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                  <text>. Page A10 • The Dally Seriline.l

www.mydailysentinel.com

Monday, April 21, 2003

All work and no play make
this husband suddenly single

ACROSS
1 Pouch
4 Hurry
B Buzz
11 D11y of
the wk.
13 Verve
14 Single,
in Parts
15 Blissful
opot
16 Morse
signals
17 Like Capp's
· Abner
18 Sensibly
20 Health food
21 Yes vote
22 "What's
that?"
24 Tremble
27 Usual
30 Pipe fittings
31 Fishline
winder
32 Tease
34 Chromo·
some
material
35 'Turnpike
36 -salad
37 Moor
39 Filleted
40 Nam~,
to Pierre
41 Body part
42 Swiss

DEAR ABBY: I didn't
you never see her and do not abuse. How you have tolerat'know I had a problem until .
respond to her e-mail s. it ed it for 50 years is beyond
the day my wifefloverlbest
shouldn't be difficult to tell mecAsk him why he married
friend walked out on me two
your f()rmer classmate that you. His reply may provide
weeks before our 13th
· you are very busy and do not you with some insight. Then
anniversary.
ha ve the time she has to ask yourself -· is thi s how you
All our married life I
devote to a friendship. Say it want to spend your remaining
worked a seven'day-a-week
kindly, and wi sh her all the years? Your signature says it
factory job on second shift,
best in the future .
• all. I couldn't live in an
and in the morninlls managed
DEAR ABBY: What do atmosphere like that.
ADVICE
my own retail busmess.
Dear Abbv is written bv
you think of my husband's
I thought everything at
behavior? We 've been mar· Abigail Van Btu·en, also
home was great. Our house require work and nurturing.
ried almost 50 years. and if I known as Jeanne Phillips, and
and cars were paid for. We . DEAR ABBY: 1 am a didn't speak all day long we was founded by her mother,
even owned a boat. It turns female college student. 1 am would h ve in a silent world. Pauline Phillips. Write Dear
out that all my wife wanted having a problem with a for- My husband says nothing. not Abby at www.DearAbby.com
was for me to hold her, love mer classmate from last even "good morning." He will or P.O. Box 69440. Los
her and "be there" for her. semester. I'll call her Theresa. stalk right by me on his way · An!feles, CA 90069.
Now she lives 6'00 miles W~ started a friendship, but out the door and never say a
away.
the conversation was always word.
I learned my lesson the hard awkward, and we had few
This is nothing new. It has
way. I closed my business, but common interests. so 11 was a been like this nearly all of our
it's too late. Abby, please chore to spend time with her. married life. We ~re both col·
warn your readers about the Not · a good formula for · lege-educated, wtth responst·
danger of becoming a worka- friendship.
ble pr~fessions, and were
holic. Material things are not
Theresa calls my apartment ratsed m well-educated, proworth the price of losing the and my cell phone. and she e- fe ssional families. No on.e
one person who shares your mails me on a weekly basis. I else I know gets treated thts
life. I hope my story will save screen all of my calls and way.
.
.
.
someone else's marriage. - never respond to her e·mails,
l have .tned tal~mg to htm
HIT WITH REALITY IN but she hasn't taken the hint. about thts, but tt does no
MICHIGAN
How does one "nicely" end good. Thar:ks for any insight .
DEAR HIT: So do I. In a friendship without burning you can gtve me. - SUF·
No matter what
order for couples to grow bridges? Our paths may cross FERING IN SILENCE IN
direction you turn
together, they must communi- again one day in the corporate MASSACHUSETTS
cate, spend time with each world. None of my family or
DEAR SUFFERING I!'i
other and share mutual inter- friends have an answer. - SILENCE: Your husband s you can always find
ests. Good marriages don· t BESIEGED IN MASSA- behavior could be a sign of
It In the
just happen . Like anything CHUSETTS
long-standing depression or it
else worth having, they
DEAR BESIEGED: Since could be passive-aggressive

Dear

Abby

45
49
50
53
54
55
56
57
58
59

capital
Opposite
of veto
Luau guitar
Game traps
Nobel Prize
city
Longing
Dog·food
brand
Honey
drink
Mach 1
exceeder
Actress
Laura Pollution
control org.

'

Coming Sunday: Yearbook Community•Keligion

substance
20 Physicist
· Georg DOWN
22 Removed
weeds
1 Fuss
2 Autobahn 23 Internet
addr.
vehicle
24 Math proof
3 So·SO
abbr.
grades
4 Tint again 25 Arm bone .
26 Ladd of
5 ABaba
films
6 Household
27 Not far away
pet
7 Annapolis 28 Make-for it
grad
6 Luau dance 29 Stripe
9 Apartment 31 Leeway
10 Brooks and 33 Spoiled
35 Greek P
Gibson
36 Powwow
12 Skulks
drum ·
19 Caustic

(hyph.) ·
38 News .
network
39 Two-piece
part
41 Fiery crime
42 Pays tor
43 Just
scrapes by
44 · Cleft
46 '"Gotchal"
(2 wds.) '
47 tizzy
48 "Star Wars"
mentor
50 Traipse
51 -de ·
France
52 PBS relative

r.:-~r.r--.,..;--

Astrograph

I
Tuesday. April 22. 2003

fort s to succeed .

BY BERNICE BEDE OsoL

The best laid plan s won't
stop you from suddonl y veer-

in g off in a new direction

when somelhing very opportune and unexpected happens
in the year ahead. Interesting
~e v elopment s arc in the offmg.

TAUIWS (April 20-May
20) - l'oday's development
where your soc ial life is concerned could be construed as
a new beginning of all important course that will reveal it -

self as lime unfolds. Much
fun is in the offing.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
-:With the end in si ght regarding an objective you 'v e
been quite anxious to attain.
it ' ll prove. as of today, that
your diligence and patience
have pa id off. Yqu'll be glad
you hung in there.
CANCER (fune 21-July
22 ) - This is a parlkularly
good day to initiate or launch

Dec. 21) - Due to an unexpected shift in circumstances
that takes place today yott
may very wtsely now reverse

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Events that lake place today

could .be responsible for rai s-

ing your sights where your

your position on sornelhing

career goals arc concerned.

about which you had been un-

They'll make you realize that
you have more gotng for you
than vou thought.
.
VlkGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
- Teaming up with the right
type of partner today could

relenting.

CAPRICORN
Jan . 19) - TrJ
yourself locke
ideas or plans

(Dec 22not to get
in on any
today that

would tie you down too far in

infuse new life -in a situation

advance . Somelhing unex·
pectcd that you 'II want to be
part of is likely to pop up today.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb.
19)- Operate in the realm of
finances or material acquisi tion today -this could be an

that up until now you have
been attempting on your own.
Thi s union wil l contain
strength.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)
- Be on the lookout today
for a new development rntttated by another that could
help supplement your earnings . It may require extra
work. but it's nothmg that you
can't handle.
SCORPIO ·(Oct. 24-Nov .
22) - There's a strong possibility--that- rcrdayyou ·could

WORD SCRIMMAGE-e SOLUTION BY JUDO HAMBRICK
2QOl

~H

will turn out to be a dynamic

new relationship. Your per-

edge and expertise you've ac-

sonalities will make a win-

quired will prove to be ex-

ning combinalion.

tremely valuable in your ef-

AVERAGE GAME 250-260

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to

2nd DOWN

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F. .t..,. S'f"CIIIilll, ~

meet someone, forming what .

a new emcrprisc. The knowl-

ll'&lt;Ceptionally rewarding day
for you once involved. In fact,
you could be downright
lucky.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) - The course of action
you've been following for
some time may suddenly take
a new. tum today. putti~g you
on ·a far mOI'e exciting path
than the one you had been following.
ARIES (March 2l·April
19) - An individual who is
prcsenlly under some obliga·
tion to you may surprisingly
wipe the slate d ean today .
It'll come ·about without any
provocation from you and
will be very welcomed.

DO WN

=

by JUDD HAMBRICK

...

Business students turned writers DuPont o~ering
Rio course
blood tests in C8
inspires poetry,
short fiction
communities

Bv BRIAN J.
Staff writer

REED

FOURPLAYTOTAL
TIME LIMIT: 20 MIN
DIRECTIONS: Make a 2· to 7·1etter word from the leMers on e&amp;ct'l yardl1ne .

Pomeroy

• Time. Out for Tip~ .
with Becky Baer. Se'e
Page 3
• DAR hears about ·
Saddam Hussein. See
Page 3

A1&lt;1 po.n1~ 10 eact1 wor!l or te ner ustnQ scoring dl r&amp;cllon~ a! nght Seven·tlitt&amp;r
get a 60.~nt bonus .A.tl words can be !ound 1r1 Web! ter'R New Wcr1d
Gclege DtcliOflal)' .
JUDO'S SOLUTlON TOMORROW

wo rds

..an HE DIDN'T
· 't-\AVt To ~E.T

SNII'l'Y ABoUT

Bv CHARLENE
News editor

Foilrchlld, 3ld .,_..

Pomeroy Elementary

Index
1 Sectlun - 10 Paps
Rt &amp;~T

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
weather

ACIW?S Tf&lt;E CENTER

OF THE PLATE .. .
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2
6-9
10
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4
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6-7

2

POMEROY - Within a
w~k, the $675,000 Memorial
Field House located at the end
of the Meigs High School parking lot will be competed and
athletes will begin moving in.
Superintendent
Bill
Buckley said Monday "the
workers are putting finishing
touches on the building this
week ... some lighting and
trim, and carpeting in one
locker room for the varsity
players."
The 9,000 square foot
structure has two 'locker
rooms, a weight rooin, a multipurpose room, offices, rest
rooms and a storage room.
The superintendent said it
has been especially designed
for outdoor sports, although
wrestling practice will take
place there in the winter.
One advantage, he said, is
that it will eliminate lots of
din being carried into the
high school, which· was completely renovated last year. It
. will be used by both high and
middle school students.
The dedication of the facili·
ty will not take place until the

two memorial stones
made
of
black granite are set,
probably in
July, said ·
Buckley.
0 n e
stone will
Buckley
feature an
etchtng
depicting the life and times of students and staff who died
while attending school or
who were employed in the
Meigs Local S'chool District,
while the oUter will list their
names in random order.
As of Monday, the office
had a list of about 30 names
to go on the monument.
Buckley said he thinks
there could be more and he is
asking that anyone who
knows o( someone who might
qualify contact his office at
992-2153 before Friday.
Currently, his staff is verifying the names on the list.
Buckley said that the names
.will be listed in a random way
so that if a name should be
left off or as more need to be
added they won't appear to be
out of place.

Bv J. MILES lAYTON
Staff writer

SYRACUSE - A newlycharted flood plain has
Syracuse village· property
owners concerned about
increased costs associated
with purchasing flood
msurance.
Homeowner's insurance
does not cover flood damage. The average National
Flood Insurance Policy
(NFI P) costs about $382 per
year. Insurable structures
located in flood hazard
areas. secured by a federally backed loan, are required
to purchase flood insurance.
Bob Lemley's home is in
the floodplain. Like many
other residents, he claims
his home is at least one foot
above the new 580-foot elevation standard set by the
Federal
Emergency
Management
Agency
(FEMA).
Even though he doesn't
think paying for it is right,
Lemley knows he has to pay
for flood insurance .
"T:here's nothing you can
do about it." he said.
Lemley has the option of
appealing the FEMA desig-

The village of Syracuse has a sign posted outside each
entrance warning ,of real or imagined threat of flooding. (J.
Mites Layton) .
i1ation by paying for a professional survey of his
property and submitting a
letter among other forms to
the amend the floodplain
map.
"It would
iake
a
Philadelphia lawyer to figure all thi·s out," he said. "It
isn't worth messing with."
Before the 2002 update to
Syracuse's Flood plain map.
the village was using flood

maps dated July 5, 1983.
The United States Army .
Corps of Engineers Huntington
District
(USACOE) conducted a
study of the Ohio .River
Floodway · in 1998. Meigs
County was one of I 0 counties that were studied at that
time.
This study replotted the

Ple•se see Flood, P•ce 5

Uvlng With Grief:
Coping with Public Ti agecly

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l DCI•IIIN;J :&gt;., 11:.1\i~IC , '
1\ND \ WON t T&gt;\~:.[ ')()'
FOR 1\t.l 1\i't:&gt;WOZ 1

VC:R.'\ 1-J(.LL. NYC:11

...

...,

Wednesday, April 30, 2003 • 1 PM-4:30PM
Holzer Medical Center Education &amp; Conference Center

DO YOU NU:D II .

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:a:::

Moclerator: Colcie Roberls • ABC News

·

Featuring.a panel of experts on the subject.
CEUs ore available
For more information Ol'lo
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·

TUPPERS PLAINS
Customers in the Tuppers
Plains-Chester Water District
and the villages of Pomeroy
and Syracuse, as well as other
areas exposed to a chemical
known as C8, will no~ qualify for free blood testing from tons of salt," Poole said.
In fact , Poole said last May
E.l. DuPont de Nemours &amp;
c
the chemical may have been
~ccording
to
the in five of TP-C's six production wells since the system
Associated Press, Wood was established in the midCounty Circuit Court Judge 960
George Hill ordered the 1 s.
· 1 · tt
1· t t
Lubeck, W.Va., residents,
pay or es - who first discovered C8 in the
c hemtca gtan
ing for those residents look- water supply there, filed the
i.ng to determine their ex.po- class action suit in which, Hill
sure to 'ammonium perfluo- made his order Friday.
roocanoate, or C8.
DuPont, meanwhile, has
C8 is a detergent-like maintained that CS has been
chemical agent used by used at the Washington Works
DuPont in the manufacture of since the 1950s, and that it is
Teflon and other resins and not hazardous to humans.
fini shes at its Washington
"DuPont has conducted
Works
Plant
near voluntary blood anulysis for .
C8 for employees for more
Parkersburg, W.Va.
Hill temporarily suspended than 20 years and has detecthis ruling to allow time for ed C8 in the blood of employappeal to the West Virginia ees," a DuPont fact sheet
about C8, issued in 2001,
Appeals Court.
A year ago, the TP-C Water said.
District, and the villages of
"In 50 years of C8 use at
Pomeroy and Syracuse dis- Washington Works, there
covered traces of C8 in their have been no observed
public water supplies.
human health affects associat. System managers like ed with C8 ," DuPont mainDonald Poole at TP-C and · tains.
John Anderson in Pomeroy
Last March, the chemical
said, at the time, that the con· company agreed with the
t&amp;mination is so slight as to be . U.S.
Environmental
insignificant in terms of pub- Protection Agency to supply
lie health.
alternative drinking water
"In order to ex.plain the pro- supplies to residents in comportion, you might say it's the munities with C8 contaminasame as a pinch of salt to 10 tion. ·.

•

olj

z

.

C 2003 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

&lt;

HOEFLICH

···-· .

Andy

CB is a detergent-like
chemical agent used
by DuPont in the
manufacture of Teflon
at its Washington
Works Plant near
Parkersburg, W.Va.

Syracuse

Sunny, HI: 601, Low: 401

, .... .

REED

Meigs fieldhouse New floodplain has local
nears.completion residents in deep water

IT~

tF YOU THI{OW A FASTBALL

.Bv BRIAN J.
Staff writer

MIDDLEPORT - What
could 12 business majors
possibly know about writing
poetry and short stories?
More than one might think,
accot;ding to Gina Pines,
director of the University of
Rio Grande/Rio Grande
Community College Meigs
Center.
Pines has taken mi the task
of fostering a creative spirit
in a dozen business students
at the Middleport branch
campus.
At the request of students,
Pines created the elective
class the day before the university's spring semester
began, and while . a similar
class is offered at the Rio
Grunde main campus, Pines '
course emphasizes creativity
in all forms, not just the written word.
Of the 12 students participating in the course, six. do so
ex.clusiveJy online, while the
other half of the class attend a
three-hour weekly class.
But Pines is quick to point
out that the class itself is not
classroom-centered. ·
Instead, the students have
taken
hikes
around
Middleport and enjoyed the
recent warm spring weather
in Dave Diles Park to inspire
their individual muses, and
Pines said the outings,
designed to sharpen all the
senses, are working.
"Some of the students were
writers ~fore they enrolled
in the class, but others were Mary Beals, Julie Carter ~Peart Scott and Becky Collingsworth join creative writing instructor
Gina Pines at Dave Diles Park, where singing birds, blooming flowers and the Ohio River form
Pl•se ... Rio, Pap 5
a perfect creative backdrop for their creative writing class. (Brian J. Reed)

Inside

AVERAGE GAME 195·205

mag\) ·

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

I

•
',

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org

�'

•

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel
Wednesday, April 23
I,

Thesday, April 22, 2003

•• l

"

