<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="6940" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/6940?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-12T22:04:42+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="17342">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/cabfb3c289d39edab1d8b1d03a520c5f.pdf</src>
      <authentication>3ef874dbc8c415251ce067d21525a598</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="22756">
                  <text>•
Monda~

www.mvdaiiYMntlnel.com

Peae 88 • The Dallv Sentinel

•

••

(

'

Feb.

11,200~

.

.--

Virginia coach Pete Gillen Wllsn't at the
de&lt;peration stage, but he knew that Top
Ten teams shouldn't lose
four sl,r.light games.
So Gillen shook up
the starting lineup, and
the 1Oth-ranked Cavaliers responded by
snapping the losing streak with an 85-71
victory over Clemson on Sunday.
The three players who kept their staning spots - Roger Mason Jr., Travis Watson and Chris Williams - combined for
61 points as Virginia handed Clemson its
eighth straight loss.
Freshman point guard Keith Jenifer and
forward J.C. Mathis gave up their starting
spots to freshmen Jerrrtaine Harper and
Jason Clark.
"It wasn't that those guys were the
' problem; it was the group," Gillen said.
" We lost four in a row. We had to get a
change.
"This was a badly needed victory. It
would have been a really big hurdle to
overcome. They _were reeling. We we.re

NCAA

reeling."
.

It wasn't as ifVirginia (15-6, 5-5 Atlantic
Coast) was losing to w~ak teams. The losing streak was to No. 1 Duke, No. 3
Maryland, No. 22 Missouri and North
Carolina State.
Mason had 23 points, Watson added 20
points and I 0 rebounds and Williams had
18 points for the Cavaliers, who took
control with a -15-0 run after Clemson
(11-13, 2-9) tied the game at 50 with
15:10 left.
"Their three go-to guys really made the
difference in the game," Clemson coach
Larry Shyatt said.
Virginia's big run was courtesy of its
full-court pressure, which was effective

because it kept the ball out of the hands of
Edward Scott, who handled the ball well
for Clemson in the first half.
"We felt that he was the straw that stirs
their drink," Gillen said of Scott, who had
eight assists, seven in the opening 20 minutes. "We wanted to keep · it out of his
hands.
" I thought our pressure really got us
going, gave us a little energy."
Jamar McKnight had 18 points for the
Tigers, whose losing streak started right
after it stunned Virginia at home on Jan . 8.
No.3 Maryland 92,
North Carolina 77
Juan Dixon had 18 points, and the Terrapins (19-3, 9-1 Atlantic Coast) matched
their best overall and league starts in
school history.
•
Lonny Baxter and Byron Mouton
added 16 points each for visiting Marylan·d, which had the same overall record in
1999 and the same league mark 22 seasons
ago.
Kris Lang had 23 points for the_Tar
Heels (6-1 5, 2-9), who matched the
school record for losses in a season - it
happened twice in the early 1950s - and
set a record for ACC losses. The program's
previous worst ACC season was 6-8 in
Dean Smith's third season in 1963-64.
Boston College 76,
· No. 12 Miami 63
Troy Bell scored 24 points, and Ryan
Sidney added 23 points and nine
rebounds as the Eagles (16-7, 5-5 Big
East) beat the Hurricanes for the second
time in 13 days.' Boston College had lost
five of seven, but won 70c65 at Miami on
Jan. 29.
·
Marcus Barnes and John Salmons had
16 points each for Miami (20-4, 7-4),

games.
Fresno St. 58,
No. 14 OkJahoma St. 52
Damon Jackson went 7-for-11 from 3point t2nge and scored a career-high 24
points, and Travis DeManby added ... a..
school~record 11 ~teals for the Bulldogs .
(15-10), who snapped a four-game losing
streak.
Ivan McFarlin and Victor Williams
scored 12 points apiece for the visiting ·
Cowboys (18-6), who committed 25
turnovers and shot 35 percent.
Both teams were missing key performers. Oklahoma State played without leading scorer Maurice Baker, who sprained
his right ankle during Wednesday's victory over r;o. 24 Texas Tech. Forward Chris
Jefferies missed his ftfih straight game for
Fresno State with. torn cartilage in his left
knee.
Michigan St. 67,
No. 16 Ohio St. 64
Marcus Taylor and Adam Ballinger
scored 18 points each for the S.Partans
(14-9, 5-5 Big Ten), who have won five of
their last seven conference games.
Brent Darby had 14 points for the visiting Buckeyes (17-5, 8-3), who feU out of
a first-place tie with Indiana and lost for
the third time in five games.
Pittsburgh 75, No. 23 Syracuse 63
Brandin Knight scored · 11 of his 16
points over the final 5:34, and the Panthers (21-4, 9-3 Big East) rallied from a MINElli- Clemson's Chey Christie grabs a rebound in front
14-point deficit in the second half for ' of Vlrglnla·•s Keith Jennifer (10) in the first half Sunday. (AP)
their first win in the Carrier Dome since
March '2, 1997.
Preston Shumpert had 28 points for the
Orangemen (18-7, 7-4), who lost for the
fifth time in seven games.

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.
(AP) -Tony Stewart and the
Ford drivers were the only
ones celebrating after the first
race

NASCAR

I•
--lY
.
.
.
--A'.
-·-··!ill
• ........._.....•

Investigation of
sh.,.ng ·continues
Murder-suicide
suspeded

Raiders beat Spartans, 5

Oebera t Snrder, 47
Freda Russel , 72

Details, 3
I

\IJid rnliDt' cncii.CMI and 12ftllllh COOIIOI.i&amp;W Nllllftd.
~ .. I)I0'1"dion ,..,. be
4ctlncl (II

------

..._... _

'*""' .•••

~llrl*n

IIIMIICII ~.

~ M'N. TNT. ClleoM NMwlft. DIHDII.,.

THAT'S COLD -Tony Stewart reacts after getting a face full
of beer in Victory Lane at Daytona after winning the Budweiser Shootout Sunday. (AP)
Gordon.
"Rick Hendrick can get his
towel out and cry about it all
he wants to, but the .bottom
line is that physics is hurting
us," Yates said. "Thank gooc;lness NASCAR is making
some adjustments for that.
"There are a lot of good
Ford teams and a lot of other
teams that are good, but you
can't erase too much of a
handicap."
The Chevrolets, which most
people believe have at le~t a
slight advantage, are using a 6
1'/4-inch rear spoiler, while
both the Dodges and POntiacs
are at 6 112 inches.
Ford teams have complained
since the end of last season
that they are at an aerodynamic disadvantage under the new
rules for Daytona and Talladega, NASCAR's two biggest
and fastest ovals.
The new package was introduced late last fall after driver
complaints about dangerous
racing at the two tracks in
200 t: Those events had threeand four-wide racing and
pas;ing throughout the pack
on just about every. lap.
That resulted in a 19-car
pileup near the end of the
Dayqma 500 that resulted in
Stewart flipping on the backstretch. The elder E_arnbilrdt
was killed on the final lap of
the race.

Lewis admitted.
Olazabal, who like Tiger Woods made the cut
on the number, finished with a 72-hole total of
13-under 275.
"I feel like I played very, very well over the
weekend," said
Olazabal, who shot a 67 in the
I o
wind Saturday.The wind never came up Sunday,
giving golfers perfect conditions under a cloudless sky.
.
·
Lewis, trying for his second tour victory, tied
for second with Mar~ O'Meara at 276: Both
shot 70s. as did Daly, who finished fourth at 277.

.,
of th~

Spotlight: Kids speak out

BY TONY M. LEActt

path.
Musser said the village
POMEROY - Seeking could receive . additional
additional funds for ·the:, vii- financial assistance under the
!age's ptQpo~ed new wallting . Ohio Department of Natur. path project topped the al Resources' (ODNR)
agdtda
of
Monday's Clean Ohio Trails Fund·.
"If acquired, money from
Pomeroy Council meeting.
Former councilman John the Clean Ohio Trails Fund
Musser spoke with council would play a significant role
about the possibility of in the development of the
acquiring additional funding walking path project," said
for the project.
· Musser.
The new blacktop walkAfter discussing the issue
way, jf constructed; would be with Musser, council agreed
more than 9,100 linear feet to file an application with
in ·length and 10 feet wide the ODNR and provide all
and would extend along th~ in~ormation. and documenOhio River from the tatton requtred to become
Pomeroy levee to Nye eligible for possible funding
Avenue. Park benches, water asststance._
fountains and lights . would
In other matters, Pomeroy
also be placed along the
PlUM - Ponteroy, 3
TLEACHOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

WASHINGTON (AP)
-· The FBI warned of a
possible terrorist attack as
early as Tuesday in the
United States or against
Americans in Yemen, and
investigators rushed to dis~ibut.: photpgrapm o(Jnen
believed to be involved.
Police nationwide were
under orders to detain any
of them immediately.
The warning identified
one possible attacker as
Fawaz Yahya ai-Rabeei, a
light-skinned, 22-year-old
trom Yemen with Westernlooking features. The FBI
considered the information
"credible;' but it was not
spedfic ah9ut possible targets and was not corroborated by other sources.Officials said they decided
to issue the warning out of
an abundance of caution
and because Tuesday was so
near.

.

OHIO

luck• 5: 4-15·27-28·29
Pick 3 ct.y: 7·8·7

daY: 7·7·2-2

W.VA.
Deily 3: 8-6.CJ
4: 4.CJ..2-a
'-llli 15: 2-8-15·16·17·22

,.UY

At Pleasant Valley Hospital,
we treat you like family... ·
..
because that's w~at you are.

I

Letters reveal community
..needs,..kid$i'conceJ;Us....~.~·
''

BY BRIAN J. R!I!D
BREEOOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Adults tell us not
to skateboard in
but there
a ·place to
at my home. '
· bored
because
my
skateboilrding
activity has been
taken away." ·
. "If you would
put
in a new park
.
or community
center, fewer kids
would get in
trouble with the
· Kyle Boep
law," wrote Brittany Preast. "By bringing more activities into
the area, it will draw attention to the small
businesses.
·
"It would be a way to invest in the commu-

MIDDLEPORT .- "Please give us a place
of our own."
Casey Smith, a sixth-grader at Meigs Middle
School, and many of her classmates, say that
recreational facilities and businesses catering to
their needs and
interests would
' be assets . to the
commumty
and might help
eliminate discipline problems.
f .
Students
in
Pam
Durst's
sixth-grade class nity."
Talisha Beha, 11, wrote about restaurants in
wrote letters to
the editor as an her letter - or the lack of high-end eateries
like Damon's and
assignment, and
Lone Star Steaksay the commuhouse, and sugnity needs skategests
locating
boarding faciliCIIHySmlth
restaurants on the
ties,
activities
'
•..
nver.
centers, movie
· theaters and restaurants.
r
"Athens .and
Columbus have
"Middleport youth need more activities to
very
nice restauoccupy our time," Smith wrote. "We have
rants, ~o why
nothing to do. I bet if kids actually had somecan't
we?"
thing to do, there wouldn't be as much loitering on the streets."
"We need a
recreation center
"Instead
of
to keep kids off
adults complainthe streets," Kyle
ing about . us all
Boggs wrote. "I
the time, why
· hope the readers
don't you try to
Emily Davis
agree and will be
build us a skate
park?" Bradley inoved'to action!"
Lacey Stobart of Chester and Alexa Venoy of
Jones of Middleport
wrote. Pomeroy suggested a movie theater. '·
"Everywhere,
"It would help tourism by providing somego, .I se_e , no . thing to do in the evenings when everything
skateboardmg
else is closed. I think the old Pamida building
.
stgns..
would be an ideal place for a theater, with
Ryan Smailes plenty of parking," Stobart said.
of
Pomeroy
"People and kids would have a new meeting
wrote, "We need
·
a
skate
park.
PIMH
IM Kkll, 3
. Brittany Preatt

.

BPA to remain
in place
'
BY 8RfM J. RIEP ..

BREEDOMYDAILYSENTINEl.COM

MIDDLEPORT- "This
is an unnecessary solution to
a non-existent problem."
That's how former Middleport Councilman Eric
Chambers described Middleport Village Council's
proposal to replace the
Board of Public Affairs with
a village administrator at
Monday evening's regular
council meeting.
The BPA will remain in
place after a proposal to
replace it was unanimously
tabled. Council again considered legislation to elimi-

nate the three-man board
with an administrator who
would be responsible for
supervising water and sewer
projects and em!;'loyees, testing water samples and other
work relating to the village's
public works system.
After the second reading
of the ordinance, which was
first introduced in December, a group of 14 Middleport residents - including
three former council members - voiced their concerns that the elimination of
the BPA was untimely and
unnecessary.
Council members . Roger
Manley
and
Stephen
Houchins, who have supported the ordinance, have.

Pleese •• Caun~ll. 3

Happy Anniversary! _.

.

Pick 3: 5·9·1
tf;ick 4: 4·5·8-8
~4
•

Area kids just want Council tables action
place of their own'· on administrator
~ -

wamlng

-~~--.-.

.........,.

'

victims and we are cur- ground. .
reritly in the process of ques- · Snyder was pronounced
· tioning an eyewimess;• said dead at the scene with an
Trussell. "My department and appare'nt gunshot wound to :
thl! Ohio Bureau of Criminal the head. Wise, who was trans- ·
BY TONY M. WCH
Identification and lnvestiga- ported via medical helicopter
TLEACHOMYDAILYSENTINEL:.COM
RUTLAND - · A. s)iboting tion'Concu.r that the incident to Holzer Medical Center in
that left two people dead is was probably a homocide/sni- Gallip6Iis , with a gunshot
I wound to t he chest, later died
being investigated by authori- ct'd e."
On Friday night, deputies as a result of his injuries,.
ties
as
a
possible
from the sheriff's office were Trussell said.
homocide/ suicide.
According to Meigs County dispatched to a home on · Both bodies have been
Sheriff Ralph Trussell, evi- Smith Run Road around 9:20 transported to the Franklin
dence collected at the scene of p.m. · following a report of a County Coroner for autop:
the shooting near Rutland possible shooting. Upon arriv- stes.
"No arrests have been made
"seems to poin~ toward a pos- ing on the scene, deputies dissible homocide/suicide."
covered the boaies of Debra as of yet and ·the incident is
"A .38 caliber handgun was Joan Snyder, 47, and Sidney still under investigation," said
found under the body of-one Roland Wise, 42,laying on the Trussell.

_. FBI puts out

I

.. .., 122.811..--

'

' '

POMEROY
Pomeroy.hunts more
walking path funds .

MIDDLEPORT

•

index
..
2
6-8

9

2

. I. ·.•

·.~·.~:...,

·~

1

,r,l .

4.

.. 3
;;:"'{~~~.
i "~'
3

.,

.: ,' 5,8, 10

37

,

.

CELEBRATION -The 100th anniversary of People's Bank
was observed Friday with open houses at its various locations In Ohio, West VIrginia and Kentucky. Decorated cake
Inscribed 1902 to 2002 was served with punch and tea in
celebration of the occasion. Shown· here is Edie Harman, a
customer service representative at the Pomeroy bank,
serving Rita Lewis of Pomeroy. (Charlene Hoeflich)

Heart
Wellnes.

Jose Maria Olazabal wins Buick Invitational

l

HoMat.wn Newspa,.,

Got I All IIBt-

~:e

SAN . DIEGO (AP) - Jose Maria Olazabal
backed into the Buick Invitational title whenJ.L.
Lewis three-putted on No. 18 to blow a shot at
a playoff.
Bt.tt Olazabal certainly played well enough for
the victory, his first on the PGA Tour sincr winning his second Masters in 1999.
His 7-under-par 65 held up when Lewis
bogeyed the finishing hole on the Torrey Pines
. South Course on Sunday to blow his shot at a
_
playoff.
"I kind of got a bad break, then choked."

•

which lost for the second time in eight

Tony Stewart wins Bud Shootout
we've seen in Daytona so far."
The ·Fords have been slow
since the first practice here
Friday. Only two Fords
cracked the Top 20 in the first
. round . of qualifYing on Saturday, and Dale Jarrett's Robert
Yates-owned Taurus was the
top finisher m Sunday's
NASCAR season.
Stewart drove his Pontiac to shootout.
Jarrett's sixth-place finish
victory Sunday in 'the Budweiser 'Shootout, a nonpoints was almost four seconds
race at Daytona International behind Stewart, who held off a
Speedway. Two hours after its last7Iap charge by the Chevrocompletion,
NASCAR. lets of Dale Earnhardt Jr. and
reduced the spoilers on the Jeff Gordon to win the race.
Fords to make the Tauruses
The race was a single-ftle
event until it turned into a
more competitive.
The rules change overshad- legitimate shootout at the end,
oWed Stewart's second straight with Stewart winning for the
victory in the made-for-TV second straight year with an
event and spawned a flurry of Earnhardt in his rearview mircomplaints from the other ror.
Earnhardt Jr. was on ' Stewthree car makes.
"The Dodge camp is now art's rear bumper until the finbasically behind the eight ball ish line, reminiscent of last
across the board,'' said Tony year when Stewart outdueled
Glover, team manager for Dale Earnhardt one week
Chip Ganassi Racing. "It's dis- before the seven-time Winston
heartening and it's disappoint- Cup champion was killed in
ing when you start into a situ- the Daytona 500.
":Winning that race last year
ation as an underdog."
NASCAR cut a quarter- with that black No. 3 in my
inch off the Ford's rear spoilers mirror was the highlight of my
following their poor •hawing career," Stewart said. "But this
was just like last year. He may
in the shootout.
· The spoilers will be reduced have 'Junior' behind his name,
to 6 inches, a full half- inch but he drives like Senior."
The thrill from the wi~. was
smaller than they were when
shonlived,
though, as Stewart
NASCAR first introduced its
new aerodynamic package late and his crew chief reacted to
last fall. NASCAR 'took the the Fords getting help.
"I'm the only one who can
first quarter-inch away last
month after the Fords tested lose. by this because I won
under the old rules," .Stewan
poorly under the new rules.
The Fords can begin using said. "1 don't want them to do
the smaller spoilers on Tues- anything to the cars."
And Greg Zipadelli, his
day, and NASCAR will monitor their progress in the 125- crew chief, thought the Fords
mile qualifying races on didn't deserve the break.
"They should have been left
Thursday. Should the decision
alone
from the start and forced
shift the disadvantage to anyof
the other · three car makes, to do their 'homework a little
NASCAR president Mike better before 'they got here,''
Helion said more changes · Zipadelli said.
Yates fired back.
could be made before next
"We've worked extremely
Sunday's season-opening Dayhard," he said. "We didn't sit
tona 500.
"We're
making
these back or sandbag."
changes b3sed on · results on
Then he mentioned the
the track,'" H elton said. "This four Chevrolets of Hendrick
action is coming from what Motorsports, including that of

•

Olympics: u.s. rqen sweep.ha~ipe, 5

Virginia changes lineup and ends losing streak ·
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

l
t

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
2$20 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant) WV 25550
o

I

304.. 675-4340

spon«ncc by the HMC Community Health and
~~- and HMC CatdiCfl'Jimonotr Uni~
lbursday, February 14, _2002 • 10 AM- 4 PM
I

HMC Education &amp; Conference Center
. ·10 AM • 12 Noon and 1 • 4 PM • FREE scREENINGS
.'

Non·Fasling Cholesterol and Glucose,
_Blood Pressure, Body Fat Analysis and more.
12 Noon - 1 PM • Special Presentation by Nabil Fahm:y. MD
Health information will be on hand as well

MEDICAL
CENTER
I

Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org

I

�..

.

'

IJ the Bend

DBAR. READERS: Today's column will be different. I want to
thank you for making OperationDearAbby.net a tremendous
succeu. Because of your generosity,
our troops have re&lt;:eived more than
375,000 messages. That's the equivalent of more than five tons of letters. (Heaven ol)ly knoM how many
ADVICE
trees have been spared because they
weren't needed for paper.) And the
Department ofDefense tells me that it was 18 to 12. I hope you win the
the number of"hits" - that's visits to war. If you don't die can you please
the site - has topped 25 million!
write me back? 1'll writ&lt;&gt; to you
again.
i·
I'll share a sample of the messages
that were received from young read.P.S. Merry Christmas and a Happy
ers (spelling and grammar pre- New Year. We're thinking of you. SetVed):
MEMPHIS (lRD GRADE)
DEAR SOLDIER: I'm glad you
From a girl to her' brother who's
are pertecting us. But I'm sorry your in the' Army:
away from your family near ChristDEAR TIMMY: I want to fill
mas. I hope you are o.k. and I hope you in on what hos been going on.
you can see your family again. If )'!'U First of all, Mom and Dad have split
watch football, the Small Bears won up. Now Dad has someone else
the championship. The Raiders are ·named Theresa. Her little girl is one
in second place. It was a good game, of my friends. Me and Mom now

Dear

Ahby

and V.U
]acb. The aoop meell
tMiry odw!: ..-k. at the Racine
!Dry and at the last meeting held
its irM:!Iilu!e and J:Pdediarim ceremony ~ bn:mnie Jim and

m:mbelship !1m.
The aoop sold 2,127 boxes of
cookies .with 9dessa Jacks being
. the top troop seller selling 400

boxes. ·

other Monday fiom 6-7:30 p.m at January's Super Girl Scout for her
the Middleport ChUit:h of Christ. help with Bltwnie Troop 1015 and
Troop leadeiS are lisa Meadows doing and completing her \\OOC
and Lynn Curl.
Ten membeiS attended the Just
JWlior Salem Center Troop 4 Girls Health Day and earned
Chel&lt;ea Carpenter attended the the Highway to Health Badge.
Car Care Badge in Mason: Two am:nded the car badge
Samanrha Goble sold the most workshop in Mason.
cookies for the troop. The troop
Southern Junior Troop 1204plans to go to COSI and visit the At the two meetings held in the
Columbus Zoo
last month, work was continued
Middleport Junior Troop 1276, on the lint aide requirement Cirls
has began working on several made posters for the Health Day at
badges this month: Cookft, Con- Middleport and put them around
nections ~ the Cookie Pin town in Racine and Syracuse.
activity. MembeiS discussed and They also handed out flyeiS in the ·
put into pxactice safety rules for schoo~ Cogar went to the
selling cookies. The troop has also eYIIfu and earned the Highway to
woxked on Money Sense, Lets Health Badge.
Get CookinJ;, It's important to
The cookie sale was discussed.
Me, W sports sampler badges.
Ericka Cogar, Kay1a and Jo Fetty
. For Money Sense, the girls fig- went to Charleston and particiured out their per:sonal income pated in their Space and
and the troops income. They plan
Be)und mxkshop 1o earn the
on touring a kx:aJ bank in the aeroepace badge. They had a 'Mllknear future to find out about . shop on the stus in the winter sky
investments, credit cards, etc. For and tdked about star pattcrm They·
Let's Get Cooking, .the troop made kires and paper airplanes. and
experimented with apple slices to then tried them out and w.w:hed a
find out about proper handwash- film on explorntion, learned about
ing techniques. They also made a the buiklingofthe new spore stllion.
fiuity surprise that c~nsisted of
Six girls sold 94 cases of cookyogurt, whip cream, and graham 1es.
cru:kers.
·
Girls decided to do South
The girls discwsed what the dif- Africa for Thinking Day. worked
fmntpartsoflhelawandpromile on requirement for Earth Conmeant in reg;m:ls lo values.They also nection, which was counting
made up a story about themseMs ring~ on a tree slice.
or fictional on what is impo!Wll to
Salisbnty JuniorTroop 1290 them.
Terrie Houser is filling in as
FortheSporuSm;&gt;ler\JQdge.the leader. Lindsey Houser was top
gidunade up their OIVl1 penonal fit. cookie seDer with 51.1 boxes sold.
· . and their practice
Meig~ County Cadettes has a
improYing at their fa..mte new leader, Marty Smith. .
Carol Fetty is on a medical
aoop sold 228 cases of leave. Plans ~~ made for a
cookies with Nikki LaW100, Hai- valentineUs dance Feb. 9. Kristin
ley Ebenbach, .and Courtney ~r w.is top cookie seller.The
Mayes top sellen.The noop plans Cadettes a~ working towards
to do some community work, go their leadership pins. $eweral girls
to COS! and other launch events, have picked out their project for
ere. Several girls are making plans their silver award.
to attend the 90th Anniversary
celeb!:llion in Washington, D. C.,

~e country
troop has
~ China
as their
furThinking
Day.
Hannalt completed her homework and will receive the fOllowing try-its: Sounds of Music, All in
.the Family, Computer Smarts;
Point, Click &amp; Go,Thtvel Rjght; &amp;

Cl.Y'Dl t tAlllt

INVUT IN

1Nfl.A110N ...

me

\'

'

Community Calendar
Is published as a free
service to non-profit
groups
wishing
to
announce meetings and
special events. The calendar Is not designed to
promote sales or fundraisers of any type. Items
are printed only as space
permits and cannot be
guaranteed to be printed
a specific number of
days.

