well and should be understandable and helpful to us.
If choir directors and church organists go ~o
heaven - and if I do - there is bound to
some discord in the harmony we are told we
can expect there.
But I have a feeling that I'll get along fine
with the organist at the Methodist church' J
attended on Good Friday. We sang "Were You
There?" and "The Old Rugged Cross." That
was heavon. .
·
'
·

be

(George R. Plagenz is a columnist for Newspdper Enterprise Association)

I

D.j!ACONS ENJOY PIES - Adam and Jeremiah
Warden look on as Hillside Baptist Church deacons Steve Walters, Henry Hoppe, Joe Humphrey,
t;&gt;'avid Johnson, Ron Clonch, Mike Burns and Dafl
~ood take pies In the face at a recent' event.
Hood challenged church members to have 150
people In the congregation on Easter Sunday. The
challenge grew to Include a deacone for ever person over the count. When 177 people attended,
the deacons met the challenge and wers hit with
pies from the 91 people present at the event.

The election of officers will be held at the May
meeting.
Barbara Fry pres~nted the program.
Presentations were made by Phyllis Skinner, on
leg pain; Susie Mash, on the heartbeat; Frances
Goeglein, exercises for rhe mjnd; Dorothy Jeffers
on sinusitis; and Barbara Fry, common poisonous
plan~.
·
A contest was presented by Dorothy Jeffers.
Barbara Fry and Phyllis Skinner were winners.
The May meeting will be held at the home of
Phyllis Skinner; with Skinner and Nancy Grueser
as hostesses. Mash will present the program, and
Goeglein will have the contest. Dorothy Jeffers is
in charge of co-op for May. ·
Refreshments were served by Mash. Melyla
Mash was a guest.

Lydia Clrde rece.-tly meets

BRADBURY - Marjorie Davis was hostess at
the recent meeting of the Bradford Churcll of
Cllrist Lydia Circle, which met recendy at the
church.
President Carolyn Nicholson opened the
meeting with. prayer requests. Prayer was led by
Paula Pickens.
Devotions, "Mean Moms;• were shared by
Davis.
Gerry Lightfoot and' Terry McGuire received
the May sunshine baskets.
·
Kitchen supp~es for May will be bathroom tissue,
and pack th~ pantry items' are canned meats.
LONG
BOTTOM
A thank yt\u note was received. from Krystal
Christy Riley of Long Bottom
Bolin
for a sunshine basket.
has been named a United States
Nicholson will se~ as hostess for the June 12
National Award Winner for her
meeting,
and Suzie :Will will be in charge of com-·
honor roll achievements.
A student at Eastern munion.
The August 6 meeting will be a family picnic
High School, Riley was nominated by her teacher, Sheryl at the Ohio Valley Christian Assembly. ·
Refreshments were served to Kathy, Megan and
Roush.
She will appear in the Madison Dyer, Tracy Davidson, Charlotte. HanUnited States Achievement ning, Madeline Painter, Jack.i Reed, Diane
Riley
Academy Official Yearbook, Maxwell, t;lecky Amberger, Suzie Will, Paula Pick"
ens, Cherie and C~itlin Williamson, Charlotte Van
.
which is published annually.
· . She is the daughter ofJohn and Kathy Riley of Meter, Carolyn Nicholson and Nancy Morris.
Lpng Bottom and the grandparents of Paul· and
{'auline Riley of Long Bottom and George and
Louise Staats ofTuppers Plains.
ALFRED - Alfred United Methodist Women
met recently at the home of Florence Ann
Spencer.
••
The meeting was opened with prayer by Thel• 'poMEROY - Members of the Meigs County Churches of Christ enjoyed a wiener roast dur- ma Henderson and a gf?up reading of the UMW
irig their meeting. recently. at the Ohio Valley "Purpose." Secretary and Treasurer reports were
read and approved, and 33 frhmdship calls wc:re
Christian Assembly campgrounds.
recorded.
Pat Thoma had the opening prayer prior to the
A reading program, Mission Today report and
business meeting, and devotions were shared by
the
making of sewing ·kits for African women
Paula Pickens of the Bradford Church, titled "God
were discussed. ·
·
is God Anyway," by Barbara Johnson.
Spencer had the Prayer Calendar and chose
Ann Lambert gave a reading, ''jesus and the
Nina Conrad, an evangelist at First United
Egg."
•
..Prayer was asked for Herbert Hoover, who has Methodist Church in Wasilla, Ala. The society
•
signed a birthday card for her.
~en diagnosed with cancer. Reports were read
Henderson 'gave the mission report, "From Her
arid approved.
·Mother's
Arrns," about Beatriz Ferrari, who
,. Announcements included the National Day of
Prayer on May 4, Senior Saints Day at the camp- worked to help women and children in Latin
grounds with George Pickens as speaker, Vacation American countries.
The program was "Remembering Motllers,"
~ible School at Bradford Church,June 5-9, and at
with
members givi,ng readings, poems, and perZion Church of Christ, July 16-22 at 6:30p.m.
: There will be a cleaning session at the camp in sonal memories of mothers, and history of Mothp~paration for youth camp.
. er's Day.
Spencer served sandwiches, Bugles, and cookies ·
·. ,The next meeting will be held at Middleport
during
the social hour. Pastor Jane Beattie gave
Churcll of Christ May 25. Dexter Church will
have devotions, with a quilt display and a demon- the grace. Other mem,bers attending were Martha
sqation of making a quilt block with Ann Lam- Poole, Charlotte Van Meter, Sarah Caldwell, Osie
Follrod, 'Nina Robinson, Mary Jo Barringer, and
&amp;~rt in charge.
·
Nellie Parker: Eleanor Boyles, Pat Mayhew, David
·, l'aula Pickens gave the closing prayer.
Beattie, and Richard Spencer were guests.
The next meeting will be held on June 13 with
.~
Van Meter as program leader and Parker as host, ROCKSPRINGS - The Rocksprings Better . ess.

~amed to

USAA pu~lcatlon

Allied UMW meet recently

.. Churches of Christ meet

the thief then drove next door to the
Pepsi plant, and stole 47 cases from a
locked Pepsi delivery truck. Police .aid
they didn't know why anyone would
steal the Pepsi after successfully breaking into the Coke plant. A Pep~ i spokeswoman said, "Our guess is he liked
Pepsi, and figured he could sell it easier
than Coke.'' A 20-year-old man was
arrested · in the case.
Is alcohol ruining your life or the life
of a loved one? "Alcoholism: How to
Recognize It, How to Deal With It,
How to Conquer It" can turn things
around. Send a self-addressed, long,
business-size envelope and a check or
money order for $3 .75 (this includes
postage and handling) to: Alcohol, c/o
Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11562, Chicago,
Ill. 60611-0562. (In Canada, send
$4.55 .) To find out more about Ann
Landers and read her past columns, visit
the Creators Syndicate web page at
www.creators.com.

COMMUNITY CALENDAR

•••

FRIDAY, May 12
MIDDLEPORT - Widows
Fellowship, Friday, noon at the
Middleport Church of Chris•.
.Old and new members welcor..c.
POMEROY - Special service, Faith Valley Tabernacle, 7
p.m. Friday with Rev. Clarence].
Woodbridge of Chillicothe.
POMEROY - Open enrollment into VA Health Care Sys.,.
tern, by VA Outreach Team of
Chillicothe, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Bring discharge documents,
insurance and Social Security
card for veteran and spouse,
income verification information
and information about dependent children. Those who have
not used tile system for the past
three years must re-register.
Blood pressure, glucose and cholesterol .screenings also . ~vailable.

•••

SATURDAY, May 13
SYRACUSE Ladies for
the &lt;Loi:d meeting, First. Church
of God, 10 a.m. All women welcome. For more information,
Betty Johnson, 441-1415 or Jan
Swigger, 992-6667.
CHESTER Saturday', 7
p.m. and Sunday 6 p.m. revival,
Harvest Outreach Church,
Reibel Road, Chester. Evangelist, Michael Vance of Columbus.
Special singing, Michael Cadle
of Cabin Creek, W.Va.
BURLINGHAM- Burlingham Camp, Modern Woodmen
of American, Potluck dinner,
.S~wrd~y. 6 p.m. at the hall.
Mothers to be recognized.

••• •

SU~AY,

May 14

RACINE - A hymn sing,
Sunday, 6 p.m. featuring .the
Southern Gospel Aires at the Mt.
Moriah Church of God, located
off Dorcas Road. Take 124 to
Apple Grove to Dorcas and follow signs to church.

•••

MONDAY, May 15
MIDDLEPORT
The
OhKan Coin Club will met
Monday at the Trolley House in
Middleport, 7 p.m. There will be
an auction and refreshments.
New members will be accepted.
Membership fees are $10 per
year for adults and $5 per year
for children under the age of.\6.

through Sunday, 7 p.m. Tim
Hammaker, evangelist. Dewey
King, pastor.
RACINE - Racine Village
Council wiU meet in recessed
' building
session at the municipal
at 7:30p.m. on Monday.

•••

TUESDAY, May 16

SYRACUSE - Special pictoPOMEROY Organiza- rial cancellation of the Breast
tional meeting, Monday Evening Cancer Research Stamp, Syra•
Ladies League at Pine Hills Golf cuse Post Office. Stamp sells for
Course, Monday at 6 p.m. Nine40 cents, with net proceeds
hole scramble will follow a short
going to research. Stamp goes off
organizational meeting. All substitutes are invited to participate sale July 29. Special cancellation
in the scramble. League play by Postmaster Bonnie Brown.
consists of two person teams participating in match play. Teams The Community Calendar is
who want to participate in the
published as a free service
league or anyone who wants to
to non-profit groups wish-.
play as a substitute may sign up at
ing to announce meetings ·
the clubhouse or call 992-3710
and special events. The calor 949-2530 by Friday.
endar is not designed to
promote sales or fund raisRACINE Census test,
ers of any type. ltema are
Monday, 6 p.m., Racine Public
printed only as space perLibrary.
mitl and cannot be guaran•
RUTLAND -Revival, Rose . teed to be printed a specific
of Sharon Holiness Churcll,
number of days.

enter Inn
"l'ake Mam O,JII ...., Dlanar "l"lda

Sunday, llay 141hl
Cum• Ia 'l'he Carpenter Inn and
enJuy a acrumpllaua lluflel In a .
relaxing almaapbare.
Beef Tips with mushrooms and peppers,
Turkey and Stuffing, Shrimp Scampi,
Crab Legs, Vegetable Marinara, Stir
Fried Vegetables, Assorted Salads,
Pastas, rice &amp; potatoes, Chef's selection·
of deserts, Beverages - $18.95

NEW SUNDAY HOURS
11:00 A.M. to 5:00P.M.
Friday and Saturday Nights
5:00P.M. to 9:00P.M.

Call For Re•ervations
740-698-2450 or 800~644-2422

..Mash hosts health club

tkalth Club met recently at the home of Susie ·
~ash for the May meeting. Mas~ served as host- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ess.
~ Barbara Fry, president, opened the meeting
with the Lord's Prayer and the Pledge to the
.(\merican Flag.
, · Mash had devotions, titled, "~ove in Every
Room," and "What Kids Do -Easter."
Subscribe today.
Reports of officers were given, and a thank you
992-2156
n&lt;!te from the Carleton Schpol's Special Olympic.
was read.

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

Mon.-Thurs. 9-5
Fri. 9-6 • Sat. 9·4

I

�..

P9 A &amp; • T'tle Dlllly Sentinel

·· NATIONAL BRIEFS
'•

•.•

Enployee pleads to fraud

WASHINGTON (AP) -A BeU Atlantic technician under conlrllct ~th the Education Department has pleaded guilty to taking
p~tt tn a scheme that defrauding the agency of $1 million since
1997, federal officials said Thursday. Several Education Department
employees and contract worken could be charged, the officials said.
, . The fraud involved stealing television sets, digital cameras, comP\'ters and falsely charging for overtime, said Wilma Lewis, the U.S.
attorney for the District of Columbia.
. ·six Education Pepartment workers, who were not further iden~ed, have been suspended without pay indefinitely, said Erica Leppmg, a department spokeswoman.
Three contract worken with Bell Adantic and another undisdosed company have been fired, officials said.
"We have zero tolerance for illegal activity;' said Lepping, who
sa!d two-thirds of the stolen property had been recovered.
: The technician, R obert J. Sweeney, 42, of Upper Marlboro, Md.,
J!leaded guilty to conspiracy and theft charges in U .S. District Court
&lt;In Wednesday. He faces a maximum 15 years in prison and a
-500,000 fine when he is sentenced at a later date.
· Officials said Sweeney, assigned fuU-time to install phones in
&lt;!epartment offices, began sometime in the mid- 1990s ordering
~uipment such as phones and·answering machines unrelated to his
work. He picked them up from a warehouse and gave them to coworkers for personal use. The stolen items included a 61-inch tele'o/ision, computers, digital cameras and more than 100 cordless
phones.

.Ford admits to SUV problem
. ATLANTA (AP) - Ford Motor Co., in a startling admission, says
sport utility vehicles are environmentally unfriendly, chug gas and
c;m be a danger to driven in smaller vehicles, thus putting its highprofit business in SUVs at odds with its desire to be more environmentally responsible.
The critical comments were delivered in a book given to shareholders at Ford's annual meeting Thursday.
.
In a 98-page book, "Connecting With Society," the company
concedes that SUVs burn more gas and emit more pollution than
qrs and can pose a danger to smaller vehicles in crashes.
· The book even quotes a Sierra Club news release that "the gasguzzling SUV is a rolling monument to environmental destruction ...

"We take our social responsibility seriously;' Ford chairman
William Clay Ford Jr. said after the meeting. "Our approach to
SUVs and the environment has not always been responsible, but
now we're in the leading position."
. Ford, a great-grandson of Henry Ford, has made environmenral
c9ncerns one of his top priorities, promoting his views inside and
outside the company.
: The automaker's SUVs were the major engine behind the com~y's record profits of$7.2 billion last year; some models can carry
PfOfit margins of nearly $15 ,000. Demand for several models,
il)cluding the hulking Excursion, has almost Dutpaced supply.
:The automaker said the book Was part of the company's effort to
b.e more "transparent" about the problems its facing and it's proposed solutions.

i

Pomeroy1 Middleport, Ohio

. within 300 yards of a plutonium storage
facility. Lab officials insisted that dangerous
materials were protected in fire-resistant
facilities strong enough to withstand the
crash of a 747.
"I think the message is so far, so good, but
we're not out of this yet," said John
Gustafson, a lab spokesman.
Another danger was posed by a hazardous
· waste area in nearby White Rock that
includes asbestos, low-level radioactive waste
and PCBs stored in steel drums and fiberglass
compound containers.
Paul Schumann, an official with the lab's
OUT OF CONTROL - Thick gray smoke bil· environmental restoration project team, said
lowed into a cobalt sky as 1,000 firefighters that if the area catches fire, possible health
struggled to hold the line against a fire effects could range from short-term probwhipped by furious winds that raced through lems such as liver poisoning to long-term ail280 homes and forced 25,000 people from
ments including cancer, the result of breaththe town. (AP photo)
ing a pluto nium particle.
still-standing neighborhoods.
The fire was about five miles away from
" We 're going to chase this fire until the the area Thursday night.
Brick fireplaces and chiml)eys were the
weather changes or it runs out of fuel. We
could be here for three weeks," said Jim only things remaining of the scorched shells
Paxon, . a spokesman with a federal-state of some homes while others escaped th~
intenigency m!magement team that deals fire's macabre dance, seemingly unscathed
with fires on public land.
even as they overlooked the destruction.
The winds were expected to remain gusty
The fire had destroyed an estimated 260
today but lose their earlier force that had homes and damaged 20 others on the nortll,swayed cars and blown building doors open, ern and western areas, Los Alamos County
The town, 70 miles north of Albuquerque, spokesman Bill Lehman said. In all, 25,000
is essentially a company town for the Los people were evacuated and 150 National
Alamos National Laboratory, whi ch employs Guardsmen called in to maintain order and
7,000 people at buildings scattered through- prevent looting.
out the city.
"I can't believe how many homes are
At the weapons lab, flames burned trailer~ gone," said Don Shainin, a fire battalion
and portable buildings, rolled past concrete · commander from Albuquerque who came to
bunkers containing expl9sives, and carne · Los Alamos to help out.
·- - - '

,.A,.E

0,.

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M . (AP) - Defense attorneys have challenged prosecutors to name the foreign nation for which fired Los
Alamos scientist Wen Ho Lee sought to secure a benefit, as alleged
i1t federal charges against him.
: Lee, 60, a naturalized U.S. citizen from Taiwan, was fired last year
by Los Alamos National Laboratory and accused of 59 counts of
breaching lab security by transferring files from secure to unsecure
(:9mputers and to computer tapes.
. Lee is not accused of espionage. But for the government to win a
conviction on the most serious charges against him, prosecutors
must prove he copied weapons secrets to portable data tapes with
the intent of injuring the United States or giving a foreign nation
an advantage.
In a motion filed Wednesday, defense lawyers asked U.S. District
Judge John Conway to make prosecutors name the country for
which Lee allegedly meant to secure an advantage.
; "Dr. Lee should not have to guess at such a basic element of the
charges against him;' wrote attorneys Mark Holscher and John
Cline. "The prosecution surely knows which 'foreign nation' it will
c:ontend that Dr. Lee intended to benefit It should not be permitt~d to hide the ball on such a critical point.':.
.

·Man executed in twin slayings ·
: HUNTSVILLE, Texas (AP) - A man who shot his ex-girlfriend
and a companion to death in a jealous rage in 1985 was executed
thursday.
·
·
Michael Lee McBride, 38, was convicted of gunning down two
t:S-year-olds from Fort Worth, ex-girlfriend Christian Fisher and
P,Wion and did not amount to capital murder.
\ "God bless aU of you," he said before his execution. As the lethal
li):ugs began taking effect, he said: "Pretty cool, I feel it in the back
Of my throat. Bye."
; McBride, a bartender in a Lubbock country club, dated Fisher for
~out 11 months before she broke up with him. He lured the Texas
l;ech student to his house under the pretense of giving her a paintijtg he said was equal to money he owed her. He concluded the
conversation by saying: "If I can't have you , nobody Will."
~ Her friends worried about her and accompanied her in two cars
to McBride's home. Holzer was with Fisher.
' She knocked on the door but got no answer. As she was returning to her car, McBride emerged wearing camouflage clothing .a nd
qrrying a semi-automatic rifle. He shot Fisher at least 10 times and
~olzer nine t;imes.

-- . ..

.._

.. .. "" . ,.,
~

Friday, May 12, 2000

P,omeroy, Ohio

PRICE

Clinton delivers criticis~ of Bush campaign in.radio interview
I

- WASHINGTON (AP) - President Clinton said ~day that Gov.
George W Bush, if elected president, ';ould ~et polluters control the
!Jlll!Ons enVIronmental policy and
appoint Supreme Court justices
who would reverse the landmark
l973 decision that legal.ized aboraon.
,
. Clinton said Bush ' would press
for big tax cuts and higher Pentagon
spending that would bring back
· budget deficits and higher interest
cares. "It Will mean that we won't
have muc.h money lefi over to invest
m educalion or the environment or
health care," the presi\lent said.
· Clinton noted that Bush
opposed the Comprehensive
Nuclear Test Ban Treaty. which was
defeated by the Senate last year, and

said the governor "wants to build a
much bigger missile defense system
than the evidence wmants right
. now." He suggested Bushs positions
could affect efforts to reduce
nuclear stockpiles around the
warld.
·
"So I think that gives me some
pause:· the president said. "I think
that's troublesome!'
Clinton leveled his criticism in
an interview with Diane Rehm of
ra&lt;!io station WAMU. It was his
most pointed attack yet against the
likely Republican presidential nominee.
Replying to Clinton, Bush
spokesman Scott McClellan said, "It
appears that he is continuing his
transition from commander in chief
into his role as campaign ~ger

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The next president will nam~
President AI Gore would chan~
thin'gs if elected president.
·
two to four Supreme Court ju"l
"If Governor Bush gets elected, I t;ices, because of expected vacancies;
think he'll do what he said he ·Clinton predicted.
•·J
would do;' the president said. "I
"And if they (Republicans) get
think .it's not necessary to attack
two to four appointments on mil
these people penonally:•
Supreme Court, I think Roe ~c
He :said that if Bush wins the
White House, "He will do what he Wade (the 1973 aborti_on decisi~):
did ih Texas, he will let the people will be repealed and a lot of oth,c;Jj
who basically are the primary pol- things that have been a part of the
luters control envitonmental poli- fabric of our constitutional life will

WASHINGTON (AP)- John
the GOP nominee even if he lost.
In an e-mail sent to
McCain has received hundreds of
"And like all the promises I've
120,000 atmpaign
e-mails and telephone calls from
made along the campaign trail,
backers, former
supporters upset by his endorse- ·
this one I intended to keep;' he
Republican presidential said.
·ment of George W Bush. He is
telling them that Bush is "our best
, McCain said there were " a
atndidate John McCain
hope" of throwing Democrats out
few
principled
disagreements"
said, "To those who I
.o f the White House.
between Bush and him, but didn't
, In an e-mail sent to 120,000 have disappointed, let me specifY them. ln*ad, he said the
campaign backers, the former simply reiterate that I will Texan was better suited for the
Republican presidential candidate never gif!! up myfightfor White House than Democratic
f.~id , "To those who I have disapAI Gore.
·
real gOfkrnmtnt riform." candidate
~ointed , let me simply reiterate
"My primary reason for
:&lt;Jtat I will never give up t.nY fight
,
'
endorsing Governor Bush is based
less
on
·policy
than
it is principle. Quite simply, I
:~\lr .real government ret'orm!'
·
.·
McCain's political team worried in advance of believe that he is our best hope to end the Clintonr uesday's summit .with Bush that an endorsement Gore era and restore honor and integrity back to
,.would tarnish his self-styled image as a straight.• ralk- the White House," McCain wrote in customized e•1'g maverick. But they also suspected that with- mails that addressed the recipients by n~rne several
·
!~olding the endorsement would hurt his standing in times.
Mike Wescott, 31, a bartender in .~t Strouds:~e GOP and jeopardize his prospects for seeking
burg, Pa., didn't receive tl].e e-mail but is a McCain
·' . he nomination in four years.
!~~ With the compeung interests in mind, McCain backer who was disappointed by the endonement.
"I think he's giving into the political norm,"
:,&gt;waited two months to back Bush and repeatedly sig:~aled that his support was lukewarm. The Arizona Wescott said in a telephone interview from his
j lena tor compared the formal ·announcement to sports .bar. "He's now no better than the rest."
·Wescott said he 'is likely to favor Bush over Gore,
t swallowing medicine.
"but
not because of the endorsemeht. I just don't
t : In the seven-paragraph e-mail, McCain noted
. ~that he promised early in his campaign to support trust AI Gore."

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. in chief:'
the White House, and they thought
McClellan defended Bush's stand they had found a formula that
on missile defenses, saying, "Gover- would always keep Democrats out
nor ·Bush believes it is important to of the White House. They would
protect America and Americans say we couldn't be trusted on the
from rogue missile launches, and he economy and foreign policy and
is concernea that the president and national defense and welfare .and
vice president do not agree with crime, and we were going to tax
this urgent priority."
people to death .... And when it didClinton atso said Republicans in n't work, I think they were very
Congness opposed him so vigorous- angry."
ly because they resented what they
Clinton criticized Bush when
felt was harsh treatment of GO P asked to describe how Bush or Vice
presidents when the Democrats
controUed the House and Senate.
"So they thought it was payback time:' he said. "But the overwhelming reason is that they resented the fact that they didn't have the
White House.
"They thought that they owned

McCain responds 'to disappointed backers

~

2000 GMC SIERRA

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 7·

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

!''

'

Feels challenged on daims

,.

. ~.

Blaze rolls through los Alamos.

DO

... ... ..

Friday, May 12, 2000
•

LOS ALAMOS, N.M . (AP) -Thick gray
smoke billowed into a cobalt sky as 1 ,000
firefighters struggled to hold the line against
a fire whippe4 by furiou1 winds that raced
through 280 homes and forced 25,000 people from the town where the atomic bomb.
was built.
The abandoned town's only signs of life
early today came from the flashing lights of
emergency vehicles and military trucks rumbling past the smoldering remnants of
homes.
"It looks like a war zone," said Ed Pullian,
a battalion chief with the Los Alamos Fire
Department.
Pullian had · slept just seven hours over
three nights battling the blaze that at one
time surged so ferociously that firefighters
dropped their equipment and ran for safety.
'"We didn't have a chan·ce," he said. "'We
kept retreating, retreating, retreating and kept
getting overrun ."
The lire was set a week ago to burn brush
at Bandelier National Monument, then
sliced through 20,000 acres like a white-hot
sickle. The man who gave the OK for the socalled controlled burn was placed on leave
Thursday.
'
With helicopters, airplanes, bulldozers and
hand tools, firefighters feverishly worked
into the morning to stanch the fire.
Crews took advantage of nightfall, with its
lower temperatures and higher humidity, to
burn trees, grass and brush about five miles
from town, hoping to .create a scorched earth
that would stop the fire from spreading.
Other crews were dousing homes with
water, cutting brush and digging trenches in

'

'

'

•

I

�..

P9 A &amp; • T'tle Dlllly Sentinel

·· NATIONAL BRIEFS
'•

•.•

Enployee pleads to fraud

WASHINGTON (AP) -A BeU Atlantic technician under conlrllct ~th the Education Department has pleaded guilty to taking
p~tt tn a scheme that defrauding the agency of $1 million since
1997, federal officials said Thursday. Several Education Department
employees and contract worken could be charged, the officials said.
, . The fraud involved stealing television sets, digital cameras, comP\'ters and falsely charging for overtime, said Wilma Lewis, the U.S.
attorney for the District of Columbia.
. ·six Education Pepartment workers, who were not further iden~ed, have been suspended without pay indefinitely, said Erica Leppmg, a department spokeswoman.
Three contract worken with Bell Adantic and another undisdosed company have been fired, officials said.
"We have zero tolerance for illegal activity;' said Lepping, who
sa!d two-thirds of the stolen property had been recovered.
: The technician, R obert J. Sweeney, 42, of Upper Marlboro, Md.,
J!leaded guilty to conspiracy and theft charges in U .S. District Court
&lt;In Wednesday. He faces a maximum 15 years in prison and a
-500,000 fine when he is sentenced at a later date.
· Officials said Sweeney, assigned fuU-time to install phones in
&lt;!epartment offices, began sometime in the mid- 1990s ordering
~uipment such as phones and·answering machines unrelated to his
work. He picked them up from a warehouse and gave them to coworkers for personal use. The stolen items included a 61-inch tele'o/ision, computers, digital cameras and more than 100 cordless
phones.

.Ford admits to SUV problem
. ATLANTA (AP) - Ford Motor Co., in a startling admission, says
sport utility vehicles are environmentally unfriendly, chug gas and
c;m be a danger to driven in smaller vehicles, thus putting its highprofit business in SUVs at odds with its desire to be more environmentally responsible.
The critical comments were delivered in a book given to shareholders at Ford's annual meeting Thursday.
.
In a 98-page book, "Connecting With Society," the company
concedes that SUVs burn more gas and emit more pollution than
qrs and can pose a danger to smaller vehicles in crashes.
· The book even quotes a Sierra Club news release that "the gasguzzling SUV is a rolling monument to environmental destruction ...

"We take our social responsibility seriously;' Ford chairman
William Clay Ford Jr. said after the meeting. "Our approach to
SUVs and the environment has not always been responsible, but
now we're in the leading position."
. Ford, a great-grandson of Henry Ford, has made environmenral
c9ncerns one of his top priorities, promoting his views inside and
outside the company.
: The automaker's SUVs were the major engine behind the com~y's record profits of$7.2 billion last year; some models can carry
PfOfit margins of nearly $15 ,000. Demand for several models,
il)cluding the hulking Excursion, has almost Dutpaced supply.
:The automaker said the book Was part of the company's effort to
b.e more "transparent" about the problems its facing and it's proposed solutions.

i

Pomeroy1 Middleport, Ohio

. within 300 yards of a plutonium storage
facility. Lab officials insisted that dangerous
materials were protected in fire-resistant
facilities strong enough to withstand the
crash of a 747.
"I think the message is so far, so good, but
we're not out of this yet," said John
Gustafson, a lab spokesman.
Another danger was posed by a hazardous
· waste area in nearby White Rock that
includes asbestos, low-level radioactive waste
and PCBs stored in steel drums and fiberglass
compound containers.
Paul Schumann, an official with the lab's
OUT OF CONTROL - Thick gray smoke bil· environmental restoration project team, said
lowed into a cobalt sky as 1,000 firefighters that if the area catches fire, possible health
struggled to hold the line against a fire effects could range from short-term probwhipped by furious winds that raced through lems such as liver poisoning to long-term ail280 homes and forced 25,000 people from
ments including cancer, the result of breaththe town. (AP photo)
ing a pluto nium particle.
still-standing neighborhoods.
The fire was about five miles away from
" We 're going to chase this fire until the the area Thursday night.
Brick fireplaces and chiml)eys were the
weather changes or it runs out of fuel. We
could be here for three weeks," said Jim only things remaining of the scorched shells
Paxon, . a spokesman with a federal-state of some homes while others escaped th~
intenigency m!magement team that deals fire's macabre dance, seemingly unscathed
with fires on public land.
even as they overlooked the destruction.
The winds were expected to remain gusty
The fire had destroyed an estimated 260
today but lose their earlier force that had homes and damaged 20 others on the nortll,swayed cars and blown building doors open, ern and western areas, Los Alamos County
The town, 70 miles north of Albuquerque, spokesman Bill Lehman said. In all, 25,000
is essentially a company town for the Los people were evacuated and 150 National
Alamos National Laboratory, whi ch employs Guardsmen called in to maintain order and
7,000 people at buildings scattered through- prevent looting.
out the city.
"I can't believe how many homes are
At the weapons lab, flames burned trailer~ gone," said Don Shainin, a fire battalion
and portable buildings, rolled past concrete · commander from Albuquerque who came to
bunkers containing expl9sives, and carne · Los Alamos to help out.
·- - - '

,.A,.E

0,.

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M . (AP) - Defense attorneys have challenged prosecutors to name the foreign nation for which fired Los
Alamos scientist Wen Ho Lee sought to secure a benefit, as alleged
i1t federal charges against him.
: Lee, 60, a naturalized U.S. citizen from Taiwan, was fired last year
by Los Alamos National Laboratory and accused of 59 counts of
breaching lab security by transferring files from secure to unsecure
(:9mputers and to computer tapes.
. Lee is not accused of espionage. But for the government to win a
conviction on the most serious charges against him, prosecutors
must prove he copied weapons secrets to portable data tapes with
the intent of injuring the United States or giving a foreign nation
an advantage.
In a motion filed Wednesday, defense lawyers asked U.S. District
Judge John Conway to make prosecutors name the country for
which Lee allegedly meant to secure an advantage.
; "Dr. Lee should not have to guess at such a basic element of the
charges against him;' wrote attorneys Mark Holscher and John
Cline. "The prosecution surely knows which 'foreign nation' it will
c:ontend that Dr. Lee intended to benefit It should not be permitt~d to hide the ball on such a critical point.':.
.

·Man executed in twin slayings ·
: HUNTSVILLE, Texas (AP) - A man who shot his ex-girlfriend
and a companion to death in a jealous rage in 1985 was executed
thursday.
·
·
Michael Lee McBride, 38, was convicted of gunning down two
t:S-year-olds from Fort Worth, ex-girlfriend Christian Fisher and
P,Wion and did not amount to capital murder.
\ "God bless aU of you," he said before his execution. As the lethal
li):ugs began taking effect, he said: "Pretty cool, I feel it in the back
Of my throat. Bye."
; McBride, a bartender in a Lubbock country club, dated Fisher for
~out 11 months before she broke up with him. He lured the Texas
l;ech student to his house under the pretense of giving her a paintijtg he said was equal to money he owed her. He concluded the
conversation by saying: "If I can't have you , nobody Will."
~ Her friends worried about her and accompanied her in two cars
to McBride's home. Holzer was with Fisher.
' She knocked on the door but got no answer. As she was returning to her car, McBride emerged wearing camouflage clothing .a nd
qrrying a semi-automatic rifle. He shot Fisher at least 10 times and
~olzer nine t;imes.

-- . ..

.._

.. .. "" . ,.,
~

Friday, May 12, 2000

P,omeroy, Ohio

PRICE

Clinton delivers criticis~ of Bush campaign in.radio interview
I

- WASHINGTON (AP) - President Clinton said ~day that Gov.
George W Bush, if elected president, ';ould ~et polluters control the
!Jlll!Ons enVIronmental policy and
appoint Supreme Court justices
who would reverse the landmark
l973 decision that legal.ized aboraon.
,
. Clinton said Bush ' would press
for big tax cuts and higher Pentagon
spending that would bring back
· budget deficits and higher interest
cares. "It Will mean that we won't
have muc.h money lefi over to invest
m educalion or the environment or
health care," the presi\lent said.
· Clinton noted that Bush
opposed the Comprehensive
Nuclear Test Ban Treaty. which was
defeated by the Senate last year, and

said the governor "wants to build a
much bigger missile defense system
than the evidence wmants right
. now." He suggested Bushs positions
could affect efforts to reduce
nuclear stockpiles around the
warld.
·
"So I think that gives me some
pause:· the president said. "I think
that's troublesome!'
Clinton leveled his criticism in
an interview with Diane Rehm of
ra&lt;!io station WAMU. It was his
most pointed attack yet against the
likely Republican presidential nominee.
Replying to Clinton, Bush
spokesman Scott McClellan said, "It
appears that he is continuing his
transition from commander in chief
into his role as campaign ~ger

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glming burt and hopefully prevenred this kid from dying."
: Sgt. Greg Lovett was responding to a call from a resident who
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When the officer found the 12-year-old crouched in a hayfield
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' Lovett, who wasassigned part time to the school, was treated and
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The next president will nam~
President AI Gore would chan~
thin'gs if elected president.
·
two to four Supreme Court ju"l
"If Governor Bush gets elected, I t;ices, because of expected vacancies;
think he'll do what he said he ·Clinton predicted.
•·J
would do;' the president said. "I
"And if they (Republicans) get
think .it's not necessary to attack
two to four appointments on mil
these people penonally:•
Supreme Court, I think Roe ~c
He :said that if Bush wins the
White House, "He will do what he Wade (the 1973 aborti_on decisi~):
did ih Texas, he will let the people will be repealed and a lot of oth,c;Jj
who basically are the primary pol- things that have been a part of the
luters control envitonmental poli- fabric of our constitutional life will

WASHINGTON (AP)- John
the GOP nominee even if he lost.
In an e-mail sent to
McCain has received hundreds of
"And like all the promises I've
120,000 atmpaign
e-mails and telephone calls from
made along the campaign trail,
backers, former
supporters upset by his endorse- ·
this one I intended to keep;' he
Republican presidential said.
·ment of George W Bush. He is
telling them that Bush is "our best
, McCain said there were " a
atndidate John McCain
hope" of throwing Democrats out
few
principled
disagreements"
said, "To those who I
.o f the White House.
between Bush and him, but didn't
, In an e-mail sent to 120,000 have disappointed, let me specifY them. ln*ad, he said the
campaign backers, the former simply reiterate that I will Texan was better suited for the
Republican presidential candidate never gif!! up myfightfor White House than Democratic
f.~id , "To those who I have disapAI Gore.
·
real gOfkrnmtnt riform." candidate
~ointed , let me simply reiterate
"My primary reason for
:&lt;Jtat I will never give up t.nY fight
,
'
endorsing Governor Bush is based
less
on
·policy
than
it is principle. Quite simply, I
:~\lr .real government ret'orm!'
·
.·
McCain's political team worried in advance of believe that he is our best hope to end the Clintonr uesday's summit .with Bush that an endorsement Gore era and restore honor and integrity back to
,.would tarnish his self-styled image as a straight.• ralk- the White House," McCain wrote in customized e•1'g maverick. But they also suspected that with- mails that addressed the recipients by n~rne several
·
!~olding the endorsement would hurt his standing in times.
Mike Wescott, 31, a bartender in .~t Strouds:~e GOP and jeopardize his prospects for seeking
burg, Pa., didn't receive tl].e e-mail but is a McCain
·' . he nomination in four years.
!~~ With the compeung interests in mind, McCain backer who was disappointed by the endonement.
"I think he's giving into the political norm,"
:,&gt;waited two months to back Bush and repeatedly sig:~aled that his support was lukewarm. The Arizona Wescott said in a telephone interview from his
j lena tor compared the formal ·announcement to sports .bar. "He's now no better than the rest."
·Wescott said he 'is likely to favor Bush over Gore,
t swallowing medicine.
"but
not because of the endorsemeht. I just don't
t : In the seven-paragraph e-mail, McCain noted
. ~that he promised early in his campaign to support trust AI Gore."

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. in chief:'
the White House, and they thought
McClellan defended Bush's stand they had found a formula that
on missile defenses, saying, "Gover- would always keep Democrats out
nor ·Bush believes it is important to of the White House. They would
protect America and Americans say we couldn't be trusted on the
from rogue missile launches, and he economy and foreign policy and
is concernea that the president and national defense and welfare .and
vice president do not agree with crime, and we were going to tax
this urgent priority."
people to death .... And when it didClinton atso said Republicans in n't work, I think they were very
Congness opposed him so vigorous- angry."
ly because they resented what they
Clinton criticized Bush when
felt was harsh treatment of GO P asked to describe how Bush or Vice
presidents when the Democrats
controUed the House and Senate.
"So they thought it was payback time:' he said. "But the overwhelming reason is that they resented the fact that they didn't have the
White House.
"They thought that they owned

McCain responds 'to disappointed backers

~

2000 GMC SIERRA

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 7·

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

!''

'

Feels challenged on daims

,.

. ~.

Blaze rolls through los Alamos.

DO

... ... ..

Friday, May 12, 2000
•

LOS ALAMOS, N.M . (AP) -Thick gray
smoke billowed into a cobalt sky as 1 ,000
firefighters struggled to hold the line against
a fire whippe4 by furiou1 winds that raced
through 280 homes and forced 25,000 people from the town where the atomic bomb.
was built.
The abandoned town's only signs of life
early today came from the flashing lights of
emergency vehicles and military trucks rumbling past the smoldering remnants of
homes.
"It looks like a war zone," said Ed Pullian,
a battalion chief with the Los Alamos Fire
Department.
Pullian had · slept just seven hours over
three nights battling the blaze that at one
time surged so ferociously that firefighters
dropped their equipment and ran for safety.
'"We didn't have a chan·ce," he said. "'We
kept retreating, retreating, retreating and kept
getting overrun ."
The lire was set a week ago to burn brush
at Bandelier National Monument, then
sliced through 20,000 acres like a white-hot
sickle. The man who gave the OK for the socalled controlled burn was placed on leave
Thursday.
'
With helicopters, airplanes, bulldozers and
hand tools, firefighters feverishly worked
into the morning to stanch the fire.
Crews took advantage of nightfall, with its
lower temperatures and higher humidity, to
burn trees, grass and brush about five miles
from town, hoping to .create a scorched earth
that would stop the fire from spreading.
Other crews were dousing homes with
water, cutting brush and digging trenches in

'

'

'

•

I

�Inside:

Friday, May 12, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Pqe A 8 • The Deily Sentinel _

The Daily Sentinel

AL: Oakland tops Seattle, Page B2
NL: Fish swallow the Br~ves, Page B2
NBA : Blazers thump Jazz, Page BJ
Daily Scoreboard, Page B8

Page Bl'
Friday. May 11. 1000

r.moi'O)'

Apostoltc

w-. Clwdl orCllrlll

33226 Cblldren'a Home Rd.
Sundly School - ll a. m.
Worship · 10..m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Cllarcb or J...., Cllrill Apoolollc
V10Zand1 lAd Wild Rd.
Putor: James Miller
Svnday School • 10:30 a.m.
E~enin&amp; - 7:30 p.m.