PIKETON (AP) -A judge has ruled against an attempt to
Wednesday, April 23
remove three' members of the Eastern Local school board.
TUPPERS
PLAINS Visiting Judge Thomas Hodson decided Monday in favor of
Eastern
Local
Board of
the district and against petitioners who charged in November
Educption,
regular
meeting,
that board members Stephanie Knipp, Keith Smith and Loura
I. .X•u_n~·-'~~ .[~3,'!54'_.1
6:30 · p.m., Elementary
Roberts neglected their duties.
Thursday, April 24
library conference room.
The petitioners had tiled a lawsui t in Pike County Common
ATHENS Survivors
Pleas Court stating their objections to the board's vote to
Suicide
Support
Group, 7
Thursday, April 24
expand Superintendent Treva Harmon's authority.
p.m
.
at
the
Athens
Church
of
CHESHIRE- The GalliaThey also have said that Harmon and board members treat 785
West
Union
Christ,
Meigs Community Action
ed the public with contempt during a 3 1/2-month teachers
Agency will hold the April Street , Athens . For more
..
strike which ended Jan. I0.
Board of Directors meeting information call the church,
"I think · both ,sides felt very strongly about their case,"
at 4:~0 p.m ., at the Cheshire 593-74 14.
POMEROY- Caring and
Hodson said. "I had to make a decision based on what I felt
office.
Sharing
Group will meet at
was right under the law."
·
SYRACUSE - Wildwood
Garden Club will meet at 1 1:30 p.m. at the Senior
School district attorney Jim Stucko, o( Columbus. said the
p.m. at the Syracuse Fire Citizens Center. Diana
·
board members weren't surprised by the ruling.
W. VA.
Station for its business Coates will talk on home"We really expected it to come out this way," he said.
meeting . Members should land security.
"They've had a lot of these confrontations to overcome ....
bring ·gardening tools to .
Hopefully there will continue to be fewer tind fewer of these
work at the park following
obstacles to deal with."
the
business meeting .
Some people who had supported removing the board memSaturday, April 26
bers said strains the 900-student district endured during the
Sunny Pt Clou&lt;Jv Cb.Jdy
Sllowera T-storms
Rain
. flurries
Snow
MIDDLEPORT
Ev~nts
strike continue.
'"
Pancake breakfast to benefit
"It can' t get much worse," said Jack Thompson, head of the
Cancer
the
Ameri can
Tuesday, April 22
~.-lnesday Taxpayers and Concerned Citizens Committee. ·'It's comSociety
will
be
served
from 7
. RACINE - Racine Area
CU
pletely tom our school system up ....
to
10
a.m.
at
the
Middeport
Community Organization
"I can guarantee that as long as one of them's on that board.
(RACO) meeting will be Church of Christ Family Life
; : BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
to warm into the 50s.
we're going to be after them." '
held at 6:30 p.m: Star Mill Center.
~ Skies will continue to be
Look for more sunshine on
The district's only school serves students in kindergarten
• Park building .' Potluck to be
cloudy across much of the Thursday, with afternoon tern- through 12th grade and is located in the village of Beaver,
Monday, April 28
served. New. members wela,ea through the afternoon peratures in the 60s.
about 65 miles south of Columbus.
RUTLAND
- Skin testing
come.
hours and there.is a chance of
WEATHER FORECAST
"
by the Tuberculosis Clinic
s~attered light rain shl)wers.
Tonig~t. .. Partly
cloudy.
Many teachers learned of the ruling during their lunch
will take place from 4:30 to
There could be a few breaks Lows m the mid 30s break, said Cheryl Selbee, a guidance counselor..
. Wednesday, April 23
in the clouds across the west Northwest winds 10 10 IS , "I guess we're kind of numb," she said. "We felt that we had
CH~STER Pomeroy 6 :30 p.m . at the Rutland
late in the day as high pres- mph.
a pretty strong case" against the three board members.
. Ch;ipter 186, Order of the Fire Department. Personnel
Eastern Star, will have will return on April 30 to read
sure begins to build in. Highs
Wednesday... Mostly sunny.
She said the teachers will be working this fall to replace two
the tests.
will be on the cool side with Highs in the lower 60s. board members who are running for re-election.
afternoon temperatures in the Northwest winds around I 0
mid 50s south.
mph.
Skies will clear from west
Wednesday night...Clear
to east tonight. This will allow with scattered frost possible.
temperatures to fall into the Lows in the upper 30s.
upper 20s and 30s. After a
ExTENDED FORECAST
COLUMBUS (;).P) - The money from '04 to balance freeze. Harris said that does- posed &lt;1lmost $3 billion · in
frosty start Wednesday, sunny
Thursday ... Moslly sunny.
proposed
state budget may '05." Taft said. ''That's not n't address soaring Medicaid cuts froiil Taft's $.:19.2 hillion
skies will allow temperatures. Highs in the mid 60s.
plan. As protests over cuts
not be balanced and may need sound budgeting, that's not costs.
•
"I'm very sensitive to those grew. lawmakers chose to
additional , cuts, the Senate responsible budgeting."
Finance
Chairman
said
as
the
optional
setvices, but I also rai se the sales tax and restore
also
said
he's
worHarris
A DAY ON WALL STREET
Senate prepared to start work ried abo~l Medicaid spending know a lot of people who are most'of the cuts.
10,000
on the $48.5 billion plan .
April 21, 2003
H&lt;1rris said he's not conin the House plan. Taft working and paying taxes and
Sen. Bill Harris said the stripped the budge t of option- their insurance plan does not vinced everything the Hou se
Dow
r - - - 9,000
House proposal to use earn- al Medicaid services such as have some of those provi- put back in .the budget was
Jones
ings from electronic slot dental and vision care and sions," he said.
paid for.
machines in 2005 might not tried to freeze reimburseSenate lawmakers may also
"Any time you want to reingive Ohio enough money to ments to nursing homes .
•
haveto look at more cuts, said stitute something. you've got
balance the budget.
The House added those ser- Hams.
to get the money from some•,Pd. change
Record high: 11,722.98
The
House
originally
prowhere," he s aid. ~
• from pnMoua: ..().1 0
The question is whether vices back and removed the
Jan. 14, 2000 ·
"that generates near enough
April 21 ,'2003
1,600
money to fund the second
year
of the budget," Harris, an
Nasdaq
Ashland Republican , said
: •composite
Monday.
.
.
1 -- - 1,200
The Senate begins budget
-----------1,000
'.
hearings Tuesday and hopes
1,424.37
JAN
FEB
MAR
APR
to pass its plan by the end of
...,
~
Roconl high: 5,048.62
Pet ctiango
COMMUNITY
1,432.08 1,4,3.71
March10,2000
May.
AUTOMOTIVE
--~' .(1.08
The House budget would
Norris Northup Dodge ·
City of Point Pleasant
April 21, 2003
raise $1.2 billion· in the fiscal
year starting July I with a
www.norrisnorthupdodge.com
www.pointpleasantwv.org
Standard&amp;
penny
sales
tax
increase.
Poor's 500
It proposes asking voterS to
BOO
- Turnpike Ford of Gallipolis
Mason County Chamber of Commerce
substitute that tempor:ary
www.turnpikeflm.com
700
www.masoncountychamber.org
increase with slot machines at
892.01
APR
Ohio
horse
racetracks
:
in
Pet. chonge
Aoc:anl high: 1.527.&lt;18
.(1.18
March 2•. 2000
2005. Estimated revenue of
Meigs County Chamber o'f Commerce
-~
BUSINESS TRAINING
slots runs from $400 ·million
www.meigscountyohio.com
to $900 million a year.
Gallipolis Career College .·
Gov.
Bob
Taft.
a
NEWSPAPERS
Republican, , shares Harris'
www.gallipoliscareercollege,com
concern about the budget.
·Gallipolis Daily Tribune
House lawmakers are
MEDICAL
"using a lot of one-time
www.mydailytribune.com
lf?1' - 25.06
OuPonl- .C0.47
f'llpalco - 41.84

RACINE - A hi story
of Saddam Hussein and
the transfer of
power
from the Baath Party to
h11n and hi s family over
th e yea rs was given hy
Rae Moore at a rece nt
meeting
of
Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter,
Daughter s
of .
the
American Revolution .
Moore told how Saddam
rose to leadership ip the
party, founded in 1947 in
Syria, how he gained control of the Iraqi government, how he weakened
the party and stren gthened
the family over the years,
how he gained control of
in stitutions in the cou ntry,
and how he handl ed th e
dispute with the Kurds in
NortHern haq. .
She
also discussed
America's invasion and
the positive results and the
sy_mbolism of the toppling
ot the s t ~tu e of Saddam in
Baghdad. Taking a look at
the future of Iraq . Moore
sai d that two things are
certain - · the American
led and American dominated militarv forces have
the re spon-sibility for
sec urity in Iraq for an
indefinite . tim e, mon.th s,
perhaps years. as ·well as
th e deliver of food , medi cine, and other human itarian assistance to the peapie of Iraq."
She said that what
remains in doubt is the

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Dolly atoC:ic reports ara
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of the previous day's
lraneadlons, prolllded by
smth Pao1nors a1 Advest
Ire:. ol Gallipolis.

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Our li ves - seemeu to he
fiiJed with meetings for work ,
church, civic anu social
groups. During these events,
whether the meeting is only
for an hour or there is a weeklong conference, participants
arc usually offered dough nuts, cookies. past ries and
sandwiche s.
high-fat
Norma ll y lillie thought is
given to nutriti on or how ·
physical activity can be incorporated into these programs to
keep membt:rs energized and
enthusiastic.
Proper nutrition and physical activity encourages effective meetings. When planning your conference. work
with caterers who wi ll provide meals that arc on the
light side. Ask for foods to he
prepared with reduced-fat or
no-fat cheeses, skim milk .
yogurt, mayonnaise and salau
dressings. Choose tomato or
vegetable-based sauces for
pasta. Select foods thai are
grill ed. bak ed, broiled or
steamed. Avoid fri ed foods
and restrict the amoun t of red
meat that is offered. Have
several vegetables availabl e.
seasoned with herbs instead
of cream sauces or butter.
Serve salad uressings on 1he
siue, so vegetables won ' t
drown in the high-fat topping .
Provide whole grain bread s
and fruils at each meal. with
fruit al so being a delicious
dessert option .
We' ve all heard that a good
breakfast help s students in

character of the civi l
administration that wi ll
manage the transition In
the evenlual government
that will be representative
·
of the Iraqi peopl e.
" Bu1 tile larger qLi CSlion ,.. said Moore.
is
Wheth er
, superpowe r
Am eri ca will seck to hea l
the breac h with longtim e
alli es that blocked United
Na ti ons' action against
Saddam or walk ~away
from the world body and
seek to manage future
conflicts with its own
coalition of lhe willing ."
Read at the meeting was
· ·
an invitation from Ewings
chapter. Sons of the
American Re volution . to
attend a dinner meeting on
'Apr il 24 at Our Hou se in
Gallipoli s. Jan Cady was
voted 'in as a new member.
A program calling for
redemption coupons for
the families of members in
the armed forces was
announced
by
June
Ashley. Pauline Atkins
was named to ha ve the
program in May.
Ferman Moore was a
guest at the- meeting hosted by Mrs . Rohert Ashley,
.Mrs. Day,id Sayre. Mrs.
. George Warn er, Mrs.
Keith Ashley , Marjory
Warner, and Whitnev
Ashley.
·

Becky
Baer
their schoolwork. The same
is true for people attenuing
meeting s. Participants wil l be
more attentive and alert with a
nutri1iou s breakfast under
their belt.
A continental
breakfasl of small bagels or
bran and fruit muffins. fresh
fruit, fruit cups. fruit or veg"
ctable juice, low-fat yogurt or
whole-grain cereals with fruil
wou ld be excellent choices.
For heart ier breakrasts offer
ome lets filled with peppers.
onions. mushrooms. spinach
and tommocs. Usc no-cholesterol egg-substi tu tes for
omelets or scrambled eggs.
Top waftles. pancakes. hot or
cold cereals with fr esh or
dried fruits .
Have fat-free
milk on hand as a beverage or
to add to coffee or cereal.
Limit high -fat breukfasl meais
of sausage ·and bacon or offer
the lower-fat Canadian bacon.
Many meeting s tend to have
la rge amounts of high-fat and
sugary foods during their
;c heduled break s.
Good
choi ces for these in-betweenmeal snacks would b~ fn1it s
anu vegetables with d,ip .

smoo th ics. juices. baked tortilla chips and salsa. hot pr.etzcll, fruit kabobs and popcorn. Don't forget the importance of drinking lots of water
during the day. Keep ice
water pitchers fi lied on co nfen:"nee tables or have holt led
water readil y available.
Ask tljat ve nding machines
located in public areas incl ude
hcullhful snacks. llems such
as pretzels. baked pot ato
chips, peanuts. grano la and
cereal bars. nut and dried fruit
tra il mix, reduced-fat or "lite''
cookies. crackers and candy
bars are now available to
stock
snack
machine s.
Reque st · tha t
beverage
machines feature
I00'/r
j uices.
What if your orga ni tat ion

i~

only planning a short meeting
but l,l includes ll potluck dinner'' Whal can you do . to
ensure a more nutritious array
of foods'! Avoid ha ving all
dessen s and no entree s by
plannin g
your
potluck.
Suggest specific foods thol
are. low -f&lt;~t. low-cholesterol.
low-sodium and low- sugar. C tSe.
Recommend main dishes that
Beckv Boer is the Meigs ' .
are heavy 011 the vegetables Co untr Extension Agent .
'
.'
anu light on the red meats and
cream sauces. Ask the cooks
'
to sub stitute ch icken or
' '
.
''
ground turk ey in place of
' I .
grou nd beef.
.
As you plan your confer~ ;
ence. choose facilit ies that
have gyms , walking/biking
paths . swimming pools and
fitness centers. Provide exer&lt;

Bringing the .
news you can
.
use.
The Sentinel
~

RAIN

..

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.'

CHECKS

Prices Good Tuesr Aprll22 and Wtd.April23
only.
.
'

'

'

;

WHILE
SUPPLIES
LAST

NO
.,

cise furms for attendees to
track their activity levels
throughout the meeting . Give
small prizes for those who
follow the recommended regimen of 30 minutes of activity
a day. During social hours
and recep1ions. provide music
for dancing .· Organize llroup
walking tours, yoga or fitness
classes.
To avoid the after-lunch
slump . get the conference partici pant s moving during the
afternoon .
Plan activity
breaks into the agenda where ,
panicipan1s con walk and talk
as a means of networking or
conducting roundtable discussions. Getting out in the fresh
air may even help ge~e,rate
creative ideas .
:
A' an added boost, have
door priLes throughout the
convention that stress physical activity. Give away jump
ropes. pedometers, fitness
club memberships, water bot:
tie s. or gift certificates for·
athletic shoes . or sporting
equipment as mcenttves . \0
encourage members to exer- ,

.

'

WEBSITE DIRECTORY

.

I
t

Thesday, April 22-, 2003

Time out for tips
DAR learns about
.
Saddam, his regime Pr&lt;;&gt;per snacks can supercharge meeting~

inspection 7:30 p.m. at the
Chester hall. Deputy grand
matron will be the inspecting
officer.

imo conditions lowilli n 1om raturss

Page3

The Daily Sentinel

Community Calendar
Judge won't_remove
school board members ~ Public meetings

Ohio weather
AccuWaat er.com forecast for da

Page 2

Mill SubKrlptlon
IMide Melgo County
13 Weeks .............'30.15
26 Weeks ... , .. ·. .. .... '60.00
52 Weeks . .

·

. .. ... '1 18.80

R - Outolcle Melgo County
13 Weeks . . .......... .'50.05
26 Weeks . . .
. .....'100.10
52 Weeks ... .. , . . .. ..'200.20

Holzer Medical Center

Man dies in
fire trying
to save his
two dogs

AKRON (AP) - A man
died in a house fire when he
went b·ack inside to try to
save his two dogs .
Geraid R. Lehman, 44,
escaped Monday 's pre-dawn
fire with his wife, son and a
family friend, but he became
trapped after returning for the
animals, fire officials said .
Firefighters found Lehman
next to the Siberian huskies
in a second-floor hallway. A
pet raccoon and a cat also
died.
An unattended candle in
the living room started the
. blaze, a fire report said.
Elsewhere, a Stark County
fire killed Roben R. Bruce,
8?. of Canton Township. He
died in the burn unit of
Children's .Hospital Medical
Center of Akron of injuries
suffered in a mobile home
fire Sunday.
Bruce was pronounced
!&lt;&gt; dead at 10:40 a.m . Monday.
An autopsy was arranged for
Tuesday, according to the
Summit County medical
exammer.
Investigators were trying to
determine the cause .

!

Fresh Chicken
hole Friers

49c1b

Limit 2/ person

Good For

Point Pleasal)t Register

www.hollerclinic.com

www.mydailyregister.com

Pleasant Valley Hospital

www.pvalley.org

GIFTS &amp; COLLECTIBLES

ENTERTAINMENT

Precious Memories

www.photosonchina.com

Charter Communications

www.charter.com

AGRICULTURE

WELLNESS &amp; WEIGHT LOSS
Herbalife Independent Distributor

Jim's Farm Equipment

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www.herbsndiet.com

www.bluestarr.net

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Holzer Clinic

BlueStarr Network

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HOME IMPROVEMENT
Quality Windows

RUSSETT

North em

Potatoes

Bath Tissue

s

49
10 lb.

uP To ·sae Each
· Not Good On Advertised Items
Coupons tripled once daily.
See Store For Details

l4CT

4.7

www.qtlalitywindowsystems.com

MAKE YOUR BUSINESS A HIT!!
· Take your business into the homes of over 40,000 con·
~umers in Gallia, Mason, Meigs Counties EVERYDAY
with a listing of your web address in our

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for only a $1 a day.

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Broughton 2%
1% or skim milk

1.79
298 SECOND STREET
POMERO_V, OHIO
Prices Good April 22 &amp; April 23 only.

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The Daily Sentinel
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Page4
Thesday, April 22, 2003

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

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Obituaries

Local Briefs

.

The Daily Sentinel .
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

William R.
Anderson Sr.

REBUILDING

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157

IS

www.mydailysenllnel.com

HELL!

OhiocValley Publishing Co.
Publisher

Bette Pearce ·

Charlene Hoeflich

Managing Editor

Editor

-

There's more to being
ready than duct tape
• The Herald, Everett, Wash., on emergency preparedlless: The bad news is there's no way to guarantee we can prevent terrorism on U.S. soil. The good news is there's more to
protecting ourselves t.han duct tape and plastiC.
Emergency preparedness classes are nothing new in this
county. Many residents have signed up and gone through
weeks of training to learn how to help themselves and their
neighbors should an earthquake stri ke and leave the area in
shambles. Be prepared to take care of yourself for three days.
experts often say. That' s how long it could take emergency
crew s to reach you.
Now we need a new kind of training: How to protect ourselves against weapons of mass destruction.
We've stepped into a new era where we must do our best to
guard against the horrors some people' would inflict upon us
out of h;J.tred. Other countries have endured thi s in the past
and many still do todi!y. News reports of adults and children
learning to put on gas masks seemed almost unreal before.
Now we watch these stories and wonder how long it will be
before such practices become routine in our country.