POMEROY - Republi,
can Day lincoln Day Dinner, Tuesday, 6 p.m. Meigs
High School. Guest speak·
er, Ann Womer Benjamin,
state representative. Tickets available from party
committee members.

THURSDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS
VFW 9053 Thursday,' 6:30
p.m. dinner; 7 p.m. meeting
at the hall.

WEDNESDAY
RACINE - Bethany DorPOMEROY Trinity
cas Sonshine Circle at
Congregational
church,
church Thursday, 7 p.m.
Lenten breakfast, 7:45 a.m.
Members reminded to take ··
Wednesday. Use entrance
a bear for the Sheriff's
on Second Street. Reser·
· vations · to be made with Department bear project.
TUESDAY
Peggy Harris, 992·7569, or Everyone invited.
TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern High School, Diane Hawley, 992·2722.
SATURDAY
financial aid information
night on Feb. 12 at 7 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT- MiddlePORTLAND - A Portin the cafeteria. Julia Mur- port Literary Club, 2 p.m. land ·community meeting
of ~will be held Saturday at 10
home
phy of Hocking College will Wednesday,
speak on FASSA, ·scholar· Martha Hoover. Pauline a.m. at the Community 'of
ships and student loans.
Horton to review, "No eye Christ Church.
·

IS THE_RIOT CHOICE

RUTLAND- Debera Joan Snyder, 47, of Rutland, died on
Friday, February 8, 2002.
.
She was born on May 3, 1954, in Mason, West Virginia,
daughter of the late Harry J. and Janet Mason Snyder.
She is survived by a siste~ and brother-in-law, Diana and
Charles Kapp..QfWest Columbia, West Virginia; a sister-in-law,
Nancy Snyder of Cheshire; and sevetal nieces and nephews.
Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by her brother, Roger Snyder; and a special friend, Sidney Roland "Sid"
Wik
.
Private. graveside services will be conducted -at the convenience of the family. There will be no calling hours.
Arrangements are under the direction .of Fisher Funetal
Home in Middleport.

Freda Russell

P~ge A

3

LOCAL
BRIEFS
•
Conferences
scheduled

alleging' default on a mortgage agreement in the
amount of$43,673.97.

RACINE Southern
Local Schools will be holding
parent/teacher conferences
for the Third Nine Weeks on
Tuesday from 4-7 p.m.
The conferences are being
changed due to the boy's sectional basketball tournament ·
on Wednesday. Students will
be bringing home papers
about the conferences this
week, or parents may call their
child's school to schedule a
conference.
Southern Local will not be
having classes next Monday,
which is President's Day, and
·school will start on a twohour delay on Feb. 20 due to
staff inservice. No student
should arrive before 10 a.m.

Dinner planned
POMEROY
The
Pomeroy United Methodist
Church on Second Street, will
be sponsoring a monthly
Community Mission Outreach event. The first dinner
will be a spaghetti supper Friday, with serving from 4:30 to
(i p.m. The dinner is free and
open to the public.

To meet
POMEROY Fraternal
Order of Eagles 2171 · will
meet on Feb. 18 to vote on
replacing the roof and air
conditioning unit.

Benefit dinner
planned

Bills mailed .

POMEROY - Real estate
SPRINGFIELD - Freda Gaye Darst Russell, 72, SpringTUPPERS PLAINS - A
field, formerly of Middleport, died Saturday, Feb. 9, 2002, at tax bills for the first half 2001
Mercy Medical Center in Springfield.
tax year have been mailed, benefit dinner for Cindy LinShe was born March 16, 1929, in Middleport, daughter of according to Meigs County ton, fourth grade teacher at
the late Vernon and Elizabeth Darst.
Treasurer Howard Frank. The Eastern Elementary ' will be
Surviving are her husband of 54 y~ars, Maurice G. Russell; a bills were mailed on Feb. 8, held Friday with serving to
begin at 4:30 p.m. Proceeds
son and daughter-in-law, Mark and Susan Russell of Spring- and taxes are due March 12.
will
go toward expenses relaifield; a daughter, Rebecca; three grandchildren; and three sisAnyone who does not
ten, Wanda Searles of Columbus, Martha Wolfe of Middleport, receive a bill within the next ing to Linton's ptedical condiand Kay Barnett of Franklin, Tenn.
three to five working days tion.
She was also preceded in death by three brothers, Ellison, should contact Frank's office
Frank and Lester Darst.
at 992-2004.
She donated her body to the Wright State University School
Not receiving a tax bill does
MIDDLEPORT The
of Medicine. A memorial service will be conducted at 1 p.m. not prevent penalties and
Middleport Fire Department
Saturday at Grace Evangelical Lutheran Church, 180 St. Paris interest, Frank said.
will be holding a soup ~nd'
Pike, Springfield, with Pastor Daniel M. Powell and Louis Davis
~oppyjoesandwichluncheon
presiding.
Saturday from 11:30 a.m. to
Memorial contributions may be made to the Grace Living
(report) is ·so impressive that
POMEROY Divorce 2:30 p.m. at the fire departit's hard to see a negative. Memorial Trust Fund or the Bowlesville United Methodist
actions have been filed in ment. Popcorn will also be for
The BPA has laid a lot of Memorial Fund.
Meigs County Common sale
groundwork and it's bad
Pap 1
Pleas Coutt by Cathy Price,
timing at this point in ' time
Rudand, against Michael W.
Lited inadequate supervision to make the change."
Price, Middleport; and by.
~f employees and testing of Councilman Bob RobinMIDDLEPORT - EarthHeather D. Long, Long Botiwater samples by a village son moved tp table the proen
Vessels will be singing at
tom, against Shaun M. Long,
'tmployee os· reosons for the posed ordinance until furthe Ash .Street Church in
Reedsville.
witch, and estimate the cost ther notice, and Mayor
Middleport at 7 p.m. Wednesf hiring a village administra- Sandy Iannarelli said a third
day. Pastor Glenn Rowe
[or to do the job at $45,000 reading will not be forthinvites the public.
~er year, plus benefits.
coming at council's ·next
POMEROY - Marriage
i Those meeting with coun- meeting.
licenses have been issued in
:Cil last night spoke of the
In addition to the citizens,
Meigs County Probate Court
PA's accomplishments in BPA members Don Stivers
to Larry Gene Bunch, Jr. , 27,
ddressing health and safety and Bernard Gilkey, and for'
Albany, and Jacquelyn Jean
sues since its formatio)1, and mer BPA member Myron
MIDDLEPORT The
Hipskind, 21, M,W.C., Okla., Ohio valley Crusade for
aidthe 'time was not'til:ht to Duffield' also attended the ·
Marciano Ortiz Lopez, 31, Christ meeting will be held
make a switch.
. .
meeting.
Pomeroy, and Summer Dawn Monday 7 p.m. at Heath
,0 "I think maybe it's a• control
Council also:
Groves; 22, Racine, and United Methodist Church,
P.IDblem;' said Tom Dooley, a
• Held a second reading
Fredrick DoiSel Thomas, 40, Middleport.
Middleport merchant. "It's on an ordinance to increose
Ches!lire, and Jeri Sue Myers,
~tting in the way of a collab- the fee for commercial trash
32, Cheshire.
J!r.ltion between council and haulers from $25 to $150 per
!ne board. The BPA hos done month.
!be job effectively and at min• Approved payment of
linal cost. Why do we need bills in the amount of
MIDDLEPORT - InterPOMEROY - A foreclo$30,785.68.
CHECK PRESENTATION - John Musser, chairman of the
~e change?"
1 Approved the mayor's Sternwheel Riverfest Committee, right, presented Pomeroy sure action has been filed in denominational pastor prayer
,•• "It's not that you're con¢dering elimina\ing the BPA report of fines collected in Fire Chief Rick Blaettnar with a $250 check during Monday's Meigs County Common group, Friday, 8:30 a.m. Mid;
village council meeting. The donation is for the fire depart· Pleas Court by Ohio Valley dleport First Baptist Church.
if,cause they're doing a the amount of $3,500.50.
/tlediocre job, they're doing a
• Discussed the 2002 ment's •assistance and dedication in making the annual river Bank, Gallipolis, against Virgil those attending a~ to use the
festival a success." (Tony M. Leach)
Hardey, Rutland, and others, rear entrance.
spper job;' said former coun- appropriations process.
Cil member Rae GwiazAlso present were Council
Jowsky, citing a list of BPA members Kathy Scott, Linda
"People still have . time to
into 'trouble or drugs when
aCcomplishments distributed Haley and Bob Pooler, and
pay
their
tickets,
however,
if
they are bored and have
at• an earlier meeting. "This Clerk Susie French.
nothing better to do."
they continue to ignore the
•
fines,
their
vehicles
will
be
from
Page
AI
The students, Durst said,
from Pagel
•
towed," 'added Young.
wrote the letters as a prep a•
also:
place,"Veitoy
said
about
a
theration activity for their
Council
Fire Chief Rick Blaettnar met
•
• approved the second ater. "Teens would have a cool upcoming proficiency . tests .
with council to request the
Premier8.35
Federal
Mogul1.02
Al:P-41.05
purchase of six new sets of fire reading of an ordinance that place to work. We wouldn't Letter writing is a compoRockwell - 18.02
USB-19.85
Atch Coal- 19.93
gear. T)le gear, which would would grant a wage increase have to drive all that way to nent of that · test, and stuRocky Boots - 6 •
Gannett- 73.31
IO&lt;zo - 42.57
dents have written business
include new coats, pants and for salaried employees of the watch a movie."
.tonTech/SBC - 35.35 General Elau:trlc- 37.85 RD Shell - 49.74
Sears- 52.90
GKNLY-4
of
Rutland
letters
.. friendly letters and
village;
Emily
Davis
~land lno. - 46.04
would
cost
suspenders,
Harley Davidson- 54.03 Shoney's - .31
..a&amp;T- 16.13
• approved the second said a theater would be persuasive essays.
around $9,000.
Wai·Mart- 00.25
Kmart-1
Bank One r 36.39
inside a "huge
The issue of local youth
Wendy's- 31.63
Kroger - 20.58
Council agreed to purchase reading of an ordinance that great li.l-11 .13
Worthington- 14.90
Lands End - 49.70
Bob Evans- 27.03
would
grant
a
wage
increase
·
.
mall."
·
facilities
came up during a
Qally slack reports are the new gear and informed
Ltd. - 17.36
~rgWamer- 56.54
"We should hav.e this mall . brainstorming session, and
the 4 p.m. closing Blaettnar to begin ordering . for tlie clerk/treasurer;
NSC-21.70
Ohamplon - 3.18
• approved the second so that parents won't have to while students were allowed
Qak HUI Ananolal - 18 quotes of Ilea previOus the equipment as soon as pos()Ianning Shope - 8
day's transactions, pro·
OVB-24.75
Ofty Holding -13.42
of an ordinance that worry about their children to write about any topic ·in
reading
sible.
vidad by Sml1h Partners
BBT-35.76 ·
®1-21
Following
Blaettnar's would grant a wage increase or teens getting into trou- their editorials, all chose to
at Advest lno. of Gal·
Paoplaa ..:.. 19.65
lil-15.19
llpolls.
Pepsico
46.92
DuPont -' 44.56
request, M'usser, who is the for village employees paid by ble," Davis wrote. "Teens get address the same issues.
•
chairman of the Sternwheel the hour;
••
• publicly thanked Marvin
Riverfest Conu:nittee, pre••
and
Lois Burt for their $300
sented Chief Blaettnar with a
••
.$250 check for the fire donation toward the payment
•
department's "assistance and of the txack hoe used to erad(USPS 21.8-880)
•
Ohio Volley Publlohlng Co.·
icate a number of derelict
dedication
in
making
the
Published fiVer'( afternoon. Monday
•
annual river festival a success." structures throughout the vilthrough Feiday, 111 eoun St.,
Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Second-class
;
Corractfon Polley
Musser also presented a lage.
• Our main oonoem In all atorlells postage pakl at Pomeroy,
$1.000 ·donation to the ·
: to be accurate. If you 'know of an Mlma.r: The Assooiated Press and
11ee
Ol1lo
News!&gt;u:Po•
Association.
• error In a story, callllee newsroom Poetmaat.r: 8end adctrea.s correcPomeroy Blues and Jazz Soci: a1 (740) 992-2156.
Don't
llonato Tho Dally Semlnel, 111 eoun.
ety; $250 to the Meigs Local
Sl,
Pomeroy,
Ohi9
46789
.
•
Band; and $500 to local arti;
Forget Your
~
New• Departmentl
Subac:rlptlon
rates
sans
and
crafters.
• The malh number II 9&amp;2·2158.
• Sweetheart on
By canter or motor route
• Department extenliona are:
Due to the increasmg
on.$2
'
$8.70
; Genenol manager
Ext. 12 on. month
amount of unpaid parking tickon. yooor
$104
ets, council agreed to "stricdy
.
50 con1s
Ext. 13 Dally
Sub8aibera not ~~ring to pay lha
enfon:e" the village's current
carrier may remit In advance direct lo
Ext.
14
ordinance on parking meteiS.
• or
The Dally Sentinel. CuodH will be giVen
caerier each WUIOk. No "l'bscrlptlon by
Councilman Victor Young
Other Hrvlcas
mall permitted In areas where home
III
~d individuals with an
Clrrier service Is available.
Ext. 3
t
Acmrtlllng
excessive amount of unpaid
' o
I
.r::ICOUPON GOOD FORII•
Mill
subscrlallon
Ext.
4
• $2.00 OFF (1) HEART •
parking
tickets
will
have
their
: . Clreulallon
lnoldl lil&lt;olgo cot'uiij,•
•I Good
SHAPED CAKE
I•
13W8oka
$27.JO
. vehicles towed and stored
Ext. 5 26W8oka
Week of Feb. 10·18.J.
: c•·~H'Ie!IAda
$53.82
until all accumulated tickets
52W8oka
$105.56
,. 1:•
. 'ro eand e-mail
have
been paid in full.
: • Call Today •
R-out- Motgo County
newsO
mydallyUntlnel.com
1
' The towing bill will also
13W8oka
$29.25
•
On tha Wab
26 Weeks
$56.68
be the responsibility of the

semngset

Divorces filed

: Coundl
I

f1um

Singen coming

Issued licenses

Cnasade meeting set .

~

prayer meeting

K•d
I S

LOCAL STOCKS

MORE LOCAL NEWS .
MORE LOCAL FOLKS. ••••••

the Daily Sentinel

•• Dairll••••••
•• Queen ••
••
••
••
••
••
; Valentine's •
••
•
· Day
•• Thursday, ••

: Reader Services

DEIIll liD TillS- WUT I

TAX bV DANTU

Debe•• Snyder

POmeroy

IT'S Tt\E ONI.Y
TI\ING GOING Uf.

CGIPITEIIZIIIETIIIS Ill DEmHIC FIUII
IEfiiU II I IAII.d IF IIYIM lOllS
DEPII.II 01 TIE CIOICU YOU ll'-IE

'

Suit filed

•

lET DANTU liGHTEN
··YOUR lOAD

FROM STAFF REPORTS
converted to ammonia j•JSt
CHESHIRE - Ohio Valley prior to injection.
Electtic Corp. has sold $305
SCR systems at both plants
million in notes to pay for selec- are scheduled for completion
rive catalytic !eduction (SCR) and available for operation by
systems under construction at the start of the 2003 ozone
'OVEC's two coal-fired power seoson. The ozone seoson runs
' plants to !educe emissions of &amp;lm May through September.
hitrogen oxide, a contributor to
Operation of the SCR sysl:he formation of ground-level terns is expected to reduce
~~ne dUring summer.
nitrogen oxide emissions from
· The 5. 94 percent senior Kyger Creek and Clifty Creek
se~ufl}d notes, xated AAA by by more than 80 percent.
~tandard &amp; Poor's Ratings Officials said such reduction
Services, ~mture on Feb. 12, will enable the plants to com.2006. The notes pay interest 1
h th I
semi-annually and will pay p y wit
e atest air quality
princip:U on maturity date. . standards set by the U.S. Envi~
The notes were offered pri- ronmental Protection Agency.
'irately by ·McDonald InvestAmeric~n Electric Power's
hlents Inc. and ABN AMRO technical and professional sertnc. to institutional investors. vices organization is serving ·os
, ' Construction began last general contractor on the
. June on SCR systems at SCR projects. Among thef
OVEC's
1,075-megawatt sponsonng comparues 0
Kyger Creek Plant at Cheshire ?VEC are four AEP operatahd the 1,290-mw Clifty' mg compames.
.
Creek Plant near Madison
Kyger Creek and Clifry
Ind., owned by OVEC'; Creek began operations in
subsidiary 1955 under the IKEC/OVEC
:wholly-owned
1ndiana-Kentucky Electric banner. The two plants are
Corp. (IJO'C).
connected by a network of776
· SCR uses a chemical reac- miles of 345-kilovolt transmisf&lt;&gt;n to break down nitrogen sian lines in. Ohio, Indiana and
1oxide into elemental nitrogen northern Kentucky. .
1and water. The SCR process
Parent companies of the
!involves .injection of ammonia sponsoring utilities include
lin to. flue gas. Each plant will AEP, Allegheny Energy Inc.,
1use an ammonia-on-demand Cinergy Corp., DPL Inc.,
'system in which u~a. a solu- FiiStEnergy Corp., PowerGen
&lt; le nitrogen compound, is PLC and Vectren Corp.

Obituaries..

The Dally Sentinel •

Paston in

•----111111111.

Call US!

'

can See" by Jane Kirk- - '
patrick.

The cost of HEALTH
CARE Is GOING UP!
Make sure you have
ADEQUATE INSURANCE!

Creative~

Middleport Brownie Troop
1015 participated in the cookie
crunch with Desirae Cundiff taking fiiSt, and Cairlin Cordell secQnd. Jessi Meadows dressed as the
Trefoil Cookie and greeted participants as they entered Adult
volunteer Jackie Wolf conducted
the cookie training and cookies ·
~re sampled for re6xshments.At
t\leJust 4 Girls Health Day, 14 girls
and five adults attended. The
9COuts attending receiYed an event
patch.
Members began working the
on the Safety Sense Tty-It and the
Safety Award Pin badges and will
· complete the Safety Pin in Februal)' Girls ate healthy snacks at
meeting to reinfon:e the
Health Day activities.
. The 29 girls in the troop s,old
3,214 boxes ofcookies. Top sellca,
were HoOy McGroth,Jessi Mead~-ows and-Harley-Fox.

wan or in other dangerous situ~;
lions. Thanks for being there wh~n
needed and for putting up shelter
for hurt people and sending them
food, clothing, water and oJher us~:
ful supplies. NEPHTALI IN
CALIFORNIA
So, Dear Readers, I hope th4
sample wos ample and you 'enjoye'4
th~m as much as I did.
:.
Thanks to the Department of
Defense, OperationDearAb.\ly.net .is
now year-round. It serves all
branches of our armed forces. Nl
messages are relayed to our troop's
via a secure military site so they Cl\R
be beamed to a ship in the middle
of the ocean, a submarine under the
'
sea, or downloaded to a cave .H)
Afghanistan. ,
,,
Valentine's Day is just around tlie
corner. Please join me on Opera~
tionDearAbby.net in \elling our
troops how much they are love!! an,d
appreciated on Valentine's Day aqd
every day
·

LOCAL EVENTS

Thinking Day will be observed
Welcomed as new memben in June.
by Big Bend girl scouts Sa!un:hy at were Chelsey Elliott, Hannah
The troQp ~selected Nicar.egua
the
ReedSville Chun:h of Elliott and Jessica Stines.
as their country for Thinking Day.
Nazarene fiom 3 p.m to 5 p.m.
Regular meetings are every Courtney M3)"S has been chn&lt;en as
Each troop will represent a
country by displaying itrms fiom
the country as ~ as serving foods
fiom that couna:y.
Thinking Day is a celebration
for aJ1 Girl Scouts and Girl Guides
all orer the \\Odd.
kickoff for the annual girl
SCO\lt cookie sale was held in January.'l\velve troops participated in
the sale selling 19,944 boxes of
cookies.
· Accotding to Joyce Romines,
cookie service unit manager, sales
this )&lt;"l1' ""'le 20 to 24 percent
mcxe dian last yeat
Thp girl seDers were Kristin
Trader, 708 boxes, Troop 1180,
who won the GoldTrefoi!Awanl
:artd will receive a Gold Cookie
Achievement Medallion; Lindsey
Houser, Troop 1290, sold 511
boxes of cookies, and won the
Silver Trefoil Award and will
receive the Silver Cookie
AFhievetnent Medallion; Nikki
Lawson ofTroop 1276, who took
thiid place by selling 505 boxes of
cookies· who won the Bronze
Trefoil and Bro112e Achie\'elllent
Medallion.
Top aoop sales were Middleport Brownie Troop 1015, 287
cases of cookies; Middleport
Junior'Thxlp 1276, 228 cases; and
Pomeroy Brownie Troop 1271,
206 c:a!eS. For those not ~ to
order cookies or who want extta
boxes, there will bC sevmJ cookie booth sates in M=h or April.
In addition lo cookie sales, a112
~ ~ ~ l:uy in )arJ.iar):
Scuthem BtrNmielloop 11
~ new le¥len, Kalhy MUl}lhy

finance air quality system

.

live in an apartment. I •m in forth
And these, from ' a Webelos Boy
grade now. I even have my own Scout Tro~ in Tennessee:
locker. I go to the same school, ~ .•..DUB, S!!'ULDIER: Hope you
now I'm getting into an after odill'lil . make it back to your family. Have a
program. Thank you for risking h]:PPM£.wfar. I know how it fells.
your hfe for us. Your siste.r,...-"itllfi . go 'killed in the war when
ANDREA ·
· I was four. I have a new dad now,
DEAR · SERVICEMAN: I'm and I'm sad about all those kids who
13. I'm a very nice girl. I like to lost their mom and dad. Hope it
sing, dance, play video games, talk stops. - DYLAN
on the phone and listen to .my CD
DEAR SODLER: I'm ~frican
player. Thank you for protecting our Amircan. Please, please, pleose kick
country and my family.You left your realy kick kick Afghanistan's B-Uhome to fight for us. Thanks to you, T-T. And I'm not jakin'.- MALa lot of people are 'still alive. You put COLM.
your lives in danger and that is realP.S. Please don't die. Come back
ly brave. You should get a gold to your family in once peace.
medal. I felt really sad wl)en I heard Please!!!!!!!!!
· terrorists bombed New York and
And last, from a budding humanithe Pentagon and killed so many tarian:
innocent people. I think whoever
DEAR AIRMAN: I am 12 years
was in charge of the· bombing old and in 8th grade. I like to play
should be killed. You are heroes and football as a cornerback blocking
nobody will ever forget you. the receiver. I also like videogames:
K\'ANA, CANOGA PARK, Thank you for joining the U.S. Air
CALIF.
Force. Also for risking your life at

Big·Bend Area Girl.Scout diary,

www.mydallysenf1MI.com

bvec sells notes to

_Th_eo_a_ny_Se_ntin_'e_l_ _ _

.