"

MW'tpe'l'l Clllll'dl ofCilrlll
5th and Main
Putor: AI H.,.,n
Youth Minister: DiU Frazier
Sundly School - 9:30a.m.
Wo11hip- 8:15, 10:30 o.m., 7 p.m.
W~dnelday Services · 7 p.m.

Cbvrcb or J..ua Cbrtst
Apostolic Foitb
New Lima Road
Sunday, 10 a.m. and 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.

Keoo Chvrcb or Chn.t
Worship . 9:30a.m.
Sund1y School - 10:30 a.m.
Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace
lit t nd 3rd Sunday

A sse mbly of God
Ubut7 Aaambly of God
P.O. Box 467. oUddina Lane
Mason, W.Va.
PaSior: Neil Tennant
Su nday Services- 10:00 a.m. and 7 p.m.

BnrwollowJUd&amp;e ,Cburcb of Cbrlll
Pas•or:T~rry Stewart
Sundly School ·9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 o.m., 6:30 p.m.
Wedncsdt y Servlc:et • 6:30p.m.

Bapttsl
Mlll'OUtbo Boptbl Cburda
Pastor: John Swanson
Sund ay School · 10:00 a.m.
Mornina Servic::c: 11:00 a.m.
Evening Service - 6:00p.m.
Wednesday Servke- 7:30p.m.

ztoo Cbun:b ofCbrlll
Pomeroy, Harrisonville Rd. (llt.l43)
Poor: Roaer Watson
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship. 10:30 a.m ., 7:00p.m.
Wednelday Services · 7 p.m.

Hope Boptlst Cburch (Soulb'"')
Pastor: Jim Dilly
510 Grant St., Middleport
Sunday school - 9:30a.m.
Worship· I I a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 p. m.

Tvppen Ploin Cburdl orCbrtol
Instrumental
Worship Service' · 9 Lm.
Communion · 10 a.m.
Sundt)' SchOol - 10:1 5 a.m.
Youth- 5:30pm Sunday
Bible Study Wednesday 1 pm

Burlingham · 742-1606

•

Rutland First Bilptl•l Cburth

Bndbury Cbun:b ofCbrilt
Putor: Tom Runyon
Sunday School - 9:30 •. m.
Wor1hip- 10:30 a.m.

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.

Worship - 10:45 a.m.
Pomeroy Flnl Baptllt
E.e t Main St.

RuUond Cbon:h of Cbrlll
Sundly School - 9:30a.m. , .
Worship -10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Sunday Sc hool - 9:30a.m.

Worship - 10:30 o.m.
Fint.Southeru Jloollll
41872 Pomeroy Plke .
Pa51ur: E. Lamer O'Bryant
Sunday School - 9:l0 a.m.
Worship - 10:4S 1.m., 7:00p.m.
Wcdnc~y Services - 7:00p.m.

Bndrord Cllun:b or Cllrill

Corner of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.

Minlatcr: Doua Shamblin
Youth Minister: Bill Amberger
Sun4ly School - 9:30 o.m.
Worsbip -8:00a.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:00 p.m.
Weclnosdoy ServlceJ • 7:00p.m.

Flnt Boptlll Cbarcb
Pastor: Mark Morrow
6th and Palnler St., Middlepon
Sunday School· 9:15a.m.
Worship - lO:IS a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7:00p.m.

Hldulry Hllll Cburdl of Cbrill
Evaoa,ellst Mike Moore
Sunclly School- 9 1.m.
Wonhip ·10 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Setvlces • 7 p.m.

Racine Flnt U.plilt
Pastor: Rick Rule
Sunday School-9:30a.m.

Worship - 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7;(10 p.m.

·

Mt.Ual011. .. ptjsl:
Pastor : Joe N. Sayre

Sunday School-9:•~ a.m.
Evening - 6:30p.m.

Old Belhtl Freo Will Boptlll Cbun:b
28601 St. Rt. 7, Middleport
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Evening - 7:00p.m.
Thursday Services - 7:00

Hillside Boptbl Cburda
St. Rt. 143 jusl off Rt. 7
Pastor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship· lla.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· '1 p.m.
Victory Boptill lllllepoadont
525 N. 2nd St. Middleport
Pa110r: James E. Kce!U
Worship - 10a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Se'rvices - 7 p.m.
' Poith Baplllt Cburdl
Railroad St, Mason
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 1la.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Forni Jtn Boptlll
Pastor : Ariu1 Hurt
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worthlp • 11 a.m.

Trloll7 Clwdl
Second &amp; Lynn, Pomeroy
Pastor: Rev. CraiJ Croasmin
Worship 10:25 a.m.
.Sunclly Schooi9:1S t.m.

Episcopal
G.- Eob&lt;opol Cbon:b
326 E. Moin St., Pomeroy •
Rev. Jimcs Bemac:kJ, Rev. Katharln F011er
Rev. llcbonh Rooldn, Oerty
Sundly: Adult Educotion •
S~ndly Sehool 1Q:l5 a.m.
Holy Euehtrist 11:00 a.m.
Wedneldly: Holy Euehorill 5:00p.m.

C3thO iiC
Somd HeutColltoftcCb161 Mulbenj Ave., Pomeroy, 992-5898
Putor: Rev. Walter E. Heinz
Sao. Con. 4:45-5:15p.m.; Mus- 5:30 p.m.
Svn. Con. ·8:45-9:15 a.m.,
Sun. Mao· 9:30a.m.
Dalley MIA • 8:30 1.m.

Hol in ess

Church of Chr i st

C..aaiiJCll.....,
Putor: Rev. Amoo nma
Main Slreet, Ru.tland
Sundly Wonhlp-10:00 Lm.
Sunday Service-? p.m.

ATTEND

"-

Reorpnlzed Cburcb ol JHUI Clirlal
ar I...Mier Dar Salats
Portland-Racine Rd.
Putor: Jerry Sinaer
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Wedne!lday ScrviceJ · 7:00p.m.

C1nnt1-Sanoa

Carmel &amp;: Buhan Rds.
· Racine, Ohio
Paator: Dewarne Stuller
Sunday SchOo • 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m.
Bible Study Wed. 7:00p.m.

'l'be Cburcb or J -

Cbrill or IAtter·D17 Salall
St. Rt. 160, 446·6247 or 446-7486
Sunday Schooll0:20·11 a.m.
Relief Society/Priesthood 11:05-12:00 noon
Satrament Service 9·10:1S a,m,
Homer~:~aklna meeting, lSI Thurs. - 7 p.m.

Gnlulm Unlleol Melllodlol
Worship • 9:30 Lm. (lit ol2nd Sun~
7:30p.m. (3nl &amp;. 4th Sun)
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Cong reg &lt;t1to nal

llullolldl'reo Will Boptbl
Salem St.
Paslilr: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sundoy S&lt;hooi·IO i.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednesday SCrvlces • 7 p.m.

Latter-Oily Sain1s

Cllon:h or Cbrlsllll
CbrlllluUo.._
Hahford, W.Va.
Putor:Jim Huahes
Sunday School- 11 a.m.
Wcnhip · 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30 p.~

Cb- of God orl'npllecy
OJ. Wbite Rd. off St. lit. 160
Plllor: PJ. Cblpm10
Sunday School-tO a.m.
Worahlp • II o.m.
Wednesdal ScNices- 7 p.m.

ML Morlab Boptlat
Fourth &amp; Main St., Middleport
Pastor: Rev. Gilbert Craia, Jr.
Sunclay School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship -10:4S a.m.
Allilquity Boptlot
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship • 10:45 a.m.
Sunday Evenlna· 6:00p.m.

Worsbip- 10:i5 1.m.

MonlqSiar
Pastor: J)ewa)'ne Stuller
Sunday Scllool - 11·a.m.
Wonhlp • 10 a.m.
l!all Letart
Pastor: Brian Harkne55
Sunday School - tO a.,n.
Worship - 9 a.m.
W.ednesday .. 7 p.m.
Bodae
Pastor; Brian Harkness
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worahip - 11 a.m.
Wednesday 7 p.m.

ML Olve Ualted MetllodlJI
Off 124 behind Wilkesville
Pastor: Rev. Ri.lph Spires ,
Sunday School · 9;30 a.m.
Worship. 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday. Services • 7 p.m.
Metaa Coopentlve Porlah
HortbOIII Cluster
All'red .
. Pastor: Jane Beaule
Sunclay School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonbip -lla.m., 6:30p.m.

·c -

Joppo
Pastor: Bob Randolph
Worship - 9:30 a.m.
Sunday School-10:30 o.m.
loqBoltom
Suncloy Sc;liool · 9:30 a.m.
WoBhip - 10:30 o.m.

S7neuse Cburdl oftbe N.......,e
Pastor Mik~ Adkins
Sundoy School • 9:30 0.m.
Worship • 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedneodly Services · 7 p.m.

lleeoii,Uie
Worahip • 9:30a.m.
Sundly School • 10:30 o.m.
First Sunday of .Monlh - 7:00p.m. service

........,.CburdaortbePutor: Jan Lavender
Sundly School • 9:3Q o.m.
Worship • 10:30 1.m. ond 6 p.m.
Wednesdoy Service• • 7 P·ll!·

~

Pllltu SL hul
· PUtor: lane Belnle
Sonclly School· 9 a.m.
wo,.hlp ·10 o.m.
TueSday Services-7:30p.m.

CbootetCburda orlbe NIUm!e
Putor: Rev. Herbert GBte
Sondly School " 9:30 o.m.
Worship ~ lla.m., 6 p.m.
Wednuday Seivic:cs- 7 p.m.

C.Utn!CJ.-

Aibery CS1.,.._&gt;
Pastor: Bob Robinson
Sundoy School- 9:45 o.m.
Worship ·1la.m.
Wcdnesd1y Services - 7:30p.m.

Seventh -Day Adventist
· Stventh·Day Adventist
Mulberry Hts. Rd., Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy La,winsky
Sa1urday Services:
Sabbeth School. 2 p.m.
Worship - 3 p.m.

MI. Olive Commanll7 Cbun:•
Pastor: Lawrence Bush
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Evenine- 7 p.m.
Wedncdl7 Service • 7 p.m.

Un1ted Brethren

UiltodFallhCbarcb
Rt. 7 oo Pomeroy By·J'us
Pator: Rev. Robert E. Smith,.Sr.
Sunday School· 9:30 o.m.
WoBhlp · 10:30 a.m.. 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.

MI. Hermoa Uolted Brethrea
In Chrlll Church
Texas Community offCR 82
Pastor: Robert Sanders
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worsblp ·-10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m .
Wednesday Sel'\•ices- 7:30p.m.

Freedom Goopel MBold Knob, on Co. Rd. 31
Putor: Rev. Roacr Willford
Sunday Scbool- 9:30a.m.
·
Wonhip- 7 p.m.

ICE

FYOU
Crow'a Family.

~i•~er ~ mtmd ~orne

"Fealullng KentuCky Fried Chlck6n"

228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

.. .

lNSURANCE

. -

~·
....
,

GENCIIS l11e.
Bll Quickel 982-41177"•

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SWISt:IER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
SERVICES

We Fill Dbctors'

21-4 E. Main
1192-5130 Pomeroy

Ptescrip~ions
~-2955
Pomeroy

FUNERAL HOfJJE
Set your affections on EWING
Dignity and Service Always
things above, not on
Established 1913
things on the earth.
992-2121
Col. 3·2' 106 Mulbany Ave. Pomeroy

.

FUNERAL HOME
"We ~u:cept Preraeed Tro,.,fero"

112·1200
Lundy Brown
Director

.

Ragan Brown
174

~temti u

tke Yatillll wANe
f~ti iJ tAe .,!,,l'fi, ~~~ti tAe
ll'!le wA#M Ae Aat'A tANefl
I~~' Au #Wfl i~tAel'i(llll&amp;e.
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SNOUFFER
FIRE • SAFETY
SALES • SI:RVICE
992·7075
172 North Second Ava.
Oh ·

I
I'

680 Eltsl Main Street • Pomtlfcy, OH 4~7118
740-992-5444

992·5432
F.. ~Mol

NEW YORK (AP) - The
half- million dollar sale of the base
ketball advertised as the one Wilt
Chamberlain used to score 100
. points iri. an NBA game was
called off because of questions
about its authenticity. .
·
Leland's, auction house sold the
ball on April 28 for $551,844 a record for a basketball and the
·third- highest figure of any spom
memorabilia 'item sold at auction.

284 South Second AIII.•Middlepurt,
740-992-5141
Bruce R. F~htlr · llireetor

31:f.2

:francis FLORIST

....

Me,;lo (;ounlyJ Oldest Florilr
WZr.tMIIIPl
. 740-992-2644
740-992-6298
IAI U1 Serul Your TlwU«III• Wid' Sp«MI Core

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local church?
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. every Friday!

.

"I can't get in another race car and be able
to do the same thing:'
Crew chiefTony Eury has worked the
entire team hard since the start of the year
to ensure that nothing is left undone. He
says his rookie driver has helped make aU
the work pay off.
"He's definitely surprised us," Eury said.
"He's a good little race car driver and he
knows what it takes to make it go around
the track as fast as it can."
Fellow drivers also are impressed.
"What a driver that kid is," Jarrett sa(d.
"Unbelievable."
Tony Stewart, who seemed certain to
win in Richmond until a late pit-road
bump from Earnhardt Jr. flattened a tire

Boo.ne,
·Reds walk
off with
win
•

· · under scrutiny · .

,.

5edlotiiL hp Bl

. BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
that I'm winning races in the Winston
Little E is living up to the hype - and Cup series," said the 25-year-old Earnhis name.
hardt, the first driver this season with
Dale· Earnhardt Jr. arrived in more than one victory.
His win in the Pontiac Excitement 400
NASCAR's top series with greater fanfare
than any ~okie in history. He came in was especially impressive because he outwith two Busch series titles and $50 mil- ran series champions Terry Labonte and
lion in sponsorship, and is the son of a · Dale Jarrett in the closing laps, when a
driver's mettle is put to the ultimate test.
seven-time Winston Cup champion.
Eleven races into his debut season, He passed his father, Dale Earnhardt, for
Junior has accomplished more than just rhe lead with 31 laps to go.
about anyone expected. He's even set a
Little E often is n'lore self-deprecating
record already, winning two races faster than cocky, and certain to credit his team
for making good things happen.
than any driver in any era.
He did it in .his 16th start, beating 'the
"I can 'i go out there and do that .withbest last Saturday night in Richmond, Va. out a good motor. I can't go out there and
" It surprises me ·that it's me in ihe car, do that without a good race car," he said.

$500,000 ball annes

Wblte'l Cliao&gt;et W01ley111
Coolville Road
Pattor: Rev. Plt.UIIp Ridenour
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Woflhip • 10:30 a.m.
Wednoodly Service • 7 p.m.

Please -

SECTIO.NAL SCENERY ..... Jeff Brown of Meigs waits for the throw over from pitcher Tommy Roush as Gallie Academy's Heath Rothgeb dives back to first base (top photo). Meigs reliever John Stanley (lower left)
delivers a pitch in the fifth inning of Thursday's sectional championship game. Marauder senior Kyle Smiddie (lower right) lines a shot to seeond base against Gallipolis. The Marauders fell to the Blue Devils 166 yesterday. It was the final game for seniors Kyle Smlddle, Tommy Roush, Odie Karr, Ronnie Smith and
Levi Burns. (Dave Harris photos)

tittle E is living up to his pre-NASCAR hype

ROME (AP) -. Top-ranked
Andre Agassi lost 6-4, 6- 4 to
Dominik Hrbaty in the third
round of the' italian Open.
Ninth-seeded Lleyton Hewitt
moved into the quarterfinals with
a 7- (i (6), 2-6, 6-3 vi ctory over
No. 7 Thomas Enqvist.
. ·Also, No. 3 Magnus Norman
: !fefeated Andrei Medvedev 7-6
' (4), 6-1; No.4 Gustavo Kuerten,
the
defending
champion,
advanced when Younes El
f\ynaoui Withdrew with a heel
injury a few hours before their
match; and Mariano Puerta beat
Juan Carlos Ferrero.

Carleloa laterdeaomlootloalll Cban:h
Kinpbury Rood
Paator: Cl7de Henderson
. · Sunday Sehool- 9:30a.m.
Worship Service 10:30 a.m.
·
No Solncloy or Wodnelday Nlg)lt Services

the third. T he Blue Devils
scored five runs with· two outs
to take the lead for good.
"As a coach, you get a little
netvo us when a team comes out
and attacks the ball real well;'
Gallia Academy head coach
llrack Houchens said in regard
to the early deficit. "We were
off-balance a little bit, but our
guys came back. They just
showed a lot of composure and
didn't panic."
1
The Marauders pulled off a
double play after Galli a Academy's Scott Nida ripped a leadoff single to left field. Bobby
Angel lined out to Stanley at
short for the first out, and Stanley threw on to first to doubleoff Nida. ·
Rothgeb got aboard on an
error to start the rally. Cody
Lane then followed with a single
to left field.
Justin McKinniss stepped in
and belted a double· that drove
in Rothgeb with the Blue Devils' first run and ·c ut the g;tp to 31.
Jeremy' Payton, who ·was hit- .
ting .468 ente~ing play Thursday, cracked another double that
drove in two runs and tied the
.score at 3-3:
Mter Bo Shirey slapped a single through the left side, Nick
Merola got aboard on an error
that allowed to runs to score and
gave the Gallipolitans a S-3
advantage.
Prior to the Blue Devils' outburst in the third, Meigs starter
Tommy Roush had held Gallia
Acadetny in check. Roush faced
just seven batters in the first two
innings and gave up one hit. He
had two strikeouts in that
stretch.
Gallia Academy' ~extended its
lead to I 0-3 in · the fourth
in,ning. Roush ' surrendered
back-to-hack walks to Sims and
Nida before Angel knocked in
one run with a 'single through
the left side.

.

Apssl bulftped
froiD Italian Open

Eden Unltnl Bnlbreoln Chriot
2 112 miles north of Reedsville
on S1a1e Route 124
Pastor: Rev. Robert ,Markley
Sunday School - 11 a.m.
Sunday Worship- 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Youth Service-7:30p.m.

Soutb Bethel New Teottmonl
Silver Rid&amp;e ·
Pastor: Robert ltarbcr
Sunclly School· 9a.m.
Sun. Worship - 10:10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Scrviee - 7 p.m. ·

Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship • 10:30 a.m.. 6:30 p.m.
Wednetday Services - 7 p.m.
•
Porllud Ffnt Cloarcb oru.. i i PuiOr. William JUJtis
Svndly Scllool -10:00 Lm.
Mornina Worship • 10;4S a.m.
Sunclay Servh;o · 6:30p.m.

CHUR

Middleport Pnobyterian
Sunday School·· 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m.

hll Galpel IJablllo3lOoiS Hilond Rood. Pomeroy
Putor: Roy Hunter
Sunday School-10 a.m.
Evenlns7:30 p.m.
Tuesday&amp;. Thursday· 7:30 p;m.

Rutl.uld Cburda oflbe N Putor: Rev. Samuel W. Bu)'e

Flalwoodo
Pu1or: Keith Rader
Suodoy School . 10 o.m.
Wonhip • 11 o.m.

FRANKLIN,Tenn. (AP) -Pat
Hurst shot·a 7- under-par 65 for a
two-stroke lead after the opening
round or.the LPGA 's new Electrolux USA Championship.
· Cindy .Figg-Currier and Krista!
Parker each shot 67s, while .Meg
Mallon, who won this e;,ent in
NashviUe last year, was among six
players at 69.
Karrie Webb, looking for her
fifth LPGA victory and sixth title
this year· after winning in Japan
l~t weekend, finished. with a 73.

Hanisondle Presbyterian Cburch
Worship - 9 a.m.
Sunday School ! 9:45a.m.

Fallb Goopel Cbarcb
Lon&amp; Bottom
Sundly Schoo! • 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:•~ a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m.

I

· EaterpriH
Pa1tor: Keith Rader
Sundoy School. 10 o.m.
· Worship ~ 9 a.m.

Syracuse First United Presbyterian
Pastor: Rev. Krisana Robinson
Sundly School - 10 a.m.
Worship. 11 a.m.

Mono Cblpel churl:b
Sunday school- 10 a.m.
Worship . 11 a.m.
Wednnday Service - 7 p.m.

lleediVIIIo
Ch-oflbeNPutor: Teresa Walclcct
Sundly School • 9:30 a.m.
Wor1hlp- to:•s Lm., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Sen~ices • 7 p.ni.

Hunt leads LPGA
USA ChaiDpionshlp

Presbyterian

DyHYIIe Commualiy Cburch
Sundly School-9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7 f.m.

-p

Pastor: Jane Bea!Jie
Worship - 9 a.m.
Sund17 School • 10 o.m.
Thvrsdoy Servicea • 7 p.m;

Middleport Pentecostal
Third Ave.
Pastor: Rev. Clark Baker
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Eveni ng · 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.

'

Middleport Cburda or tile N Putor. Allen Mldap
'
Sundly School· 9:30 Lm.
Wonhlp - 10:30 o.m., 6:30 p.m.
Wednelld1y Services - 7 p.m.
Putor. Allen Midcap

IRVING, Tex~s (AP) - Davis
.Love Ill, winless in his last 53
starts on the PGA Tour, 'holed a·
40- foot chip and a couple of 30foot putts for a 4-under-par 66 to
share the first~ round lead at the
Byron Nelson Classic with Blaine
McCallister.
Among six players two strokes
back were Lee Janzen and Sergio
Garcia. Masters champion Vijay
Singh was in a large group at 69.
Tiger Woods opened with a 3over 73, matching his worst score
in relation to par this year.

·Pentecostal Auembly
St. Rt. l 24, Racine
Pastor: William Hoback
Sunday School - lO a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Hutl Commually Cbun:h
OffRt.124
Pastor: Edsel Hsn .
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wor1hip -10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Nazarene

Love Ill shares
Nelson Classk lead

Pentecostal

SynctUO Mluloil
1411 Bridaeman St., Syracuse
Rev. Mike Thompson,Pastor
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening - 6 p.m.
.
Wednesday Service ' 7 p.m.

Tardl clnui:b
Co. Rd. 63
Sunday Scllool - 9:30 1.m.
Worship .. 10:30 a.m.

Today'a gamea
Sectional Tournament
Eastern v. Leesburg Fairfield, 5:00
(at 'Rio Grande)
Southern v. Portsmouth Notre
Dame, 5:00 (at Jackson H.S.)

Chruch of Christ
Intersection 7 and 124 W
Evangelist: Dennis Sargent
Sunday Bible study ~ 9:30 a.m.
Worship: 10~30 a.m. and6:30 p.m.
· Wednesday BiblC Study - 7 p.m.

l'ollb Valie1 Tobel'llll&lt;le Church
Bailey Run Road
Putor: Rev. Emmett Rawson
S~nday Evening 7 p.m.
Thursday Service • 7,p.m.

•·'li·

Regular Season
Point Pleasant 11 , River Valley 1
Federal Hocking 23, Wahama 14

God's Ttmple of Praise
3166S McQuire Rd. Pomeroy, Ohio
PastOr: Way ne Balcolm
Services: Thurs. Niles 7:00pm
New church No Sunday service established.

,Middleport Commully Cburch
S7S Purl St., Middleport
·
Putor: Sam Anderson
Sunday SchoollO a.m.
Evening -·7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7:30 p.m.

GALLIPOLIS
G~ll ia
Academy rallied from a threerun deficit to capture its second
straight secti.onal baseball championship Thursday.
The Blue Devils (12-9)
defeated Meigs 16- 6 in six
innings to advance to the Division II district tournament Tuesday at Ross County Park in
C hiUicothe.
Gallia Academy will meet
powerhouse Washington Court
House in the first round of the
district tourney. The Blue Lions
(18-1 ), ranked No. 6 in this
week's AP state poll, held off
Miami Trace 6- 4 Thursday to
win its sectional.
Meigs (7~ 12) jumped out ~ a
1-0 lead in the first inning
thanks to a double by number
two hitter John Stanley and a
RBI single by first baseman Jeff
Brown. Stanley whipJYed a oneout double to left field to put
himself into ~coring position.
Following a ground out by
Matt Stewart, Brown stepped in
and singled to right field to
drive in . Stanley with the goahead run.
·
The Marauders added two
more runs in the third inning,
with Stanley and Brown again
· figuring in the scoring. Stanley
led off the inning with a single ·
through ,tP,~ right side of the.
infield ·and ·Stewart drew a walk
to put runners on first and second.
Brown lined a single up the
middle to drive in Stanley and
give Meigs a 2-0 lead. Tommy
Roush hit into a double play,
but picked up a RBI when
Stewart scored . from third to
give Meigs a 3-0 cushion.
The Marauder catcher scampered home as Blue Devil second baseman Heath Rothgeb
threw to Jeremy Payton at first
to complete the 6-4-3 double
play.
·
However, the Meigs Jead
evaporated in the bottom half of

Balebllll
Thuraday'a gamea
Olvlalon II Sectlonala
' Gallla Academy 16, Meigs 6, 61nn.
Hillsboro 13, Greenlield McClain 2
Washington Court House 6, Miami
Trace 4
Fairfield Union 6, New Lexington 3
South Point 8, Jackson 7
Northwest 2, Portsmouth 1
Logan Elm 13, Circleville 8

Full Gospel Churth or the U¥iDII Sa¥1Dr
Rt.331:1, Antiquit y
Pastor: Jesse Morris
Asst. Pastors: Jim Morris
Services: Saturday 7:30p.m.

Hmiloa•lllo Community Chun:b
Putor: Theron Durham
Sundly.- 9:30 o.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday· 7 p.m.

OVP SPORTS EDITOR

Prep Sports

New Ure VIctor, Center
3773 Georges Creek Road, Gallipolis, QH
Pastor: Blll Staten
Sunday Services· 10 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m. ·
· Wednesday - 7 p.m. &amp; Youth 7 p.m.

Tbe BelleYOn' FelloWiltlp Ministry
New Lime Rd., Rutland
Pastor: Rev. Maraaret J. Robinson
Services: WedneS(Iay, 7:30p.m.
Sundly, 2:30p.m.

Gallia Academy defeats Meigs
BY ANDREW CARTER

Clifton, W.Va. .
Sunday School - lO a.m.
Worship - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.

Faith Full Goapel Chon:h
Lons Bottom
Pastor: Sieve Reed
Sunday Sehool · 9:30 a.m.
Worship· 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wedneldar • 7 p.m.
Fri9ay - fellowship service 7 p.m.

HocldiiJPOrt Cllun:h
·Grand Street ·
Sundly School- 10
Worabip • 11 a.m.
·
Wednesday Services - 8 p.m.

HIGHLIGHTs

Clifton Tabernatle·Cburcb

Hobloa Cbrtstlu Ftllowsblp Cbun:h
Sunday service, 10:00 a.m., 1:00 p.m.
Youth Fellowship Sunday, 7:00p.m.
Wedne5day serJlcc, 7:00p.m.

Deibel Chun:h
Township Rd., 468C
Sund•y School • 9 a.m.
Worship ·10 a.m.
Wednesday Services - 10 .a.m.

Faith Fellowship Crulldo for Chrilt
Pastor: Rev. Franklin Dickens
Service : Friday, 7 p.m.

Rejoicing Life Chun:h
500 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport
Pastor: Mi ke Foreman
Pastor: Emeritus Lawrence Forema n
Wors.hip- 10:00 am
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Cbrllllaa Fellowoblp Center
Sllem Sl., Rutland
Pastor: Robert E. Musser
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhlp • ll:U o.m., 7 p.m.
Wednc:sdty Service · 1 p.m.

Coolville Ualled Metllodlat Ptorllb
Pastor: Helen Kline
Coolville Chlln:ll
Main &amp; Fifth St.
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship- 9 a.m.
Tuesday Services • 7 p.m.

FRIDAY's

Sll¥en¥1He Word or F:ailh
Pastor: David Dailey
Sunday School 9:30 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.

Fallb Cbopel
923 S. Third SL, Middioyort
Pastor Michael Pangto
Sunday service, io a.m.
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.

lletbllly

Untied Methodist

S,I'ICIIJII'lnt Cburcb or God
Apple and Sooond Sll.
.
Putor: Rev. David Ruuell
Sundly Schoolond WoBhlp· 10 1.m.
Bvenin&amp; Scr't'k:et- 6:30p.m.
WeclllCICioy Servlm • 6:30p.m.

. St.lem Ct-ater
· Pastor: Ron Fierce
Sunday School - 9:15a.m.

Fairview Bible Churcb
Letart, W.V1. Rl. 1
Pastor: Brian May
Su nday School - 9:30a.m.
Wor~hip - 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study - 7:00 p.m.

Calvary Bible Chun:h
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pastor: Rev. Black wood
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship 10:30 a. m., 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Serv ice -7 :30p .m.

"Fuii-Ootpei'Church"
Putors John &amp;. Pa.tty Wade
603 Second Ave. Muon
773·5017
Service dme: Sunday 10:30 a.m •.
Wednesday '1 pm

Jludud
S4nf!iy School· 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 o.m.
Th~rsday Services • 7 p.m.

Pastor: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday SchOol • 10 Lm.
Wonhip • 9 a.m.
Wednesday Services -10 a.m.

Chn sl13n Un1on

RutludCharcbofGGd
Pastor; Ron Heath
Sunday Worihip . 10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednetdty Services - 7 p.m. ·

Appo ur. C.UIIr

SnoWJOIIle
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship · 9a.m.

SL Paul Lulbenn Cbun:b
Comer Sycamore &amp;. Second St., Pomeroy
Rev. Donald C. Fritz
Sund17 School· 9:45 o.m.
Worship • 11 o.m.

Mt. Morlab Churda or God
Mile Hill Rd., Racine
Pastor: Brh;:c l.ln
Sunday School· 9:4!1 a.m.
Evenina · 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

PeuiCblpel
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.

lAurel Cllrr Fm Metbodllt Church
Pastor: Charles Swiger
Sunda)l School ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip • l0:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Se'rvice · 7:00p.m.

Beater Cbvrcb ofChrlll
Pastor: Justin Campbell
Sunday sdlool9:31.1 a.m.
Nomian Will, superintendent
~unday wol'llllp • 10:30 a.m.

Churct1 of God

Hanell OutrNdt Mlalstrla
47439 Reibel Rd., chester
P:l.&lt;IOB: Rev. Mary lAd Horoid Cook
Sunday Servi ces: 10 a.m. &amp; 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Rock S~rtap
Putor: Keuh Rader
Sunday School - 9:1S a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m.
Youth Fellowship, Sunday - 6 p.m.

H710ll Rua Hollo. . Cbun:b
Rev. Mark Michael
Sundly School • 9:30 o.m.
Wotsbir. - 10:4~ a.moi 7 p.m.
Thursdty Bib e Study and Youth· 7 p.m.

OUr Sawlotor Lutber111 Cburc:b
Walnut and Henry S11., Ravenswood, W.Va .
Pastor: David Russell
Sunday School-10:00 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.

-

Min emilie
Pastor: Bob Roblason
Sunday School • 9a.m.
Worship · 10 o.m.

POIIIff'OJ

Wnle71n Bible Holiaea Cburch
1S Pearl St., Middleport.
Pastor: Rev. Doug Co"
Sunday Worship . 9:30p.m,, 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m.

Rtecbvllle Cbvrcb or Cbrlll
Pu10r: Philip Sturm
Sunclly School: 9:30a.m.
Worship Service: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wodnesday, 6:30p.m.

lldhlehem Bipllol Church
Great Bend, Route 124, Racine, OH
Pastor : Daniel Mecca
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Sunda)' Worship· 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Bible Study - 6:00 p.m.

AIIISintiCbAsb St.. Middleport
PISIOr Leo Hlyman
Sundly School • 10:00 Lm.
Sundly Servia: • 6:00p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:00 p.m.

Pastor: Connie Fiaru
Sunday School - 9:IS a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study Tuesday · 10 1.m.

Plae Gro¥e Bible Holtneu Church
1/2 mile off Rt. 325
Putor: Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sundly School • 9:30 o.m.
Worship. 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneaily Scrvi&lt;:e - 7:30p.m.

H-'ock Gnve Cburcb
. Putor: Gene Zopp
Sunday sc:hool· 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 9:30a.m .. 7 p.m.

Wednesday Services - 6:30p.m.

•

ROR of Sblroa Hollnt~~ Church
Leadina Creek Rd., Rutland
Pastor: Rev. Dewey Kin&amp;
Sundly ,.hooi· 9:30 a.m.
Sunday worship -7 p.m.
Wednesday pr1yer meetln&amp;- ~ p.m .

SL John Lothtrlll Cburcb
Pine Grove
R~v. Oonald .C. Fritz
Worship • 9:00a.m.
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.

Sunday School- lOa.m.

Other Churches

Hralll (Mldlleplrl) .
Puto;: Vemapye SulliVan
Sundly School - 9:30a.m.
Wo11hlp · 10:30 a.m.

Calvll')' Pllcrlai Cblpel
lhrrisonvllle Road
Putor: Olarles McKenzie
Sunday School9:30 a.m.
Worship . -1 1 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wedneld1y Service • 7:00 p.m.

Lutheriln

Worship - lla.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7:00p.m.

•
•
•
•

o..r

U8pvUie Cbrllllu Cburda
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 s.m., 7:30p.m.
Weclnesdoy Service 7:30p.m.

Sliver Jlua Boptlll
Pastor: Sceven K. Uttlc

Fo-Rua
Pastor: Bob Robinson
Sundly School · 10 o. m.
Worship - 9 a.m.

Dtol•lllo llolilttll Cburcb
31057 Stile Route 325, lanpvlle
Putor:
sacklon
Sundl71&lt;hoo • 9:30 o.m.
Svndly wonhip · 10:30 Lm. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer tervice - 7 p.m.

LSU star to enter
NBAdraft
BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) LSU forward Stromile Swift said
he will enter his name · into the
N BA draft but not retain "an ·
agent, giving him the choice of
pulling out before the June 28
draft.
The 6-foot-9 sophomore averaged 16 .3 points and 8.2
rebounds per game last season as
the Tigers reached the regional .
· semifinals of the NC AA tournanlent.

CINCINNATI (AP) -· A
seaspn already full of misfortune ··
·and misery got a whole lot
worse for. the San Diegp Padres.
The slumping Padres blew two
sizable leads, ha1 reliever Rodney Myers tear up his knee fielding a bunt and wound up losing
their sixth consecutive game
·'Fhursday, 11-9 to the Cincinnati YEAH, BABY! - .Aaron Boone Is mobbe d by Reds teammates after
R eds.
hitting a walk-off homer in the ninth to oe at San Diego. (AP)
Aaron Boone's
two- run
homer off the right-field fo11l selves.''
comeba~k grounder off his right
screen in the bottom of the
The afternoon started with ankle in the first, then gave up
ninth finished off a deflating day great promise for the Padres. four consecutive hits to open the
for the Padres, who left town Afier scoring only one run in · second. Just like that, the Reds
after only their third 0-6 roaa the last 24 innings, they got five had cut i.t to 5-4.
trip in their 32-year history.
in the first tWO off Rob Bell.
Bichette and Ken Griffey Jr.
"You don't thirlk it can get · Bret Boone hit a two-ru11 homer hit solo homers to put the Reds
worse, but it does ·and it's hap- and BeD le~ in a pair of runs ori · ah ead, but Bret lJoone had a
pened right now,'' .manager consecutive wild pitches.
two-run inside-the-park homer
Bruce Bochy said. "We're findBut Padres .starter Rodrigo
ing \erent ways to beat our- Lopez took Dante Bichette's
PlnH-Ieds,PepBI

}
I

il

Pleese see Little E. Pep .,

Deion, Reds part
ways ••• for now
CINCINNATI (AP)
nerback in the NFL this fall ,
Deion Sanders received per- possibly for the Washington
mission to leave the Cincinnati Redskins.
R eds' Triple-A farm club
Sanders, 32, signed a minor
Thursday; at least temporarily league coptract with th e R eds
ending the attempt to revive · on Jan. 20 intending to return
his baseball career.
to the majors.
The outfielder batted only
The centerfielder's value to
.200
(21 - for-105)
for the Reds diminished when
Louisville with 10 stolen bases they traded for Ken •Griffey Jr.
in 25 games. Sanders had not on Feb. I 0.
played baseball sin ce 1997,
Sanders had arthroscopi c
when he left the Reds to be a surgery on his right kn ee to fi&gt;o
full- time cornerback for the a football injury on Jan. 24 .
Dallas Cowboys.
He was hobbled when he
General manager Jim Bow- reported for spring training
den said the club agreed to let but was running well enough
Sanders return to his home in to begin a miho r league rehaDallas, where he'll continue bilitation assignment last
rehabilitating his right knee.
month.
Although Bowden said it's
Sanders had hoped to rejoin
possible S~nders could return the R eds quickly. but his
to baseball . this season, it's minor league struggles and the ·
highly unlikely.
Reds ' outfield depth became a
Sanders expects to play cor- roadblock.

I

,,

and to.ok him out of contention, says he
c'an p)lff out his chest because he predicted the success.
"I felt like Dale.Jr. and Matt Kenseth
were both very capable and still are of
winning at least three and maybe more
races," said Stewart, who set rookie records
last year with three wins and a fourthplace finish in the points race.
"Like I've said, I think this is a record
that would only probably last a year,"
Stewart said of his standard for rookie victories. "After Saturday night, Junior's one
step closer to that."
Earnhardt's first victory came April 2 in
the DirecTV 500 in Fort Worth, Texas, in

,I

I•

�Inside:

Friday, May 12, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Pqe A 8 • The Deily Sentinel _

The Daily Sentinel

AL: Oakland tops Seattle, Page B2
NL: Fish swallow the Br~ves, Page B2
NBA : Blazers thump Jazz, Page BJ
Daily Scoreboard, Page B8

Page Bl'
Friday. May 11. 1000

r.moi'O)'

Apostoltc

w-. Clwdl orCllrlll

33226 Cblldren'a Home Rd.
Sundly School - ll a. m.
Worship · 10..m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Cllarcb or J...., Cllrill Apoolollc
V10Zand1 lAd Wild Rd.
Putor: James Miller
Svnday School • 10:30 a.m.
E~enin&amp; - 7:30 p.m.

"

MW'tpe'l'l Clllll'dl ofCilrlll
5th and Main
Putor: AI H.,.,n
Youth Minister: DiU Frazier
Sundly School - 9:30a.m.
Wo11hip- 8:15, 10:30 o.m., 7 p.m.
W~dnelday Services · 7 p.m.