TODAY IN H·ISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Tuesday. April22. the I 12th day of 2003. There are
253 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On April 22, 1970, millions of Americans concerned about
the environment observed the first Earth Day.
.On this date:

------c;~~~~::~~~~~~~~~~~~:~~ltb~~~(::i~~~~~~~~~voyage~ofwas born in
Spain.
In 1509; Henry VI ascended the throne of England following the death of his father. Henry VII.
In 1864, Congress authorized the use of the phrase "In God
We Trust" on U.S. coins.
In 1889, the Oklahoma Land Rush began at noon as thousands of homesteaders staked claims.
In 1944, during World War II , U.S. forces began invading
Japanese-held New Guinea with amphibious landings near
Hollandia. ·
1n 1952, an atomic test conducted in Nevada became the
first nuclear explosion shown on live network television.
:In 1954, the televised Senate Army-McCarthy hearings
began .
]n 1964, President Lyndon Johnson opened the New York
~orld' s .Fair. ·
·In 1983. the West German news magazine Stern announced
the di scovery of 60 volumes of personal diaries purportedly
wtitten by Adolf Hitler. However, the diaries turned out to be
a hoax.
·
-In 1994, Richard M. Nixon, the 37th president of the United
Siates, died at a New York hospital fou r days after suffering a
sttoke: he was 81.
Jen years ago: The U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum was
dedicated in Washington D.C. to honor the victims of Nazi
extermination.
:Five years ago: A young woman charged along with her
hiEh school sweetheart with murdering their newborn at a
Delaware motel pleaded guilty to manslaughter. Amy
Grossberg was later sentenced to 2 1/2 years in pri son; Brian
Peterson received a lesser sentence of two years because he'd·
cqoperated, with authorities.
One year ago: Actor Robert Blake was charged with murder,
s()licitation of murder and conspiracy in the shooting death of
hi.'; wife, Bonny Lee Bakley, outside a Los Angeles restaurant :
Blake's bodyguard, Earle Caldwell , was charged with conspiracy to commit murder: both men pleaded innocent. Linda
Boreman. once known as porn star Linda Lovelace. died of
injuries from a car crash: she was 53.
Today ·~ Birthdays: Actor Eddie Albert is 95. TV producer
Aaron Spelling is 80. Actor George Cole is 78. Actress
Charlotte Rae is 77. Actress Estelle Harris ("Seinfeld") is 71.
Singer Glen Campbell is 67 . Actor Jack Nicholson is 66.
Singer Mel Carter is 60. Country singer Cleve Francis i ~ 58.
Movie director John Waters is 57 . Singer Peter Frampton is
53. Rock singer-musician Paul Carrack (Mike and the
Mechanics: Squeeze) is 52. Actor Joseph Bottoms is 49. Actor
Ryan Stiles is 44. Comedian Byron Allen is 42, Actor Chris
Makepeace is 39. Actress Sheryl Lee is 36. Country singermusician Heath Wright (Ricochet) is 36. Country singer
K,ellie Coffey is 32. Actor lngo Rademacher is 32. Rock
singer-musician Daniel Johns (Si lverchair) is 24.
Thought for Today: "D~ath is always and under all circumstances a tragedy. for if it is not. then it means that life itself
h~s become one."- Theodore Roosevelt. American president
0 _858-1919).
.

SPEAK OUT!
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newspaper that gets your dander up?
Next time you get the urge to express your opinion. pick up the
telephone and call the Daily Sentinel's new "Speak Out" line.
. Speak Out line callers need not give their name. They must.
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..

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Fund-raiser
announced

NATIONAL VIEW

Take care

Couple found·
by friend

t.linners will be served. Cou ntry
Life.
will
provide
musi_c.
The lirst will be a pancake breakfast Remedies
to be served from 7 to I0 a.m. on Reservations are to be sent to Joy
Saturday at the Church 's Family Li fe Wi se man Clark, P.O. Box 7096,
CIRCLEV ILLE
RUTLAND . - A Rutland couple Center.
Syracu,e. Ohio 45779, . or by calling
killed in a Sunday tractor accident were
William R. Andersqn Sr., 61.
The second will be a sports cli nic to Harold Graham at 742-3033 by May 20.
found
by
a
family
friend,
according
to
of Circleville, died Sunday.
Officers arc Harold D. Graham, presibe conducted by Mike Bartrum from I0
an accident report released Tuesday by
April 20, 2003 . . in Mount
a.m. to noon on May 10 at the Meigs dent; Larrv 0. Clark. vice president;
Meigs County Sheriff Ralph Trussell.
Carmel West Hospital.
Virgil Reeves , treasurer: and Joy
According to the report, Charles A. Middle School football field . There will
He was born October 13.
Wi seman Clark, secretary.
Searle s. 58, and Sandra Sue Searles, 56, be a $2 donation .
1941 , in Parkersburg. West
were found pinned beneath the tractor
RUTLAND - Sandra Sue on
Virginia. the son of William
a hill near the Searles' New Lima
and
Mary · (E iberfield) "Susie" Searles, 56, of Road home around 7 p.m. Sunday.
Anderson.
Rutland, died Sunday, April
The victims were found by the
He wa s a U.S. Navy 20, 2003. alongside her hus- boyfriend of the Searles' daughter. "'
Vietnam veteran, member of band, Charles A. Searles. as
Both had suffered severe burns and
POMEROY - The Meigs Area
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs Coumy
St. Paul Lutheran Church and the result of injuri es sus- other injuries, according to the accident
Relay for Life will have a basket bingo Holiness Assocation will meet tonight at
tained in a tractor accident.
worked for ..Q3 Industries.
report.
game at 6:30 p.m. on May I at the the Laurel Cliff Church, not at the
She was born November
He was precede-d in death
Middleport ,Legion hall in Middleport . Rutland Church as was earlier
I 0, 1946, in Mason, West
by hi s father.
Door prizes will be awarded. All pro- am'tounced .
He is survived by his wife, Virginia, daughter of the late
ceeds will go to the American Cancer
Jean (Jackson) Anderson ; Hubert W. Sr. and Margaret
TUPPERS Pt.AINS - Eastern Music Society ..
mother and stepfather, Mary Virginia Jane Gibbs Johnson. Boosters will meet at 7 p.m. on April 29
She was a greeter at Wai- in the high school band room. All mem(George) Morri s: daughters.
Kristin (Pat) Gragan and Erin Mart Supercenter in Mason , bers are urged to attend, to make final
(Larry)
Sanchez;
sons, and was a member of the details about the concert band trip.
WILKESVILLE -- Wilton Civic
William Anderson Jr, and Auxiliary oi' the SmithAssociation wi ll hold a spaghetti dinner
Michael Anderson: step- Capehart American Legion
'
at
noon Sunday, May 4 at· the
HARRISO!'JYILLE - Plan s· have
daughters, Chris (Chuck) ·Post No. 140 and the
been made for the annual Harri sonville- Wilke sv ille Community Center.
Zimmerman. Lori cFenneken, Auxiliary of th e StewartThe me nu is spaghetti, garlic bread,
Scipio alumni ·banquet and dance to be
Jana Storts and Erica (Ken) Johnson Po st No. 9926.
salad,
dessert ·and drink . The cost is $5. ,.
MIDDLEPORT - Two fund-rai sers held at 6:30p .m. on Saturday, May 24 at
Windham :
g!r.andsons, VFW.
Surviving are her daughter have been plann~d by the Middleport the Harrisonville School. Classes to be All proceeds go to benefit the center.
Andrew and Jared , Gragan:
For more information, contact
step-grandchildren. Jennie, and son-in-law, Li sa and Church of Christ Road Runners for th~ honored are 1923, 1933, 1943 and 1953 .
Skaggs
of American Cancer Society's Relay for · Baked steak and cream baked chicken Catherine Shenefield at (740) 669-4831.
Kelli. Casie, Madison , Dante, Mark
Donovan, Nevaeh and Vann ; Barboursville, We st Virginia;
brothers, John (Joan). Jim daughter .and special friend,
is designed to get the creativ- dents will have completed three number of well-respected
· (Becky) and Don (Bernie) Tammy Searles and Mark
---flity-flowin~ -- --npoe,..,msanda.mt"StOryf~oetry journals.
--Anderson; and many Aieces McCloud of Middleport; son,
"Perhaps the most notable llteitwrn&lt;sinprogress arealready
The evening of poetry will
Charles R. Searles of
and nephews.
thing
.
about
this
group
of
teaturect
on
a
website
Pines
created:
also
feature an "open floor"
from Page 1
Services will ·be II a.m. Rutland; two grandchildren,
aspiring writers is that www.geocities.com/meig.~-wihom period.
Thursday, April 24, 2003 at · Heather Hawley and Dakota
they' re all business majors, elhtml.
"This class is about
the St. Paul Lutheran Church. Skaggs: two sisters and not ," Pines said. "Now, we and they're here only because
The students, in the mean- immersing students in their
Buri al will be in Reber Hill brothers-in-law. Virginia Jane have short story writers, and they want to be," Pines said. time , will be included in the senses,'' Pines said. "I prefer
Cemetery. Friends my call and Ray "Red" Tucker. and we have poets, and their work "That makes a huge differ-. Meigs Center's "Evening of to think of it as more of a
from 2 to 4 and 6 to 8 p.m. Gladys Fay and David . has genuinely impressed ence in their attitude toward Poetry," the third annual ·creative class,' rather than a·
the class .work."
poetry reading held in con- creative writing class."
Wednesday. April 23. 2003. William\ all of Mason; a sis- me ."
The class ranges in age junction with National Poetry
"Some of these students
"It's difficult to sit in a
at the Wellman Funeral ter, · Patricia E. Williams of
classroom
and
be
creative,
so
from
18
to
82,
and
includes
Month.
The
event
is
schedwill
continue to work in their
Rutland; a brother and sister- .
Home, Circleville.
two
displaced
Southern
Ohio·
uled
for
7
p.m.
on
April
30,
personal
writing journals,
we'
ve
been
trying
to
change
Memorial contributions in-law, Hubert W. Jr. and Sue the scenery as much as we Coal Co. miners. single and will feature Rutland's · and write for themselves long
may be made to American Ann Johmon of West can," Pines said. "Each class mothers and a great-grand- Cathy Lentes, an award-win- after the class is finished, and
Heart Association and St. Columbia, Wewt Virginia; session begins with a period mother.
ning poet and essayist whose that 's the best reward a
sister-in-law and brother-in- of free journal writing, which
Paul Lutheran Church.
By the end of the tenn. the stu- work has· been featured in a teacher can hope for,"
law, Kathy and Wayne
Pauley of Middleport; brother-in-law and sister-in-law,
Syracuse has posted signs !ages in Meig s County
flood each year to make
these assessments. He thinks throughout the Village that affected by the changes in
Keith and Irene Kennedy of
basing data off three hypo- warn res idents that they are the newly designated floodRutland: and her brother-in.
from
Page
1
·
thetical floods of "g reat located in a floodplain area. plain in July 2001.
RUTLAND - Charles A. l!iw. Martin Searles of
Like everyone any other
. The USACOE study was
magnitude" is unrealistic .
Searles, 58, of Rutland, died Rutland.
village,
Syracuse had at
condu
cted
to
ge
nerate
data
Moore's
home
.is
now
in
Services will be I p.m. existing 100-year flood pro- the floodplain. even though
Sunday. April 20, 2003,
that better supported flood- least a 90 day period to
alongside his wife, Sandra Thursday, April 24, 2003, at files and created a new llood- he said it is at least two feet plain management alon·g the amend qr di spute any
Sue Searle s, as the result of Fogelsong-Tucker Funeral way model for Ohio commu- higher than the 580 foot ele- Ohio River. The Village of changes in the floodplain.
injuries sustained in a tractor Home in Mason, with the nities without existing flood- vation that FEMA considers Syracuse has floodpl ain reg- According to Alicia Silverio
Re:v. Louis Staubs officiating. way data. Channel geometry as the peak point where ulations designed to guide from ODNR, no one repre- ·
accident.
He was born June 7 ." 1944. Burial will follow at Rutland was obtained by on-site data flood waters will crest. .He floodplain developm ent to se nting the village attended
collection.
has Jived in his home since lessen the damaging effe cts the meeting or afterward ·
in Fairfield, son of the late Cemetery.
The
Federal
Emergency
1973 and this is the first of floods.
filed an appeal.
Friends may call from 6to 9
Rolland C. and Veva V.
has
ever
had
to.
pay
Management
Agency
time
he
Representative
s
of
FEMA
p.m. Wednesday, April 23,
Lemley Searles .
(FEMA)
used
the for flood insurance.
.and the Ohio Department of
He was a truck driver for 2003, at the funeral home, and USACOE's new Ohio River
"It doesn · 1 make me Natural Resources (O DNR)
Hogg &amp; Zu span Materials may e-mail condolences to Floodway study data to happy,'~ he said .
111
lltlended · meet ing s
Co., was a veteran of the U.S. foglesongtucker@citynet.net.
revise the Flood Insurance
Moore said FEMA did not Pomeroy FEMA with electArmy. and was a member of
Rate Maps (FIRMs ) for do an on-site analysis which ed officials representing vi iMeigs County and local would explain why his
the Smith-Capehart Post No.
as house and many neighborcommunities,
such
140, American Legion, and
ON
Syracuse.
ing houses are now part of
the Fraternal Order of Eagles
SAT &amp; SUN ONLY
The results of this the floodplain . This revelaPOMEROY - · Meigs
BOX OFFICE OPENS
No. 2171 at Pomeroy.
USACOE
study showed
·
·
6:30 PM MON-FRI &amp;
Surviving are a daughter County Emergency Medical increased flood hazard lion may come as a surpnse
many residents.
and son-in-law. Lisa and · Service responded to these throughout the Village of . to "I'll
guarantee my neighcalls
Monday:
Mark
Skaggs
of
CENTRAL DISPATCH Syracuse. .The revised bors have no idea that they
Barboursville, West Virginia;
12:22 a.m .. Lexi Whitgal, FIRMs now depict llood- are in the floodplain now,"
a daughter and her special Sycamore Hill , treated not plain areas where none was Moore said.
,
friend, Tammy Searles and transported:
previously established.
Lemley said he has relaMark
McCloud
of
One of these areas is the tives who have lived in the
5:07 p.m., Billy Qoodman.
Middleport : a· son, Charles R. Price Strong. treated not Special Flood Hazzard Area area for many decades that
(SFHA). which is defined as say thev_ have never seen the
Searles of Rutland : two transported;
9:43 p.m. , John · Fink, an area of land that would be water even get close to the
grandchildren,
Heather
Police inundated by a flood having village. He sa id the system
Hawley and Dakota Skaggs; Middleport
treated
not a one percent change of of Jocks and dams should
two sisters and brothers-in- Department.
occurring in any given year prevent floods from occurlaw, Kathy and Wayne transported.
otherwise known as the I00 ring like they did during the
Pauley of Middleport , and
year flood.
floods at the turn of the ceoIrene and Keith Kennedy of
To determine modified
flood peaks 011 the Ohio tury and in the late 30s.
Rutland ; a brother, Martin
According to FEMA, the
BRINGING
Searles of Rutland: sisters-inRiver, 12 historical floods, standard constitutes a rea(PG13) 7:10 a 9:10
plus
three
hypothetical
ones
sonable
compromiSe
law and brothers-in-law,
AL L AGES , ALL TIMES $ 4 00
of greater magnitude , were between the need for buildVirginia Jane and Ray "Red"
used in the analyses of flow ing restrictions to minimize
Tucker. and Gladys Fay and
modification.
David Willian1s , all of
The flow s of these 15 , the potential loss of life and
·
·property and the economic
Mason, West Virginia; a sisconsidered repre sentative of benefits 10 be derived from
ter-in-law, Patricia Williams
the basin. were modified by floodplain development.
of Rutland: and a brother-inDevelopment may take
the operation of USACE
law and sister-in-law, Hubert
'Lane ~
reservo_irs, completed or place within. the floodplain.
W. Jr. and Sue Johnson of
under construction .
provided that development
Mason.
Many ~esidents . dispute . complies with local flood this standard. Denms Moore plain management ordiServices will be I p.m.
ts cnltcal of FEMA because nances , which must meet the
Thursday. April 24. 2003. at
tt reltes on a mere one per- · minimum federal requireFogel song-Tucker Funeral
cent
chance the vtllage ments.
··
·
Home in Mason, with the
Receive a Console
would face the 100-year
Rev. Louis Staubs officiating.
w/ mirror FREE.
Burial will follow at Rutland
with lhe purchose of select
styles Lanel! Recliners!
Cemetery.
·
'
Consoles
ovalloble In Antiquo
Friends may call from 6 to
Wh"-.c,...m•9 p.m. Wednes~ay, April 23,
2003, at the funeral home ,
and may e-mail condolences to
fogl esongtucker@citynet.net.
Military grave side · rites
will be conducted by
American Legion Post No.
140 and VfW Post No . 9926.

Sandra Sue
Searles

.Carl Esposito

)

Tuesday, April 22, 2003 .

Holihess group
meeting tonight

Boosters meet

.CNN went easy on · Iraq.~ VVho else
did
so?
.

As 1996 Republican presidential cand idate Boh Dole
said about then-President Bill
Clinton' s White · House
fundrai sing
practices,
"Where's the outrage''"
It' s a relevant question
now. fo llowing the disclosure
last week by a top Cable
News Network executive.
Eason Jordan, that for years
CNN failed to report atrocities it knew Saddam
Hussein 's regime ·was perpetrating in Iraq·.
·
Jordan wrote a New · York
Times op-ed piece in which
he said that CNN withheld
stories of torture, murder and
intimidation for fear that its
Iraqi employees would be
killed.
Besides protecting lra4is,
however, it's obvious from
Jordan 's .own writing that
CNN also went easy on the
Iraqi regime to insure that
. CNN could maintain a
- bureau in Baghdad.
"Over the last dozen years
I made 13 trips to Baghdad to
keep government permission
for CNN's Baghdad bureau
and !O arrange interviews
with Iraqi leaders," Jordan
wrote.
"The secret . police terrorized Iraqis worKing for inter-national press services who
were courageous enough to
provide accurate reportin g,"
he wrote.
'' Some vanished. never to
be heard from again . Others
disappeared and then surfaced later with whispered"'
tales of being hauled off and
tortured in unimaginable
ways. Obviously, other news
organizations were in the
same bind we were when it
came to reporting on their
own workers."