•

TU,eldly, Feb. 12, 2002

3 Piece Oak Breakfast Nook
w/.Storage Under Seats

ssggss

.

·i
•

••

•

ww:w.mydolysentioel.com

: F:.!?!.'!~Z.!~!.h :

52 Weeks

$109.72

' .o

•

...

.L.--------:
992·3322 ( :
•••••••••••

vehicle's owner, he said.

•

l

\

•

�•

.

• ••

Op1n1on

The Daily Sentinel

pageA4

The Daily Sentinel

Inside:

TuMdlf, Fabi1ary 12. 2101

eTJA qJ-zooZ r~ ~ $TM-'TEU:6~,...,#....,.- - -

· l

The Daily Sentinel

Dan Snyder still a big spender, Page 10
'

•

t4ULME

.

5

Q

'l'lleSAy, flb"!I'J 12, 2112

111 Court St., PorMrOy, Ohio
740-992·21511• Fu: 740-1182-2157
www.mydlll~tlnel.com

1l.JFsn.\y's

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Den Dickerson
Dillne Kay Hill
Controller

Che..-. HCJI!tllch .
Genenll MaiMiger

,....... ..... -

.. -

•~ 1d}«&lt; M..., .U..,

HIGHLIGHTS

· .... ,

Publisher

~Basketbal

. ·'

N.,...· n., •. _.. ,..,_JOO_AI/_
--..umr

Olrta .
Moncley'a Osi!IM

.M iaeiMM_Minu 111111 W/q~NNN,.....,
No 1UU1f11nlll&amp;rr wlll N ,.NhltM. Uttwt ''"""" 1M bt toM wu,

iu~~n, lfGI ~IHNlilk~

Athena 52, Chillicothe 33
Falrtand 69, Gallia Academy 51
!Jackson 54, Washington C.H. 51
S1 ctlolwl TOUI'IIIIII*IIa
lit Logan
Dlvlllon II
River Valley 42, Alexander 27
. Boy•
Monday'• Osi!IM
Wahama 61 , ParicEnsburg Chr. 34
Ohio Valley 51, Hannan 36

,._ upUtlou u,..mM ill llt~ rohult~t Hlow t1n IJu CMJMI.w.J: "fllw OAID M&amp;llq

l'wblb,., c.. ~-- ..... oiJtmriH-

NATIONAL VIEW

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

Is Bush administration retreating
from environmental issues?

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Tuesday, Feb. 12,the 43rd day of2002. There are 322
·days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Feb. 12, 1809, Abraham Lincoln, the 16th president of
the United States, was born in present-day Larue County, Ky.
On this date:
' In 1733, English colonists led by James Oglethorpe founded
,savannah, Ga.
In 1870, women in the Utah Territory gained the right to
vote.
· m 1892, President Lincoln's birthday was declared a national
'holiday.
: In 1909, the National Association for the Advancement of
-Colored People was founded.
: In 1915, the cornerstone for the Lincoln Memorial was laid
in Washington, D.C.
In 1924, George Gershwin's "Rhapsody in Blue" premiered
in N ew York.
In 1940, the radio play "The Adventures of Superman".
debuted on the Mutpal network with Bud Collyer as the Man
of Steel.
' In 1942, painter Grant Wood, creator of" American Gothic,''
died in Iowa City, Iowa, a day before his 51st birthday.
In 1973, the first release of American prisoners of war from
the Vietnam conflict took place.
In 1999, the Senate voted to acquit President C linton of perj~try and obstruction of justice.
Ten years ago: Democratic presidential candidate Bill Clinton released a letter he'd written as a student in 1969 in which
'he said he had decided ·to give up a draft deferment in order to
"maintain · my political viability." President Bush formatly
announced his bid for re-election.
I five years ago: The highest- ranking official' to flee commu1nist North Korea, HwangJangYop, asked for political asylum at .
!South Korea's consulate in Beijing. The Clinton administration
'gave permission to 10 U.S. news organizations to open bureaus
'in Cuba .
One year ago: The NEAR spacecraft touched down on Eros,
;completing the first landing on an a.'teroid. Scientists published
\their first examinations of nearly all the human genetic code. A
'federal appeals court ruled the Internet service Napster had to
'prevent users from swapping copyrighted · music without
!charge. A computer virus .pretending to be a digital photo of
•tennis star Arina Kournikova overwhelmed e-mail servers in
:Europe and North America.
: Today's Birthdays: Movie director franco Zeffirelli is 79.
llasebatl Hall-of- Fame sportscaster Joe Garagiola is 76. Sen.
,Arlen Specter, R-Pa. , is 72. Basketbatl Hill-of-Farner Bill Russell is 68. Actor Joe Don Baker is 66. Rock musician Ray Man,zarelc: (The Doors) is 63. Author Judy Blume is 64. &lt;(ountry
·singer Moe Bandy is 58. Actress Maud Adams is 57:Actor Cliff
DeYoung is 57. Actor Michael Ironside is 52. Rock musician ,
·Steve Hackett is 52. Rock singer Michael McDonald is 50.
·
·
· Actress Joanna Kerns is 49..

•

\,

Mondtly'l GIIIIM
MAC

President Bush's declaration of war
againsr the "evil axis" of Iraq, Iran and
N otth Korea has caused quaking among
U.S. allies, many Democrats and much of
the foreign policy establishment. But it was
a vital act of world leadership.
The tact is, weapons of mass desrruction
in hostile hands pose a growing menace to
the civilized world ihat simply can't be left
to polite diplomacy. Bush deserves credit
for sounding a loud alarm and demanding
action to deal with the threat.
It's reasonably clear from Bush administration statements since the State of the
Union that military attacks ori the three
"axis" nations aren't imminent. but it's also
clear that the United States is firmly set on
a campaign to change their regimes if it
can't change their policies.
Instead of pondering the prospect of
chemical, biological and nuclear weapons
being used against innocent civilians and figuring out how to help thwart it most European leaders and media commentators have been wailing that the pres. ident was acting irresponsibly by mentioning it.
One analyst for London's financial
Times wrote that it was "dangerously simplistiC:' to "see the W&lt;lrld as an axis of evil
fighting an alliance for good."
A German radio commentator said that
"the U.S. president is pursuing a dangerous
mission - self-righteous, fined with almost
religious zeal and carried by a wave of support at home. A political impossibility: a
holy warrior in the White House:'
News reports from the World Economic Forum in New York were fined with
tales of hand-wringing from foreigners
and some u.s. observers about a "return to
unilateralism" after Bush said that, if necessary, this country would deal with the
threat of weapons of mass desrruction on
its own. .
The New York Times editorialized, irrationatly, that even if the axis governments
could be changed, "there is no way to

economy.''

Morton
Kondracke
COLUMNIST
assure that the backlash abroad would not
be worse than the original threats."
Let's see: For Bl)sh to be denounced in
the European parliament would be worse
than the consequences of Iran's handing
off a small nuclear weapon or a canister of
botulism toxin to Hezbotlah? I don't !hiok
so.
More surprising than objections from
Europeans and the Times editorial page is
the reaction from some deferu~-minded
Democrais and .even some Republicans,
including former National Security Adviser Brent'Scowcroft and Sen. Chuck Hagel,
R-Neb.
Scowcroft said that by offending the
allies, Bush might hamper cooperation in
the war on terrorism. Hagel said the President might have done better by following
the Teddy Roosevelt dictum, "Speak softly
and carry a big stick."
Scowcroft and Hagel were attendees at
last weekend's annual Munich i!efense policy summit along with ~everal Democrats
who also denounced Bush's formulation.
Rep. Jim Moran, O-Va., catled it "reck·less rhetoric to lump all three counrries
together." Will Marshatl, president of the
Progressive Policy Institute, told me it con-

stituted "overreaching."
Rep. Etlen Tauscher, 0-Calif., told me
"lumping those countries together
was a failed strategy if it was designed to
make people take sides."
tha~

, I've heard other Democrats respomj
even more cynicatly, implying that Busq
wants to keep the country at war in order
to keep his poll rating-; high.
When· United Nations weapons inspectors were banished three years ago, Thci
Economist continued, they were con~
vinced that Saddam had hidden an arsenal
ofVX nerve gas and "a whole range of
hiological agents and toxins."
,
Ir.m: According to the Monterey Cente~
for Nonproliferation Studies, Iran has aq
arsenal of chemical weapons and, accord~
ing to the U.S. government; has been
secretly producing biological weapons. Iris
getting Russian help on nuclear power
and assistance on missiles from Russia and
China.
North Korea: Caught in 1992 produc~
ing more plutonium than it admitted tci
making, North Korea agreed in 1994 to
stop producing it in exchange for Westem
nations' help. with less-dangerous nuclear
technology, But it has blocked implementation of the agreement. North Korea has.
large stocks of chemical weapons and a
well-developed biological weapons program. It is also developing a missile capable
of reaching the United States.
It's rrue, the three countries don't constitute a cooperative "axis" as Germany. Italy
and Japan did in World War II; but that's a
technicality.
There's no question that they are "evil."
Just look at what these nations do to their
own people and the menace they repre"
sent to humanity. If Bush could topple just
one of the three regimes - most likely
Iraq's first - he'd be doing the world a
huge favor. And, likely as not, the others
would be scared into line.
'

Investigation

EUGENE, Ore. (AP) - ,
Oregon coach Mike Bellotti
welcomes an investigation
into claims that the Ducks
used unethical recruiting
practices to attract high
· schooi football players.
Washington coach Rick
Neuheisel said last week after
'national signing day that "a
couple of schools in the
.(Pacific-! 0) Conference did'n't even start recruiting until ·
they saw our list"

(Morton Kondracke is executiw editor if Rn/1
Call~ the newspaper if Capitol Hill.)

Tyson is in
trouble again

New GOP chief brings low-key style to prickly town

I

''

single changed champions for the first
time in a decade and Russia extended
its record reign in. pairs figure skating
- at least in the eyes ofjudges, if not
the fans.
The full sweep in the halipipe
marked the first time Americans took
all three medals in' an event since
men's figure skating in 1956.
Their haul doubled the U.S. medal
count to six, with two golds - the

other in women's halfpipe. No country hilS more golds or overall medals.
The power of their sweep was best
illustrated at the medals ceremony late
Monday, when three U.S. flags were
raised side-by- side.
"It was pretty cool,'' said Kass, the
19-year-old poster boy for this XGames crossover sport. "Everybody
was psyched."
The trio left th e medals podi;,.m to

Raiders top Alexander
RV advatues to
face Gallia

HONOLULU (AP) Police are investigating a
claim that Mike Tyson assault..ed a woman while in Hawaii
'attending thePro Bowl .
A 38-year-old woman,
whose identity was not
released, reported she was
struck Saturday as she was
forced aside by Tyson when
she "ran up to talk to him" at.
Aloha Stadium, ·Honolulu
police spokeswoman Jean
Motoyama said. .

with the travel schedule" as he works on
keeping the majority in the House, picking
off strategic races in the Senate and work~
ing for candidates at the state and local levels.
He was elected Montana's attorney general after working there for 16 yean. He
served as governor from 1993 to 200 I,
then turned down requests last year that he
run for the U.S. Senate in 2002.
The furious controversy over the Hou~
ton-based company drowned 04t any message Racicot might have offered at the time
he took over the GOP in mid-Jan~ He
was well received at a recent conservative
conference after initial worries were voiced
that he might be too moderate.
Racicot continues to take a salary and d()
some legal work for other clients at
Bracewetl &amp; Patterson. But the experience .
of recent weeks left a bitter taste about the
news. media.
"Reporting seems more concerned'with
appearances than with substance;' he sai&amp;
His frequent sparring parmer on the cilk
shows, Democratic National Chairman
Terry McAuliffe, describes Racicot as "a
classy guy. It's kind of like going up against
one of my law school professors."
Asked how ,he likes debating the Democrat on television, Racicot grinned and
said: ''I'm going to provide adult supervision as best I can."

McDyessmay

retum .1Uesday
DENVER (AP) - Denver
Nuggets forward Antonio
·McDyess, who has not , yet
.played this season because of a
knee i!'jliry, might return to
,the lineup Tuesday night.
McDyess said it witl be a
.game-time decision as to
,whether he plays in the
Nuggets' home game against
-Boston.

Conec6on
Jordan williams, who scored
II points in Friday's Meigs·
'basketbatl game, was left out
of the boxscore.

(Will Lester cowr.s palitics and polling for The
Associated Press.)

/•

\.

rr ·

season.
Tip-off is scheduled for
6:15 p.m. Wednesday at
Logan.
"We're just going to
work on some things that
we think might work
against Gatlia Academy and
just go from there and. give
it our best shot," said
Weaver. "That's a~out as

PIHse ... Relden, 10

Pluse.-

Sweep. 8

Miami
.

pounds
Bobcats
OXFORD (AP) - Doug
Davis scored 25 points and
was 4-of-5 in 3-point shoot~
ing to lead Miami, Ohio, to a
79-55 victory
over Ohio on
Monday night.
Miami ( 11 12, 8-4 Mid-American Conference) took an 11 -10 lead at
the 12:49 mark in the first
hal f with a 3-pointer by
Eugene Seals, and the RedHawks never looked back.
Seals was 3-of-7 from 3-point
range.
Miami led by 36-31 at halftime, but began pulling ahead
of Ohio (13-8 , 8-5) by double
digits with about 10 minutes
left in the game.
Miami dominated Ohio
defensively,
forcing
20
turnovers by the Bobcats. The
RedHawks outscored Ohio
24-8 in points otT turnovers.
Davis' 25 points were a
career high, Seals added 15
points for Miami, while Juby
Johnson led the team in
rebounds with six.
Sonny Johnson led scoring
for Ohio with 14 points.
Brandon Hunter added 12
points and led his team in
rebounds with six ..
Miami dominated Ohio in
free-throw shooting. The
RedHgwks made 88 percent
of their free throws, while the
Bobcats only hit 62 percent.
Miami also led in ·assists,
with a season-high 21. Ohio
had only 11 ossists.

MAC

·Ducks welcome

WASHINGTON TODAY

BY WIU.I..alER
. K.aufinan describes Racicot as "a perfect
WASHINGTON
Republican fit."
N ationill Committee Chairman Marc
"The most important single thing as
Racicot thinks Washington is too obsessed chairman of the RNC," K.aufinan said, "is
with partisan conflict, doesn't like the ver- to have the confidence of the White
hal slugfest of the Sunday talk shoWs and House."
has faced criticism for his link to Enron
He replaced former chairman Jim
Corp.
Gilmore, who was then governor ofVirRacicot associates, however,' say the for- ginia. The GOP lost two governors' I"'Ces
mer Montana governor is a solid fit to lead last year - Virginia was one - and some
the GOP into the 2002 elections: a shrewd say there was friction between Gibnore and
strategist, a low-key but effective the White House.
spokesman for the parry and a loyal friend
Racicot said the job is a little more manto President Bush.
ageable because of the president's leader"He comes at you under the radar;' says ship skills and popularity. ·
Connecticut Gov. John Rowland, a feUow
He hasn't shifted the GOP's goals, which
Republican and a friend. "He has a great are shaped largely by the White House
style, he's very unassuming, very uncharac- political operation. He wantl! to recruit
· teristic of a typical politician:'
solid candidates, raise money and expand
Racicot, 53, a Montana native of french- the party's base to include more women,
Canadian descent, concedes his personal Asian-Americans, Hispanics, blacks and
style is not weD-suited to the shouting other minorities. .
The GOP could f.!re better with those
matches that sometimes pass for po~tical
debate in the nation's capital.
groups, he said, "if they have a chance to
"I've asked the (news) shows, 'Is this one carefully review our agenda and experiof those shows where you want to know ence the inspiration of the president's leadsomething or do you already know every- ership:'
thing and I'm just here as a vehicle for your
But Republicans can't assume anything
theatrical skills?'" Racicot said. "It probably about the elections based on the president's
popl)iarity, he said. ·
does cast a pill on the proceecfuigs:'
Racicot (pmnounced.Ross-koh) says he · "We're swimming against the tide of hisappears on the news programs because it's tory;' Racicot said, noting the party in
an. important part of the GOP job he power in the White House usually suffers
accepted out of his close friendship with congressional losses in midterm elections.
Bush. Vetetan Republican organizer Ron . Racicot says he will be "very aggress!ve

2002 Winter Olympics

chants of"USA!" then stirred up the
crowd by tossing out their baseball
caps.
And what about' their bouquets of
yellow roses~
" I saved them for my mom," said
·Powers, smiling.
Picabo Street's bid to become the
first American woman to win three · ·
Olympic skiing medals was pushed
from Monday to Tuesday because of
high winds.

~rudemy

She also said that now that the war in
Afghanistan is nearly over, Bush "has tci
look like he's fighting somewhere. If he
doesn't have a war, he can't justifY a . war

·

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - For all
the scripted ways organizers have
tried. making the Winter .Games truly
American, three snowboarders have
pulle.d off . the equivalent of spray
painting " USA" on the white spires of
the Mormon temple.
Ross Powers, Danny Kass and J.J.
Thoqw took gold, silver and bronze
in the men's halfpipe Monday, thrusting themselves and their radical sport
to the forefront of the Salt Lake City
Olympics.
Elsewhere Monday, the men's luge

Miami (Ohio) 79, Ohio 55
W. Michigan 94, Akron 89, OT
OTHERS
Canisius ~9. Maris! 63
Connecticul46, Villanova 40
. prexel 60, Otd Dominion 70
Rutgers 80, St. Peter's 63
BY BuTcH COOPER
Wagner 99, St. Francis, NY 88
BCOOPEROMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM
AJabamaA&amp;M 95, Savannah.St 53
LOGAN - River Valley
~loom St. 84, Ark.-Pine Bluff 66
survived a difficult shootAppalachian St. 85, Wofford 69
ing night and a physical
B'ham-Soulh. 88, Co. Carolina 60
first half Monday as the
Chattanooga 91 , VMI 64
Coli. Chal1eslon 81, W. Carolina 64
Raiders defeated AlexanDelaware St. 54, Morgan St. 52
der, 42-27, in the first game
Furman 70, The Citadel 64
of the Division II sectionGoo. Mason 59, N.C.-Win ..... 156
als.
!iaward 88, Coppin St. 72
The Raiders shot 10Mercer 72, Troy St. 71
for-58 , or 17 percent from
Mar. Brown n. Jacksonll. St. 12. OT
· the field.
_N.C. A&amp;T 62, e :-cookman 60 .
"They feel pretty good
N.C.·Ashevllle 72, Elon 58
about
itt said River Valley
Norfolk St. 70, Md.-East. Shore 68
head coach Tom Weaver.
S. Carolina St. 73, Florida A&amp;M 72
"They
played
good
Southern U. 88, MVSU 73
. Tenn. St. 66, E. Kentucky 63
enough to win. We talked
· Wis.-Green Bay 65, Detroil61
about it in the locker
Jackson St. 66, Prairie View 55
room, we could've played
Kansas 110, Texas 103, OT
better.
McNeese St. 81. Tx.·Arfington 74
"We all . pretty milch
North Texas 78, La.-Lafayette 59
agreed, we can't play like
'rx. Southam 87, Grambling St. 66
that Wednesday night. We
Tx..f'anAmer. 100, New Mex. St. 86
CO!ora&amp;o St. 70,' Mlchljjar\68, OT '. know we'll have our hands
·full"
San Diego St. 77, BYU 73
Up next - top-seeded
UNLV 72, Utah 64
Gallia Academy (19-1),
who the Raiders lost tQ
twice during the regular

Bush is correct in targeting 'evil axis' in war on te"or

• Times Union, Albany, N.Y., on federal e&lt;JVironmental policy: The Bush administration continues to take steps that make
for a disturbing pattern of retreat on environmental issues. This
week, the administration backrracked on wetlands protections
against the advice Of it' own Environmental Protection Agency
and Fish and Wildlife Service. And just last month, the White
House proposed to open the way for new logging, mining and
drilling in undeveloped national forests.
Taken together, these initiatives are troubling. But they
become even more so when added to other recent White
· House actions, including a second look at the long-standing
EPA policy of trying to phase out older, coal-burning power
plants that contribute to acid rain, and a sudden shift away from
developing high-mileage automobile engines capable of reducing air potlution through lower tailpipe emissions ....
But now even Mr. Bush's own environmental appointees are
having misgivings about his policies. The EPA and fish and
Wildlife Service opposed the Army Corps of Engineers plan
on wetlands, for example, but the White House sided with the
corps. ·r
_
The corps contends that the new policy is simply a way of
reducing paperwork in reviewing projects with minimal effects
on the envir0nf!1ent, and that will give it more time to concentrate on projects with potentiatly greater impact. But ·who
defines what is minimal? The Army Corps of Engineers.
for its part, the corps insists it will remain true to the Bush
administration's commitment of maintaining the same ' net
acreage of wetlands no matter how many new· projects might
be approved under the new policy.. ..
These do not appear to be projects with minimal impact on
the environment. On the contrary, the new rules seem to be
part of a major a."ault on vital environmental protections.