Cbvrcb or J..ua Cbrtst
Apostolic Foitb
New Lima Road
Sunday, 10 a.m. and 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.

Keoo Chvrcb or Chn.t
Worship . 9:30a.m.
Sund1y School - 10:30 a.m.
Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace
lit t nd 3rd Sunday

A sse mbly of God
Ubut7 Aaambly of God
P.O. Box 467. oUddina Lane
Mason, W.Va.
PaSior: Neil Tennant
Su nday Services- 10:00 a.m. and 7 p.m.

BnrwollowJUd&amp;e ,Cburcb of Cbrlll
Pas•or:T~rry Stewart
Sundly School ·9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 o.m., 6:30 p.m.
Wedncsdt y Servlc:et • 6:30p.m.

Bapttsl
Mlll'OUtbo Boptbl Cburda
Pastor: John Swanson
Sund ay School · 10:00 a.m.
Mornina Servic::c: 11:00 a.m.
Evening Service - 6:00p.m.
Wednesday Servke- 7:30p.m.

ztoo Cbun:b ofCbrlll
Pomeroy, Harrisonville Rd. (llt.l43)
Poor: Roaer Watson
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship. 10:30 a.m ., 7:00p.m.
Wednelday Services · 7 p.m.

Hope Boptlst Cburch (Soulb'"')
Pastor: Jim Dilly
510 Grant St., Middleport
Sunday school - 9:30a.m.
Worship· I I a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 p. m.

Tvppen Ploin Cburdl orCbrtol
Instrumental
Worship Service' · 9 Lm.
Communion · 10 a.m.
Sundt)' SchOol - 10:1 5 a.m.
Youth- 5:30pm Sunday
Bible Study Wednesday 1 pm

Burlingham · 742-1606

•

Rutland First Bilptl•l Cburth

Bndbury Cbun:b ofCbrilt
Putor: Tom Runyon
Sunday School - 9:30 •. m.
Wor1hip- 10:30 a.m.

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.

Worship - 10:45 a.m.
Pomeroy Flnl Baptllt
E.e t Main St.

RuUond Cbon:h of Cbrlll
Sundly School - 9:30a.m. , .
Worship -10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Sunday Sc hool - 9:30a.m.

Worship - 10:30 o.m.
Fint.Southeru Jloollll
41872 Pomeroy Plke .
Pa51ur: E. Lamer O'Bryant
Sunday School - 9:l0 a.m.
Worship - 10:4S 1.m., 7:00p.m.
Wcdnc~y Services - 7:00p.m.

Bndrord Cllun:b or Cllrill

Corner of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.

Minlatcr: Doua Shamblin
Youth Minister: Bill Amberger
Sun4ly School - 9:30 o.m.
Worsbip -8:00a.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:00 p.m.
Weclnosdoy ServlceJ • 7:00p.m.

Flnt Boptlll Cbarcb
Pastor: Mark Morrow
6th and Palnler St., Middlepon
Sunday School· 9:15a.m.
Worship - lO:IS a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7:00p.m.

Hldulry Hllll Cburdl of Cbrill
Evaoa,ellst Mike Moore
Sunclly School- 9 1.m.
Wonhip ·10 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Setvlces • 7 p.m.

Racine Flnt U.plilt
Pastor: Rick Rule
Sunday School-9:30a.m.

Worship - 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7;(10 p.m.

·

Mt.Ual011. .. ptjsl:
Pastor : Joe N. Sayre

Sunday School-9:•~ a.m.
Evening - 6:30p.m.

Old Belhtl Freo Will Boptlll Cbun:b
28601 St. Rt. 7, Middleport
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Evening - 7:00p.m.
Thursday Services - 7:00

Hillside Boptbl Cburda
St. Rt. 143 jusl off Rt. 7
Pastor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship· lla.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· '1 p.m.
Victory Boptill lllllepoadont
525 N. 2nd St. Middleport
Pa110r: James E. Kce!U
Worship - 10a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Se'rvices - 7 p.m.
' Poith Baplllt Cburdl
Railroad St, Mason
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 1la.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Forni Jtn Boptlll
Pastor : Ariu1 Hurt
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worthlp • 11 a.m.

Trloll7 Clwdl
Second &amp; Lynn, Pomeroy
Pastor: Rev. CraiJ Croasmin
Worship 10:25 a.m.
.Sunclly Schooi9:1S t.m.

Episcopal
G.- Eob&lt;opol Cbon:b
326 E. Moin St., Pomeroy •
Rev. Jimcs Bemac:kJ, Rev. Katharln F011er
Rev. llcbonh Rooldn, Oerty
Sundly: Adult Educotion •
S~ndly Sehool 1Q:l5 a.m.
Holy Euehtrist 11:00 a.m.
Wedneldly: Holy Euehorill 5:00p.m.

C3thO iiC
Somd HeutColltoftcCb161 Mulbenj Ave., Pomeroy, 992-5898
Putor: Rev. Walter E. Heinz
Sao. Con. 4:45-5:15p.m.; Mus- 5:30 p.m.
Svn. Con. ·8:45-9:15 a.m.,
Sun. Mao· 9:30a.m.
Dalley MIA • 8:30 1.m.

Hol in ess

Church of Chr i st

C..aaiiJCll.....,
Putor: Rev. Amoo nma
Main Slreet, Ru.tland
Sundly Wonhlp-10:00 Lm.
Sunday Service-? p.m.

ATTEND

"-

Reorpnlzed Cburcb ol JHUI Clirlal
ar I...Mier Dar Salats
Portland-Racine Rd.
Putor: Jerry Sinaer
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Wedne!lday ScrviceJ · 7:00p.m.

C1nnt1-Sanoa

Carmel &amp;: Buhan Rds.
· Racine, Ohio
Paator: Dewarne Stuller
Sunday SchOo • 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m.
Bible Study Wed. 7:00p.m.

'l'be Cburcb or J -

Cbrill or IAtter·D17 Salall
St. Rt. 160, 446·6247 or 446-7486
Sunday Schooll0:20·11 a.m.
Relief Society/Priesthood 11:05-12:00 noon
Satrament Service 9·10:1S a,m,
Homer~:~aklna meeting, lSI Thurs. - 7 p.m.

Gnlulm Unlleol Melllodlol
Worship • 9:30 Lm. (lit ol2nd Sun~
7:30p.m. (3nl &amp;. 4th Sun)
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Cong reg &lt;t1to nal

llullolldl'reo Will Boptbl
Salem St.
Paslilr: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sundoy S&lt;hooi·IO i.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednesday SCrvlces • 7 p.m.

Latter-Oily Sain1s

Cllon:h or Cbrlsllll
CbrlllluUo.._
Hahford, W.Va.
Putor:Jim Huahes
Sunday School- 11 a.m.
Wcnhip · 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30 p.~

Cb- of God orl'npllecy
OJ. Wbite Rd. off St. lit. 160
Plllor: PJ. Cblpm10
Sunday School-tO a.m.
Worahlp • II o.m.
Wednesdal ScNices- 7 p.m.

ML Morlab Boptlat
Fourth &amp; Main St., Middleport
Pastor: Rev. Gilbert Craia, Jr.
Sunclay School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship -10:4S a.m.
Allilquity Boptlot
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship • 10:45 a.m.
Sunday Evenlna· 6:00p.m.

Worsbip- 10:i5 1.m.

MonlqSiar
Pastor: J)ewa)'ne Stuller
Sunday Scllool - 11·a.m.
Wonhlp • 10 a.m.
l!all Letart
Pastor: Brian Harkne55
Sunday School - tO a.,n.
Worship - 9 a.m.
W.ednesday .. 7 p.m.
Bodae
Pastor; Brian Harkness
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worahip - 11 a.m.
Wednesday 7 p.m.

ML Olve Ualted MetllodlJI
Off 124 behind Wilkesville
Pastor: Rev. Ri.lph Spires ,
Sunday School · 9;30 a.m.
Worship. 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday. Services • 7 p.m.
Metaa Coopentlve Porlah
HortbOIII Cluster
All'red .
. Pastor: Jane Beaule
Sunclay School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonbip -lla.m., 6:30p.m.

·c -

Joppo
Pastor: Bob Randolph
Worship - 9:30 a.m.
Sunday School-10:30 o.m.
loqBoltom
Suncloy Sc;liool · 9:30 a.m.
WoBhip - 10:30 o.m.

S7neuse Cburdl oftbe N.......,e
Pastor Mik~ Adkins
Sundoy School • 9:30 0.m.
Worship • 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedneodly Services · 7 p.m.

lleeoii,Uie
Worahip • 9:30a.m.
Sundly School • 10:30 o.m.
First Sunday of .Monlh - 7:00p.m. service

........,.CburdaortbePutor: Jan Lavender
Sundly School • 9:3Q o.m.
Worship • 10:30 1.m. ond 6 p.m.
Wednesdoy Service• • 7 P·ll!·

~

Pllltu SL hul
· PUtor: lane Belnle
Sonclly School· 9 a.m.
wo,.hlp ·10 o.m.
TueSday Services-7:30p.m.

CbootetCburda orlbe NIUm!e
Putor: Rev. Herbert GBte
Sondly School " 9:30 o.m.
Worship ~ lla.m., 6 p.m.
Wednuday Seivic:cs- 7 p.m.

C.Utn!CJ.-

Aibery CS1.,.._&gt;
Pastor: Bob Robinson
Sundoy School- 9:45 o.m.
Worship ·1la.m.
Wcdnesd1y Services - 7:30p.m.

Seventh -Day Adventist
· Stventh·Day Adventist
Mulberry Hts. Rd., Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy La,winsky
Sa1urday Services:
Sabbeth School. 2 p.m.
Worship - 3 p.m.

MI. Olive Commanll7 Cbun:•
Pastor: Lawrence Bush
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Evenine- 7 p.m.
Wedncdl7 Service • 7 p.m.

Un1ted Brethren

UiltodFallhCbarcb
Rt. 7 oo Pomeroy By·J'us
Pator: Rev. Robert E. Smith,.Sr.
Sunday School· 9:30 o.m.
WoBhlp · 10:30 a.m.. 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.

MI. Hermoa Uolted Brethrea
In Chrlll Church
Texas Community offCR 82
Pastor: Robert Sanders
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worsblp ·-10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m .
Wednesday Sel'\•ices- 7:30p.m.

Freedom Goopel MBold Knob, on Co. Rd. 31
Putor: Rev. Roacr Willford
Sunday Scbool- 9:30a.m.
·
Wonhip- 7 p.m.

ICE

FYOU
Crow'a Family.

~i•~er ~ mtmd ~orne

"Fealullng KentuCky Fried Chlck6n"

228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

.. .

lNSURANCE

. -

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....
,

GENCIIS l11e.
Bll Quickel 982-41177"•

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SWISt:IER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
SERVICES

We Fill Dbctors'

21-4 E. Main
1192-5130 Pomeroy

Ptescrip~ions
~-2955
Pomeroy

FUNERAL HOfJJE
Set your affections on EWING
Dignity and Service Always
things above, not on
Established 1913
things on the earth.
992-2121
Col. 3·2' 106 Mulbany Ave. Pomeroy

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FUNERAL HOME
"We ~u:cept Preraeed Tro,.,fero"

112·1200
Lundy Brown
Director

.

Ragan Brown
174

~temti u

tke Yatillll wANe
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FIRE • SAFETY
SALES • SI:RVICE
992·7075
172 North Second Ava.
Oh ·

I
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680 Eltsl Main Street • Pomtlfcy, OH 4~7118
740-992-5444

992·5432
F.. ~Mol

NEW YORK (AP) - The
half- million dollar sale of the base
ketball advertised as the one Wilt
Chamberlain used to score 100
. points iri. an NBA game was
called off because of questions
about its authenticity. .
·
Leland's, auction house sold the
ball on April 28 for $551,844 a record for a basketball and the
·third- highest figure of any spom
memorabilia 'item sold at auction.

284 South Second AIII.•Middlepurt,
740-992-5141
Bruce R. F~htlr · llireetor

31:f.2

:francis FLORIST

....

Me,;lo (;ounlyJ Oldest Florilr
WZr.tMIIIPl
. 740-992-2644
740-992-6298
IAI U1 Serul Your TlwU«III• Wid' Sp«MI Core

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.

"I can't get in another race car and be able
to do the same thing:'
Crew chiefTony Eury has worked the
entire team hard since the start of the year
to ensure that nothing is left undone. He
says his rookie driver has helped make aU
the work pay off.
"He's definitely surprised us," Eury said.
"He's a good little race car driver and he
knows what it takes to make it go around
the track as fast as it can."
Fellow drivers also are impressed.
"What a driver that kid is," Jarrett sa(d.
"Unbelievable."
Tony Stewart, who seemed certain to
win in Richmond until a late pit-road
bump from Earnhardt Jr. flattened a tire

Boo.ne,
·Reds walk
off with
win
•

· · under scrutiny · .

,.

5edlotiiL hp Bl

. BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
that I'm winning races in the Winston
Little E is living up to the hype - and Cup series," said the 25-year-old Earnhis name.
hardt, the first driver this season with
Dale· Earnhardt Jr. arrived in more than one victory.
His win in the Pontiac Excitement 400
NASCAR's top series with greater fanfare
than any ~okie in history. He came in was especially impressive because he outwith two Busch series titles and $50 mil- ran series champions Terry Labonte and
lion in sponsorship, and is the son of a · Dale Jarrett in the closing laps, when a
driver's mettle is put to the ultimate test.
seven-time Winston Cup champion.
Eleven races into his debut season, He passed his father, Dale Earnhardt, for
Junior has accomplished more than just rhe lead with 31 laps to go.
about anyone expected. He's even set a
Little E often is n'lore self-deprecating
record already, winning two races faster than cocky, and certain to credit his team
for making good things happen.
than any driver in any era.
He did it in .his 16th start, beating 'the
"I can 'i go out there and do that .withbest last Saturday night in Richmond, Va. out a good motor. I can't go out there and
" It surprises me ·that it's me in ihe car, do that without a good race car," he said.

$500,000 ball annes

Wblte'l Cliao&gt;et W01ley111
Coolville Road
Pattor: Rev. Plt.UIIp Ridenour
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Woflhip • 10:30 a.m.
Wednoodly Service • 7 p.m.

Please -

SECTIO.NAL SCENERY ..... Jeff Brown of Meigs waits for the throw over from pitcher Tommy Roush as Gallie Academy's Heath Rothgeb dives back to first base (top photo). Meigs reliever John Stanley (lower left)
delivers a pitch in the fifth inning of Thursday's sectional championship game. Marauder senior Kyle Smiddie (lower right) lines a shot to seeond base against Gallipolis. The Marauders fell to the Blue Devils 166 yesterday. It was the final game for seniors Kyle Smlddle, Tommy Roush, Odie Karr, Ronnie Smith and
Levi Burns. (Dave Harris photos)

tittle E is living up to his pre-NASCAR hype

ROME (AP) -. Top-ranked
Andre Agassi lost 6-4, 6- 4 to
Dominik Hrbaty in the third
round of the' italian Open.
Ninth-seeded Lleyton Hewitt
moved into the quarterfinals with
a 7- (i (6), 2-6, 6-3 vi ctory over
No. 7 Thomas Enqvist.
. ·Also, No. 3 Magnus Norman
: !fefeated Andrei Medvedev 7-6
' (4), 6-1; No.4 Gustavo Kuerten,
the
defending
champion,
advanced when Younes El
f\ynaoui Withdrew with a heel
injury a few hours before their
match; and Mariano Puerta beat
Juan Carlos Ferrero.

Carleloa laterdeaomlootloalll Cban:h
Kinpbury Rood
Paator: Cl7de Henderson
. · Sunday Sehool- 9:30a.m.
Worship Service 10:30 a.m.
·
No Solncloy or Wodnelday Nlg)lt Services

the third. T he Blue Devils
scored five runs with· two outs
to take the lead for good.
"As a coach, you get a little
netvo us when a team comes out
and attacks the ball real well;'
Gallia Academy head coach
llrack Houchens said in regard
to the early deficit. "We were
off-balance a little bit, but our
guys came back. They just
showed a lot of composure and
didn't panic."
1
The Marauders pulled off a
double play after Galli a Academy's Scott Nida ripped a leadoff single to left field. Bobby
Angel lined out to Stanley at
short for the first out, and Stanley threw on to first to doubleoff Nida. ·
Rothgeb got aboard on an
error to start the rally. Cody
Lane then followed with a single
to left field.
Justin McKinniss stepped in
and belted a double· that drove
in Rothgeb with the Blue Devils' first run and ·c ut the g;tp to 31.
Jeremy' Payton, who ·was hit- .
ting .468 ente~ing play Thursday, cracked another double that
drove in two runs and tied the
.score at 3-3:
Mter Bo Shirey slapped a single through the left side, Nick
Merola got aboard on an error
that allowed to runs to score and
gave the Gallipolitans a S-3
advantage.
Prior to the Blue Devils' outburst in the third, Meigs starter
Tommy Roush had held Gallia
Acadetny in check. Roush faced
just seven batters in the first two
innings and gave up one hit. He
had two strikeouts in that
stretch.
Gallia Academy' ~extended its
lead to I 0-3 in · the fourth
in,ning. Roush ' surrendered
back-to-hack walks to Sims and
Nida before Angel knocked in
one run with a 'single through
the left side.

.

Apssl bulftped
froiD Italian Open

Eden Unltnl Bnlbreoln Chriot
2 112 miles north of Reedsville
on S1a1e Route 124
Pastor: Rev. Robert ,Markley
Sunday School - 11 a.m.
Sunday Worship- 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Youth Service-7:30p.m.

Soutb Bethel New Teottmonl
Silver Rid&amp;e ·
Pastor: Robert ltarbcr
Sunclly School· 9a.m.
Sun. Worship - 10:10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Scrviee - 7 p.m. ·

Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship • 10:30 a.m.. 6:30 p.m.
Wednetday Services - 7 p.m.
•
Porllud Ffnt Cloarcb oru.. i i PuiOr. William JUJtis
Svndly Scllool -10:00 Lm.
Mornina Worship • 10;4S a.m.
Sunclay Servh;o · 6:30p.m.

CHUR

Middleport Pnobyterian
Sunday School·· 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m.

hll Galpel IJablllo3lOoiS Hilond Rood. Pomeroy
Putor: Roy Hunter
Sunday School-10 a.m.
Evenlns7:30 p.m.
Tuesday&amp;. Thursday· 7:30 p;m.

Rutl.uld Cburda oflbe N Putor: Rev. Samuel W. Bu)'e

Flalwoodo
Pu1or: Keith Rader
Suodoy School . 10 o.m.
Wonhip • 11 o.m.

FRANKLIN,Tenn. (AP) -Pat
Hurst shot·a 7- under-par 65 for a
two-stroke lead after the opening
round or.the LPGA 's new Electrolux USA Championship.
· Cindy .Figg-Currier and Krista!
Parker each shot 67s, while .Meg
Mallon, who won this e;,ent in
NashviUe last year, was among six
players at 69.
Karrie Webb, looking for her
fifth LPGA victory and sixth title
this year· after winning in Japan
l~t weekend, finished. with a 73.

Hanisondle Presbyterian Cburch
Worship - 9 a.m.
Sunday School ! 9:45a.m.

Fallb Goopel Cbarcb
Lon&amp; Bottom
Sundly Schoo! • 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:•~ a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m.

I

· EaterpriH
Pa1tor: Keith Rader
Sundoy School. 10 o.m.
· Worship ~ 9 a.m.

Syracuse First United Presbyterian
Pastor: Rev. Krisana Robinson
Sundly School - 10 a.m.
Worship. 11 a.m.

Mono Cblpel churl:b
Sunday school- 10 a.m.
Worship . 11 a.m.
Wednnday Service - 7 p.m.

lleediVIIIo
Ch-oflbeNPutor: Teresa Walclcct
Sundly School • 9:30 a.m.
Wor1hlp- to:•s Lm., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Sen~ices • 7 p.ni.

Hunt leads LPGA
USA ChaiDpionshlp

Presbyterian

DyHYIIe Commualiy Cburch
Sundly School-9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7 f.m.

-p

Pastor: Jane Bea!Jie
Worship - 9 a.m.
Sund17 School • 10 o.m.
Thvrsdoy Servicea • 7 p.m;

Middleport Pentecostal
Third Ave.
Pastor: Rev. Clark Baker
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Eveni ng · 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.

'

Middleport Cburda or tile N Putor. Allen Mldap
'
Sundly School· 9:30 Lm.
Wonhlp - 10:30 o.m., 6:30 p.m.
Wednelld1y Services - 7 p.m.
Putor. Allen Midcap

IRVING, Tex~s (AP) - Davis
.Love Ill, winless in his last 53
starts on the PGA Tour, 'holed a·
40- foot chip and a couple of 30foot putts for a 4-under-par 66 to
share the first~ round lead at the
Byron Nelson Classic with Blaine
McCallister.
Among six players two strokes
back were Lee Janzen and Sergio
Garcia. Masters champion Vijay
Singh was in a large group at 69.
Tiger Woods opened with a 3over 73, matching his worst score
in relation to par this year.

·Pentecostal Auembly
St. Rt. l 24, Racine
Pastor: William Hoback
Sunday School - lO a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Hutl Commually Cbun:h
OffRt.124
Pastor: Edsel Hsn .
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wor1hip -10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Nazarene

Love Ill shares
Nelson Classk lead

Pentecostal

SynctUO Mluloil
1411 Bridaeman St., Syracuse
Rev. Mike Thompson,Pastor
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening - 6 p.m.
.
Wednesday Service ' 7 p.m.

Tardl clnui:b
Co. Rd. 63
Sunday Scllool - 9:30 1.m.
Worship .. 10:30 a.m.

Today'a gamea
Sectional Tournament
Eastern v. Leesburg Fairfield, 5:00
(at 'Rio Grande)
Southern v. Portsmouth Notre
Dame, 5:00 (at Jackson H.S.)

Chruch of Christ
Intersection 7 and 124 W
Evangelist: Dennis Sargent
Sunday Bible study ~ 9:30 a.m.
Worship: 10~30 a.m. and6:30 p.m.
· Wednesday BiblC Study - 7 p.m.

l'ollb Valie1 Tobel'llll&lt;le Church
Bailey Run Road
Putor: Rev. Emmett Rawson
S~nday Evening 7 p.m.
Thursday Service • 7,p.m.

•·'li·

Regular Season
Point Pleasant 11 , River Valley 1
Federal Hocking 23, Wahama 14

God's Ttmple of Praise
3166S McQuire Rd. Pomeroy, Ohio
PastOr: Way ne Balcolm
Services: Thurs. Niles 7:00pm
New church No Sunday service established.

,Middleport Commully Cburch
S7S Purl St., Middleport
·
Putor: Sam Anderson
Sunday SchoollO a.m.
Evening -·7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7:30 p.m.

GALLIPOLIS
G~ll ia
Academy rallied from a threerun deficit to capture its second
straight secti.onal baseball championship Thursday.
The Blue Devils (12-9)
defeated Meigs 16- 6 in six
innings to advance to the Division II district tournament Tuesday at Ross County Park in
C hiUicothe.
Gallia Academy will meet
powerhouse Washington Court
House in the first round of the
district tourney. The Blue Lions
(18-1 ), ranked No. 6 in this
week's AP state poll, held off
Miami Trace 6- 4 Thursday to
win its sectional.
Meigs (7~ 12) jumped out ~ a
1-0 lead in the first inning
thanks to a double by number
two hitter John Stanley and a
RBI single by first baseman Jeff
Brown. Stanley whipJYed a oneout double to left field to put
himself into ~coring position.
Following a ground out by
Matt Stewart, Brown stepped in
and singled to right field to
drive in . Stanley with the goahead run.
·
The Marauders added two
more runs in the third inning,
with Stanley and Brown again
· figuring in the scoring. Stanley
led off the inning with a single ·
through ,tP,~ right side of the.
infield ·and ·Stewart drew a walk
to put runners on first and second.
Brown lined a single up the
middle to drive in Stanley and
give Meigs a 2-0 lead. Tommy
Roush hit into a double play,
but picked up a RBI when
Stewart scored . from third to
give Meigs a 3-0 cushion.
The Marauder catcher scampered home as Blue Devil second baseman Heath Rothgeb
threw to Jeremy Payton at first
to complete the 6-4-3 double
play.
·
However, the Meigs Jead
evaporated in the bottom half of

Balebllll
Thuraday'a gamea
Olvlalon II Sectlonala
' Gallla Academy 16, Meigs 6, 61nn.
Hillsboro 13, Greenlield McClain 2
Washington Court House 6, Miami
Trace 4
Fairfield Union 6, New Lexington 3
South Point 8, Jackson 7
Northwest 2, Portsmouth 1
Logan Elm 13, Circleville 8

Full Gospel Churth or the U¥iDII Sa¥1Dr
Rt.331:1, Antiquit y
Pastor: Jesse Morris
Asst. Pastors: Jim Morris
Services: Saturday 7:30p.m.

Hmiloa•lllo Community Chun:b
Putor: Theron Durham
Sundly.- 9:30 o.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday· 7 p.m.

OVP SPORTS EDITOR

Prep Sports

New Ure VIctor, Center
3773 Georges Creek Road, Gallipolis, QH
Pastor: Blll Staten
Sunday Services· 10 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m. ·
· Wednesday - 7 p.m. &amp; Youth 7 p.m.

Tbe BelleYOn' FelloWiltlp Ministry
New Lime Rd., Rutland
Pastor: Rev. Maraaret J. Robinson
Services: WedneS(Iay, 7:30p.m.
Sundly, 2:30p.m.

Gallia Academy defeats Meigs
BY ANDREW CARTER

Clifton, W.Va. .
Sunday School - lO a.m.
Worship - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.

Faith Full Goapel Chon:h
Lons Bottom
Pastor: Sieve Reed
Sunday Sehool · 9:30 a.m.
Worship· 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wedneldar • 7 p.m.
Fri9ay - fellowship service 7 p.m.

HocldiiJPOrt Cllun:h
·Grand Street ·
Sundly School- 10
Worabip • 11 a.m.
·
Wednesday Services - 8 p.m.

HIGHLIGHTs

Clifton Tabernatle·Cburcb

Hobloa Cbrtstlu Ftllowsblp Cbun:h
Sunday service, 10:00 a.m., 1:00 p.m.
Youth Fellowship Sunday, 7:00p.m.
Wedne5day serJlcc, 7:00p.m.

Deibel Chun:h
Township Rd., 468C
Sund•y School • 9 a.m.
Worship ·10 a.m.
Wednesday Services - 10 .a.m.

Faith Fellowship Crulldo for Chrilt
Pastor: Rev. Franklin Dickens
Service : Friday, 7 p.m.

Rejoicing Life Chun:h
500 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport
Pastor: Mi ke Foreman
Pastor: Emeritus Lawrence Forema n
Wors.hip- 10:00 am
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Cbrllllaa Fellowoblp Center
Sllem Sl., Rutland
Pastor: Robert E. Musser
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhlp • ll:U o.m., 7 p.m.
Wednc:sdty Service · 1 p.m.

Coolville Ualled Metllodlat Ptorllb
Pastor: Helen Kline
Coolville Chlln:ll
Main &amp; Fifth St.
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship- 9 a.m.
Tuesday Services • 7 p.m.

FRIDAY's

Sll¥en¥1He Word or F:ailh
Pastor: David Dailey
Sunday School 9:30 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.

Fallb Cbopel
923 S. Third SL, Middioyort
Pastor Michael Pangto
Sunday service, io a.m.
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.

lletbllly

Untied Methodist

S,I'ICIIJII'lnt Cburcb or God
Apple and Sooond Sll.
.
Putor: Rev. David Ruuell
Sundly Schoolond WoBhlp· 10 1.m.
Bvenin&amp; Scr't'k:et- 6:30p.m.
WeclllCICioy Servlm • 6:30p.m.

. St.lem Ct-ater
· Pastor: Ron Fierce
Sunday School - 9:15a.m.

Fairview Bible Churcb
Letart, W.V1. Rl. 1
Pastor: Brian May
Su nday School - 9:30a.m.
Wor~hip - 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study - 7:00 p.m.

Calvary Bible Chun:h
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pastor: Rev. Black wood
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship 10:30 a. m., 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Serv ice -7 :30p .m.

"Fuii-Ootpei'Church"
Putors John &amp;. Pa.tty Wade
603 Second Ave. Muon
773·5017
Service dme: Sunday 10:30 a.m •.
Wednesday '1 pm

Jludud
S4nf!iy School· 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 o.m.
Th~rsday Services • 7 p.m.

Pastor: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday SchOol • 10 Lm.
Wonhip • 9 a.m.
Wednesday Services -10 a.m.

Chn sl13n Un1on

RutludCharcbofGGd
Pastor; Ron Heath
Sunday Worihip . 10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednetdty Services - 7 p.m. ·

Appo ur. C.UIIr

SnoWJOIIle
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship · 9a.m.

SL Paul Lulbenn Cbun:b
Comer Sycamore &amp;. Second St., Pomeroy
Rev. Donald C. Fritz
Sund17 School· 9:45 o.m.
Worship • 11 o.m.

Mt. Morlab Churda or God
Mile Hill Rd., Racine
Pastor: Brh;:c l.ln
Sunday School· 9:4!1 a.m.
Evenina · 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

PeuiCblpel
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.

lAurel Cllrr Fm Metbodllt Church
Pastor: Charles Swiger
Sunda)l School ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip • l0:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Se'rvice · 7:00p.m.

Beater Cbvrcb ofChrlll
Pastor: Justin Campbell
Sunday sdlool9:31.1 a.m.
Nomian Will, superintendent
~unday wol'llllp • 10:30 a.m.

Churct1 of God

Hanell OutrNdt Mlalstrla
47439 Reibel Rd., chester
P:l.&lt;IOB: Rev. Mary lAd Horoid Cook
Sunday Servi ces: 10 a.m. &amp; 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Rock S~rtap
Putor: Keuh Rader
Sunday School - 9:1S a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m.
Youth Fellowship, Sunday - 6 p.m.

H710ll Rua Hollo. . Cbun:b
Rev. Mark Michael
Sundly School • 9:30 o.m.
Wotsbir. - 10:4~ a.moi 7 p.m.
Thursdty Bib e Study and Youth· 7 p.m.

OUr Sawlotor Lutber111 Cburc:b
Walnut and Henry S11., Ravenswood, W.Va .
Pastor: David Russell
Sunday School-10:00 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.

-

Min emilie
Pastor: Bob Roblason
Sunday School • 9a.m.
Worship · 10 o.m.

POIIIff'OJ

Wnle71n Bible Holiaea Cburch
1S Pearl St., Middleport.
Pastor: Rev. Doug Co"
Sunday Worship . 9:30p.m,, 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m.

Rtecbvllle Cbvrcb or Cbrlll
Pu10r: Philip Sturm
Sunclly School: 9:30a.m.
Worship Service: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wodnesday, 6:30p.m.

lldhlehem Bipllol Church
Great Bend, Route 124, Racine, OH
Pastor : Daniel Mecca
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Sunda)' Worship· 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Bible Study - 6:00 p.m.

AIIISintiCbAsb St.. Middleport
PISIOr Leo Hlyman
Sundly School • 10:00 Lm.
Sundly Servia: • 6:00p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:00 p.m.

Pastor: Connie Fiaru
Sunday School - 9:IS a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study Tuesday · 10 1.m.

Plae Gro¥e Bible Holtneu Church
1/2 mile off Rt. 325
Putor: Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sundly School • 9:30 o.m.
Worship. 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneaily Scrvi&lt;:e - 7:30p.m.

H-'ock Gnve Cburcb
. Putor: Gene Zopp
Sunday sc:hool· 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 9:30a.m .. 7 p.m.

Wednesday Services - 6:30p.m.

•

ROR of Sblroa Hollnt~~ Church
Leadina Creek Rd., Rutland
Pastor: Rev. Dewey Kin&amp;
Sundly ,.hooi· 9:30 a.m.
Sunday worship -7 p.m.
Wednesday pr1yer meetln&amp;- ~ p.m .

SL John Lothtrlll Cburcb
Pine Grove
R~v. Oonald .C. Fritz
Worship • 9:00a.m.
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.

Sunday School- lOa.m.

Other Churches

Hralll (Mldlleplrl) .
Puto;: Vemapye SulliVan
Sundly School - 9:30a.m.
Wo11hlp · 10:30 a.m.

Calvll')' Pllcrlai Cblpel
lhrrisonvllle Road
Putor: Olarles McKenzie
Sunday School9:30 a.m.
Worship . -1 1 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wedneld1y Service • 7:00 p.m.

Lutheriln

Worship - lla.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7:00p.m.

•
•
•
•

o..r

U8pvUie Cbrllllu Cburda
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 s.m., 7:30p.m.
Weclnesdoy Service 7:30p.m.

Sliver Jlua Boptlll
Pastor: Sceven K. Uttlc

Fo-Rua
Pastor: Bob Robinson
Sundly School · 10 o. m.
Worship - 9 a.m.

Dtol•lllo llolilttll Cburcb
31057 Stile Route 325, lanpvlle
Putor:
sacklon
Sundl71&lt;hoo • 9:30 o.m.
Svndly wonhip · 10:30 Lm. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer tervice - 7 p.m.

LSU star to enter
NBAdraft
BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) LSU forward Stromile Swift said
he will enter his name · into the
N BA draft but not retain "an ·
agent, giving him the choice of
pulling out before the June 28
draft.
The 6-foot-9 sophomore averaged 16 .3 points and 8.2
rebounds per game last season as
the Tigers reached the regional .
· semifinals of the NC AA tournanlent.

CINCINNATI (AP) -· A
seaspn already full of misfortune ··
·and misery got a whole lot
worse for. the San Diegp Padres.
The slumping Padres blew two
sizable leads, ha1 reliever Rodney Myers tear up his knee fielding a bunt and wound up losing
their sixth consecutive game
·'Fhursday, 11-9 to the Cincinnati YEAH, BABY! - .Aaron Boone Is mobbe d by Reds teammates after
R eds.
hitting a walk-off homer in the ninth to oe at San Diego. (AP)
Aaron Boone's
two- run
homer off the right-field fo11l selves.''
comeba~k grounder off his right
screen in the bottom of the
The afternoon started with ankle in the first, then gave up
ninth finished off a deflating day great promise for the Padres. four consecutive hits to open the
for the Padres, who left town Afier scoring only one run in · second. Just like that, the Reds
after only their third 0-6 roaa the last 24 innings, they got five had cut i.t to 5-4.
trip in their 32-year history.
in the first tWO off Rob Bell.
Bichette and Ken Griffey Jr.
"You don't thirlk it can get · Bret Boone hit a two-ru11 homer hit solo homers to put the Reds
worse, but it does ·and it's hap- and BeD le~ in a pair of runs ori · ah ead, but Bret lJoone had a
pened right now,'' .manager consecutive wild pitches.
two-run inside-the-park homer
Bruce Bochy said. "We're findBut Padres .starter Rodrigo
ing \erent ways to beat our- Lopez took Dante Bichette's
PlnH-Ieds,PepBI

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Pleese see Little E. Pep .,

Deion, Reds part
ways ••• for now
CINCINNATI (AP)
nerback in the NFL this fall ,
Deion Sanders received per- possibly for the Washington
mission to leave the Cincinnati Redskins.
R eds' Triple-A farm club
Sanders, 32, signed a minor
Thursday; at least temporarily league coptract with th e R eds
ending the attempt to revive · on Jan. 20 intending to return
his baseball career.
to the majors.
The outfielder batted only
The centerfielder's value to
.200
(21 - for-105)
for the Reds diminished when
Louisville with 10 stolen bases they traded for Ken •Griffey Jr.
in 25 games. Sanders had not on Feb. I 0.
played baseball sin ce 1997,
Sanders had arthroscopi c
when he left the Reds to be a surgery on his right kn ee to fi&gt;o
full- time cornerback for the a football injury on Jan. 24 .
Dallas Cowboys.
He was hobbled when he
General manager Jim Bow- reported for spring training
den said the club agreed to let but was running well enough
Sanders return to his home in to begin a miho r league rehaDallas, where he'll continue bilitation assignment last
rehabilitating his right knee.
month.
Although Bowden said it's
Sanders had hoped to rejoin
possible S~nders could return the R eds quickly. but his
to baseball . this season, it's minor league struggles and the ·
highly unlikely.
Reds ' outfield depth became a
Sanders expects to play cor- roadblock.