- but not nearl y as much as
they should have and !lOt
nearly enough fro m the
mainstream media.
The main criticism has
come from CNN's arch-rival ,
Morton
Fox News (where I am a
Kondracke ·commentator). conservative
radio talk show hosts and
from the right-of-center Wall
Street Journal editorial page.
The Washington Post. The
l.n the mid-1990s. Jordan New York Times and other
wrote. one CNN cameraman networks
have
barely
was beaten and. subjected to touched the controversy and
electrushock torture to get some
non-con servati ve
him to identifv Jordan as a media critics have treated
CIA agent.
•
CNN's "ethical dilemma"
In 1991 . he wrote, u . with sympathy. Jordan does
woman who merely talked on deserve modest praise for
the phone to CNN- was beat- publicly confessing to what
en for two months and her CNN didn't report. He might
father forced to watch. have kept quiet and avoided
·Finally, "they smashed her criticism entirely.
skull, ripped out her ·brain s
On the other hand. the
and put them in ajar, and tore record shows that Jordan and
her body limb from limb. A CNN deceived other journalplastic bag containing her ists .who inquired into the
body parts w;is left on · the bargains required to secme
doorstep of her family 's access in Iraq .
home."
Last October. Jordan told
None of this was reported National Public Radio's Bob
until Saddam's regime was Garfield that CNN had been
dispatched from . power. "forthright'' in its reporting in
What's worse, as _Ihe New lraq_ muLwru;___nnt making
Republic's Franklin Foer "journalistic compromises"
wrote in the Wall Street in ord]:!r to cover a_J)ew Gulf
Journal this week, "for nearly War. Clearly, that was false.
a decade. (CNNl gave creduFoer wrote in tlie Wall
lous treatment to orchestrated Street Journal that when- he
anti-U.S. protests."
interviewed Jordan for an
When Saddam Hussein · article in The New Republic,
staged a national. election and the CNN exec utive told him
won virtually 100 percent of that his network gave-"a full
the vote, Foer noted. CNN's picture of the regime" and
Baghdad
correspondent challenged him to find any
reported that "tillS I S really a instances of CNN neglecting
huge show ?,f support'.' and "a stories about atrocitie~.
vote of defiance agamst the
If CNN was afraid that its
United States."
.
' local employees might be
In truth, Jordan's d1sclo- harmed as a result of specilic
sure and CNN's performance reporting about atrocities. at
have produced some o utrage least CNN anchors and corre-

Freedom for- and from

spondents based elsewhere
could have conveyed a consistei1t picture of Iraq as· a
police state.
The network could have
interviewed exiles in Jordan
and the United States, publicized the report s of human
rights organizations and
e)(pressed skepticism at the
regime's
claims.
What
Jordan and others knew
never seems to have
informed the network 's overall coverage of Iraq .
In
addition.
CN N
International. the parent network's subsidiary that broad- .
casts to Europe, Asia and the
Middle East, has more or less
consistently hewed to the
anti-American line on Iraq,
using videotape supplied by
AI Jazeera and other Arab
networks.
CNN presumably is not
alone in . making bargains
with the devil in Iraq . And
Iraq presumably is not the'
only place where devil's bargains have been made by various news organizations.
·
There's lots of anecdotal
evideTICe";'"'for instance, that
the Palestinian. Authority
intimidates foreign journalists and their local employees
into soft-peddling reports on
corruption and intimidation
in the West Band and Gaza.
The revelations of Eason
Jordan should have launched
a thorough examination of
the terms of coverage in dictatorships. So .far, this hasn't
happened. Where 's the out- .
rage?
(Morton Kondracke is
exawive editor of Roll Call,
th e newspaper of Capitol
Hill. J

religion

I've longed admired Bill
greater purity. without than But the .full bench omitted
Donohue , president of the
with the aid of government." (from the original ruling) the
Catholic League for Civil
Accordingly,
I
have previous blocking of the
and Religious Rights. Based
reminded Donohu e that 19541aw passed by Congress
in New York. he has become
Article VI of the Constitution that officially added "under
a national exposer of anti·
states unequivocally that "ho God" to the Pledge of
Nat
Catholic bigotry in its many
religious test shall ever be Allegiance·. Only public
Hentoff
forms, so me of them veiled
required as a qualification to schools are now involved in
but no less pernicious. But ·
- - - - • · any office or public trust the prohibition .
one point where we di sagree
under the United States." The
Then ,
Judge
Alfred
- hi s sulfurous reaction to
freei:lom of conscience guar- Goodwin, who has . not
the 9th Circuit Court of
.
.
. anteed to all American s retreated at all from his conAppeal s decision that the Goodwm .. stated . pl~~~ly m means that in thi s land, there stitutional decision, has
Pledge of Allegiance in pub- .ht s ,dectsJon . that
under is freedom for - and free- stayed the enforcementofthe
lie school classrooms is God · tS a dec!arat1on of JCIJ - dum from - religion.
ban in public school classunconstitutional because it gwus beltef and thereby
Hi storian Clinton Rossiter, rooms pending a decision by
· contains the phrase "under vwlates
. the . F1rst whose books on early the United States Supreme
God ."
Amendment s Establishment American history won him a Court whether it will take the
th
Clause
, Hou se MaJonty
.
c Leader Tom DeLay (R- number of notable prizes , · case.
. Dono h uc ca II. s t or
It is true that even if the
tmpeachment ot the Judg~s Texas) has cast a thunderbolt wrote in "The First American
Revolution"
(Harvest
Books,
ban
is lifted by , the High
who made the ruling and. il. at the entire federal judiciary.
1956)
of
the
"
multiplicity
of
Court,
individual students
the Supreme Court do~s. not If the Supreme Court does
overrule . _that . dect SJ&lt;;n: not expunge the deci sion, he religions and the great can refuse to recite the
Donohue msJsts that teachers threatens legislation to limit unchurched'' in the American pledge that · contains "under
Ill . the mne western ~tatc s jurisdiction of all federal colonies. These factors, he God." They will then be sent,
said "were the fundamental in some schools, to the prinaffected by . the . de71s10n courts.
should commtt civil dtsobeAnd by a thumping vote of reasons ... for the growth of cipal's office, or in any case,
d1en ce' ".: their clas~rooms ~y 22-2, the Hou se 'Judiciary an awareness that any other be regar~ed as pariahs by
call1ng t.he ~ops and .t.oc,tl Committee urged the Bush course but toleration, and in many of their fellow stuTV reporters and recJt J~g administration on March 12 time separation (of church dents. I have reported on
the. Pledge of All egtance m to indeed appeal the 9th and state ); would be inexpe- cases where this has hapthe1r presence.
.
Circuit's deci sion to the dieill if not impossible to fol- pened. In defense of these
He believes that th1s act Supreme Court. In a biparti- low. Most (American) colo- dissenting students, I cite a
wmild be es~eCJally appro- san spirit of indi gnation, nial s had a majority attitude poiill made by Judge
pnate at a t1111e when our presidential aspirant Sen. toward relation s of church Goodwin, indicating that no
troops "are ~repared to d1e Joseph Lieberman (D-Conn .) and state, and the core of thi s American should be shunned
for the ltbertJ~s symbolized says that "if this decision is attitude could ha~e been no for exercising his or her connot overturned. we will other than the permission of stitutional right of conby the Pledge.
dis&gt;enting consciences.:·
science.
I am not aware that any amend the Constitution." .
James Madison , the princimember . of ou,r forces.
Me anwhile , in further
And Donohue is fully entiengaged m what JS clearly a pal architect of the First developmems in the notori- tied
by the First
JUSt war, had to rass a relt - Amendment
to
the ous three-judge decision, the Amendment - to issue ' his
· gious test to risk his or her · Constitution . and a major 9th Circuit: On March I, the broadsides, in conscience.
life . There are also atheists player
at
thl!
1787 24-j ud ge 9th Circuit Court of demanding the impeachment
under fire . Not many, per- Constitutional Convention in Appeals - with nine dis- of those judges on the 9th
haps. but some.
Philadelphia. insisted - in a senters - let stand the ban Circuit.
Donohue is far from alone J.uly I 0. . 1822 letter to on the recitation of the
(Na t Hentoff is a nationally
in his fury at the 9th CirctJit Edward Livingston -- that Pledge of Allegiance in the renowned authority 011 the
judges. Despite the foct that "we are teaching the world ... ~ublic schools of the circuit First Amendment and the Bill
the chief target, Judge Alfred that religion flouri shes in wi th "under God" included. of Rights.)
\

Alumni event
being planned

Benefit dinner
·on tap May 4

Fund-raisers
scheduled

Rio

Char1es A.
Searles

Fl 00d

EMS

Baseball

Indians
swat ·
Chi Sox
See Page 6

Recliner

s4ggoo

€JJ
TA~ecJJ
Presents .

•WIN•
2nEETICIETs
Illite
SNIII Vlli.IY
CIIEMAJ
FIND YOUR NAME IN
TDDAY'S CLASSIFIED
SECTION AND WIN!
M4Vf" lfX./ PlA&amp;ltJ A CI.A$$/FflP lArllY?

L.::::::::::::::§§i§:§§§:§~~=~

SPRIN(; \'ALLEY CINE:\1 .\ 7

Come listen to the n~w
sounds Karaoke!
'

�'

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, April 22, 2003

Page6
Thesday, April 22, 2003

SeAnile becone;

·rribe blasts ChiSox

heagetll
SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) Teemu Selanne, the San Jose
Sharks' leading scorer, became
a free agent when he decided
not ~o exercise a player option
m his contract for next season.
Selanne scored 28 goals and
had 64 points this season. leading the Sharks m both categones
while
noticeably
improving his two-way game
and physical play. The Finnish
Flash was named the Sharks'
most valuable player.

Randy Johnson
goes on DL
PHOENIX (AP) - The
Arizona Diamondbacks placed
Randy Johnson on the 15-day
disabled list with a sprained
right knee and hope he 'II be
able to return to the rotation
Sunday.
Johnson has been experiencing inflanunation and swelling
m his nght knee since his last
start on Apnl II. He was millally scheduled to return last
Wednesday.
Johnson was scratched from
last Wednesday's start, however, and the team later deternuned after a weekend thfowmg sessiOn that he would not
be able to start as scheduled
Tuesday at Montreal. The
move is retroactive to Apnl 12

Cleveland lndtans' Eilts Burks connects on a solo home run off Chtcago Whtle Sox
pitcher Jon Gat land dunng the lhtrd mmng. Monday, 1n Chtcago (AP)

LOS ANGELES (AP)
Nine-time Olympic gold
medaltst Carl Lewis was arrested for mvesl!gation of misdemeanor driving under the influence after a one-car accident.
The 41-year-old track star
wasn't injured in the accident
on Interstate I 10 in South Los
Angeles.
The California Htghway
Patrol found Lewis alone in a
2004 Maserati and noticed
signs of alcohol intoxtcation,
Officer Joseph Pace said.

CHICAGO (AP) The
Cleveland lndtans picked up a
mce
little
so uvenir
III
Chtcago: thetr offense.
Ellis Burks and Karim
Garcia each homered twice
Monday as the Indians won
for the second straight day,
beating the Chtcago White
Sox 9-2.
Carlos Lee went deep in hi s
ftfth
strai ght game for
Chicago. matchiiig a club
record. Bur 11 wasn't enough
to catch the lndtans, who have
won two straight for the first
time sinc e the season-opening
senes at Baltimore.
Cleveland has been scuffling thi s seaso n as it adjusts
to a lineup without Jtm
Thome . searching for someto JUmp-start the
thing
offense. The Inaians might
score run s in bunche s one day.
then stru gg le to get a couple
the next.
But Saturday's brutal 12-3
loss to the White Sox mtght
have been the key. Cleveland
beat the White Sox 7-4 on
Sunday, then scored a seaso nhigh nme runs Monday
After beginning the season
with only II homers . the
Indi ans have now hit ftve in
the last two days. They also
had 13 hits Monday. with
every starter but one reaching
base.
Brandon
Phillips
reac hed base III all four atbats. singling twice and drawmg two wal~s
The Indian s went after Jon
Garland (0-2) right away, tagging htm for five runs and five
hilS III JU St 2 2-3 lllnlllgS .

Garcia got it started with a
two-run homer in th e first
inning, a nd Milton Bradley
added a two-run double m the
second. Burks made it 5-0
with hi s first homer, a ,solo
shot , in the thtrd.
One batter later, Garland
walked Casey Blake to end hts
day. White Sox fans Jeered as
he left the mound.
But Rick White didn 't fare
much better. Omar Vtzquel hit
an RBI tnple III the fourth
mmng, and Burks led off the
ftfth with hi s second homer of
the day. It was the 22nd twohomer game of Burks' career.
Garcia hit another two-run
shot in the ninth off White
Sox clo ser Billy Koch for his
fifth career multihomer game.
The White Sox pttchers didn't get much help from therr
Jake
offense,
either.
Westbrook (1-2) got himself
into Jams III the first and second inning s with men at third
base. But he got outs when he
needed them and let hi s teammates do the rest to get his
first victory as a starter since
July 25, 2001
Westbrook allowed two runs
and stx hits in 5 2-3 Innings
Lee finally spoiled the
shutout in the sixth, sending
the ftr st pitch he saw from
Westbrook into the White Sox
bullpen. It was his fifth homer
in as many games, matching
the club record
Frank Thomas did it twice in
1994, and Greg Luzinski and
Ron Kittle both homered in
ftve stratght games in 1983.

Muscle-building drugs, NBA playoffs
amphetamine use still Spurs, Pacers win
common in baseball
Assoc1ated Press

-~--------

NEW YORK (AP) Base ball players are stil l
ustng muscle-butldmg drugs
and amphetammes desp1te
the sport's new stermd-tesling plan , The New York
limes reported 111 Tuesday's
edtttons
Players have switched
from usmg stermds to drugs
like human growth hormone.
The Times reported, cltmg
interviews with 40 current or
former playe rs, baseball
executives and medical officials.
Some players told the
newspaper that the UIIIO II IS
jeopardizing the heal th of its
members by not allow1ng
mandatory testmg of cert,un
drugs
Thts spnng, 16 members ol
the Chicago Wh1te Sox were
ready to refuse a drug test so
they could be wunted as testmg postttve for sten:nds
Thetr tdea was to send ames-

Toledo eliminates
three sports
TOLEDO, Ohto (AP) Toledo will eliminate men's
swimming and men's indoor
and outdoor track and field this
year because of budget shortfalls in the athletic department.
Toledo will save $478,000
by droppmg the three teams
with 59 athletes. the school
said.
The moves will put the athletic department in compliance
with Title IX, the federal law
that mandates equal opportunity for female athletes at schools
that receive federal money.

Davis to rebuild
Drake
DES MOINES, Iowa (AP)
- Four years after beiiig let go
as basketball coach at Iowa,
Tom Davts was hired to rebuild
the downtrodden program at
Drake
The uruven;ity called a news
conference Tuesday to IIItroducehim
Drake hasn't had a winning
season since going 17-14 III
1986-87 The Bulldogs last
played III the NCAA tournament m 1971
The 64-year-Qid Davts had
the most vtctories at Iowa,
CQlllpiling a 269-140 record in
13 seasons. But he was told
before the 1998-99 season that
hts contract would not be
renewed at Its end.

sage that mo1e exlenst ve
momto11 ng 1s needed
Players on an un1dent1hed
NatiOna l League team also
constdered reftJsiiig to take
the test. The Tt mes reported.
Former San Diego Padres
All-Star Tony Gwynn satd
that more attention needs to
be focused on amphetarrunes.
He estimates that 50 percent
of pos1t1on players use "greemes'" routinely
Last ye&lt;tr, former playets
Jose Canscco and Ken
Ctmtnlll also made claims ol
widespread steroid usc 1n
baseball.
New York Mets pllcher
Tom G l.tvme. the NL player
rep to the umon , called
Gwynn's comments ··me spon"hle."
··ts there stutf gomg on"'
Sure:· Glavine satd. "ls 11 50
percent"' l don"tthmk so •·
•There IS no test1ng for
&lt;tmphetamines III the labor

reached between
players and owners last sum-

&lt;~g reement

mer.

The policy calts for all
players 10 be tested for
stermds once dunng the 2003
season. and for 240 players to
be tested at random again. If
mme than 5 percent test posllt ve, a second step wtll go
mto effect Ill 2004. in whtch
players could be subject to
pen.tlttes tor testmg postttve.
In 2003, however, players
who test positive for steroids
would not be penalized -or
even 1den11lled
It is a we&lt;tk d1u g pohcy
when compared ""ith the
NFL,
NCAA
and
lntenwt10nal
Olympic
Committee. all of whtch test
for more than just steroids
and have more stnngent
penalties

SAN ANTONIO - San
Antonio didn't stop Stephon
Marbury. but the Spurs did
make their free throws down
the stretch Monday night, and
that was enough for an 84-76
VIctory over Phoenix to even
thetr playoff senes · at one
game aptece.
Two days after the Spurs
mtssed stx of thetr eight free
throws m ovemme and tell to
the Suns in Game l, Ttm
Duncan scored half of hts 22
pomts in the fourth quarter
He helped San Antonio battle
back from a seven-pomt
deficit in the period.
The senes switches to
Phoenix for games on Fnday
and Sunday.
Wtth the Spurs leading 7776, Manu Gmobih made a 3pomter from the wmg wtlh
I 02 left.
Marbury. the hero of Game
I with a running 3-point bank
shot m overtime, missed a

drive to the basket on the next
possession.
San Antomo then clinched
the victory by making all four
of Its foul shots in the final
minute.

Pacers 89, Celtics 77
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) After sitting on the bench for
all but two minutes of the
fourth quarter tn the series
opener, Reggie
Miller
showed that's the time he's
needed most
With the crowd chanting
"Reg-gie!· Reg-gte!", Miller
dnlled a 3-pointer, helping
the Pacers to hold on and beat
Boston 89-77. evening the
Eastern Conference playoff
series 1-1.
Jermame O'Neal scored 23pomts and grabbed 20
rebounds for the Pacers.
Antome Walker led the
Celllcs wtth 19 points, Walter
McCarty had 16 and Paul
Pierce, who scored 40 in the
opener, finished with 16.

•

Prep Track

Self introduced
Eastern to host track meet as new Kansas
basketball

BY ScoTT WOLFE

Sports

cor~espondent

TUPPERS PLAINS
The Eastern Eagles wt ll be
hostmg thetr first track meet
m two years Tuesday night.
bnng to the home crowd the
excitement and success they
have shown m earlier meets.
At Rtver Valley as part of
a field that incluiled Gallta
Academy. 0 . V C . South
Gallia, Southern, and Rtve1
Valley, the Eagles saw Ross
Holter claim his th1rd stratght
VICtory m the dtscus Holter
earned the win w1th a to'&gt; ol
136 feet and 4.5 mches and
also muscled hts way to a
VIctory 10 the shot put wtth a
46 toot 4 mch toss. Darren
S~arbrough also claimed a
asecond m the dtscus, and
fourth tn the shot whil e
Travts Batey earned a ltlth
place III the shot.
Senior Brandon Werry
recorded two second place
fimshes·m the I00 Meter and
200 Meter dashes He fm-

NBC's cawrage of
wi llei olympics
wins·13 Emmys
NEW YORK (AP)
NBC's coverage of the 2002
Winter Olympics carried the
network to 13 Sports Emmys.
One year after it received no
awards. NBC won II for lis
coverage of the Salt Lake Ctty
Garnes. The 13 overall Emmys
marked a record for the net. -work, topping by one the total
from 1988 and 1996, when
NBC broadcast the Summer
Olymptcs.

