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                  <text>Wedn11dliy, Feb. 27, 2002_ ·

www.mydllllysentlnel.com

hge B I• The O.lly Sentinel

•••ooa
•

PHILLIP
ALDER ·

c.· p.

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ACROSS

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THE BORN LOSER

~1KE. CLEMe~ !

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BIG NATE

PEANUTS
'nilS IS Ml(
ON

T~E

ltEPO~T

IT ALSO 61VES YOU c;tUA~TUiu..::

WIND...

TO WRilE ABOUT

~··

1 Hli.d
11 Lookl
1hugo
clolely
2 Btm and
23 Qo.gener·
Beer
25 Beklfy Hom 3 Bui'Mdond
211 TV MWI
looted

llluolon

f?!lnceM

What's inside

20 Thlalo- 41 Volley
Ule"
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21 Aclr1hlllnk)
Llncholler 44 Lightning

-laok

5 Cpl.'l

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GALLIPOLIS- Firstar Bank at the
Silver Bridge Plaza in Gallipolis was
the target of a robbery late Wednesday
morning.
Officers from the Gallipolis Police
Department responded to the bank at
II :49 a.m. and were informed by
employees that a white male had
entered the bank and demanded cash
from the two tellers on duty at the
time. The suspect escaped with an
undisclosed amount of money and was
last seen walking northbound on Ohio
7.
. The suspect was wea\.!_ng a dark-colored sweatshirt with a hood at the
time of the robbery. He is believed to
be anywhere fi-om 5-feet-9 inches to

on.r

·Deaths
Mary Lou Blake, 4S

Gene R. Rice, 79
Details, A3
-

Spotlight: H~lping the elde~y
CELEBRITY CIPHER .
Today~ clue:

'H~LZN

ZL

RCKR'L

VJBKLKMR

; . Hip: 50, Low: 101
:
Details, A2
•

HBSZNZMB

BVZRFHZEB
GFCM

•
•
·SOUTHSIDE, W.Va.
U:S. 35 near Southside,

KHBDZNK.'

SBMPBD

W.va., in Mason County
Was dosed in both directions
'il'tdnesday night after a colli&lt;ilon between two. ttactortiaileN~ and aVolvo resultea 'irfthe death of iruck driver Richard 'Clement, 61 , of
Mukwonago,Wis.
T~~ accident happened
n·e ar the Mason-Putnam
county line at 8:33p.m. The
driver of the other truck
was not hospitalized, nor
w.is the driver of the 1998
Volvo, James Catalan, 43, of
Shelby, N.C.
- Lois Clement, a passenger
and wife of Richard
Clements, was hospitalized
at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
This is the eighth fatality
of the year in Mason County and the fourth on U.S. 35.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'As only Now Yorkers know, II you •
can get through the twilight, you'll live through the nlghl." •
- Dorothy Parker.
:

T::!:t:~' S©'F-.~lA-~t-tts·

WOlD GAM I

- - - - - - - l~lt•~ ky CI,AY I. POUAN
Rearrange letters of
0 four
acromblad words

the

be·

low to fcrrn four tlm~le words.

T E0 NI N

I

WH A L S
E DR I E
1 1 1
I date a gentleman who is the
"::1;:
· ~
l;:;=.:;:~"':_,strong silent type. The only thing
r
V A N E L E . :~r~~~~~~~~dineout. we neve-r
Is

I&amp;

f-"'T,7:;-"T,-T,...;..
·

1e

"T,-"T,D'a-1
.

.

.

RF

FSBRRK

R K Y B.'
'Z·

ror

J equals L

Complata tka cnuckle quotod
by filling in the miulng words

L........L..-1---L-.L.-...1.-.1 you develop from step No. 3 below.

Plck3: 1-(J-2

IIIP 4: O.&lt;J-2-4
SUptrLotto: &amp;-19-20-21·3145

Bonus ..11: 49
Kicker: 4·8-2-9-8-9
Pftk 3 diJ: 2-6-8
Pick 4 diJ: 6-1-7-8

five dollars a day. He lilughed, ·sure, if your hobby is:
MUGGING.'

w.vA.

~·our

GEMINI (May 21-June 20)

som~thlng that smacks · of fa 7
voritism, and e-nd 1.1p hurting
one who is important to you.
Watch your actions.

crcllit, Y'\l' will do whatever it
takes to ~t't the ball mlling
and, iu the procc~s ; pi t·k up
n1 :my ~ems alun~ th(• way.
. I'I SCES (Feb. 211-M"rdt 211)
.;._ .Smm.· tillll'~ i(s whom we
knuw tl1a1 ~ct.~ us whlTe we
\\l:11H to ~t,, but . it'll be

-- Should yo u do somcthin~
foolish money-wi~c , il'~ ape

SC:Oili'IO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) -- l-lold your trump card

'rr_1 hl' :'1 lulu, s1.i your \J~~t 1'01
icy i~ to l~·owc fin:~ndnl matters
to another day. whl.'n yuu
11H1Y have- better luck.
CAN&lt;;ER (June -21-Jt!ly

as lnnl_!; as possible . T~ere is a

wm1'r wail ' ti1r L;~Jy Luck to

- nuke
BaSketball. Kentucky at VarxlerbiH

iCC!

thin!J;~ h:~ppcn .

To

stric:tly wh at rou knuw that
will bt• the lliOSt f.i~n ifi rant
f.1.t:tor iu a'lric\·ing · ~ucn·s~.
Knnw wht•rc 10 lqnk for ftl111 &lt;lll(l' :mll you'll lind k The
Ac.tn1-Gr:1ph M;Mhmakcr in stantly rcvl."als whirh ~igm 01rc
COil ,ltlllticaJiy flCTti..•t:t f1~T yt.lll ,
Mail $2 .75 to M.udHll&lt;~ker,

c/o th i.~ ncw~papcr. P.O. Unx
1-75K. Murr;~y Hill Station,
New York. NY 11!\S(t.
AlliES (Mmh 21-!lprii iiJ)

-- Although

)'0\1

like a buddy

h ;mgin~ otround rnost ()f thl·
time. this mi~ht irk you
shmdcl you find rhi~ pt·r~un to

bt· rnurt· of a hiq.dran..:t: than .1
supportn. Go it .tlonc .
TAURUS (Ap,;J 211- May
20) - Starl o tT small , instc·•lll
bitinp, niT more 'th.111 you t:an
dww . It might not bl· m ca~y

BY CHARLENE HOEFliCH
HOEFLICH@MVDAILVSENTINEL.COM

HOME 'DELIVERED ·MEALS - Belinda Wellington. nutrition director for the .Meigs Senior Center, loads a truck full of meals that will be delivered to needy seniors throughout the area. The
senior center will be holding special luncheon/bake sale, titled "March For Meals," on March
20 to raise money fOr its Home Dellveted Meal program. (Tony M. Leach)

l'

OHIO

to drop some of th~ work you
started. You could l(Ct overwhelmed.

8

22) -- Get your mind uff.

yourself ,and try tg be as coopcr:~t ivl'

with othcrs as pos~i­
ble. Any evidence of ~clf-ct'tl·

h·rcdncss will be met with dis-

d:iin.
LEO (July 23- Aug . 22) --

T:Isks or

n·~pomibilitit•s

will

. not g~t done on thei r own
. t~uwc r . You're going to have
to do tlu~m one way or anotht.•r. The longer yuu wait,
however, the more tht·v'H

, compound thcnuclvt·~-.
·
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22)
-- ln vcstiKate all a~ peels of all
cudt•avor before you rlunk
done any of your hard t:ash on
them . It's good to be cuthusiastic aho\lt things, but re;\lism
nmsl pn:!cedc thi~.
HllllA (S•p'- 23-0co. 23) -

- lt'~ very unlike you. yet you
r might ab~cnt~minctcdly J.o

lftdex
·

good chance that your oppo sition will try to wait you out
iu hopes of you making a silly
movt", and end up as the

joker.
SAGITT IIIli US (Nov. 23- . •
Dec . 21) -- An associate
might pledg:t: a fair share in a
•
co ll~ctive investment, but
when it come! time to deliver
''
she: or he may be nowhere 'to
be found. Get the ftmds up
front .
CAI' IU CORN (Dec. 22Jan . 19) ·- -There's a possibility th2ot you could be your
own wor~t enemy if you fail
to be cooperative when

•

2 Stdlona- 11 Pllps

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
DearAbby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

..

AS
8S-6
87

AS
A4
A3
A3
B1,2,4
A2

: ~ 2002 Ohio Valley Publhnlns co.

MEICS LoCAL SCHOOLS

Constmdion-·· work on middle
school ahead of schedule

a

SCRAM-I.ETS ANSWERS
Oxygen- Given- Rummy- Impugn - MUGGING
I asked the cab driver if it was possible to sightsee on

This man is suspected of robbing Rrstar Bank at the
Silver Bridge Plaza in Gallipolis on
Wednesday. (From bank surveillance
footage)

BANK BANDIT -

Progress of
grade school
still a ·major
concem'

4·,. -Weallier
.

by Luis Campos
Celebrity Clpller cryplogramo ort craatl&lt;llrom quotallona by lamous
people, past and present. Each tetter in the dphlr atanda
another.

Powerball: 1-2--6-19-45 (27)
iH. 2002

6-feet tall with dark hair and dirk eyes. matched the description of the bandit,
Police hav~ rd~ased a picture of the but later rel~ased him after confirming
suspect obtained from th~ bank's sur- thai he played no part in the theft_
Brandeberry said Wedne1day'! inciveillance camera.
"Anyone who believes they may dent is the fourth robbery of the year
have information which would help us to date in Gallipolis and caps what he
identity this suspect is asked to call the called "a hectic two weeks for the
plice department at 740- 446- 1313," police department."
Said. Brandeberry, "We have investiPolice Chief Roger Brandeberry said.
gated three armed robberies, two
The Silver Bridge Firstar branch was
deaths and dealt with a four-hour
also robbed in May of 2001 by a lone
standoff with an armed man. These
bandit.
. serious problen1s are very challenging
Gallipolis officers were asisted _at the for us anyway, but we still have to deal
scene by deputies from the Gallia with th~ accidents, reports and other
County Sheriff's Department and everyday calls."
agents from the Federal Bureau of
The Holiday Inn and Super 8 hotels
Investigation.
in Gallipolis were victimized by
Police officers detained a man who , thieves in January.

.'

Deily 4:9-1-7-3

In the vcar ah ead, vou

Lone·bandit hits Gallipolis bank
FROM STAFF REPORTS

o•nv 3: 4-4~5

Thunday, F~·b.

Hometown Newspaper

11 "Star Wora• 3t Opllcol

4 01-

' !'.;.

ba Zsa Gabor said,

---·

DOWN

22 Not buoy
by-product
24 Mike I
45 Lilli
dlclllon
47 Did glllt,
26
Pipe
·hlndle
oillnglly
33
turloy I
41 "Aunewoy
34 Elgle'e ·
7 Roll-cell IIIII 27 Ho-ye
IIIII
Bride"
CIIW
8 Sileo
35 Unvor·
pltchll
21Comlobook
49 Chow ,..;In :
nllhld
-t · Acti'HI
heroll
lflhlneer
36 Woahltond
Brln
'30 Corollr'o
50 Airport Info ltom
10 Nobokov
tune
51 VIIYOIV
36 Rtgord
heroine
31 Single
ourloco
40 Long heir 11 In a funk
37 Cuh-bock · 52 Home
41 Holr..lyllng 12 Antlblollc
llfnllhlng
11 Uohorld In
goo

New facet

,-------"T'-'"'"Ir"""-..,..-----..,..----n4J

11 " " " 17 Lalln f -'1
18

32 GlfUpport

Opening lead: ¥ Q

HOPE I CAN ~EMEMSE.~
AI.L TH' GOSSI~ JANE'(
""-- TOLD ME ! !

blrdo

21 Booby grond

"I never hated a man
c.jllOugh to give hint
his diamonds back."
Diamond.s -- the
gems, not , the suit -and bridge deals have
somethihg in common: facets. Sometimes, when writing
this column, I do not
have room tu mention one of a d~al's
facets. And the origi11:11 writer ignored an
important facet here.
Huw should the play
go in six clubs?
North-South did
well to avoid playing
in six diamonds, but
when South bid four
dubs, North assumed
that that continued a
genuine suit.
The author pointed
out that South had to
avoid two diamond
losers. Nunnally one
would lead low toward-the queen, planning, if it lost to
W ~.-·st's ace, to finesse
dummy's 10 on the
second round. However, West's overcall
marked him with the
diamond ace, which
affects matters. Dec
darer won trick one
with dummy's heart
ace. drew tru1npS,
cashed the heart king,
and ruffed a heart in
the dtmuny . Now he
knew that West had
begun with eight
rounded-suit cards.
Spades were more
likely to be 3-6 than
2-7, so "declarer tentatively credits West
with three spades"
and therefore two
diamonds.
South
cashed his spade win- ·
ners ending in hand,
played a diamond to
dummy's king, and
ducked a diamond on
.th~ way back, bringing down the ace and
making the contract.
Well played, but
why didn 't West play
his spade queen on
the second ro11nd of
the suit, tr~ing to
look like a man with
a doubleton? This.
f.1cet to the defense
might have misled declarer · into thinking
West had begun with
three diamonds after
all.