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and to.ok him out of contention, says he
c'an p)lff out his chest because he predicted the success.
"I felt like Dale.Jr. and Matt Kenseth
were both very capable and still are of
winning at least three and maybe more
races," said Stewart, who set rookie records
last year with three wins and a fourthplace finish in the points race.
"Like I've said, I think this is a record
that would only probably last a year,"
Stewart said of his standard for rookie victories. "After Saturday night, Junior's one
step closer to that."
Earnhardt's first victory came April 2 in
the DirecTV 500 in Fort Worth, Texas, in

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�Friday, May .12, 2000

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.page a 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Friday, May 12, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

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AMERICAN LEAGUE

:~iambi
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boys make things happen for P.s

BY THE ~OCIATED PRESS
ager Art Howe said.
most lopsided in 45 years, vvhen go-ahead run with his first hit of
:': Witli brother Jeremy Giambi
Ramon Mernande: added a · the Indians beat the Boston Red the season during a six-run sixth
e\lnd, Jason Giambi is making two-run doubl~ for Oaldand, Sox 19-0 on May 18, 1955.
inning that lifted Boston to victo~ ·pitchers cry uncle.
which won at home for just the
Ramirez added a two-run ry at Baltimore.
•:Jason Giambi drove in five runs sixth time in 16 games.
homer in the sixth, and David
Carl Everett, who entered the
With a three-run homer, a sacriThe A's survived a three-run JuStice and Jim Thome . also game in a 2-for-14 slump, went
Zh:e fly and an RBI single, and he homer by Jay Buhner and solo homered as Cleveland snapped 3-for-5 with a homer and four
~ tripled and walked Thursday shots by Alex Rodriguez and the Royals' five-game winning RB!s.
Dlght in Oakland's 7-6 victory David Bell for Seattle.
streak.
Garciaparra was replaced by
p\rer Seattle.
Buhner, who has hit 18 homers
The Indians blew 5-0 a'nd 8-0 Sheets in the first inning after
; : Giambi, who leads the majors at the Oakland Col.Ueum, hit his leads as they lost their previous aggravating a hamstring injury
.:ith ·15 homers. and 42 RB!s, is s~enth of the season to give the two games at Minnesota.
while running out a grounder.
hitting .357 (10-for-28) with four Mariners a 5-4 lead in the sixth.
Angels 3, Rangers 2
Brady Anderson homered and
bpmers and 12 RB!s in seven His homer followed an RBI sinDarin Erstad and Troy Glaus drove in three runs for the Oriemes since Jeremy was recalled gle by Edgar Martinez.
homered and Garret Anderson oles, who have lost eight of nine.
O!i&gt;m the minors on May 5. While
Rodriguez hit his lith homer drove in the go-ahead run with a
D•vil Rays 1, Yankees 0
.ljremy was atTriple~A Sacramen- leading off the eighth, pulling the single in. the eighth inning for
Tampa Bay won 1-0 for the
!i'3. Jason hit just .212.
Mariners to 7-6, but three Oak- Anaheim against Texas.
second straight game with Steve
·~"It's niCe to have him around land relievers protected the lead.
With the score tied 2-2, Adam Trachsel as the starte-r and Fred
avd have that extra batting Jason Isringhausen allowed a hit Kennedy singled with one out in McGriff knocked in the only run
•~ach;' said Giambi, who admit- and a walk in the ninth, but held the eighth off Kenny Rogers (3- with a ·seventh-inning homer at
~ he wa! depressed when Jere- on for his seventh save.
4) and took third on Mo Vaughn's New York.
·
(liy was demoted. "It makes it
Tim Hudson (4-2) allowed six double. Tim Salmon was intenTrachsel (3-2). who pitched a
tlice to come to ·the ballpark runs on seven hits in seven tionally walked before Anderson complete game against Pedro
e$rery day."
innings, striking out seven, for the lined a 1-1 pitch to center, scor- Martinez in his last start, gave up
~~Giambi had a sacrifice fly in the win. The loser was Gil Meche (0- ing Kennedy. ·
three hits, struck out five and
l)rst and a triple in the third on a 4), who allowed six runs on eight
Shigetoshi Hasegawa (1-0) walked one in seven innings, run~ that went over the will, but hits in 5 2-3 innings.
earned the victory with three ning his scoreless-iqnings streak
tYas knocked down by center
Indians 16, Royals 0
innings of one-hit relief, and Troy to 17. He was relieved by Albie
9elder Mike Cameron. His RBI
Manny Ramirez hit two Percivfll got three outs for his Lopez, who .gave up one hit the
sihgle came in the fourth, and"he homers, including a first-inning 10th save.
last rwo innings for his firs't save.
fibmered in the sixth to give grand slam, and Jaret Wright
Ivan Rodriguez homered fot
McGriff, who had not homered
· Qal&gt;!and a 7-5 lead.
pitched 7 2-3 shutout innings for the visiting Rangers.
in 67 at-bats, hit a 2-1 pitch from
;, "I'm certain he's happy he's Cleveland against visiting Kansas
Red Sox 11, Orioles 4
Orlando, Hernandez (4-2) into
back. They help each other, they City.
Andy Sheets, after . replacing the right-center field bleachers,
C;Uk hitting all the time;• A's manThe shutout was Cleveland's Nomar Garciaparra; drove in the his fourth homer of the season.
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SALT LAKE CITY (AP) The Portland Trail Blazers are
playing so well, so loose, · that
Damon Stoudamire sees nothing
taboo about openly discussing a
four-game sweep of the oncemighty Utah Jazz.
, "Why not? Let's go 'out and try
to win Game 4," Stoudamire said
after the Bla~ers built a 3-0 lead in
the Western Con(erence semifinals
:with a I 03-84 victory over Utah
qn Thursday night.
: · "We're one step away," he said.
~'We're going to come in here on
Sunday and try to take that game,

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too."

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Arvydas Sabonis scored 22
points, Steve Smith had 21 and
reserve Bonti Wells had 10 of his
19 points in the fourth quarter,
leaving Utah one game from
being swept in a best-of-seven
~e ries for the first time in franchise
history.
"It's strange for the whole
organization," sai d Karl Malone,
who scored 28 points, but was
held to two in the fourth quarter.
"We've never been down like this,

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SEE VA LATER,- David Justice of Cleveland pounded a solo home run.
In the Indians' 16-0 whitewashing of Kansas City Thursday. The lndi·
ans hit four home runs altogether against the Royals. (AP)

NATIONAL LEAGUE

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Rag-arm Marlins ·knock off the .Braves again
BY THE AsSOCI,.TED PRESS

The Florida Marlins got a win for the ages.
·With .their pitching stafF depleted by injuries, 23-year-old Jason
· · Grilli and 37-year-old Joe Stmng, both making their big-league
debuts,. combined to ·p itch.eighi innings as Florida overcame a triple
play and beat the Atlanta Braves 5-4 on Thursday night:
"This was great;''tllanager John Boles said. "Those two guys gave us
everything we had to have. It was just perfect!'
Strong pitched 1 1-3 hitless innings a. he became the oldest player
to make his major. leag~,~e debut in nearly 40 years.
~ ·1 haven't slept a wink," said Strong, who arrived on an overnight
flight after being recalled from Triple-A Calgary. "The way things went
tonight, I'll probably never sleep again."
Grilli, 14 years younger than Strong, allowed 15 baserunners - 11
hits, two walks and two l].it batsmen - but only four runs in 6 2-3
innings. He also singled on the first pitch in his first qteer at-bat and
drove in a run on a fourth-inning groundout.
"I wanted my whole life to be here," said Gtilli, who was sent back
to Calgary after the game. "To do as well as I did, it's a great feeling."
When Strong entered the game in the seventh inning, he became
the oldest player to make his big league debut· since Diomedes Olivo
on Sept. 5, 1960, for Pittsburgh at age 41.

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"I was so happy when he took the mound, I almost started tearing
up out there," said. teammate Preston Wilson, who hit a two-run
homer. "That's just perseverance."
Because of the two rookies, the Braves' first triple play since 1986
became a footnote. They went around the · horn on Mike Lowell's
grounder to third in the fifth inning.
With runners at first and second, Lowell hit a gtounder ,that third
baseman Chipper Jones backhanded. He stepped on third, thehthrew
to second baseman Quilvio Veras, whose relay .t o first wai backhanded
on one hop by Andres G~. Lowell was out by less than half a
·
step.
.
The only other pitcher available for the Marlins was Antonio Alfonseca, who pitched the ninth for his 11th save, giving Florida three wins
in the four-game series.
Brewers 14, Cubs 8
Mark Loretta went 5-for-5 and J.eromy Burnitz had three RB!s as
Milwaukee won the longest nine-inning game in National Leagoe history.
The 4-hour, 22-minute game at Wrigley Field featured 35 hits and
19 walks as the teams tied the major leagoe record for a nine-inning
game set by Baltimore and the Yankees in a 13-9 game on Sept. 5,

The longest previous NL game took 4 hours, 20 minutes, betweeh'
Los Angeles and Colorado on June 30, 1996.
·
David Weathers, the l()th 'pitcher, struck out Sammy Sosa with the'. ·
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bases loaded on the 427th pitch of the game to finish it.
Phillies 6, Expos .4
Thiid baseman Michael Barrett's error with two outs in the seventh'
inning allowed the go-ahead run to score for visiting Philadelphia.
Randy Wolf (2-2)" allowed four runs - three earned - ·ih six'
innings as the Phillies won for the sixth time in their last eight games. •

Mets 3, Pirates 2
AI Leiter (4-0) pitched an eight-hitter and Todd Zeile had

asolo·

homer and two RB!s.
The Mets had lost 10 of14 and were 4-8 on a season-long 13-game
road trip until Leiter pitched his first complete game of the season.

CHICAGO . (AP) Elton
Branq and Steve Francis discovered they had a lot in common
when they got to ·know each
other last summer.
They both loved basketball,
obviously. They had both ·played at
Atlantic
Coast
Conference
schools, Brand at Duke and Francis at Maryland. And they had
gone 1-2 in the NBA draft.
Now the two have something
else to share. On Thursday, Brand
and Francis were selected co-winners of the NBA 's Rookie of the
Year Award.
"Our relationship is basketball,"
Brand said. "We like to play basketball, we like to have a lot of
fun. I think that's why we hit if off
so well and became friends. .
"We may always be· connected,
e~ecially be~a1,1se of the tough
rookie of the year race."
Brand,' the forward ' from the

·Little·E·
frolll Pip B1
his 12th career start. Only Ron
Bouchard, who won his 11th race,
Was faster1.
·
Dale Earnhardt, who owns his
son's team, won for the. first time
in. his !.6th start. And Stewart
needed 25 races before his first
celebration.
Earnhardt Jr. says the confidence
he gained by winning easily in
Texas helped him hang on in
Richmond.
·
"I had established some credibility in the sport," he said. "I

1997.

Sectional ·

"I expect that with youth, when you start meet&amp; . Fairfield Union, which edged New
' three sophomores and three or four juniors, Lexington 6-3 Thursday.
and a couple of seniors;• Gheen added, "Even
Warren (9-13) advanced to the Lucasville
the seniors we have don't have a lot of expe- district tournament by virrue of a 9-7 upset of
fnnPigeB1
. rience.
No. 1 seed Athens. The Warriors will meet
Rothgeb followed with a single and Lane
Lane went 5-for-5 with four RBI to lead Northwest
(14-10),
which
stunned
drove in two runs with a double to right field. Gallia Academy. Payton was 2-for-3 with four Portsmouth, 2-1.
Payton singled to drive in Lane and round out RBI. Each had a double.
South Point (16-7), an 8-7 winner over
the scoring in the fourth.
Rothgeb was 2-for-4, scored three runs and · Jackson, will meet underdog Log:in Elm (J"The second time through the lineup we had two RBI. Shirey was 2-for-3 with a RBI. 17) at Lucasville. Logan Elm upset Circleville,
started hitting the ball and running the ,bases
Sims was 1-for-2 and scored tWice. Nida 13-8.
· aggressively, and just did the job," said went 1-for-1 with two walks and scored three
Houchens. "I'm really proud of them."
runs. Angel was 1-for-2, walked tWice and
Meigs put together a three-run rally in the scored three times.
top of the fifth innirig. The Marauders loaded
Rothgeb · (4-2) pitched five innings and
the bases with Stanley, Stewart and Brown to earned the win. He gave up six runs on nine
hits, and had one strikeout and four 'walks.
set up a string of three ~I singles.
Stanley op.,.ned the inning with a single, folMcKinniss entered the game in the sixth
lowed by Stewart, who drew a walk, and inniqg and .held Meig5. scoreless. He had one .
walk. '
·
another single by Brown.
"Meigs
is
a
.
good
team;· l-Jouchens added.
Josh Lynch, who entered the game in relief
of Roush in the four.th, slapped a single to "They haven't had as good a year as .they usuright field tQ drive in Staruey. Derrick John- . ally do, but we have a lot of respect for them,
May Is OLQEB AMI;~ICAt"S MO~JH, a time to reflect
son bounced into a 6-4-3 double play, but that and I thought they hit the ball extremely well
and really put some pressure on us."
was enough to score Stewart..
capabilities;' contribUtions,
and ,concerns ofour older
.
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Brown went 3.for-3 with two RBI to 'pace
Brown scored, on a two-out single to center
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field by Zach Bolin as Meigs shaved the the Marauders. Stanley was 3-for-4 with a
double and scored thre~ runs. Bolin was 2deficit to 10-6.
.
Gallia Academy answered with four runs in for-3 with a RBI. SteY;art walked twice and
the home .half of the fifth. Lane, Payton and scored two runs.
Roush went three innings and gave up nine
Shirey each had RBI. Rothgeb, Sims, Nida
runs on eight hits. He recorded two strikeouts
and Angel each scored ..
The Blue Devils ended the game in .the . and two walks.
Lynch pitched one Inning in relief, giving
bottom of the sixth after McKinniss retiJ:Fd
Bramb~ewood"
the side in the top half of the inning with a up five runs on three hits, with four walks.
pop fly to right field and dou\&gt;le play that he Stanley pitched: one inning and surrendered
two runs on four hits. He had one strikeout
started by fielding a line drive· from Stewart.
and
two walks.
Nida reached base on a fielder's choice and
"I was proud of them; they played hard aqd
Angel walked to put runners In scoring pootion. Rothgeb belted a single to left field to never gave up;' Gheen added. "They'll get
score Nida, and Lane followed with an infield better, though. They'll have a: hell of a team
16
single to the left side to drive i.ll Angel with next Y,Cir. They'll come back and be good."
Seniurs Kyle Smiddie, Jell' Bmwn, Tommy
the deciding run.
"We're real young;• said Meigs. head coach Roush,' Odie Kart, Ronnie Smith and Levi
Scot Gheen. "We've got a lot of young pby- Burns suited for the final time in Marauder
.
ers all the way amund. We've had injuries and maroon and gold. .
In other Division II sectional tournament
a young pitching stafF. We've always had to
battle back late in the game, or we get down action Thursday, Hillsbom defeated Greenearly and have to battle back. It's been like that field McClain 13-2 to reach the disttict tournJmenr at Chillicothe. Hillsboro (12-10)
all year long.

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NBA PLAYOFFS

Jazz 103·84,

The capacity crowd of 19,911
was boisterous much of the second half after Utah rallied from a
21 -point second-quarter deficit.
But Jazz fans cleared out with
three minutes on the fourth-quarter cl0ck, after· the Blazers opened
the period with an 11 - 2 run and
pulled away for thei r third
blowout victory in the serie s.
"If I was in th e crowd, I'd have
left, too," said Jeff Hornacek, who
scored 24 points on 9-of-17
shooting. "If we'd have lost these
games by one or two or four, I'd
think there would be more hope."
With Portland's post-up offense
dictating the pace, the Blazers
took a 53-32 lead. with 4:50
before halftime. Some fans booed
and it seemed to spur the Jazz,
who closed the half with a 17-2
run for a 55-49 halftime deficit.
Utah kept it close in the third,
three times tying the score. But
the Jazz never could get the iead,
and Portland put it out of reach by
outscoring Utah 28-14 in. the
fourth. quarter.
"When they cut it to six or

3·0 series lead :
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seven, it was anybody's ball game,"
said Blazers forward Brian Grant.
"But 1 think they used up a lot of
energy coming back."
Rasheed Wallace scored 17
points for the Blazers.
Bryon Russell had 18 points
for the Jazz.
Utah had beaten Portland in 10
of the previous 13 playoff games
in Salt Lake City, but the Blazers
weren't intimidated. Now, they've
won 10 of their last 12 overall
against the Jazz.
"All I know is it's 3-0 in the
series," backup point goard .Greg
Anthony said. "That team is too
good for us to allow any complacency co creep m on our pan.

We've got to play even better on
Sunday."
That's scary, because the Blazers, who beat Utah in six games
last year in the Western Co nferenct! senlifinals, havt: made it look

easy this year.
"We're desperate ," Russell said.
" If we don't come out and win,
then it's bye-bye."

Chicago Bulls; and Francis, the
gliard for the Houston Rockets,
each received 58 of a possible 121
votes from a panel of sportswriters
and broadcasters. Lamar Odom of
the Los Angeles Clippers received
three votes, and Andre Miller of
the Cleveland Cavaliers got two.
lt was only the third time two
rookies have shared the honor.
Jason !Gdd and Grant · Hill were
co-winners in 1994-95, and Dave
Cowens · •and
Geoff Petrie
shared it m
1970-71.
Brand said
he was also
sharing · the
await! with his .
mother, Daisy,
who moved to
Chicago "with
him
and
attended aU but

one of his games this season. He He also w;.s tops in double- dousurprised his mother with flowers bles (42) and led the NBA with
and gave her a kiss after accepting 4.3 offensive rebounds per game.
He joined David . Robinson,
the award.
Though Brand was the No. 1 Shaquille O'Neal, Alonzo Mournpick in the draft - th e first- ever ing and Tim Duncan as rookies in
No. 1 for the Bulls - Francis was the past .decade who averaged 20
the early favorite for the rookie points and 10 rebounds .
·His high of 44 points against
award. There were those who
thought Brahd was too small to the Washington Wizards on April
bang with the NBA's big boys. 13 was the highest output by a
Others said he lacked francis' flash rookie since Philadelphia's Allen
and fl~.ir. ·
Iverson ended his streak of five
But
40-point-plus games with 50 on
Brand was con- April12, 1997.
sistently solid
Brand won the monthly rookie
all season. He honors in January, February and
led aU rookies . April. He shared the April award
m
scormg with Francis, who made a strong
. (20.1 points), push at the end of lihe season.
rebounding
Francis scored 30 or more points
(10.0), blocked
shots
(1.63)
and
minutes
(37) per game.

knew they wete going to treat me
like a proven race car driver."
. Others are treating him like ·a
star. Rolling Stone magazine
recently did a. seven-page spread
on him, calling him )he rock and
roll NASCAR whiz kid."
Many of the 103,000 fans at
Richmond International Raceway
roared when · he dueled with the
veterans, perhaps loudest when he
passed The lntithidator ,for the
lead.
'
But Earnhardt Jr. has f.1iled to
finish three times, and even trails
Kenseth by three spots in the driver standings. Ke.nseth is 14th.
For that, Little E insis ts on taking the heat.
ul've been tearing up sante race

cars and I walk into the shop and
they're all shiny and 'ready to go,"
he said. "That's why things have
happened so fast.
"What the public sees is just me,
but there's a .lot of people in the
background working at the same
pace, making thin gs come togeth.
er."
And 'they're probably wondermg how much better Earnhardt

GOING TOTHE RACK - Portland center Arvydas Sabonis goes to tne
basket for the layup. above Utah's Bryon Russell (OJ during Thursd&lt;lY
night's Western Conferenc.e semifinal game in Salt Lake City. (AP) :

four times in the final month.
Francis also won the monthly
award in December and March.
He finished the season as the
rookie leader in assists (6.6 per
game) and finished second to
Br~nd with 18 points per game .
He was fifth in scoring among all

•

point guards in the NBA and was
the seventh rookie to average at
least 15 points, five assists and five
rebounds,
Hill, Oscar Robertson, Alvan
Adams, Magic Johnson, MichaeJ:
Jordan and Penny Hardaway were:
the others.

will ge t with more t!xperience.

H e took what he thought was a
third- or fou rth-place ca r and put
it in Victory La11e in Richmond.
" Now. we need to go home' and
look at that and see how we did
it," he said. "'We need to figure out
how to make those decisions
every week."

Brand New 2000 Pontiac
Sunfire Sun &amp; Sound .

Brand New 2000 Chevy
S.Serlea LS Exlended Cab

Brand New 2000 Pontiac
Grand Prix SE Sedan

~2,850* ~3,850* ~1,850*
• Air Cond.lllonlng
• Power Sunroof

• Air
• AMIFM CD

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~·==:.:=~_,;

• AMIFM CD

M·EIGS COUNTY.YOU'RE INVITED!

• Aulomatlc, Air Condltionl119
• Power Windows &amp; Locks

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upon the:
citizens. · ·

Brand New 2000 Pontiac
Montana 4 Door Extended

Brand New 2000 Chevy
Full Size Conversion Van

821,850* 823,8

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Entertainment will. begin at 11:00 a.m. and will · ·
include:

11:00- Roger and Mary Gilmore- performing "Buckeye Hill &amp;
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11:15- Big Bend Cloggers
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•••
12:00- George Hall
YOU ABE INYilED to attend the annual Senior Citizens Day ·,
celebration on Tuesday, May at the Meigs Multipurpose Senior·
. Center. This 'event is held yearly throughout Ohio to horior the ··~
state's o19er adults. The theme for this year's event is "Ohio ... A
great place to grow up, and a great place tci grow old!"
.· ·. For Information, Call 740-992-2161

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Brand, Francis share NBA Rookie of the Year honors

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that I can recall."
The Jazz are reeling, another
perfect part of the Blazers'
scheme:
" If we allowed this team to win
this game, I think they'd feel like
they could win the series," said
Portland's Scottie Pippen. "This
game has· put some doubts into
their minds."
It's noi that ·the Jazz, who
played for the NBA title in 1997
and 1998, are a bad' team. The
Blazers are simply deeper, bigger
throughout the lineup and playing
much better right now.
, .. After beating Utah to go up
3-0. we have a right to be confident;' said Portland forward Detlef
Schrempf.
Game 4 is at the Delta Center
on Sunday, with Utah trying to
become the first team in NBA
history to rally from a 3-0 deficit.
The odds don 't f.wor it; and the
Jazz sounded .like they knew it.
" Sunday is just a pride game for
me," Malone said. " I don't think
anyone wants to end the year getting swept."

.

The Dally Sentinel • Page

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Chevy, Pontiac, Buick, Olds,

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Monday-

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�Friday, May .12, 2000

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.page a 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Friday, May 12, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

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AMERICAN LEAGUE

:~iambi
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boys make things happen for P.s

BY THE ~OCIATED PRESS
ager Art Howe said.
most lopsided in 45 years, vvhen go-ahead run with his first hit of
:': Witli brother Jeremy Giambi
Ramon Mernande: added a · the Indians beat the Boston Red the season during a six-run sixth
e\lnd, Jason Giambi is making two-run doubl~ for Oaldand, Sox 19-0 on May 18, 1955.
inning that lifted Boston to victo~ ·pitchers cry uncle.
which won at home for just the
Ramirez added a two-run ry at Baltimore.
•:Jason Giambi drove in five runs sixth time in 16 games.
homer in the sixth, and David
Carl Everett, who entered the
With a three-run homer, a sacriThe A's survived a three-run JuStice and Jim Thome . also game in a 2-for-14 slump, went
Zh:e fly and an RBI single, and he homer by Jay Buhner and solo homered as Cleveland snapped 3-for-5 with a homer and four
~ tripled and walked Thursday shots by Alex Rodriguez and the Royals' five-game winning RB!s.
Dlght in Oakland's 7-6 victory David Bell for Seattle.
streak.
Garciaparra was replaced by
p\rer Seattle.
Buhner, who has hit 18 homers
The Indians blew 5-0 a'nd 8-0 Sheets in the first inning after
; : Giambi, who leads the majors at the Oakland Col.Ueum, hit his leads as they lost their previous aggravating a hamstring injury
.:ith ·15 homers. and 42 RB!s, is s~enth of the season to give the two games at Minnesota.
while running out a grounder.
hitting .357 (10-for-28) with four Mariners a 5-4 lead in the sixth.
Angels 3, Rangers 2
Brady Anderson homered and
bpmers and 12 RB!s in seven His homer followed an RBI sinDarin Erstad and Troy Glaus drove in three runs for the Oriemes since Jeremy was recalled gle by Edgar Martinez.
homered and Garret Anderson oles, who have lost eight of nine.
O!i&gt;m the minors on May 5. While
Rodriguez hit his lith homer drove in the go-ahead run with a
D•vil Rays 1, Yankees 0
.ljremy was atTriple~A Sacramen- leading off the eighth, pulling the single in. the eighth inning for
Tampa Bay won 1-0 for the
!i'3. Jason hit just .212.
Mariners to 7-6, but three Oak- Anaheim against Texas.
second straight game with Steve
·~"It's niCe to have him around land relievers protected the lead.
With the score tied 2-2, Adam Trachsel as the starte-r and Fred
avd have that extra batting Jason Isringhausen allowed a hit Kennedy singled with one out in McGriff knocked in the only run
•~ach;' said Giambi, who admit- and a walk in the ninth, but held the eighth off Kenny Rogers (3- with a ·seventh-inning homer at
~ he wa! depressed when Jere- on for his seventh save.
4) and took third on Mo Vaughn's New York.
·
(liy was demoted. "It makes it
Tim Hudson (4-2) allowed six double. Tim Salmon was intenTrachsel (3-2). who pitched a
tlice to come to ·the ballpark runs on seven hits in seven tionally walked before Anderson complete game against Pedro
e$rery day."
innings, striking out seven, for the lined a 1-1 pitch to center, scor- Martinez in his last start, gave up
~~Giambi had a sacrifice fly in the win. The loser was Gil Meche (0- ing Kennedy. ·
three hits, struck out five and
l)rst and a triple in the third on a 4), who allowed six runs on eight
Shigetoshi Hasegawa (1-0) walked one in seven innings, run~ that went over the will, but hits in 5 2-3 innings.
earned the victory with three ning his scoreless-iqnings streak
tYas knocked down by center
Indians 16, Royals 0
innings of one-hit relief, and Troy to 17. He was relieved by Albie
9elder Mike Cameron. His RBI
Manny Ramirez hit two Percivfll got three outs for his Lopez, who .gave up one hit the
sihgle came in the fourth, and"he homers, including a first-inning 10th save.
last rwo innings for his firs't save.
fibmered in the sixth to give grand slam, and Jaret Wright
Ivan Rodriguez homered fot
McGriff, who had not homered
· Qal&gt;!and a 7-5 lead.
pitched 7 2-3 shutout innings for the visiting Rangers.
in 67 at-bats, hit a 2-1 pitch from
;, "I'm certain he's happy he's Cleveland against visiting Kansas
Red Sox 11, Orioles 4
Orlando, Hernandez (4-2) into
back. They help each other, they City.
Andy Sheets, after . replacing the right-center field bleachers,
C;Uk hitting all the time;• A's manThe shutout was Cleveland's Nomar Garciaparra; drove in the his fourth homer of the season.
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Trail Blazers

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SALT LAKE CITY (AP) The Portland Trail Blazers are
playing so well, so loose, · that
Damon Stoudamire sees nothing
taboo about openly discussing a
four-game sweep of the oncemighty Utah Jazz.
, "Why not? Let's go 'out and try
to win Game 4," Stoudamire said
after the Bla~ers built a 3-0 lead in
the Western Con(erence semifinals
:with a I 03-84 victory over Utah
qn Thursday night.
: · "We're one step away," he said.
~'We're going to come in here on
Sunday and try to take that game,

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too."

\,\

Arvydas Sabonis scored 22
points, Steve Smith had 21 and
reserve Bonti Wells had 10 of his
19 points in the fourth quarter,
leaving Utah one game from
being swept in a best-of-seven
~e ries for the first time in franchise
history.
"It's strange for the whole
organization," sai d Karl Malone,
who scored 28 points, but was
held to two in the fourth quarter.
"We've never been down like this,

•

....' .

SEE VA LATER,- David Justice of Cleveland pounded a solo home run.
In the Indians' 16-0 whitewashing of Kansas City Thursday. The lndi·
ans hit four home runs altogether against the Royals. (AP)

NATIONAL LEAGUE

'

Rag-arm Marlins ·knock off the .Braves again
BY THE AsSOCI,.TED PRESS

The Florida Marlins got a win for the ages.
·With .their pitching stafF depleted by injuries, 23-year-old Jason
· · Grilli and 37-year-old Joe Stmng, both making their big-league
debuts,. combined to ·p itch.eighi innings as Florida overcame a triple
play and beat the Atlanta Braves 5-4 on Thursday night:
"This was great;''tllanager John Boles said. "Those two guys gave us
everything we had to have. It was just perfect!'
Strong pitched 1 1-3 hitless innings a. he became the oldest player
to make his major. leag~,~e debut in nearly 40 years.
~ ·1 haven't slept a wink," said Strong, who arrived on an overnight
flight after being recalled from Triple-A Calgary. "The way things went
tonight, I'll probably never sleep again."
Grilli, 14 years younger than Strong, allowed 15 baserunners - 11
hits, two walks and two l].it batsmen - but only four runs in 6 2-3
innings. He also singled on the first pitch in his first qteer at-bat and
drove in a run on a fourth-inning groundout.
"I wanted my whole life to be here," said Gtilli, who was sent back
to Calgary after the game. "To do as well as I did, it's a great feeling."
When Strong entered the game in the seventh inning, he became
the oldest player to make his big league debut· since Diomedes Olivo
on Sept. 5, 1960, for Pittsburgh at age 41.

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"I was so happy when he took the mound, I almost started tearing
up out there," said. teammate Preston Wilson, who hit a two-run
homer. "That's just perseverance."
Because of the two rookies, the Braves' first triple play since 1986
became a footnote. They went around the · horn on Mike Lowell's
grounder to third in the fifth inning.
With runners at first and second, Lowell hit a gtounder ,that third
baseman Chipper Jones backhanded. He stepped on third, thehthrew
to second baseman Quilvio Veras, whose relay .t o first wai backhanded
on one hop by Andres G~. Lowell was out by less than half a
·
step.
.
The only other pitcher available for the Marlins was Antonio Alfonseca, who pitched the ninth for his 11th save, giving Florida three wins
in the four-game series.
Brewers 14, Cubs 8
Mark Loretta went 5-for-5 and J.eromy Burnitz had three RB!s as
Milwaukee won the longest nine-inning game in National Leagoe history.
The 4-hour, 22-minute game at Wrigley Field featured 35 hits and
19 walks as the teams tied the major leagoe record for a nine-inning
game set by Baltimore and the Yankees in a 13-9 game on Sept. 5,

The longest previous NL game took 4 hours, 20 minutes, betweeh'
Los Angeles and Colorado on June 30, 1996.
·
David Weathers, the l()th 'pitcher, struck out Sammy Sosa with the'. ·
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bases loaded on the 427th pitch of the game to finish it.
Phillies 6, Expos .4
Thiid baseman Michael Barrett's error with two outs in the seventh'
inning allowed the go-ahead run to score for visiting Philadelphia.
Randy Wolf (2-2)" allowed four runs - three earned - ·ih six'
innings as the Phillies won for the sixth time in their last eight games. •

Mets 3, Pirates 2
AI Leiter (4-0) pitched an eight-hitter and Todd Zeile had

asolo·

homer and two RB!s.
The Mets had lost 10 of14 and were 4-8 on a season-long 13-game
road trip until Leiter pitched his first complete game of the season.

CHICAGO . (AP) Elton
Branq and Steve Francis discovered they had a lot in common
when they got to ·know each
other last summer.
They both loved basketball,
obviously. They had both ·played at
Atlantic
Coast
Conference
schools, Brand at Duke and Francis at Maryland. And they had
gone 1-2 in the NBA draft.
Now the two have something
else to share. On Thursday, Brand
and Francis were selected co-winners of the NBA 's Rookie of the
Year Award.
"Our relationship is basketball,"
Brand said. "We like to play basketball, we like to have a lot of
fun. I think that's why we hit if off
so well and became friends. .
"We may always be· connected,
e~ecially be~a1,1se of the tough
rookie of the year race."
Brand,' the forward ' from the

·Little·E·
frolll Pip B1
his 12th career start. Only Ron
Bouchard, who won his 11th race,
Was faster1.
·
Dale Earnhardt, who owns his
son's team, won for the. first time
in. his !.6th start. And Stewart
needed 25 races before his first
celebration.
Earnhardt Jr. says the confidence
he gained by winning easily in
Texas helped him hang on in
Richmond.
·
"I had established some credibility in the sport," he said. "I

1997.

Sectional ·

"I expect that with youth, when you start meet&amp; . Fairfield Union, which edged New
' three sophomores and three or four juniors, Lexington 6-3 Thursday.
and a couple of seniors;• Gheen added, "Even
Warren (9-13) advanced to the Lucasville
the seniors we have don't have a lot of expe- district tournament by virrue of a 9-7 upset of
fnnPigeB1
. rience.
No. 1 seed Athens. The Warriors will meet
Rothgeb followed with a single and Lane
Lane went 5-for-5 with four RBI to lead Northwest
(14-10),
which
stunned
drove in two runs with a double to right field. Gallia Academy. Payton was 2-for-3 with four Portsmouth, 2-1.
Payton singled to drive in Lane and round out RBI. Each had a double.
South Point (16-7), an 8-7 winner over
the scoring in the fourth.
Rothgeb was 2-for-4, scored three runs and · Jackson, will meet underdog Log:in Elm (J"The second time through the lineup we had two RBI. Shirey was 2-for-3 with a RBI. 17) at Lucasville. Logan Elm upset Circleville,
started hitting the ball and running the ,bases
Sims was 1-for-2 and scored tWice. Nida 13-8.
· aggressively, and just did the job," said went 1-for-1 with two walks and scored three
Houchens. "I'm really proud of them."
runs. Angel was 1-for-2, walked tWice and
Meigs put together a three-run rally in the scored three times.
top of the fifth innirig. The Marauders loaded
Rothgeb · (4-2) pitched five innings and
the bases with Stanley, Stewart and Brown to earned the win. He gave up six runs on nine
hits, and had one strikeout and four 'walks.
set up a string of three ~I singles.
Stanley op.,.ned the inning with a single, folMcKinniss entered the game in the sixth
lowed by Stewart, who drew a walk, and inniqg and .held Meig5. scoreless. He had one .
walk. '
·
another single by Brown.
"Meigs
is
a
.
good
team;· l-Jouchens added.
Josh Lynch, who entered the game in relief
of Roush in the four.th, slapped a single to "They haven't had as good a year as .they usuright field tQ drive in Staruey. Derrick John- . ally do, but we have a lot of respect for them,
May Is OLQEB AMI;~ICAt"S MO~JH, a time to reflect
son bounced into a 6-4-3 double play, but that and I thought they hit the ball extremely well
and really put some pressure on us."
was enough to score Stewart..
capabilities;' contribUtions,
and ,concerns ofour older
.
' .
Brown went 3.for-3 with two RBI to 'pace
Brown scored, on a two-out single to center
•
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field by Zach Bolin as Meigs shaved the the Marauders. Stanley was 3-for-4 with a
double and scored thre~ runs. Bolin was 2deficit to 10-6.
.
Gallia Academy answered with four runs in for-3 with a RBI. SteY;art walked twice and
the home .half of the fifth. Lane, Payton and scored two runs.
Roush went three innings and gave up nine
Shirey each had RBI. Rothgeb, Sims, Nida
runs on eight hits. He recorded two strikeouts
and Angel each scored ..
The Blue Devils ended the game in .the . and two walks.
Lynch pitched one Inning in relief, giving
bottom of the sixth after McKinniss retiJ:Fd
Bramb~ewood"
the side in the top half of the inning with a up five runs on three hits, with four walks.
pop fly to right field and dou\&gt;le play that he Stanley pitched: one inning and surrendered
two runs on four hits. He had one strikeout
started by fielding a line drive· from Stewart.
and
two walks.
Nida reached base on a fielder's choice and
"I was proud of them; they played hard aqd
Angel walked to put runners In scoring pootion. Rothgeb belted a single to left field to never gave up;' Gheen added. "They'll get
score Nida, and Lane followed with an infield better, though. They'll have a: hell of a team
16
single to the left side to drive i.ll Angel with next Y,Cir. They'll come back and be good."
Seniurs Kyle Smiddie, Jell' Bmwn, Tommy
the deciding run.
"We're real young;• said Meigs. head coach Roush,' Odie Kart, Ronnie Smith and Levi
Scot Gheen. "We've got a lot of young pby- Burns suited for the final time in Marauder
.
ers all the way amund. We've had injuries and maroon and gold. .
In other Division II sectional tournament
a young pitching stafF. We've always had to
battle back late in the game, or we get down action Thursday, Hillsbom defeated Greenearly and have to battle back. It's been like that field McClain 13-2 to reach the disttict tournJmenr at Chillicothe. Hillsboro (12-10)
all year long.

•

•

f

NBA PLAYOFFS

Jazz 103·84,

The capacity crowd of 19,911
was boisterous much of the second half after Utah rallied from a
21 -point second-quarter deficit.
But Jazz fans cleared out with
three minutes on the fourth-quarter cl0ck, after· the Blazers opened
the period with an 11 - 2 run and
pulled away for thei r third
blowout victory in the serie s.
"If I was in th e crowd, I'd have
left, too," said Jeff Hornacek, who
scored 24 points on 9-of-17
shooting. "If we'd have lost these
games by one or two or four, I'd
think there would be more hope."
With Portland's post-up offense
dictating the pace, the Blazers
took a 53-32 lead. with 4:50
before halftime. Some fans booed
and it seemed to spur the Jazz,
who closed the half with a 17-2
run for a 55-49 halftime deficit.
Utah kept it close in the third,
three times tying the score. But
the Jazz never could get the iead,
and Portland put it out of reach by
outscoring Utah 28-14 in. the
fourth. quarter.
"When they cut it to six or

3·0 series lead :
•

seven, it was anybody's ball game,"
said Blazers forward Brian Grant.
"But 1 think they used up a lot of
energy coming back."
Rasheed Wallace scored 17
points for the Blazers.
Bryon Russell had 18 points
for the Jazz.
Utah had beaten Portland in 10
of the previous 13 playoff games
in Salt Lake City, but the Blazers
weren't intimidated. Now, they've
won 10 of their last 12 overall
against the Jazz.
"All I know is it's 3-0 in the
series," backup point goard .Greg
Anthony said. "That team is too
good for us to allow any complacency co creep m on our pan.

We've got to play even better on
Sunday."
That's scary, because the Blazers, who beat Utah in six games
last year in the Western Co nferenct! senlifinals, havt: made it look

easy this year.
"We're desperate ," Russell said.
" If we don't come out and win,
then it's bye-bye."

Chicago Bulls; and Francis, the
gliard for the Houston Rockets,
each received 58 of a possible 121
votes from a panel of sportswriters
and broadcasters. Lamar Odom of
the Los Angeles Clippers received
three votes, and Andre Miller of
the Cleveland Cavaliers got two.
lt was only the third time two
rookies have shared the honor.
Jason !Gdd and Grant · Hill were
co-winners in 1994-95, and Dave
Cowens · •and
Geoff Petrie
shared it m
1970-71.
Brand said
he was also
sharing · the
await! with his .
mother, Daisy,
who moved to
Chicago "with
him
and
attended aU but

one of his games this season. He He also w;.s tops in double- dousurprised his mother with flowers bles (42) and led the NBA with
and gave her a kiss after accepting 4.3 offensive rebounds per game.
He joined David . Robinson,
the award.
Though Brand was the No. 1 Shaquille O'Neal, Alonzo Mournpick in the draft - th e first- ever ing and Tim Duncan as rookies in
No. 1 for the Bulls - Francis was the past .decade who averaged 20
the early favorite for the rookie points and 10 rebounds .
·His high of 44 points against
award. There were those who
thought Brahd was too small to the Washington Wizards on April
bang with the NBA's big boys. 13 was the highest output by a
Others said he lacked francis' flash rookie since Philadelphia's Allen
and fl~.ir. ·
Iverson ended his streak of five
But
40-point-plus games with 50 on
Brand was con- April12, 1997.
sistently solid
Brand won the monthly rookie
all season. He honors in January, February and
led aU rookies . April. He shared the April award
m
scormg with Francis, who made a strong
. (20.1 points), push at the end of lihe season.
rebounding
Francis scored 30 or more points
(10.0), blocked
shots
(1.63)
and
minutes
(37) per game.

knew they wete going to treat me
like a proven race car driver."
. Others are treating him like ·a
star. Rolling Stone magazine
recently did a. seven-page spread
on him, calling him )he rock and
roll NASCAR whiz kid."
Many of the 103,000 fans at
Richmond International Raceway
roared when · he dueled with the
veterans, perhaps loudest when he
passed The lntithidator ,for the
lead.
'
But Earnhardt Jr. has f.1iled to
finish three times, and even trails
Kenseth by three spots in the driver standings. Ke.nseth is 14th.
For that, Little E insis ts on taking the heat.
ul've been tearing up sante race

cars and I walk into the shop and
they're all shiny and 'ready to go,"
he said. "That's why things have
happened so fast.
"What the public sees is just me,
but there's a .lot of people in the
background working at the same
pace, making thin gs come togeth.
er."
And 'they're probably wondermg how much better Earnhardt

GOING TOTHE RACK - Portland center Arvydas Sabonis goes to tne
basket for the layup. above Utah's Bryon Russell (OJ during Thursd&lt;lY
night's Western Conferenc.e semifinal game in Salt Lake City. (AP) :

four times in the final month.
Francis also won the monthly
award in December and March.
He finished the season as the
rookie leader in assists (6.6 per
game) and finished second to
Br~nd with 18 points per game .
He was fifth in scoring among all

•

point guards in the NBA and was
the seventh rookie to average at
least 15 points, five assists and five
rebounds,
Hill, Oscar Robertson, Alvan
Adams, Magic Johnson, MichaeJ:
Jordan and Penny Hardaway were:
the others.

will ge t with more t!xperience.