I.

!Shed behtnd
A ll en
Brown
111
both events.
Kevtn
Marcinko
claimed the
long JUmp
pn wnh a
leep of 18
feet
and
Chadwell
thtee 1nches.
Austin
Cros s ftmshcd second 111 the
II 0 meter hurdles and di stance man
Chns
Davis
Fimshed thtrd 111 the 1600
meter ,md 3200 me ter run
In the gtrl s portion ot the
1:1ett. Jen Hayman clatmed,
first place 111 the I00 meter
hurdles and the 400 meter
ddsh , wh1le al so clatmmg
second 111 the 200 meter dash
Jennifer Chadwell claimed
a first in the .\00 meter hmdb ,md luu rth 111 the 1110
meter. whtlc Brnani Hensley
clmmcd a tlmd 111 the I00
meter dusy R.tchael Elliott
pl.tced liN 111 the 3200 meter
and Ca"IC Nuiter cleared the

h'gh JUmp bur for a thtrd
place limsh
The boys fi ni shed second
m overall team pomts, and
the girls fini shed third .

Warren Invitational
At the W,men ln v1tattonal ,
Ross Holler agam was the ·
t.tlk ot the meet w1th a domtnatmg I :l l toot , f1ve mch
elfort 111 ,t fteld that mcluded
Divtston l, II. and Ill schools
in the prehmmary
Holter flexed hts muscle
1n the llnals to wm the meet
w1th " 13'1 loot, nme mch
effort Holter clatmed wins
ove1 contenders from Logan
and Manetta.
Senior Brandon Werry
miSsed the semi-finals in
both the I 00 M and 200· M by
0:! and 03 seconds respecu &gt;el y. Kevin M.trl·tnko finl'hed om the placmg in the
long JUmp by II tnches. Jen
Hayman JSt mi ssed plactng m
the 400 meter by 1.98 seconds.

LAWRENCE, Kan (AP)
- Bill Self is back where his
career began.
He
was
mtroduced
Monday as the new basketball coach at Kansas, whtch
lost Roy Wtlliams to North
Carolina a week after losing
the NCAA champion ship
game
Self talked about ~mooth­
ing over the b1tterness stirred
by Williams' departure and similar fee lings at
Illinois, where Self coached
for three years.
Ht s tirst college coaching
JOb was as an assistant to
LilT)' Brown at Kansas in
1985, and Self called hts new
post "the most prestigious
act 111 all of co liege basketball"
About 300 people were at
Had! Auditorium on campus
for the news conference ,
greeting Self and chancello"r
Robert Hemenway with a

standmg ovallon as they
entered .
Hemenway
said
hts
school's search focused only
on Self, who won two Big
Ten regular-season tttles and
one conference tournament
championship with the Illini.
His record there was 78-24,
and he led the team to the
NCAA tournament each
year, reaching the final eight
Ill 200 1.
The 40-year-old Self, who
played at Oklahoma State,
has an overall record of 207105 in I0 seasons at a head
coach, including stints at
Oral Roberts and Tulsa.
With the Jayhawks, he
replaces
the
beloved
Williams, who departed a
week ago for his alma mater.
Wtlliams led Kansas to nine
conference titles and four
Fmal Fours in 15 seasons,
gomg 418-101. He lost in the
national title game twice.

\

The Daily Sentinel• Page 7

www.mydailysentinel.com

.Maj_or League baseball

Jack su~ Wilson Sporting Goods

:Yankees wallop·Twins

COLUMBUS. Ohto (AP)
- Goller Jack Nick laus IS
sumg a sportmg goods company wh1ch has mtroduced a
Ime of golf balls carrymg the
brand ""JACK "
Nickl&lt;tus IS cla11ntng trademark Infringement in the
U.S . District Court lawsuit
He says Wilson Sporting
Goods 1s n11S leadmg people
into thmkmg Ntck lau s tS
associated with the b,dls
The l&lt;twsuit says Nick laus
Goll Equ1pmen1 Co . based

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - .
Wells and the rest of
the New York Yanhes' slarti'hg p1 tchers are reapmg the
beneltts ol playing w1th
baseball 's most
potent
offense
' " I t ,s awesome to have."
Wells smd " You can go out
lhere. and It you give up a
i.ew runs, yo u' re still in the
ballgame ."
'
, Wells pitched a seven- htt~~r and got a lot more run
$}Jpport than he needed
Monday after ihe New York
Yankees
routed
the
Mmnesota Twms 15-1
" Alfonso Sotiano hit a
grand slam and N tck
Joh nson homered tw1ce for
New York. which leads the
majors in batttng average
(.302) and home runs (39)
}he Yankees completed their
second strat gh t season sweep
of the Twt ns. and have outhomered them 3 1-3 dunng
tha t span.
" ''I'd like to give you my
,glove and let you try to face
th at lmeup," Minnesota
starter Rick Reed satd after
giving up a career-high II
runs
• Yes, the Twins were clearly happy to ~ee the Yankees
leave town after losing four
straight at the Metrodome.
, ··we
got
lambas ted."
Twtns
manager , Ron
Gardenhire satd "We're a
lo ng way from betng 111 thetr
),ague, from what I saw out
D&lt;~vtd

~here:-

. Well s (3-0)
fmed
$ 100,000 this spring by the
team for hts sptcy autobiography titled "Perfect I' m
Not' Boomer on Beer,
l3raw ls.
Backac hes
&amp;
Baseball" - improved the
rotation's record to 14-0.
That's the longest winmng
st reak to start a season smce
1900. accordtng to the Ehas
Sports Bureau
" It comes down to starting
iitching,"
said
Berni e
William s, who hit a two-run
homet 111 the ninth off J.C
Romero
"It JUSt gtves our offense a
good chance to get some••

thing gmng," W11l1am s said
"1\ IS a luxury we are expenencmg nght now "
In other AL games, 11 was
Toronto II, Bo ston 6,
Cleveland 9. Ch tcago 2: and
Balt1more 4, Tampa Bay 0.
Dustan
Mohr spoiled
Wells ' shutout btd 111 the
etghth With hts second
homer of the season, but by
then it was too late.
En ck Almonte had a
career-h igh three h11 s and
Raul Mondest also went 3for-4 for the Yankee s, who
pounded 14 htts and scored
38 run s 111 thi s series
"O ur confidence ts sky
ht gh ri ght now:· manager
Joe Torre sa id.
New York has more
homers than Detroit has ru ns
(34) thts season
"Everythmg we threw up
there,
'they
whacked,"
Gardenhire sa td ,
The Yankee s· high-powered offe nse had scored 111
the f1rst mmng of each ot the
ftrst three games of the
series untti ,Reed ( 1-3) struck
out the stde IIi ftrst.
Two errors cost h1m 111 the
third. when Almonte doubled
to center and moved up a
base when Bobby Kielty
bobbled the ball.
Soriano hit a sharp
grounder to th trd {ha t C hns
Gomez - playlllg there for
the hrst ume in his careercouldn't scoop and allowed
Almonte to score
John so n hit a two-run
homer to make 11 3-0, and It
JU St got worse from there lor
Reed. He gave up I0 earned
run s and I 0 htts 111 4 1-3
inmngs.
Wtth two out s 111 the
fourth, Reed put th ree
strai ght men o n base before
failing to get a pllch to
Soriano instde enough.
Soriano, who has one ol
the quickest sw in ~s in the
game. hit an 0-1 smker mto
the left-fie ld seats to put the
Yankees ahead 7-0
"I knew I had a good
sw mg," smd Sonano, who
was later asked 11 lhts was
the best the Yankees h.tve

playe d m hts three seasons
" We wtn the game like
every day," Sonano satd, "so
that 's pretty good "
Reed got one out 111 the
I illh before the next five batlets reached
Gdrdenhue emptted hts
bench Gomez leu otl and
pl.tyed
th1rd.
Mdtthew
LeCroy w.ts at ltrst base tor
Doug M1entk1 eWICZ , Mohr
&gt;Ubbed fo 1 Jacque Jones 111
left , Tom Pnnce replaced
A J. Pterzynski at catcher
and Kt elty was m center fo r
Tori1 Hunter - the designated htttet
It didn't do much good tor
the defending AL Ce ntra l
champton Twms.

III We st Palm Beach , Fla ,
has the nghl to [he "JACK"
trademark and has been makmg Irons Iabe led "JACK "
stnce 1997
A spokeswomdn
lur
Cht cago-based
Wilson
declmed to comment lor a
story publtshed Tuesday 111
The Cnlumhus D1 spatch
The lawsUit says Wtlson
began usm g the "JACK "
name on goll b.tlls ''"' yew
without notlfymg or p.t)llllg
Ntcklaus, who has won IR
r

m&lt;tJOr damp1u nshtps, more
than .my other golfer
lt says the use of ··JACK'
is an attempt to t.tke advantage of Ntcklau ' · ttlentn y
atter a Wilson h&lt;~IJ end01 sed
by Ben Ct en shaw had d"appmntmg sales
Wil son ad verme' the
'•JACK" balls on ns Web SI\C
wnh the slogan "II you t11mk
there\ a l &lt;~n g e 1 b,dl you
don 't know Jack' "

~--

Blue Jays 11,
Red Sox 6
At
Boston.
C hri s
Woodward hn a two-run
homer and Greg Myers
hom ered and drove in four
runs as the Red Sox had thctr
seven-game Wllllllng streak
snapped
The Blue Jays averted a
sweep o l the lour-game
senes by wmm ng for the
second tune m 12 games
Vernon Wells and Dave
Berg h1 t a so lo homers and
Cory L1dle (3-2) got the wm
tor the Blue Jay s

Orioles 4,
Devil Rays 0
At Baltimore. Rick Hell ing
( 1- 1) allow~ d four hits in
etgh t inntngs and Jerry
Hatrston homered off Steve
Parn~
(0-2 )
to
lead
Baltimore.
Balttmore won for the ftfth
time 111 stx games m front of
I ~.0 17 fans - the smallest
crowd m Camden Yards' 12year ht story.
Tampa Bay, which was
blanked tor the second ttme
tht s season, has dropped six
ot seven
No National league games
were on the sc hedule'
Monday

.

Miller still unsigned
BEREA, Ohio (AP)'- The
Cleveland . Browns are ru11nmg
out ol ttme and maybe patience
With free agent hne~acker
~umrr M11ler
Mtiler, who tmssed last season wtth a torn Achilles' tendon, is considering incentiveBased contract offers from the
Browns and Baltimore Ravens
liut sull hasn't dectded which
t~am to stgn wtth.
And tf he doesn't make up
ius mmd before Saturday's
NFL draft, the Browns appear
Wtlhng to move on with or
\\•nhout their only Pro Bowl
player SIIICe 1999
· Stetnberg dtd not immediate)y return a phone message
seekmg comment.
Polley planned to speak wtth
Stemberg again on Monday. He
said the Browns have made 11
clear to Mtller that they want
him to be part of thetr future,
now they need to know if the
29-year-old feels the san1e way
The Browns have reportedly
offered Mtller a one-year deal
that includes a $1 million signmg bonus and a base salary of
$650.000. Playmg time and
performance incentt ves could
help double the package
Polley satd it was unlikely
the Browns would budge from
thetr offer. All Mtller has to do
now IS sign hts name to 11. .
· Dunng the negotiations,
Browns coach B11tch Davis
satd he has had se~eral phone
co n ~ersation s· with Miller.
Davis has assured Miller he
would have an important playing role.
· Polley mdtcated that M1ller
could nsk havmg the Browns
reduce or withdraw their offer
if he doesn't act quickly.
·The upcommg draft may also
affect whether the deal gets
L~ mpleted. Policy said there's
st1 ll a chance the sides could
reach •an agreement before
Saturday
' Davis released Miller 'along With linebackers Earl
Holmes and Dwayne Rudd ill February as part of a salaryC'dp dump At the time, the
Browns thought Miller would
have a difficult time finding a
team wtlling to spend big
J

money on a player coming off
a senous mjury.
As it turns out, It looks like
they were nght
·
Miller recorded 13 sacks m
200 J and became the ftrst
Browns player to earn a Pro
Bowl tnp smce the team
returned to the league
However, he rankled Davis by
threatemng a contract holdout
last summer and then tore hts
Achtlles' in the first cxhibiuon
game
Pohcy referred to Mtller as
"a fnend" before say mg the
nine-year p10 overestmmted hts
worth and 1s now tacmg the
realization that he's not go mg
to get a Iucratt ve deal.
Miller also visited Tampa
Bay and K ansa~ City but wasn't offered a contract.

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fster

CLASSIFIED

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pedal cars, old signs-: cans ,
porcelain gas stove, rocking
c h~l rs. laundry stove , school
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Galll.ll Cn11nt)', OH
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ANNouNCEMENTii

c-·1 Beer Carry Out permit
for sale. Chester Township,
Meigs County. send letiers
of interest to : The Daily
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POmeroy, Ohio 45769.

Do you need your GED or

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'

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3 family yard sale Fri. Sat.
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St. house 39 Cheshire Oh.

YARDSALE-

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675-1429.
Garfield Rd.

0PI'OR11JNriY
Local bocJY. shOp seeks qualIfied repair tech. Competitive
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any Need. No Stock Ups, No Available up to $500,000.
~ Door to Door. It will Work tor Low Interest. CALL TOLL
You! $10.00 Start up Fee. FREE: 1·877-436-6297
Ca ll April. 304-88:2-3630 for
i'ROFJ;SSIONAL
Details.

~~

ldiled ~Y

'h•

of
,
fcur acrombltd words b,.
low to fcrm fcur :~imple words.
Rearrange

!enars

. II I 1 I I
2

4005

Gallipolis Career College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Todayl 740-446·4367,
1-600·214·0452
www gallipohscarefHColleOje com
Reg lf90·05·1 274B.

I

block three times·the wife askea

. I_ I_ I. .Is ..

her husband.,'"Why didn't you tell
me I was lost?" Smiling the Mus. - - - - - - - - --...:......, band replied , "Well, you always

:. \I---'1-C--'I-F_._E:-~.A_N.___,Iknow where

1 I I' I I
6

.

6

.

.

.

.

.

'o-c~..:pi.;.- ~h.

you're go,ng when;
chudcl• q•o••ci

by fi lling in lhe missir19 wordJ
you deve lop from lfep No. 3 .below.

P~I N T NUM6t REO LE TT ER S

IN

THESE SQUARE S

( } UNSCiAMBLE
C,[[ AN SWER

lETT ERS TO

I I I
.

.

.

I I I
.

•

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Cupful - Juicy- F?aven- Potash- JUST FINE
Dad to teenage driver 'Before you back out of tne
garage, be sure and look in the rear vtew m1rror and the
s•de mirror " The teen repl ied , "Oh dad, I look JUST

Yesterday's

..

FI NE "

I

Hl88-582'·3345
WI \I I " ' " II

Ho~m;

fOR SALE

Electric wheelchair, goo d
cond. askmg $1.400 . call

180
1.

WANITD

In this newapaper Ia
aubject to the Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1968
which makee It Illegal to
advertise "snw
preference, llmll•tf()n or
dlacrlmlnallon b8s~ed lon
race, color, religion, sex
familial atatus or national
origin, or any Intention to
make any such
preference, limitation or
dlacrimlnatlon,"
Thll new1paper will not
knowingly accept
advarttaements tor real
estate which Ia In
violation of the law. Our
readers are hereby
lntorrMCI that all
dwelling• advertlaed In
this newspaper are
avallabl• on an equal
opportunity bases.
Owner Must Selll
Price Reduced
Ranch Style Home. Syrs.
old. Approx. 2000s~ . ft . 3br,
2ba, LA , OR, FA, ;2 car
garage. Convenient
location.
3()4,674-4677

eled, in Middleport, call Tom
story home on approx. 1
Anderson after 5 p.m.
acre, 3 bedrooms. (2
992·3348
upstairs. 1 on first floor.) 1
bath. living room, eBt-in
3 bedroom, 1 bath~ 2· siory kitchen, enclosed back
home in Pomeroy, i car porch used as utility room,
garage, firePlace. (740)992- enclosed front porch used
9492
as TV room . 'G.reat location,
in walking distance of local
3 bedroom, 2 bath, 508 market and Post office. Fruit
State Street, Thurman, OH trees, city water, natural gas,
$45,000 Call 1740)379· detached 1 car garage, lor
9249 or (740)245-0358
more·
information
call
- - - - - - - - - (740)376·6253
3 br. home at 171 Lariat Or.
..., MOBILE HOMES
Gallipolis OH .. appt. on ly
.
FORSALE
please 740-446-9403 or

740-448-7845or 1-304-6753216.
.

3 year old Brick Ranch ,
3.000+ sq,ft ., 2-1/2 acres.

A&lt;."REAGE

1/3 acre lot on 554 in Porter,
all utilities (including sewer)
Ready to build. $16,900
17401 256-9200

r

1304 )458-1656

200 1 14x80 Oakwood. 3
BR. 2 bath, all appliances
included. We'll make down
payment, you take over payments of $370 month, or bu~

for $22,000. 1216)351-7086
evenings and weekends, or

(216)257-1485 days.
Cole's Mobile Homes
US 50 East, Athens , Ohio,

Call (740)367-7266 between
9am &amp; 9pm.

Land Home Packages avail·
able. In your area, (740)446-

33t4.
New 2003 Doublewide. 3 BR
&amp; 2 Bath. Only $1695 down
.and &amp;295 /mo. 1-800-691·
6777
New 3br/2bth. Only $995

down and only $197.47 pee
month . Call Harold, 740·
385· 7671 .

Twm Rivers Tower is accepting applications for waiting

1

~~
BuildlnQ lots, State Route
141 , 10 minu tes from ~~--------rGallipolis . Restricted. with
water &amp; electric. All with road 1 and 2 bedroom apartments, furnished and unfurfrontage . (740)379-2830
nist'led, security depo511
For sale- shares of property required , no pets, 740·992·
in Langsville, Ohio area, 2218.
part. of 135 acre farm , great
for hunting , call (740)742· 1 Bedroom Apanments
2006
Starting
at
$289/mo,
Washer! Dryer Hookup,
Lot for sale in Racine.. Stove · and Refrigerator.

list tor Hud-subs1zed , 1- br,
apartment. call 675-6679

EHO

t,__.limi iSi iRI'A.iRfil~il-rr.__,l'
Trailer space lor rent in
I

(740)44 f · 1519.

tor sa le· close to
Green Schoo\ 2 mobile
home lots. Own 1 &amp; rent 1.
ApprO)(Imately 11'2. acre .
Greet investment. {4 19)991·
0924

2 one bedroom aPartments
in Middleport, ava ilable For Sale: Reconditioned
immediately, (740)928·494 1 washers , dryers and relrig·
after 6pm.
erato rs.
Thompsons
3 rooms &amp; bath, all utilities Appliance . 3407 Jac~son
paid , downstairs $285.00 Avenue. (304)675-7388.