Melp County"s

58 WM-footec:l

15 Rlnllle

time

t\11 pall

Puo

BARNEY

sa c-

hllllntl

12Biubll
53-Yodt
13 .... oll1111
·14.,.,_
SSV

• KIt I 7 J
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I~

42 c-paur

ltraYinllly
1 Pltl
41 l.oM hair
lllldwlci1H 41 ~
• loop aplt'e
lauch
11 Coulln al .. Thrulln

=r:r." J
A i.l
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MAC hoops: Rockets run past Bobcats, 81

NEA Crossword Puzzle

'

Home meaP1oprogram plans ·
fund-raising · · · for March
Luncheon/bake
·sale planned .
for March 20 ·
Bv TONY M. LEAcH
TLEACH@MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

POMEROY - In an effort
· to .help cutu the problem of
lo cal senior citizens going
hungry, as well as garner support for its Home Delivered
Meal program, the Meigs
Senior Center will be collecting funds through donations
and a special luncheon/bake
sale.

to
Belinda
Wellingtdi1, nu\rition director
at the , ~ior center, a luncheo~fbake sale, titled "March
For Meals:· will be held on
March 20:':'Aom 10 a:m_ until
2 p.m., tJiitollect money for
the center'!~ nutrition program
and to purc)l~se items for their
home delivered meals.
"We currently have three
trucks that deliver around 200
meals per.. day, Monday
through Friday, with each
truck traveling over 500 miles
a week," said Wellington.
"There is a definite demand
in our area for home delivered

meals," add~d Wellington.
HThe number seems to
increase every day and money
collected
at
our
luncheon/ bake sale will help
assure that no senior goes to
bed hungry."
The menu for the special
luncheon, which will also f~a­
tur~ a live radio broadcast, will
include hot dogs with sauce,
baked beans, macaroni salad,
chips, pie and soda.
In a show of support, students in the Eastern Local
School District have agreed to,
collect money for th e Home
Delivered Meal program.

POMEROY -While progress at the new Meigs Elementary School is still a "major concern," constru ction
work on the new Meigs Middle School is about two
months ahead of schedule, Superintendent William 'Buckley
reported to the Meigs Local Board of Educa tion Wednesday
night.
Buckley said the middle school project is moving along
nicely and that rooms are beginning to take shape in the
·
structure. He said that within the next
couple of weeks. the contractor will
begin putting on the roof.
As .for the elementary school, the
superintendent reported on problems.
"One wall fell ove r, it was re placed,
turned out not to be squared, had to be
torn down, and now is ready to be· put
back up," said Buckley in desc ribing what
1...---'-----' is happening at the site.
Buckley
He did report that things are better
since a new project ·supervisor has come
onto the job. The east wing is stoned up, the walls are laid
and th e workers are ready to pour concrete when the
weather is right. Masonry work is also taking place on the
west end, Buckley reported.
According to th e superintendent, a preliminary report on
the walls which were X-rayed for swbility indicated that the
walls will be okay after some corrections are made.
As for the high school renovation, Buckley said the work
is ahead of schedule and should be completed by th~ end of
summer.
Plans call for the building to be "turned over" to the contractors afte r M emorial Day. At that time, asbestos w ill be
removed in the cafeteria area and other lower level rooms
yet to be re'modeled, and the main entrance will be sealed
off so that work can begin in the from lobby and office area.
Buckley said the school office will be moved to the Salisbury building for the summer. The goal is to have the work
completed in August, so that new furnishings and ·equipment can be moved in prior to the tit]Je school starts.
H e also reported that tentative plans call for two of the
modular classrooms to be removed at the end of t.he. school
year, which could save the district about $30,000.
Buckley discussed staffing, noting that when the new
buildings open, the district will be going from eight teach-

Pluse -

Melp, Al

Senior Oulreach
"Reaching Out to Meet Senior NE:eds"

net&gt;ded. Holding out for a

better dL·al nl:lY yield you a

Reassuring Phone Calls and Home Visits
Prescription Reminders • Loan Library

bi~ . f.1t zero.

AQUARIUS Q"n - 20-Feb.
I 9) -- Indifference or procra5ti1l:Jtion may cause yo u to f.1il
to recognize opportunities
that co\dd be bcucfh:inl to
your general \Velfarc. Uc :dt&gt;rt
~nd reaJy to act.

For
. more information, please. call · ·

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

www .holzer.org

(740) 446-9560.
I.

•

~-----------.......------·------.,.--------':~-----

�'

..
PageAl

The Daily Sentinel

lhiii'SUy. FebruMy 21. 20Q2

Tobacco fund could help balance budget

Ohio weather
Friday, March 1

I Tolodo 111'1.18' I

I Mlnolltld Izoot40' I •

r

•ICoknnbul l21 '/43' I

W. VA.

KY.

• 2002 AccuWeather. lne.

0 ~ 6},~~-·

Sutlft; Pl. Cloudy

~

Showtfs T·storms

Rail

Flurrll!l

Snow

•
lea '

A bit warmer in area Friday
.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Extended forecast:

War mer southerly breezes
will bring the region some
brief rel ief from the Wlntery
weather o n Fri day, the
Natio nal Weath er Service said.
Skies will be partly clo udy
and high temperatures will
·ncar 50.
R ain becomin g mixed with
snow is forecast for Saturday,
turn ing to snow Saturday
mght.
Overn ight lows will be in
the 20s and daytime highs in
the 30s.
Sunset tonight will be at
6:22, an d sunrise on Friday is
at 7:05 a.m.

Saturday.. .Showers. Highs in
the lower 50s. Chance of rain
90 percent.
Saturday
night...Mostly
cloudy with a chance of •
showers in the evening, then a
chance of snow showers late.
No
snow
accumulation
expected. Lpws in the lower
30s. Chance of precipitation
50 percent. .
Sunday... Mostly
cloudy
with a chance of snow showers. No snow accumulation
.expected. Colder. Daytime
temperatures steady in the
lower 30s.
Monday... A chance of snow
during the day, otherwise.
partly cloudy. Continued cold.
Lows in the mid 20s and highs
in the mid 30s.
Tuesday.. .A chance of snow
or rain showers during the
day, otherwise partly cloudy.
Lows in the mid 20s and highs
in the lower 40s.
Wednesday... Mostly clear.
Lows in the upper 20s and
highs in the upper 40s.

Weather forecast:
Tonight ... Mostly
clear.
Lows 15 to 20. Light south
winds.
Friday...Mostly sunny. Highs
near 50. South winds 5 to 10
mph.
Friday night ... Part!y cloudy.
A chance of rain showers after
midnig ht. Low s in the mid
30s. C hance of ra in 40 perern£.

Deal would place cap
on college tuition
.

COLUMBUS (AP) - The
deal between public universiti es and Gov. Bob Taft to limit
tu ition in creases for o ne year
·might stir up support for reinstati ng a permane nt fee cap,
said lawmakers who support a
cap.
" If we lea rned anything
from all this, it was a mistake
to lift the m ," Sen . Kevin
. Coughlin said Wednesday qf
tuition hi ke limits the state
imposed un til last year.
T he Legislature eliminated
· the ,·ap afte r re fu sing
i ncn~J.,l' r w h1gher ~d u ca tion
budget.
Several sc hooh then raised
t u it1011 ,Jt nli dyear, .and two
sa id thcv were. considering
ch.1rgiug cer t:1 ir6 groups of
students, such .1s fi rst-year studen ts, !Ilore than others in the
fall .
Taft then threatened to push
law makers to reinstate the cap.
On T11 csday the _ governor
t "'
ln tcr- l,J niver sity
" "' up o f presithe 1J state-sup11( 1 tt'c\
uni ve rsiti es,
a '' gtl ntlc nun 's
.1
lfl
•'t p lllCfCJ SCS
l ·
f~)r current
stud
t 111comin g stu-

to

J,•n~ t

II

I"

~
F

{,c hoo ls could

Wl)'',.
, (,

them lo -.how
hic h ' dt
1

1 )'&gt; ·

iu~..

ck.d c oveTs on ly the
2002-2003 sc ho o l year.
Co ug hli n,. a Re publican
from C uyah oga Falls who
spo nsored a bill in the Senate

II

,

Taft pushes for more highway funds
WASHiNGTON (AP) Ohio Gov. Bob Taft said
Wednesday it's critical that
Congress restore the $234
million for highway construction that the state would lose
next year under President
Bush's proposed budget.
"Such a cut would force us
to delay much ne eded new
construction and would further dampen our economy;•
Taft said.
Taft, who is in Washington
this week for a National Governors Association meeting,
took his case Wednesday to 13
members of Ohio's congressionaldelegation.
He said the governors are
urging Congress and President
Bush to approve additional
highway funds for states this
year in order to avoid disrupting existing construction
plans, budgets and contracts.
In Ohio, 17 major projects
could be affected by highway
funding cuts, said Brian Cunningham, a spokesman for the
state Department of Transportation.
Most would expand existing
state routes and interstates,
such as a $42 million project
to improve the interchange of
Interstates 70 and 75 north of
Dayton and a S39 million j ob
to widen Ohio 8, which runs

from Akron to Cleveland.
Bush's budget plan fqr 2003,
which start' O ct. 1, provides
S22.6 billion for the Federal
Highway
Administration,
down sharply from $32 .1 billion this · year. States would
receive $8 .5 billion less next
year than thi s year.
Legislatio n from the H&lt;luse
and Senate transportation
committees that would restore
ab out hal~ of the cuts, or $4.4

billion, has attracted broad
support in Congress, largely
because it would benefit every
state and there is an $18 billion
surplus in the federal highway
trust fund.
"That would be a huge
improvement for the state, but
we still have scm~ projects that
will suffer even under that
outcome," Taft s:iid.
Ojrio received $960 million
for highway projects this year.

The state would get 24 percent Jess, or $726 million,
under Bush's proposed budget.
It would get about $867 million under the proposed
restoration bill.
Ohio's
transportation
department has an annual
budget of $2.35 billion, Cunningham said.
It is estimated that $1 billion
spent on highways creates
40,000 jobs.

POMEWY .- A number
• of cases were recendy
processed by Meigs County
Court Judge Steven L. Story.
Those fined were: Ricky 0.
Colburn, Pomeroy, $25 and
costs, one year probation,
domestic violence; Audrey
Bowling, Bidwell, $250 and
costs, three days jail swpended,
-one year probation, wrongfUl
entrustment; Ricky D. Wibon,
Syracuse, $50 and costs, drug
· paraphernalia, $50 and costs,
. possession;, Rii:har:d L. Barker,
'Rutland, costs only, 10 days jail
suspended, one year probation,
· restraining order, disorderly
conduct; Brenda L. Lemley,
Portland, $20 and costs, no registration; Robert F. Lawson,
Reedsville, $30 and costs, speed;
Michael K. Harrison, Middle.. port, S100 and costs, twQ yeats
probation, reckless operation, 10
days jail swpended to three, two
yean probation, restitution,
·theft, $25 and costs, two yean
-probation, criminal trespass, $25
·and costs, left of center; Sandra
K. Young, Rutland, $30 and
costs, speed; Jef!i:ey C. Wicker. sham, Pomeroy, $30 and costs,
·speed; Raymond E. Proffitt,
· Racine, $30 and costs, speed;
Bridget ]. Heldreth, Pomeroy,
$30 and costs, speed; Jefli:ey J.
' Cowdery, Reedsville, $20 and
.. costs, disobey traflic sign; Alek, sander V: -Medyanikov, Erie, Pa.,
$30 and costs, seat belt;Thieu L.
Thi, Solon, $30 and costs, seat
belt; Jessica L. Nance, Racine,
$30 and costs, seat belt; Jeanne
' Mulligan, Canton, $30 and
: ~osts, speed; Mark S. Lawson,
Shade, $30 and costs, speed;
j3ryce W. Bond, Syracuse, $20
and costs, failure to yield.
' .. Julie F. Elliott, Paden City.
W.va .• $30 and costs, ~eat belt;
_Richard D. Gilkey, Middleport,
$30 and costs, seat belt, $20 and
.. costs, expired registration;
Tiffany D. Richmond, Rutland,
' $20 and costs, failure to yield;
Linda]. Smeck, Racine, $30 and
costs, speed; Amber N . Snow' den, Rutland, $30 and costs,
·speed; Arica N. Blackwell, Rutland, $30 and costs, speed; Sher.• ri Hart, Vinton, $30 and costs,
; speed; Walter E. Randolph,
.. Columbus, $30 and costs, speed;
:: Andrew E. Davis, Pomeroy; $20
· iind costs, seat belt; Elmer B..
: Parsons lll, Syracuse, $30 and
:costs, Speed; Donald L. Neai,Jr.,
·: Langsville, $345 and costs, over:: toad; Robert]. Manhall, Mason,
&gt;W.Va., $30 and costs, seat belt;
: Stewart M. Shoemaker, Oak
: Hill, $20 and costs, failure to
·control; Carrie D. Holter, Long
:Bottom, $30 and costs, speed;
:Michael L. Duncan, Middleport, $30 and costs, speed; Timpthy M. Fowler, Ripley, W.Va.,
$30 and costs, seat belt; Alan L.
Podson, Middleport,' $25 and
· costs, spotlighting; Patrick
Snider, Racine, $100 and costs,
: ~ne swpended to $25 and costs,

'.