I

NCAAMen'a

U.S. men sweep made-in-America .halfpipe~,

ATTACK THE BASKET_.:. River Valley's Ashley Caldwell drives past Alexander's Sarah Woods
in Monday's sectional tournament game at Logan. (Bryan Long)

Kyle Petty fastest in qualifying
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla .. (AP) - ·
Kyle PettY led an abbreviated ·second
round of Daytona 500 qualifying Monday, running a lap of 183.061 mph in
his Dodge and winding up 27th fastest
overatl:
He didn't complete his run Saturday
in the first round because of an engine
failure.
"We didn't pick up much on the second lap," Petty said. "We picked up
two-tenths (of a second) on the second
lap, and we should have picked up four
tenths, so that killed us."
· Petty will start 26th in the first 125mile qualifYing race Thursday, behind

~~
drivers who posted a first-round speed.
The opening time trials decided the top
two positions and the qualifying races
will filled the next 28 positions, with~
coming from each event.
Petty's speed probably won't be good
enough to fall back on if he has prob]ems in his qualifier.
"That's borderline," he said. "We really d on ,t kf\OW w h ere anyb o dy sta c k s up

who completed his first-round run to
make a second ottempt, and it paid otT
slightly. His lap of 18 1.785 moved him
up six spots to 41st overall. ·
Other drivers making' second-round
runs were Kirk Shelm erdine (178.246)
and Norm Benning (168.429). Benning
must reach a speed of 175 in practic ~
the next two days 111 order to st~rt last
i11 the second 125.
. LITTLE AL'S BACK: for the first
nme smcc 1998, AI Unser Jr. ts back at
Daytona prepanng for the lnternat1onal Ra ce · of C h:(mpwns.

right now. Bow can you know?"
Mike Skinner was the only driver

Pluse -

NASCAR,

10

Eagles still ·
i~ol~Bes , f~he

'
Eastern J:la81es boys baslletball team is ranked 1Sth in
the latest ~ivilion IV Ohio.
Associated ·.~ss S~sketball
polL
The Eagles received l5
poil)ts,itl .the voting.
' S. Charleston Southeast~
er;1 holds the ,top spOt.
Centerburg · . is . s·e cond,
while . Bristo!viUet
lldstOI
i'
.
;
.was third:

Wahama wins fourth straight
BY GARY CLARK
OVP CORRESPONDENT
MASON, W.Va. - Coach Lewis Hatl's
Wahama White falcon basketball team overcame a sluggish st~rt Monday evening in
soundly defeating visiting Parkersburg Chnstian by a convincing 66-34 score as the Bend
Area team claimed its fourth srraight hardwood triumph.
The White Falcons continued its late season surge to extend its winning streak to four
in a row while bringing its season slate 9-9 on
the year. WHS use.d a balanced offensive
attack with all 11 players denting the scoring
column in addition to pressuring. the vi~itors
into numerous turnovers wtth tts defenstve
intensity.
"We got off to a slow start but picked it up

'\
I

.defensively and that seemed to ignite our
offense;' Falcon coach Lewis Hall said. "We're
coming off a big win at Southern last friday
and with Wirt County coming in here
tomqrrow we may have lost some of uur
, concentration but we· picked it up and put
the game away."
. Ivan Cadavid came off the bencll to pace
th( balanced White Falcon offense with 11
points while Jason Simpkins added 10 markers. Anthony Mitchell came up with nine tallies with Stephen Roach, Ryan Roush, Gabe
Lambert and J. R . Parsons aU contributed six
points apiece. Chri! Morehead netted 18
points for Parke,rsburg Christian with Jan1es
Douglas totaling eight in a losing cause.
.......... W•h•ma, I ·

~&gt;w••,.- Wahama's Ryan RQush (34) attempts to block the shot
of Parkersburg Christian's Jeff Douglas Monday. (Dan Adkins)

�Page~ I•

The Deily Sentinel

TUelday,Feb. 12,~

WWWtf"Ydllllysentlnel.com

'C!trtbune - Sentinel C LA 55 I F 'l ED

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 7

! AKC 0.. Dono Puge, 111 18118

Dodge Oynosty 3.0
• - e n d -,
Aulo,-.
• HOIIequin &amp; , Born
1111111, .. 11r
1~1 (740)388-8113
ld """'-' , _ fl1ora. ..,
runo real good. 11 ,000.
AKC Reg. lllol:k Lob pup- 090 or 1roc1o 1ar lett l'iM lor - ,good hur'dlng
(304)773-8064 01
,• 71113
_,
.
YOice
~1·
IMve
·
or colt ~5-44ee
I
Moroury Grind Mllquio. 94,
: ~glollred Lobs, loaded, 117,000 Mlteo,
,
or Bleck $3400 (740~
• (740)441-!1831
•
Slor Auto S.O.o, acrou

t

We Cove
, Meigs, Gallla,
And MaS'on
counties Like
No One
Else CanJ

car-

l

=.::;:

"
r""

HOW I..Q WRITE

A1':1. AD.

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response,,

I'Ji:RsoNALs

I

Attentlonl
Earn 2nd Income 'Mihout
2nd Job up to
$25 -$75 /hr Pt Ft

Male 61 yrs old RetJred
:;;""
PO Box 272, Pomt Pleas25550
ant, w-J
Moon Ughl E1&lt;:0rts. AHen·
t1on Ladtes Full Semce
Male Escorts Prompt Prcr
fessblal 01screet &amp; Conft·
dentlal
6pm to 6am
(740)386 1799

,.i:',:~:~~~PP~

1·800·218 7543
www Money Dreams
'""'com
"·'

.

ADVERTISING
SALES
REPRESENTATIVE
For well estabUshad
Local Co.

Why wa1t? Start meet1ng
Ohio singles IOmght, call lOll
tree 1-800-766-2623 ext
1621

SERVING THE
TRI·COUNTY
AREA

A Shoppers Pamdlse naw
webs1te, merchandise 50·
80% off manufacturer's auggelled retail W1ll add new
products regularly Check 1t
out! a·shoppers·paradlse

com

'

• Must have good
CommunlcaUon akllla
• Must have good
drlvlng record &amp;
provide own
tranaportatlon
• Muat have ability to
be 1 TEAM player

,

Foster Parents
local Agsncy In Ohio seek·
ing qualtfled couples to be·
come Foster parents In
Lawrence Galha, Jackson,
Me1gs areas There w1il be
Send Resume to:
5 to 10 fam1hes chosen to
become part of the p1iot Golllpolll Dally Tribune
project Qualified applicants
RE: Advertising
may receiiJe up 10 $40 00
Solos Rep
per day reimbursement lnlereated
psrues
Call
825 Third Avenuo
(740)534-3379 as1&lt; lor Rob- Galllpolla, Ohla 45631
ert II you have previousty
called, please call again
100 WORKERS NEEDED
Shop Online O
Assemble crafts, WOOd
www marykay com'bspencar47
Items Ma$48tenal provided
Your Mary Kay Independent
To
0+ wk
Beauty Consultant Bridget Free lntonnatlon pkg 24 Hr
lplnc
1-801·428-4750
or.
Shop Online 0
Beaullclen, FT &amp; PT Help
www youravon comlltndahaiV Needed Patd Vacation/
or call Undl for all your Avon Hourly Wage Vs Commisneeds Orders, Deliveries, sion, Free CEU hours,
~~hures lnlo (7401388· ,!:.,74:::0:::)44:::,6·.:.72=6:.:7____

~-:...:::..:..=..:.:.;:.:...__:.

o.NQ

InsertiQ_n

Or Garage/Yard Sales • Limit 3 Per Person
Mall To: Ohio Valley Publishing, 825 Third
Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631

Sunday In·Column· 1•00 p m
For Sundays Paper

, ;.

HEuW~

11

lfiuWAMID

r

n3

MRaelsnumS~ee'~

~....

Help Wanted- experienced
roofer'• and oarpanters·
mull have a valid driver's 11canso """e lrtlnapo"allon
and ""'..,.., local wort&lt;
good pey Apply a1 CMsll:
an'o Conolru~llon 1403
Eutem Ave, GalliPolis. Of·
- - - - - - - - Ilea
houra 8•5 M·F,
AVONI All Areas! To Buy or (740)44&amp;-4S 14
$111 Shirley Spears, 304875-1429 •
Home &amp; Garden Party ~
I
now hiring Slart your own
2 LPN'I Day ShiH, No home bal8d buslnell with
Weekenda, Apply In Po""" lilllelo no lnvastmenl lnlllr·
al Medical Plaza, 938 State vlows conducled Monday,
Route 180
March 4 Calt Pal Miller lor
an appointment (740)379_
Domino'• now taking appll· 9887

, ,IHOUR TO START
~ (upon completion of training
Looking lor a New JOB or
CAREER???
Then don't mlsa thle oppor·
ilunllylll
1CAU: 1.,..._174-JOBI

!

'

..:.==='--.,.----::-

openiQg for a lk:ensed Inter~
preler for a hes:rlng·lm·
paired student Applicants
mull be proliclenlln Amerl·
can Sign language. possess
the proper certllicallon. and
a comple1e background
check upon employment
Phone (740) 949-2889 lor
further Information Please
sand Inquiries to Mr James
Lawrence, Superintendent,
Southern Local SChools,
Bolt 176, Racine, Ohio
45771 SI.SD Is an Equal
Dpportunlly Ernp!Oifor

URGENTLY
NEEDEDpiUma donors, eam $50 10
dallonsforsafedrtvera, Ga~ :=::...______ SOO per week for 2 or 3
llpolla and Pomeroy loeB· Need 5 ladles lo sell Avon hours weekly Call Sere·
llano on~ Apply In person
(740)446·3356
Tee, 740·592-8851

I

r ~AL r ~~ rio
I

l

~~

I

I

l-------..,1

riO

r AP~ r==
Bu~ness Sult~nd
I

I

=:..:.::.:.:.______

1980 El Camino, Good
Shape wl 350 engine,
$2800 (740)258-6981

:;:.::.=::==-:--:--:-

1984 Porsche 944, auto,
60 000 mile&amp;, excelent con·
dillon, $4,800.00 OBO
741).949·2446
1990 Oudl 80 lwlo, loaded
with
Sunroof
$2000
(740)446-2519
1992 Cullaso Ctera, 4 door,
e-'lenl oondlllon, $2495
1995 Grand Am, $3795
1994 Grand Am, 53895
1995 S·1 0, $3795 1995
GMC lull llze lruck, $5795
1998 Blazer, 4 door, loaded,
$6495 COOK MOTORS
(740)448-0103

I

BoauiHul 1998 mobile food
concession Trl-axle 24 feet
long All stalnleas sleol
equip!T}Int with deep fryer,
shallow fryer, 4 bowl s1nk,
exhaust hood and cotton
candy machine Eight foot
serving Window and a cash
raglsler "skl,ng $12,g()0
(740)742·3033"
S
v
B
~
tan rour us 1ness ,o.
day Prime Shopping Con·
ter Space Available At Atfordable Rale Spring Vellay
Plaza, Call740-446o01 01

1994 Chevy lumina, 4
Door, l.oaded, Cl..n, Nice
Cor 152700 (740)379·2853

I

r

riO

1993 Grand Prix Special
EdiUon power locka/win~
dOws, AIC, CD ployor, , _
American Aaclng rims
$3999 (740)992·2459 or
(304)982·3407

1995 Chryeler LHS Exc
condition Lpaded. One
Owner Dk/BIIGN w/Chll·
coal leather. 133k mllea
$5300 (304)875·7121

~rdo~:.~=~:~;

i

l

Selle the opportumly· t.ow
Interest rates! Selling at
$162,000, well below ap·
pralsal Great Neighborhood
1n Green School District
close to Holzer 4 Bed·
rooms, 3 Full Batl'ls, Inground pool For mote d&amp;lolls and
appolnlment
(740)446·3139
~~~~~~:'!!'~3:l:
w t
h e? 11 11
AI
an
your own om
po s, 7 m11es 1rom o
Own your own land? We dOl Grande (740)379·2540
Call(740~6-3384toquali· Pilot Program Renters
ly lor your new dream Needed,
• •
304 736 7295
home

=:.:!:===----

_:Vaca:::::::ncle:::a~now:::..,..-::--:--

r

Clean 2br WID Hookup New England 20ga Single
Reference and Deposit No Shot, $110 Remington 870
Wingmaster 2Qga
En·
:.,P:::•'::'_oC304::::::!:16::.75~·_::5::;1B::2'--- graved, U!6 Now hr Me·
8
Modem 1 Bedi'OO!Tl Apalt· cury Boat Motor, $1295
mont (740)44llo0390
7-7693
1740138

r

SIJPI'LIIlS

1,•-..0iililliii-.,_,.J
Block, brick, sewer pfpes,
windows, llnlels, eiC Claude
Winters. Rio Grande, OH
CaN 740-245·5121

Sales oriented individual
with ability to take direction.
Must have sales experience.
Apply in person to

93 Columbus Road,
Athens, 0.
and ask for
Chuck or Jerry

'.

Structures,

completion may hove
been extended, but
will oaMaslhe sum of
$100.00 per day
agolnat the blckler for
deflctlvo performance
roaultlng from delay.
Said penalty tor delay
ohall be deducted
from the Performance
Guoronlee.
The dally penalty
deduction will ceaoe
when (a) the bidder
declarea, In wrlllng,
that tho bidder Is
unable 1o, or doe• not
Inland lo complete
performance; ar (b)
the
Director
of
Tronlporllltlan
decloreo lhot, In the
Director'• ludgment,
the bidder 11 unable
to, ar doea not Intend
to
com p lele
performance, or (c)
the dally penalty
equ111 the amount of
the
Performance
Guarantee. In the
evenllny olthe above
condlllona occur, all
rlghta,
IIIIa anu
Interest of the bidder
In sold alructure or
atructurea and tho bid
temlttonce ore then
ou1omotlcolly lorleltod
ta the State. Tho
Director may then
dellroy ar atherwloe
dispose
al
the

a atructure or structure•

Pllrformance
guarantee lor each
ltom muat be posted
at
the
District
Transportation office
lndlcetod In Paragraph
Twa (2) of the Notice
to Bidders. Thla
pertormonce
guarantee, unlns
othorwlae lndlco1ed In
the
Item
parcel
description shall be
evidenced
by
1
certified check or
official bonk check,
mode payable ta the
TREASURER, STATE
OF OHIO In the
emaunt noted In the
lnvllollan ta Bidders,
and tha Notice ta
Bidders, lor each Item
bid. The performance
guarantee will be
depoolted In the State
al Ohio Genoral Fund
to
Insure
1he
porlormance of the
romovol operation• In

and any part al the
Performance
Guarantee
which
romolno
will
be
applied taword the
caato In connection
therewith. Thla Is nat
Intended to preclude
recovory by lhe Stole
foronydomagosover
and above the amount
herein above lorfeltod
or retained.
EXTENSION FOR
COMPLETION
II the IUCCIIIIUI
blddor
linda
11
lmpoaslble
lor
reasons beyond the
bidder's control to
complete 1he work
wHhln the number of
daya speclflod In this
notice, he may ol any
limo prlar to the
expiration of the
schoduled complollon
dolo r111ke 1 wrltlen
roquoat ta tho ODDT
Dlotrlct Ten Real

condlllone oat forth In
the Notice to Blddera.
Failure to provldo
such performance
guarantee within len
(10) days will be
conaldered 1 default
and the amount al the
bid will bo forfeited

for

an

extenalon al time,
setting forth therein
the
reuona
he
believes justify the
granting
at
hla
request. A plea lhot
lnoulllclent time wao
opeclfled In the Notice
Ta Bidders Ia nat 1

and retained by the valid reaeon lor an

Ashley &amp; Hope

L Q ST

Yeah FourtOfn Yeah Fllletn

SJberlan Huakle
&amp; Australlan
Shephard
Brown &amp; buff In
color, 1DO lb.

Love Forever,
Grandma
(Aunt) Mary

II'7Jin1

992·3083

Stille. Tharoofter, the
D 1 r 1 c tor
wIll
readvertlu end resell
ar athorwiM dlapaoo
at the atruc1ure or
atructureo In the beat
Interest• of lhe State
of
Ohio,
Ohio
Deportment
at

aucceaaful bidder af
hla reaponalblllty.
SPECIACATIONS
The
followiQg
additional condlllalll
shall apply lo tho
removal operations
unlou
apeolllc
excep11ona ore natod
eiMwhere In 1he Hem·
Parcel O..Crlptlono af
thla Notice. •
A. No port ol any
41ructuro shall remain
or be placed within
twenty·ftve (25) lee! al
the permanent right·
of·woy llmHa of1hlo or
any
other
stole
highway.
B. Permits mua1 be
socured tram lhe
proper
public
authority
before
removal work may be
• torte d .
The
succeutul " bidder
mua1
determine
whelher ell ulllltles
have been properly
dlaconnecled
In
compliance with local
requl.,.mento.
C. Tho remova' of
the structure• listed
he.,.ln shall be ta the
con c rot o
p e d.
(Concrete pad to
remain) Alloteel bolla
or any similar Items
that protrude Jrom the
concrete pad must be
mode fluoh with the

rel1tlve

to

non-:

dlacrlmlnotlon on th•
ground of ,.co, cola(
or notional origin.
(4) Information And
Reports:
The:
cantrllclar will provide&gt;
all lnlormatlof\ one(
reparta required by.

the regulation•, or:
orders
and .
Instrument• lssuect

pursuant thereto, anc(
will permit access to
111 baaka. recorda.,

eccounta,
aourcea

othe r.!
of

Jnlarmotlon, and 11•
locllltlea •• may be
determined by the
alate Tronaportatlol1
Department or 1he
Fed11a1
Highway
odmlnlatrotlan to be

pertinent to a•cerlalrll
compliance wllh such;

regul1tlon1,

orders

and
lnatructlons .·
Where any Information:
required
al
the.

contr•ctor Ia In the;
exclualve POISISIIOI\
of another who fails or
reluMa to furnish thla,

Information,
the&gt;
contractor shall 101
certify 10 lhe Stole

Tr1neportatlon

1

Doportment, or the
Federal
Highway
Administration oa'
appropriate, and shall
111 forth what eflarla H
concrete pad or has mode to abtoln
romaved complelely. eald Information.
The aru surrounding
(5) Sanctions For
the
structure• Noncompliance' In the
removed shall be event
of
the
cleared of ell debrlo.
contractor's
D. The lntonded noncompliance with
relocation alto of the nondiscrimination
buildings muat have provlslano of Section
the prior written 11·3
of
the
approval
of
the Regulotlono, 1he Stale
Dlotrlct Real Eotole Transportation
Englnurl
"
Department
shall
Administrator.
lmpoH such contract
NON·
sanctions aa It or the
DISCRIMINATION
Federal
Highway
DUrIng
I hI Admlnlotretlan may
porlormonce of thll determine 1o be
contract,
the appropriate. Including,
can1rectar for llaell, bul not limited lo:
Ita ••algneea and
(2) withholding of
ouccauarsln lntereat payment• to the
(hereinafter referred to contractor under the
•• the "contractor"), contract until the
contractor complies,
agrees II lollowa.
(1) Compliance with and/or
(b) cancellation ,
Regulatlono:
The
or
contractor wiM comply termination
with the regulltlano at auaponolon of the
the Ohio Deportment contract, In whole or
af
Trenaportotlon In port.
(8) Incorporation Of
relative to nonProvlalona:
The
doacrlmlnotlan In
contractor will Include
-rolly·osols1ed
programo al the Ohla lhe provisions of
Deportmont
of Section 11·3 of the
Transportation (title Regulations In every
49, Codo of Foderol subcontract, Including
Regulatlano, Port 21, procurement
of
herolnofter relerrod to materials and leases
•• the Regulations), of equipment. unless
by
lhe
which are herein exempt
Incorporated
by regulations, orders, or
reference and made a lnetrucllons Issued
pert althlo contract
pursuant !hereto. The
( 2)
Nan· contractor will take
dlacrlmlnollon : The such action with
10
any
cantrectar, with ragard respect
to lhe work performed subcontract,
by It after award, and procurement or lease
prior to comple11on of 11
the
State

extonolanol11me.
Co,nalderotlon will
be given ta requeals
for extension by
reoaana of on oct al
Gad ar unavoidable
delay, which Ierma
Include, unuauolly
Inclement weo1her
Trenaportetlon.
during the contract the contract work, will Transportation
The
aucce11ful Pllrlod, otrlkes of 1he nat discriminate an Department or the
bidder shall hove lhl employees of the the ground al race, Federal
Highway
right of poaaaaalon aucceaaful bidder or color, or national Administration may
upon
filing
the othera which hinder or origin In lhe aelactlon direct as a means of
oloreaold performance P"'vent the removal al and retention of enforcing
such
guarantee.
After the etructure, refuul subcontractors,
provisions Including
paaMsslon 11 grantod, or unuauol delaya by Including procuremonl aancllonl
for
any lou ar damage ta lac a I
or
11111 at materials end noncompliance;

any structure by fire, governmental
leases of equipment. provided, however,
windstorm, or other authorltlee In grantlnQ The contractor will not that lin lhe even1 1
coouelly aholl be the permlaolan far the porllc,lpote el1her contractor becomes
reaponslblllty end risk movement of the directly or Indirectly In Involved In or Is
of the auccesaful
bidder. The bidder lo
whom the Item Is
awarded
will
be
reaponalble for, and
the Sllte Deportmen1

11ructure avor public
roods. refuul ar
unuoual delay• by
local authorities In
granting permits lor
the
removal ,

ol Tranaportatlon held r el o c a t I o rt-

or

harm leiS tram 111 destruction of •
public
liability, otruc1ure,
or
personal lnlury, dooth, unreasonable delays
or domogee thai may by local aulharltlea In

occur upon, In, or to permiHing the uae of
any

atructure

or the site to which the

atructuree on or after structure II to be
Melling Our Silos BrochureSI
Free Supplies, Poslagol
Start Immediately!
Ganulno Opporti.Wlllyl
For Free Information
Call Toll Fret
I 888-1115 1835
WE~KLV

SAlARY
h
Sales Lenera From Horne
1998 Nlsaan Sentra GXE, IGonu;ne Oppootunily FREE Suppl10s
power doors, power win~
St.elton Aaaoc11t&amp;1,
doWs, cruise, auto, remota
Wellcheater, ll 60154 Or Can 1·
mirrors, 76,500 miles,
$5,500 00 740-949·2537

pomt hitch , $2,150 Aleo, new 4' finish
mower atHI In crate, $850 Sh1ppmg
IWIIIIble Located Oullide of HuntsVIlle
jiJ (256) 776 9435
•

8
DE TCDNSOLIDATIONt
$2000-$200,000
NoA-IK:ahonFees Save$$$$$
"""

EllmmateH~ghtnterest

Non Profit-Call Now
1·118&amp;-lllt-DE8T(3321)oxt2011

1--~~~~'!i'!!!&lt;!!!!!").__.•
CASH ADVANCE BY PHONE
Must tlave checking account
TOLLFREE1~~nM

1998 Honda Civic OX,
alendard, $7,800 00 740992·3187

rocelpt of the Notice of
Avolio bIll t y
u
hereinbefore provided.
FA 1L U R E
T0
PERFORM
Folluro ta camplole
the
work
In
accordance with the

moved, together with
the a1her reasons
b e Yond
I he
reasonable control pi
the auccnalul bidder.
R e que • I
I or
extenalono of time
shall opacify the

apeclflcatlone

set number

forth

Bid

In

the

Propoaal (Contract) cau1e

and the Notice to
Bidders Incorporated
therein will be a failure
at consideration ond 1
motorial breach of the
controct. In which

1

d

Ia

each mater I ala

o

atlrlbuted

of

the dlocrlmlnotlon lhreotened
with,
prohibited by Section litigation with lhe
21.5
of
the subcontractor's
Regulollons, Including supplier or lessor as a
employmenl practices result
of
such
when lha contract direction,
tho
covers a program sat contractor
may
forth In ApPIIndlx B al request the State to
theregulollana:
enter Into
such
(3) Sollcllatlona For llllgotlon to protectlhe
Subcontraclo,
lntereat of the State,
Including
and In addition, the
Procurement
Of contractor
may
Materials
and request the United
Equipment:
States to enter Into
In all solicitations auch lltlgallon to
elthar by competitive protectlhe Interests of
bidding or negotiation the Unlled Slates.
mode
by o the Gordon D. Proctor
contractor lor work to Director
oI
be performed under a Transportation
subcon1rac1, Including (2) 5 , 23

ays procurement

delay equipment,

prompting 1he request
and shall Include
aupporllve evidence
of ownerohlp or
control of the alto lor
the relocation of the

of
or

each

potential
subcontractor
or
supplier shall be
notllled
by
the
contractor of the
contractor's obligation

1i vo~'d
Ibeen lisle ~SiflfD

I

rW
m""'ORKSt

here...
Vou'dbe
,1
sold now! ""'"-,.....---'1

'
The Dally Sentinel
that under this contract
992·2156
applications
lor and the regulotlona
permits and other . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - ,
proceedings wore
lnltlotod an • timely
boala and reasonably
pursued
by
I he
succeoolul blddar,
ASSIGNMENT OR
SUBLETTING
The
ouccesslul
bidder a hall •not

event, all rights, title structure,
and Interest of the
aucceoalul bidder In
oold atructure or
structures may be
lartolted and the bid
remittance retained by
the State. Tha Dl.,.clor
may thon elect to
dea1roy ar otherwise
dlspaae
of
the
11ructuro or atrlcturea

98 Chrysler Cirrus LXI, CD
Player, Leather lnlerlor,
$7500 DBO 41!,000 mil..
~~~~2158· 1282 or (740)2158·
Uvo~o "uto SaiH· 1992
Otdo Aohleva, Steoo 1993
Plymouth Acolalm, $1400
1968 Ford Mustang, $1200
1888 Ford F· t50 Pickup,
$1200 1992 Dodge Rom
Van, $1000 1965 Dodge[).
250 Pickup, $1000 1990
Ford Tempo, 2 Door, $900
11188 011*'1 Baratta, $900
1885 Otdo Cullon Su·