Proper!)~

740 ·446·2568 .
HousinQ Opportunity.

bedroom

house

in

•

Impounds!
Venture .
Hondas , Chevys, etc! CarS/ 1983 Yamaha
Truc~s from $500 . For list- 36,000K mi., full dress, .new
ings 1-800·719-3001 ext. tires . runs great, looks good

$3.500. 1740)245-0460

1993 Pontiac Grand Am SE,
2 dr. 6 cyl , 139.000 miles.
re mote . starter, Pioneer
casslsterio, new tires , runs
good, nice car. $2,500,

(740)949-9008

1986

EVANS LAWN CARE
• FreeEsUmales•
Lawn Malntainence, Shrub

Trimming, Snow Removal
&amp; Other lown Core Needs
Jamie Evans
linda Evans
(7 40) 949·2 !08 ( 74 0) ~4 :).')11 6
Pager (800) 97&amp; ·24!1 ,... 1 • .,

"&lt;,.
tf)P11Il11A.
....7

High &amp;Dry
Self-Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

CAMI"t:KS&amp;

MOTOR HOMES
Hornet

Camp er.

C&amp;C
General
Home
Maintenance· Painti ng, vinyl
97 Dodge Neon automatic.
cold air. nice car. $:2100 siding, carpentr~. doors,
~ridOWS, bethS, moblle
080. (740)441·0584'
home repair and more. For
98 DOdge Stratus, 4 door, free estimate call Chet, 740·
2.4, 4 cylinder. full power, 992·6323.
CD player, new tires. 80,000
PLUMBING &amp;
miles. AIC. runs &amp; drives

080.

grea1.
$4800
(740)441·1547

r

Congratulatlanal You have
won 2 free movie tickets to
the
Spring
Valley
7
GallipoliS. Call lhe Sentinel
for details. 740 992·2155

r

3 br. house· in town available
May 15th unfurnished w/
carpet $400 . per month
$400. dep. i yr. lease contract call (740)446·0332 as~ (740)446-3945
for Heather.
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed- Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark ..
House For Rent air and rOom apartments at Village Chapel Road, Porter, Ohio.•
electric. 2003 Madison AvO. Manor
and
RiYerslde (7~0)446-7444 1·877·630· .
Pt Pleasant (3041675-6453 Apartments In Middleport. 9162 . Free Estimates, Easy ~
From $278-$348. Call 74'0 · financing. 90 days same as .,
Partial furnished 3 bedroom 9S2-5064. Equal Housing cash . Visa/ MaSter Card.'.:
doublewide
w/ aneched Opportunities.
Drive- a- little save slot.
•
·
garage, 3
miles from
·
Pomeroy on 143, $375 plus ~---------------------Honeysuckle Hills Apt.locat- Whirlpooi .Washer, Designer :
deposil . (740)992·7401
ed on Colonial Dr. behind 2000. $175: GE washer , •
H1ghway Patrol post, 2 br $95: GE Dryer. $95: Electric •
Unfurnished 2 br, house with now available rent starts Range, 30", $95; Frost Free
lull basement, close to town, $285.00 per man. low &amp; Refnger.ator. nice. $150: GE ~
asking $350.00 a mort +utll· moderate income Equal Electric Range, nice. $165: :
ities,dep.required call 304·
HouslnQ
Opportu nity Maytag Washer &amp; Dryer Sel, •
675-8902 or 304-593-0152
(740)446-3344 or TOO · 1- like new, $400; Kenmote :
B&lt;XH50-0750.
Washer and Dryer Set , •
""" MOBILE HOMES
$300:
Drop Leal Table and 4 •
..__ _ioFOIIiilioiRfiiiiiNriiio-r Mobile home tor rent 2 br. ,
·
water &amp; kitchen appliances chairs , $165 : Couch. S50; :
14x70 mobile home, 3 bed· turn .. no pets call (740)441- King size Bed , $1 50; Full
size Bed, $150; Various '
4540 leave message.
room , 2 bath, Pomeroy, _
other pieces of furniture . :
$390 per month, (740)992·
Modern 1 br. apt. ~740)446- Skaggs
Appliances , ~
6914

FARM

Axle DurTlp truck , 466, DT.
Allis Chalmers DO Aoacl .Sherry cUnningham
eng ine. Congratulations! You have
1968 International
Boy Grader, diesel
won 2 free movie tickets to
(740)256-6147
1ractor. s· belly mower,
the Spring Valley 7 in
Gxcellent condition, great for
1996 F150, 6 cyl. $7900 .
Gallipolis. Call the Register
yards or farmi ng, (740)742·
740·368·0173 or 740·367· today tor details.(304)6752301 aher 5:00.
7187 .
1333

low

---------------- ·

:

•

••
•

•

on,this poge'fot(Js low tis

S25~00
~~r mopth!
.
·.. '

''•

.

OLD GLORY
AUCTION
SERVICES
Every Thursday

ul 5:3flp.m.
Cons.ignm cnt W~d. &amp;
Thurs. IOam-Jpm
Now doinv, estate
&amp; household

Cell (304)674-0870
W1ll pressure wash homes,
trailers, decks . metal bu1ld·
.ngs and gutters . Call
(740)446-0151 ask lor Ron
or leave message.

P~C rt.!' nni ~ d ' ')2 . 2~.

4 in. rots $ 1.00 - ~ 1.2:0.
!-! in &amp; 10 in. CLL }' pol "
&amp; l'o mh i nuti u n l~l ll pl.uucrs \ 4.50 &amp; $7. 'J .~
Open Mon -Su t 9-5

740·992-5379
~-·J

'

Tl\e
Daily;

''

Phone (740)593-6671

1\lll&lt;ns, Ohio

Clu ~t' tl Sunda~·

Pomeroy Eagles
BINGO 2171
Every Thursday &amp;

JONES'

PC DOCTOR

Sunday
Doors Open 4:311

Grand Ooening
May 1st

Tree Service
Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding

li®i

Early birds start
6:30 1st Thursday

Bucket Truck

We Make House Calls

ur every month

· Computers, Repairs,
Upgrades, Networks

All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon

30 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. OWner: Ronnie Jones
Free Estimates

Buy $5.00 Bonanza ·
Get 5 FREE
Snapper

204 Condor Street

Dean Hill

992-2975

'

Lawn and Garden Equipmem is our
business. not our sidelir1e

I

HARTWELL
STORAGE

Riverway
Cafe

J&amp;C Lown Service
Mow&amp; Trim -

in .~yrat· use
r 1-"&lt;mnN/r 1\'lrimn :, 1

Please leave
me ssage if no

Under ne w uwncr . . hip

an swer

and

n ~\~

81

740·992-1717
St. Rt. 7 Goeglein Rd.
Pomeroy

475 South Chrch St.
Ripley, WV 25271

1-800·822-0417
··w.v·s # l C hevy. Pontia c. llulck, Olds
&amp; Custom Van Dealer·

lOxlO
10x20

Auctioneer
Jim Taylor

New&amp; Used

Pomeroy, Ohio

1

s~les.

Phone 992-9553
or 742-0226

Best Service at
the Rest Price

BUILDERS InC.

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garra gesJ
• Replacement

Finally .. . Money paid to ~ \Vhen cancer
strike s. You d10ose the amount up to $50,000!
Pay s in addi tion Lo ot her i n~urance.
You use the money however you like.
Cam:er will stri ke when you least expect it
IL wi ll k avt: yuu and your famil y linancially
&gt;~rapp e u .

Window s • Ro1.1ring
COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

740-992-6694

CANCER CHECK

CA NCER CHECK will he

th ere wl1 en you nccd
C all rHm to I'C~ t'J'\' C XQ.W:
01'1'1' &lt;lui11 -~PI!l
,.,U IOJI•"; In•,· •U h·~•w P•

'ur
\ ·.rl "' 1.•r .11 · ""' "''"r""' '"'"!'
I !~&lt;'