LOCAL STOCKS
" l\EP- 43.43
·: Arch Coal-18.10
P,kzo- 44.67
AmTach/SBC- 37.80
.. Ashland Inc. - 44.44
.. AT&amp;T -15.45
:: Bank One- 35.65
" BLI-t2.74
:: Bob Evana - 28.45
·· llorgWamer - 61.23
:. Champion - 3
; Charming Shops- 6.91
:: l::ltv Holding -t5.49

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to be accurate. If you know of an
error In a story, call the newarocm
at (740) 992·2156.

New• Department•
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Mary Lou Blake
GALLIPOLIS - Mary Lou Blake, 45, Gallipolis, died Tuesday, Feb. 26, 2002, at her residence.
Born Jan. 24, 1957, in Point Pleasant, W.Va., daughter of
Abraham E.Thornton, who preceded her in death on Oct. 24,
!998, and Mary Jane Thornton of Gallipolis, she was a homemaker.
She was also preceded in death by a sister, Rebecca Chapman; and a ·brother, George Thornton.
Surviving in addition to her mother are two sons, Do novan
L. (Robin) Blake of Gallipolis, and Dale. Blake of Crown City;
a daughter, Crystal Kimberling of Leon, W.Va.; three grandchildren; three sisters, Helen Cox of Gallipolis, Darlene Thornton of Pomeroy, and Linda Willet of Ashton, W.Va.; and two
brother.;, Carl"Curly"Thornton and James Thornton, both of
Gallipolis.
'
Services w · e 1 p.m . Saturday m Wilcoxen Funeral Home,
Point Pleasant, ' a., with the Rev. Jrmmy Thornton officiating. Burial will be 1 ine Grove Cemetery,-Leon. Friends may
call at the funeral me on Saturday from I 0 a.m . until the
time of services.

Gene Rice
MIDDLEPORT - Gene Russell Rice, 79, St. Petersburg,
Fla., formerly of Middleport, died Saturday, Feb. 23, 2002, at
Largo Medical Center in Largo, Fla.
He was born Aug. 5, 1922 in Meigs County, son of the late
Russell and Ora Nuckles Rice. He was formerly employed as
an ironworker with Charleston Local 301, and was a veteran of
the U.S. Army during World War II.
He was a member of Feeney-Bennett Post 128, American
Legion, Middlep \&gt;rt, Masonic Lodge 363, Middleport, and
Scottish Rite Valley of Columbus. He was a member of the
First Baptist Church of Middleport.
Surviving are his wife, Enda Marie Kapple Rice of St. Petersburg; his children, Doris M. and Dennis Walburn of Beverly,
and David R. and Sharon Rice, Robert C. and Rebecca Rice
and Debra K. and William Chancey, all of St. Petersburg; 11
grandchildren, 12 great- grandchildren and eight step-greatgrandchildren; and several nieces and nephews.
He was also preceded in death by his brothers, Gerald and
Cecil Rice.
Services ·will be 11 a.m. Saturday in Fisher Funeral Home,
Middleport, with the Rev. Mark Morrow officiating. Burial
will be in Gravel Hill Cemetery. Military se rvices will be conducted by Feeney-Bennett Post.
Friends may call at the funeral home o n Friday from 6-9
p.m. at Fisher Funeral Home in M iddleport. Maso ni c services
will be conducted at. 8:30 p.m. on Friday.
Memorial contributions may be made to American Diabetes
Association, 1221-A Ohio Ave., PO. Box IllS, Dunbar, W.Va .
25064, or Ohio Masonic Home, 5 Masonic Drive, Springfield,
Ohio 45504.
·

Meip
from PapAl
· en per grade level to six. He
said there will be some other
positions to be filled , but that
there will some reduction· in
staff.
The
superintendent
noted that. he has met with
teachers who have "legiti~
mate concerns" about their
employment which. need to
be addressed; and he asked
for input. As for staff devel-·
opment prior to then,
Buckley said he plans to
put four days into the
2002-03 calendar year for
that.
In other business the
board took action as. follows:
• approved the revised
permanent appropriations
for the 2001-02 fiscal years
the
amount
of
'in
$43,728,015;
• approved the "donation" of balances of the
Class of 2000 and 2001 in
the amounts of $324.86
and $80.03 respectively to

I

..

the class of 2002 to help
with graduation expenses
as requested by Celia R.
M 'c Coy,
former
sentor
advisor;
• hired Chri s Neece,
Steve Shull and Rodney
Walker as sub stitute custodial/maintenan ce workers;
•
approved overnight
field trips by the' Meigs
Middle School, May 7 and
8, and Pomeroy Elemen'·tary School, May 28 and
30.
n approved disability
retirement for Leota Grace
Chaney, and family medical
leave for Janet Hoffman;
• and voted to approve a
contract with the University of Rio Grande for
placement of teacher candidate&gt; into the schools for
field experience and student teaching effective
immediately.
Attending were Mark E.
Rhonemus, treasurer, who
gave financial reports; and
board members Roger
Abbott,
Norman
Humphreys, Ron Logan,
Scott Walton and John
Hood.

CARPET SALE!

at O'Bleness Memorial Hospital. The meeting, whi ch will
include sharing as well as a
video, "Community Involvement for Parkinson's;· will be
held in O'Bleness' basement·
conference room B- 10.
Information is available
from Dee Tharp, at 753- 1 6~8.

· PORTLAND - Kaite D.
Sayre, 16, 31085 Mitchell
Road, Racine, was cited for
assured clear distance by the
Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
Highway Patrol following a
two-vehicle accident Wednesday on Ohio 124.
Troopers said Sayre was
eastbound in Leban6 n Township at 3:15 p.m . when she
was unable to stop in time
and . struck- the rear of a car
driven by Harold P Guthrie,
81, Toledo.
Guthrie had stopped for
traffic ahead, the report said.
Both vehicles were ·slightly
damaged.
.
. Tf9opers cited Charles W.
Green, 49, Letart, W.Va., for
failure to control in a one-car
accident later Wednesday orl'
County Road 17 (Cotterill)
near Harrisonville.
Details on the 9 p.m. accident were unavailable before
presstime today.

.6

EMS runs
POMEROY ,
Units of
the Meigs Emergency Service
answered three calls for assistance on Wednesday. Units
responded as follows :
CENTRAL DISPATCH
2:02 p.m., Picospec t Hill,
Ronald Denny, Holzer Medical Center;
7:14p.m., Sycamore Street,
Clair Swan, HMC.
POMEROY
. 2:21 p.m., Hilltop Road ,
Deborah M cCray, HMC.

Announce
schedule

LONG BOTTOM ·
Unity Singers will perform at
Faith Full Gospel Church in
Long Bottom on March 8 at 7
p.m.; Cana anvill e United
Methodist Church at 7 p.m.
on March 10; Mount Hermon United Brethre n in
Pomeroy, 7 p.m. on March 17;
Kanawha United M ethodist
Church in Parkersburg, W.Va .,
on March 24 at 7 p.m .; ·o ak
Grove Wesleyan
United
Methodist, N elsonville, 7 p.m .
on April 7; Belpre Heights
United Methodist, 7 p.m. o n ·
April 14; To rch Baptist at 6
p.m. o n April 21 ; Little Hocking
United
Methodist
Church, 7 p.m . on_April 28;
and
· White's
Chapel,
Coolville, 7 p.m. on May S..

Fire workshop
set

REYNOLDSBURG - A
Grants Assistance Workshop
for Ohio's Fire Service will
be h eld March 16 from 8:30
a. m . to 5 p. m.
The work sho p w ill take
place at th e O hi o Fi re
Acad emy located at 8895 E .
Moin St. in R ey n olds bu rg.
POMEROY
M eigs
The purpose o f thi s
High School Band Boosters wo rkshop is to provid e
will meet o n March 4 at 6:30 informatio n o n av ai la ble
p.m . at the high school band grants and requ ireJ:nents, the
room . Plans for upcoming basics of grant wr itin g with
spring fund - rai sers will be h111t s
from
suc cess ful
discussed. All band parents are d e pa r tm e nts , and u se fu l
encouraged to attend.
re sources and so urces of
information .
Upon comple ting the
wo rkshop, parti cipants will
be able to apply these skill s
•
fo r deve lopin g th eir own
g rant p ro posal s.
SYRACUSE Sutto n
A tour of the O hio Fire
Township Board of Trustees Academy/ Training G rou nd s
have organized for 2002.
will also be gi ve n to view
.Roy VanMeter was elected outdo o r equipment dispresident and Delbert Smith plays. If your department
vice
president Kenneth · has a pi ece of federal excess
Guinther is the third trustee. equipment that has been
Regular monthly meetings · conve rted or fi!Odified for
will be held on the first Mon-. use , bring it to share . .
day of each month at 7,30
Information ·about bringp.m. at Syracuse Village Hall.
ing equipment to display is
available by co ntac ting
Nathan Kirk, O DNR-Division of Forestry, at 614265-6711.
The cost is $20 per perPOMEROY - Applicason, which includes lunch.
tions for garden seeds are
The cost increases to $25 ·
being taken at the Meigs
per person after March 6.
Cooperative Parish until
March 15.Applications can be
picked up at the Parish Shop
in Pomeroy or at the Cooperative Parish offic.e on Condor
Street.

Boosters meet

Syracuse
trustees
orgamze

Accepting
applications

Group meets
ATHENS
Athens
Parkinson's Support Group

~b

.... 'II" I'll' N

Sill '8" Per Yd

lllo...wk
VimyI Floori ng Ellllfill
Laminate Wood
lA Stocl '5" Per Yard
II SliCk: 'l"Per R

(UIPI 21MIO)
Ohio Yllloy Publlohlng Co•
Publl1htd mry afternoon. Mondoy
lhro,.gh· Friday, 111 Court St., .
Pom.,oy,
Ol'lio.
Second·clas•

polllgt pold ot Pomeroy.

Momblr: Tho AIIOOiatod Prell and
tho Ohio New-r Auoclotlon.
Poetm..Wr: Send addreaa correcHono to The Dally Sentinel, 111 Court
St., Pomeroy, Ohio 457Bi.

DEATH AIID TAXES· Wm ·I

LET DANTAX LIGHTEN

Sub1crlptlon rate1

YOUR

By · · - "' mol« ones2
One month
$8.70
Ono )9"'
S104
Dilly
50 COnti
SubOOrlbtrl not doolnrt(lto PlY 1111

·COIPUTEIIIEI RETURNS ANI ElECTRONIC FiliNG
Will IEFUIIDS Ill AMmEI OF DAYS OR HOURS
DEPENDING ON TIE CHOICES YOU MAlE

carrier may rerrit In advance direct to
Till Dolly Sentlnol. Crod~ will bt given
earner oocl1-. No lubtcrlptlon by
m~ll permitted In areal where home

carrier eervloe It l~tlll!lble .

INCOME: Tlll-V DANTAX

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52 Weeki

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(740)
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..

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USB~20.85

will meet March 12 at 2 p.m.