H e took what he thought was a
third- or fou rth-place ca r and put
it in Victory La11e in Richmond.
" Now. we need to go home' and
look at that and see how we did
it," he said. "'We need to figure out
how to make those decisions
every week."

Brand New 2000 Pontiac
Sunfire Sun &amp; Sound .

Brand New 2000 Chevy
S.Serlea LS Exlended Cab

Brand New 2000 Pontiac
Grand Prix SE Sedan

~2,850* ~3,850* ~1,850*
• Air Cond.lllonlng
• Power Sunroof

• Air
• AMIFM CD

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• AMIFM CD

M·EIGS COUNTY.YOU'RE INVITED!

• Aulomatlc, Air Condltionl119
• Power Windows &amp; Locks

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upon the:
citizens. · ·

Brand New 2000 Pontiac
Montana 4 Door Extended

Brand New 2000 Chevy
Full Size Conversion Van

821,850* 823,8

~,

Entertainment will. begin at 11:00 a.m. and will · ·
include:

11:00- Roger and Mary Gilmore- performing "Buckeye Hill &amp;
·
· · ·,. '••
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11:15- Big Bend Cloggers
zja ·
•••
12:00- George Hall
YOU ABE INYilED to attend the annual Senior Citizens Day ·,
celebration on Tuesday, May at the Meigs Multipurpose Senior·
. Center. This 'event is held yearly throughout Ohio to horior the ··~
state's o19er adults. The theme for this year's event is "Ohio ... A
great place to grow up, and a great place tci grow old!"
.· ·. For Information, Call 740-992-2161

1

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Brand, Francis share NBA Rookie of the Year honors

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that I can recall."
The Jazz are reeling, another
perfect part of the Blazers'
scheme:
" If we allowed this team to win
this game, I think they'd feel like
they could win the series," said
Portland's Scottie Pippen. "This
game has· put some doubts into
their minds."
It's noi that ·the Jazz, who
played for the NBA title in 1997
and 1998, are a bad' team. The
Blazers are simply deeper, bigger
throughout the lineup and playing
much better right now.
, .. After beating Utah to go up
3-0. we have a right to be confident;' said Portland forward Detlef
Schrempf.
Game 4 is at the Delta Center
on Sunday, with Utah trying to
become the first team in NBA
history to rally from a 3-0 deficit.
The odds don 't f.wor it; and the
Jazz sounded .like they knew it.
" Sunday is just a pride game for
me," Malone said. " I don't think
anyone wants to end the year getting swept."

.

The Dally Sentinel • Page

...
~.

• AMIFM Cassette
·
• Power Windows &amp; Locks
Tilt &amp; Cruise ·

• Vortec V-8 Power .
• 4 Captain Chairs
Windows&amp;

Brand New 2000 Chevy

824,i5i·
• Vortec V-8 Power
• Power Windows &amp; Locks
CD

• Ta•es. Tags. Trtle Fees "'Ira. Aebate l~luded In sale price of new voh~le ~sled where applicabkl. "On approved credit. On selecled
models. Not responsille for typograph~el errors. pr~es Good May 12th Through May 14th
1

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(:tm~lint• o~~·rult:t

'
Chevy, Pontiac, Buick, Olds,

p~ .. fn A (.::,
· ~ "'.. ....

" ..,.~

·West VIrginia's t1
And Custom Van Dealer.

Monday-

9am-9pm
1 pm-Bpm
·

'.

.,

�P~ge

Friday, May 12, 2000

B 4 • The Dally Sentinel

2000

Ohio

Mlscallaneous
MerchsndiM

730

Vena

&amp;

The Dal

005

11 0

RN o TO $31 50 IHR
LPNoT0$2200/HR

Personals

mmed a e Wo k n S a ng And
P va a Du y .lissgnmen n
Sou he n And Cen a Oh o
Choose You Hou s And Loca
ons LOCAl.. NTERV EWS W
Be He d A Bu ckeye H s OBES
Off ca On May 7 2000 Ca To
day Fo Appo n men 6 "' 846

DIABETIC PATIENTS

I

Mtd ca e o P Iva a lnsu ance
~ou may be ent t td o ece ve
you d abetlc supp ea 11 no cos
lo you Fo mo e n o ma on

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

BU-677 6561

STAAT

DATING

TONIGHT

ave Fun Mea ng E g be

~

Help Wanted

8399

Sn

•• nYou Ata Cal Fo Moe
n.to mat on , 800 ROMANCE

!lli 973!5

11

o

230

FINANCIAL
21

o

Business
Opportunity

New Bank Repos
Ohly Two Left Neve Lived In

ecommends tha you do bus
ness w th peop e you know and
NOT o send money h ough he
ma un vau have n es ga ed
he olfe lng

Colt 8()().948 5878

Naw

Help Wanted
All eal ostale tdwrllllng In
this newspaper Ia aubjeCt to

~0

Announcement•

~OT

A CAMPGROUND Mtm

bt lh p Or T mtl ha e ? Wt
Take t Ame ca a Moll Sue
Cit I u Campg ound And T me
tha 1 Rasa e C ea nghOust Ca
AtiO t Sales In a national 800
423 S967 24 Houra www 110 t
sa as com

A R AWARDS Buy Stll Domto

19

In e nat ona Bus nan &amp; Flret
Q aaa !.at M nu e Coach
800.

937-4784

New To YO\/ Thrift Sllo!&gt;Pe
9 West s lmSon Athena

740-592 842

Quat v c o h ng and houatho d
Items S1 oo bag sa t eva y
Thu adav Monday th u Satu day

9 ()().5 30

Orde any Longabe ge baake a
~u ng May&amp;June w I pay any

Stomped Envo opo GICO DEPT
5 Box •38 ANTIOCH TN
370tl 438 Stan lmmtdlollly

U08 WEEKLY GUo\AANTEED
WORKING POR THE GOVERN
MENT FROM HOME PART
TIME NO EXPERIENCE RE
QUIRED 1 800-787.0783
mant

~efunds

Free Otla 1 (24

Mod co Ofllct LPN 0 Mtd ca

ATTENTION
29
PEOPLE NEEDED I You Have
tO To 75 b1 To Loot WE PAY
YOU $$$ A Na u 1 Doclo

dayo Sand A11umo &amp; Quail ca

Alllltlnl To Wor~ PRN Week

Recommended Clultlnlltdl 1

lotodlaol Trtn..._,llonltt

Fu Benet II Ca 7 Oayl 1 800
230-3390 El&lt;l 4090

323 oo V Now

Poa a Jobs

H ng No Expe lenca Pa d
Tra n na G tal Btntlltl Cal 7
Cayaii00-429-3880 Ext J 385

f: ght 5 week o d pupp ea
2
Rottwe a and 2 Black lab to a
good home n the country 7.. 0)

4467331

PUP I

$48

ABSOLUTELY NEED 8 PEOPLE
NOW lnle net ac•we oaphabla
all mollva e&lt;1 condldaltl pleaoo
Ttllooornmu a 101 your own
schedule

$2~.Jhr

WWW.20KCLUI COM

795-0380 Ext t20 (24 Hrsl

lOise she

lo

(7401258-6176

Lost and Found

Sma I G ay Flully Cal El e L Ia
John s Centana y
$20 00 (7401 446-9582

70

ATTENT ON WORK AT HOMEI
In I Bus noas Nttda He p IMME
0 ATELVI s•20 00 /Wk PT
$t 000 $t 500 .Wk FT In orn11
Mo I 0 dtr FUll ');len ng I 800
900-9308 24 HRS

come? Mo e Fit• be Hourt? In
dependence? Avon Has What
You re Looking Fo Let a Te k

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

8811-158 1-2866

ALL Vtrd Stitt Mutt
Be Paid n Advance
QEAQI..INE 2 DO p.m
lht dly btforo the ld
11 to run Sundly

tdiUon 2 00 p m
Friday Mondly edition
9 30 o m Stturdoy

Certlf ad NurM Aldtt Rotat ng
sh fls nte med ate ca e cente
West VI g n a c.,t f cat on re
qu ed Pont P eaaant Cen e

Stale Route e2 Aou t

pany Veh c e Fax eaume o
(8t4) 23!5 8080 or Ca 1 (8001 550-

3273

328 Pont P aaaant

wv

Ulllennlum Telnlrvlca

It plaased to amounce the
Grand open ng of Ill new WeN
aton cal ng 08flter
We a 1 now uttlng up
lntarvlew appo n manta fo
outbound teleservlce pos tons

H Po entlal Process nl) Cia ma
s Euy T a n ng P ovltted

MUST Own PC CALL NOW t
888 585 5t97 EXt 842
An

ourpa

en A coho And Othe 0 ug
Agency Located n Ga 1a And
Jackson Coun es Is Seek ng A
Oua ed Pe son To P ov de A
cohO And Othe o uo Caunsa
ng Counselo WI Wo k W lh AI
Age G oups Knowledge Of
Chern ca Dependency Requ ad
Bacha o a Dog ot CCDC LISW

And 0 LPCC P ole ed Send
Resume By May t9 2000 To
FACTS 45 0 ve Slroel Ga I po
s Oh o 45631 Ot FAX 740 446
80 4 WF/H

wh ch oln violation oftht

law Ou roadero "" hllroby
Info mad that al dwel nuo
advert ttd In th t a e ava able on an equal
opportunity ban

au 928 3426
32x80

Fac a y Aepo

L vod n $49 950

REAL ESTATE

Navar

818 89

MOBILE HOME OWNIAS
Huge lnven o y 0 acoun Pr ces

On Vny Sk t ng Dooro Wind

Hu yl Won Laat Oakwood
Ga lpo ~ 740 446 3093

owa Ancha s Wata Heaters

330 Farms for Sale

Mob lo Homo Supply 740 •48
94t6 www orvb corrlibtnnett

800 720 0326

www ezoppo tun ty com

HUNTIN(II.ANO

NEW BRAND NAME COM PUT
EM A moal Everyone Ap
p1 oved W th $0 Down Low

Ava able On Land Con act As
l lila As
Down
800 2 3

Mon h y Payments! 1 BOO 8 7
3476 Ext 330

a Counly On y 133 000

!5,..

Business and
Buildings

nat on n a mat on

F~de

a He

Ful Benells 1 800 598 4504 Ex
6PM

CST

GOV T POSTAL JOBS Up
To $18 24 Hou H ng Fo 2000
F ee Ca I Fo App ca on Exam
na on In arma on Fede a H e

I Oflpm F~day

Big sae May t2 3 15t9 Ollce

qesks ab as compu
photocop e s cha 5
CK~a acks gene a ors
e-ases o ght bu bs
m sc 4 m a out t43

e desks
un u e
cab nets
c o has

t day &amp; Saturday May 2 3
aam 4pm N ce clothes mac 32 mllas out 43 on rtght

sa •o•

s• • May 11

Business
Training

We look torwartllo meot ng you

Schools
Instruction

Fu naces 0 Fu naces 2 See
Heat Pump &amp; A r Cond ton ng
Systems Free 6 Vea Pa ts &amp; La
bor Wa anty Bennetts Heat ng &amp;

AT&amp;T 1 CENT PHONE
ROUTE Easy CASH CASH
CASH FREE lnlo BOO 997
9888 Ext 55 124 Hs l
$$ Au o Loans Pe sonal Loans
Debt Con so dat on Mo tgage s
And Ra nanc ng Cred t P ob ems
OK Consume s F nanc a BOO

2476 25 E•
&amp;W

t 800 812 5987

Ron &amp; Gun Shop

s hav ng a sa e
on a guns n stock ca 140 742

www countrytyme com

Mob e Home Lot W I Take 12

Look ng To Buy A New Home?
Don t Have Land? We Do Hu ry

Depos I Rele ences 740 446
0175

Ohly

Pl1111nt

oLo • Left

304 736-7295

$ NO DOWNI HOMES NO CRED
T NEEDED GOV T FORE
CLOSURES GUARANTEED AP
PAOVAL 800 360 4620 EXT

t4 18 Wldes $125 Mon n $100

P o esso a Coup e nu.d to rtrf1
3--4 bed ooms home As soon s,..a
pass ble W Co nelda 6 month

8509

Lease (140) 245 5776

34 Vod OH KS

MERCHANDISE

Naod 7 Ladies To SOl Avon 74(1.
-33e8

510

FORECLOSED HOMES Low 0 0
Down Govn And Bank Repo s
Be ng Sod Now F nanong Ava

abe Ca Now

800 355 0024

Ext 8040

Wooded lo unde 5 Ac es n
Oh o for sma weekend Cab n
Along Raccoon C eek a Na ana
Fo est P eferred Phone (304)675

7942

Household
Goods

Wash 0 ye Was he wo k&amp; f ne
Orye needs mer Must ake

80

Auction
and Flea Market

1ne Income $500-$78001 monlh t
188-2 S.l33t wwwHOmmblz
1111

7 !5 H P Sea s Outboard Mo or
Runs G oal $300 (304)882 3602

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

on (3041675 5115

790

campers &amp;
Motor Homes

1988 Four Wlnna 205 Sundowner
cuddy cab n 4 3 Liter V 6 dua
batte u Kept under cove ed
dock In summer stored n garage
n w nte exce lant cond on
$9 500 contact Dan Waugh at

17401 3884 2t77
3890

WANT A COMPUTER???? BUT
NO CASH?? MMX TECHNOLO
G"' We F nance o Down Pas

0

(7401 384

SERVI CES
994 Red Bonnev lie SSE Super
Cha gad Tu co Fue nJtCtediV6

Pets for Sale

4 week old AKC Chocolate L8bl

$250 Ca (304 675-5636

BOO

Compact 0 sc Premium Sound
Sun oof 6 way Powe Leather
Seats Powe Locks &amp; W ndows
Ce u a Pl'lane W Booste K t A
Cand tlon ng T t C u se Dual

A bags ASS 4 Wheel Anll Lock
b akes Regu a y Se v ced &amp;
Ma nlalnod (7401 446 0957 o
(74014460852

810

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Uncond t ona feHme gua antaa
Local eterences tu nlshed Es

Ia!&gt; shed 975 Co 24 Hrs (7401
446 0870 1 800 287 0578 Rog

1i ale Fo Rent" $250 mo w 1
turn sh f you wanl (3041675
71t51740 992 6387
Depoe 1
$tOO No Pets

oxcaptlng
all
lagal
1111mtnto and rlghta of
way
Permanent Parcel No 0300541-004
Loclttd
at 38311
Flatwooda
Road
Pometoy Ohio 45769
Said property hat baan
appralttd It S30 000 and
cannot 1111 lor 1111 than
two-thlrdl of appralnmtnt
Thla approlaal Ia baltd
upon a vlaUIII lnapaotlon of
that part of tha promlllt 10
which acoaaa wee readily
available Tha oppralatrl
aaauma no reaponolblllty
lor and glva no wllght to
unknown lagal matttre
Including but not limited to
concealod or latent d - 1
and/or tho preaanca of
harmful or toxic chtmlcala
pollutanta or ga111
Tan
Tarma. of 1111
Ptrctnl (10%) day of aalt
belanca within 30 daya.
Jam11 M loulaby lhtrlff
of Mtlga County Ohio
Stephan D Mil.. Attorney
18 Waot Monument Avanue
Dayton Ohio 45402
3T 5(5)(12)(18)
3T5(5) 5 12 19

PUIUC NOTICE
NOTICE Ia hereby given
that on Saturdo)l May 13
2000 at 10:00 am a public
nla wiU be hald at 21 f Wall
Second Street Pomeroy
Ohio Tha Parmar 1 Bank
and Savlnga Company
extended par~lng lot
(baalda Powell 1 Iuper
Valu) to aall lor caah the
following oollatoore~
2000 Honda TAX &lt;IIIOES
478TE2304V4011241
The Farmara Band and
lavlnga
Company
Pomeroy, Olllo reoarvaa tha
right to bid It thla oata and
to withdraw the above
collataral prior to aala
FIM'tharlavlngl
The Farmera
lank
and
Company
raaarvn 1ha rtght to reject

an¥u~: bld~~~~~m'::n

collateral will be aold In tha
condition It It In with no

expraaa
or Implied
warrantln glvon
For lurthar lnlormatlon
oontoot Shalla Buchanan at
App ance Parts And Se v ca All 982-2131
Name B and&amp; Over 25 Yea 1 EK (5)10 11 123tc
pe enca A Wo k Guaranteed
F ench C ly Maytag 740 448
7796
Public Nolloe

ers Wate proof ng

Between A hans and Pome oy 2
&amp; 3 bed oom mob e homes
$260-$300 740-992 2167

$$BAD CAED T? Gel Cash
Loans To $5 ooo Debt Consoli
da on To $200 000 Cred 1 Ca ds
Ref nanc ng And
Auto Loans Ava abe Mar dian

96 S awberry Rd Dodge Noon 4

Mortgages

FOR ALL YOUR REAL ESTATE
NEEDS

your resume and
ceDing

us

Co\LL NORA OONOHEW AT
(304)111-3448

986 Oakwood Mob 1• Home
4x70 2 Bedrooms 2 Sotho L1rt

now n olde and oul 1740) 251
988
994 t4x80 Fleelwood 2 bod
noms 2 fu Da ha

Ohio Valley
Publishing Co

CENTURY 21 SHIPLEY REALTY

w~trrden

tuti

All 1 tel c Appliance WID n
c udod Now lronl porCh S 1 up
on P va e Lol May move (740)
258 9382

Country vlng n ca two bad oom
mobUt home a electric c tv wa

tt oenl al a 1 112 aero ltva lol
$325 per monlh p ue $300 do
pooll and ull to on Nchola Rd
Rutland Oh o off LOad ng c tok
Rd .. 740-992 9052

-

t ed Photog a

pht
Reasonable ales
Ca for sppo ntmen

patt 740-992 5858

1304)875 7472
(304)8757279

Tv Computtra Ctllphonea 1
877108 tt~ Of v tft ...... frio
iuftk net CAlL TODAY!

FuR Imol part timo coot&lt;, fulltlmtl

Come See Tho Bill 740 448
3093

Apartment•
for Rent
1 and 2 bedroom apar ments fur
n sl\ed and unfu n aned l&amp;curlty
dtPOIIt equ ed no pa 1 740

Pomoroy on •s1te

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE

CU.SSIFIEDSI

mmadlate And Vea Round
Open nga For Gradua as Prefa
Educa on 0 £ng sh Majo But
No Aequ ed Top Pay E~eca ant
Bene s Fo Ent y Leve Posl
ons Na ve No h Ame can
Eng sh Speake Sand Resume
0
ln(lu y To o agon

lo edOaol com (MSWORO) 0
Fax 50 75t 327~

cubic fool Kenmore Chett frttzer

74(1.742 8926

Gold Fish for pondl Dltferanl

alzo colora $4 aach (304)773
8198

~abrodo e Puppies (31 Ve ow
Pomea 9 wotks od $t50
(00.)875 6604

t.'lyo c Pomo any b ted dog
groom ng ava abla A 10 show

$250 (740)-44tt108

qua

ty

1500 Po y Tank Prouuro Toni(.
Subma 1 bit Pump Uotd for

~

9 wook old mu Boxor pupt

s~t

and pat Pomo avolablt for
14D-IM9-341 8

eo popu ca 1740-742 2525

$800 00 (740) 2811 toe

570

2 tw n bldl complttt 1 meuva
colored I tl choir tmall loblo w1
Clio" (740)-388 8t93

•

24 ound Tldowa1or pool lwo
yea 1 old 52 wall col 74(1.8435&amp;« for lnlormatlon

79 ooo m ea

97 Geo Metro automa c a 4
cyl nde gas save $2295 cal

HONDA 1 S 00 $500 &amp; UP PO
L CE IMPOUND Honda I Toyo
ta 1 Chav~s Jeeps And Spo

Uij klea Ca Now 80(1.772 7470

EXT 6338

Hondo t F om UOO Pol co lm
pound &amp; Tlx Ropo 1 AI Malrtt &amp;
Modt1 800-242 t 057 Ext 102
Co\R8 FROM U91MO lm
pounds /Fiopoo Fto SO.Down 124
Mot ~ t ~ i'll For Lllllngo t 8()().
319 33&lt;3 X2156

Fruits &amp;
Vegetablsa

1279/Mo + Ul es No Po s 74(1.
446 2957 Or 74(1.339-4835

Racine Gun Club
Fishing Derby
Sat May 13th
7am·l2 noon

The family or Okey Klier
1994 Ford Range XLT 90 OOOK
New T es Lookt Runs Great!

WANT ,. COMPUTER?? B~
NO CASH?? MMX Techno o
W Fnanco W h 0 Down P
Crad Probfema No Problem Col
Tol Free 871-293 4082

•

FARM S UPPLIE S
&amp; LIVE STOC K
810 Farm Equipment
S.ato Beava Tracto 4 W 0 ve
Diesel W h Et~u pman S mp c ty
e HP Tac o 44 Mowe 740

3e7-0t06

I
I
1 To be published

1
1
1

1

Friday,
May 26, 2000
in The Daily
Sentinel

Larry Boyer
Gellla Acadamy High School
Clan of 1959

Dabble Pickens Lowery
Southern High School
Class of 1979

Special recognition to graduates of:

*1950. 1975. 1990*
$7.00 per photo or $12/couple
Fill out form below &amp; drop off with payment to:

I

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Name_______________________
School ____________
Year
---------------------------------Nickname~------------­
Deadline Friday, May 19 • 4 p.m.

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t:::::::::::::::::::Jr:::::::::::::::::::r:::::::::::::::::::JC::::::::::::::::::~
Public Notice
PUIUC NOTICE
Solplo townahlp will
accept aoaled bide lor the
following
1880 Ford F 1100 15 978.2
mlln
Serial f
F
8000H1911110, Sutphen pump
150 Qol Parmtn 750 Gal
Tank Tranamlulon 2 apaad
axle 288 Engine Mu GVW
11.800, Hydraulic brakn
Scipio townalllp NllrYII
tho right to raluaa any and
all blda bldt will be opened
Juna 7 2000@ the .Solplo
Twp
Tru1111 regular
monthly m11tlng To view
tht truck contact Randy
Butcher @ 742 23D2 or
Robert Jawall @ 742 27110
lldt may bt mallad at
IOiplo townahlp
C/0 Connie Chapmtll'
311315 IR 143
PomarolJ OH 41711
(1)12,. 21 310

Public Notice
PUBUCNOnCE
Notice Ia hereby given
that on April 17 2000 tha
tuppara Plalno Regional
Sewer Dlatrlct Board put o
BAN on tho aarvloe oroo
until Tuppara Plalna
Regional Sewer Dlatrlct and
EPI' can dtlarmlna II tho
dlotrlct haa the capacity lor
any future connectfone
(raaldtntlll or bualnan)
VIdeo and plcturaa aro
IVIIIIbll at the TPRSD
oHica lor public ravlaw
upon appointment call 740-

MT-tl08

tuppara Plaine Regional
s-Diotrlol
Char'ta Willi~ Chairman
Clyde Kuhn VIet P'"ldtnt
Loretta Murphy lacratary
and TrHaurar
(5) 12 14 210

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry

Mlzway Tavern
Frl Karaoke $1 00 cover
Sat Steel Horse Band
$2 00 cover

Card of Thanka

S S T lm $4 300 080 (HO)
3711-2589 Afte 5 00
1 Btdroom Nea C nama A/C
w o Hookup au et Loca an

Eleclrlcaland
Refrigeration

Announcementa

Plenty of FOOd end
Prlzas for all kids
Bait l"urnlshtd

3 mon ho $800 00 (740) 718
'18114
580

840

30

au....

Bach 8r111 Trombone wl h F At
tachment Purchased New uaed

37 Ptop t Ntodtd To Lott Up
To 30 Pounds In Tho Noxt 3q
0111 Free Samp 11 740 4•1
t982

L v ngaton a Saaament Wate
Proofing a baaament repairs
dona f 11 eat metes ftt me
gua antee 12yrs on job 11p1 I

tnct (304)195-3887

A special section devoted to
your favorite "alumnus"
Remember your spouse, child,
grandparent, friend, couples, etc.

Membaraand

Mualcal
Instrument•

1182 22t8

UN VERSITV
GRADUATES
TEACH ENQLISH IN TAIWAN

pa t me eaah ar 1111 growing
bua n111 11nd reaume 10 The
OaHv Sanune PO Bor: 720 7S

ongagamtnl lng 1200 (olzo
71Yamaha Sttroo w lh Boolt 101
f oor tland ng tpoalrtro and citbl
-na S:ldO G dor Roel&lt;tr 180 111M
PS/1 Computer StOO 0 op Loll
Kllchon labia (No Chol •I 1-40 ~3

dr nk ng wa er til than ona v-f,rl

TWo bedroom moblla home no

Oakwood Galllpo a America 1
La geat Rete t Buy For Leu

1/4 ca at marquis cut dlemontl

speed 2 doo a

NeedS pa nled $ 800 oo OBO
(7401 258 ?33

Queen 1 ze Wlttr Bed sam
Wave eas Lgh1ed h~d boartl t
Supa S ng e watt bed 1 Nan-

S 218 $275 Mo St50 Oopoo 1
lncludta Wator &amp;Traoh 1140)
25H789

ao 000 m as

$3000 080 94 Dodge Shadow 5

C ed Corp t 800 47 5tl9 Ext
t80

da~ Conu t Parrot and cage
1740~256 ot95

doa au oma 1c a

memb
When?

or leaa

Public Notice

Into Summe I 800 820 7546

Building
Supplies

more

Merchandise

FAEE JUNK 2 FREE Sotoll to

I

U 1

WE LOST 50 LBS n 6 Weeks

560

P 11-D-T-D+fi.A.P 11-V

-n.-

;..,;,;..:....;:..:;.;:.:;..,.-------1

los Call Nowl 800 772 7470
EXT 7832

dl

www dletez cam

FR EE DEBT CON SOL OAT ON

'Wtd&lt;llngs

tumt To CLA 103 c/o Go lpo
Do ly T lburlo 825 Tl\lrd
Gtl1lpollt Otl.oae31
-

Chevy&amp; Jeeps And Spa

540 Miscellaneous

Gallipolis Ohio 456~1

Fu T me Flo a Ott gne Wltn
E•l'• ance Aeft ence1 Sa a 'f
Bned On Exporltnco sena Rt

71 0 Autos for Sale
CARS $100 $800 &amp; UP POLICE
IMPOUND Honda s Toyola e

3 8 Lite 75K AM FM Slereo

SponaTtaml
P o ••• anal Ce

flo urday at 7p m (140~2!6-6989

TRANSPORTATION

FREE FREEl MONEY PAOB
LEMS? NOW ACCEPT NG AP
PL CAT ONS $3 000 ANO UP
NO APPLICATION FEE 1 877
54:3-8357 EX'r 402

fuel on Thu 1doy1 6pm Middle
ijO 1 Oh o &amp; WV Llcontt 1•0
992-9707 740-11111-2123

Aaymond Johnaon Auct on"r
F.uu Aucl on Sa v ee Owne of
A ve aide Auct on 8a n C own
c ty Cons gnmtnt See every

Oewhu 81

Wfle no Special 314 200 PS
S2t 95 Pe 00
200 PSI
i37 oo Per 100 All 8 ass Com
prosslon Fillings In Stod&lt;
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson Ohk&gt; 1 800-537 9528

spondence Bfised Upon P o Ed
uca on And Sho S udy Cou sa
Fo FREE nla ma on Book e

825 Third Ave

buv ••II estates constgnmen1

Plants

750 Boals &amp; Motors
for Sale

Farms (3041895-3740 895 3789

bolh $7! 00 Call (740)-446-9708

550

Anenllon Publisher

B Moodltpaugh Aucl ontorlng

Ear es

1992 Geo T acke 5 spd low
ml sage New battery goad con

F ench C ty Maylag 740 448
7795

a e By Co e

lliterview coru11de•-allo1~ I

home aern on

Tobacco Pants

Now tak ng o ders fo h s Sp lng
F s Orders w Gua ante&amp; Best&amp;

Amby Ln 'Just past crossroads
n Bdwe) A poceeda ae
Dana.te o Fight Cancert

¢red P ob em&amp; OK Even I
nii'ned Down Belo e Reestab sn
lllur Crtdk t 800-659 0359

2 Btdroama 1112 Batnt s m ...

e commerce I

650 Seed &amp; Fertilizer

5~8 1363 NORWOOD sAW
MILLS 252 Sonw II 0 lve Buffa o
NY 14225

'Prag ams GuaranteeH Spr ng

EARN A EGAL COLLEGE DE
ClAEE OUICKLY Bache o s

o ector for Mason County Emtr
gency Ambulance Services Au
ho ty Must possess current WV
Pa amed c cert Ilea an and va d
d ve s I cense ~espons ble tor
O\lerall management and opera
ton of mu t pie s allons with bo h
lu t me and pa t time pa d and
va unteer emp oyees P av oya
management and f acal expe I
e ce p efe ed Send esume and
Ia te Of n e e11 o MCEASA
Attn Sea ch Comm tee P 0
Box 34 Po nt P euant WV
25550 by May 9 2000

WfNit23plm oom

acr1a

Sawm $3 795 Saw Logs Into
Boa ds P anks Beams large
Cqpac y Best Sawm 1 Va ue An
ywhe e FREE lnforma on 1 800

App ances
Recond toned
WQ.She s 0 ye a Ranges Ref lg a o s 90 Day Gua ante,el

RENTALS

REPORTER

Orvtt 2 Wltk Pod COL loin
ng No Exparlern:e Nlldtd Etrn
Up To $32 000 N Full Blntllto
Co I Toaoy t 177. 230 1002
PAM
T ansport

eo

760

u

&amp; VIcinity

Fa mt Jackson 740 286 5395

842

LOOKING FOR LAND?
t-800-2t3-83t5
ANTHONY I.AND CO LTD

BOO

.s Oocto

OQme ce Webs tea Star Vour
HomeBus ness Today! A most
Eve yone App ovedl low Month y
P.aymen 1 F ea Colo P n e 1
888 479 2345
(To F eo)
WWw e ump-sta 1com

www ol\lb comlbennett

6 PM

(Ca eers ClOse To Home)
C~ IToday 740 446 4367

Mas e

flO MONEY DOWNI Compaq
HP IBM Desk ope Lap ops E

Cooling

ees
Gene • Ha Ingar M r:td epo t
8abv Items curtalnt Home lnlerl
o badapraad&amp; d ahea ctoth ng

PI

P cad Reaaanably Slate Run

RESIDENTIAL HOME OWNERS
H Efl c ency 90% Gas

Hun ng Aec ea ana Bu d ng

CENT VE OFFER Ca
328 85 0 Ex 29

l&gt;lanlts &amp;budd •• &amp;mise

ANGUS AND CHIANGUS Bul t

l'~ppan

SAVE THDUSo\NOS I $ S I No

Phony Bus ness Opp P om ses
Buy VEND NG E(lu pment 0
AECT F om MFG Campa a Ou
P tees Belo e You Buyl 100'Y. F
nanc ng W A. C 1 800 965 9025
24 H s

CST

150

350 Lola &amp; Acreage
m .., !rom Po n P eaan~ A ut
as on p ope IY Severa beaut
fu home sites Phone (740 992
;3653

Fu Benelts t 800 598 4504 E•

tens on 1515 (8 AM

140

446 0008

App ca on W Sa v ce Reduce
Paymen s To 65 ~ CASH N

Advenee Dlldllna 1 OOpm the
.;lay before tha ad 11 to run
5undey &amp; Monday edition

oo 11•01

Sa u doy Sunday t3t4 Rt t80
Now Tak ng App ca ant 3~
West 2 Bedroom Townhouae
Apa tmen s
no udes water
Sewage T ash $325 Mo 740

26 Acres on Be hal Road 4

GOV T POSTAL JOBS Up
To $18 24 Hou H ng Fo 2000
F ee Ca Fo App ca on Exam

.-------~!180 Wanted To Do

All Yard Sales Muet Be Paid In

broko 10 dt $1 ooo
245-5 20

e1umb ng &amp; Eltclr cal Pars Fur

Phone CAMS RIDGE ST~TE
UN VERS TY 800 964 8316

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp;VIcinity

9 Vtl old Tann11saa Wa kar

Hac•• &amp; Heat Pumpa Bannetta

C aws Va ey Up To .-o Ae 11
By Wayne Na ana l Fa aat In

8365

3 Bed oom B ck Home Ooub e
Ga age La ge Lo F n &amp;had
Basement Ma ntenanca F eet
740 446 8329

WORK FROM HOME 1500 o
$5000 mon h

2 4 0452
Reg •oo os 12748

Athens Oh 45701

Do pool Rofo tncot No Pttf
740-448 0139

6111

340

Gtlllpol 1 Career College

Needing somt extra hours or 1
part time poaiUOn K me&amp; Can
va aacent Cen e s ook ng o a
few spec a paop e Pan t me
LPN eve y othe weekend om
1pm 7am Part t me STNA one
on each &amp;h fl s needed Full
time LPN wo k ng n ghts I om
pm 7am Oppo un ty o be
come lui me Ca ng? Compas
s onate? Rei able? II hese pos
tlons aok right tor you con aet
linda or Ma IJ 75 K mes L.ane

Dawn own 2 Bedroom• Upsra 1

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Ropolrtd Now &amp; Rebu n S ock
Ca~ Ron Evans 1-800-837 9128

IHI!RII'I' SIALI
United 8taUJ of AmMica
va John I! l'areman, lr~ .t
e
II
Molga County Common
730 Vans &amp; 4 WOe
PleM C.. No t8 r:::v 031
In purwuano. of an order
992 Chevy 4x4 Excollonl Cond
tlon $9 300 740 387-0219 r.o- laauad from the Common
Plello Court, within and lor
3e772n
the County of Malga State
78 Volkswagen Sua Exce ltnt of Ohio on the 14 the d.ty
COnd on Well Cl ed lo (HOI
or July tiM and to me
339 0482 Leave
Meuagt diNCted I will offer lor oale
$1 80000
at Publlo Auotlon In the
88 Chauy •x4 305 4sP&lt;l Now 3e Melp County Courthouoe
u •• &amp; nms 54 500 oo (7401«6- Second Btreat Pomeroy
9367
Ohio on TUHday June 13
20DC) at 10 00 om of oald
da)l the following Roal
e.tate to wit
Situated In Cheater
Townahlp Melga County
For sale 1995 Chevy B azer ed
Statt of Ohio and being fn
b liCk nter c 1 c 4wd powe
lllotlon 12 Town 2 North
wtndowa ~ stat ng amllm radiO/
Range 13 Mit of the Ohio
cuattle exce ent cond on
58732 mloo $17500 1 m 740 Company'e purchalt and
being cllecrlbed aelollowa
985-«85
Beginning et a point In
740
Motorcyclea
tha centetllne of County
1987 Honda Z~R $550 00 OBO Roed 21 (Fiatwooclt Road)
t993 Honda XA250R $t700 aald point being eouth 42"
40 oo· eaat 1oo oo teet
OBO (7401448-Be5f
along the oantar 11111 of oald
County Road.t 21 to a point;
thanco aouth 41" 31 21"
wa.t 345 24 loll to an Iron
t990 Fou Whu t 80 Yamaha rod paaolng an Iron rod II
$2200 00 (7401 367 1708 740)
fill lor relorenct thence
448 9237
north 11" 15 27 Will
171 71 loot to a Iron rod
thanoa north 41" oe 34"
oaot Ill II fall to an Iron
81 HI ey Davidson ow r de
looks and una good $8700 rod thonca north 15" 21
44" aaot 180 45 toll to tha
(740)-448-0IM7
point of Htllnnlng paallng
an Iron rod at 131 laat lor
raloranca containing 1 00

•

Flexible sctuldu ng Sran you
new career wl h us!
Ca 1 1100-929-5753
fo an appointment

740-446 4!25

JAHITROL HEATING AND
COOLING EQUIPMENT
INSTALLED
II You Oon I Coil U• WI Both
Looo Fr.. Eatlmoteo 740 446
8308 t-6oo-29HI096

3428

New ooublaw dt 3 SA 2BA
S27e pe month Low Down Pay
ment Fat A l'rta 01 VI V

Grubb 1 P ano tuning &amp; repa r1
Prob ems? Need Tuned? Ca the
plono D

mon h Low Down Payment F et
A F ee 01 ve 'i
888 928

.,___,;,;,_..;;..11111.,._1.1Go
:,~~

lion And lnlo mat on t 888 726
9083 Extne on 1101 (7 A M 1
~M CST

EOE
CLA MS PROCESSORI $20 $40

Counee or Poa t on

vacallont aval able 3 shifts daly

740 ue

On y $333 Down And $353/Mo

advertsementaforr11 estate

I 800 892 2987

JVSD (740 246 5334 EEO

able 40 KIMedlcaVDentaVPa d

S18 ~ Hour Fu Bentfls No Ex
par tnce Requ rad FrH App ca

25550

cat on equ ed CON
Ge a Jackson v n on

tenson1516 (SAM

GOV T POSTAL JOBS Up To

Box

to Ce
TACT

knowingly 11CC01!f

EARN TO $500 IWK FT PT

sMp &amp; mov as Ca

2588 Equal Hous ng Opportoolly

New 6x80 3BA 2BA $288 per

no ogy roqu od 'Jyp ng BOWPM

Eamup o S M1
wllh quarterty 11 ary evlews
MaMgemen opportun nee 8118 1-

AVON Look ng For H gher In

Yard Sale

VACANCY Vacatlanal Educa
tlon Supe visor Oh o Oep o
Educa on Superv so Adm n s a

W dO 3BR 2BA $213

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT Jo\CK
SON ESTATES 52 Weslwood
D ve rom $289 o $370 Wa k 10

Own You New Home In o vea s

This newspape wll not

Se v ce New And Es ab shed
Fu e B ush Custome &amp; n Loca
A ea No Ooo Doo Requ ad
FREE Sta ta Supp as nd 0 It

Submit reaume app cat on to
Pleasant va ay Hoapuat e o
Peraonnel 2520 Va IY 0 VI PI
Plaeaant WV 25550 or fax to

No expo 11n0e necessary

Rewa d

592 6651

ly hoa a lull limo oppo lun ly fo

Chock Compoll voly pay Com-

Toys Jewelry Wood Sewing
1\'P ng G ti Poyl CALL 1 8()().

asma

an e11p1 anced Medica rran
ac p onlst High Schoo G adu
ata o equ valent Med ca tt mt-

Me chencl aer needed lo Soutttern Ohio Location Part T me
Must have Good 0 v ng reco d
Peas Drug Taat and Backg ound

Loam more-

p

n W ndsh e ds Fee V deo
800 826 8523 US Canada
www g assmechan •..com

Pltasanl VI IY Hoap ta cu ent

(304)875-6975 AAIEOE

o\SSEMBLY AT HOMEII Crotts

To a good home only 2 K nens
f lon g hie sold g ay and tor

t on To CL4 505 c o Ga llpo a
Dell~ Tr bune 825 Th rd Avenue
Go lpolo OH -IS83t

888-806-483t

guest s Sh pp ng and hand ng

Giveaway

URGENTLY NEEDED

dono a aa n S35 to S45 fo 2 Of 3
hou 1 weak y Ca Sera Tee 740

Hr Atcordod Monagol t 800
230-3390 Ext 1504e

S1 $33 HOURI Govornmant
Jobal H lng Now Pad Train ng

to advenlse any PI efereuce
Imitation or discrimination
basad on race color ralglon
sax tam I Ill statua o nat anal
orlg n or any Intention to
make any such prefarance
mltat on or dlacrlmlnatkm

EARN $90 000 YEARLY Aopa
ng NOT Rep ac ng Long C ack&amp;

$800 WEEKLYI Mtkt Monty
He ping Peop t Roctl .. Qovo n

Ca (3041675-6937
40

the Fedaral Fair Hous nu Act
ol1968 which mal&lt;os I llogol

Se f 4dd lllld

Ruah

14

Pe Month L.ow down Payment
F ee A r F ee De very 1 888
928 :&gt;128

on ttd Poe ago &amp;Suppllll P o

Apartments
for Rent

388 100

No Fee Unless Wt W n
-688 582 33ol5

INOTCEI
OH 0 VALLEY PUBLSH NG CO

440

1 0 2 BAd oom Apar men s Wa
e &amp; Ta&amp;h Pad No PelS 740

TURNED DOWN ON
SOC Al SECURIT11SSI7

U DOD WEEK LVI Mt ng 400
B ochureat Sa atacr on a ua
-v dad

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Professional
Services

t997 black Chevy S 10 Sops do
E11 ended Cab 3 door loaded
25 000 m ee ve y sha p ful fa

ngs $1 00 740 949 204! o
740-949-2203
88 Fo d Range Club Cab 6&lt; y
Ssp 4x4 Qood shape Runs

1 13 800 oo 7401 448-4818

gr~ta

5

Public Nolloe

15 FORO RANQER 2 WD AUTO
TOPPER $1900 00 304-675-4230
D~YS OA 304 875 •853 AFTER

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Sentinel • Page B

Jr. would Uke to mencl
our appreclldOG to all

who helped In anyway In
our time or IIQrl'n
Whelher It wu money
ftowen cuds or 1
comfonln&amp; won! Spcdal
!hanks 10 tbe Mt Morllh
Cbun:h or God. Again
thanks to all
mE KISER MMILY

Good Times
Presents
Bad Habit L1ve
U"'" 13
91
Tuppers Plains VFW
Chicken &amp; Alb BBQ
Sun May 1411 am
Slaw baked beans roll tea or
coffee Pie or cake extra

$5/Dinner

�P~ge

Friday, May 12, 2000

B 4 • The Dally Sentinel

2000

Ohio

Mlscallaneous
MerchsndiM

730

Vena

&amp;

The Dal

005

11 0

RN o TO $31 50 IHR
LPNoT0$2200/HR

Personals

mmed a e Wo k n S a ng And
P va a Du y .lissgnmen n
Sou he n And Cen a Oh o
Choose You Hou s And Loca
ons LOCAl.. NTERV EWS W
Be He d A Bu ckeye H s OBES
Off ca On May 7 2000 Ca To
day Fo Appo n men 6 "' 846

DIABETIC PATIENTS

I

Mtd ca e o P Iva a lnsu ance
~ou may be ent t td o ece ve
you d abetlc supp ea 11 no cos
lo you Fo mo e n o ma on

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

BU-677 6561

STAAT

DATING

TONIGHT

ave Fun Mea ng E g be

~

Help Wanted

8399

Sn

•• nYou Ata Cal Fo Moe
n.to mat on , 800 ROMANCE

!lli 973!5

11

o

230

FINANCIAL
21

o

Business
Opportunity

New Bank Repos
Ohly Two Left Neve Lived In

ecommends tha you do bus
ness w th peop e you know and
NOT o send money h ough he
ma un vau have n es ga ed
he olfe lng

Colt 8()().948 5878

Naw

Help Wanted
All eal ostale tdwrllllng In
this newspaper Ia aubjeCt to

~0

Announcement•

~OT

A CAMPGROUND Mtm

bt lh p Or T mtl ha e ? Wt
Take t Ame ca a Moll Sue
Cit I u Campg ound And T me
tha 1 Rasa e C ea nghOust Ca
AtiO t Sales In a national 800
423 S967 24 Houra www 110 t
sa as com

A R AWARDS Buy Stll Domto

19

In e nat ona Bus nan &amp; Flret
Q aaa !.at M nu e Coach
800.