FREE ESTIMATES

17401446-IMil

740-992-7599

ROCKY HL"PP I~SUH.\Nl'E
&amp; FI~ANCIAI. SER\'ICF.S
Box 18t.J .'vii DDu-.r oR r . O ll -'5.7flO

~~~Ill oi/o,;Jil ol[!l

5,,.,,,

it.
..:hct: k.

740-843-5264

/'ltlllt'

lf ll'l ll n

lll&lt;lllagemc rl1 .

COME JOIN l 1S
7 Days A Week!
Morning

"The Link rl'~\ll ura n l
with the hig- t a~ t e"

HOWARD l.

WRITtSfl
*HOOFING
dOME
MAINTENANCE
dEIMlESS
GOITER
"'free Estlmatab

29670

Bashan Road

Size• 5'x1o~

sgg;month*

l740J 985-4180

~&lt;&gt; 10'x30'

•w.A.C-

Hours
7:00AM- 8:00PM

11401
992-1385

Randall L. Shust
Owner

740-992-1871

Certified Arborlot
·full Range ot SerYices·

Stop &amp; Compare

t'H.Iil:" t:.SllJid.IJ;;S

(740) 594·87~4
~:~~cturttl
Aluminum

O"cr lh )!Cars Experience
• Room Additions
• Kit chen &amp; Bath

Stain b~ S1cel WEL IN
C a~1 Iron

Mdd Stc~i

Stid . Mig. Tig, (:ia~.
Pr(1pane \\..'c lding
Pla :mm. Atr Arc. &amp;
Acet ylene cu!1ing

B ru ~ ~

MANLEYS
SElF STORAGE
97 Beech St.
middleport, OH
992-6635
THOMPSON'S
WATER
Si n ~.:c

I il71:1

A1.nh"1 "0:11 S~n "~ I' m' 1d~r hn

RalnSufl
Waler Tl"l!il lm ~ n t

l-.tJUi pmt•nt

Mt. Vernon
74 -397-9751

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Addition• &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages.
• Electrh::el &amp; Plumbing
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Pa'tlo and Porch Decks

1·740-949-2115

Pomeroy, 0n1o

Pd 1 mo

Gunero

Free Estimales

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·62 15
22 '/ IU$loc!11

Henderson, WV

Full~ l n ~ u~cd

875-2457 or 448-2112

Free btimate ~

740-992-1119

Cell Phone 674-3311 Fax 304-675-2457

Seamless Gutter
Seroices
• No Sea111s
• No U(lks
• Free Estimates

• Driveways • Tennis Courts
• Parking Lots • Playgrounds
• Roads • Streets
WV Contractors Lie. #003506

lh1 ·n,·r or,erarf ,t

Dm·id Rlr i11k .1 '-~ .Vomw Rhn(/t'.l

Office (740) 985-3511

Marcum
Building
Service
• Dtxk' &amp; P~1rc h .:s
• Room t\J diHI' Il ~
• Ro(1l"i ng

• Vin)•l &amp; Wood
Sidin g

• Interior Rcrnodeling
Gene ral C 1rpentry Work

Parts • Senice
Bags • Belts

Roosa's
LAWN
CARE

l

..---'--LAWNCT
MOWING ·•
CONTRACTS

l $15-$25for l
small yard
$35 per acre J
1

Mike l\111rt·um. Owner

740-985-4141

Ow-r 25 Vl'ars in Bu l illl" \S
- ' ~5 . 00 &lt;,cn'icc fc c fnr p 1 ~·\..mg
up ' '~· e eper s &lt;~1 ) t lllr l \t• m~·

SEAL IT COOS"IRUCTlON

RainbowS. Kirby, El~·tlniiU .\: , llnCI\Cr, Eun.•kK,
Tri-Star~ Re~:,ina &amp; most other hrands.
Parts shipped UltS • ··Rst, Dependable Senice

C. til Bl'n C0d,, , at Ccd.tr

• Roofing !

MYERS PAVING

(10'Kl0' 610'K20')

(740) 992-3194

YOUNG'S

COMPARE THESE PRICESII
4"' pot of annuals 94e
4" pol of perennials $1.18 (8ut 6 gt! I FREEl
Flat of plants $6.60
Open 7 doyo
a WHk dayl!ghl
Hanging Baskets $6.60
,. """
Morning Star Road- C.Rd 30 • Racine , OH

Srme Cerrijied • PorraiJ/e

APWelding (740) 949-0901

I 'l &gt;

Meigs CountYs Largest selection of
annuals, perennials, vegetables,
shrubbery, fruit, ornamental trees,
·roses, rllodoaenarons, ana azaleas.

RcmQ&lt;kling
.• Replacement Wi n d o w~;
• Pol'l:hes • Decb. • Gurages ·
,• Siding • Roofing
• Complete ReiHib~

m

Radiat or.~

1-ohruuds &amp;
Side tank s
Broken IJh~
Plastic tank!\ &amp; Boxes
Tailli ght len ses

Custom
Building
&amp; Remodeling

or I

SUE's GREENHOUSE

for free estimates
740-992·5678
Leave messa e

1

740·949·2217

Friendly &amp; Profenlonal

• Garages

Let me do 1t for you

liNDA'S PIINDNI .

25 yrs. experience

·• New Homes

SpeCial

on A/C
as low as

45771

ln1~ rl~1r, t:)ll~rlnr, t.:uinm~tn• !t~l

CONSTRUCDON

the PAIN
out of PAINTING! '

Add

Racine . Ohio

949·1405

ROBERT
BISSEll

Ta~e

Hill's Self
Storage

1/ 14/1 mo. pd

·

Newell's Lawn Mow mg
Serv1ces Call (304895-3399

1-1).1
AI.\'O PlOW accepti11g
most iluurmrcf

#cHiVRO,~Tj

$ 1 !. ') ~

f1 in.

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Grille ~

'

740-992-2432

LARRY SCHEY

GRAVELY TRACTOR

Moton.:ycb fairing-"
Auto. Bumper:&gt;~

.

Heolher A. Fry L.M.T.

Grafters Wanted

$(&gt;.95

. . l ll1n . H,m g mg ba ~ h:l "
$~.9 ~ &amp; $9.1J5
12 in. Han gin g B ~hk C I "

Buy 1 Gift Certilicale.
Cet 2nd Free!

!hru

Fl:n ~

mix or mar('h

Gravely_

Remodeling

, .1990 lnlernalionel Single

. ,;,f;.,,..l.
L--·EQuiil;iiiliiii'II--I!Nii
•

"·

All

Easter &amp; Mothers Day

202 East Main

• Complete

(740)446-2847 $1800

lb

Syracuse Now Open

THERAPEUTIC
MASSAGE

orr~, ~·'l.od

Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

HUB BARDS
GREENHOUSE
992-5776

HEATING

740·992·1•93

Home grown Asparagus.
Charles McKean Farm 740·
t983 Ford F-150, E~etended
446-9442.
Cab,
4x4, 300· 6-cyllnder.
1 \lnl ... 1 1'1'111 '
fair shape , runs great.
.\ 11\l .... llltl\.
'

S95 . Skaggs Appliances. 76 :
VIne St. 17401446-7398

r

Mark Proffitt

TRUCJ(S
FOR SALE

Spring r..
r.. Special ':&lt;

I

(7 40)992·6914

For more lnrormution call iJ92-4055

'~

Craft, Basket and
Antique Mall

740-992-5232

Imported bloodlines claSSIC leather, $5,500, (740)590markings (740) 379·9110
2496

F

"

17' Bass boal. 140 hp
Johnson. (2) lishldepth finders, li va well . trolling motor.
trailer. (740)992-~385

2002

MUSICAL
· I~TRUMEN'ffi

b)' The MI(I!Jiept.Jrl C1•mmuni1v A~~ ol.' a1ill
The l'omtmy Mt'rehanl\ A ~")ti:1 linn .
Tn '1gn up. 'tnp in Ohw River Bc;u Cu " r Mi ddiclli'R
lkpl Sillfl' ur Oflkc Scr\il'C &amp; Suppi~ m /&gt;. liddlcp• 1rt (Jr
Chapman Shoe .. &amp; Ohiu Valle) Uulk Swrc P n mcr0~

THE CRAFT
SHACK

(304)675-1935

HJHSALE

sr~~n~l)l'e d

19 Welshtown Rd.
Pomeroy, OH 45769

(740) 992-0003
Prime location with
lots of parkin

Editioh ,33K miles. loaded.'
ing area slide out. 32ft. long .
exc cond .calf alter 6pm
Never
been
trallered .
Block . brl c ~ . sewer pipes.
(740)446-1955
· E~ecel l ent
co ndition .
Windows . li ntels . etc . Claude
Winters. Rio Grande, OH 2000 Oldsmobi le Alero $ 15.000. (740)446-2252
Call740-245-5121 .
42,500 mi. ext. warra nty to
100,000 mi. 4 new tires, 36' Terry Fleetwood camper.
PETS
AM
/FM/&amp;
cassette/CO, queen size bed, bath, ale ,
FOR SAL[
White w/ Gray int. , spoiler, new lurnace, no refrigerator,
exc cond . { 740 ) 4~ 1-9865 5th wheel goes with it, askAKC Registered La brador
ing $4,000 OBO. \740)992·
after 5pm.
Retn ever
puppies.
6190 after Spm
Champ1 on
Bloodlin es, 200t Por;tiac Grand Pri~ .
"I I~\ II I "'
Ready for Easter. · Males lik.e new condition , bur$200, Females . $300. Black gundy, loaded. :22.000 actu·
HOME
&amp; Yellow (740)446-0080
af miles . 13,000 left on warIMPROVE!'o!U&gt;TS
ran.ty.
$t3,500
OBO.
C.'K. C. Registere d Jack 1740)992-1493
Russell Terr ier puppy. male,
BASEMENT
7 wee~s . $150. (740)256· 2002 4 dr. Taurus SES fully
WATERPROORNG
eq. $1 t ,800. 304-675·3354
1652
Unconditional life time guar91 Ford Th\,Jnderbird , 5.0 antee. Local re ferences fur·
Cute boxer mixed pups.
motor looks &amp; runs good nished. Established 1975.
Shots &amp; wormed . 6 w·eeks
(740)-446-0130.
• -· CaU 24 Hrs. 1740) 446Old April 21 . $50 . 379·2915
0870, Rogers Basement

lO

JIM'S SMALL
ENGINE REPAIR

Brand New 4.-wheelers . 50
cc $1299 , 100cc $1599. Will
trade tor a great deal Call

lloATS &amp; MomRS

of maps di ~lnbul ed ! Ad vcfl i.\t.:d &amp; promuh::d wid ely un
ntdi o, new~ pa per11. llyer~ &amp; po!&gt;lers!
A·ll for $5.(lq!

• Lawn Mowers
Power Mowers
• Chain Saws
• Snow Blowers
• Weed Eaters
Tillers • Edgers
Go Karls • Mini
Bikes -

Street Downtown,
Porneroy

r

·

WE REPAIR

1740)245-5747

2000 Chev. malibu limited sleeps tO, has dinette 8. liv-

""

Good Used Appliances.
and
Reconditioned
Guaranteed
Washers,
Dryers,
Ranges ,
and
Aetrlgeraters, Some start at

(740)446 -7398

•Ag Lime

BMW

(740)992-7401

SUPI'I.I~:S

• Dirt

Touring K100 RT S3500 .

1994 Ford Thunderbird , li~e
new condition . 75,000 miles.

BlJILDIN(;

Makes &amp; Models
Free Estimates
Fast Turnaround

1995 Harley soft tail custom

$12.500 .. .

Cellular

6 1111l ~" l o n g through M idd leport &amp; Pome roy! Hundred.

SSOOI Police

(7 40)682-7512

t pair 200 Wall EV. PA sys·
tem spea~ars , tits 24x28 in
cabinet 12 in . EV speakers
8x16 in horns asking

old ExCellent Conditio!'!.
Beech St. Middlepon. 2 bed· Super capacity, Heevy Duty.
(740)446·4116
room furnished apartment. Call.
utilities paid, deposil &amp; refer· 17401441·9414
ences , no pels, (740)992·
Late
model
Whirlpool
0165
refridQ . $125 .00, Whirlpool,
Furnished efficiency. Ail utili- washer , $75 .00, GE dryer_
ties paid, Share bath, $135 $65.00 all Almond (740)446- ..
month. 919 2nd Avenue. 9066
•

0390

F""'

ilH:oltion for yuur ):tr_d ..ale.

HAULING:
• Limestone
• Sand

I_
~'--&lt;10MO'IlJRCYCLES
-~'. -1L
fPJII.'

1994 Corvette. White Red Boat &amp; trailer, 1998 Marda
leather. glass top $1t .OOO MXI Sport, 18', $8,500 ,

White'S Metal Detectors
Ron AlliSOn
588 Watson Ad
.Bidwell OH, 45614
Phone (740 )446-4336

May 2nd &amp; 3rd.

Racine, OH
3/4 Ton G~C Work Van,
34M. Original Owner. a1r,
auto, tilt, cruise. $10,500 .
(740)446-2957

1992 H. D. Springer Salt Tail,
1988 Buick Sk~lark , t&gt;odies low m1les , lots of chrome ,
good. needs motor. asking (740)992-6027

Su nda y. (740)446-7300

Trucking

$5 gets you·on the mup &amp; a ycll n'l\' !l ctg.
An additional $5 if you uced an in-1own

94 LEXUS ES 300 . loaded. Waterproofing .
Reg . Border Collie puppies tl 1K, clean. good conditi on.

Equal Kenmore Washer/Dryer 2yrs

----------------

new 1ires. $2 .500. (740)992·
1493

Jr. (740)256-11 02

Aull"'

3901

Grati ng
For
Drain s,
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp; L
Sc rap Metals Open Monday,
Tue sday, Wed nesday- 6
Fnday, Bam-4:30pm . Closed
Th ursday,
Saturday
&amp;

~

(740)992·5858

HAY &amp;
GRAIN

10

Join lhefiih annual YcJJo;N Flag Yard Sale '

1993 one ton Ford work Va n. 1 .
loo~s goOd . runs good . like

r

Townhouse
Apartments. Very Spacious,
2 Bedrooms, 2 Floors. CA. 1
H2 Bath, Newly Carpeted,
Adu lt Pool &amp; Baby Pool ,
Patio. Start $385/Mo. No
Pets. Lease Plus Security
Deposit Required, Days:
740-446-3481 i Evenings:

154 Acres of Hardwood Fall .
Timber &amp; Pine Pulp wood for
sale by owner. Show date
Trailer for Rent 1740)446- 740·367-0502.
May 2, tOam . May 3, 10am. 4824

1984 14x70 Shul1z mobile 2

Call 1304)675-6515 af1e• 45701, 740-592-1972

55 acre farm on SA 554 .• 3
bedroom. 2 bath house with
basement. 2 barns. 10 acres
pasture. Spring fed livestock
tank, Good hunting. Stocked
pond. Free gas. $125,000.

Small 2 bedroom $285 . per
month. 3 bedroom&amp; 2 baths
$400. per monlh . $400 .
Deposit up 1ront references
requ1red. No pets inside or
out. Free gas with ba1h. Cal l
(740)245·5622

Rio Grande area. 3 to 30 519 2nd street 740-446·
acres lots, some restrictions, 3945.
wate r &amp; electric. (740)245·
BEAUTIFUL
APART·
12x60 1970 PMC. good con- 5747
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
dition. 4 yr. old furnace. new
I{ I '\ I \I ..,
PRICES AT JACKSON
floors, new carpet with
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
14x24 unfinished attached
Drive !rom $297 to $383.
room , $1500 OBO. must
Wa,lk to shop &amp; movies. Call

Bulav111e Pike. 2 story. 3 br.,
ToDo
2 112 ba .. liv. room. dining.
lam .. &amp; game room . 2 car We have new sectional &amp;
E~eperienced college student gar., 3 car unaltached, pool, single wide homes as low as
will do basic house cleaning , 1 acre $175.00.00 (740)448· $180 per month, 800·837·
2338.
.
reliable. and honest Call 8050
(740)645-1050 ask for Tara.
Handyman , yard
work,
(740)992-2741 ask lor T1m.

~

Mobile home 'tor ren1, no
pels, (740)992-5858
Tara

BEDROOM HOME , 4 home, 3 bedroom. 2 beth ,
Middleport, $300 per' month,
bath, only $14,900. For list· $10,000 , on large lot that
$300 deposit , no pets,
ings call 1·BOO· 719·3001 can be rented . (740)992(740)992-5039
EJd.F144
6914
'

4br. 3 baths. storage building. fenced yard . CI A,
Modern appliances. All
Electric,
Good
Neigh.borhood, Pt. Pleasant.

2 br. mobile home, $350.00 0008.
a mon. plus dep. and util. no

E.H.O

lnground
pool. storage
building. e~tcellent neighbOr- movel Call (740)949-0812,
leave a message .
hood. (740)446-0149

4

Now Taking Applications35
West
2 Bedroom
Townhouse
Apartments ,
Includes Water
Sewage,
· Trash , $350/Mo., 740-446-

One · bedroom turnished
2 br. tra1ler lor rent. no pets apartment in Pl. Pleasant.
~
call 740 -441·9060 9-5pm Very clean and nice . No
Corner
Restaurant after 5 pm call 740·245- Pets. Phone (304)675-1386
Middleport. Ohio estab · 9060 .
Pleasant Valley Apartment
tished 1991 business &amp;
2 br trailer At 7 Gallipolis Are now ta~if'lg Applications
building. turn key operat10n.
City limits 740· ( 740)~46- tor 2BR. 3BR &amp; 48R .
(740)992-3955
2491
Applications are
taken
Rio Grande afea , 2400 Beau!iful River View Ideal Monday thru Friday. from
sq .lt ., O!fice/ Comme rcial For
t Or 2 People , 9:00 A.M .-4 P.M . Ottice is
Building tor Rent/ Lease. References. Deposit, No Located at 11 51 Evergreen
Plenty off parJ&lt;ing. (740)245- Pets, Foster Trai ler Park , Drive Point Pleasant, WV Phone No is (304)675-5806. •
1!!57:i!l4::'"7-~~-'"!'--., 740·441-0181 .

r

r

R.B.

- - - - - - - - ,,-- 17jaQ-91J~-l,~ll)4

(740)286-5395

Large sw1ng se t; lull size $300, (740)7n-2481
t r ue~ cap ; love seat. older
child's chopped 3 wh eeler, 199;2 Mere Cougar 2dr. 8
cyl. , sunroof, auto, ale.
(740)985· 3810
107,000 miles. e~cellent
New &amp; Used Heat Pump s· .:;ondition . Phon e. (304)675Gas
Furna ces
.Free 1519
E.stimates. (740)446-6308
1993
'Cavalier
Good
NEW AND USED STEEL Condit ion . 106,000 miles.
Steel Beams. P1p e Rebar New t1res. $2,000. Ma ~ e
work
car.
Call
For
Concrete ,
Angle. good
(304)88
2·2098
atte.r
5
pm.
Cha nnel. Flat Bar , Steel

Hiiiiiio~.~.~.·... L,-•M•oiinllin
iiHiiio.~.IE'l•._.1 r_.i\11i.i~iiiR1ii'\OiiiNiii
- io'-S ,.t
FOR•.ERENT
FOR R ENT

Lars &amp;

10 horses for sale, green 1988 Ford Bronco 4~4 .
broke paints , (740)992·3276 GoOd
Condition,
Call
(304)675-651 5 after 5pm
Feir Lamb s, (740)4 41·9614
aft er 4:30pm. Also, one 3
t991 Che v ~ Blaze r, runs
month old billy goat for sale.
good, $1200, ( 7 40)9~2 Reg . Angus bulls- Top per- 2563
formance bloodl ines. Maine
Chi· Angus s how heifers. · 1993 Dodge Caravan.' ac .
heifers, bred heife rs and good cond . asKing $1800 .
crossbred bu lls. Slate Run Call 740-446·9552 or 740·
Farm..
Jacks on,
OH. 446-4122

1987 Pontia c 6000 runs 1987 XR-250 , goOd condi·
needs tires, $350.00 080 lion , new t1res. run s strong,
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In 304-675-6870 or 740·446$950 080, 1740)992-6925
Stock . Call Ron Evans, t - 2639

11

pelS 1740)446·4313

VANS&amp;
4-WDs

J ET
AERATION MOTORS

""-•M•oiouiiinli
FOR:.-.SAL,!-:

RUSIN"""
..__iiAjj,NiilloiBiiiiiUiillii..DiilN&lt;iili;siiio,.,

.
____.~l
~~
~
LiVESTOCK
• L
i

HIRSALE

800-537-9529 .

2 bedroom t4)(70 mobile
home in Middleport. $325
plus deposit.
no Pets,
(740)992-3194

$850. (740 )256-1105

17 40)44 6- 4122

8902

Vindale mobile home. t:2)(60
with expando. window air,
gas heal. furnished , one
family owned . ve ry n1ce.
price reduced. (740)742 ·
2979, 740·992·3394

(740)379-2757

87 dodge van $1300. ask for ·

Up To 15 Words, 3 Days
Over 15 Words 20¢ Per Word
Ads Must Be Prepaid

All real estate advertising

3 Bedroom newly remod· Reedsville location , t 112

5pm.

BUSINIHi

I =~

No Fee Unless We Win!

(3)FHA &amp; VA homes set up
NURSES (RNo)
for i~mediate possession all
$47.00
per
hqur, within 15 min. of downtown
Columbus, OH . All Units, Gallipolis. Rates as low as
FULL TIME (800)437·0348 6%. (740)446·3219.

TRAINING

v

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?

Part-time, flexib le schedule!
1·800·695·9166 or visit
www.NolayoflsHere.com

Truck Drlvtre, Immediate
h1re, class A COL required ,
excellent pay, experience
required . Earn up to $1,000.
per week .Call 304·675·

.: , t-r.,E'-rN--'1-r.-G,I_T-r--i

:1,_ -L A 0 1

SERVICES

4 br. t 112 baths, brick and
Sub contractor for siding &amp; frame, lull basement, 2 car
sotfitt installer, send resume : garage, New haven WV
Da11y. Sentinel, PO Box 729· (740)446·4274
31 , Pomeroy. Oh 45769

·uMI

-----~---

:o

WORD

r

~

Overbrook Rehabilitation
Cemer is currently accepting
applications for its upcoming
nursing assistant. class .
Applications will be accepted until May 1, 2003. The
class will begin May 12,
2003. Applications may be
picKed up at 333 Page St..
Middleport, Oh or co ntact
Gassy
Lee,
Staff
Development Coordinator at
740}992-6472 For more
information.
E.O.E.
Individual with Secretarial,
Accounting. a['ld sales skills. - - -- - - - -- Send resume and refer- Part-time posilion available
ences along with salary for a Shetter Manager lor the
requirements to : 4367 State Me1gs COunty Homeless
Route 160, Gallipolis, ·oH Shelter. Poaillan requires at
45631
a minimum, a high school
diploma.
preferably
an
Join the team ot quality care Associates Oegre~ in a
professionals at Overbrook social work field. The ideal
Center. We are taking appli- candidate will have strong
cations
for part time interpersonal skills, be able
LPN 's/RN 's for 12 hour to work wi1h minimal super·
shifts. Benefit package avail· vision,
keep
accurate
able. Please come In and records, and l:le able to work
complete our application with other area service
today at 333 Page Street. agencies. Interested parties
Middleport, Oh
may send resumes to :
Personnel. P.O. Box 454,
Gallipolis, OH 45631 .

TMAI DAILY C,./r;l

. 'uuua

""

•

r

FOUND

Visit us at: 200 Main Street, P1. Pleasant
Call us at: (304) 675-1333
Fax us at: (304) 675-5234
E-mail us at:
classified@ mydailyregister.com

POLICIES: Ohio Valle~ PubliShing reserves the right to edit, reje&lt;:t, or cancel any ad at any lime. Errors must be reported on the tirat day ot
Tribune-Sentlnei-Reglater will' be reaponaible tor no more than the coat of the apace occupied by the error and only the tirat insertion. We ahall not
any loll or exptln11 thai reaulta from the publication or omi111;ion of an advertisement. Correction will be made in the first available edition. • Box
are always confidential. • Currant rate card applies. • All real estate advertisements are subJect to the Federal Fair Housing Aet ot 1968. • This n"IOPIIperl
accepts only help wanted ada meeting EOE standards. We will not knowingly accept any advertising in violation of the law.

~-""!"---....,
r.•o_..,;,liHiiloliMiii~iii
· ...._.
FOR SALE
10
BUSINES."&gt;

1110

One day only, 4·25·04 , 45701 or fax 740-593·8221 .
home, J5670 SA 7, lots of misc.
good
spayed. items, large clothing , appli- Gre'enhouse workers need·
&amp;
(740)441-0905
ed and also management
ances, 9·7
positions available. call
(740)843-1248, Alexis Taylor
YARD SA!Epuppies, 112 lab, 1/2
Gardens.
German Shepherd, 1 male,
Pr. I'LEAsANr
1 female, 8 weeks , wormed ,
Heavy equipment operator,
(740)388·0411
Caroline Flea Market Now
50% paid on health insurOpen - Fri. Sat Sun . Vendor-s
ance, partial payment retireLo!ITAND
ment. wages based on
experience.
ma11
resume/wages expected to:
Found-·· female Aottweiler
Dally Sentinel, PO Box 729·
Tanners Run Rd. friendly,
Kessel 's Produce and Flea 30. Pomeroy. Oh 45769
1740)949-2912
- - - - - - - - - Mkt . Open Thu rs-Fri-Sat .
Help wanted caring for the
Found: Beagle Dog . on Now rentinQ spaces , 1354
elderly, Darst Group Home,
Belle Rd . (304)675-7162
Jackson Pike . (740 )446 now paying minimum wage,
7
new shirts : 7am·3pm, 7am·
5pm, 3pm- 11pm, 11pm·
r'--•Y•ARD-•S•A•LE_
7am. call 740·992·5023.

_.II

·il\egister

II "\\\( l\1

Need. carpenter with ~ 0 yrs.
back· ground experience in
Experienced,
. licensed remodeling 304-727-481 1
Physical
Therapist
Assistan t, excellent benefits. No Layoffs Here 11!
send
resume:
14t Earn an extra $420.·
Columbus Ad., Athens, Oh $1680/mon.

5,00pm (330)721-9706

Ca1s
to
neutered

t

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display: 1:00 p.m.
Thursday for Sundays

• Include Phone Number And Addrest When Needed

Middleport-Pomeroy's 6th
annual 6-mlle long Yellow
Flag Yard Sale. May 2 &amp; 3.
loa~ lor the ~allow flags! Call
tor into about locations, 740-

GIVEAWAY

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
MOnday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Day's Paper
&gt;una"'Y In-Column: 1:00 p.m .
For Sundays Paper

Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations

Moving, eve rything goes .
Washer, dryer. Microwave ,
chairs. beds, chests, dishes,
pans. appliances, heater.
fans , adult clothes . quilters
fabric , puzzles . mtercom .
much , much, more. Rain or