Drivers ticketed

The Daily Sentinel

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Manx other •
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Premier- 6,56
Rockwell- t9.80
Rocky Boots- 6.92
Gannett- 78.13
General Electric- 3!1.75 RD Sheil- 51.41
Seara-62.90
GKNLY-3.80
Hatley Davidson- 50.70 Shonay'a - .3&lt;4
WaH'.!art- 62.25
Kmart-1.14
W111dy'1 - 30.68
Kroger - 22.03
Worthington -14.99
LAnds End - 49.80
Daly stock rapot11 ara
Ltd. -18.29
the 4 J.m. cloalng
NSC-23.12
Oak Hll Fl'tanclll- 19.14 quolea the pravloua
day's transa011ons, proOVB-23.86
vided by Smith Partners
BBT-3!1.86
at Adveat .Inc. of Gal·
Peoples- 20.15
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Popslco - 50.62

Federal Mogul- .96

LOCAL BRIEFS

•

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CORNER S£COND1AND GIIAPE. GALLIPOLIS 446-2842
91 MILL STRE£!. MIDDLEPORT 992-6250 (on the "T'j

one year probation, domestic
violence;
Geneva
Wise,
Cheshimn $850 and Costs, 10
days jail suspended to three, &amp;ix
month license suspension, two
yean probation, jail and $500
suspended upon completion of
RTP School, driving under the
inlluence; Joanne E. For:d, Gallipolis, $30 and cosll, speed; Jill
M . Cremeans, Atheru, S30 and
COSts, speed.
DaVid N. Sample, Kinata, $30
and costs, speed; Andrea G.
Dixon, Albany, $30 and costs,
speed; Michael F. Davis, Centralia, R.I., $30 and costs, speed;
Melissa L. Young, Pomeroy, $30
and costs, speed; Eugene Drabick, Cleveland, $50 and costs,
speed; Brenda L. Bartimus,
Reedsville, $20 and costs, stop
sign; - Joshua
Whitlock,
Wapakoneta, $25 ~d costs on
each count, 10 days jail suspended, two yean probation, six
counts passing bad checks; James
R , Blackwell, Racine, costs only,
six monihs jail suspended to 12
days, siJ!: months of in-house
rehab, two yean probation,
domestic violence; Harry D.
Leonard, Middleport, $100 and
costs, fotfeiture, reckless operation, costs only. 90 days jail suspended, one year probation, telephone harassment; Brandi N.
Meadows, Middleport, $30 and
costs, seat belt; Howard W
Thonw,Jr., Newark, $100 and
costs, reckless operation, costs
only. left of center; Robert V:
Knapp, West Columbia, W.Va.,
$20 and costs, failure to yield to
a stop sign; Michael J. Letson,
Reedsville, $100 and costs on
each count, 10 days jail suspended to three, one year probation,
restraining order, two counts
domestic violence; Michael S,
Henry, Portland, $200 and costs,
10 days jails suspended to three,
one year probation, restraining
order, domestic violence; Kari E .
Justus, Vinton, costs only. three
days jail suspended, one eyar
probation, restraining order, telephone harassement.
Dee.Anna E. Swarty, Pomeroy,
$30 and costs, speed; Robert E.
Bissell, Pomeroy, $45 and costs,
seat belt, $30 and costs, speed;
Eric A. Nichols, Chillicothe,
$30 and costs, speed; Susan Retzloff, Pomeroy. costs only,
wrongful entrustment; Mary A.
Searles, Pomeroy, $25 and costs,
three days jail suspended, one
year probation, restitution, passing bad checks; Charlotte M.
Hunt, Coolville, $30 and costs,
seat belt; Clara Pullins,.$200 and
costs, three days jail suspended,
one year probation, no operators license; Teresa R. Rathburn, Langsville, $21 and
costs, speed, $30 and costs,
seat belt, $25 and costs, three
days jail suspended, one year
probation, restitution, passing
bad checks; Melissa Davis,
Pomeroy, $30 and costs,
speed.
•

"- - - - - - - - - - - - - -

" PG- 14.3&lt;4
:DuPont- 47.10

~ine :Jewefry

••
t

•

The Dally sentinel • Page A 3

·courity Court Notebook

,. Col-23.23

clmgc :11\ .ld•lit irma l $300 and
Ohio 'LH&lt; · 'u uld be able to
add"" S475.
" M y prefere nce is 'to gi ve ~
t·lcx ibiltty to the un iversities ,"
Taft s.tid Wcd nesdav w hil e
mcc tinH . wi th governo rs in . ~
Wa shi ngto n, D.C. "Each one is ~­
difTcront , and a cap affects diffc n·llt universities in different
1

the pain, but we'd like to see some proportion&gt;lity;' said Don Branson. "Taking
In addition to using the tobacco
100 percent from us, zero percent fiOJ11
fanners' money- about $32
others
doesn't seem to be very eq'!imillion over the next two years rable."
.
Taft pro~ taking about
Pat "Raines , the foundation's vi~e
$224 mill10n from the Tobacco
chairman and a tobacco grower in
Use Pievention and Cessation
southern Ohio, said the money comif!g
Trust Fund, aimed at reducing
from the prpgram is spent over and over
smoking. particularly among
again in rural communities.
.
children and minorities.
"The loss of revenue in ~ -mununities
like ours is like the loss of jobs in a cit¥,"
In De.:ember, Taft sign ed a bill tapping said Raines, 55, who grows 38 acres i&gt;f
about $260 million in tobacco money to · burley tobacco in Seaman in . Adams
fix the deficit
County. Raines also grows corn and spyO n Wedn esday, Taft's budget director beans and raises cattle.
,
Tom JohHson presented details of that
To date, the foundation has develop~d
bill to the Senate Finance Committee.
four pilot programs for helping farmet;S.
In addition to using the tobacco fa~m- The most established program, with: a
ers' mo ney, Taft proposes taking about $2.7 million budget this year, provi~s
$234 million from the Tobacco Use Pre- grants to farmers trying to upgrade their
vention and Cessation Trust Fund, aimed corrals, gates, fences and other structures
at reducing smoking, particularly among used in raising livestock.
'
childre n and minorities.
Earlier this week, the Burley Tobacco
Taft also proposed taking about $1.9 . Growers Cooperative Association, which
million from a third fund that provides represents growers in Ohio, Indiana,
money for public health programs. That Kentucky, Missouri and West Virginia,
would leave the Public Health Priorities asked Taft to support the foundatio 11's
Trust Fund with about $6 million.
work.
.
Se ttlement money to be spent on eduThe fund's economic investment "has
cation and research was not cut.
helped these grower.; ' to become less
The tobacco farmers ' fund re ceived dependent on a crop that has an uncerabout $36 million over the last two rain future," Danny McKinney, the assoyears. But the executive director of the ciation's executive director, said in a letfoundation overseeing the farmers' ter Monday. "We strongly encourage you
money said' he was disappointed by the and the Ohio General Assembly to CO!lplan for the next two years.
tinue your investment in southern Ohjo
'' We're willing to share a P,Ortion of agriculture."

to permanently cap tuition
hikes, said Taft's compromise
will make it difficult to gain
support to get a permanent
cap in place this year but sets
the stage for a cap to be reimposed next year.
.
Senate President Richard
Finan,' a Republican from
Evendale, opposes a cap but
must leave the Legislature
next year because of term limits. He said there is not support in the Senate for a tuition
cap in any form ..
~,~-:--:-:---~

. , It,""

dL' I.i

\

COLUMBUS (AP) - To balance the
state budget, Gov. Bob Taft has proposed
using all of the mo ney - about $32 million over the next two years - from a
fund that helps tobacco farm ers hurt by
slowing production.
The proposal is part of Taft's plan ,
....----, introduced 'Wedn esday, fo r how to spend
Ohio's share next year
and in 2004 of the
1998 national settlem e nt with th ajor
tobacco C01npanies.
Ohio is receivin g
about $10 billion over
-""'-_, 25 years from the setTaft
dement
The state previo usly
approved a spending plan for 2001 and
2002.
Taft said the money. from the Southern Ohio Agri cultural and Community
Development Trust Fund is needed to
help patch a $1. 5 billion budget defi cit
The proposal upset Doug Whi te, the
No. 2 Republican in the GOP-controlled Senate. White, a southern Ohio
farmer who still grows two ac res of burley tobacco, said the fund was an easy
target because of the negative image of
tobac co farm ers.
He said he doubts much can be done
to restore the funding.
"We're the dead dog laying in the
Pniddle of the road," White said Wedn es-.
day. " There are very few who care
beyond a. certain level:'

www.mydallyHntlnel.com

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The Daily Sentin~l

1hund11J. Februery 21, 2002
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The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St., P~, Ohio
740-M2·2111 • Fax: 740 111-1117
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Ohio Valley Publlehlng Co.

:r:.KNOW, .. CHEW YOUR

FOO~ DON'T RUN WITH
SCISSOR$, DON'T PLAY IN
THE STREeT... BUT WHAT
IF I1t1 NOT PLANNING ON

BEC0MIN6 PRESIDENT?

Den Dlc!WI'IOn
Publlther

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NATIONAL VIEW

Grief
Powell shouldn Jt take heat for
promoting responsible behavior
• The Akron Beacon Journal: Colin· PaweD needs no one
to defend him, but it's a shame that he should catth grief for
giving sensible advice to an audience that could use it.
During a question-and-answer session last week on MTV
with live feeds from several cities around the world, a young
Catholic woman speaking from Milan, Italy, asked the secretary .
of state about the Catholic Church and its strictures against
condoms. Powell gave what was a well-considered opinion.
He paid respect to the church and the abstinence-only policy.
.
He then added that he supports the use of condoms and
encourages young adults to protect themselves if they are sexual! y active. ·
Oh, the shock of it.
Some in the conservative wing of the Republican Party were
outraged. .
Orie critic claimed the response was "reckleu and irresponsible," a slap in the face of the president's supporten.
Too bad.
Powell's concern was not, nor should it be on thil iuue, with
the president's supporters.
· · .
He knows only too well the devastation sexually transmitted
diseases cause around the world.
He knows as well that the people most at risk are the MTV
demographic group, young people from teens through the
early 30s.
His concern is properly with them.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

..
K 0 N DR A C KE' S' V IE W

Pick'ering battle highlights liberals at their worst
It's time forliberal groups such as People for .the American Way and the
NAACP to quit using ~haracter assassination to defeat conservative judicial
nominees - and for Democratic senaton to show some independence from
them.
Republicans have aiso used defamation
against liberal nominees, as in the branding of Missouri Supreme Court Judge
Ronnie White as "soft on crime" in
1999. But the usual pattern when the
GOP controlled the ·Senate was to simplydenyDemocraticnomineesahearing
and a confirmation vote.
Democrats are learning to do that ,as
well, but they're more adept at character
attacks - the most egregious examples
being the campaigns against Supreme
Court nominees Clement Haynsworth
in 1969, Robert Bark in 1987, and
Clarence Thomas in 1991.
Now the liberal groups ate systematicaDy vilifying Fifth U.S. Circuit Court of
· Appeals nominee Charles Pickering as
"hostile to civil right!"- read: racist and. ~ yet no Democrat ~n the Senate .
JudiCiary Committee has raiSed a peep of1
objection. Pickering's chances in Judicia.
ry don't look S?od.
~n fact, the ev1de~ce suggests thatP~ckersng IS a. decent, ,'f outspoken, rehg10us
conservative who s repeatedly gone out
of his way to help African-Americans.
Wo~d a racist send his c~~dren. to
newly Integrated schools Ill M!SSISSlppl Ill
the ~ 960s when an all-white "~cade?ly"
was JUSt down the roadl P1ckermg did.
.A.nd. he kept J:Us son, now Rep. Chip
Ptckenng (R-M1~.), and three daughters
sn the Laurel, ~Iss., pubhc schools even
~hen, by the nme they graduated, .their
high .school was .70 percent AfriCanAmencan.
I~ ~jority-black :Washington, D.C.,
white liberals, 1~cl':'ding so~e senators,
usuaUy send their kids to pnvate schools.
&amp; a .coun_ty attorney from 1964 to
1968, P1ckermg helped the FBI prosecute Ku Klux .Klansmen and .wa.s defeated for re-.e lecnon because ofu.When .he

Morton

Kondracke
COLUMNIST

day reported that Africa n- Am erican
leaders in his hometown oyerwhelmi[lgly vouch for him and dismiss charges that
he's racially prejudiced.
People for th oc American Way Director
Ralph Neas was reduced to saying that
those who have watched Pickering at
close hand for deqdes know less about
him than Washington activists.,
. Close examinations by Jonathan
Groner in Legal Times and Byron York in
National Review pretty clearly discredit
Neas' charges that Pickering has been
biased in employment and voting-rights
cases and was too lenient - and may
have behaved unethically - in a crossburning case.
York has demolished the basis for
attacks on Pickering by Democratic
presidential hopeful Sen. John Edwards
(N.C.) in the 1994 cross-burning case.
York showed that Pickering believed
that the Justice Department had let off
the main perpetrator of the incident and
that he intervened with Justi ce not ·- as
Edwar(is alleged - to secure leniency
for the defendant, but to hasten a government response to his inquiries. H,e
sentenced the defendant, Daniel Swan, tp
27 months in prison, ·
I can't say that Pickering is qualified tp
serve on the 5th Circuit. The Washington
Post, while scolding liberals for their uctics, asserts that Pickering has \&gt;een a district judge "of no particular distinction."
\ On the other hand, since Democrats
have elevated American Bar Association
ratings to iconic status, it's worth noting
that a majority of its rating committee ,
found Pickering "well qualified" and the
remainder, "qualified."
Still, Pickering is in trouble. Senate
Majority Leader Thomas .Dascble (bS.D.) is against him and Democrats have
a 10-8 margin over Republicans on Judiciary, enough to deny him a floor vote.
Moreover, the White House isn't fighting
very hard for his nomination. Too bad.
the guy deserves better.
(Morton Kondracke is. executive editor 1!f

ran for the state Senate in 1971,he won
with two-thirds support from black vaters in hi.s district.
This is scarcely the record of someone
who represents "a throwback to the days
of the segregated South," . as Marcia
Kuntz of the liberal Alliance for Justice
called him.
As a state senator, Pickering did vote
(Wice to fund tlle-'fiotorious Mississippi
Sovereignty Commission - at a time, his
supporters say, when it claimed to be giving up its failed segregationist mission.
Ultimately, it didn't do so and Pickering
voted for its dissolution.
In 1992, Pickering urged his son, then
an aide to Sen. Trent Lott (R-Miss.), to
help win membership in the Sigma Chi
chapter at the University of Mississippi
for Damon Evans, son of the Ole Miss
football coach.
At that point, no African-American
had ever been admitted to a white fratt:rnity, and Evans was facing an anonymous
"blackball." Pickering flew down to
Oxford, made a speech to the members
of his and his father's fraternity, and got
Evans accepted. ·
If, as liberals sometimes argile, "the
personal is the political,'.' then Pickering's
record is that of an advocate of civil
rights. He was able to get white-owned
banks to lend money to black businesses
and helped direct federal funds to afterschool and medical programs for blacks.
In what ought to be a humiliating
blow to the anti-Pickering assault
brigade, The New York Times last Sun- Roll Call, the newspaper'![ Capitol Hill.)