937-4784

New To YO\/ Thrift Sllo!&gt;Pe
9 West s lmSon Athena

740-592 842

Quat v c o h ng and houatho d
Items S1 oo bag sa t eva y
Thu adav Monday th u Satu day

9 ()().5 30

Orde any Longabe ge baake a
~u ng May&amp;June w I pay any

Stomped Envo opo GICO DEPT
5 Box •38 ANTIOCH TN
370tl 438 Stan lmmtdlollly

U08 WEEKLY GUo\AANTEED
WORKING POR THE GOVERN
MENT FROM HOME PART
TIME NO EXPERIENCE RE
QUIRED 1 800-787.0783
mant

~efunds

Free Otla 1 (24

Mod co Ofllct LPN 0 Mtd ca

ATTENTION
29
PEOPLE NEEDED I You Have
tO To 75 b1 To Loot WE PAY
YOU $$$ A Na u 1 Doclo

dayo Sand A11umo &amp; Quail ca

Alllltlnl To Wor~ PRN Week

Recommended Clultlnlltdl 1

lotodlaol Trtn..._,llonltt

Fu Benet II Ca 7 Oayl 1 800
230-3390 El&lt;l 4090

323 oo V Now

Poa a Jobs

H ng No Expe lenca Pa d
Tra n na G tal Btntlltl Cal 7
Cayaii00-429-3880 Ext J 385

f: ght 5 week o d pupp ea
2
Rottwe a and 2 Black lab to a
good home n the country 7.. 0)

4467331

PUP I

$48

ABSOLUTELY NEED 8 PEOPLE
NOW lnle net ac•we oaphabla
all mollva e&lt;1 condldaltl pleaoo
Ttllooornmu a 101 your own
schedule

$2~.Jhr

WWW.20KCLUI COM

795-0380 Ext t20 (24 Hrsl

lOise she

lo

(7401258-6176

Lost and Found

Sma I G ay Flully Cal El e L Ia
John s Centana y
$20 00 (7401 446-9582

70

ATTENT ON WORK AT HOMEI
In I Bus noas Nttda He p IMME
0 ATELVI s•20 00 /Wk PT
$t 000 $t 500 .Wk FT In orn11
Mo I 0 dtr FUll ');len ng I 800
900-9308 24 HRS

come? Mo e Fit• be Hourt? In
dependence? Avon Has What
You re Looking Fo Let a Te k

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

8811-158 1-2866

ALL Vtrd Stitt Mutt
Be Paid n Advance
QEAQI..INE 2 DO p.m
lht dly btforo the ld
11 to run Sundly

tdiUon 2 00 p m
Friday Mondly edition
9 30 o m Stturdoy

Certlf ad NurM Aldtt Rotat ng
sh fls nte med ate ca e cente
West VI g n a c.,t f cat on re
qu ed Pont P eaaant Cen e

Stale Route e2 Aou t

pany Veh c e Fax eaume o
(8t4) 23!5 8080 or Ca 1 (8001 550-

3273

328 Pont P aaaant

wv

Ulllennlum Telnlrvlca

It plaased to amounce the
Grand open ng of Ill new WeN
aton cal ng 08flter
We a 1 now uttlng up
lntarvlew appo n manta fo
outbound teleservlce pos tons

H Po entlal Process nl) Cia ma
s Euy T a n ng P ovltted

MUST Own PC CALL NOW t
888 585 5t97 EXt 842
An

ourpa

en A coho And Othe 0 ug
Agency Located n Ga 1a And
Jackson Coun es Is Seek ng A
Oua ed Pe son To P ov de A
cohO And Othe o uo Caunsa
ng Counselo WI Wo k W lh AI
Age G oups Knowledge Of
Chern ca Dependency Requ ad
Bacha o a Dog ot CCDC LISW

And 0 LPCC P ole ed Send
Resume By May t9 2000 To
FACTS 45 0 ve Slroel Ga I po
s Oh o 45631 Ot FAX 740 446
80 4 WF/H

wh ch oln violation oftht

law Ou roadero "" hllroby
Info mad that al dwel nuo
advert ttd In th t a e ava able on an equal
opportunity ban

au 928 3426
32x80

Fac a y Aepo

L vod n $49 950

REAL ESTATE

Navar

818 89

MOBILE HOME OWNIAS
Huge lnven o y 0 acoun Pr ces

On Vny Sk t ng Dooro Wind

Hu yl Won Laat Oakwood
Ga lpo ~ 740 446 3093

owa Ancha s Wata Heaters

330 Farms for Sale

Mob lo Homo Supply 740 •48
94t6 www orvb corrlibtnnett

800 720 0326

www ezoppo tun ty com

HUNTIN(II.ANO

NEW BRAND NAME COM PUT
EM A moal Everyone Ap
p1 oved W th $0 Down Low

Ava able On Land Con act As
l lila As
Down
800 2 3

Mon h y Payments! 1 BOO 8 7
3476 Ext 330

a Counly On y 133 000

!5,..

Business and
Buildings

nat on n a mat on

F~de

a He

Ful Benells 1 800 598 4504 Ex
6PM

CST

GOV T POSTAL JOBS Up
To $18 24 Hou H ng Fo 2000
F ee Ca I Fo App ca on Exam
na on In arma on Fede a H e

I Oflpm F~day

Big sae May t2 3 15t9 Ollce

qesks ab as compu
photocop e s cha 5
CK~a acks gene a ors
e-ases o ght bu bs
m sc 4 m a out t43

e desks
un u e
cab nets
c o has

t day &amp; Saturday May 2 3
aam 4pm N ce clothes mac 32 mllas out 43 on rtght

sa •o•

s• • May 11

Business
Training

We look torwartllo meot ng you

Schools
Instruction

Fu naces 0 Fu naces 2 See
Heat Pump &amp; A r Cond ton ng
Systems Free 6 Vea Pa ts &amp; La
bor Wa anty Bennetts Heat ng &amp;

AT&amp;T 1 CENT PHONE
ROUTE Easy CASH CASH
CASH FREE lnlo BOO 997
9888 Ext 55 124 Hs l
$$ Au o Loans Pe sonal Loans
Debt Con so dat on Mo tgage s
And Ra nanc ng Cred t P ob ems
OK Consume s F nanc a BOO

2476 25 E•
&amp;W

t 800 812 5987

Ron &amp; Gun Shop

s hav ng a sa e
on a guns n stock ca 140 742

www countrytyme com

Mob e Home Lot W I Take 12

Look ng To Buy A New Home?
Don t Have Land? We Do Hu ry

Depos I Rele ences 740 446
0175

Ohly

Pl1111nt

oLo • Left

304 736-7295

$ NO DOWNI HOMES NO CRED
T NEEDED GOV T FORE
CLOSURES GUARANTEED AP
PAOVAL 800 360 4620 EXT

t4 18 Wldes $125 Mon n $100

P o esso a Coup e nu.d to rtrf1
3--4 bed ooms home As soon s,..a
pass ble W Co nelda 6 month

8509

Lease (140) 245 5776

34 Vod OH KS

MERCHANDISE

Naod 7 Ladies To SOl Avon 74(1.
-33e8

510

FORECLOSED HOMES Low 0 0
Down Govn And Bank Repo s
Be ng Sod Now F nanong Ava

abe Ca Now

800 355 0024

Ext 8040

Wooded lo unde 5 Ac es n
Oh o for sma weekend Cab n
Along Raccoon C eek a Na ana
Fo est P eferred Phone (304)675

7942

Household
Goods

Wash 0 ye Was he wo k&amp; f ne
Orye needs mer Must ake

80

Auction
and Flea Market

1ne Income $500-$78001 monlh t
188-2 S.l33t wwwHOmmblz
1111

7 !5 H P Sea s Outboard Mo or
Runs G oal $300 (304)882 3602

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

on (3041675 5115

790

campers &amp;
Motor Homes

1988 Four Wlnna 205 Sundowner
cuddy cab n 4 3 Liter V 6 dua
batte u Kept under cove ed
dock In summer stored n garage
n w nte exce lant cond on
$9 500 contact Dan Waugh at

17401 3884 2t77
3890

WANT A COMPUTER???? BUT
NO CASH?? MMX TECHNOLO
G"' We F nance o Down Pas

0

(7401 384

SERVI CES
994 Red Bonnev lie SSE Super
Cha gad Tu co Fue nJtCtediV6

Pets for Sale

4 week old AKC Chocolate L8bl

$250 Ca (304 675-5636

BOO

Compact 0 sc Premium Sound
Sun oof 6 way Powe Leather
Seats Powe Locks &amp; W ndows
Ce u a Pl'lane W Booste K t A
Cand tlon ng T t C u se Dual

A bags ASS 4 Wheel Anll Lock
b akes Regu a y Se v ced &amp;
Ma nlalnod (7401 446 0957 o
(74014460852

810

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Uncond t ona feHme gua antaa
Local eterences tu nlshed Es

Ia!&gt; shed 975 Co 24 Hrs (7401
446 0870 1 800 287 0578 Rog

1i ale Fo Rent" $250 mo w 1
turn sh f you wanl (3041675
71t51740 992 6387
Depoe 1
$tOO No Pets

oxcaptlng
all
lagal
1111mtnto and rlghta of
way
Permanent Parcel No 0300541-004
Loclttd
at 38311
Flatwooda
Road
Pometoy Ohio 45769
Said property hat baan
appralttd It S30 000 and
cannot 1111 lor 1111 than
two-thlrdl of appralnmtnt
Thla approlaal Ia baltd
upon a vlaUIII lnapaotlon of
that part of tha promlllt 10
which acoaaa wee readily
available Tha oppralatrl
aaauma no reaponolblllty
lor and glva no wllght to
unknown lagal matttre
Including but not limited to
concealod or latent d - 1
and/or tho preaanca of
harmful or toxic chtmlcala
pollutanta or ga111
Tan
Tarma. of 1111
Ptrctnl (10%) day of aalt
belanca within 30 daya.
Jam11 M loulaby lhtrlff
of Mtlga County Ohio
Stephan D Mil.. Attorney
18 Waot Monument Avanue
Dayton Ohio 45402
3T 5(5)(12)(18)
3T5(5) 5 12 19

PUIUC NOTICE
NOTICE Ia hereby given
that on Saturdo)l May 13
2000 at 10:00 am a public
nla wiU be hald at 21 f Wall
Second Street Pomeroy
Ohio Tha Parmar 1 Bank
and Savlnga Company
extended par~lng lot
(baalda Powell 1 Iuper
Valu) to aall lor caah the
following oollatoore~
2000 Honda TAX &lt;IIIOES
478TE2304V4011241
The Farmara Band and
lavlnga
Company
Pomeroy, Olllo reoarvaa tha
right to bid It thla oata and
to withdraw the above
collataral prior to aala
FIM'tharlavlngl
The Farmera
lank
and
Company
raaarvn 1ha rtght to reject

an¥u~: bld~~~~~m'::n

collateral will be aold In tha
condition It It In with no

expraaa
or Implied
warrantln glvon
For lurthar lnlormatlon
oontoot Shalla Buchanan at
App ance Parts And Se v ca All 982-2131
Name B and&amp; Over 25 Yea 1 EK (5)10 11 123tc
pe enca A Wo k Guaranteed
F ench C ly Maytag 740 448
7796
Public Nolloe

ers Wate proof ng

Between A hans and Pome oy 2
&amp; 3 bed oom mob e homes
$260-$300 740-992 2167

$$BAD CAED T? Gel Cash
Loans To $5 ooo Debt Consoli
da on To $200 000 Cred 1 Ca ds
Ref nanc ng And
Auto Loans Ava abe Mar dian

96 S awberry Rd Dodge Noon 4

Mortgages

FOR ALL YOUR REAL ESTATE
NEEDS

your resume and
ceDing

us

Co\LL NORA OONOHEW AT
(304)111-3448

986 Oakwood Mob 1• Home
4x70 2 Bedrooms 2 Sotho L1rt

now n olde and oul 1740) 251
988
994 t4x80 Fleelwood 2 bod
noms 2 fu Da ha

Ohio Valley
Publishing Co

CENTURY 21 SHIPLEY REALTY

w~trrden

tuti

All 1 tel c Appliance WID n
c udod Now lronl porCh S 1 up
on P va e Lol May move (740)
258 9382

Country vlng n ca two bad oom
mobUt home a electric c tv wa

tt oenl al a 1 112 aero ltva lol
$325 per monlh p ue $300 do
pooll and ull to on Nchola Rd
Rutland Oh o off LOad ng c tok
Rd .. 740-992 9052

-

t ed Photog a

pht
Reasonable ales
Ca for sppo ntmen

patt 740-992 5858

1304)875 7472
(304)8757279

Tv Computtra Ctllphonea 1
877108 tt~ Of v tft ...... frio
iuftk net CAlL TODAY!

FuR Imol part timo coot&lt;, fulltlmtl

Come See Tho Bill 740 448
3093

Apartment•
for Rent
1 and 2 bedroom apar ments fur
n sl\ed and unfu n aned l&amp;curlty
dtPOIIt equ ed no pa 1 740

Pomoroy on •s1te

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE

CU.SSIFIEDSI

mmadlate And Vea Round
Open nga For Gradua as Prefa
Educa on 0 £ng sh Majo But
No Aequ ed Top Pay E~eca ant
Bene s Fo Ent y Leve Posl
ons Na ve No h Ame can
Eng sh Speake Sand Resume
0
ln(lu y To o agon

lo edOaol com (MSWORO) 0
Fax 50 75t 327~

cubic fool Kenmore Chett frttzer

74(1.742 8926

Gold Fish for pondl Dltferanl

alzo colora $4 aach (304)773
8198

~abrodo e Puppies (31 Ve ow
Pomea 9 wotks od $t50
(00.)875 6604

t.'lyo c Pomo any b ted dog
groom ng ava abla A 10 show

$250 (740)-44tt108

qua

ty

1500 Po y Tank Prouuro Toni(.
Subma 1 bit Pump Uotd for

~

9 wook old mu Boxor pupt

s~t

and pat Pomo avolablt for
14D-IM9-341 8

eo popu ca 1740-742 2525

$800 00 (740) 2811 toe

570

2 tw n bldl complttt 1 meuva
colored I tl choir tmall loblo w1
Clio" (740)-388 8t93

•

24 ound Tldowa1or pool lwo
yea 1 old 52 wall col 74(1.8435&amp;« for lnlormatlon

79 ooo m ea

97 Geo Metro automa c a 4
cyl nde gas save $2295 cal

HONDA 1 S 00 $500 &amp; UP PO
L CE IMPOUND Honda I Toyo
ta 1 Chav~s Jeeps And Spo

Uij klea Ca Now 80(1.772 7470

EXT 6338

Hondo t F om UOO Pol co lm
pound &amp; Tlx Ropo 1 AI Malrtt &amp;
Modt1 800-242 t 057 Ext 102
Co\R8 FROM U91MO lm
pounds /Fiopoo Fto SO.Down 124
Mot ~ t ~ i'll For Lllllngo t 8()().
319 33&lt;3 X2156

Fruits &amp;
Vegetablsa

1279/Mo + Ul es No Po s 74(1.
446 2957 Or 74(1.339-4835

Racine Gun Club
Fishing Derby
Sat May 13th
7am·l2 noon

The family or Okey Klier
1994 Ford Range XLT 90 OOOK
New T es Lookt Runs Great!

WANT ,. COMPUTER?? B~
NO CASH?? MMX Techno o
W Fnanco W h 0 Down P
Crad Probfema No Problem Col
Tol Free 871-293 4082

•

FARM S UPPLIE S
&amp; LIVE STOC K
810 Farm Equipment
S.ato Beava Tracto 4 W 0 ve
Diesel W h Et~u pman S mp c ty
e HP Tac o 44 Mowe 740

3e7-0t06

I
I
1 To be published

1
1
1

1

Friday,
May 26, 2000
in The Daily
Sentinel

Larry Boyer
Gellla Acadamy High School
Clan of 1959

Dabble Pickens Lowery
Southern High School
Class of 1979

Special recognition to graduates of:

*1950. 1975. 1990*
$7.00 per photo or $12/couple
Fill out form below &amp; drop off with payment to:

I

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Name_______________________
School ____________
Year
---------------------------------Nickname~------------­
Deadline Friday, May 19 • 4 p.m.

Let the Daily Sentinel bring you information for your
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A subscription can bring you local merchants' ads,
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t:::::::::::::::::::Jr:::::::::::::::::::r:::::::::::::::::::JC::::::::::::::::::~
Public Notice
PUIUC NOTICE
Solplo townahlp will
accept aoaled bide lor the
following
1880 Ford F 1100 15 978.2
mlln
Serial f
F
8000H1911110, Sutphen pump
150 Qol Parmtn 750 Gal
Tank Tranamlulon 2 apaad
axle 288 Engine Mu GVW
11.800, Hydraulic brakn
Scipio townalllp NllrYII
tho right to raluaa any and
all blda bldt will be opened
Juna 7 2000@ the .Solplo
Twp
Tru1111 regular
monthly m11tlng To view
tht truck contact Randy
Butcher @ 742 23D2 or
Robert Jawall @ 742 27110
lldt may bt mallad at
IOiplo townahlp
C/0 Connie Chapmtll'
311315 IR 143
PomarolJ OH 41711
(1)12,. 21 310

Public Notice
PUBUCNOnCE
Notice Ia hereby given
that on April 17 2000 tha
tuppara Plalno Regional
Sewer Dlatrlct Board put o
BAN on tho aarvloe oroo
until Tuppara Plalna
Regional Sewer Dlatrlct and
EPI' can dtlarmlna II tho
dlotrlct haa the capacity lor
any future connectfone
(raaldtntlll or bualnan)
VIdeo and plcturaa aro
IVIIIIbll at the TPRSD
oHica lor public ravlaw
upon appointment call 740-

MT-tl08

tuppara Plaine Regional
s-Diotrlol
Char'ta Willi~ Chairman
Clyde Kuhn VIet P'"ldtnt
Loretta Murphy lacratary
and TrHaurar
(5) 12 14 210

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry

Mlzway Tavern
Frl Karaoke $1 00 cover
Sat Steel Horse Band
$2 00 cover

Card of Thanka

S S T lm $4 300 080 (HO)
3711-2589 Afte 5 00
1 Btdroom Nea C nama A/C
w o Hookup au et Loca an

Eleclrlcaland
Refrigeration

Announcementa

Plenty of FOOd end
Prlzas for all kids
Bait l"urnlshtd

3 mon ho $800 00 (740) 718
'18114
580

840

30

au....

Bach 8r111 Trombone wl h F At
tachment Purchased New uaed

37 Ptop t Ntodtd To Lott Up
To 30 Pounds In Tho Noxt 3q
0111 Free Samp 11 740 4•1
t982

L v ngaton a Saaament Wate
Proofing a baaament repairs
dona f 11 eat metes ftt me
gua antee 12yrs on job 11p1 I

tnct (304)195-3887

A special section devoted to
your favorite "alumnus"
Remember your spouse, child,
grandparent, friend, couples, etc.

Membaraand

Mualcal
Instrument•

1182 22t8

UN VERSITV
GRADUATES
TEACH ENQLISH IN TAIWAN

pa t me eaah ar 1111 growing
bua n111 11nd reaume 10 The
OaHv Sanune PO Bor: 720 7S

ongagamtnl lng 1200 (olzo
71Yamaha Sttroo w lh Boolt 101
f oor tland ng tpoalrtro and citbl
-na S:ldO G dor Roel&lt;tr 180 111M
PS/1 Computer StOO 0 op Loll
Kllchon labia (No Chol •I 1-40 ~3

dr nk ng wa er til than ona v-f,rl

TWo bedroom moblla home no

Oakwood Galllpo a America 1
La geat Rete t Buy For Leu

1/4 ca at marquis cut dlemontl

speed 2 doo a

NeedS pa nled $ 800 oo OBO
(7401 258 ?33

Queen 1 ze Wlttr Bed sam
Wave eas Lgh1ed h~d boartl t
Supa S ng e watt bed 1 Nan-

S 218 $275 Mo St50 Oopoo 1
lncludta Wator &amp;Traoh 1140)
25H789

ao 000 m as

$3000 080 94 Dodge Shadow 5

C ed Corp t 800 47 5tl9 Ext
t80

da~ Conu t Parrot and cage
1740~256 ot95

doa au oma 1c a

memb
When?

or leaa

Public Notice

Into Summe I 800 820 7546

Building
Supplies

more

Merchandise

FAEE JUNK 2 FREE Sotoll to

I

U 1

WE LOST 50 LBS n 6 Weeks

560

P 11-D-T-D+fi.A.P 11-V

-n.-

;..,;,;..:....;:..:;.;:.:;..,.-------1

los Call Nowl 800 772 7470
EXT 7832

dl

www dletez cam

FR EE DEBT CON SOL OAT ON

'Wtd&lt;llngs

tumt To CLA 103 c/o Go lpo
Do ly T lburlo 825 Tl\lrd
Gtl1lpollt Otl.oae31
-

Chevy&amp; Jeeps And Spa

540 Miscellaneous

Gallipolis Ohio 456~1

Fu T me Flo a Ott gne Wltn
E•l'• ance Aeft ence1 Sa a 'f
Bned On Exporltnco sena Rt

71 0 Autos for Sale
CARS $100 $800 &amp; UP POLICE
IMPOUND Honda s Toyola e

3 8 Lite 75K AM FM Slereo

SponaTtaml
P o ••• anal Ce

flo urday at 7p m (140~2!6-6989

TRANSPORTATION

FREE FREEl MONEY PAOB
LEMS? NOW ACCEPT NG AP
PL CAT ONS $3 000 ANO UP
NO APPLICATION FEE 1 877
54:3-8357 EX'r 402

fuel on Thu 1doy1 6pm Middle
ijO 1 Oh o &amp; WV Llcontt 1•0
992-9707 740-11111-2123

Aaymond Johnaon Auct on"r
F.uu Aucl on Sa v ee Owne of
A ve aide Auct on 8a n C own
c ty Cons gnmtnt See every

Oewhu 81

Wfle no Special 314 200 PS
S2t 95 Pe 00
200 PSI
i37 oo Per 100 All 8 ass Com
prosslon Fillings In Stod&lt;
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson Ohk&gt; 1 800-537 9528

spondence Bfised Upon P o Ed
uca on And Sho S udy Cou sa
Fo FREE nla ma on Book e

825 Third Ave

buv ••II estates constgnmen1

Plants

750 Boals &amp; Motors
for Sale

Farms (3041895-3740 895 3789

bolh $7! 00 Call (740)-446-9708

550

Anenllon Publisher

B Moodltpaugh Aucl ontorlng

Ear es

1992 Geo T acke 5 spd low
ml sage New battery goad con

F ench C ty Maylag 740 448
7795

a e By Co e

lliterview coru11de•-allo1~ I

home aern on

Tobacco Pants

Now tak ng o ders fo h s Sp lng
F s Orders w Gua ante&amp; Best&amp;

Amby Ln 'Just past crossroads
n Bdwe) A poceeda ae
Dana.te o Fight Cancert

¢red P ob em&amp; OK Even I
nii'ned Down Belo e Reestab sn
lllur Crtdk t 800-659 0359

2 Btdroama 1112 Batnt s m ...

e commerce I

650 Seed &amp; Fertilizer

5~8 1363 NORWOOD sAW
MILLS 252 Sonw II 0 lve Buffa o
NY 14225

'Prag ams GuaranteeH Spr ng

EARN A EGAL COLLEGE DE
ClAEE OUICKLY Bache o s

o ector for Mason County Emtr
gency Ambulance Services Au
ho ty Must possess current WV
Pa amed c cert Ilea an and va d
d ve s I cense ~espons ble tor
O\lerall management and opera
ton of mu t pie s allons with bo h
lu t me and pa t time pa d and
va unteer emp oyees P av oya
management and f acal expe I
e ce p efe ed Send esume and
Ia te Of n e e11 o MCEASA
Attn Sea ch Comm tee P 0
Box 34 Po nt P euant WV
25550 by May 9 2000

WfNit23plm oom

acr1a

Sawm $3 795 Saw Logs Into
Boa ds P anks Beams large
Cqpac y Best Sawm 1 Va ue An
ywhe e FREE lnforma on 1 800

App ances
Recond toned
WQ.She s 0 ye a Ranges Ref lg a o s 90 Day Gua ante,el

RENTALS

REPORTER

Orvtt 2 Wltk Pod COL loin
ng No Exparlern:e Nlldtd Etrn
Up To $32 000 N Full Blntllto
Co I Toaoy t 177. 230 1002
PAM
T ansport

eo

760

u

&amp; VIcinity

Fa mt Jackson 740 286 5395

842

LOOKING FOR LAND?
t-800-2t3-83t5
ANTHONY I.AND CO LTD

BOO

.s Oocto

OQme ce Webs tea Star Vour
HomeBus ness Today! A most
Eve yone App ovedl low Month y
P.aymen 1 F ea Colo P n e 1
888 479 2345
(To F eo)
WWw e ump-sta 1com

www ol\lb comlbennett

6 PM

(Ca eers ClOse To Home)
C~ IToday 740 446 4367

Mas e

flO MONEY DOWNI Compaq
HP IBM Desk ope Lap ops E

Cooling

ees
Gene • Ha Ingar M r:td epo t
8abv Items curtalnt Home lnlerl
o badapraad&amp; d ahea ctoth ng

PI

P cad Reaaanably Slate Run

RESIDENTIAL HOME OWNERS
H Efl c ency 90% Gas

Hun ng Aec ea ana Bu d ng

CENT VE OFFER Ca
328 85 0 Ex 29

l&gt;lanlts &amp;budd •• &amp;mise

ANGUS AND CHIANGUS Bul t

l'~ppan

SAVE THDUSo\NOS I $ S I No

Phony Bus ness Opp P om ses
Buy VEND NG E(lu pment 0
AECT F om MFG Campa a Ou
P tees Belo e You Buyl 100'Y. F
nanc ng W A. C 1 800 965 9025
24 H s

CST

150

350 Lola &amp; Acreage
m .., !rom Po n P eaan~ A ut
as on p ope IY Severa beaut
fu home sites Phone (740 992
;3653

Fu Benelts t 800 598 4504 E•

tens on 1515 (8 AM

140

446 0008

App ca on W Sa v ce Reduce
Paymen s To 65 ~ CASH N

Advenee Dlldllna 1 OOpm the
.;lay before tha ad 11 to run
5undey &amp; Monday edition

oo 11•01

Sa u doy Sunday t3t4 Rt t80
Now Tak ng App ca ant 3~
West 2 Bedroom Townhouae
Apa tmen s
no udes water
Sewage T ash $325 Mo 740

26 Acres on Be hal Road 4

GOV T POSTAL JOBS Up
To $18 24 Hou H ng Fo 2000
F ee Ca Fo App ca on Exam

.-------~!180 Wanted To Do

All Yard Sales Muet Be Paid In

broko 10 dt $1 ooo
245-5 20

e1umb ng &amp; Eltclr cal Pars Fur

Phone CAMS RIDGE ST~TE
UN VERS TY 800 964 8316

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp;VIcinity

9 Vtl old Tann11saa Wa kar

Hac•• &amp; Heat Pumpa Bannetta

C aws Va ey Up To .-o Ae 11
By Wayne Na ana l Fa aat In

8365

3 Bed oom B ck Home Ooub e
Ga age La ge Lo F n &amp;had
Basement Ma ntenanca F eet
740 446 8329

WORK FROM HOME 1500 o
$5000 mon h

2 4 0452
Reg •oo os 12748

Athens Oh 45701

Do pool Rofo tncot No Pttf
740-448 0139

6111

340

Gtlllpol 1 Career College

Needing somt extra hours or 1
part time poaiUOn K me&amp; Can
va aacent Cen e s ook ng o a
few spec a paop e Pan t me
LPN eve y othe weekend om
1pm 7am Part t me STNA one
on each &amp;h fl s needed Full
time LPN wo k ng n ghts I om
pm 7am Oppo un ty o be
come lui me Ca ng? Compas
s onate? Rei able? II hese pos
tlons aok right tor you con aet
linda or Ma IJ 75 K mes L.ane

Dawn own 2 Bedroom• Upsra 1

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Ropolrtd Now &amp; Rebu n S ock
Ca~ Ron Evans 1-800-837 9128

IHI!RII'I' SIALI
United 8taUJ of AmMica
va John I! l'areman, lr~ .t
e
II
Molga County Common
730 Vans &amp; 4 WOe
PleM C.. No t8 r:::v 031
In purwuano. of an order
992 Chevy 4x4 Excollonl Cond
tlon $9 300 740 387-0219 r.o- laauad from the Common
Plello Court, within and lor
3e772n
the County of Malga State
78 Volkswagen Sua Exce ltnt of Ohio on the 14 the d.ty
COnd on Well Cl ed lo (HOI
or July tiM and to me
339 0482 Leave
Meuagt diNCted I will offer lor oale
$1 80000
at Publlo Auotlon In the
88 Chauy •x4 305 4sP&lt;l Now 3e Melp County Courthouoe
u •• &amp; nms 54 500 oo (7401«6- Second Btreat Pomeroy
9367
Ohio on TUHday June 13
20DC) at 10 00 om of oald
da)l the following Roal
e.tate to wit
Situated In Cheater
Townahlp Melga County
For sale 1995 Chevy B azer ed
Statt of Ohio and being fn
b liCk nter c 1 c 4wd powe
lllotlon 12 Town 2 North
wtndowa ~ stat ng amllm radiO/
Range 13 Mit of the Ohio
cuattle exce ent cond on
58732 mloo $17500 1 m 740 Company'e purchalt and
being cllecrlbed aelollowa
985-«85
Beginning et a point In
740
Motorcyclea
tha centetllne of County
1987 Honda Z~R $550 00 OBO Roed 21 (Fiatwooclt Road)
t993 Honda XA250R $t700 aald point being eouth 42"
40 oo· eaat 1oo oo teet
OBO (7401448-Be5f
along the oantar 11111 of oald
County Road.t 21 to a point;
thanco aouth 41" 31 21"
wa.t 345 24 loll to an Iron
t990 Fou Whu t 80 Yamaha rod paaolng an Iron rod II
$2200 00 (7401 367 1708 740)
fill lor relorenct thence
448 9237
north 11" 15 27 Will
171 71 loot to a Iron rod
thanoa north 41" oe 34"
oaot Ill II fall to an Iron
81 HI ey Davidson ow r de
looks and una good $8700 rod thonca north 15" 21
44" aaot 180 45 toll to tha
(740)-448-0IM7
point of Htllnnlng paallng
an Iron rod at 131 laat lor
raloranca containing 1 00

•

Flexible sctuldu ng Sran you
new career wl h us!
Ca 1 1100-929-5753
fo an appointment

740-446 4!25

JAHITROL HEATING AND
COOLING EQUIPMENT
INSTALLED
II You Oon I Coil U• WI Both
Looo Fr.. Eatlmoteo 740 446
8308 t-6oo-29HI096

3428

New ooublaw dt 3 SA 2BA
S27e pe month Low Down Pay
ment Fat A l'rta 01 VI V

Grubb 1 P ano tuning &amp; repa r1
Prob ems? Need Tuned? Ca the
plono D

mon h Low Down Payment F et
A F ee 01 ve 'i
888 928

.,___,;,;,_..;;..11111.,._1.1Go
:,~~

lion And lnlo mat on t 888 726
9083 Extne on 1101 (7 A M 1
~M CST

EOE
CLA MS PROCESSORI $20 $40

Counee or Poa t on

vacallont aval able 3 shifts daly

740 ue

On y $333 Down And $353/Mo

advertsementaforr11 estate

I 800 892 2987

JVSD (740 246 5334 EEO

able 40 KIMedlcaVDentaVPa d

S18 ~ Hour Fu Bentfls No Ex
par tnce Requ rad FrH App ca

25550

cat on equ ed CON
Ge a Jackson v n on

tenson1516 (SAM

GOV T POSTAL JOBS Up To

Box

to Ce
TACT

knowingly 11CC01!f

EARN TO $500 IWK FT PT

sMp &amp; mov as Ca

2588 Equal Hous ng Opportoolly

New 6x80 3BA 2BA $288 per

no ogy roqu od 'Jyp ng BOWPM

Eamup o S M1
wllh quarterty 11 ary evlews
MaMgemen opportun nee 8118 1-

AVON Look ng For H gher In

Yard Sale

VACANCY Vacatlanal Educa
tlon Supe visor Oh o Oep o
Educa on Superv so Adm n s a

W dO 3BR 2BA $213

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT Jo\CK
SON ESTATES 52 Weslwood
D ve rom $289 o $370 Wa k 10

Own You New Home In o vea s

This newspape wll not

Se v ce New And Es ab shed
Fu e B ush Custome &amp; n Loca
A ea No Ooo Doo Requ ad
FREE Sta ta Supp as nd 0 It

Submit reaume app cat on to
Pleasant va ay Hoapuat e o
Peraonnel 2520 Va IY 0 VI PI
Plaeaant WV 25550 or fax to

No expo 11n0e necessary

Rewa d

592 6651

ly hoa a lull limo oppo lun ly fo

Chock Compoll voly pay Com-

Toys Jewelry Wood Sewing
1\'P ng G ti Poyl CALL 1 8()().

asma

an e11p1 anced Medica rran
ac p onlst High Schoo G adu
ata o equ valent Med ca tt mt-

Me chencl aer needed lo Soutttern Ohio Location Part T me
Must have Good 0 v ng reco d
Peas Drug Taat and Backg ound

Loam more-

p

n W ndsh e ds Fee V deo
800 826 8523 US Canada
www g assmechan •..com

Pltasanl VI IY Hoap ta cu ent

(304)875-6975 AAIEOE

o\SSEMBLY AT HOMEII Crotts

To a good home only 2 K nens
f lon g hie sold g ay and tor

t on To CL4 505 c o Ga llpo a
Dell~ Tr bune 825 Th rd Avenue
Go lpolo OH -IS83t

888-806-483t

guest s Sh pp ng and hand ng

Giveaway

URGENTLY NEEDED

dono a aa n S35 to S45 fo 2 Of 3
hou 1 weak y Ca Sera Tee 740

Hr Atcordod Monagol t 800
230-3390 Ext 1504e

S1 $33 HOURI Govornmant
Jobal H lng Now Pad Train ng

to advenlse any PI efereuce
Imitation or discrimination
basad on race color ralglon
sax tam I Ill statua o nat anal
orlg n or any Intention to
make any such prefarance
mltat on or dlacrlmlnatkm

EARN $90 000 YEARLY Aopa
ng NOT Rep ac ng Long C ack&amp;

$800 WEEKLYI Mtkt Monty
He ping Peop t Roctl .. Qovo n

Ca (3041675-6937
40

the Fedaral Fair Hous nu Act
ol1968 which mal&lt;os I llogol

Se f 4dd lllld

Ruah

14

Pe Month L.ow down Payment
F ee A r F ee De very 1 888
928 :&gt;128

on ttd Poe ago &amp;Suppllll P o

Apartments
for Rent

388 100

No Fee Unless Wt W n
-688 582 33ol5

INOTCEI
OH 0 VALLEY PUBLSH NG CO

440

1 0 2 BAd oom Apar men s Wa
e &amp; Ta&amp;h Pad No PelS 740

TURNED DOWN ON
SOC Al SECURIT11SSI7

U DOD WEEK LVI Mt ng 400
B ochureat Sa atacr on a ua
-v dad

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Professional
Services

t997 black Chevy S 10 Sops do
E11 ended Cab 3 door loaded
25 000 m ee ve y sha p ful fa

ngs $1 00 740 949 204! o
740-949-2203
88 Fo d Range Club Cab 6&lt; y
Ssp 4x4 Qood shape Runs

1 13 800 oo 7401 448-4818

gr~ta

5

Public Nolloe

15 FORO RANQER 2 WD AUTO
TOPPER $1900 00 304-675-4230
D~YS OA 304 875 •853 AFTER

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Sentinel • Page B

Jr. would Uke to mencl
our appreclldOG to all

who helped In anyway In
our time or IIQrl'n
Whelher It wu money
ftowen cuds or 1
comfonln&amp; won! Spcdal
!hanks 10 tbe Mt Morllh
Cbun:h or God. Again
thanks to all
mE KISER MMILY

Good Times
Presents
Bad Habit L1ve
U"'" 13
91
Tuppers Plains VFW
Chicken &amp; Alb BBQ
Sun May 1411 am
Slaw baked beans roll tea or
coffee Pie or cake extra

$5/Dinner

�.-

Frltlay, May 12, 2000

12, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Dally S,entlnel• Page B 7 ·

0

BRIDGE

IT

.......