prerne,

•

. accordance with the Eatate

1993 Buick Skylark 4 Door,
Clean. Excelont Condition
$3500 (740)379-2214

Pets,

i

FOCIND

•-------"

1993 Buick Pari&lt; Ave Exc
Condition, loaded, All serv·
Ieee Ll Bronze metsltlc
100,031
miles $4500
(304)875-2924

j

17401367 7193

l.urr AND

1992 Nluan Stanza, FuUy
l.oaded, $1895. 1988 Fold
Lid 2, VB, 4 Door, 63,000
actual mllea, $995 1987
Toyota Corolla, Aula, AIC,
like New, Low Miles,
$2100 (740)256-6012

Traller/lol wtlh nice oul
building 4-1/2 mile out Crab
Creak Road City watar
(304)675·5107

goz~ l~ftst~1 !~0 ~rt~r

....---....,j

a.--~

Public Notices in Newspapers.
Your Right to Know, Delivered Right to Your Door.

P4trformance
G1111ranlee $3.000.00
Item Na. 2 : Parcel Na.
3tWD
Storage
Building Two• One
motllltorage building
(30'x120' ) with 32
Individual atoroge
comportments
numbered 33 1hru 84.
Thlo building 11 made
up of 12·5' x1 0' unlto,
6-10x15' unite, 8·
t0"xt5' unlta and 8··
10"x20' un1t1. Thll
building Ia locotod on
441 Weal Main S1roet.
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769
Performance
Guarantee$3,000.00
The acceptance at
tho
bid
by the
Deportment
at
Tranaportotlon and
wrltlen na11flcltlan of
award thereof, Ia the
succaulul bidder
shall conatltu1e •
conlract
by and
between
tho
auccanful blddar and
the
Director
at
Tronaportotlan and
wllllncarparate all the
torma, provlalono end
condition• of thll
Notice 1a Bidders and
tho Bid Prapoeal.
PERFORMANCE
GUARANTEE
Within ten (10) daya
after receipt at the
Notice al Availability

atrlcturea muat be of
completed not laler
than 70 daya aller
recelptoltheNatlceol
Availability from the
District Transportation
Office and hereinafter
provided.
The
strucluroo
located on the parcels
Indicated
ore
ducrlbed as follows:
Item Na. 1: Parcel
No. 39WD Storage
Building One· One
metol otorage building
(30'X120') With 32
Individual storage
comportmentonumber
1 thru 32. This
building Ia mode up at
12·5"x10 unlta, 6
10'x15" unlto, S.10'x15'
unlteo and 8·10'x20'
unltl. Thl1 building II
located on 441 Weal
Main Street. Pomeroy,
Ohio 45789

FOR SALE

I

don't haul your logs to the
mill Just call 304·875·1957
Moving and Hauling Clean
Out Buildings Baseme.,., Ar.'a
A~klng 579,000
Garages, Estates, Trash,
~
Etc
Odd Jobs
Call
(740)446-7604
. . . . , . - - - - ----::
For Renl or salt, small
Top to Bottom Cleanmg house 1br 5250 month ...
SeMae Professional clean· Deposit
(304)727-3318
lng at affordable pr~cea from 8pm-11pm
Residential oHice remodel·
lng and construction clean For sale by owner Nice bl·
up Conlldentlal 992-2979 level home on 1 acre near
or 992-1391
Chesler Three bedroom
two baths, one--car garage
family room with fireplace
sun room New central heat·
ing &amp; ale system One ml·
;:;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; nute off Roula 7, but still pn·
riO
BlHMliS
vale (740)985·3981
OPPoimJNrry
New Home. Vtnyl Siding,
Shingle Roof, 3 Bedrooms/
INOnCEI
2 Balh, $499 Down Call
(740)446 3570
OHIO ciAllEV PUBUShH·
.
lNG C recommends 1 at Old 3br 2 story home 69
you do business with people acre lots of old woodwork
you know, and NOT to ""nd on Sliding Hill Creek Road
monay lhrough lhe mall unlll (304)882·3554
you ~ve ln11estigated the
offering
Remodeled 3 bedroom, In
~
Middleport, call Tom AnderBarborahop lor Rent In son aller Spm, (740)992·
Crown Clly (740)256-6295 3348

----'"---......:..

(peraonal checkll and
c . . h unacceptable),
payable
to
tho
TREASURER, STATE
OF OHIO In tho exact
amount at the bid far
IICh Item. In the event
blda are not acceptod
the checks will be
returned to 1111 blckler.
The
D'rectar
at
Tranaporlltlan
roaerveo 1he rlgh1 to
rejechnyoullblds.
THERE WILL BE AN
OPEN HOUSE ON,
FEBRUARY 16, 2002
FROM 9:00 A.M. TO
12:00 P.M.
It shall be the
reoponslblllty of oach
bidder Ia lniPIICI and
examine for them the
olze and condlllon of
each structure, all
oppurlllnoncea
thereto. and the
conditions afloctlng
the removal thereat.
The
descriptions
llstod ore lo be usad
lor
Identification
purpaua only and are
not ta be construod ••
1 warranty of any kind.
Each bidder muat
properly execule the
Non.COIIullon
Affidavit
Farm
attached and oubmlt
with the olgnad Bid
propaoll.
Removal of the

Auros

I

Pomeroy, large 2 bedroom, ciood Used Appliances, Ae- ~W:.:eek=a::;nda:::.._ _ _ __
Naylors Run, wid, atref, fur- conditioned and Guaran- Metal Disk.
Drawers on
4
nished, lg. yard-patio, no teed
Washers, Dryers,
Batt
pet8 (740)992-6888
Ranges., and Refrigerators one side, Shelve 90
om,
•
Some start at $9S SkaggS 30x20, Very Nice, Perfect
We have approximately 20 Spacious 2br 1ba. Duplex Appliances, 76 Vine St, lor Students Homework,
uaed homes tor under Washer/Dryer
Hookup (740~6-7398
$20 (740)98S.4409
$2,000, call ~-800·837-3238 $450 month. DeposiVRefer· ::..::.::.;:.::.:..::;::...._ _ __ MOilLE HOME OWNERS
lor Info
ences A~ulred
No Pots $I
Hl~ebed, $100 BoLovesea1,
.....
Sp
lntertherm &amp; Coleman gas,
(,304.:::!l::B7:.:5-:.:204e:.:..::....___ 00 0 ueen x r1ng oil &amp; electl'ie furnaces Inl..ors &amp;
and
Mattrtas,
1100
ACRfAGE
Clud 1ng hi efficiency heat
1 Tara Townhouse Apart· (740)448-9742
~------··
ments,
Vary
Spacious,
2
pump
systems
a
.,
Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA, ~ Large Wooden Entertain- complele
line We
ot carry
Mobile
80 Acres Henderson on 1/2 Bath Fully Carpeted ment Center, Glass Door, home parts &amp; accessories
New Four lane at lnttrsec· Adull Pooi &amp; Baby Pool Pa: $50 3 pisco Coffee/ End BENNETT'S HEAnNG &amp;
lion with clly waler $80,000 tlo Start $365/Mo. No
Table Sol, Solid Oak, $100. COOLING (740)446-9416
(304)937-2518 (304)545· Lease Plus Seainly Deposit (740)446·7022
or 1.-a'l2·58117
6491
Required, Days 740-446· Mollohan Ca~t ~·Clark www.orvb.comfbennttt
3481 E i
740 367
· - ""~
lot 1 36 Acre on Crab
' van nga
·
• Chapel Road, Porter, Ohio NEW AND USED STEEL
Creek Ad Owner financing 0502, 740-446-QlOl
(740)448·7444 1-677-830· Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
with
down
payment Twin River Towers accept· 9182. Free Estimates, Easy For Concrete, Angle, Chan·
(304)675-4182
lng applications now tor
ftnancmg, 90 days same as nel, Flat Bar, Steel Grating
Unitt available
cash Visa/ Master Card For Drains, Driveways &amp;
Lot lor Sale cleared, approx
March 1, 2002
Drive. a· little save slot
Walkways. L&amp;L Scrap Met2 112 acres, gravel road, 1br Hud Subsidized apt tor
als Open Monday, Tuesday,
water &amp; electnc available, elderly and disabled EOH
Wednesday &amp; Friday, SamParter area $18 500 Call
(304)6 •
SPOKI1NG
4 30pm Closed Thursday,
75
6679
(740)446-4514 or '(740)446GooDs
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday
3248 after 5pm
Very nice 2·3 bedroom
(140)446-7300
apanment. In town, large
Wanted to buy or lease In kitchen, LA, S500Jmo Ref· Model1938 Tur1dsh Mauser
Meigs Co 6 acres, 112 erencos &amp; deposM re&lt;tuirod Bmm Bayonet and scab· RR.,osll&lt;ldillltl'"'nttel Homo 0wnora
woods,
112
pa&amp;lure "(7..:.40::l446-c..c:..:.3644::::.'----Tappan HI efficiency 90 plus
.,&lt;7:~;40;;:);;99;;:2:;·9;,;1;;69~--...., gas lumaces lncludmg oil
$t 00 (304675·2352
and
elactrlc goa luma·
REALF.srATE I
'
HI Eff'"'-' H
WANnD
BEAUnFUL
APART· Taylor made Burner Bullbla cos
~-~, eat
, MENTS AT BUDGET PR~ OnveJ 10 5 "-reeiolt, like Pumps, laalurlng Tappan&amp;
CES AT JACKSON ES. new. S110. (30:)875-5458
Free Incredible warranly
looking for 2-3 bedroom TATES, 52 Westwood Drive
package ,
house to purchase Quick from $297 to $383 Walk to
' IIENNEn 8 HEATING a
closing Call Jim at (740) shop &amp; movtas C.l 740t\NnQlJEli
COOLING (740)4*9411
992-3187
448·2568 Equal Housing
or. t-81J0.872·5817.
Opportunity
www.orvb.comfblnnett
Buy or sell Rivet1ne AntiBeech Street Middleport, 2 ques, 1~24 East Ma!n on
bedroom, lumlshed apa"· SA 124 E Pomeroy 740· Waterilne Spacial 314 200
menl, ulllllles peld, depoSit 992·2526 Russ Moore PSI $21 00 Per 100, ,. 200
HOI!IiS
&amp; rslorences, no pets 740- owner
' PSI $35 00 Per 100, ""
Llllli!""•FORilll-lbNI'iiiiiioo-' 992-QIBS
.:...._ _ _ _ _ _ _ Brus Compression Fltllngo
Sue's Selectables on the "T" In Stock
4 BR House on 9 acres Chrlsly's Family living, In Middleport Dolls, glass· RON EVANS ENTERPRIS.
Central Heal, Carpet, 1 33140 New Uma Ad, Aut· ware, Aladdin mantels, a.nd ES J~klon, Ohio, 1-600Bathroom wrthin 1 mUe of land, Ohio 740-742-7403 more (740)992..()298
537-9528
Gallipolis, and Hospital. Apartment, home and trailer
$490/mo pius Utilities rentail commercial stor•
~ 1·---=~---..,
{304)863-5728
fronts available for leaH
1UI!.KLIIArU~ .
BIJIUJING

EurnuCAIJ

Local GM Dealer seeking
experienced
service advisor
Apply In person
DONTATEMOTO~
308E.Maln
Pomeroy, Ohio

r

~t

11

r...--...iiiiiRAINiiiiiioo-..,1

r

wv

·-------,J r

r

55

4

1

r

I

997 16 58

New

j

i

12x50, 2 BA, $2000; Now 1 ·3 Bedrooms Foreclosed Garage Apt on Roush St. Over 30
Homes From $199/Mo • 4% 1br • kitchen, living room, D;e...q•u' Sizelubs2D-22·ca.!l
01
Down, 30 Years at e 5% jurnlshad, real nicQ quiet 2 62 811
APR For Ustlngs, 800-319· street $275 per month + wear &amp; jeans, size 2()-22,
3323 Ext. 1709
uiHillos +Deposit (304)n3- $100 Call (740)245·5506
5054
aHer 6pm or leave mea·
1 bedroom house In Radna - - - - - - - - - sage
TURNED DOWN ON
or,
pOIIIal
lumlahed, $325/month (740)992 5039 GraciOUS llvtng 1 and 2 :,:::::.__ _ _ _ __
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI? $13,500 00 OBO 591·1899 3 bedroom home Minersville bedroom apartmonls al VII- ~~~"'t.:~:"' as;: ~~
No F.. Unless We Wlnl
1990 F'""iwood 2 ~room area, river vtew, $450 per logo Manor and Alveralde Spri~ , 595 T-~ T,.......·
1 -•••-582-'»'~.u:::
~
Apartments in Middleport
··'""""' _.........
~ ~
home-call Charyl 0 740- monlli, references rOGulrod, From ,$278-$34e Call 740• eiJ"W x 91" l, $50 Call
385-9821 , 2002 sunpolnte depostt rectulred, no polO, 992 •5064 EQual Housing (740)258-1529
3 bedroom/2bath 14 x 71). 740-992-llm after Spm
Opportunities
HoMtli
must sell-call Mike 0 74(). 3 BA 1 "Balh Groan .::.::~=='------ 1975 Oldsmoble lor Dolby.
fOK SALE
385·2434
School: $500 plu~ Utililies N 3rd Avenue, Middleport, Solid Car, Runs Good 5300
2 bedroom, fum1shed apart- OBO Playstatlan 1, control1994 14x 70 Oakwood, 2 17401245-9020
BR 2 Full Bath Wuherf --~~--~---, ment, deposit &amp; references, lar, memory card, 1 game,
1376 Patriot Rd, Palrlot, ory'er Stove 3 'Ton Heal ~i MOBILE HOI'.&amp;
no pets 740-992-0185
$100 (740)247·2304 no anOH 2 SIOry, 3 BA, 2 112 Pump' New c' a~l In Uvl~
n-swer, leave message
Balh, 67 acre iol WMI Con·
'
'~
""
FOR""""'
WANTED TO RENT
14
aider Land Contract Down Room, $ ·000 &lt;740)367• ·--iiiiiiiiiiioo-' New Publisher for the Ohio Adult 3 wh981 bike, $100.
Payment and Aelereneea 0907
2 bedroom mobile home lor Valley Pub!tohlng Company Big Red Slide, Good Shape,
Required
No
Pels Forsale-16x70,3bedroom, ~nt no pets. (l4Q)992· :e~:n:ur;:,~h~ a~~~~~ S2SmS TurtMielcrowSandaveBo. x, ~
(740)379·9887
2 bath, call 740-385-9821 5858
111
ask lor Clle'11.
----~-==- Should have pnvale bath· ,(,304:::::;)::89:.:5-37:.::.;:3:.9-::--:--:3 Bedroom on Roule 2, =:..=...:;:~::.....___ 2 bedroom trailer, $250 mo , room and be close 10 Gallp- .,.
(3041675-5332
Umited Or No Crodil? Gov· ref &amp; &lt;lop, Mlnersvtlle, Dh oils Cell Den Dickerson at Ceramic &amp; Gift Shop Apple
emment Bank Finance Only
5pm
(740)446·2342 (days)
Grove (304)578·2600 Ce4-Sale lg Ranch Style At oakwood In Barbours- (740}992-67n after
ramie Molds used 70% off,
Home, 4br' 3ba' wllh Ville,
304-738-3409
2 bedroom, lor sale or '""'·
SPACE
New 50% off, Moving Not
screened In patio porch, 2
quiet community, nice clean
IDR lbNr
1:takl::.::ng:..::m::o::lds:.:.__ _ __
car garage $78,000 4 Muat sell· 14x70 mobile home, 17401992.2167
blocks from High School home, call 741).385·2434
Commercial Smoker-ramo
Gal OhiO Good view ol aak !of Elaine
Mobile Home lor Rent Mobile Home lot, Takes 12· pressure cooker 220 volt
IOWn (304)727-3318
:M:.:u:.:st::..:se1=1=.=t~----x-- (740l440-J 279
~t. 1!,~~~·s~2~el:~ (304).5~6-2703
•
816 Main' Street, PI PI front kitchen, exceiant con:
APAlnMENrs I ences (740)446-0115
DISf'IIJY , Area 7 Days, 6
Completely Refurbished 2 dltlon Call Karena, 740Night Hotel Stay Paid $600,
slory, 2 Full Balh 3 Bod· 385·9948
FOR RFNr
Storage Space lor renl4033 Sell lor $199. (614)898·
rooms
Large Kitchen.
square teet with metal 2::9::94:.:...._ _ _ _ __
l.ar\10 Ullllly Room, LR/ DR/ New 14x70, 3 br/21Jth Only 1 and 2 bedroom apart· sholvtng. localod '" Clly ol Eloclrlc 3 wheel"" •-t~
Family Am. New Carpet $975 down, $189 84 per """"" 1 m1 hod nd unlur Pol t p•···· t 1 1
t
"" ~" •throughout. F/A &amp; AJC, month Call Nll&lt;ld, 740-385' u s
a
n - n nqu re a Scoote~ 6 months Cltd cat!
$79 900 (740"'"·9585 or 7671
nlshed, security depooll "'" (304)674'0102
(304)675-5238 Aak lor
,
,_..
)446qulred, no peta, 740-992·
Joee
17401446•2205 or &lt;740
New Double Wide on Pri· 2218
:::::::.,_ _ _ _-.,..,.,.
2683
vate Property, 1-5 Acres. - - - - - : - - - - . , . Free Gas Fu1T18C81 and A1r
ANI Log H - Ceblns Call (740)448-3583 10 pre- 106 locusl Stroel, upstairs rlO
HOUillHOUl
Condlllonar Estimales Call
to pustoms Fraa lnforma-q
,::UB:;II;:.Iy'-------- garage apartment, 2 bedGooDs
. (740)446·6308 Of 1-800bon 740-558~2393
room, stove &amp; refrigerator
291-oo98 II you don't call
One Only
furnished, $275/mo, $150
us we bo1h lose!
Used doublewlde
deposit, (740)446-9061
3ex60 wooden kitchen table
60/56x28/26, 3 bedroom. 2
With green accent, 4 match· Grubb's Plano· Tuning &amp;
bath, gas heat1 central air, 1br
$300 a month all lng spindle chairs $200 Repairs Problems? Need
fireplace wfth gas logs, ulllllles Included + $200 Call (740)446.0487 alter Tuned? Cell The P10no Dr
1987 model,
Dopostl (3041675-3654
4 OOpm
740-446·4525
Price tor Immediate sale
Cole's Mobile-Home~
3 Bedroom Apt., Bath, CIA Appliances Reconditioned Household Items &amp; Baby
US 50 Easl, Athens, Oh
and Gas Heal, $400 per washers, Dryers, Ranges, llama. (304)675·2601
month
and
deposit Rafrigrators Up To 90 Days
:.,740:.::;:·5:::9::2::,:·1,:97;:2:._____ (740)387·7015
Guaranleedi We Sell Now tndependenl Heillllite 018·
Only $850 down and
Maytag Appliances French tnbulor, Cell For Product Or
$161 38 per month geta you Newly Remodeled, 2 Bad· Clly Maytag, 740-44s-7795. Opportunity. (740)441-1982
a new home Call 1-800- room Apt , Stove/ AetrlgeraJET
837-3238 ask lor Mike
lor Ulllilles Paid, $4001 Bedroom Sull, $150 OlneHe
AERATION MOTORS
month
46 Olive St , Sel, $75 Dresser, $75 Ropal ed Ne &amp; R built
1.
Pilot
Program·
(740)446-9742
Slockr ca' ,.' Rwon ev"ans, ,n
Bad Credh
and No
FirstCredit/
Time (740)446-3945
Home Buyers FA5 and Now Taking Applications- For Sele Aeconclltloned 800-537·9528.
Government Loans Avalla· 35 West 2 Bedroom Town- Washltl'8, dryers and refriQ~
ble Own your new hOn'i6 fn- house Apartments Includes erators Thompsons Appll- -------~
C
W1
Saw ' Trash ance 3-407 Jackson Ave- Large pickup load mixed
1
(740
··r~321:nnng
all $3~!Mo 740::oooa
nue (304)675·7388
firewood,
will
deliver
'
'
(740)948-2587 Evenings &amp;
LOANS, LOANS, LOANS,