Today is Thursday, Feb. 28, the 59th d.iy of 2002. There ate
306 days left in the year.
.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Feb. 28, 1951, the Senate committee headed by Estes
Kefauver, D-Tenn., issued a preliminary report saying at least
two major crime syndicates were operating in the United
States.
On this date:
In 1827, the first U.S: railroad chartered to carry p~engen ·
and freight, the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Co., was incor~
porated.
In 1844, a 12-inch gun aboard the USS Princeton exploded,
killing Secretary of State Abel P. Upshur; Navy Secretary
Thomas W Gilmer and several othen.
In 1849, the ship California arrived at San Francisco, carrying ·
the first of the gold-seekers.
In 1854, some 50 slavery opponent! met in Ripon, Wis., to
call for creation of a new political group, which became the
·
Republican Party.
In 1861, the Territory of Colorado was organized.
In 1974, the United States and Egypt re-established diplomatic relations after a seven-year break.
.
In 1975, more than 40 people were killed in London's Underground when a subway train smashed into t)le end of a tunnel.
We Americans already knew we were a customers. Fast-food has Harry Potter toys thing along the lines of a "Bacon Double
In 1986, Swedish Prime Minister Olaf Palme was shot to
fat people, relatively speaking. (This means and Happy Meals. Tobacco kept its cus- Fried Stuffed-Crust Quarter-Pounder
death in central Stockholm.
that relative to the · rest of the world's tamers craving more by adding extra nico- with Cheese" knows it isn't diet food. So
In 1995, Denver International Airport opened · after 16
· human population, we are fat. Relative to tine. Fast-food has lard and special sauce.
let's say .you order the Grilled Chicken
months of delays and $3.2 billion in budget overruns. ·
. larger mammal classes, such as elephants
But so far, the fast-food industry hasn't Caesar Salad with a packet of Caesar dressIn 1996, Britain's Princess Diana ·agreed to divorce Prince
been forced to include 'warnings on its ing and some croutons, instead.
·
an4 hippos, we have some wiggle room.)
Charles.
Now comes a report from respected wrappers informing diners that "repeated
That's 300 calories- more than ·a hamTen years ago: Twenty-eight people were il\iured whe11 an
researcheJ:S concluding that, contrary to consumption of these products may cause burger (280). And let's say that instead of
IRA bomb exploded at London Bridge train station.
previous studies, Americans are not "fat;' death before you return to your car."
Coke or Sprite, you go for the healthierFive years ago: Brushing aside congressional calls for a tougher
but rather "really, really, circus-act, Macy's- . So, as a service to yo~, the reader, I ~nt sounding Hi-C Orange Drink. .
·
stance against Mexico, President Clinton recertified the countty
parade &amp;t:'
to my local McDonalds the other morrung · Except the Hi-C ha&lt; more calories and
,.~ as a fully cooperating ally in the struggle against dtug smugIn presenting the report, U.S. Surgeon and asked for thm nutrinon gwde._ (I also sugar than either of the other drinks. The
gling. In North Hollywood, Calif., two heavily armed masked
General David Satcher said that up to 61 ordered. a Bacon, Egg and Cheese biScwt, a 48-ounce Super Size Hi-C has 460 calo- ·
robbers bungled a bank heist and came out firing, unleashing
percent of us are obese or overweight.
deep-fr1ed hash-brown patty and coffee, m ries·and 12 4 grams of sugar_ more sugar
their arsenal on police, bystanders, can and TV choppen before
The causes are hardly a mystery. We have o~er to bien~ mas an actual c.usrome.r.)
than 10 bags of McDonaldland cookies!
they were killed.
Barta lo\lnge~.;,.with rettigerated compareOur goal, · the ..McDonalds Nutnt~?n
As 1 was writing this in my notebook, 1
One year ago: A powerful earthquake rocked the Northwest,
ments.We have motorized bikes and scoot- Facts booklet said, IS to proVJde you ":"th began rationalizing the purchase of anethshattering windows, shOV(ering bricks onto sideWalks and senden. We shop at wholesalers like Costco so the mformaaon you need to make sensible
d f b' ·
d h h b
· t
·
·
b
bal
·
d
d
er
roun
o
lScutrs
an
a'i
rowns,
JUS
ing frightened people running into the streets in 'places like
k
h
we carl stoe our omes with flats o f deciSlons a out ance, vanety an mo fi . 1 kn I h d
A th
Seattle and Portland, Ore. A train collision in northeast Englan~
muffins the size of our heads and bags of eration i~· your diet."
~0 t m.kid e:--:
a to g~t 0 ~~· t ~
killed 10 people and injured more .than 70.
chips advertised as Economy Family Size
I looked up the Bacon, Egg and Cheese
oor, a
raJSing m?ney or Is you .
Today's Birthdays: Actress Billie Bird is 94. Actor Charles
' (under the assumption that your family is Biscuit .on the chart. With this one item, I group asked whether I d buy some candy,
the size, more or less, of the local Rotary had reached 49 percent of my recom- Not JUst a bar, of course, but a packag~ of
Durning is 79. Svetlana Alliluyeva, daughter ofJosefStalin, is 76 .
Club).
mended daily anJount of saturated fat and 10. I forked over $4.50. The chocola~
Actor Gavin MacLeod is 71. Actor Don Francks is 70. Ac:tbr•
director-dancer Tommy 1\me. is 63. Auto racer Mario Andretti.
But the primary reason we're fat is we 83 percent of my daily amount of choles- · llllght balance th~ gre~e.
•.
is 62. Singer Joe South is 62. Actor Frank Bonner Is 60. Actress
~ more &amp;st-food restaurants than fruit terol! Total calories in the biscuit and hash
By now, I wa•n t feelmg too well. I went
s~ds, gyms, parks and bike trails com- .browns was 610, which sounded high until home and stretched out on the coucli;
Kelly Bishop is 58. Football player Bubba Srtlith is 57. 'Actren
bined.
I saw the numbers for the steak, egg and which is where I am writing this. ! 'm going
Stephan ie Beacha111 is 55. Actress Men:edes Ruehl is 54. Actress
Our eating habits are so bad, Satcher said, cheese bagel and hash browns. That combo to take a hike later. I'm just stayh1g he.re for
Bernadette ,Peters is 54. Basketball player Adrian Dantley is 46.
Actor John Turturro is 45. Rock singer Cindy Wil10n is 45.
that obesity may soon cause as many pre- was 830 calories - and provided 97 per- a few minutes. At least until this ~ause~
ventable deaths as smoking.
.
cen!, of a person's daily amount of choles- passes - or it's time for. lunch.
Actress Rae Dawn Chong is 41. Actor Robert Sean Leonard is
33. Actress Maxine Bahns is 31.
·
.'
·
. In other words, the Fturated-fat industry terol.lt is important to note that'it also proaoan Ryatt is a collllllllist for the &amp;m Fran·
Thought for Today: "Shake and shake I The catsup bottle. I ·
is the new tobacco industry. Hamburgers vides 2 percent of one's daily amount of cisro Chrorlicle. Send commmts to hcr in care &lt;&gt;.f
None will come, I And then a lot'U! ' - Richard Armour
are the new cigarettes, only cheaper.Tobac- . fiber, so it's not like it's a total indulgence.
this newspaper or send Iter e·mail .ai joan: ·
co had the cartoon camel to lure young
Of course, anyone who orders some- ryan@s.kate.con•.)
'
(1906-1989).

RYAN'S VIEW.

_Cause
of
(living
large'
in
America
hardly
a
mystery
.

. '

DEAR ABBY: This is in reply to
the 81-year-old woman who proposed creating an anti-smoking
poster with two hW.thy sisten on
each side of the unhealthy sister who
smoked. It won't work!
I'm 20, and if I saw a poster of an
elderly woman dying oflung cancer~
:I would scoff at the message. I would .
ADVICE
be sympathetic, but I would think,
. ''I'm young. I'li NEVER be like
that." However, if I met someone in you know of an organization lookhis late teens or early 20s who had ing for young adults like me to tell
.lung cancer, it would be a different their stories - please let me know.
~tory.
CHRIS IN MASSACHU; I propose sending teens who are SETTS
:ex-smoker&gt; to schools with their
DEAR CHRIS: The '}lll1)jlem
with your proposal· is that tobacco~tories. Not just junior and high
schools, but elementary schools, too. . related cancers usually take years to
I recently quit smoking. (I was in develop. The chances . Qf a high
third grade when I started.) I now schoql student meeting a contempowork in. a school. Every day I won- rary with cancer of the mouth,
der which students smoke or drink. throat, lung, pancreas, cervix, kidney
I wish I could make a difference. If or bladder are slim. However, every

Abby

Ldlfn Iii t/t.l Hlltw..,.. .,,~. 7T111 1laoldt Him,._ M ..... AI ......
.n •MbJ«t to ftflltltr tuuiMIIllt k •'PM Mlilldllb Mira• •
tt' u t r
No •"•It•H IMim will 1¥ pd&amp;AM. Ultfn rluHUtl h be ,._ ,..,, .....,. I ' 1

Bend

Thursdey. FebNery 21. 2002

Making smoking uncool is a challenge
Dear

I

ChlriiDI HOifllch
Olnlral Mllllfllr

:-_....::I::;;;;;;;.J. the

._Th,;_..eo_a_ny_Se_ntin_e_I_ _

Page AS

Meigs County
Notebook
~ 'dlomburg birth
' POMEROY - Amy M.
Thornburg
of Pomeroy
· announces the birth of a son,
:Domonic Michale Thornburg, born Feb. 7 at the
'O'Bleness Memorial hospital.

.Teachers relate

experiences

Center, and the Bacone College. A thank you . note was
read from Murah Indian Children's Home for support by
Barbara Gheen.
Mary K. Yost presided at the
meeting, using devotions from
the Guidepost. For roll call,
members answered with a
Bible verse.
CardS were sent to the ill
and shut-ins of the community. Refreshments were served
by the hostess to those named
and Geraldine Cleland, Nondus Hendricks, Linda Grimm,
Lillian Hayman, Naomi Stobart and Mabel Brace. .
Next meeting will be held .
at the home of Mildred Hart
with Stobart to have the program.

POMEROY Heart•warming teaching experiences
were related at a recent meetIng of Alpha Olllicron chapter, Delta Kappa Gamma, held
~t Porterhouse in Wellston.
· • The experiences included
·stories of teaching a blind student, helping the disabled, the
joys of students understanding. literature.
Pam Toon, presided the .
ineeting which opened with
"Ten Reasons to Become
Teachers." It was noted that
Beta Tau will be the Maixh
host chapter for a meeting to
be held in Jackson on March
POMEROY - Receipt of
15. Nellie Parker gave the sec- an award for fulfilling nine of
retary's report from the Janu- 15 requirements for missions
ary meting.
was noted at a recent meeting
, It was announced that a of the United Methodist
Jackson County committee Women of the Rock Springs
·member was _needed and plans Churi:h.
were made for updating files
Hazel ' Ball opene&lt;~ the
on members. February birth- meeting with a reading from
days were noted.
John 15, prayer, and group
Members enjoyed a buffet singing of "He Leadeth Me"
luncheon. Attending from and "Love Divine."
Meigs County were Rosalie
Leslie Kidder was welcomed
Story, Gay Petrin and Nellie as a new member. Thank you
Parker.
notes were read from Tammy
Wright, Margaret Hughes, the
' ·Rev. Keith Rader and the
Worthington
Children's
Home.
Plans were made for a products party on March 21, and
for observing "Bread of Life
Sunday."
Love was the theme of the
RACINE - A love gift
program and offering to ben- program, with Leah Ord talkefit the disadvantaged was fea- ing about the assurance of
~~red at a meeting of the being loved and the ability to
~ertha M . Sayre Missionary share love with others through
~ociety held at the home of gifts and cards. Readings by
Virginia Wears included
Marge Grimm.
Martha Lou Beegle present- "Blessed Be the Name of the
.c~d the program, "The Love Lord" and "How Can the
Gift Box." The money collect- World Find Peace?" A Bible
.ed will be sent to the Kodiak verse quiz was won by Frances
Baptist Mission in Kodiak, Goeglein. Prayer by Ord
:Alaska, the Dayton Christian closed the meeting.