shine. Friday and Saturday.
8-?. 136 Second Avenue
--------Yard Sale lund-raiser for the
Gallia
County
An imal
Welfare League. May 1-2. 9
am to 5 pm . 91 Garfield
Gallipolis.
Avenue .
Furniture, clothes . ·collectibles, and jewelry. Light
refreshments available. Help
Us -- Help the animals

High-SChool Diploma? Do
you know how to write an
effective resume? Do you
know what qualities eniptoyers are toot:~:ing For in an
employee? Do you know
how to ~E.ep a job once you
get it? We can Help! For
more information. call the
Meigs
County
STEP/JOG/ABLE Program '"4

Display Ads

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...
12

Word Ads

87 Toyota 4x4 , b8en
wrecked, new rebuilt motor
2.000 miles. S600; 89 5·10,
2 whee l dnve, runs great,
new tires , M problems,

New product launch Octooer
23, •200 2. Call Tr~cy at ~
(7 40)441-1982
Good quali ty straw. Volume
di scount &amp; delivery availCatWalk , 10' , $56 ; small able. Heavy square bales.
dog/cat carrier/house, $1 0; $2. 85 per bale . (304)675sweeper, S40 (740)992· 5724
14261eave message.

Gorgeous Butter Yellow lor·
mal gown , wo tn appro ~ i­
mately 3 hr. , new asking
$80.00 s1ze 14 call 304-675-

Of{iee lforv-~

\"\\ 01 "\ t I \II "\I "

WEIGHT· LOSS
REVOLUTION

Visit us at: 8.25 Third Avenue, Gallipolis Visit us at 111 Court Street, Pomeroy
Call us at: (740) 992-2155
Call .us at: (740) 446·2342
. Fax us at: (740) 992-2157
Fax us at: (740) 446-3008
E-mail us at:
E-mail us at:
classified@ mydai lysentinel.com
cl.&lt;issified@ mydai lytri bune.com

Your

BLOCK

Fal.

Crav ings,
and
BOOST
Energy Like
You Have
Never Experienced .

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
UJ:ribune
Sentinel

To

..

BURN

Cle r~ Fork Lilt , dual PNEU
tires, 4 cyli nder. gas. 3
speed s, forward/ reverse.
4,000 pound cap. 46 inch
forks,
$5500 ,
OBO.

V.lC ~

(304) 273-4098

Roofing. Siding.
Pam ting. El ectrical.
De cks, Etc.
Free Eslimales
992-1 189 992-2902

i

Call now to
schedule your
lawn care
service.

Insured

740-949-1101
1·866·28ROUSI

•

�'
'\

Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel

www. mydailysentinel.com

'

ACROSS

Earth Day reminder to
clean u our own act
DEAR ABBY: Please
remind your adult readers to
be more respectful of our
planet. At 13, I have observed
peopfe who are careless with
their trash and abuse the Earth
with to.xic chemicals and in
other ways. "They forget that
even though they won't be
around when the Earth stans
breaking down. we younger
generations may be.
All my life I've heard adults
say stuff like, "We love you
and will never let anything
hann you." But if grown-ups
don't clean up their act, something WILL harm us. And it
will be because of them. WORRIED
TEEN
IN
GEORGIA
DEAR
WORRIED
• TEEN: Because today marks
the 33rd anniversary of Eanh
Day, your letter is especially
timely. When Earth Day
began, there were no pollution
controls on cars, people and
entire cities dumped untreated
sewage into rivers and land·
fills, industrial communities
.were often shrouded with
smoke and smog, and some
· rivers were so polluted with
'chemicals that they actually
caught fire.
We have made advances
since 1970. but we cannot
afford to become complacent.
. DEAR ABBY: My son,
"Roger,"
was
recently

Dear
Abby
ADVICE
divorced from his wife. His
two sons, 10 and 12. are with
him every weekend. Roger
told me that after the boys
stay at his home, things come
up missing - CDs, tapes,
loose chanjle. etc.
Roger fmally said some·
thing to his ex-wife, but she
told him to "deal with it."
Soon after that, the kids
stayed at my home for a day,
and sure enough, after they
left, 1 also discovered items
missing. Please tell us how
this problem can be handled,
Abby. I would like to show
the boys ' mother your
response. - MICHIGAN
GRANDMOTHER
DEAR GRANDMOTH·
ER: When couples separate,
the~ still have a joint respon·
sibtlity to the children they
brou~ht into this world.
Toppmg the list of lessons
that responsible parents
should teach by example is
how to be a good citizen and a

person with character.
Big crimes usually start
with petty ones. Your grand·
sons are crying out for attention in a negative way. Ideally,
the mother and father should
speak to their sons together,
but if their mother chooses
not to deal with the problem,
then their father must do it
alone . The boys must be confronted and the items
returned. Your son should also
consider spending more time
with the 'boys, until they have
adjusted to the new situation.
If that fails, family counseling
is in order.
DEAR ABBY: I overheard
my cousin, "Jenny," tell our
16-year-old daughter that it
was OK to consume alcohol,
and that she was welcome to
drop by her house any time if
she wanted a drink. (Thank
heaven she lives more than a
hour and a half away')
While I trust my daughter
not to take Jenny up on her
"offer." I think she was out of
line. Do teens really need the
added pressure of an irrespon·
sible adult telling them it's
OK to dririk before they reach
the legal age limit? How
should I handle this if it happens again? ..,.- MIFFED IN
MARYLAND
DEAR MIFFED: For
Jenny to have made such an
offer is a blatant attempt to

' Pllctl tOp, n.lnp to do.In thursday's paptr

Tuesday, April 22, 2003

circumvent · your parental
authority. Do not stand for it.
Remind your cousin that pro·
viding alcohol to minors is
against the law, and let her
know that if it happens you'll
inform the police. As a parent,
your first responsibility is to
.
your ,child.
Dear Abby is written bv
Abigail Vai1 Buren. also
kt!OWil as Jeanne Phillips, and
was founded by her mother,
Pauline Phillips . . Write Dear.
Abbv ar www.DearAbbv.com
or ·P.o. Box 69440,' Los
Angeles, CA 90069.

Pidure yourself
in a new career.
Find it in the
Classifieds!

1 Differing
from the
usual
4 Large
quantity
7 "Golly!"
11 That girl
12 Chills
14 Pierre's
girl .
15 Recent
. (pref.)
16 Hair curler
17 Novelist
-Grey
18 Be against
20 Hissed at
22 Raided the
fridge .
. 23 Moon,

40
41

42
45
49
50
52

•

"Ouch!"
Soap .
purchase
Tranquil
Finish
(2 wds.)
Kite part
Prowl
St. or ave.

53-

spumante
Logical
Want-ad
abbr .
56 Must have
57 Engine
part
58 FICA 10

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

54
55

10 Pay

35

attention
13 Forbids
DOWN
19 EKpletive
21 Units of
1 Cry of
energy
dismay
in verse
24 Smash
(2 wds.)
24 Takes a
Into
2 Profound
breather
25
-the
Red
27 Overeat
3 Hard
26 Leave a
candy
(2 wds.)
mark
4 Belt sites
30 Bend
27 Cooking
5 Come
31 Prohibits
vessels
to terms
32 Suet
6 Laurel and 28 Pilots'
34 Hamm
slghtings?
Hardy
of soccer
29 DlpiO!f1aCy
35 Ornamental 7 Summer·
31 Milwaukee
house?
containers
team
8
FitzGerald's
36 Loony
33 Ballerina's
poet
37 -suzette
balancing
9 Trig
3D Social
point
function
stratum

36

3Q
39
41

42
43
44

46

County
approves
limited
Noble
contract

Fairy-tale
word
Pasternak
heroine
Lash locale
Bizet Opera
Safari
leader
Ollie's
partner
Soothe
Formality
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boss
47 Navaho foes

Unskilled
labot'er
51 Crudely
clumsy one

48

BY BRIAN

Your ideas or suggestions
may be superior to those of
your associates; however. if
they're not carried out properly. they cou ld end up being

BY BERNICE BEDE OsoL

There is a strong possibility
in the year ahead that you wi ll
be enlarging your social circle
considerably. It is important, ·
. howeve r. to keep a balance
between work and play.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20)- 3e careful today not to
take any bows prematurely
for something you haven't yet
ac.complished - · there's a
good chance somethins could
go awry. If it does. 1t'll be
embarrassing.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
...,. Unless you follow through
on your plans m, an orderly
fashion today, yoti could stan
jumping ahead of yourself,
leaving out some very essen·
tial steps that wouiCI derail
your pro!cct.
CANCER (June 21-July
22) - Unless you'1e an ex·
pert. do not attempt to get in·
valved or manage a complicated affair of another's to·
day . It could end up costing
money for both you and the
person you're trying to hel p.
LEO (July 23-Aug ..22) -

more troublesome lhan any-

thing your cohorts would
have done.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
- · Don't expe&lt;t others to
come behind you today and
attend to duties or responsi·
bilities you fail to complete.
· What you don't do yourself
won't get done, and you will
be held accountable.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)
- Although you may be in a
sociable mood today, it isn't
likely that you will enjoy be·
ing a member of · a large
crowd. Stick to small intimate
groups of people with whom
you can let your hair down.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22)- Should you find your·

day your judgment may be
cloudy enough to ·cause you
to ma~e some faulty proJeC·
tions. Keep your thoughts to
yourself
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20)- Guard against making
mountains out of mole hi lis to·
day. so.:that you won't turn
small ta~J&lt;) into monumental
ones .
ARIES (March 21-April
19) - Pompous or arrogant
individuals .who rub you the
wrong way won 't be tolerated
· too easily by you today, so
before accepting any invitations, better check out who
else is included.

tant topic is being discussed,
try to hear what IS really be·
ing said instead of only what
you want to hear. This could.
be a weakness with which
you may have to contend to·
day.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·
Jan. 19)- Take extra time to
shop around today , because
you might be too eager to
gratify a material desire, thus
impulsively spending far
more for it than it is actually
worth.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb.
19) - You're famous for
your foresight into outcomes
others can't envision, hut to-

B.

A,

self in the minprity concern-

ing an opinion, whether it be
that of your family or friends,
gracefully go along with. the
majority. Don't make any

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scenes over il.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·
Dec. 21) - . When an impor·

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1\'0RD SCRIMMAGE" SOLUTION BY JUDO HAMBRICK
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JUDD'S TOTAL

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AdO pomts to each word or tener u~~ scoring directions at ngm Se'.l(ln-lener
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JUDO'S SOLUTION TOMORROW

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. ·Alfred UMW discusses
spring retreat, See page
A3
• Tickets for alumni on
sale, See page A3
• Autism awareness
observed, See page A3
• Mother-daughter banquet, See page A3
Rain likely, HI; BU.. Low: 40s

ROwERS AND
A ROI'IlANTI{..
r.x!H; D€L\VERED
FOR ALL TI\E
WORLD TO StE!

Chrlo11na Lewis, 11 yearo old,
Harrisonville Elementary

Index
2 Sedlons - n Plies
Calendar
A3
Classifieds
B4·5
Comics
B6
Dear Abby
B6
Editorials
A4
Movies
A3,5
B 1·3
Sports
A2.
Weather

. WHIC.H , INC. I PENTALL'&lt;,
WAS PERFORMED
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POPOWSKI'S. f:L.VTE

2003 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

J.

REED

Staff writer

REED

POMEROY - Meigs County
wi II continue tn rei yon the Noble
County Jail to house 3ome of its
prisoners, under a limited con·
tract approved Tuesday.
Meigs County commissioners
approved a one-year contract
wit!l Noble County commissioners and Sheriff Landon Smith.
allowing Meigs Sheriff Ralph
Trussell to house prisoners in the
Caldwell jail al a w st of $50 per
bed , per day.
For two years, the county has
maintained a five-bed contract
with Nohle County at a cost of
$200 ·per day.
Earlier this month, Trussell
recommended that the commis·
sioners discontinue that contract,
which officially expired in
March, in favqr of a continuing
contract
with
Washington .
County.
The $6,000 per-month contract
with Noble County required full
payment regardless of . whether ·
all beds were occupied , and
Trussell said last week he has
been housing most prisoners in
the Washington County Jail, and
in jails at ' Middleport and
Gallipolis.
Trussell has also encountered
problems with housing prisoners
on prescription medications in
the Noble County facility,
because Smith has been forced to
lay otl' jail statl' ~ including
medical personnel.
Trussell said he has begun to
rely most on the Washington
County for prisoner hou sing,
although it costs $60 per bed, per
day. because transp01ting prisoners to and from that jail requires

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J.

BY BRIAN

Statt writer

Astrograph
Wednesday. April 23. 2003

Commissioners
accept old
school buildings

Meigs High School seniors Jennife r Walker and Allison Williamson stand beside a bust
of William Shakespeare in Celia McCoy's English class. Both seniors said Shakespeare's
words through his plays have affected their lives in many ways. Born April 23, 1564,
'
today is the bard.' s birthday. (J. Miles Layton)
'

Shakespeare still holds
meaning for local students
J.

numerous English classes. that they can get caught up
Plays like "Julius Caesar," in goals that are obsessed
"Macbeth" or "Romeo and with or are driven to
POMEROY
High Juliet" are taught each year. achieve. But yet after
Joe Bailey, an English achieving these goals, they
school students in Meigs teacher, hopes the lessons are disappointed or let
County know a thing or two from "Macbeth" will echo down ."
about William Shakespeare, an eternity with hi s stu·
Bailey stresses that the
who was born April 23, dents . "Macbeth" is a play main
le sson
from
1564.
where a man is driven "Macbeth" is that li fe ts
For many students and through blimj ambition and · about choices.
"The play teaches us to
teachers alike, this writer 's a scheming wife to take
plays have captured the over th e throne of Scotland. make better decisions and
"This is a tragedy ,which to be more. responsible for
essence of emotion and
taught valuable .le ssons means the protagonist is our acts."
about humanity for .439 involved in something
Allison Williamson, a
years:
above and beyond his con- ·Senior, likes "Romeo and
Students at Meigs .,.High . ·trot" ~alley . ~aid. "The Juliet ." but hated the .&lt;e,!ld·
valuabl·e
lesson
School get their first I taste most
of . Shakespeare through, learned from 'Macbeth' is Please see Students. AS
Bv

MILES LAYTON

Staff writer

POMEROY - Ju st hours
before the Meigs Local
School Board. tabled action
on the tran sfer 'of the
Harrisonville
Elementary
School building. Meigs
County
commissioners
passed a resolution accepting
that building and Pomeroy
Elementary School. (See
related story.)
The commissioners plan to
assume ownership of the two
buildings and lease them to
two charitable organizations.
God 's
Neighborhood
Escape for Teen s, and the
Meigs County CllOperative
Parish and the Common
Ground Mission have asked
the commissioners to faci li tate the transfer of the buildings on their behalf - God's
NET and the cooperative
Pari sh the Pomeroy school;
Common
Ground
and
Mi ss ioll the Harri so nville
building,
At Tuesday 's school board
meeting, Harold ' Graham of
Harrisonville confirmed hi s
March letter expressing inter·
est in purchasing the build·
ing, propeny and some con·
tents for $20.000. and the
board tabled action on trans·
ferring either building until
after its May 13 meeting.
The board invited commis·
sioners to that meeting to dis·
cuss their plans for both
buildings.
Commissioners
said
. Tuesday they have no interest
in owning thi'buildings other
than serving as a "conduit"
Please see Buildings. AS

Board to
$eek bids
for school ·
demolition
Br CHARLENE
News editor

HoEFUCH

POMEROY
,
Questio1!&amp;·3lld concerns·on
the disposition of schools ·
being vacated . by the
Meigs
Local , ·School
District as students move
into. new buildings were ,
.raised &lt;\! ..Tuesday night's
meeting ·of the Meigs.
Local Board of Education.
The state provides for
the demolitton of old
school buildings or· the
transfer to a taxing entity
such as the county com·
ffiissioners or a village for '
appropriate use or disposi·
tion.
.
'
· At Tuesday's meeting,
the
board authorized
Superintendent William·
Buckley cl!Dd Treasurer
Mark Rhonemus to begin
. advertising for the demoli•
tion · of the Rutland 3lld
Salem Cepter schools., ,
·. Several111ollths ·ago, the
board informally agreed tri
trartsfer ,the Pomeroy and
Harrisonville elementary
.s¢hools ;.•t,o . the Meigs
to.upt~,: •. commiss~oners '
after reviewing P)li!I.S. for
apparent appropn'W·c'fl',~

PleueMeSc~s.'AI

Syracuse center nets donation
the first educator to retire with
over SO years of teaching in the
Southern Local School District.
Weese had taught at the old
Syracuse Elementary School ,
from 1927 to the 1930· 3 I
school year, and then moved to
the new school when it opened
that year.
He was there for 10 years
before transferring to old .
Racine High School in 1941 ,
teachi~g there until I%2 when'
the Southern · Local ' High
School opened until his retire·
mem.
·
There are six other rooms in
the building to be named for
educators or others making
donations of $10,000 each. the
money to be invested and the
interest only to be used for
. maintenance and opermion of
the center.
Robert Wingett, left, president of the Syracuse Community
Robert Wingett, president of
Center, accepts a check for $10,000 given by Don C. Weese the center board, said that the
and Melanie A. Weese, D.O., as a memorial tribute to his father · rooms will be offered tirst to
and her grandfather, the late Carl B. Weese, longtime educator. fmmer educa~xs who taught in
A room at the center will be named "The Weese Room. "
the building and then to others
who, are interested in suppon·
classroom in the former ing the center, which is dedi cat·
Bv CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Syracuse Elementary School to ed to the educational, spiritual
News editor
be named ''The Weese Room." and ·cultural bene lit of resiln that upstairs lloor room. dents.
SYRACUSE - As a memo- where the late Mr. Weese t&lt;iught
"Our goal," said Wingett, "is
rial tribute to the late Carl B. for several years, mementos·of to generate over a period of
Weese, lo!'lgtime teacher in the his career a~ an educator will be time upwards of $100,000 to
Southem Local Schools, his displayed for the public to be placed in an interest-beming
son, Don C. Weese, and daugh· enjoy.
· account which will help proter, Melanie A. Weese, D.O., of
Among those mementos will vide money tor the operation
Racine have contributed be a plaque presented to him and upkeep of the building."
$1 0,000 to the new Symcuse when he retired in 1975. It recHe said plans are to have the
Community Center.
.ognized Mr. Weese, who died at · center open to the public this
That contribution reserves a 94 on June 19, 2001. as being summer.

Teachers and students alike worked side by side to plant
flowers in the planter in front of Southern Elementary as
part of Environmenta l Awareness Wee k. (J. Miles Layton )

Southern students, staff:
learn more about Earth
BY

J.

MILES LAYTON

Staff writer
RACINE
Students.
faculty and staff are learn·
ing more about the recy·
cling and . eco logy during
Environmental week at
Southern
Elementary
School.
Paula Wood, director of

the
Meigs
County :
Recycling
and
Litter
Prevention.
gave
the
keynote addre's Mpnday at
the elementary school.
"Be aware of you r environment." she said. "You
have onl} '"'c 'earl h. There
will not be any more land.
Take pride in your commu- .
Ple11se see Earth, AS

50\.0!

Hero-""''
National Nurses' Week is May 6 · 12, 2003

,

~

~

NO\f\11'1&amp; SE.R\0&lt;.16, en!\(l)· YOJ
t',f\'1[ f\ ~I ~Pl.E CK£
Of 1&gt;,\f\U.H:.':&gt; fOOl 1

'y.._

In observance of this special week, Holzer Medical Center is
osking for your assistance in recognizing our nurses.
If you feel a Holzer Medical Center nurse hos positively impocted your
core, please moil the nurse's name, along with a brief explanation of why
you feel he/ she represents on "Everyday Hero", by April 28, 2003 to:

Helser Medical Center
AHn1 Marketing DepartMent
I 00 .Jacbon Pike
Ocdllpella, OH 45631

·

Or, log on 1o www.hol-.org, click on the •Send an E-Mail Conlac;t" and oubmit your recognition.
Thank
in odvance for
assistance!

\

l

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer D!f.fe1·ence

www.holzer .org

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