I

r~

·=.,..,..'l*l

for good or bed cridlt call Warm Momlng Wood Bum·
toll free 1·866-8&amp;4-5756
er, $300 (740)379-9257
••• No up front rees
"""FUI reliable service
1989 Mansion Umlted II, 14
•••eankruptcles wetcom8
x 70, 3 bedroom, 2 bath,
whlrlpooiiUb, washer &amp; dry-

r

r

on

cwd......... •

I

111118 Hondo 4 - . 3IJO.

PUBLIC
NOTICES
L.:iE::

t

POUCIQ, Ohio y..._, PI til
,_...the right
ad •..., Ume. limn..,.... N reportld h tnt
1Hbune I ilfnel R ;'II wtH Ml ;
't' for no mor. then U. ootC of thup101 OIDCM ;211 I by lhe ..-or 8ftd only tht-nnt - .. , I , MIUon. llox
MYktHorupeMetNINMIItlfroMthlpuUc•Uanorom' t ' •04'..,1Ch•11 1 ._ ConcolloudN~InU.
••
•
. . ....,. OOftfldtnttll. • CUtNnt rete
AI .... Ntat41 M••UH4i*itl . . eul:lfeCt lo "'!t FWirll Flit HoullnQ Act Dl ,..._ • Thle n
tooepUonty ....,..,..... .-....ang EOI••'*' We . . not knowingly ICOipl MY....,....nt Jn vtDtltion olltht .._

McCiures Restaurant now OffiCe Socrelary Needed lor
hiring all 3 kx:attons, full or local Veterinarian Office
part-time, prck up applrca- Wtll Also Perform Some
tlon at location &amp; bring back Cteanlng and Kennel Du·
tJetwoen
9 30am
&amp; toes Day and Evening
1o ooam Monday thru Sat- Hours and some Week·
urday.
ends Part t1me p 081tton an1y Friendly and Wa"" Per
Musicians and Vocalist sonallly a Must Please
neecled for gospel commun bring Resume 10 Rlvertlend
lty choir/music for live perII I 1520 Stat
e
lormances and record1ng Animal C nc,
Please contact David al Aouto160, GalllpOUs, Ohio
Receptionist lor busy doc(304)675-1400
lOr's office Knowledge ol
NURSING SUPERVISORS medical codlr¢~11ng preScenic Hills Nursing Center ferrad FAX resumes to
Is Re- Structuring lor opll675-3713 or 522·3612 or
mal RN SupeMsor Cover- send 10 PO Box 857 Bar·
ago
We are looKing for dedlcat· :bo:.:u:.:rs:.;v::lll•::'...;w-J.:..:..c2::6:.:5::54__
ed, dependable, caring Bates Bros AmuHment
AN's tor the 3-11 and ~1-7 Co Is loOking !of enlhuslas·
shift New Wage and Senetlc individuals spring/sumfit Package Please C811 mor
2002 Mrst be alloast
Pam Coldwell al (740)44618 years and able lo travel
7~ 50 tor more Information.
Weekly pey, living taclllllos
ConlaCI us al 740-258-2950
CNA's &amp; Resident Asslatants. ApplicatiOns Are Now CNA classes to be offered
Batng Accepted For CNA:s allakln Hospllat Projer:lod
&amp; ~ea1dent Assistants start date is march 4, 2002,
lor 6 weeks 8am-4pm
Many Benefits Available
SUch As Competitive Wag· Monday lhrough Friday ~
es, Paid Meals, Paid Vaca- ply to Vicky AN Staff Detlons, Employee Discounts velopment 6mcer. 1\ppilca&amp; Available Insurance, In- lion Deadline. Februarv 16,
terestod AppltcaniS May Ap- 2002 AH applicants must
ply Daily Mon -Sun 9-4 have a high Bllhool diploma
Come See Usl Ravens- or GEO
wood Care Center, 1113 CNA HHA Cert Homomak·
Washington St , Raven•·
·
'
wood, wv References R• ers needed to provide in
home
service
lor lhe
qui rod.
elderly/disabled In Mason,
· Cabell, Wayne, Pulnam
Counties area Call 1·888RN'o &amp; LPN'o
453-4992 Will Train
Evenlng&amp;MidmghtShlfts
Fantastte Startlnn wa,._ Top Ten Store Needs Man•
_..
F 1111
&amp; p rt Ti
SGreat,ShtftCOifferen&amp;Rti~Latb ~~~i u Fu~enme a&amp; ~:
unbr dge aN
'"••
Ti
For Putnam
c
Cell Wanda Taylor
al 304·757-6605
c/
To Schedule A
Professional Interview
Located AI
300 Seville Road
Hurricane, w-J 25526
EDE

COME (;ROW
WITH u51
Ws are expanding our clltu·
lation stan to beHer serve Semi- Onver Needed Qak
our cuslomera we oro look· Hilt, DH Trucking Company
lng for 8 person that has 1s seeking experienced
hi h
Ol
SemiTractor
TraUerExce~
Driv·
g energy Ieve I' 88II• mouera Over
the Road
I vated and a"'oys working lent Pay InsuranCe and
GIVEAWAY
wlth people Must have de- Benefits ' Call (740)682·
pendable transponatlon ba· 7n3 1-800 523-0804
Seventeen sic computer knowljtdge
or
•
a home for This Is a full time salaried
STNA
•
poSIIIon and offers all com· Part·tlme STN" needed lor
pany bsnellts Including new program provtdlng In·
YARD SALE
health insurance, vacation, home training to care glv·
.__ _ _ _ _ _ _,. personal days, and 401 K era Duties include but not
~
plan We are part ol a large limited to Assist with care
1.,.-~-~---, company that offers excel- g1var tra1ning plans and In·
4
YARD SALElent career advancement home training to care glv·
PoMmovHdmol..E opportunities For inteMew ers, assist In obtaining propconalderatlon send a cover er documentatiOn trom ell·
let1er telling us why you are ents, service provides, MedBasement Sale February the person we are k)oklng icald, advocate tor needed
16th 9 00 am
3 00 pm for along with your resume serv 1cea, enter data Into
Rutland Churth of God ap-. to Paul Barker, Circulation program tracking system,
II
St AI 124
' ma1ntam medical rec:ords,
prox 2 m es out
Director at o h1o ".-alley pUuA
lllshlng Co • 825 Third Ave , publiC speaking, POSition r•
UCI10N AND
Galtpollo, Ohio 45631
QUIItmenta STNA and High
FuA MARKEr .
School Diploma/ GED wHh
DATA ENTRY
al least lhree years expert~lck P~:~arson Auction Com- Process Claims for Doctors 10
ence required Must be able
peny, full time auctiOneer, Will Train, PC Required
access homes/locations
complete auction service
Great lncomelll
that may not be readily acLicensed ~66 OhiO &amp; West 1-800·241).8197, Depl 956 cesslble musl be able lo lift
Virginia 304-773·5785 or
www hpnmed com
and lranster cl1ents, must
304
5447
have reliable transportation
• •
Driver Needed, COL Ll· must have data entry com·
WAmED
I cense wllh Tanker Endorse· puter skills, must be able to
ro BuY
ment Requ1red Evening cammun1cata effectively
..__ _ _ _ _ __ . Work, Home Week-ends Staning salary $11.50/hr
...,
(740)245~5514
Maximum of 28 hrlwk Trav·
Absolute Top Dollar US E 1
lo 1
work.l
el required with travel reim
Silver Gold. COins Proof- mp oyee r Brge
f ng bursement at 38 5 cents per
Mil, ' Diamonds, ' Gold farm Experience with arm mile Deadline tor appllcaRings,
us currency,~ equipment and cattle prater· lion ls February 19, 2002
M tS Coin Shop !51 Sec· red Housing available II Sul&gt;mil resume and refer·
ond "vonut, GaiiiPooiS. 740- neededEB
09 Se200nd
once IO
,
446-2842
,
Human Aosourcas
Polnl
Pleasenl.
w-J
25550
•-·
A~
on
ani~
I \l i'ICI\\II'-1
~- ••..• ,
""""
..., , In II I ...,
Help wanted caring lor the
Dlstllcl7, Inc
el"""-, Derat Group Home,
F32 URG, PO Box 500
ii!jlliOr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;....,I_;;'P.,ytng minimum wage, Rio Grande, Ohio 451174
lbiJ' WANIF..D
new shifts 7am·3pm, 7am- Equal Opponunlty Employer
• 5
3pm 11
11
· - - - - - - - ' 7~~; caii740-~~So23 pm· TOihsolrlciSoulhehasmanLoc:allmmScod'f'olate

Whot A"' Vou Walling For
1
You know you want 10 1'1 :•
Stan today Jay Clarks
kenpo Karole (740)742·
2546

116

&amp;o-. ._.,or.-_,

hit•

18118 Yarnolta Pro Hauler
Good CondHion $2200
(304)862-3273

!

• No Tickets/Purebred Animals

• Ads Should Run 7 Days

116
116
iill=.;;;...---, 1 IIEuWAMID 11

~~-------•

Dally In· Column l : OO p m

• Start Vour Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Pt'lone Number And Address When Needed

\Y\Ill \C I 'II \ h

'r

Private Party Ads Under $100
20 Words 7 Days • Each Item Priced
• No Commercial Ads

In Next Day's Paper

"'""'.__ • .._._

1'RucKs
RJR SALE

t

tor

• • -_

l

?

•

Mondey·Fri&lt;IIV

r:::==J

"(7:':40"-)4
; :'4:..8:..876:..1:......:-:---:-c:: NOTICE TO 81DDERS
Sealed blda will be
2001 Harley Davldoon 1183
, CFA Himalayan Kitlans,
Hugger, 510 Actual Mlleo, received
by
the
t Csli aher 6pm weekdays L,.
Brand
Condition, Director
at
: Portae! Valentine Grft,
$8500 (740)379·2601
Tranoportollan.
Stole
(740)448-3188
1965
GMC
1
Ton
Clew
Cab
=::::..!:..:::!::..:..::::::..__
1
i
Dually 8 2 Olollsl, $3200 Yomaha Golf cart, Parter:l of Ohla, 11 tho Ohio
I lab Puppies, AKC, ShoiS OBO. (740)448-3541
COndilion Runs Good Daparlment
of
and Wormed Yellow and
$1300 (74o)379-2853
Traneporlltlon, Office
Black Both parenll 0111988 lntemat1ona1 Dump~ of Dlolrlct Deputy
Elr..ltent Shape
BoATS &amp; MoToRs Director,
1 ~ $275 (740)258- truck.
338
I 1686 WIH hold with deposit. 1986 Chevy Van wilh ladFOR SALE
Muaklngum Drive,
i
der Aaok. Phone (304)695Ohio, until
r,
=385~8------------- 2000 Baas Tracker, 1-4', Marietta
1
2 :00 P.M., March 4,
• ~ 1988 5-10 Truck, low rider open V-hull, 99EV1nrude4- 2002, forthe purchaM
•
FARM
vary silo.,, rod with black slroko, lroi6"11 motor, snap and remonl
at
~
interior: Roll pan tronl &amp; on oover, allaccessorlelln- otructurea deacrlbed
'
,..,. Mag Wheolt- tires. eluded, $4600 00 DBO In thla notlca. TheM
t
4oy1 5op 30 miles 10 the 740-949-2727
, 40B ,..._ Ferguson In- gallon S2100 (304)773· - - - - - - - - atructureo havo been
' dustrlal DieHl Tractor 5054 or leave mesaage
For 5ale or Trade 36'x12 ar era being acqulrod
f Same as 245MF but Haavl·
'
1f2 • House boat and trailer by the ,State of Ohio
01 Built 4 speed, H;Qivtow 1992 Dodge Dakota, V-6, 5 (740)669-3482
from the for mar
1(No Mu~- power), Floil Bar sp, AIC , must see, 740·
awnera thereat and
• and Cancrpy 3pt and p&lt;o, 742-3020 after 5pm
Auro PARI'S &amp;
locolod In the
~ Good llres Now Paint Has
ACCIJ!oliOIIIEE 1 ire
rlght·of·woy
required
never had a loader on ft 1995 Dodge Ram 2500 Tur· ·-oliiiiiiiillliiiiiiillo.rl
far the lmprovemen1
(740)669·5101 Wllkavllie bo Diesel SlT laramie,
OH
'
' 51,000 mlleo loaded Good Chevy Tnrck Bed lor Sale or reiOCIIIon of;
l
oondltlon (304)695-3202
Call after 5 OOprn (740)446Melga
33·15. 70
3243
(Pomeray/Mooan
John Deere 13' Grain Dril, B7 Ford Ranger, PU, 4x4,
"'I I&lt;\ II I..,
Bridge)
f $550 (740)643-2285
Slondard, $2600 OBO
The bldo are la be
l Time lor Frost Seeding Pas· (740)245-9502
aubmllled only on 1
tf ~~~':,~ 12 94Chevy 5-10 Blazer, 4x4,
Bid Proposal Form
Volt, High Ouallly FilS ,;.,., 40 , Tahoe/LT Aula, A/C,
(RE Form 79, Rev. 11·
ATVs $295
'
l.aalher, loaded Garaged,
: Jtm's ' Fann EQulpmenl Inc Nlca, 79K, $7200 (740)379- All 'Y9N ol mu0111'/ brick, 93) available at the
• (740)446. 2464
_27..:.411;:_______ block &amp; SlOne 20 yrs expo- following
rience,
tree estimate. Tranaporlltlon
97 Chevy S·10, V6Nortec, (304)77J.9550
Offices:
L1vmucK
AuiO, A/C, PS/PB, AM·FM
Ohla Department of
......_
casaeue, Aluminum wheels,
BASEMENT
Tronapartotl9n
leer Topper, 73K, $5200
WATERPROOFING
Dlotrlct Ten Office
5 yr old blue eyed, blonde (740)379-2746
Unconditional llletime guar·
338 Muoklngum Drive
paint gelding pony, $350 00 For Sale· 85 GMC S·IS Sl· antee Local references fur·
Marietta, Ohla 45750
Call .flor 5 P m 7'"94"'
nlshtd EstabliShed 1975
~ ~ erra PU· VB, Rod, Aulo, Cell 24 HIS (740) 4461-800-84H226
2494
Now Rubber, Good Condl· 0870
HI00·287-Q578
or
lion, $1600 89 Ford Ranger A ' W
1
Ohio Deportment of
For Sele- Registered Angus PU· Blue, Ext Cab, 4 cyl, 5 ogers alerproo tng
Transportation
Bull· Champion Hills Exl Speed, Good Condition, - - - - - - - MelgoCaunty
Btoodllne, (740)448·7410
$2000 Call (740)446-4514 e&amp;C General Horne MalnteReglstered Black Angus or (740)446-3248 aher epm nence- Patnllng vinyl Bid- Maintenance Garage
34448 Stale Route 7
Bulls yurllngs &amp; okler •------~-..., log, carpentry, doors, wtnSirea BOCC Traveler.
dows baths, mobile home Pomeroy. Ohio 457611
Champion Hill EXT, ChamVANS &amp;
repelr and more For !roe
1·740-992·2501
pion Hill Wide spread WlC
4-WDs
estlmale call Chet, 740·992·
The blda are to be
Clips, gentle guaranteed
B32'lP3-~---~.., addressed to:
OhlaDepartmentol
SIOOO 13041372•2389
1988 F-250 4x4, 351 5
I
Tronopor11111on
HAY &amp;
I speed, aunvlsor, running
REFR:IGERATKlN
G
boards, bedllner, slr'ong run· ~
•
Dlatrlct 10
nlng truck. best reasonable
338 Muoklngum Drive
...,
affar 74()...992·7458
Residential or commercial
Marietta, Ohla, 45750
Good Mixed Hay Never ------~-'- wiring, new service or reAttn: Ken Dollison
been wei $200 per square 1991 GMC Jimmy 4x4, pairs Master t.Jcansed elecReal E-e
bele (740)446-1062
Runs Good, $2500 OBO lrlclan Ridenour Electrical,
Administrator
- - - - - - - - (740)446-8044
WV000300, 304-675-1786
The
following
Hay Round
Mixed Grass,
·~!OO&gt;OO(!OOOOC~!OO&gt;OO(!OOOOClC&gt;O!OO&gt;OO(lC&gt;OOOC)Oo
or
Bales Square
$1 50 '9
Information
must
square, $12,50· $15 00
appear
an
the
Round
(740)256·6140
enveloPII:
CrownCIIy
"'Meigs 33·15.70 (03OU2) Bid Opening 11
Round balsa, slored Inside,
2:00P.M."
$10 a bole. Albany
Certified checks,
(740)541·1223 Or (740)898·
alllclol bank checko,
8085
ar money ordera
Hay &amp; Brlghl Wire lle
Slraw, Voar 'Round Dellvary
&amp; VoJume Discount Avalla·
Happy Ad
ble
Herilage
Farm
(304)675·5724
- lli"iii"U'H#I
I
II{\ \" 1'01~ I\ 110\
(7 40)44,., 162

In one week With us

Monday thru Friday
8:00a.m. to 5:00p.m.

88 Dodge Rim. 4x4, 318
Aulo, 4" L1L ...... ,30
, _ !!1110 to go Tnrc:k.
(740)44Hlllll- 6pm

:AK-:;C::-::A:-OI~gl-ll-lred-:-~Por-m_IOI_anl-_
~.:0:;. ~ 4 hx. Uke New, G_,,
an Puppteo Ready 10 Go ::"'iii""'r;s;;;.;.740o,;=::9:;;,;;g..;
Kept,
$3500
,;;;,1_..,. G11ago
4 246

c.DIII(....,. OH

REACH OVER 28$,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

- ·&amp;.rww-.
gino -

•t

$800 tgse -

Pickup, $600 1990 Gao
Sto"". Block, $BOO 11186
Fon:l E:l50 Van, 1 5 ger, $800 10 more cars under 51000 C.l (740)3889303

.'

\

. .

.

i'

th•t

time,

SAVE
SAVE·SAVE

and 1ublet, aselgn or aell

aotlaly any cool In any portion al thll
connection therawlth work without
from tho P11rfor-nce~ wrlltlfl . .-~
guorantoa.
Dl11rlct
Tho Director may DIrector
o
oloa oloct 10 1raot the Tranaportotlan. Such
contriCl 11 continuing permission, II granted,
oltor the date llxod tor with relorence ta
Its completion, or ofter oubcontroctora, aholl
tho date to which not rollevo tho original 1------~---..:.,

I

'

___;::

�A
• The
o.u...
Sentinel _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _I'"_ _ _ _.;..;::,:,-w
w-w ....
..-..
_.-......;.
_ I_
__
..."..;.;.IY,;.;,...;.;,;,;;.;,.
,_.ly•nu-•
·-·com

OthCT events Tuesday included the
women's 10-km and men's 15-km classical cross-&lt;ountry events, men's moguh
and men's 500 meter speedskating.
-Later in the day, the U.S. women will
face Germany in their first hockey g:une
and athletes will compete in the 120kilometer ski jump, women's luge and
men's short program figure skating.
FIGURE SKATING: Russia's 11th
straight pairs title started with ~- collision
and ended with a controversy - both
invt&gt;lving the Canadian duo.
Elena Berezhnaya and Anton
Sikharulidze were crowned the champions, although mapy observers felt the
best duo was Jamie Sale and David Pel. letier of Canada.
Fans serenaded the Canadians with
chants of"Six! Six!" when they finished
- begging the judges to give them a
perfect score. Pelletier even kissed the
ice before leaving to celebrate.
Inscead they got four 5.9s for artistry.
Russia got seven, with the 5.9 from the
Chinese judge making the difference
Sikharulidze and. Sale smacked into
1 each ocher in warmups, but neither
: seemed affected by it.
·
: China's Shen Xue and Zhao Hongbo
won the bronze medal. Americans
Kyoko
Ina and John Zimmerman fin1
ished fifth but called their performance
"the greatest thing we've ever done."
LUGE: If Germany's Georg Hackl
was disappointed about his demotion to
silver after three · straight golds, he sure
didn't show it.
Hackl and bronze medalist Markus
Prock of Austria hoisted Zoeggeler on
their shoulders, then smiled for picrures.
The trio looked as happy as the American snowboarders:
: "I'm getting a silver, and that's great,"
1 said Hackl, who missed becoming. the
first Winter athlete to win the same
event four times but still won a medal in
a record-setting fifth games. "Now, two
silver medals will frame three gold
medals."
Adam Heidt was fourth, just missing
the chance to win America's first luge
medal in 38 years. It was still the best
singles finish in U.S. team history.
.
SPEEDSKATING: Four steps into
Jeremy Wotherspoon's 500-meter qualifying race, the Canadian's medal hopes
were over.
Casey FitzRandolph seized the open-

!

1

1

·wahama

.'