Rock Springs
UMWomen
recognized for
mission work

year a person smokes, the more
deeply addicted he or she becomes.
P.S. I'd be interested in knowing
why you finally quit. Read on:
DEAR ABBY: Thirteen-year-old
kids ·don't care about 81-year-old
cancer patients on oxygen unks.
When I was 13, I had two adjectives
"cool" and
for everything " uncooI ." When you 're 13, you 're
never going to be 81 or have cancer.
Being uncool is the real danger!
Ad campaigns directed at teens
pound the health issue to death, but
kids tune them out. Cigarettes are
cool precisely because they are
unhealthy and disreputable. The
anti-sm9king ads must improve.
Somewhere there must be some
principled, highly intelligent people
with the media savvy to gradually
make smoking uncool. Thing§ will
not change otherwise.
Advertising agencies with a con-

science - graphic designm with a
cause - tastemakers with a point of
view: Arr: you reading this carefully?
-LOSING MY COOL IN L.A.
DEAR LOSING MY COOL:
Don't give up hope. I'm sure there
are creative people out there who
care as much as we do.
DEAR ABBY: My mother is a
lifelong smoker. She is dying from
lung cancer. The bravest thing she
has ever done is share her story with
high school students. She makes no
bones about her future. If her story
prevents one kid from starting to
smoke, she'll feel she has done something good with her life.- P. T. IN
ALLENTOWN, PA.
I)EAR P. T.: Please accept my
sympathy for your mother's terminal
illness. She's a courageous woman to
share he~ s(ory in the hope it will
save others.
DEAR ABBY: My deceased dad

had the good grace to write a statement to be read at his funeral admitting that smoking is a killer, and he
wouldn't wish it on anyone. M.L. IN SPRINGFlEID, MO.
DEAR M.I:.: My condolences to
you for the loss of your father. He
told it like· it was.
DEAR ABBY: My sister and I
are if) ou r 40s. Upon reading the letter from the 81-year-old woman , we
both decided we wanted to be
healthy and active in our retirement
years. We quit smoking on the spot!
GRATEFUL IN WOODSTOCK
DEAR GRATEFUL: Yippee! A
double victory! Your lette r made my
day.
(Pauline Phillips and he&amp;..#4Jighter
Jeanne Phillips share tl~e p]{(,Jonym
Abigail Urn B11rcn. Write Dear Abby at
www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box
69440, Los A"geles, CA 90069.)

MEIGS COMMUNITY CALENDAR
Community Calendar Is
. published as a free service
to non-profit group• wishIng to announce meetings
and special events. The cal·
endar Is not designed to
promote sales or fund·rals·
ers of any type. Items are
printed only at space permits and cannot be guaranteed to be printed specific
number of dayt.

POMEROY
Ewings
Chapter, Sons of the American Revolution, Thursday,
Meigs Museum. Dinner, 6:30
p.m., by reservation only, to
be made two days prior to
meeting. Program, 7:30 p.m.,
by Jeff Higley of Londonderry,
collector of Meigs County
postal history with slide pre·
sentation. Call 992·7874 for
dinner reservations.

THURSDAY
POMEROY- Meigs County Churches of Christ
Women's Fellowship, Thurs"
day, 1:30 p.m . at the Zion
Church of Christ. Pomeroy
Church to have devotions.
Each person to take home·
made valentine, also a readIng, poem, skit or song relatIng to Valentine's DIIY·

TUPPERS PLAINS -VFW
Post 9853 Thursday at 7 p.m.
at the hall. Special drawing.

a

REEDSVILLE - Riverview
Garden Club, Thursday, 7:30
p.m. at the Reedsville Church
of Christ. Program by Rose·
mary Vance, master garden·
er. Members to take fruit for
fruit baskets.

POMEROY - Caring and
FRIDAY
sharing support group ThursPOMEROY
Pamona
day, 1 p.m. Meigs . Multipur· ·Grange, 7:30· p.m. ·Friday, at
pose Center. Heart health to the Hemlock Grange hall.
be presented by Pleasant Val·
ley Hospital.
SATURDAY
COOLVILLE - Missionary
POMEROY Preceptor service, White's Chapter
Beta Beta, Beta Sigma Phi, Wesleyan Church, Coolville,
6:30 p.m. Thursday at the Saturday, 4 p.m . and Sunday,
Lutheran Church. Program the 10:30 a.m. Greg Rast, mis·
language of the rose hostesse~. sionary to Oxford, England,
·
Joan Corder and Jane Wakon. guest speaker.

SALEM CENTER - Star dleport Nazarene Church .
Grange 778 and Star Junior
Grange 878 meet in regular
MONDAY
session Saturday, potluck at
PAGEVILLE - Columbia
6:30 p.m. followed by 7:30
Township Trustees, Monday,
meeting . Members urged to
7:30 p.m. at the fire station.
attend.
SYRACUSE
Sutton
PORTLAND Lebanon
Township Trustees, Saturday, Township Trustees, Monday,
7 p.m. township building.
7:30 p.m. Syracuse Village
Hall.
LONG BOTIOM - Gospel
sing, Saturday, 7 p.m.
Rutland
RUTLAND
Promise of Columbus at Faith
Township Trustees. regular
Full Gospel Church, Long
meeting, Monday, 5 p.m., Rut·
Bottom . Refreshments.
land Fire Station.
HARRISONVILLE - Harrisonville Lodge 411 staled
TUPPERS PLAINS
meeting, Saturday, 7:30 p.m. Friends of the Library, Eastern
at, the hall. Work in Master Library, Monday, 7 p:m.
Mason degree. Refresh·
ments .
TUESDAY
POMEROY Salisbury
SUNDAY
MIDDLEPORT Eddie Township Trustees meeting, 6
Lee and Anointed in concert p.m. Tuesday, township hall,
Sunday, 6:30 p.m. at the Mid· Rocksprings Road.

lMI RCIHI

IAVHINGI
Pnce s Good Through Wednesday. March 6. 2002

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V.la

· Familv Practice

• l'!diiri: diroifl ~ pill!oLI ~
• Wei;t ami adlole:l1t!ol ~
• Prm!IIM lll!dk:i!e
• liaDowl &lt;I ~r!J:t skin llimOO &amp;moles
• All •u!Cidoskdetil inlliT l!llllpll1lllt a...ala~~ ~t
• Minor surps, suturiog abceralioo care
• W001111~ we11a1t ~ euminations, birth C001101 a~ mgenern)
• Ollei lllln:
• O!teq;dilc mm~ Jllldldne (~~ spons aodier Injury !!llbllltalloo)
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He.is tmiiJIPrWed prtrPitkrfor AE1NA, RS weU RS most other insurtmas.

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

�.

The official 4-H emblem Is a green, four-leaf clover
with a white "H" on each clover leaf. '
The four H's stand for Head, Heart, Hands, and Health.

-

The o.fficial4-H pledge is as follows:
"I pledge My Head to clearer thinking,
My Heart ttJ greater loyalty, My Hands to larger service
and My Health to better living, for My Club, My Communitj,
My Country and My World."

•

In Meigs County
in the year 200/th,re were 370 4 -H members.
.
Join the following businesses in celebrating their accomplishments, hard work, and dedication.

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Best Wishes and Much Appreciation to the Meigs County 4-H Clubs
Harrisonville 4-Hers
Jade
K-9 Kids+
Klassy Klovers
Kountry Kidz
Lakeside Leaders
Magnificent Seven
Meigs County Dairy Club

· Alfred Livestock
Another Generation
Backyard Critters
Busy Beavers
Country Clovers
•
Country Critters
Farm Forces
GodDi Country Kidz

Meigs County Shepherds Club and More
· Meigs Creek
Mirror Image
Nickers &amp; Neighs
Pioneers
Rocksprings Raiders
Rowdy Rascals
Salem Center Go-Getters

Schoolhouse Kids
Shade Valley 4-H
Silver Spurs
The Tiggers
The Young Riders
Thimble and Needles
WhizKidz

Nationwide Insurance
331 OS Hiland Rd., .Ste. 1
Pomeroy, Ohio
992~2318

~---------------------,

Meigs Veterinary ,
Clinic
247 Mulberry Avenue
Pomeroy,OH
740-992-6653

G&amp;M Fuel Company

Bernard Fultz

43070SR 124
Pomeroy,OH
740-992-5111

111 /2 W; Second
Pomeroy,OH
740-992-7101

Syrac;use,OH

740-949-2210

740-992-6333

Middleport
Trophies
190 N. Second Avenue
Middleport, OH
740-992-6128

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DanTax
331 OS Hiland Road
Pomeroy,OH
740-992-9355

Oiler's Deer
Shop

Route SO
Coolville, OH

l37C N. Second
Middleport, OH
740-992-6376

Dair~J

Restaurant
740-667-6101

J40..U8-1800 •1-800-212-5119

Birchfieta Funeral Home
&amp; Rutland Dept. Store

BAUM LUMBER

Rutland, Ohio

St. Rt. 248
Chester, OH

Queen

740:...742-2333
.· 740-7 42-2100

Middleport, OH
740-992-3322

·Dr. Douglas "unter
.

207 Fifth Street
Raclne,OH
740-949-2683

Third Street
Raclne,OH

740-949-2882

R&amp;GFeed
Supply
399W.Maln
Pomeroy,OH
740-992-2164

252 Upper River Road

Gallipolis

~
-mt.c.

tw'

740-446-0842

74Mif.NI

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~==============~
•

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

McDonald's

Ridenour Gas
Service

ofP.omeroy

we love to see
~::;;;;..-- ' " you smile™

Chester,OH

740-985-3307

AutoZone

\l

.. '

lt,OII-

741,• •

698 West Main
Pomeroy,OH
740-992-6391

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1/4MII~ North

700 West Main • Pomeroy; OH
'740-992.:..2891

Pomeroy/Mason BrldQe
Mason, WV 25260
Phone
773 -5323

' .
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...

· Jackson, Ohio • Proctorville, Ohio • Athens, Ohio •
South Charleston, WV

www.holzercllnic.com

Fisher
Funeral Home

.

. Middleport 740-992-5141
Pomeroy 740-992-5444

Swisher • Lohse
Pharmacy
'

Kenneth McCullough, R. Ph.
Charles Riffle, R. Ph.
112 East Main Street
Pomeroy 740-992-2955

Williams &amp; Associates
Insurance .

ll1111.rP.O. . . . 211 11111111111111... . 1M Uppl1' lllllrllllll

BIG BEND

Middleport • 740-992-6491

Ridenour
Supply

91 Mill Street
Middleport • 740-992-6250

P.OJIII.,_,OII
-

Point Pleasant, WV

740-992-5432

11 0 N. Second • Pomeroy, OH
740-992-6059

Tl1pplrsPIIii,OII
... .
-

Holzer Clinic of WV

.740-985-3831

Fine Jewelry

liiiiil

Pom,eroy, Ohio

Pomeroy,OH

Attorneys At Law

~

Holzer Meigs Clinic

Pomeroy,OH

.9Lcquisitions

Fanners Bank·

Gallipolis, Ohio

Crow's
·
Family Restaurant

Crow&amp;Crow

: 8&lt; SOvlngl Co111pa 1V

SR325
Lanosvllle, OH
740-742-2076

Holzer Clinic

SHADE RIVER
AGSERVICE

985-3308.

lburBankJnif. .

OHIO VALLEY BANK

ict"-5oglt z~
195 N. Second • Middleport
992-1622

State Route 248, Chester, OH

740-985-3301 .

AB&amp;TAuto

11 Second Street • Pomeroy
740-992-3381

a
ant

Cool Spot
Store
740-667-6100

DOWNING-CHILDS
INSURANCE AGENCY

t .

Office Service
&amp;Supply

Second Street
Mason,WV
(304) 773-5592

Dairy ·
Queen

Celebmting
lOOYears

1

Mason Furniture
Raclne,OH

(J 11 io --J -1I

Jim Rogers ·

122 E. Main Street
Pomeroy,OH
740-992-3985

Supermarket
.and Catering
Service
407 Pearl Street
Middleport
. 740-992-3471

Whaley's Auto Parts
New &amp; Used Parts
for all makes &amp; models
We sell "rebuilds" ·
Shade, Ohio
·.

1-800-848-0070 ' ) .
740-992-7013

H&amp;R BLOCK

-&gt;
!

618 E. Main Street
Pomeroy,OH

740-992-6674

Rhett Milhoan ~
Auction Service ~

The Daily Sentinel

35581' Flatwoods Road
Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992-9019 '

"Your Hometown Newspaper"

. 992-2155 .
i

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Cele.bt

1oo· 4eots

·~'"'"'"

of 401Aik 'Oevef&amp;rmen.t
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"I pledge My Head tocle~rer
thinking,
.
.