DiHiiAI ·

·Advertise
in this
space for
s150 per
month.

,....,.....
Dealen.

rooo sr. Rt. r Soullt

PSI
CONSTRUCTION

Sue'• Greenhouae
QaalltJ, Vlll'ietJ'1 low Prk,. • Tbat'l Val

Bedding &amp; Vegetable Flats $6.60
10" Hanging Baskets $6.60
Wide Assortment of Herbs
Annuals &amp; Perennials in 4" Pots for .94¢ each
Mornilll Star Rd. CR JO
Raelae, Ohio
l-'740o9494115

Larry Schey

Remodeling,
Roofing New
Additions, Pole
Buildings, Etc.

Free Estimates .

740..992-1709
•121100 1 mo pd

"Get in whUe you can, 1pa.ce it limited"

Porch Boxes,
Combination Pots,
Potted Gel'&amp;niums,
Phlox, Azaleas,
Rhododendrons,

IACIHOI• DOziiG •DID LOADB •IHCIM •IIIIKIIM

Suu.tRom•
Construetlon

''

Free Esllmates

"We're Back"
219E. 2nd

992·5479

Pomeroy, Ohio
Used Appliances
Parts- All Makes

992·1550

MYERS PAVING
Henderson, WV
1711-2417 or 441-1428

The Appliance
Man
Ken Young
4/19JOO 1 mo. pd.

Fax 304-675-2457

•Driveways •Tennis 'Courts
•Parking Lots • Playgrounds
•Roads • Streets

REPLACEMENT

Karaoke!

IStandliDg timber tar·Ke 1

or

tracks. Top

prices paid also.

GHhty Window
Systems, l~c.

Sing-Dance-Party

Pomeroy, Ohio .
992-4119 or
1·800-291-5600

Karaoke

ith Miss Mamie In
Annie Oakley's
• Weddings•
Birthdays • Privata
Parties

c•

Dozer work.
PnelsHMatea
Call T&amp;R Logging
after 8:00pm

740-992-5050

Advertise In
this apace for
$25 per
month.

'

g
N·

Vinyl Siding, Roofing,
Replacement Windows,
Seamless Gutters &amp;
Downspout, Garage room
additions, Pole Building,
Garage Doors &amp; Opener,
Decks, Boat Docks,
Con&lt;:rete &amp; Block Work,
Blown Insulation
. 992·2772
For All Your Home
lm rovement Needs

CONCRm BACKHOESERVIQS
MASONRY . BOBCAT SERVICES

$6.75/50 lit~ ...
Nutrena Western Pride
12% Sweet Feed $5.00/50 llt.llal
S rtn Seeds 8 Fertiltzer

· Size • JD 550 G

Rate $50 per hour
Call for minimum

rate
Free Estimates
Pond estlmatea

BAUM
State Route

welcome

740·992·7945

•Estes Rockets and Accessories
•'1\'ains by Lionel &amp; Mm
•K-Line
•Gargraves Track
•Athearn
•Model Power
•Lifeline
•Atlas

Advertise
in this
space for

Are Your Plant Beds
Ready?
Weeding: .Mulching:
Pruning:Edging
Planting and Retaining
Walls
Free Estimates

Mike Sharp
740-949-3806

B from the Classlffedsl:

l,.and Clearing &amp;
Grading

Septic Sy•te,.. &amp;

UtilitiB•
(7401 992·3131

~I) (,0 6~1~(,

1"'1-11-\~1 (:,000 ~~

1/1£. 1\ em of'
(.Off Et:. N~l LE

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.

f'OWE!i:., If' '1'00

'I'OV'to:.e: "'T II !

PEOPLES SECURITY'S, UNITED FINANCIAL
SERVICES

I

I

Rocky R. Hupp, Agent
Box 189 . •
Middleport, Ohio 45~ .
Local • 843-5284
Medicare Supplements; Life Insurance; Burial
and Final Expenses; College, Retirement,,
Emergency Funds; Mortgage; .
~ .
Major Medical• Nursing Home.
. - - - - ·.

...

ftalppDanca
We Service All Makes
Washers- Dryers
Ranges- Refrigerators
Freezers. Dish Washers

.......,,a•·

· leave Message

Ill I. lad

Alter 6prn- 614·985-4180

~

~ 'Nio\ll£?

~

•
I

o.__ _ _ _ _.L......t

::

Self-Storage. ,

2010 state Route 124 In Syracuse
Office Hours
Monday and Thursday 10 am - 3 pm

. Phone (740) 992-6419
• TDD 1-800-750.0750

-.nlng

•

•

•

e.g.

38 Cliopell'll, •·II·

a Tint

38 Ancient chertot

11 B.orracudlt
12 Ac-.Gerr
1921 Feelo

40 Guide
8 Formerly,
42 So
fonnariy
48 Wide ehoe atza 10 Lell81 bit

'I

25 ·Applaud
28 Clernt811 Mr.
28 Storage
bola

_\

Pllrtlclee •
30 To the

'
:;
·'
;:

28

Eul
Pass

•

22 Curlier
22 Orderol
willIn
24 TUrldah n-u

'
'

i'

Electrified

ohelt8red
olde
·
31 Aromallc

••
Pass

·..~

olnllnent
37 Acta tlke.•
thief
38 VIew
41 Macabre

1

:· :
1

'

42 Pekoe an..

:: .
i

Ellrl Grey
43 Silence
t
44 - Mafor (con- · ·1

BY PHILLIP ALDER
.
otettatlon)
:
Dr. Samuel Johnson claimed,
45 Scorch
-•
"The chains of habit are too
47 Walghtof
India
.. •
weak to be felt until they are too
48 Toke-J'
VIeW
,to•
strong to be broken." Was he a
49 .,....
...... of llah · 1':
1\
chain-smoker?
SO
JIICOb'a
aon
·~.
Start by looking at the South
52 Gym -IMt
•
54 Term of
.. {hand. West's one-club opening is
·~~~ f •
passed around to you. What
•
would you do?
•
;'•
CELEBRITY
CIPHER
South has three choices: dou~
••
'
by Lula Campoa
ble; one diamond and two dia;,
·
~ Clphor cryptog- ... - - quolallono by lamoue people, put...,
••
monds. Taking them in reverse
- -Each
ltlo alpllor
TodiY, Clue:
E aquUI U
order, two diamonds, a jump
-~
overcall in the balancing -- or
~
pass-out -- position, shows some 'CUPAX . CDYA LPRW 8
14·16 high-card points and a
decent six-card suit. So, it is a rea- CUSVN·UNUV IAUUY L 8 I RWU
sonable choice. However, as the ZETBPUIR IIWPAX IIWIR UMUY
hand is playable in either major,
it wouldn't be my piclc. One diaWIOOUAUV
RD
zuu MSA
K U.' mond makes .it easier for partner ·
to bid a major, so is bener. But my_ TZUUH
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "E.OO momlllQ when t awake. t experience again a
favorite is.the takeout double. If aupmne
pleuuia- that o1 being Salvador 0e11.• - Salvador Dati
partner advanC!JS one heart, continue with two diamonds. This is
WOlD
a slight overbid, but your hand has
lAM I
a- lot of playing-tricks. Here,
- - - - - - 1_411Ht ~r CLAY I. POI1AH
though, you get to four spades,
Roarrongo lettort of tho
0. four
which is an easy make given the
scrambled word• t&gt;e:
low
to
form
four ~mple wordt.
delightful trump position . .
Against five diamonds, West
ZABEAL
. led the heart king. Declarer won
with the ace, drew trumps, and
pushed a spade ·toward the dum:
my, making the contract easily.
Yet what happens if West leads
&lt;.1
instead the club queen?
_ ·I 1
I .
Oeclarer ruffs, draws trumps ·
ending in the !lummy, ruffs the
"I've bored you talking about
other club, and leads a spade.
5
:.·my job_" the fellow told his date. "
West must win with the ace and
=~·~·:;:· ~-·:';'~That's
okay," she shrugged, "you
exit with the spade queen . Declarr
"' bore me on any -·· - - - - -."
. ·er runs the·spades, crosses to hand
Mu c s A p
with a trump, and plays a low ·
-1 f) Complele the chuckle quoted
.
•
•
•
•
_
_
by filling in the missing words
heart toward dummy. If West
L..-L.--1-.1--L.--t--1 you de.elop ftqm 11ep Nq_ 3 below. ,
wins the trick, he is endplayed. If
PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS I
West ducks, as from the bidding
IN THESE SQUARES
he is marked with at least one
honor, South's only chance is to
. , UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS TO
V GET ANSWER
·
•
call for dummy's jack.

-lor-·

...

'=~:t~~· S~\t4\llA-l&amp;t.~S"

•••• :.-:., :.~

•

jR ... '.I

•

...

I

I' I I I

;: :;:·

1-"-rl--ilrrl_,.1--,lr'r?

· Pomeroy, Ohio -

740·992·5232 .

CARROT CAKE 15 NOT
A VE6ETA8LE ..

•

&lt;4/281 mo. pd:

I

I

To get a current weather
'
h
report, Check t e

Sentinel

'

SCLt.M ms ANSWERS
Verbal- Mumps- Brine -.Kettle- PAVEM~NT
,
."I know it rains so the grass and flowers Will grow,
~;~a#nnounced. "but why dbes it rain on the PAVE-

-·

.
••

~~~F";:RI:;DA;;:Y;:==:~__:::=.:__ _ _ _~M;";';Ai\iY'7.12~r _l

.I
I

I
I
I

.....~

~ j r.::::-:::~~~~"":'~~~~~~

•

I

: '
;:i

NoCradlt•SI-Credlt•S.nkruptcy
. Repo. Olvorded

lI

..
j

No l:mbarra11mant...
You're Tre-ed with Reapectl
Call Now for l~llll)t •lJIProVItlll"*

••

' :·

Contact OffiCe For Details
. fl :
..........................
•.......••.••••
-~

Advertise

•••

~

:,.
,•

•'
:: .

1

•

WORBYIIO!!! .

:•

~-

_1 WHket!d-

I

33795 Hiland Rd. ·

(740) 742-8888
1-888-521·0916

·Seniors, Dlsabl~. Handicapped
• ·
' Range, Refrigerator, A/C, On·Site l.aundry, ; ':;·
• : Community Rooin, 24 Hour M~lntenanca • .

Call·o~ Come :vr~v~~~~e Located at

DOWN

-g•

L..

· Rutland, Ohio
· 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 yra experience

..........

Waters EcMe of Syracul!e

r.'tff.='i :

21 ScMter
abbr.
2
23
27 ~ldde4Ninhl•ueP~r 3 ~-(d'-J!~•"l
-····~
32 Ac!Nu Bwkln 4 YNre (Sp.)
33 Paney hybrid
5 Thing In law
34 RIPII
I Bone, to a clog
35 Type of blbl
7 Dag'e luoh,

I

High, &amp;Dry

•

'

eymbola

5I Fill with love

I"
~==O~R:R:::U:J~~,:;:

Now Renting

: ~ •• .ONE.MONTH'S RENT FREE .• : ' CREDit PROBLEMS???-.
•

•••

Muelcal

_, : .w Hricl

4/181001 mo pd.

1t•te' 1M

CN-I'T~
II Oto\C£ I~

J!

,PJ

LINDA'S
PAINTING

.......

gem

57

:
•

-';'f':::+.::+-=-S::-1 '

51 Cryataltlne .

-In

I"'

~

!!1-li:t+IB+-i=t:~

55 AIIM:k

,.,

$50 per
month.

Compteter Perforrtt«nte Upgr«da
110 Court Strlft
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Local beside The Grill .
740-992-1135

QUALITY lANDSCAPE • :
A.prU Shower~ Bri"6
May FIOUJ•roll

•un·

BuUdoser &amp; Ba~khoe Se,lee•
Hou"" &amp; Trailer Sites

BANKRUPTCY

• Access! $899.00

:or. .. :or. ..

53 -"Scholar

The longest suit

n

wae

~~~;;;;;;;;;;;:; :

AMD K6-2 500 CPU
64 Megs Ram, 6:4 Gig hard Drive, 17" Monitor .26
DPI., CO-Rom, 56 K V.90 Modem, 100/10 Network
Card Mouse, Keyboard, Speakers Lexmark Z 11
Color,Printer Windows 98 Second Edition
Wordperfect Suite 8 1 month'FREE Frognet Interne•

:•

Shop II home:..

'

740-742-9501
'Toll F.ree

•

S

Dozer For Hire

·Fr11 Delivery

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

''h •

Ji'ass
St
Paso

'

-toPNvtouaPUDio

'fPtff_.

Opening lead: • K

-

RESIDENTIAL COMMERCIAL
0
E FREE ESTIMATES ... FULLY INSURED N : :
T
Brian Morrison/Racine, Ohio
R
•;
-·
(740~ .... ~ ...... o
y
•
.
E
1 VViNV"~V
•
100
L-------------..;';;o~',.;;.;'.;;mo--.. :

Nutrena Hunters Pride Dog Food

parts

~ . • :: Now.TaklngAp~~:t~~~/or1 Bedroom

R

Ag. Service

·Ruto locly PG1II
All replacement

S•••n St~le

J&amp;L iiSIUiiOI I
COISIRUCnON

P/8 CONTRACTORS, INC.

Shade River

'

(NO' SUNOAY CALLS)

,.;

c

\

740-367·7935

Paaa

New Homes • VInyl
"Take the pain out
Siding • New Garages
ofpainting' • Replacement Windows '
•i
Let me do it for you"
• Room Additions .
Interior
I
•Rooflng .
FREE
ESTIMAiES
CO!AMEROAl and RESIDENTIAl.
Before 6 p.m. ·
' FREE ESTIMATES .

~u4t. te ,.~ ..

Sand and Dirt

t•

Norib

'

51 • liCit Ill"

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: West

'

740·992·7599

• A 4 3 2

47 Spenlelt

tAKQ982

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

-

• a B-5

. • 10 8 8 3
• 10 5

...

Electrical Contractor WV003114

:

East

• A 7 2

Albany, Ohio

992-3490

• K 9
WOBI
•AQ
•KQ5
• 4
• Q J 10 8 1 a s

• 74 3 2

Pritchard Electric Company, Inc.

;

20 Film dlraetor
JacqUM -

• J 9 4
• J 783

Soutb

.R&amp;IOucala,

BISSELL BUILDERS
INC.

t Pteoentll'om
1111tlnlng
7 Betlevei In God
13 Fancy dlw
14 Romanle'a
,._
15 levy (tlxH)
11 Tucher, Itt
17 Fixed cllafMI
11 "Delk:loual'

Norlb
• K J 10 9

s•

Quality Residential &amp;Commercial Service

ACROSS .

umea

Weal

Free Ettimate•
Contr10tors Weleo1111

car

. WINDOWS

Hauling • Umastone •
Gravel• Sand • Topsoil•
Fill Dirt • Mulch •
Bulldozer Services
(740) 992-3470

740-742-8015 or
1-877-353-7022

1·800·311·3391

Trade-In's Welcome
Your last stop
shop

EXCAVfiTI"G

CILASSIFIEDSI

~~9'of!a

PHILLIP
ALDER

"fiUU"G

Quality Driveways,
patios, sidewalks
25 yrs experience
Free Estimates

2425 Eighth Avenue
Huntington, WV 25703
Phone: 304-529-2566 Fax: 304-529-2567
Toll Free: 877-457-8904 · I..IJQil, 77~ 15.Qll
Emergency Beeper: 540-1141

Across from Super-America In lower Pomeroy

HIM, 01..0 CHUNc;.o.MUNG.'. MIGHT'VE
-rlll(f;N DOWN TH~
l.OT QF US!

Your .
CONCRETE
CONNECJ!ON

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS .
GOnERS

For the best deals in the area
for Pre-owned cars &amp; trucks

Dump Truck
· Servtce
Limestone, Gravel
Agricultural Lime

949·2249
a.IH,Ohlo

Shrubs
Open Dally 9-5
Sun 12-5

ESTIMATES
740-992-1671 '

RIVERVIEW·
· MOTORS

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

Dalley .
Trucking

Lilac Trees, Assorted

•New Homes
· •Garages

7122/TFN

'

Cell Phone 674-3311

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

New Construction &amp;
. •Complete
Remodeling - Kitchen
Remodeling
Cabinets Vinyl SidingStop &amp; Compare
Roofs - Decks - Gatragc:s 1
FREE

~wa
Cellular
Jeff Warner . Ins.

7:00AM ·8 PM

Uc. II OO.SO un..,.,

Syracuse
Now Open For
Spring season
V"'lelable Plants,
Bedding Plants,
Hanging Baskets;

740-949-7039
SEPTIC TANKS, LEACH BEDS INSTAI.LED, WATER-GA
ELECTRIC UNES, BASEMENT-FOOTERS, MOBILE HOME
"""'"" A~ BUILDING·LAND CLEARING, HORIZONTAL
~~~~ CREEK &amp; FIELD DAAINING-PONOS

Hours

992·5776

48909 SR 124
Racine
Camping- Flahlng • Boating
• Nightly • Weekly • Monthly • seaaonal
Convenience Store/ Bait &amp; Tackle

6129/mo.

Racine, Ohio
45n1
740-949-2217
Slzea 5' x 1o•
to 10' x 30'

HUB BARDS
GREENHOUSE

OLD LOCK24
CAMPGROO"D

Phone (740) 593-6671

29870 Beahan
Roed

P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy,OH
Paying $80.00
·per IJI"l"
$300,00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburet
Progre111va top line.
AT6:30

C40M/Ie, OH 46723

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle
Sales Representative

"A Better

. AD M•Jsee Tractor &amp;
Equipment Pllltll
Factory Authorized·
C...,..JH Parts

(7 40) 367-0266
1-800-950-3359

·HILL'S
SELF STORAOE

Pomeroy Eagl"
Club Bingo On.
Thursdays

NEA Cro••word Puzzle

•••IF IT W~N'T FOR

'

Sulurtluy. M:~y IJ, 2!KKl
· Geuing more involved in the

munagemenl of rhe nffuir." of olh• : il\ cxtrcmd¥ prob:tble in the
o;

II&gt; ; yc:~runc''" · You'll not only enjoy
you' ll he doing. but all will
benefit from your cfTons.
l " TAURUS !April 20-Muy 20)
i1. You did such an cffcct1ve JOb ye~r;­
~ terday organ~z ing u sociul ~~;li~i·
4, ty for your fnends th:,u you II s11ll
:. be gelling calls today praising
" you r effectiveness. Trying to
~ patch up a broken rt&gt;munc~? ":be
., A11tro-Oroph Mut~hmaker can
t help you understand what to do llr
~ mnke the relntionship work, Mail
( $2 . 7~ 10 Matchmaker. c/o this
t newspaper, P.O. Box I758, Mur,.- ray Hill Station, New York, NY
!0! 56.
•
GEMINI (May 21 -lune 20)
~ Some knowledge that cu~e: to
" your uuention ~este rduy. cun still
~ h~; used constructively again
t hKiuy ·- without huvins to rcveul
the ~ uun:c uf ynur success.

s

CAN«;:ER (June J t -July 22)
The closer 1touch you keep with
those who ure vital to your presen1
plan!', the mort it \'fill mot:iv1ue
tht:m to 1.."'tJnccntratc on your pro·
jt:ct and c,;pedit~ thC procedure!!.
LEO (July 2J-Aug.' 22) Con·
c~ ntmre on reaping financial gain~
tOOay. e'o'en if the 'opportunities
seem .. malt to you. In reality. they
will turn out lo he more significunt !hun you may now think..
VIRGO (Aug. 2~·Scpt. 22!
The wu~ you prm:c:;s and pre~nt
your tt;oughts today could be:
seen us novel and fre sh to others.
It'll Ill.! "your wuy of thinking und
merhod ~ of prescntution ttl at will '
sthnulutc origina lity.
LIBRA !Sept. 2J.Qct_ 2Jl
When with progr~!!sivc rcnplc
today. he un «P"ciatly good ti'tencr. Something that is said may
help you run your fingcr,r; on the
pulse of smurt business.
SCORPIO !Oct. 24- N&lt;~v . 22)
lt "ll "be your innate aood «;ommon
sense you demonl&lt;IT1rule. so often
thut friend&lt; wilt seek out today.
Take the time to unabashedly
offer your opinion to atl who ask
for your input.
·
SAGITI'ARIUS (Nov. 2)·0.0.

...

21) Although you might dis&lt;:over
you have a slight edge over olh·
ers today where com~tition is
involYed, don't set so overconfident about it lhllt ~ou lay aside
this mental advantage.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-lan.
19) Participate in ,any Llctivi'ty
tOtluy thai could stimuhue your
mind and help you achieve a more
positive 111titude. This type of
thinking will benefil you
hnmcnsely. ·
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Fob. 19)
If you c hoo.~e to ferret out in_forrnntion being kept ul buy. it isn 't
lik~ ly unyone could prevent ya,u
hom doing so. You 're un eJtcel·
hmt invcstigator·who will gel to
ttk! hOlt(llll of aatything.
PISCI : ~ lf&lt;b. 20-Murch 20!
Us.: your logi~: when anulyzinp
any type of issue im•olvinf: oth~rs
today. ~ it !IOCial. cOnnnt!rciul or
cmolional. Your cool head will
di!!cem facts from fi~tion .
ARieS !Murch 21 -April 19)
Keep your C,IIJlCclutions within
n:usormbl~ bounds today. and
nmucrs t~u111re mcuninp:ful to you
mmeriulty can continually be·reull7.cd as !hey where ycsterduy.

•!•

•••
•

••
•I•

•

I
'••
•

..

~~·~g,~=~~ - :

•'•.

....•

•••

•••
••
••

•••

...•

�.-

Frltlay, May 12, 2000

12, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Dally S,entlnel• Page B 7 ·

0

BRIDGE

IT

.......

DiHiiAI ·

·Advertise
in this
space for
s150 per
month.

,....,.....
Dealen.

rooo sr. Rt. r Soullt

PSI
CONSTRUCTION

Sue'• Greenhouae
QaalltJ, Vlll'ietJ'1 low Prk,. • Tbat'l Val

Bedding &amp; Vegetable Flats $6.60
10" Hanging Baskets $6.60
Wide Assortment of Herbs
Annuals &amp; Perennials in 4" Pots for .94¢ each
Mornilll Star Rd. CR JO
Raelae, Ohio
l-'740o9494115

Larry Schey

Remodeling,
Roofing New
Additions, Pole
Buildings, Etc.

Free Estimates .

740..992-1709
•121100 1 mo pd

"Get in whUe you can, 1pa.ce it limited"

Porch Boxes,
Combination Pots,
Potted Gel'&amp;niums,
Phlox, Azaleas,
Rhododendrons,

IACIHOI• DOziiG •DID LOADB •IHCIM •IIIIKIIM

Suu.tRom•
Construetlon

''

Free Esllmates

"We're Back"
219E. 2nd

992·5479

Pomeroy, Ohio
Used Appliances
Parts- All Makes

992·1550

MYERS PAVING
Henderson, WV
1711-2417 or 441-1428

The Appliance
Man
Ken Young
4/19JOO 1 mo. pd.

Fax 304-675-2457

•Driveways •Tennis 'Courts
•Parking Lots • Playgrounds
•Roads • Streets

REPLACEMENT

Karaoke!

IStandliDg timber tar·Ke 1

or

tracks. Top

prices paid also.

GHhty Window
Systems, l~c.

Sing-Dance-Party

Pomeroy, Ohio .
992-4119 or
1·800-291-5600

Karaoke

ith Miss Mamie In
Annie Oakley's
• Weddings•
Birthdays • Privata
Parties

c•

Dozer work.
PnelsHMatea
Call T&amp;R Logging
after 8:00pm

740-992-5050

Advertise In
this apace for
$25 per
month.

'

g
N·

Vinyl Siding, Roofing,
Replacement Windows,
Seamless Gutters &amp;
Downspout, Garage room
additions, Pole Building,
Garage Doors &amp; Opener,
Decks, Boat Docks,
Con&lt;:rete &amp; Block Work,
Blown Insulation
. 992·2772
For All Your Home
lm rovement Needs

CONCRm BACKHOESERVIQS
MASONRY . BOBCAT SERVICES

$6.75/50 lit~ ...
Nutrena Western Pride
12% Sweet Feed $5.00/50 llt.llal
S rtn Seeds 8 Fertiltzer

· Size • JD 550 G

Rate $50 per hour
Call for minimum

rate
Free Estimates
Pond estlmatea

BAUM
State Route

welcome

740·992·7945

•Estes Rockets and Accessories
•'1\'ains by Lionel &amp; Mm
•K-Line
•Gargraves Track
•Athearn
•Model Power
•Lifeline
•Atlas

Advertise
in this
space for

Are Your Plant Beds
Ready?
Weeding: .Mulching:
Pruning:Edging
Planting and Retaining
Walls
Free Estimates

Mike Sharp
740-949-3806

B from the Classlffedsl:

l,.and Clearing &amp;
Grading

Septic Sy•te,.. &amp;

UtilitiB•
(7401 992·3131

~I) (,0 6~1~(,

1"'1-11-\~1 (:,000 ~~

1/1£. 1\ em of'
(.Off Et:. N~l LE

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.

f'OWE!i:., If' '1'00

'I'OV'to:.e: "'T II !

PEOPLES SECURITY'S, UNITED FINANCIAL
SERVICES

I

I

Rocky R. Hupp, Agent
Box 189 . •
Middleport, Ohio 45~ .
Local • 843-5284
Medicare Supplements; Life Insurance; Burial
and Final Expenses; College, Retirement,,
Emergency Funds; Mortgage; .
~ .
Major Medical• Nursing Home.
. - - - - ·.

...

ftalppDanca
We Service All Makes
Washers- Dryers
Ranges- Refrigerators
Freezers. Dish Washers

.......,,a•·

· leave Message

Ill I. lad

Alter 6prn- 614·985-4180

~

~ 'Nio\ll£?

~

•
I

o.__ _ _ _ _.L......t

::

Self-Storage. ,

2010 state Route 124 In Syracuse
Office Hours
Monday and Thursday 10 am - 3 pm

. Phone (740) 992-6419
• TDD 1-800-750.0750

-.nlng

•

•

•

e.g.

38 Cliopell'll, •·II·

a Tint

38 Ancient chertot

11 B.orracudlt
12 Ac-.Gerr
1921 Feelo

40 Guide
8 Formerly,
42 So
fonnariy
48 Wide ehoe atza 10 Lell81 bit

'I

25 ·Applaud
28 Clernt811 Mr.
28 Storage
bola

_\

Pllrtlclee •
30 To the

'
:;
·'
;:

28

Eul
Pass

•

22 Curlier
22 Orderol
willIn
24 TUrldah n-u

'
'

i'

Electrified

ohelt8red
olde
·
31 Aromallc

••
Pass

·..~

olnllnent
37 Acta tlke.•
thief
38 VIew
41 Macabre

1

:· :
1

'

42 Pekoe an..

:: .
i

Ellrl Grey
43 Silence
t
44 - Mafor (con- · ·1

BY PHILLIP ALDER
.
otettatlon)
:
Dr. Samuel Johnson claimed,
45 Scorch
-•
"The chains of habit are too
47 Walghtof
India
.. •
weak to be felt until they are too
48 Toke-J'
VIeW
,to•
strong to be broken." Was he a
49 .,....
...... of llah · 1':
1\
chain-smoker?
SO
JIICOb'a
aon
·~.
Start by looking at the South
52 Gym -IMt
•
54 Term of
.. {hand. West's one-club opening is
·~~~ f •
passed around to you. What
•
would you do?
•
;'•
CELEBRITY
CIPHER
South has three choices: dou~
••
'
by Lula Campoa
ble; one diamond and two dia;,
·
~ Clphor cryptog- ... - - quolallono by lamoue people, put...,
••
monds. Taking them in reverse
- -Each
ltlo alpllor
TodiY, Clue:
E aquUI U
order, two diamonds, a jump
-~
overcall in the balancing -- or
~
pass-out -- position, shows some 'CUPAX . CDYA LPRW 8
14·16 high-card points and a
decent six-card suit. So, it is a rea- CUSVN·UNUV IAUUY L 8 I RWU
sonable choice. However, as the ZETBPUIR IIWPAX IIWIR UMUY
hand is playable in either major,
it wouldn't be my piclc. One diaWIOOUAUV
RD
zuu MSA
K U.' mond makes .it easier for partner ·
to bid a major, so is bener. But my_ TZUUH
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "E.OO momlllQ when t awake. t experience again a
favorite is.the takeout double. If aupmne
pleuuia- that o1 being Salvador 0e11.• - Salvador Dati
partner advanC!JS one heart, continue with two diamonds. This is
WOlD
a slight overbid, but your hand has
lAM I
a- lot of playing-tricks. Here,
- - - - - - 1_411Ht ~r CLAY I. POI1AH
though, you get to four spades,
Roarrongo lettort of tho
0. four
which is an easy make given the
scrambled word• t&gt;e:
low
to
form
four ~mple wordt.
delightful trump position . .
Against five diamonds, West
ZABEAL
. led the heart king. Declarer won
with the ace, drew trumps, and
pushed a spade ·toward the dum:
my, making the contract easily.
Yet what happens if West leads
&lt;.1
instead the club queen?
_ ·I 1
I .
Oeclarer ruffs, draws trumps ·
ending in the !lummy, ruffs the
"I've bored you talking about
other club, and leads a spade.
5
:.·my job_" the fellow told his date. "
West must win with the ace and
=~·~·:;:· ~-·:';'~That's
okay," she shrugged, "you
exit with the spade queen . Declarr
"' bore me on any -·· - - - - -."
. ·er runs the·spades, crosses to hand
Mu c s A p
with a trump, and plays a low ·
-1 f) Complele the chuckle quoted
.
•
•
•
•
_
_
by filling in the missing words
heart toward dummy. If West
L..-L.--1-.1--L.--t--1 you de.elop ftqm 11ep Nq_ 3 below. ,
wins the trick, he is endplayed. If
PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS I
West ducks, as from the bidding
IN THESE SQUARES
he is marked with at least one
honor, South's only chance is to
. , UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS TO
V GET ANSWER
·
•
call for dummy's jack.

-lor-·

...

'=~:t~~· S~\t4\llA-l&amp;t.~S"

•••• :.-:., :.~

•

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•

...

I

I' I I I

;: :;:·

1-"-rl--ilrrl_,.1--,lr'r?

· Pomeroy, Ohio -

740·992·5232 .

CARROT CAKE 15 NOT
A VE6ETA8LE ..

•

&lt;4/281 mo. pd:

I

I

To get a current weather
'
h
report, Check t e

Sentinel

'

SCLt.M ms ANSWERS
Verbal- Mumps- Brine -.Kettle- PAVEM~NT
,
."I know it rains so the grass and flowers Will grow,
~;~a#nnounced. "but why dbes it rain on the PAVE-

-·

.
••

~~~F";:RI:;DA;;:Y;:==:~__:::=.:__ _ _ _~M;";';Ai\iY'7.12~r _l

.I
I

I
I
I

.....~

~ j r.::::-:::~~~~"":'~~~~~~

•

I

: '
;:i

NoCradlt•SI-Credlt•S.nkruptcy
. Repo. Olvorded

lI

..
j

No l:mbarra11mant...
You're Tre-ed with Reapectl
Call Now for l~llll)t •lJIProVItlll"*

••

' :·

Contact OffiCe For Details
. fl :
..........................
•.......••.••••
-~

Advertise

•••

~

:,.
,•

•'
:: .

1

•

WORBYIIO!!! .

:•

~-

_1 WHket!d-

I

33795 Hiland Rd. ·

(740) 742-8888
1-888-521·0916

·Seniors, Dlsabl~. Handicapped
• ·
' Range, Refrigerator, A/C, On·Site l.aundry, ; ':;·
• : Community Rooin, 24 Hour M~lntenanca • .

Call·o~ Come :vr~v~~~~e Located at

DOWN

-g•

L..

· Rutland, Ohio
· 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 yra experience

..........

Waters EcMe of Syracul!e

r.'tff.='i :

21 ScMter
abbr.
2
23
27 ~ldde4Ninhl•ueP~r 3 ~-(d'-J!~•"l
-····~
32 Ac!Nu Bwkln 4 YNre (Sp.)
33 Paney hybrid
5 Thing In law
34 RIPII
I Bone, to a clog
35 Type of blbl
7 Dag'e luoh,

I

High, &amp;Dry

•

'

eymbola

5I Fill with love

I"
~==O~R:R:::U:J~~,:;:

Now Renting

: ~ •• .ONE.MONTH'S RENT FREE .• : ' CREDit PROBLEMS???-.
•

•••

Muelcal

_, : .w Hricl

4/181001 mo pd.

1t•te' 1M

CN-I'T~
II Oto\C£ I~

J!

,PJ

LINDA'S
PAINTING

.......

gem

57

:
•

-';'f':::+.::+-=-S::-1 '

51 Cryataltlne .

-In

I"'

~

!!1-li:t+IB+-i=t:~

55 AIIM:k

,.,

$50 per
month.

Compteter Perforrtt«nte Upgr«da
110 Court Strlft
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Local beside The Grill .
740-992-1135

QUALITY lANDSCAPE • :
A.prU Shower~ Bri"6
May FIOUJ•roll

•un·

BuUdoser &amp; Ba~khoe Se,lee•
Hou"" &amp; Trailer Sites

BANKRUPTCY

• Access! $899.00

:or. .. :or. ..

53 -"Scholar

The longest suit

n

wae

~~~;;;;;;;;;;;:; :

AMD K6-2 500 CPU
64 Megs Ram, 6:4 Gig hard Drive, 17" Monitor .26
DPI., CO-Rom, 56 K V.90 Modem, 100/10 Network
Card Mouse, Keyboard, Speakers Lexmark Z 11
Color,Printer Windows 98 Second Edition
Wordperfect Suite 8 1 month'FREE Frognet Interne•

:•

Shop II home:..

'

740-742-9501
'Toll F.ree

•

S

Dozer For Hire

·Fr11 Delivery

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.

''h •

Ji'ass
St
Paso

'

-toPNvtouaPUDio

'fPtff_.

Opening lead: • K

-

RESIDENTIAL COMMERCIAL
0
E FREE ESTIMATES ... FULLY INSURED N : :
T
Brian Morrison/Racine, Ohio
R
•;
-·
(740~ .... ~ ...... o
y
•
.
E
1 VViNV"~V
•
100
L-------------..;';;o~',.;;.;'.;;mo--.. :

Nutrena Hunters Pride Dog Food

parts

~ . • :: Now.TaklngAp~~:t~~~/or1 Bedroom

R

Ag. Service

·Ruto locly PG1II
All replacement

S•••n St~le

J&amp;L iiSIUiiOI I
COISIRUCnON

P/8 CONTRACTORS, INC.

Shade River

'

(NO' SUNOAY CALLS)

,.;

c

\

740-367·7935

Paaa

New Homes • VInyl
"Take the pain out
Siding • New Garages
ofpainting' • Replacement Windows '
•i
Let me do it for you"
• Room Additions .
Interior
I
•Rooflng .
FREE
ESTIMAiES
CO!AMEROAl and RESIDENTIAl.
Before 6 p.m. ·
' FREE ESTIMATES .

~u4t. te ,.~ ..

Sand and Dirt

t•

Norib

'

51 • liCit Ill"

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: West

'

740·992·7599

• A 4 3 2

47 Spenlelt

tAKQ982

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

-

• a B-5

. • 10 8 8 3
• 10 5

...

Electrical Contractor WV003114

:

East

• A 7 2

Albany, Ohio

992-3490

• K 9
WOBI
•AQ
•KQ5
• 4
• Q J 10 8 1 a s

• 74 3 2

Pritchard Electric Company, Inc.

;

20 Film dlraetor
JacqUM -

• J 9 4
• J 783

Soutb

.R&amp;IOucala,

BISSELL BUILDERS
INC.

t Pteoentll'om
1111tlnlng
7 Betlevei In God
13 Fancy dlw
14 Romanle'a
,._
15 levy (tlxH)
11 Tucher, Itt
17 Fixed cllafMI
11 "Delk:loual'

Norlb
• K J 10 9

s•

Quality Residential &amp;Commercial Service

ACROSS .

umea

Weal

Free Ettimate•
Contr10tors Weleo1111

car

. WINDOWS

Hauling • Umastone •
Gravel• Sand • Topsoil•
Fill Dirt • Mulch •
Bulldozer Services
(740) 992-3470

740-742-8015 or
1-877-353-7022

1·800·311·3391

Trade-In's Welcome
Your last stop
shop

EXCAVfiTI"G

CILASSIFIEDSI

~~9'of!a

PHILLIP
ALDER

"fiUU"G

Quality Driveways,
patios, sidewalks
25 yrs experience
Free Estimates

2425 Eighth Avenue
Huntington, WV 25703
Phone: 304-529-2566 Fax: 304-529-2567
Toll Free: 877-457-8904 · I..IJQil, 77~ 15.Qll
Emergency Beeper: 540-1141

Across from Super-America In lower Pomeroy

HIM, 01..0 CHUNc;.o.MUNG.'. MIGHT'VE
-rlll(f;N DOWN TH~
l.OT QF US!

Your .
CONCRETE
CONNECJ!ON

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE

WILLIS'
SEAMLESS .
GOnERS

For the best deals in the area
for Pre-owned cars &amp; trucks

Dump Truck
· Servtce
Limestone, Gravel
Agricultural Lime

949·2249
a.IH,Ohlo

Shrubs
Open Dally 9-5
Sun 12-5

ESTIMATES
740-992-1671 '

RIVERVIEW·
· MOTORS

WV Contractors Lie. #003506

Dalley .
Trucking

Lilac Trees, Assorted

•New Homes
· •Garages

7122/TFN

'

Cell Phone 674-3311

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

New Construction &amp;
. •Complete
Remodeling - Kitchen
Remodeling
Cabinets Vinyl SidingStop &amp; Compare
Roofs - Decks - Gatragc:s 1
FREE

~wa
Cellular
Jeff Warner . Ins.

7:00AM ·8 PM

Uc. II OO.SO un..,.,

Syracuse
Now Open For
Spring season
V"'lelable Plants,
Bedding Plants,
Hanging Baskets;

740-949-7039
SEPTIC TANKS, LEACH BEDS INSTAI.LED, WATER-GA
ELECTRIC UNES, BASEMENT-FOOTERS, MOBILE HOME
"""'"" A~ BUILDING·LAND CLEARING, HORIZONTAL
~~~~ CREEK &amp; FIELD DAAINING-PONOS

Hours

992·5776

48909 SR 124
Racine
Camping- Flahlng • Boating
• Nightly • Weekly • Monthly • seaaonal
Convenience Store/ Bait &amp; Tackle

6129/mo.