' '"

.

ing . with an Olympic record run,
putting him in position to become the
fint American since Eric Heiden to win
.the men'• 500 meten.
leammate Kip Carpenter was a surHill' ~ Sdf
prising third, while U.S. record holder
Joey Cheek was seventh at 34.78.
Stong!'
Defending gold pted.alist Hiroyasu
Shimizu oflapan had the second fastest '
time.
MEN'S HOCKEY: Ukraine discovered the firepower it had Jacked earlier,
dashing Switzerland's hopes to get out
of the preliminary round with a S-2
win. Valentyn Olersky of Urkaine had
two goals.
Belarus moved closer toward advancing to the final hockey round with its
second win, 3-1 over France.
In ·the other preliminary round, Ger"
many and Latvia prepared for a showdown on Tuesday.
WOMEN'S HOCKEY: Kazakstan
goalie Natalya Trunova made 59 saves
against Canada, the defending silver (1fx10' 610'1120')
medalist - yet it still wasn't enough,
The Canadians won 7-0.
Russia lost 3-2 to Sweden, which
means the Russians must beat or tie the
Canadians on Wednesday to advance to
the medal round.
lUATJH.ON: Magdalena Forsberg of
All Makes Tractor &amp;
Sweden already was considered the
Equipment Parts
most successful female biathlete. Now
Faclory Authorized
she has an Olympic medal to bolster her
Case-IH Pans
srarus. .
Dealers
Forsberg took btonze in the IS-kilo1000 St. Rt. 7 South
meter event, finishing third to Andrea
Coolville, OH 45723
Henkel of Germany and Liv Grete
740-667-0363
Poiree of Norway.
Ole Einar Bjoerndalen of Norway
won the men's 20-kilometer, followed
by Frank Luck of Germany and Victor
Maigourov of Russia.
CURLING: The U.S. men's curling
team got off a strong start by upsetting
defending world champion Sweden 105 in the opener, only to follow it with a
loss to 2000 world champion Canada.
In other first-round play in the 10tearn tournament, Finland defeated
•
Denmark 9-3, Germany beat Fro~nce 95 and Canada edged Britain 6-4.
Switzerland rebounded with a 5-4 victory over Norway in its second game.
In the women's curling, play open~d
with four games: Canada beat Sweden
5-4; Britain topped Norway 10-6; Germany defeated Russia 8-5; and ·switzerland beat Denmark 9-8.

MANlEYS
SELF STORAGE

97 Beech st.
middleport, OH

[740) 992-3194
992-6635
PUTS

1-

River AG SerVIce
·Ahead In Service•

3SS37 St. Rl. 7 N. • Pomaoy, OH 4S720
1t
._. Hotle ...................... 15.GGIIO
llulr
12% .... HoNe ...._ ......... 14.401110
Prlcle 21~ dog looci ........SUI/50
l!oanamy IIIII 12% etock lied..... M.'lS/SO
Mlrwallllockt............"••:.••$4.75f100
II% Llyer Ctumbela

Beauty

CDIIIAC11IIt, ~

and
brains ·

7401111141

:;"'*,# .;."::-

ocw.r..l gH 1

_

•=•

.. _"""_
..........
•coanc•touu

ad'uGI :UllOM_..

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

Palge Cleek

P'lil ... fllles
111102171

BISSELL

EuerJn.s..,

BUILDERS tnt

ilO

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New·Garages
• ReplaeellltJ\t
Windows • Roofing

&amp; SUAIIIIJ
Doers Open 4:38
Earty birds start

P'riiR$SIUe tep line
Thursdays

COIIIMElCW and RBIDENIIAl

FREE. ESTIMATES

Proaresstue

Ceuera11111 SUndays

740-992-7599
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

Independent Beau~y
ConsUtlnt
111 Hl&amp;h Street
Pomeroy. OH 45769

740-992-2802
www.m~

Advertise
in this space
for
125 per month

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

RI!Gini.ONo4S771

~

Plot-.
Rep'-·-

•

.• ,

--::· .. -

'

•

. A lOIII

•Anti
• A KQ

WVI031712

mEt&amp;s llftSSft&amp;f
THfRIIPY

fJ/11 eu '1-W"" ..._
• ,... 'fl!i!r II' , fJitt

ARE

'VOU

FELLERR

PL~tiN

:FRANK &amp; EARNEST

T"eY SAY vltMT tePA~ATfS MAN
F~OM OT~f~ ANIMALS If ttl$
AIILITY TO USf TOOLS.

.ROBERT BISSEU
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes

'

• Garages
•Complete
Remodeling ·

Stop &amp; Compare
740.992·1671

'THE BORN LOSER
....
.
..,
; .,..t-0-1 i-\E.~ CoO\W:&gt; \0 ~TIEIJ\PI ~ 0\t&gt; YOU ~ I Wf'6 COllE:.~

7122/l'FN

t

1-\~ :)1~"-IU~ J\)(o.'IP, F\

FIGJJ\Z.E ~IE\Z. WI\Et-11
WI\~ F\ YOUNC:, lt\N-1 7

' mPLE LlJTZ •. OO'NE:LL
00t-IE 1

.

•;

J.l6
Pd. I Mo.

L!:!2~

GoDFREY CJ\Uii,HT I'IE

Wolfe Home

maintenance
(740) 949-1521

D

WICK'S
· HAULING aDd .

EXCAVATING
'iilullng tl.lmtiiOnt
tGIIvel• Sand •Topaoll

oflll Dirt oMulch

space
'for
sso per
month

(740) 992-3470

.

!'V&lt;l&lt;.lt&gt;IG A VALENTINE
FOR KE~~Y DURING
C\.ASS! r THOUGHT
SHE WAS C&gt;ONNA GII/E

If year weight Is

llllllec- te

geu, You slleuld lie
camlnghus.

Mike HID
Owner

104 Fifth Street, Racine, Ohio

74 ·949- 7

Sunset Home
Construction

Steve's Truck
Accessorle•
steue II. WhHe, 01mer
Forme~y

Bryan RHVel.
New Homes, Room Additions,
Garages, Pole ~ulldlngs, Roofs,
Siding, Decks, Kitchens, ·Drywall

RV

• Thnneue Cover

740-742·3411

r----------------------------.
.
r--------.
Ad
~------------------------~~~

of Zeoli's

Bedllnen •Nerf Bar

FREE ESTIMATES!

1'\E DETENTIO!&gt;I. SO r .
HAD

:TO

WAS

HfRBftllff .
IODfPfDDEOT
DISTRIBUTOR

•Good selec:tioa of new &amp; IISed tires
•OU change $18.95·
We stock all major braads

&amp;Mere

· IT

!

WT DOII"T
1.1.
,AN'1600Y! ! DON'T

WANT EIIER'!ONE

THINKIN(; I

740·!92-7036.11

VALENTINE!

• Ventvlsor • Bull
· Shield &amp; Full Line
of Other Accessories
31345 Noble Summit
Rd. Middlepon, Ohio

Sorry for your lnooav.

(740) 992-5822

985-3616 Chris

TO TE.LL.
ANY60DY 1

HERE. LINV5 .. I WANT 'f'OU
TO MAVE THIS VALENTINE ..
8VT DON'T MlSUNCIERSTANP...

405 5th Street
Naw Haven, WV
•Residential

Bill's Tire
Shop
Ravenswood, WV

(304) 273-3271'
We'ye added to
our services:
Complete txboUit
S)'stem, ~omputer

oll1nmenll, computer
balance, skO&lt;Iu &amp;
1truts. radiator new &amp;;

rtpllr, de rods, bell
joints, etc.

.

27 In-lime

22 llhut

Not quill

t Delight

.

glint

u aec

c,-

I
I I
IH

12

I

j

I

I

I

1" 1 T:T ;:

I I• I I

·O

·

'llrthda.Y-----

Am.ericc~n

PaiW

Uving

Weduosda)'. Feb . 13, 20112
When• yom C:lrccr or \\'ork ·
is concerned, ]:'lrgl."'r ~tridcs
thJn usual •.:an be made in the
ye:1r ahead . The bendits, ad.vanugcs anJ rewards you're
co~pablc tlf generating could be
extraordinary.
AQUARIUS Qan . 20- hb.
19) - -An association ~:m• may
to~tay

establish

might prove to

be a valuable asset for you,

because 1his person's uni1.1ue
ralcnt t ' ml help you briug your
fmam:ial ~.h·~ircs into being.
Aquarius, treat your~clf to -a .
~ift. Scn~l for your
A~tru- Graph prcdi1.:tinns fnr
the )'l'ar 01hcaJ by mailing $2
:.~ild S1\.SE to Astro·Gto~}lh,
c/ o th~ newsp&lt;'p~r. P.O. Uox

birllu.iay

175H, Murray Hill St;Uion. ·
New York. NY 111151&gt; . De
!illrC fU ~talC your Zo,ii ~K ~o:ign .

PISCES (Fob. 20-Mard&gt; "ll)

been (or a long time,
vot\~

your

~.'!Torts

and

50 dt:l'IIC'r~i&lt;! ­

to your most important objc~:­
tive~.

even if you must change

I' lam.
ARIES (M•lf&lt;h 21 - April 19)

-- Don't hold b;u;k Hxby. 111:cau~e

you're

p1)~itivc

;t

thinker, vou h.wc the nbilitv
ro impir.e others, nml helP
them ell'vatc their hope.~ and
cxr~ctatiom.

.find

'

TAURUS (April 2rJ-M•y
20) - - Conditions in general
~hnuld go rather well tOr yuu
rod:1y, although your mmt
·. iu1prc..•uh'e move5 will be the

-

moving morr

- llc.•ing in the ri ght place at
tht· ri~ht time will contribute
gn•atly to your success tot.lay .
The othn faltor will lJe your
ability to act on a moment' s
notice.
SCOiti'IO (Oct. 24 -Nov.
22) -- lnfiucnccs an: now at
work that cnuld ~ubs~antiallv
help you impro'V e your finan~
cia! l)O~ition . A chance ma ..
neuver th;H You m:~ke m.:~y
latch you onto 1hese fortunate
effecu.

ingenious idea~ you '1\ come
up with omd put 10 ~ood u5cs.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) .
-- Evenu could unexpectedly
devrlop for you roday thot'll
pllt you in touch with a person essential in putting to~cthcr

tl1ings

swiftly ami SlJlmlthly than expect~d. Keep the. ball rolling
until everything i~ fulJy in
. plan~ .
LIURA (S&lt;pt . 23-0&lt;~ . 23) •

om arrangement you'd

like to fofmulatc. You'll 111:1k.C

.• big hit.
CANCER Qunc 21 -July
22) -- A door may open fur

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dcc . 21) •• Tod•y might

you today 1hat could n•present

m:J rk the beginning of acquiring nu ny thing~ fo r w hi ch
you've J e~i red but couldn ~ t
obtain. Evei-ything may start
coming np rme~ during this

a brc01k for which you'rr
louk.in~ to get into. Up unlil

now, thi!; ~lpportunity might
h;wc bc.·cn harred from ynu.
LEO Quly 23-Aug. 22) -Today mi~ht be hH.: ky for you
ro mc.·ct and IJt.•vcluJ' " new
commtn.:ial contact throuKh a
~udal ~ :tth~rinil: . The nvo · of
you will ~imf!ly hit it off wdl.
VIRGO (A11g. 2.l -5cpt. 22)
· -~ Do.n't lo~e ~i"hr of your

cycle.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22Jan . 19) -- Cood things could
dev~lop for you through .:m
:~ c riJ.e ntill cont&lt;~c t yo u ma y ·
make today. An unmual
mre tinjo; of the mind~ will beo
bd1in~i the union.

ohjecttve tot.lay when you

I

I

'

'

II 51'0 Info
41 ltlalal21 Motor Ptrt
tnllclng

DOWN

'lbuJ' · .

-- Your 'chances for \u..:ccss
:uc b etter tod:ty dun tht•y'vc

'(

Chlnly

f9

I

Repkwement~ndows

.FIELDS
PLUMBING

bird
45 Ouaml

21

I

~ ~

HOWARDL.
WRITESEL
Roofing· Home
MaintenanceGutters· Down
Spout
FI'H Estimates
949-1405 TFN

Pu1
P111

whlll

Carefully, South
· ·
continued with a
Ay CT
heart to his 10. (If he 3
had led the heart jack .
.
for a second finesse,
he would have failed.
MU p y B
~~
The superyisor had mistakenly
Try it and see.) West .
dialed his own secretary. She anwon with the king
swered the phone. held up the
and played his last
"' receiver and motioned to him. "•Is
spade. Declarer ruffed
T I WE A R
litlaughed,
for me?"
" ••heis asked.
••• 1" "No," she
and pI aye d two J--,.-:.,rr;;,...;:........;,...:..:...,........j
Complete tht cl'lvckle quoted
roun ds o f d.ian1on ds.
.
by filling In the 11luing wcrdt
East led a fourth
you d.-elcp from llop No. 3 below.
spade, but South
PRINT NUM!ERm LETTERS IN
ruffed with dummy's
THESE S UARES
heart jack, played a
A UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
club to hand, drew
V
TO GET ANSWER
West's last trump
SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS
with the heart ace,
Revoke ·Acute· Stark. Cruise- CORRECTS
and claimed.
I kn.ow a man who is always busy on environmental
· The responsive
double doesn't come committees. One day I told him that a true activist was
with a gilt-edged not the one who states the problem but the one who
CORRECTS the problem.
·
guarantee, but it will
often help your c o m i : J
petitive bidding.

WE w:&gt;ri'T ltft.VIi

PEANUTS

WEST SHADE
BARBERSHOP

c~oooc~·J.... 30, 3tst.
Feb.lst
Open
Tue, Frllfi.S:OO p.m.
Sat. 8:30 • l:t;OO
Georp K. Vat.
Feb. !·March 1
Shop wiD be realooun
&amp; days March 1st

Obi.
rau

d~~e:~~k-~~~~n.:?n

c;,a.ve

GODFREY A

LlseHibs.
Nell week

vert •. se •. n · ,_,fiiiiiiA.
"'"""'7
this space for High&amp;!Dry
s1 00 .per
Self-Storage
. 33795 Hilmul RJ.
mQ nth
Pomeruy, ObW

I. . r
I .

· ~

iii.A..I':) IZ.\Cot\T! f-\1~ ::.I&amp;AA.~e:.
..JUI.\1' 1-JI\:) TI-lE
W:IPLE K.WTZ!

~-~.:~

740-992-5232

about 18 feet to (10%) down · 11 the
Second Streat; time the bid Ia
the.- along Second IOOIJ)II d. llttlance to
Street
In
a be paid within thirty
IOIIthwwterly
(30) daye. Any aum
direction along not paid within 11ld
Slcond 811111 33 foot thirty (30) claya ehall
to Crenz Lot, the bear lnterell at the
place (of) blglnillng. rate of len per cent
Properly Addn11:
{1 0%) per annum
5'711 a. 2nd A~nua
.lfom the dale of 1111.
Middleport, Ohio
48710
.
::.~~H TR~UELL,
· Permanent P1r011 !Mige County, Ohio
No.: 111-00131.000
Prlo.r lnetrumenl
llelerenced; VOlume CARLISLE,
MoNELLIE, RINI,
55, Plllll 7211 '
KIIAMEII a ULRICH
Current Owner'a CO.,
L.P.A.
Donald IV: Herbert
Name:
Guthrie and Branda (00211342) J. Kramer
J. Guthrie
Anomey for Plllmllf
APPIIAISED AT: 25200
Chagrin
$35,000.00
Boulevard, Sulll240
T11m1 of Sale: II Cleveland, Ohio
purchaaed by 1 partY 44122
·other than plalnlllf, (211) H0-7200
the 11111 mortgage
holder. Ten percent (2)12,11,21,2002

r

. Financing &amp; 90 Days .
Same As Cash Available

Interior &amp; Exterior
Free estimates:
.Insured

l.
l'au

--

FREE ESTIMATES

hi this

Ubi.
•9

I Otw

"* • td-

31 Wadding
"'*'
conr.tll
lhw&gt;h./
37 W I
0
i.itlal
a
42
Pub .W. ·
22rx
·~~·- Ill••• 43 Will
21 Neighbor or 11 t1x-.ldad
14 l.atw .
~.;., Man"
cryalllt

Ill"'

r:d':lt

Tonia Reiber
Ucensed Massage
Therapist

"

PRinTinG

Nwtk

,_lvtr
21~':.~ 2 Forum hello 23 Mince
The
responsive
3 Gllllnglld 24 Ba-ll
50 Bed 11111111
double, which was
4 Light
VIPa
52 Low IrK!
31
pencakll
25 Dllllltacl (2 53 B111blll
mentioned yesterday,
33 Pricing
5 Hardy
wcla.)
was devised by Dr. F.
34 TV hookuPt
2t Frugally
58 Eur. nation
I
Fielding-Reid .. This
.,... 30 FIIIIVI
58 Talcl home
31 T1k11
7 Plntee'
night
1 trophy
double occurs after
llalhea
32 Handy
58 Tokyo,
31 Cllrua drink
your partner makes a
8 Aueele rock
abbr.
01101
40 WIHIIol
· group
35 Quahog
10 Fix a ....,.
lllll'lllft
takeout double and
_r-r........r--.r-the responder raises
his partner's suit.
When the opponents
have a good fit, it is
unlikrly you will get
wealthy by doul?ling
them for penalties. It
is better to use the
double as showing the
values to act, but having no clear-cut .bid
available. ·
Especially at a low
level, if you make a
n·sponsive double of a
minor suit, you will
uonnally have length
in both majors. If you
make " "'responsive
double of a major,
you will usually not
CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lula Campos
have length in the unceiBbrUy
Cipher
Cryptograms
are created from quoladons b~ famoua
. bid major, because
people, paat and present. Each letter In the cipher stands for another.
you would be happy
Today's clue: 0 equals Y
to bid that suit. You
'N
VCR
TW
UCO
COU
will often have a miDNSLA
VNAL
INDBHID
EHK
nor two-suiter.
· In this deal, N c;&gt;rth
OXCKR.
N
BHTIUD'A
LC MX
used the flexible reWNBFXU
c GXAAXK BHPW·
sponsive double, hoping for the best and
CDNHD.'
(GNH$KCWLXK) '
passing when South
strongly suggested a
B C K I RCDUGTKS
five-card heart suit.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "There's
no
homework.•
- Dan Q~lse.nberry, whan aakad whal waa the besl lhlng
West led the spade
queen: six, 10, eight:.
WORD
West continued with
CiAMI
the spade jack: seven,
two, heart two. De- ·0 borrange lene'rs of the
clarer played a dia"
four tcramblod wor-ds be·
mond to dummy's low to farm four simple words.
king and rari the heart
RE RT RO

213 N. Second Ave.
Middleport, Oh 45760

Owner: Terry Llmm

Advertise

\\'eM

Doubling

(740) 992·1705

(740) 992·0739

HOUSE

W..tll

Op:ninc k!•d: • Q

SQC(Iallzlgr Ig•

(740) 949-152i

,.

Vulncrpble: Neither
lkaler: Eaat
·

Roofing, Decks
Remodeling,
DrywaU,and
Additions

I

1.,....,_,

:1

••

end Dri- • SIOftCII
Crete
Fn:c: Eltl.....ies
Serving Ohio ond W.V.

TH'

1

• "J

41 Dvll•alglll
41 111111

=::r:t:.. •
110

,_ZIIII
11 - ... 11 Putt II
....
111111
11 lltla .,
u ,_
11 Ill II I IIIII M 1n*11 ech.
Hunllcly
II Uon'l PN1'
11
17 FM11
. ~
arlllful
1li ........
81 Child'I toy
17 l'lnctl ol
12 Houle alii
1111
u Go by
II Onol
-back
Nmld
M S.llor'a
· 20 POint thl
•yn•

s

AAIUU2

.JIGI72

1-877-466-1234
-· ·~.~ ~·~

Q .I ~

9 K t of

MECIC

• Top • Removal • Trim ·
• Stump Grinding
• Bucket Truck

•••;;::r

II 110
•

Wttt

• " - With, Slepo •

I 11"\' 11&lt;1 c IICJ"\

Tree Service

Q J

......

41 T -

tDaor*- MJiolclran

•KUI

WNAT

JONES'

.

ACROII

. '. ......

•

L.\ :\I :\I' S

992-5479

Public Notices In Newspapers.
Your Right to !~:now, Dellveml Right to Your

SHERIFPS SALE OF county courtnou••
on Thurtday Maroh
REAL ESTATE
CASS NO.: 00 CV 011 21, 2002, It 10:30
a.m. of uld diJ, the
The llttnll of New
following daeorlbed
preml-: . ·,
· York, Aa TruiiH
Under The Pooling
SITUATE In lhl
end Servicing
Vllllllll of Middleport,
AgrMment Dated At County of Melgt and
of November 30,
SIMa of Ohio:
33 FMII'rontlng on
11117, BertH 11117·0
S.Oond 81-' of the
Pllllntlff
VIIIIJII of MiddlePOrt,
·v•
DoMid G~. akl, lelng o...fourth of
Donald s. Guthrie, Lot No. 10 purchtlnd
et ••.•
by L.C. DIYII from
o.lond.nll
Jennla
Hayu,
COURT OF COMMON Charlll Geiger end
Ella Geiger, the Hml
PLEAS, MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO:
being the IOUthWIII
,In purauence of 1n quarter of aeld Lot
Order of S.ll to ro- eo. Bald one·fourtn
dlrected from t1ld beginning at the
northweat corner of
Court In the
entitled ICtlon, I will the Cranz Lot
· IX POll to 1111 II running parallel with
public auction to 1M the 11m1 about 18
hlld on n the Front fut; lhlnCI Ellt 33
feet; Thence watt
Stepe of the !Mige

~

Jeff Warner Ins.

ragged. The locals added another ten
points to its lead in the final canto as
Wahama coasted to the easy 61-34 trifrom PageS
umph.
"Once again our bench played a vital
Morehead scored nine points for role in giving us some quality minutes,"
Parkersburg Christian in the opening Hall said. "We got a good look at
period to offset the offensive balance of Anthony Mitchell at point guard and he
the White Falcons. Jason Simpkins and came through with a fine game with
Ryan Roush pacedWahama in the peri- nine points and several steals. The more
od but the Knights stayed in contention playing time we can get our reserve
throughout the first eight minutes as· players will surely come back and give
neither team could mount an offensive us a boost during the final weeks of the
spurt that would separate the two cage season and on into tournament play;•
squads.
added Hall.
·
·
'
The depth and sheer numbers along
Wahama will try and push its season
the White Falcon bench began to take
record over the .500 mark for the first
its toll on Parkersburg Christian as sectime since the early part of january
ond quarter action began, Cadavid
tonight when the Falcons host visiting
entered the contest and sparked the Falcons .offensively while the Bend Area Wirt County in a pair of JV and varsity
defense came away with several steals contests. Tipoff times will be 6:00pm for
and turned those thefts into some easy the preliminary affair with the varsity
• buckets. WHS · limited the Knights to tilt to follow at 7:30pm.
just three points in the period while
at Muon, W.Va.
putting up 16 points to construct a 30Wotuoma 81, Plrkel'lburv CMitlln 34
P.C
13
3
. 12
6
· 34
16 edge at the half.
WAHAMA 14
16
18
16 66
The onslaught continued one~ third- WAHAMA - Cadavtd 5 D-0 II; Simpkins 2 6·7 10;
quarter play resumed as Parsons and Ml1choll4 1·2 9; Lambert 2 2·2 8; Roach 2 2·4 6: Par·
8Clt1ll 3 C).() 6; Roush 3 0.(1 6; Faulk I 1-4 3: Rloklrtl I I.
Lambert took control of the boards for 2 3; Plckenpaugh 2 C).() 4; Bamlll I D-O 2. TOTALS: 25
the Mason County team. The WHS 1~2166.
CHR1SnAN- Morehead 6 5·8 18; Douglu 4'1).
advantage moved to 50-28 after 24 min- 0PKO.
8: Sigley 0 4-6 4: Border I C).() 2; Borl&lt;e I D-O 2; Miller
•
utes and by the time fourth period O: Tladale 0.10TAI.8: 12 7·14 34.
THREE·POIHT OOALJ- Wehama 1 (CadaYid). Pkg.
action began the Knights were worn. Chriililan I ( _ ,.