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My Heart to greater loyalty, My Hands to
larger service and My Health to better
living, for My Club, My Community, '
My Country and My World."
•

I

'THuRsDAY's

HIGHLIGHTS
Boy•
Tonlght'e Game ·
Dlvl•lon II
Dl1trtct Tournament
altha Convo
;Glallla Academy vs. Circleville,
~;15 p.m.
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Page.B1

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ThunciiiJ, F•bru•ry 28,2001

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_Prep Basketball

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The Daily Sentinel

R£ds lose spring opener, Page B2
NFL player moves, Page B2
Basketball galore, Page B4

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··Inside:

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........

NCAAMen'a
• WednMdlly'• Gamu
.
MAC
!!,owling Green 73, Buffalo 58
!ol!frshall 82, Cent. Michigan 57
N. ·Illinois 69, Ball St. 68
tpledo 89, Ohio 68
w. Michigan 71, E. Michigan 52
·.
BIGTEN
Wisconsin 74, Michigan 54
Minnesota 69, Northwestern 51
OTHERS
Georgetown 87, WVU 77
UMass 79, Rhode Island 69
Sl. John's 84, Notre Dame 81
1\lab&amp;IJ'Ia 73, Auburn 68
Georgia 82, So. Carolina 75, OT
Ga. Tech 90, Wake Forest 77
LSU 59, Mississippi 56
l-ouisville 74, Cincinnati 71
Maryland 96, Florida St. 63
Mississippi St. 89, Arkansas 83
North Carolina 96, Clemson 78
Richmond 67, Fordham 50
Vanderbilt 86, Kentucky 73
Ylrglnla Tech 63, Rutgers 49
Kansas 103, Kansas St. 68
Nebraska 75, Baylor 55
Temple 75, Dayton 70, OT
Washington 82, Wash. St. 75

Late Toledo jumper beats Ohio
ATHENS (AP) -Terry Reynolds
hit a fadeaway jumper from just outside the free-throw line with 27 seconds to play to give
Toledo a 6968 victory
Wednesday
night over
Ohio.
It was the
first victory
for the Rockets (13-13 overall, 10-7 conference) at
Ohio since 198l,a span of19 games,
and eliminated the Bobcats (16-10,
10-7) from a shot at a first-round bye

in the Mid-American Conference
tournament. Ohio will be the host for
a first-round game Monday night.
Ohio trailed 65-56 with 4:18 left,
but went on a 12-2 run to go ahead
68-6 7 on two free throws by Jaivon
Harris with 40 seconds remaining.
R eynolds put Toledo back on top,
and Ohio's Brdndon Hunter fuissed
two shots in the final seconds.
The ball went out-of-bounds with
nine-tenths of a second to play and
Harris attempted to lob an in-bounds
pass, but Hunter couldn't get to it and
the gam~ ended.
Nick Moore had five 3-pointers

and scored 19 to .lead Toledo.
Reynolds had 16 and Ricardo
Thomas 10.
Patrick Flomo scored 20 for Ohio.
James Bridgewater, who averaged 2.5
points a game, had 13, Harris added
12 and Steve Esterkamp 11 while
Hunter, th e Bobcats' leading scorer,
was held to 10 and had 10 rebounds.
Sonny Johnson, Ohio's second leading
scorer, didn't play because of a
sprained right knee.
.

BOWLING GREEN 73 ~
BUFFALO 58
BOWLING GREEN {AP) - Len
MateJa's 21 points paced Bowling

NBA

Wednesday'• Gam••
Milwaukee 95, Boston 92
Philadelphia 82, Miami 72
Portland 1OS, Washington 101
Charlotte 104, New Jersey 85
Saattte 98, Manta 81
. Detroit 101, Chicago 89
Q~ando 90, Toronto 85
t.jlnnesota 112, L.A. Lekers 101
Golden State 110, Denver 93

a.seball.

MLB
Spring Training

Wedn•Bdalf'a Gamaa .
Pittsburgh 13, Manatee CC 7
Minnesota 13, Cincinnati 0
San Diego 3, .Anaheim 2
DS)rolt 5, Ronda Southern 4

Draglla
withdraws.from
USA Indoors
NEW YORK (AP) There will be a firstctime
iqdoor national champion in
ibe women's pole vault.
Stacy Dragila, the only winner of that event since it was
added to the USA Track &amp;
field-Indoor Cha!Jipionships,
WiJ:hdrew Wednesday because
~:a lingering foot injury and
t6e flu.
· :l the Olympic ·a nd world
a;;.mpion has had a disapj&gt;i)inting 2002, clearing 15
f~lit jus~ once and losing her
indoor world record to SvetJana Feofanova of Russia.
:: Dragila missed .four weeks
&amp;':training in December and
j i nuary because of the left
f~9t injury. Now she's decided
it~m to compete indoors again
this year.
''I'm obviously not comp]'{ing at the level I was last
year," Dragila said. "My plan is
t~nest up and focus my energy:on the outdoor season."
Her absence· means Mel
M!leller and Mary Sauer are
tli~ favorites to become the
only woman other than Dragila to win a national U.S.
indoor title in the pole vault.
The championships are Friday
and Saturday at the Armoi:y
Track and Field Center.
. The meet is returning to
the city that was its primary
hqst from 1888 to 1993. The
USATF Indoor Championships shifted to Atlanta
from 1994-01.
; Dragila jams Olympic
cpampions Maurice ' Greene
apd M arion Jones - who
Jt;!.'ven 't competed at all
i!Jiloors this year - on the .
sidelines.
•
•
•

Plea~

see MAC. B:l

Marshall keeps
its MAC tourney
hopes alive

:·Pro Basketball

Pro

Green as the Falcons clinched a firstround bye in the Mid-American
Conferen·~e tournament with a 73-58
victory Wednesday night over Buffalo.
The Falcons (22-6 overall, 12-5
conference) end the regular season
Saturday at Ohio and will play a tournament quarterfinal game March 7 at
Gund Arena in Cleveland .
Keith McLeod scored 19 and Brandon Pardon 17 for Bowling Green.
Clement Smith had 2 1 and Turner
Battle 11 for the Bulls (12- 17, 7- 11).
The Falcons went ahead for good

THROW DOWN- Marshall's Latece Williams hangs on the rim after dunking against Central Michigan Wednesday at the Cam Henderson Center in Huntington, W. Va. (AP)

HUNTINGTON, W.Va.
"We are not going to bow
(AP) - Marshall coach Greg out easily come tournament
White still has high hopes for time,". Slay ·said. "I can
his struggling basketball team, promise you that."
which enter¥the Mid-ArneriThe Chippewas (8-17, Scan Conferfnce Tour12) are guaranteed a
nament next Monday.
road game in the
"We have to win
opening round:
Marshall trail ed
five more games;
we can not worry
early in the first half
about
anything
by as many as .eight
else," White said.
points until strong
His team took a
d efensive play by
step in the right
Monty
Wright
direction Wedneshelped ignite a 12day night as the IWilliiliililiiliiililiiiliill 0 run. Wright stole
Thundering H erd
.
an errant pass and
beat Central Mi chigan 82-57. then ki cked it out to Richard
Tamar Slay scored a game- Wilson . Wilson drove in the
high 22 points and J. R. Van - lan e and ' threw a no -look
Hoose added 19 points and 15 behind th e back pass to JR.
rebounds to lead Marshall.
VanHoose, who hit the easy
"You want to be playing lay-in to give Marshall the
your best at the end of the lead for good, 18-1 7, with
year," VanHoose said. '" If we 9:23 remaining in the half.
want to win th'e conference
Th e Thundering H erd led
tournament, we have to play 32-28 at halftime.
th e next five games like we
In the second half, M arshall
did tonight. It would be nic e shot 68 percent from th e floor
to come back for one more compared to Central Mi chigame at home."
gan's 32 percent. For th e
With the victory, the Thun- game, Marshall outrebounded
dering Herd (13- 14, 7-10) Central Michigan 45-28.
"None of our guys can find
ended a three-game conferth e basket right now," Ce ntral
ence losing streak.
"Other teams would crack Michigan coach Jay Smith
going through the kind of se&lt;\- said. "I do not know what it is,
son we have had," VanHoose
said. "But we have stuck but we are getting the blood
sucked ri ght out of us, but we
together."
Slay agreed.
Please see Marshall, B:l

John Madden

Rio sending eight to.nationals

moving.to ABC?

RIO GRANDE - Th e
University of Rio Grande
track and field

NEW YORK (AP) -John Madden is in talks with
ABC Sports to join " Monday Night Football," two TV
industry sources told The Associated Press.
Madden had one year remaining on his contract with
Fox Sports, but the network agreed late Wednesday to
free him from that deal, one of the so urces said.
Th e outspoken announcer, who coached the Oakland
Raiders to the 1977. Super Bowl championship, has
been at Fox since 1994. Before that,
h e and longtime p)ay-by-play partner
Pat Summerall were at CBS, where
they were paired in 1981. Summerall
said a week before this year's Super Bowl that he and
Madden would part ways after calling th e game for Fox.
A so urce said Madden's represe ntatives at IMG asked
Fox for permission to talk with AB C, and that Fox and
Madden agreed to end his contract now.
Neither M adde_!l nor his agent could be reached late
Wedn esday. Fox and ABC refused to comment.
If M adden does move to ABC, one possibility would
be for him to team with veteran play-by-pt,y announcer AI Michaels in a two-man booth. That would mean
comedian Dennis Milkr and analyst Dan Fouts, a Hall
of Fa mer, would be gone after two years.
Mirroring a general trend in television, the ratings for
"Monday Night Football" have declined each of the past
seven years, including a 9 percent drop this season to a
new low average rating of 11.5 (each ·rating point represents a little m ore than 1.05 million TV homes),
The partnership between Madden and Summerall
evolved into the signature sound for pro football on TV.
Summerall's reserved toi1e contrasted well with Madden's free-flow.ing opinions and jokes .

Medl•a

•

FROM STAFF REPORTS

NAIA ~;~:d

e~~;

representatives
at the NAIA lndoorTrack and
Fidd M eet in Johnson City,
Tennessee this weekend.
Four men and four men
women will compete against
the nation's be1t at ·the NAIA
level. Juni or Ashly Roberts
will com pete in both in th e 20
lb. weight throw and the shot
put. The River Valley product

JS
ranked
sixth, in the
nation,
in
both events.
Roberts
1s
also
the
sc hool record
holder
m
both events.
top
H er
Boyles
throw in th e
shot put this
year is 42 feet,· 4 inches and
she measured 50-9 in the
weight throw.
Senior Amy Kline makes a
return to the indoor meet in

the weight throw. The Logan,
O hio native earned a provisional spot early in the season
with a best effort of 47 feet, 4
0 inches. She is ranked 19th
in the nation heading into the
event.
R ed-shirt freshman Heather
Mace will participate in the 1mil e run. Mace, from Logan,
qualified with a provisional
time of 5: 17.76, She enters th e
nationals ranked 1Oth in the
eve nt.
Freshm an Kristen Darnett is

in the 3,000-meter ract• walk

Please see Rio, B:l

Jordan under knife, may return
WASHINGTON (AP) - Mic had Jordan
will probably be able to play again this season.
Whether he can make it back in time to save
· the Washington Wizards' drive for the playoffs
is another matter.
. Jordan had surgery for the
first time in hi s career Wednesday morning. Team physician Dr. Stephen Haas·
fou nd and repaired .torn cartilage in the 39year-old fo"""'rd's right knee, an injury Haas
said was th e result of normal wear and tear for
an athlete of jordan's caliber.
Typically, recovery time for such an operation is two to six weeks, and many variablesage, severity of th ~ tear, workout ethic - can
determine where a patient fits in that range.

. NBA

The Wizards wi ll have a better idea ofJordan 's
time frame when .he begins therapy after a tew
days of rest. .
"Anytime you have a knee where you're getting swelling, you hope that w hen they go in
there they find something they can fix," coach
Doug Collins said. "When I talked to Mi chad,.
he was happy they found the source of the
problem and that they were able tlJ fix it."
If Jordan fal ls in the middle of the range -·
four weeks - · he would miss 16 g.1 mes,
including the enure six-game road trip in midMarch that could make or break the Wizards'
season. He co uld join the road trip in progress

Please see Jord11n, B:l

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&gt;www.mydallysentlnel.com

Page B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

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Thursda~Feb.28,20C!