Racine, Ohio
45n1
740-949-2217
Slzea 5' x 1o•
to 10' x 30'

HUB BARDS
GREENHOUSE

OLD LOCK24
CAMPGROO"D

Phone (740) 593-6671

29870 Beahan
Roed

P.M.
Main St.,
Pomeroy,OH
Paying $80.00
·per IJI"l"
$300,00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburet
Progre111va top line.
AT6:30

C40M/Ie, OH 46723

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle
Sales Representative

"A Better

. AD M•Jsee Tractor &amp;
Equipment Pllltll
Factory Authorized·
C...,..JH Parts

(7 40) 367-0266
1-800-950-3359

·HILL'S
SELF STORAOE

Pomeroy Eagl"
Club Bingo On.
Thursdays

NEA Cro••word Puzzle

•••IF IT W~N'T FOR

'

Sulurtluy. M:~y IJ, 2!KKl
· Geuing more involved in the

munagemenl of rhe nffuir." of olh• : il\ cxtrcmd¥ prob:tble in the
o;

II&gt; ; yc:~runc''" · You'll not only enjoy
you' ll he doing. but all will
benefit from your cfTons.
l " TAURUS !April 20-Muy 20)
i1. You did such an cffcct1ve JOb ye~r;­
~ terday organ~z ing u sociul ~~;li~i·
4, ty for your fnends th:,u you II s11ll
:. be gelling calls today praising
" you r effectiveness. Trying to
~ patch up a broken rt&gt;munc~? ":be
., A11tro-Oroph Mut~hmaker can
t help you understand what to do llr
~ mnke the relntionship work, Mail
( $2 . 7~ 10 Matchmaker. c/o this
t newspaper, P.O. Box I758, Mur,.- ray Hill Station, New York, NY
!0! 56.
•
GEMINI (May 21 -lune 20)
~ Some knowledge that cu~e: to
" your uuention ~este rduy. cun still
~ h~; used constructively again
t hKiuy ·- without huvins to rcveul
the ~ uun:c uf ynur success.

s

CAN«;:ER (June J t -July 22)
The closer 1touch you keep with
those who ure vital to your presen1
plan!', the mort it \'fill mot:iv1ue
tht:m to 1.."'tJnccntratc on your pro·
jt:ct and c,;pedit~ thC procedure!!.
LEO (July 2J-Aug.' 22) Con·
c~ ntmre on reaping financial gain~
tOOay. e'o'en if the 'opportunities
seem .. malt to you. In reality. they
will turn out lo he more significunt !hun you may now think..
VIRGO (Aug. 2~·Scpt. 22!
The wu~ you prm:c:;s and pre~nt
your tt;oughts today could be:
seen us novel and fre sh to others.
It'll Ill.! "your wuy of thinking und
merhod ~ of prescntution ttl at will '
sthnulutc origina lity.
LIBRA !Sept. 2J.Qct_ 2Jl
When with progr~!!sivc rcnplc
today. he un «P"ciatly good ti'tencr. Something that is said may
help you run your fingcr,r; on the
pulse of smurt business.
SCORPIO !Oct. 24- N&lt;~v . 22)
lt "ll "be your innate aood «;ommon
sense you demonl&lt;IT1rule. so often
thut friend&lt; wilt seek out today.
Take the time to unabashedly
offer your opinion to atl who ask
for your input.
·
SAGITI'ARIUS (Nov. 2)·0.0.

...

21) Although you might dis&lt;:over
you have a slight edge over olh·
ers today where com~tition is
involYed, don't set so overconfident about it lhllt ~ou lay aside
this mental advantage.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-lan.
19) Participate in ,any Llctivi'ty
tOtluy thai could stimuhue your
mind and help you achieve a more
positive 111titude. This type of
thinking will benefil you
hnmcnsely. ·
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Fob. 19)
If you c hoo.~e to ferret out in_forrnntion being kept ul buy. it isn 't
lik~ ly unyone could prevent ya,u
hom doing so. You 're un eJtcel·
hmt invcstigator·who will gel to
ttk! hOlt(llll of aatything.
PISCI : ~ lf&lt;b. 20-Murch 20!
Us.: your logi~: when anulyzinp
any type of issue im•olvinf: oth~rs
today. ~ it !IOCial. cOnnnt!rciul or
cmolional. Your cool head will
di!!cem facts from fi~tion .
ARieS !Murch 21 -April 19)
Keep your C,IIJlCclutions within
n:usormbl~ bounds today. and
nmucrs t~u111re mcuninp:ful to you
mmeriulty can continually be·reull7.cd as !hey where ycsterduy.

•!•

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•

••
•I•

•

I
'••
•

..

~~·~g,~=~~ - :

•'•.

....•

•••

•••
••
••

•••

...•

�"J ..

•. ,;

•• ,""'(,....... ..

...... --- ·

.

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••
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•'
.Friday, May 12, 2000-

Pdl!froy, Middleport, Ohio

Ptlge B 8 • The Dally Sentinel
•

.

Dlvlalon II HCtlonalllnal
6
=~
~~.
~
~
~~
~~·o~Jt•.
' • ~-~~·
Gali'aAoadomy....... ,........oos 542. 18·15·1
.

Toronlo (Eocobar :!-') at Tampa Bay (Good·
en 2·2), ! :15 p.m.
Mlnno!IOIII (Redmon 2-Q) II ChicagO Whke
SOx (Sirolka 2·3)·, 7:05p.m.
Texu (HeUing 4-1) at Anaheim rylashbum ().
0) , 10:05 p.m.

Sund1y'1 gam••

N.v. Yankees at Detroit, 1:OS p.m.
Kansas CI1V at CLEVELAND, 1:05 p.m.
Toronto at Tampa Bav. 1:15 p.m. .
Boston at Baltimore, 1:35 p.m.
Minnesota at Chicago White $olC, 2:05p.m.
Seattle 81 Qakland, 4:05p.m.
Texas a.t Anaheim, 4:05p.m.

aarterl•

GAHS: He1Ul Rothgeb fY/4·2), Justin McK·
lf'lnlss (6) and Justin Mcl&lt;lnnlss, Nick Merola (6!.
Meigs: Tommy Roush (L), ,Josh Lynch (4 ,
John Stanley (5) and Matt S1ewa.n .
HIIUng
.
ClAHS: Cody Lane 5·5, 4 RBI, 2 A, dooblo;
Jeremy Pavton 2-3, 4 ABI, double: Heath
Rothgeb 2-4, 2 RBI, 3 R; Bo Shirey 2·3. 1 RBI;
Bobby Angel 1·2, 1 RBI; Brtan Sims 1-2, 2 A;
Soott Nida 1·1 , 3 A.
Meigs; JeH Brown 3·3, 2 RBI; John Stanley
3-4. 3 R. double: Zach Bolin 2·3: Maa Stewan 2
A.

NL standings

w I.
A~anta............. ................ .-22 12

Montreal ........................... 17
Florida ............................. 19
NewYCK1&lt; ... ......... ............. t9
Phlladelphle ....... ..... ......... 13

15 .531
17 .528
~7 .528
20 .39-4

Central Olvlelan
St. Louls ...... ,. .......... ,... ..... 20 14 .588
CINCINNATI ......... ... ........ 18
Pittsburgh ................. ........15
Houston .......................... 14
Chlca~ ........ ,........ ...... ..... 14
Milwaukee ............... .. .... ... 13

AL standings
Eaatem Division

Ium

W L l!ol.

New Yor\c. ..
..22
..... 19
Boston.....
Toronto ... ..
. ... .. .19
Baltimore .................. ..... . 16
Tampa Bay ...... .. .......... .... 12

10 .688
12 .613
17 .528
18 .471
21 .364

Central Dlvlalon
Chlcago ............. ............... 19 15
CLEVELAND ..... .. , .......... 17 15
Kansas City ..... ......... .... .18 16
Minnesota . ..... .. ......... 16 19
Detroit ... ..
. .. 9 23

.559
.531
.529
.457
.281

Weatarn Division
Seattle ............. ........ ...... 17 15
Oakland ....... .... ..... ...... 18 17
Anaheim...
.. .. 18 18
Texa s ..........
.15 19

.531
.514
.500
.441

2'•
5
7
1 Q',

Waattrn Dlvialon

Arizona........ .. ... . . ..... 24
San Francisco .. ... .. ....... 18
Los Angeles .. .. ................ 17
Colorado ....... ...................15
San Olego ........... ..... ........ 13

1
3',
9

Thursday's scores

Tampa Bay 1. N.V. Yankees 0
CLEVELAND 16. Kansas City 0
8Qston 11, Baltimore 4
Oakland 7, Seattle 6
Anaheim 3. Texas 2

Tonight's games

N.Y. Yankees (Cipmens 3·2) at Detroit
(Nitkowsld 1·6), 7:05p.m.
Kansas Cl~y (Batista Hl) at CLEVELAND

(Colon 2·1), 7.05 p.m.
Boston (P. Martinez 5·1) at Baltimore (Pon·
son 2· 1), 7:05p.m.
Toronto (Carpenter 3·3) at Tampa Bay {Rakar
0·1), 7:15p.m.
Minnesota (Mays 1·4) at Chicago White So~e
(Parque 3·1),' 8 :05 p.m.
.
Seanle (Halama 4-Q) al Oakland (Olivares 3·
3). 10:05 p.m.
Texas (Davis 0·1) at Anaheim (Schoenewels
4·1), 10:05 p.m.

.706

14 .582

16 .515
18 .455
21 .382

Portland 103, Utah 84' Ponland 1eads series
3-Q
.

monel, Va.

Sept. 17 - New Hampshire 300, Loudon.
Sept. 24- MBNA.oom 400. Dover, Del.
OCt. 1 - NAPA AutoCare 500, Martlnovillo.

Tonight's gamea

8\,

Miami 11 New 'York, 8 p.m.
L.A. Lakars at PI"'Ienl~e , 10:30 p.m .

Va.

OCt. 8 - UAW·ClM Quality 500, Conoard,
N.C.
.
Oct. 15 - Winston 500 , Talladega, Ala.
Oct. 22 - Pop Secret Microwave 400,
Rockingham, N .C.
Nov. 5 - Checker Auto Pans/Dura Lubt
SOOk, Avondale, Ariz . ·
Nov. 12 - Pennzoil400, Homestead, Fla.
Nov. 19 - NAPA 500, Hampton, Ga.

Saturday's vamee

1 ,•

Indiana at Philadelphia, 3:30p.m.

4',

5'•
7'•

Sunday's gamea

Miami at New Yo~. ~2 : 30p. m.
Portlal'ld at Utah, 3 p.m.
L.A. Lakera at Phoenix, 5:30p.m.

7'.

5
6',

,

Driver ttandlnga

1. Bobby Labonte, 1,601.

a·•

2. Ward Burton, 1,598 .
3. Mark Martin. 1,568.
4. Jeff BUrton, 1,542.
5. Cal&amp; Eamhardt, 1,523.
6. Cale Jarrett, 1,470.
7. Rusty Wallace, 1,436 .
8. Ricky Rudd, 1,411.
9. Jeff GordOn 1,400.
10. Terry Labo(1te. 1,357.
11 . Tony Stewart, 1,330.
12. Bill EMiolt, 1.300.
13. Mike Skinner. 1.263.
14. Matt Kenselh, 1,214.
15. Jeremy Ma:r.leld, 1,2~.
t6. Ken Schra er, 1,169.
17. Dale Eamhardt Jr., 1,156.
18 Chad Lmle, 1,149. ·
19. Sterling Marlin, 1. 126.
20. Steve Park, 1,125.
21 . Johnny Benson, 1, 122.
22. John Andretti, 1,1 08.
23. Jimmy Spencer. 1,068.
24. Michael Waltrip, 9M.
25. Joe Nemechek, 99-4. · .
26. Robert Pressley, 982.
27. Bobby Hamlnon, 978.
28. Kevin Lepage, 951.
29. Kenny Irwin; 895.
30. JerfY Nadeau, an.
31 . Kyle Petty, 854.
32. Slacy Compton, n2.
33. Kenny Wallace, 764.
34. Dave Blaney, 745.
35. Ellioa Sadlsr, 713.
38. Robbie GordOn, 650 ..
37. Wally Dallenblch, 638.
38 . Darrell ~allnp, 632.
39. Bran Bodine, 595.
40. ScoH PnieH, 583.

NHL conference finals

CINCINNATI 11 , San Dlago 9
Milwaukee 14, Chicago Cubs 8
Florida 5, Atlanta 4
Philadelphia 6, Montreal 4
N.Y. Mets 3, Pltt5burgh 2

.•
1

10

.545
.455
.424
.378
.371

4
4
4

Thursday's scores

1

3

15
18
19
23
22

Thurldey'e score

fGL

.JU7

Tonight'• games

Chicago Cubs (Wood 1·1) at Montreal
(Thurman 0·0), 7:05p.m.
AUanta (Mulholland 3--3) et Philadelphia
(ScMitling 1·1), 7:05p.m.
Milwaukee (Haynes 4· 2) at Pittsburgh
(Schmld11 ·2), 7:05p.m.
Florida (Oempater 3·2) at N.Y. Meta (Rusch
1·3), 7:10p.m.
CINCINNATI (Neagle 4·0) al Houston (Dotal
1·3), 8:05p.m.
Los Angeles (Dreifort 2·1) at St. Louis (KIIe ·
6·1), 8:10p.m.
San f'ranclsco (Nathan 2-Q) at Colorado
(Arrolo 1·3), 9:05 p.m.
Arizona {Anderson 2-Q) at S&amp;n· Diego
(Ciamen14·1J, 10:05 p.m.

Saturday'• gamee

Aorida (Nunez 0·3) at rlY. Mets (Roberts 0·
0), 1:10 p.m.
CINCINNATI (Fernandez 0·0) el Houston
(Ho~ 1-5), 3:05 p.m.
San Francisco (Estes 2·1) at Colorado
(Aslaclo 4-2), 3:05p .m.
Chicago Cubs (lelber 3·2} at Montreal
(Armas 0.0), 7:05p.m.
· Saturday's games
1\11anta (Maddux 4·1 J at Philadelphia (Ashby
N.Y. Yankees (PeUitte 2·f) at Detroit rNa aver 2·3), 7:05p.m.
Milwaukee {Estrada 1·0) at Pittsburgh
0·4), 1:05 p.m.
Kansas Cl1y (SL!lpan 1-3) 11 CLEVELAND (O'Connor 0.()), 7:05p.m.
Loa Angeles (Gagne 0·2) at St. Louis (Ankle!
(Burba 3·1). 1:05 p.m.
·
Boston (Fassaro 4·1) at BaiUmore (Johnson 3·1), 8:10p.m.
. Arizona (Siottie~yre 6-1} at San Diego
0·2), 1:35 p.m.
Seattle (Tomko 1-2) al Oakland (Appler 3-2), (Boehnngar 0·3), 10.05 p.m.
4:05 p.in.

Saturday's opener
Colorado at Dallas, 7 :30 p.m.

Next week's slate
Sunday, Moy 14
New Jersey at Philadelphia, 3 p.m.
.
Mondly, M1y 15
Colorado al Dallas, 7 p.m.
1\loodoy, May 16
New Jersey at Phlladelphia, 7 p.m.
Thurodoy, Moy 18
Philadelphia at New Jersey, 7:30p.m.
Frtdoy, ~ 19
Callas at Colorado; 8 p.m.
Saturd•y. Mlly 20
PhlladelpMia at New Jersey. 7 p.m.

Winston Cup slate
The NASCAR Winston Cup schedule, win·
nersln Parentheses, and driver point standings:
Feb. 20 - Daytona 500, Daytona Beach,
Fla. (Dale Jarren)
Feb. 27 - Dura LubefKman 400, Rocking·
ham, N.C. (Bobby IJibonle)
March .5 - Carsdlrect:com 400, Las Vegas.
(Jeff Bunon)
March 12- Cracker Barre\500, Hampton,
Ga. (Dale Earnhardt)
•
March 19 - Mell.com 4.00. Da~lnglon, S.C.
(Ward Burton)
March 26 - Food Cl1y 500, Bristol, Tenn.
(AuS1y Wallace)
Aprtl 2 - OirecTV 500, Fon Wonh, Te•u.
(Dele Eamhartl1 Jr.)
April 9 - Goody's 59Q, Martlnsvile, VB.

Fib. 19 - NAPA Auto Pona 300, Daytona
Bloch. Fla. (Maa Konaath)
Fib. 26 - AIITel 200, Rockingham, N.C.
(Merle Mlrtln)
March 4 - Sam's Town 300. Las Vegas
(Joft Burton)
March 11 - Aaron'o 312, Ha"'4&gt;'on. Ga.
(Marie Martin)
·
March 11!- suneom 200. Dartlnglon, S.C.
(Marie Manln)
March 25 - C-·11 250, Bristol, Tenn.
(Stortlno Martin)
·April 1 - Albenaon 's 300, Fon Worth,
Texas. (Mark Martin)
,
.
April 8 - Music City' 320, Nashville, Tenn.
(Ror&lt;ly LaJo-.)
Apr115- Touchstone Energy 300, Tallade·
go, Ala. (Joe Namechek)
Aprtl 29 - Auto Club 300, Fonlana. Calil.
(Mia Kanoolhl
May 5- Hardee's 250. Richmond, va. (JeH
Clroon)
May 13 - Buach 200, Loudon. N.H.
MIY 27 - Carquest Auto Parts 300. Con·
cord; N,C.
! .
June 3 - MBNA Platinum 200, Dover, Del.
June 10 - TeKtllease Med!que 300, South
Boston, va.
·
·
June 17..:... Myrtle Baath 250, Myrtle Beach,
S.C.
June 25- Lys~ 2:00. Watkins Glen, N.Y.
July 2 - Sears Dl~l;1atd 2_50, west Allis,

Wis.

1.

July 16 - Nazar81h 200. Nazareth Pa.
July 22 - NAPA Autocare 250. Fountain,
4
Colo.
July 29 - Carquest Auto Parts 300, Madi·
son,lll.
Aug. 4 - Kroge'r 200, Clennont, Ind. ·
r~ouo. 19 - . napaonllne.com 250, Brooklyn,
Mich.
Aug. 25- Food City'250, Bristol, Tenn .
Sept. 2- Dura Lube 200 , Darlington, S.C.
Sept. 8- Autolite Platinum 250, Richmond,
Va.
Sept. 23- MBNA.com 200. Dover, Del.
Oct. 7 - All Pro Bumper to Bumper 300,
Concord, N.C.
.1
Oct 21 - Rockingham 200, Rockingham.
N.C.
OCt. 29 - Sam's Town 250. Millington,
Tenn.
Nov. 4 - Outback Sttiakhouse 200. Avondale, Ariz.
•·
· Nov. 11 -holwheels.co!jl 300, Homestead,
Fla. "'
,

1

Busch Grand
National standings
NASCAA Busch Gmrd National schadule,

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Art Schlichter, a former Ohio
State and .Indianapolis Colts quarterback, drove a car at a Columbus
motorcycle police officer following a routine traffic stop earlier
this month, police reported.
The officer was not hurt. No
co ntact was made between the
motorcycle and a 1999 Buick that
police said Schlichter was driving
·May 1.
Schlichter, 40, was charged with
fleeing at1d eluding a police officer
and having an expired license
plate validation sticker, according
to a police report obtained by
WTTE-TV
The report said that after he was
: stopped for the plate violation,
· Schlichter got out of the car,
looked at the officer and got back
in to the four-door car.
As the officer approached,
Schlichter fled in the car until he
entered a parking lot, police said.
To leave the lot, Schlichter drove
the Buick a&gt; the officer, according
to the police report.
This caused the officer to swing

the motorcycle to the left to avoid
a crash with the car, the report
said, adding that Schlichter continued driving out of .the lot at a
high rate of speed.
WTTE said the officer then
gave up the pursuit.
Schlichter could not be located
for comme nt Thursday night.
His father, Max, told WTTE he
had not spoken to his son about
the charges. Reached by The
Associated Press late Thursday, the
elder Schlichter said he did not
know where his son was and
declined further comment.
Police said .they had no immediate additional details about the
allegations. Franklin County
Municipal Cottrt ·could . not provide information because ticket
information had not been entered
into the court computer.
Schlichter is supposed to appear
in court June 7,WTTE said.
The alleged run-in is his latest
with authorities.
Last August, he was charged
with four counts of illegal gambling while serving time at the

Reds
from

Page 81 ·

as the Padres surged ahead again
9-6.
Over' Not the game and not
the Padres' misfortune.
Myers came on to try to hold a
9-8 lead in the eighth and gave up
an infield single to Michael Tucker. Pokey Reese bunted to the
third-base side of the mound, and
Myers crumbled when he planted
his left foot on the artificial turf
while fielding it.
Myers tore the tendon bdow
the kneecap and will be out for
the season.
" I've seen it before on turf,"
Bochy said. "This is the worst stuff
in the world. It shciuld be
banned." ,
San Diego . already has sent f1
players, including six pitchers, to
the disabled list. Tony Gwynn, disabled by a sore knee. didn't make
the trip.
Matt Whisenant relieved and
gave up Dmitri Young's tying sacrifice fly. Whise nant then walked
. Bich~tte to open the nimh and
gave up Aaron Boone's fourth
home r, a sli cing driw that hit the
foul scrc,· n - on ly his second
opposite-field homer Ill the

majors.
ken Jr. for 28th on the list.
"It just feels good to help the
It · was the first time that two
team in that situation," Boone brothers homered against eac h
said. "I thought I got a pretty good other in the same game since the
piece of it. I was just hoping the Boones did it last Sept. I. It was
hit would stay fair."
only the eighth time that brothers
His brother, Bret, watched from playing against each other homesecond base as the ball stayed fair ·red in the same game.
just long enough, providing a fitBret Boone's inside-the-park
ting ending ~o the Padres' after- homer was the strangest play of
noon.
the afternoon. With the Reds
"That's the pitch you throw to ahead 6-5, Dave Magadan led off
Aaron right there," Bret Boone the sixth with a walk from Manny
marveled. "His power is out over Ayb:ir and Boone got a hit into
the plate. It was a good pitch, the left-field corner.
down and away, and he hit a home ·· · The ball caromed past Young
run."
and rolled along the wall .:is the
The Reds piled out of the husky outfielder gave chase and
dugout, formed a semicircle Boone circled· the bases, sliding
around home and bounced up and feet-first· into the plate just before
down while pummeling Boone catcher Eddie Taubensee got the
- a scene repeated often during throw.
tl)eir enchanted 96-win season of,
Notes: The Padres had 0-6 road
1999.
trips in 1974 (Pittsburgh and St.
" It's starting to be fun like last Louis) and 1975 (1,-os Angeles and
year," manager Jack McKeon said. S~n Francisco) .... It was the ninth
While the Reds' celebrated, a multihomer game ofBret Boone's
drink dispenser was tossed from career and the 13th inside-thethe Padres' dugout in frustration ,· park homer by a Padre. The last
.leaving ice and a puddle on the one was Gwynn's grand slam in
turf.
los Angeles on June 26, 1997....
Danny Graves (4-0) gave up a Young, who mis~d the last two
double to Bret Boone in the ninth games because of a stomach virus,
doubled 'in his second at-bat
but got the win .
The Reds hit four homers in all . extending his hitting streak t&lt;;&gt; ~
Griffey's solo shot in the fifth was ca reer-high 16 games. It's the
his IOth of the se:~son and the longest str~:ak by a Red since Hal
40Mth of hi' c.m ·er, tying C.tl Rip- Morris hit i11 29 games in 1'1% .

1999 Chevy
Cavalier Sedan

• LowMIIQSI

Basketball

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

\

sl.lS ~ '

Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pl Pleasant • May 14, 1000

Vol. JS, No. 12

Chief: Loud lllusic law change only procedural
BY KEVIN KD.LY

"plainly audible" at 50 feet away from an.
automobile where the noise originates a
GALLIPOLIS - The only change in violation of the law.
Gallipolis' loud music and noise law is in
lnitial ,announ~eQlCnt of the commisprocedure to make its enforcement easi- sion's action was taken by some as
er for ·officers and the public, Police putting on new restrictions and a sign of
Chief Roger Brandeberry said.
a police crackdown, but isn't, BrandeberThe City Commission approved a ry said. "
.
·~ revision in the 11-year-oid'ordinance on
''What hapeened was that I periodicalMay. 2 that switches the violation classi- ly ~k the officers how things could· be
fication from a criminal offense to a mis- made easier," the chief explained. "One
demeanor, Brandeberry said.
of the guys said, 'did you know the noise
,The law still q:msiders excessive noise ordinance is in the criminal section· and
TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF

it· should be a misdemeanor?"'
Under criminal procedure, officers
would be required to take a violator in,
write a complaint and submit the charge
to the city solicitor:s office, Brandeberry
said.
"It was a lot of work for a seemingly
minor violation," Brandeberry said .
Under the revision Brandeberry submitted to Solicitor Douglas Cowles, violators tan now be written tickets, as in
traffic offenses.
"It -vas an administrative change to

VANCOUVER GRIZZLIES: Announced
Michael Helsley officially became the owner,
Named Dick Versace president, Billy Knight
general manager and Chuck Daly consultant.

Football
Natlo111l Football League
HOUSTON: .Named Don Oelsch college
scout
NEW ORLEANS SAINTS: Released CB
Tyronne Drakeford.
NEW YORK JETS: Signed S Jonathan
Eaton.
'
SEATILE SEAHAWKS: Signed LB J.P.
Oarche.

make it easier for the public and the offi- ·
cer," he added.
The ordinance was established in 1989
to curb excessive music or noise emanat- ·
ing from vehicles cruising through town.
Over the years, officers have issued warnings to potencial violators as a means of
educating the public.
"We hope the local population is aware
of how we deal with that," the chief said.
"We give a lot of warnings for that law
because our aim is to warn people first.
"Somehow, the public has the impres-

Ho'ckey
National Hockey Laagut
CAROLINA HURRICANES: AQreed t.o tenms
with F Tommy Westlund on a mu1t1year contract.
MINNESOTA WILD: Signed F Cofy Larose.
NEW YORK !SLANDEl'IS: Traded C Chris
Nielsen to the Columbus Blue Jackets for 2000
fourth· and ninth·round entry draft picks.
·

·Hobson Bridge reopened to traffic Friday

sion we were starting a major crackdown
or violating everyone's right to listen to
their music," Brandeberry said. "Our aim
is not to do anything different."
The commission approved the classification change as an emergency ordinance so it would go into effect immediately.
Brandeberry also took the qpportunity
to remind motorists of left turn regula. tions at two busy intersections.

Please sea Loud,

Pap A1

STAFf

MIDDLEPORT -A long list
of dignitaries, a ribbon cutting
and· even a brass band accompa. nied Friday's opening of the
Hobson Bridge, after months of
construction delays and detoured

mf!ic.
. The project; · funded by the
county and administered by the
Ohio Department ofTransportation, cost nearly $836,000, and
replaced a steel~truss bridge constructed in 1927.

perature
other weather factors,. the project ,was delayed,
according to Phil Roberts of
ODOT, who served as J1roject
engineer.
The contractor was Dial Construciion Co.
Middleport ' Ma}'or S;mdy
I'lfUiarelli introduced a number of
s!1eakers during Friday's ceremony, including . Roberts, Meigs
County Commissioner Janet
Howard; , County Engineer
R.obert Eason, Ron Eiffert of
Konda Nemeth; the consulting
firm which designed the span,
George Collins, deputy director
'of ODOT District 10 in Marietta, and State Rep. John Carey, RWellston.
Former Mayor Dewey''Mack"
Horton and Eason cut the ribbon
to open the bridge. Horton and
his wife, Pauline, took a ceremonial trip across the new bridge as
the first motorists to use it. ·
The Eastern High School band
provided entertainment at the
. event, "fYallhoe: A Medieval Legend" and "All Glory Told."
The Rev. Bob Robinson
offered the invocation.
· Eason, in his remarks, detailed.

1999 Chevy
Lumina Sedan

• V-6 Power
• Power Windows &amp; Locks
• Tilt &amp; Crulae

Foodland fire

Bv BRIAN J. RIID
TIMES-SENTINEL

DET~LS PROJECT - Meigs County Engineer Robert Eason discussed the history of the Hobson Bridge
and its replacement during rlbbo~Kutting ceremonies on Friday. (Brian J. Reed photo)
·

the history of the bridge, and
described hoW responsibility for
maintaining the bridge ~.arne
under the codhty's control the
·
early 1970s.
As increasi~ maintenance
problems beca:me a fiJ!.ancial
hardship, E3so'n said, his office
began conside~ing the span's
replacj:ment. '1.
Funding forJhe project came
in the form of a grant through
the 'Fedet:al Briil,ge R~placement

Program,. through cooperation of
the Ohio County Engineers
Association.
The county received 80 percent of the project cost from the
federal program, Eason said, and
20 percent tluough credit from
the Federal .•Bridge ·Credit ·Pro,gram, w~c!t the C01jnty received
for, ptaintenance work on other
county bridges.
"It should ' be noted that no
Meigs County General Fund dol-

Iars were used on this project;'
Eason said. "All money spent on.
tliis project, whether directly or
indirectly through credits, were
fiom either federal programs, state
gas taxes, or state license fees."
. Eason said that, despite the
delays in the project, it was completed in about half the · usual
time.
"The project has gone from

PleaH SHII'Idp, Pap Al

Gallipolis City Fire Investigator Bob Oonnally and volunteet' fire"
fighter John Carroll Inspect the area around an electrical box at the,
Spring Valley Foodland, 520 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, early Satunlll)'
morning. A fire Is believed to have started inside the mlln·. elactJi.
cal entrance box l)t the northwest side of the building, where 1110&amp;sible short circuit ignited electrical wiring, insulation and the surrounding plastic. The fire, which caused minor damage, was extinguished by dry chemical. Nineteen firefighters were on the scene
for approximately one hour. (Photo by Millissia Russell)
·

..

n

Graduating senicjn displ~ a~:.
Angela Barry, Gallipolis,
graduating art major'from
the University of Rio
Grande, discusses her art·
; work with f~llow student
·Shannon Ocheltree during
the Senior Art Exhibit held
recently at the Esther Allen
Greer Museum. The
seniors showcased paint·
lngs, drawings, photographs and pottery at
., the !!how, \Yhlch will be
open until May 17. The
• • gallery Is open Monday
. . through Friday 1·$ p.m.
'; and Is free to the public. ·
(Photo by Mllllssla R~ssell)

1999 Chevy Blazer
. LS 4 Door 4x4

2000 Buick
Century Custom

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Students participate In the
Super Games at Springfield Middle School Friday. (AP photo)

lalend•n

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Baseball

Americln League
CLEVELAND INDIANS: Sent C Bobby
Hughes outright lo Buffalo of the International
League.
.
OAKLAND ATHLETICS : Called up LHP Rich
Sauvaur from Sacramento ol the PCL. Optioned
RHP Ariel Prieto to sacramento.
SEATILE MARINERS: Recalled RHP Kevin
Hodges from Tacoma: ot the PCL Optioned iNF·
OF Charles Gipson to Tacoma.
·
N•tlonalleagut
CHICAGO CUBS: Placed 1B Mario; Gracel on
the 15-day disabled list. Purchased the contract
of RHP Todd Van P(!ppel from-Iowa of the PCL .
Recalled 16 Julio Zuieta from Iowa. Designated
LHP Andrew Lorraine tor assignment.
CINCINNATI REDS; Announced OF Oeion
Sanders na,s been granted permission to leave
Louisville of the International League.
FLORIDA MARLINS: Recalled RHP Joe
Strong end RHP Jason Grilli from Calgary ol the
PCL .6.cquired LHP Ron Mahay lrom the Oak·
land .6.thletlcs for cash . Placed AHP Ricky
Bones on the 15·day disabled list, retroactive to
May 6. and OF Mark Smith on the 15-day dis·
abled list Transferred LHP Michael Tejera trom
the 15· to the 60-day disabled list.
PHILADELPHIA PHILI,JES: Placed 1B Rico
Brogna on the 15-day disabled list . Purchased
.the contract oi1B Chris Pritchett hom Scranton·
Wllkeg-earre of the International League.
PITISBUAGH PIRATES: Placed LHP Fran·
cisco Cordova· on tM 15-day disabled list.
Called up LHP Brian O'Connor from Altoona of
the Eastem League.
·
SAN DIEGO PADRES: Placed RHP Rodn ey
Myers on the 15-da'y disabled list.

,o5o· qo,o5o· qa,G5D*

• Automatic
• Air Conditioning
• Tilt &amp; Cru'"

200th win

tmes •

News Hotline

Correctional Industrial Facility in
Pendleton, Ind., on a gambling
conviction.
Schlichter was charged after
officials discovered that he placed
numerous telephone calls to Las
Vegas in November 1998, allegedly to place bets on football and
hockey games.
That case has not been resolved.
Schlichter was selected by the
then-Baltimore Colts as the fourth
player taken in the 1982 draft. The
NFL suspended Schlichter for the
1983 season when it was learned
that bookies had threatened him
over $150,000 in gambling debts.
Schlichter returned to the Colts
in 1984 and was released following the 1985 season.
"You never can run. from ' you r
past, though, you sure would like
to," he said durii1g a visit to Ohio
State last month .
"I would love to have an eraser
and be able to cut out a lot of the
things that have happened to me
in the past 20 years. But you can't
change it.You've JUSt got to live on
and hop e for the best."

Winebrenner gets

• ••

,

Schlichter faces legal trouble again

Tomado basebaD:

New business:
ACrafty Blind
Sp9t opens

See C1

Driver etandlnge
1. Jeff Green 1,623. ·
2. Todd Bodine, 1,550 . •
3. Matt Kenseth, 1,540.
4. Aancly LaJoie, 1,428.
5. Ron Hornaday, 1,353.
6. Jason Keller, t ,266.
7. Kevin HaNick, 1,257.
8. David Green, 1,254. •
9. Kevin Grubb, 1,214.
10. Elton Sawyer, 1,173.
11 . 1'hll Parsons, 1,141 .
12. Hank Parleer, Jr.. 1,120.
13. Tony RaineS, 1,093. '1
R CasoyAiwood, 1,08ll.
15. Marie Martin, 1,075.
16. Dick Trickle, 1,040.
17. Jay Sauter, 1,031 .
18. Jeff Purvis, 1~030 .
19. Buckshot Jones, 984. ·
20. Mike Dillon, 981.
21 . Marie Green. 972.
22. Lyndon Amick, 966.
23. Jlmmla Johnson, 956.
24. Adam Plfty. 928.
25. Bobb~ Hamitl:on Jr., 917.
26. Mike MCLaughlin, 900.

SPORTS

Getting aleg
up on l~e

.•

ings:

July 23 - Pennsylvania 500, 1.or&gt;,1 Pond.
Aug. 5 - Brickyard 400, lndlanapOiio.
Aug. 13 - GlObal Crosalng 11 Tho Glen,
Watkirll Glen, N.Y.
Aug. 20 - Pepsi 400, 11-lyn, Mk:lt
Aug. 28- gorec:lng.com 500, Bnatol, Tenn.
Sept. 3 - SooUlem 500, Dartlngton, S.C.
Sept 9- Chevrolet Monte caoo 400, Rich·

NBA conference
semifinal slate

Eaatern Olvlalon

Jam

wlnnarsin paron1hesas, ar&lt;l driver polrt &amp;laful·

mo. Cal~ .
July 1 - PIJI)II400, Dal'lona Blech, Fla.
July 9 - New England 300, Loudon, N.H.

MONEY

Guiding ...nd:

TODAY'S SCO -R EBOARD
(Marie Martin)
April 16 - DleHalll 500, Talladega, Ala.
(Jeff Gordon)
April 30 - NAPA Auto Pano 500, Fontana,
Cat~. (Jeremy Mayfield) ·
Mey 6 - Ponttac ExcHemen1 400, Rlchmord, Va. (Dale Elmhartl1 Jr.)
Mey 28- Coca-cola 600, Concord, N.C.
Juno 4 - MBNA Platinum 400, Dover, Dol.
Julio 11 - Kman 400. llrooldyn, Mich.
Juno18- Pocono 500, Long Pond, Po.
June 25 - Save MertiKtagen 3SOk, Sono·

TEMPO

I

\

•

••

•

Governor, Education Department
.setting groundwork for Ohio schools
COLUMBUS (AP) - Gov. Bob
~~ spoke in broad outlines Friday
__,r~ut how to satisfy the Ohio
Supreme Court's latest ruling that the
state's school funding system remains
unconstitutional.
, However, he was more spe,cific on
the issue of raising taxes, saying the
state should find ~ts solution to the
court ruling ' within existing
resources."
Also on Friday, state schools Super~
intendent Susan Tave Zelman
· ackn~?wledged for the first time that
she agreed with the court's view that
the system is unconstitutional because
it cannot provide an adequate education for every child.
'Taft - who delayed specific comment on the ruling until a news conference Friday - said he was glad the
court had given the state 13 months to
prepare a response to its latest ruling .
That should give lawmakers the time
they need to examine the issues the
c?urt bro1.1ght up in the majority rul-

ing.

d

.

The court ruled in 1997 tHat the
funding system failed to provide a
"thorough and· efficient" education for
each child, as required by the ·Ohiq:Constitution. The state passed several:·
· new laws and appropriated billions of
dollars for school construction to mee~
that court mandate.
In Thursday's ruling. the court ·
found that the funding formula still
.relies too _heavily on local propeny.taxes, leading to funding inequitieS.
among school ciistricts. The court also
found .problems with the state's educa._.
tion loan system, funding for new pro-:
grams mandated by the Legislature •
and providing a solid and reliable rev~
enue base fur each district.
' "As the court noted, resolving
school funding is incredibly complex.'
a challenge the majority described as a
task of unparalleled magnitude," Taft
satd.
Taft said he wants a broad-based

PltiM ... Schtlols..... A2

•

•
•

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