PUBLIC
NOTICES

MAlYKAY ·

,,.

PHIWP
ALDIII

--- ·- - -- - - - --

�•

I

:•'

lUll day, r:.b. 12, 2«'1

www.mydllllyMntlnel.com

P11ge A 10 • The Deily SentiMI

Cincinnati, Xavier battling for tourney ·seedin
CINCINNATI (AP) - As if it's not
enough to ~tde for conference championships and national
rankings, the Cincinnati
Bearcats . and
·
Xavier
Musketeen
ehter the stretch run
hoping to also improve their standing
with the NCAA tournament
·
committee.
.
Bearcats senior Jamaal Davis said a Feb.
2 loss at Marquette, which ended Cincin·
nati's 20-game winning streak, got his
team's attention.
"We've got to play every game like it's
our last," Davis said.
The No. 5-ranked Bearcats beat Char-•
jotte and Wake Forest during a tour of
North Carolina last week. •
,
Cincinnati's next three games are·
against teams with losing records: Saint
Louis, Southern Miss and DePaul.
The toughest remaining games for the
Bearcats are against 11th-ranked Marquette and Memphis, which is on the
fringe of the top 25 . Both games will be
in Cincinnati.
Cincinnati (22-2) is 9-1 in Conference
USA - a ·half~game back of Marquette
(21-3, 10-1) in the American Division ..
Memphis tops the National Division

work.

1
'

The ·accusations offended the Ford teams, who quickly
reached for the time sheets to show that the Pontiacs and
Chevrolets have consistendy picked up speed since the aero ·
package was first tested in January, while the Fords have made
almost no improvement.
"It's quite obvious to me who the sandbaggers · are, and
they're over there in the Chevrolets. They're the only ones
getting faster each time out;' said Frankie Stoddard, crew chief
for Jeff Burton's Ford. "And the Pontiacs are fast, too:'
Stoddard was extremely upset over the claims of a poor
winter work ethic.
NASCAR officials never bought into the Ford sandbagging
theory, saying the results of Sunday's nonpoints race was
enough of an indicator for them. Behind Jarrett, the other
eight Ford entries finished between I Oth and 21st in the. 22car field.

Raiders
flomPapS
best as we can .to, give it our
best shot. We wanted to
advance. As long as you play,
. you 've got a chance." ·
In the opening half, both
teams combined for 30 fouls
with the Raiders shooting 14for-23 from the free throw line
while Alexander went 8-for-18.
River Valley finished 19-for29 in the game from the charity stripe as the second half saw

NASCAR
from PapS
. Unser, a two-ti'me !ROC
champ, is tied with the late
Dale Earnhardt with II victories in the series.
"Dale was the one who
. helped me the most in
IROC," said Unser, who's
still without a full-time ride
for 2002 . "He was the one
that I would look to and the
one I followed.
· "As long as I was behind
him, he was the happiest guy
in town. But whenever I was
in front of him, things got
real serious."·
Unser has tried to pass
· along some of what he
learned to first-time !ROC
drivers Helio Castroneves
and Sam Harnish Jr.
BODINE STILL FAST:
One driver has topped the
speed chart thro"ugh all three
drafting practices for the
Winston Cup cars - Geoffrey Bodine.
Bodine, driving a ford for
owner James Finch, ran a lap
of 188.379 mph in Monday's
morning session. He also was
fastest in two practic~s
before Sunday's B.udweiser.
Shootout, where lie finished
13th.
He was 29th fastest in
qualifying, so he likely will
have to race his way into the

fewer fouls.
"I thought we missed more
than that in the first half;' said
Weaver. "Maybe it was a combination of one-and-ones and
maybe some wide-open layups
we missed."
The game was tied at S...all
when Brittany McDade connected on a 3-point goal for
River Valley late in the first
quarter.
That sparked an 11-0 run for
the Raiders, which Alexander
was never able to overcome.

River Valley's Kristina Naylor
made seven of her II points
'

Daytona 500 field through
Thursday's qualifying races.
"This shows we have a fast
car, and that it drafts well,"
said Bodine, who hopes to
drive this car in a limited
schedule in 2002 after running only a, part-time schedule last year. "Plus, it's a
morale booster to get to the
top of the list. It doesn't
mean a whole lot, but it
makes all the guys that work
. on the car feel good."
Bodine, the 1986 race
winner, is hoping to make
his 21st start on Sunday after
·
missing last year's event.
GORDON
WINS
AWARD
AGAIN:
Defending Winston Cup
champion Jeff Gordon was
presented with his fourth

"No. 13,11

'

gain the top seed in CUSA postseasoA
tournament, which will be played ill

•

Aerodynamics debate NCAA
gathers up momentum
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP) - ·The Ford carpp is
defending itself against chaflies of whining to NASCAR, sabotaging its own efforts and outright laziness.
Ahhh, let the Daytana games begin.
With a rules cilange that favors the Fords going into effect
Tuesday ~t Daytona International Speedway, the other three
· makes are up in arms and taking it out on their Ford rivals.
':They've been sandbagging here all week," said Jimmy
Spencer, a longtime Ford driver who moved to a Dodge team
this year.
·
Spencer was 44th in the first round of time triak and said he
was still slower than the Fords on Monday, a day before they
were allowed to shave a quarter-inch off their rear spoilers.
"They were . hauling the .mail down the straightaway, I
thought they already had changed on the spoiler because they
were going so fast;' Spencer said. "I don't mind going to a·
prize fight, but I want to have a fighting chance."
NASCAR permitted the Fords to reduce its spoilers - the
winglike metal deVice at the rear of the trunk lid- to 6 inches because the Tauruses haven't been competitive at Daytona.
The Fords have been slow in practice, had just two cars in
the top 20 after the fir&gt;t round of time trials and brought up
the rear in the Budweiser Shoo tout. Dale Jarrett was the highest Ford finisher, coming in sixth, but he was almost 4 seconds
behind race winner Tony Stewart in a Pontiac.
So NASCAR approved the quarter-inch coming off the
top, bringing the spoiler height down a full half-if!ch smaller
than they .were when the new aerodynamic package was
introduced late last fall. NASCAR took the first quarter-inch
away last month after the Fords tested poorly here under the
new rules.
The Chevrolets, which most people believe have at least a
slight advantage, are using a 6 I I 4-inch rear spoiler, while both
the Dodges and Pontiacs are .at 6 1/2 inches.
"Do your homework;' said Greg ZipadeUi, Stewart's crew
chie£ "We'~ driving a 7-year-old Pontiac, our body is so old
I applied for antique plates, and we found a way to make it

Cincinnati.
:
.. "We want to be No. 1," Cindnnaa
senior Immanuel McEhoy said. "So we 4
tr
•
got to keep working.
:
Xavier is contending to win wh3f
would be its first Adantic 10 West Di~7
sion title in four years, and could ~
the top overall record in the league for
the first time. The MQSketeers tied St!
Joseph's for the top mark in 1996-97 ~
1~1
l
Xavier (17-4) lost Saturday at S~
Bonaventure. At 9-1 in the leagu
Xavier holds a two-game leail in th
West division over Richmond, who
·the Muslcies have already swept.
•
East division 1eader St. Joseph's also
9-1, and the f4awks will play S~urda
at Xavier with both teams vying for th
top seed in the conference tournamen&amp;
In the next 10 days, Xavier pia~·
· George Washington and Temple, alon~ .
with St. Joseph's. .
•
"It's a huge week and a half for us.?
Xavier senior Kevin Prey said. "We
have to regain our focus. We haven
been playing our best basketball th~ .
past two games. It's shown our lack of
focus."
i

'w

Melp~nty's

-

i

HOT 'CATS - Cincinnati's Steve Logan
reacts after hittihg a three-point shot in
Cincinnati's 103-94 win over Wake Forest
Saturday.(AP)
with marks of 20-5 and 10- 1.·
(n addition to impressing the NCAA
committee, the Bearcats also are trying to

BY KEVIN KDLY
KKELLYOMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

I

--

Jerry L Brogan, 56
lOUISe Bartels, 87
Details, A3

of

ASHBURN, Va. (AP) - . IfDan Snyder
the inost valuable players care of your people, my children, the rest
keeps this up, someone will invent a salary
on.your team:'·
. their life:·
~
cap for coaches.
Snyder wouldn't even
Lewis' arrival marked an ·untidy end to~
The Washington Redskins' owner progo that far. H1s message tumulroous week for the man who mad~
pelled coaching salaries to a new level for
for owners who are con- the Ravens' defense one of the best in th~
the second time in a
cerned about escalating NFL, culminating with a Super Bowl vicf
•
mont~ Monday, giving
co.~ching, sal~ries: ~oobad. tory a year ago.
~
• * -ll!'::ii" • ... Marvm Lewts a three-year
I don t thmk I ve done
One week ago, Lewis was on the ve~
"~
contract worth about $2.:
anything out ?f cha.racter of being hired as Tampa B~'s head coacb
million to be the teams
wtth what we re trymg to by
ra1
Rich ·McKay. LewiS
defensive coordinator.
Lewis
build with the Redskins,"
gene dmanager bl
taff
·
•
·
h
·1d
s
d
·d
"Yi
•
··'k
even
starte
to
assem
e
as
.
Lewts w o cou earn
ny er sa1 . au re "" Th da
'gh
..:
substantially ~ore than $1 mil- ing about one of the finest coaches in tbe
Tthhenth cam~ a f Burs Y ru t Mmalee.,lmng
· per year with
· mcennves,
·
·
becomes t h e game. 'n
• all after one· thing. tha t•s v1cto·
w1
e sons
ucs
lion
were
. kno
h owner
h ft th co ·
highest paid assistant coach in the league by . ries."
.
Glazer. Lewts ew w .en, e 1e
~meeta large margin. He'll have a bigger salary
Snyder has spent freely since buying the mg that the Gla~rs didn t want him, an~
than some head coaches and will make team in 1999, but his money has bought they never told him why.
..
more than twice the estimated average litde success. He ga':e Deion Sanders nearWhen the Gl~rs announce~ that Lewii
salary for assistants.
ly $8 miUion for one. mediocre year. Coach wouldn't get the JOb. the Redskins pursued
How does anyone justify it? Ask Steve Marty .Schottenheimer essentially got $10 Lewis immediately. A Sarorday morning
Spurrier, who last month got a record five- million for one 8-8 seaso!l.
interview was ananged, but Lewis canceled
year, $25 million Heal to become the head
As for Lewis, .there was no way he could it and decided - for the moment, at leas!
coach.
deny that a maJor reason he took the JOb - to re-sign with the Ravens.
,
"Do you know what the salary cap is this was money. The Baltimore Ravens wanted · Lewis will be Snyder's fourth defensive
next year?" Spurrier S:Ud. "Seventy-one to re-sign him, but their offer was less and coordinator in four seasons, folloWinj
million. Now, don't you think the . best it never went up.
·
Mike Nolan Ray Rhodes and Kurt Schot•
defensive coordinator in the country is
"That's got ·to be a factor," Lewis said. , tenheimer 'Ironically. Nolan is rakint
worth one~70th of what you're paying the "You love the game, you have a great pas- Lewis' plac~ as the Ra~ns· defensive coor'i
team? The defensive coordinator is one of sion for the a:ome, but you also want to take di
'!•
·
...-··
nator.

.

.

,

concerns.
· · DTE applied ·for a permit
to install a small plant in
Gavin's coal pile section to
produce coal briquettes for
use by electric generating
units such as Gavin.
A public hearing w~ held
Tuesday by EPA at Cheshire's.
request to get answers· to resi-dents' questions.
Those questions, Mayor
Tom Reese said, are many and
range from the effect of the
"chemical cocktail" the plant
may add to emissions ·from
Gavin to how the coal source
for · DTE's pr~du ct will be

transported to the plant.
"We live here and feel our
lives are at risk," Reese said.
"We have a right ro have EPA
.do its job, to show tlie people
of Cheshire that AEP and
DTE do not do an end run
and we have another summer
as we have before."
R eese referred to the
plume created by selective catalytic ~duction (SCR) technologf installed at Cavin in
2001 to reduce nitrogen oxide
emissions during the prime
ozone season of May through
September.
The plume - a result of

the process - \vas another in
what residents Cited as a series
of air hazards that plague the
village.
"We're. already bombarded
by toxins every day," resident
John Phoenix told EPA officials. "This (the synfuel plant)
just adds more to the atmosphere. We have birds falling
dead from the sky."
AEP announced recently
it's investing $7 million in
equipment to stem the effects
of the plume this summer.
But DTE's application to
build at .Gavin, filed in January,
renewed hea lth and safety

SPELLING BEE

m
•

...

Speaker: lincoln
similar to Bush

IJI ..

from the foul line, while Nicole
Watkins led the Raiders (3-18)
with 12 points.
Sarah Kaufinan led the Spartans with 12 points.
"The Alexander kids have
had a down season like we've
had and they played hard down
all the way to the . end;' said
Weaver. "They never gave up."
Rl- Volley 42, Alou....., 27
ALEXANDER - Heather Brown 1, TraCie
· Jamet 4, Erika Sama 2. Molly 5. Jamie Hamil 1, Sarah Woodl 2. Sarah·
Kaufman 12.
RIVER VALLEY - Karl Beth Taylor 4,
Krllllna Naylor 11, Nlcolt Wa1klna 12,
· Jamie
Nickels 2, BriHany McDade 8, All&gt;
ley Davies 2, Aahley Caldwell3.

Driver of the Year Award,
breaking a tie he shared with
Mario Andretti and Darrell
Waltrip.
A national panel 'of motorsports writers and broadcast~
ers vote on the award.
Gordon will get a specially
crafted 2002 Indian Chief
motorcycle with a second. generation engine -:- the
company's first new engine
design in 50 years.
·
Indian
donated
two
motorcycles in !998 after
Jeff won his third Driver of
the Year Award. One was
auctioned off for $25,000
that went to the Jeff Gordon
Foundation and the other is
at the Hendrick Motorspor'ts
Museum.

Hlp: 401. Low: 101
·

NEW YORK .(AP) Investors collected profits
on Wall Street Tuesday, ever
aware of the uncertain
economy and questionable
accounting an,d taki~ no I
cq~nces ,,after two !lays of'.
si~ble gains . .
The stock market's sijp~
page wasn't surprising as
buyers had been lured to
stocks Friday and Monday
by bargain prices, not ·a
renewed faith in an economic turnaround.
The Dow Jones industrial
average closed down· 21.04,
or 0.2 ·percent, at 9,863.74,
having climbed 259.34 in
the previous two sessions.
The broader market was
also lower. The Nasdaq
composite index feU 12.45,
or 0.7 percent, io 1,834.21,
and the Standard &amp; Poor's
500 index declined 4.44, or
0.4 percent, to 1,107.50.

•

FROM THE PROS IS IN ...
WE'RE WAITING ON YOUR INPUT.

Golf DigeJI Listed
Tm: LEGISLATOR
al Capitol Hill as
among the best
new courses in
America.

OHIO
Pick 3: 8·4-4
Pick 4: 3-0~9-8

Gt~/f Jfaga::zi~e

Fn:.,umll'~vcr tlfa,;,,,_

BY TONY M. lEACH
TLEACH@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

· weii'IUesclay

OuR REPORT CARD

readers gave Tim
JUDGE at Capito)
Hill a 5 out of 5 rating. A Go/( tlft~gtz::iue ranked Grand
Nali~nal in Auburn/Opelika and Cambrian Ridge in
Greenville as among .the Top lOO Courses in America
A Go//Dr!JM named
the Trail as one of
the Top 60 Trips in
the woriJ. A Come
see for yourself why

Details, A2

:lnveston fare

"

CAPITOL MILL

Please see Plant. A3

LINCOLN DAY

~

..

conce rns.
DTE's production process
uses latex as a binding agent ·
that helps spur a chemical
co mp osi tion cha nge, said
Mark Cousino, director of
synfuels for DTE Energy Services. DTE is a subsidiary of
Detroit Edison.
Residents ·argued that with
little information ava ilabl e
about how the synth etic fuel's
components will mix with
other emissio ns. from Gavin,
EPA should delay action on
the -permit for at least another
month and get additional

.

..... .....

Bucktye 5: 17-19-24-30-34
Pick 3 d.y: 6·6·6
pick 4 d.y: 4-4-0-5
W.VA.

D•I!Y 3: H1·8
!J•IIy 4: 1.()-3·3
~sfi 25: 11-4·9-IQ-14·23

Index

GRAND NATOONAL
.AUIU~NION'LrKA,

•

A~eAMA

.'

Trail as
one of the Top 10
Trips in the World!

'

'

.

2 ledlon - 12 ..... ·

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics ·

:::inc Iistcd the

DearAbbY

Editorials

·

AS
B2-4 ·
. 85
AS
· A4

Movies
Obituaries

~

Sports
weather

Bl
A2

A3

voiley Publlslllns co..

PRESENTE.D TROPHIES -Jacinda Yonker, center, Meigs tAG coordinator, presented trophies
to Nick Kuhn, left, county winner,. and.'.Lindsey Buzzard, runner-up.
... ' .

Eastern StUdent nets
spelling bee crown

onset of his presidential term
and how he confronted
these ·challenge with steadfast determination.
·
"Upon entering offi&lt;-e,
lincoln was faced with
bringi ng toge ther a divided
nation, while at the same
time, trying to avoid a foreboding war," said Benjamin.
"E\!en though Lincoln had
to . take . some unpopular
stances to restore our coun try, he did so with honor,
integrity and character," she
·
said:
"Much like lincoln, President George W. Hush has
had to face a national crisis
during th e early days of his
term," added Benjamin.
"And just like Lin coln , 13ush
has di splayed the same characteristics of leadership
needed td bring th e nc&gt;tion

POMEROY Meigs
County Republi cans were
reminded of the similarities
between Abiaham lincoln
and George W. Bush during
the annual
Lincoln
Day Din-ner Tuesday night
ar Meigs
High
School.
State
Rep. Ann
Benjamin
Womer
Benjamin
addressed more than 320
Republicans at the dinner,
held in honor of Abraham
Lincoln, the first Republican
president of the United
States.
Worner Benjamin recalled
the adversity and hardships together in cimes of trouble.''
lincoln faced during the
Please see Lincoln, A3

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICHCMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

RACINE For Nick
Kuhn of Eastern Elementary
School, correct spelling of the
word "outrageous" ·won him
the tide of champion at the .
Meigs County spelling bee
Tuesday night.
Kuhn and the runner-up
Lindsey Buzzard of Southern
Elementary went four rounds
before . Lindsey misspelled
"myriad," Kuhn spelled it correedy and then went · on · to
spell "outrageous" for the win.
Nick, an eighth grader, is
the son of Tim and Chris
Kuhn. Lindsey, a sixth grader,
and runner-up in the spelling
competition last year, is the
daughter of Rick and Marcia
Buzzard.
· Judges for the contest were
Deryl Well, Eastern Local
· superintendent; Wendy Halar,
assistant superintendent of
Meigs Local; and JameS
Lawrence, superintendent of

,..... _

...,AJ

ALL WINNERS - These . students, winners in their
respective schools, competed In Tuesday's county
spelling bee . They are, from left, seate.d, Jufla John·
son, Meigs Middle S·chool (MMS); Taylor Russell,
Eastern Elementary; Nick Kuhn. Eastern; Lindsey
Buzzard, $outhern Elementary; Zach imboden, South·
ern, and Ashiee Teaford , Southern; and back, Ray
Sargent, Eastern; Chassidy Wills , Bradbury; Lilly
Jacks. Rutland; Zach Burns, Meigs Middle; Eric Zein·
er, Southern; Lucreshla Howard, Pomeroy; Jamie Bai ley, Salisbury; Megan Day, Meigs Middle; Steven
Hoaicraft, Harrisonville; and Sarah Wachter, Eastern .
(Charlene Hoeflich)

Annua . HHrl·

LUNCH WITH ELVIS - Elvis impersonator Dwight Icenhower of Pomeroy entertains members of the Me igs County
Chamber of Commerce during Its regular luncheon an Tuesday at Overbrook Nursing Center In Middleport. Besides
performing a number of Presley's greatest hits, Icenhower
spoke about his recent adventures In Las Vegas while competing, and winning third place, in the "World's Best Elvis"
contest. (Tony M. Leach)

r

opomorecl by 1M HMC Comm1111ily HIIOi1lr one/ Wei/,.,, DeporlmMI ancl HMC Cartliopv/rnonary Unils

Thursday, February 14, 2002 • 10 AM - 4 PM
HMC Education &amp; Conference Center

1.800.949.4444
ftJWIIJ.rtjplfrom

I·

Prescription Oxygen
1·800·346·0 115
\

·-'

CHESHIRE - Residents
upset at being what they call
"guinea pigs" for new coalburning technologies urged
Ohio Environmental Protection Agency representatives to
gather more information
about a proposed synthetic
fuel. facility at the· Gen. James
M. Gavin Power Plant before
granting a permit to the plant's
backers. ·
Officials with DTE Energy,
the Michigan firm looking to
.install the plant, assured residents it wants to work with
the community and answer its

1

·For Snyder, ev~n assistant coaches cost millionsi

In
the
recent l{etlrement
Supplement In your daily paper, it was
incorrectly printed that Prescription
Oxygen offers first month free service
to all oxygen patients.
The newspaper apologizes for any
inconvenience this may have caused.

-

I

Synfuel plant concems voiced

,._ CO,RECTION -

Rxo2

•

'

\

\

'

'

•'

•

10 AM· 12 Noon ancl1- 4 PM· FREE scREENINGS
Non·Fasting Cholesterol and Glucose,
Blood Pressure, Body Fat Analysis and more.
.12 Noon· 1 PM· Special Presentation by Nabil Fahmy. MD
1
.
Health information will be o~ hand as well

·.

will be

. For more

call

MEDIC A L CENTER

Discover the Holzer Difference
,.

www.holzer.org

446·5679.
I

'

I

I

•

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="462">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9907">
                <text>02. February</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="22758">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="22757">
              <text>February 12, 2002</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="476">
      <name>darst</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="275">
      <name>russell</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="698">
      <name>snyder</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