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Lions release st~rters; Ramo a Raider Minnesota plays first
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

After a 2-14 record, anything the
Detroit lion. do in the offseason
shouldn't be surprising.
So ,.,;hen they released
rhrec defensive starters, a
'hrug nught have been in order.
But that docsn 't mean team president Matt Millen was happy about
cutting linebacker Stephen Boyd,
linenw1 Tracy Scroggins and safety
Kurt Schulz w get under the $71.1
million '"lary cap.
"The o ne that really bugs me is
Stephen Lloyd, because I like him as a
guv, and as a player," Millen said
Wed ne&gt;&lt;hy. "But he has issues with
Ins b.tck, and he's missed significant
time the past two years.
" As Llr as Schulz, we need to
im prove ou r speed in the secondary,
an d h,. ·, comi ng otT a back injury, so
n's a ~ood time to make a change
there. And with Scroggins, he walked
into mv off1ce last year and wanted to
retire. but I tal ked him out of it. I've
always thought th at once a guy thinks
about r~tiring, it's time."
Boyd had thre e years and S10 million left on his contract. Schulz was
schedul ed to make $5.5 million for
the next three seasons, and Scroggins
had one year at $875,000 left on his
deal.
Terrell Davis, the 1998 league MVP
with 2,008 yards rushing, has pla,yed
in just 17 of a possible 48 games since.
So he agreed to a huge pay cut to
rem:iin in Denver.

The Broncos will save about $4
million in salary cap room.
Another running back plagued by
injuries since a superb 1998 season
agreed to renegotiate.Jamal Anderson
wiU remain with the Falcons after
accepting a $3 million salary slash.
Andenon, coming off his second
major knee surgery in three years, also
agreed to delay a $500,000 roster
bonus from March until July. But his
salary could increase through newly
added incentives.
In helping Atlanta to the Super
Bowl, where it lost to Denver, Anderson set an NFL record in 1998 with
410 carries, rushing for 1,846 yards,
the ninth-best season in league history. He tore a ligament in his right
knee early in the 1999 season and in
the left last season.
Oakland signed 35-year-old linebacker Bill Romanowski, cut last
week by the Broncos, to a six-year
contract.
"It's really my kind of place,"
Romanowski said when he was
introduced by the Raiders. "I can't
wait to hit somebody."
Three tight ends were hit by salary
cap realities.
San Francisco waived oft-injured
Greg Clark, a starter for 2 112 seasOf!S
who didn't play in 2001 because of
persistent hamstring injuries. Due to
make $1.95 million this season, Clark
was in the final year of a three-year,
$6.7 million contract.
Tight end Freddie Jones and wide

receiver Jeff Graham, both coming otT
disappoiniing seasons, were released
by San Diego. jones led the Chargers
in receptions in 1998 and 2000.
Tampa Bay cleared nearly S2 million in cap room by releasing Dave
Moore in hopes of re-sign ing him for
less money. Moore caught a careerhigh 35 passes and led the Bucs with
four touchdown receptions in 2001.
Another Moore, wide receiver
Rob, who mi&lt;Sed th e last two seasons
wirh injuries, was released by Arizona.
He is \nulling retirement.
Tennessee released cornerback
Michael Booker, who was to earn $2
million this season, and restructured
receiver Derrick M aso n ~s contract.
Mason was scheduled to make $3.45
n;illion in the second year of a fiveyear deal. He led the Titans with 73
receptions for 1,128 yards in 2001.
The Titans also reached agreements
w ·redo the concerts o f defensive lineman Kevin Carter, du e for a S7 million signing bonus on March 2. and
Henry Ford.
Green Bay waived middle linebacker Bernardo Harris, its leading
tackler four of the last five seasons,
defensive ·· uneinen Santana Dotson ·
and John Thierry. The · Packers·
declined to make a qualifying offer to
K.D. Williams, their leading special
teams tackler for the last two years.
Pittsburgh released fullback Jon
Witman, offensive lineman Roger
DuffY and receiver Will Blackwell .

The Daily Sentinel
encourages your
support of these area
businesses who make
this .page possible.

spring training gam~
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Griffey Jr. missed the Reds' workout

o The Minnesota 1\vins put an ugly because of a viral infection in '!:tis
offseason behind them with a stomach and will be out a few days.
resounding start to exhibition play.
"It turned out to be a pretty g09&lt;i
After nearly being eliminated by day," Gardenhire "said. "We ·hity,
contraction, the Twins ~cored two something to prove, and not becolJse
I"UilS in their first · of contraction. We finished in seco1Jd
at-bat Wednesday place last year, and people doubt 1, 6
, t
and
beat
the we can do better.These players are-c;m
Cincinnati Reds 13~0 in the first a mission to prove they can play, that
major league spring training game of
last year wasn't a fluke."
the year.
"It was a good feeling," new Twins
Montreal second baseman Jo,se
manager .,_Ro.n Gardenhire said. "I Vidro led the Expos with a .319 batdoubted that I'd be very emotional, ring average last season, yet he still
but heading into the game 1 could thinks he has something to ptm1e,
feel the buttertlies a little bit. It was too.
exciting. A long time coming with all
He hit just 15 homers in 486 ~tthat stuff we went through."
bat5 - down from 24 in 2000 - jn
Kurt Abbott hit a two-run homer, a season interrupted by injuries. In
Todd Sears drove in three runs with August, he was hit in the head by: a
two hit5 and Brad Radke started with pitch, which gave him a mild conctts. two perfect innings as everything sian.
seemed to go right for the Twins in · Indians right-hander Jake W~~
Fort Myers, Aa.
brook had arthroscopic surgery &lt;)n
Even their first-round draft pick, his right elbow at Lutheran Medi~al
18-year-old catcher Joe Mauer, Center in Cleveland.
Westbrook, expected to compele
ripped a single up the middle in his
first at-bat in the eighth.
for the fifth spot in the Indians' start" l.t was nice to get up there and see ing rotation, was operated on Tuesd:iy.
some pitching," Mauer said. "It was a
"From what 1 heard, everythir)g
fun game."
went just fine," manager Char)j.e
· Minnesota pi&gt;unded 20 hits against Manuel said. "Hopefully, he should ))e
the Reds, who left nearly all of their
throwing again sometime in mi(lregulars at their camp in Sarasota. Ken M ..
ay. I

M LB

..
.·

COMING UP ON THE CIRCUIT
r-..

Rlcky'Rudd , Ford, 172. 563
mph , Merch 3, :2000
Race ruord: Mark Martin,
3:30p.m. · Saturday • FX
Wtllt: UAW·
Ford , 146.554 mph , March ,
• WIMton Cup, UAW·.
OalmlerChrysler 400
Where: Las Vegas (Nev.)
1, 1998
DllriMI'CIWyeltr 400
Motor Speedway (1.5-mlte
NotatMe: Jack Roush2:30p.m. • Sunday • FOK
tra ck), 267 laps/400.5 miles owned fords have won three
• Crtftlln111 Thllk, Cr.t'tlmtn Annlveralry 200
When:, Green flag drops at of the previous four races
6 p.m. • March lEI • ESPN2
. 3 p.m. Sunday
Mere .... Jeff Burton Is the
l.alt year.. winner: Jeff
only two-time winner.... Dale
Gordon
Jarrett Is the only two-time
Event quaUtylnc record:
pOle wipner.

All
IMfMI
• ._h - · llm'l Town 300

• WINSTON CUP

BUSCH SERIES
What: Sam's Town 300
Wlttrt: las ·Velas (Nev.)
MotOf Speedway (1.5-m\le
track) , 200 leps/300 miles
When: 3:30 p.m. Saturday
Lat year's winner : Todd ...
Bodine
Event qualtfylnlf record:
Man Ken set h, Cl1evrolet,
169.385 mph, March 2.

PROFILE

'

Jordan
from PageBl
if he misses two or three
weeks, while a six-week layoff
wouldn't bring him back until
the final week of the regular
season.
"It's going to be start easy
and move forward," Collins
said. "And that's going to be
the roughest thing for Michael

MAC

from Page a1

points, Terrance Slater had 13
and Reggie Berry 10 for the
Broncos. Ryan Prillman
scored 10 for the Eagles.

N. ILLINOIS 69;

BALL ST. 68
The Falcons werit ahead for ·
MUNCIE,
Ind. (AP)
good 12-10 with. 15:20 to
play on a basket by Brent Eugene Bates hit two free
Klassen. That started a 13-4 throws with six seconds
run which ended on a layup remaining to give Northern
by Germain Fitch, giving Illinois a 69-68 win over Ball
Bowling Green a 25-14 lead State on Wednesday night.
Theron Smith then missed a
with 8:17 to play.
The Falcons led 39-22 at 3-pointer for the Cardinals
halftime and were up by as (18-1 0, 11-6 Mid-American
much as 65-41 with 7:34 left. Conference) and Billy Lynch's
Dowling Green was 23-for44 from the field for 52.3 per,
cent and Bufi1lo ·was 18- for"
56 for 32.1 percent.

23, he's going to heal faster than
he does ai 39. He knows that if
he has visions of playing next
year, then it would do no good
to rush back and try to do
something to set himself back.
We've got to all be patient:'
Still, the news was positive,
given all the possibilities that
had been mentioned going
into the surgery. Assuming the
rehabilitation goes well, Jordan's
career. doesn't appear to. be

over.

from PageBl
competition. The South Webster native qualified with a provisional time of18:19.14 imd
earned a No. 12 ranking in the
event. This is Barnett,s first year
of competing in the race w:t!k.
On the men's side, sopho-

more Matt Boyles and
junior Jim Robinson will
.•

seven-footer rolled around but
failed to drop as time expired.
Leon Rodgers led the
Huskies (12-14, 8-9) with 29
points and 11 rebounds. Marcus Smallwood, added II
points and AI Sewasciuk had
10.
Smith, with 20 points and
10 rebounds, got his 12th
double-double in the last 16
games for Ball State. Rob
Robbins added 16 points for
the Cardinals, who finished
with an 8-1 record in conference home games. •

W. MICHIGAN 71, E.
MICHIGAN 52
.YPSILANTI, Mich. (AP)
- Robby Collum scored 23
points as Western Michigan
beat Easte rn Michigan 71-52
Wednesday night.
The Broncos (16-12, 9-8
Mid-American· Conference)
completed a season sweep of
the Eagles (6-22, 2-15) and
clinched a home game in the
first round of next week's
MAC tournament.
Ricky Cottrill scored 16
· points for the Eagles. But he
missed his first seven shots
and' wound up 5-of-17 for
the game.
Cottrill's first basket came
six minutes in and pulled
Eastern Michiga.n within one,
but
Western
Michigan
responded with an 11 -0 run
to go ahead 18-6. The Broncos led 38-26 at halftime.
The Eagles closed to 44-41
when Cottrill hit his only 3pointer with 13 :15 left. But
Collum then scored seven
points in a 12-0 run that
helped the Broncos put- the
game away.
Steve . Reynolds scored 14

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WINITONCUP
ROCKINGHAM. N.C.What ahould have been a
glorious triumph for Ml!ltt
Kenseth ended up being
just another monument to
NASCAR 's Inconsistency.
Kenseth led 152 out of a
poss ible 393 laps at North
Carolina Speedway, returned
to victory lane for the first
time In 59 races, and that
ou&amp;ht to be that. ·
The 29-year-otd Ford
drl'ler, from CambrltfCa, Wis ..
wes a deservln&amp; winner of
the Subway 400 and proved
It time and time spin.
But there was the matter
of how NASCAR oHiclals
llotctled the finish, causln&amp;
t&lt;enseth's victory to De cast
In some doubt because the
race was allowed .. In marked
contrast to the previous
Sunday's Daytona 500- to
be ended under caution.
Anel there was the matter
of the postrace Inspection ,
where Kenseth's bleck and
yellow Ford Taurus wee
found to De a quarter InCh

Bing's
Auto'
Repair

X
. UearNASCAR Thl, Wetk,
I ha~e 11 complaint to NASCAR
offi.,:iHis 11buut SterlinG Marlin .
Why;, it that Sterling thi nk.~ the out
of hound~ rule doesn't tppl~ to
him ? I think he !hnuld h11ve ht-en
(punished) nn both thil driving
bdov. the yelluw liue lmd gelling
out oF hi• car l u !)UII hi~ fcndn
away rmm h 1 .~ tilT whik under the
red tlttj:: during thi~ year '~ Dnytona
.SOO. All he could &gt;t.ty is .Pole Earnhardt clnned his window under me

8. (I) Klvln Hervlok Off to 1 llow 111rt
9. (10) ·Ruoty Wollece Ao nual, • oonl-r
II "Tho Rook'
10. ( ·) Ricky Crovon Sllrtod on tho polo

too low. The odtfs are
ovenvhelmln&amp;, &amp;Ivan
NASCAR'a lone hletory of
allowing Its rule-breaklnt
wins to stand, that Kenaeth
will remain the winner aner
fines EHe charaed and
probations prescribed.

(Beside Goodwin's

Auto Sales)

red flaa. All I ha~ to

sa~ is, MSter·
lin&amp;, t1ke responsibility for yl'ltlr

and dun't bring one of
NASCAR \ grt:lllnl driv~rs imo it .H
D11lc Euultndt h11d nothi n1.11u do
withit.
·
Brian Conner
Carlisle. Ind.
mi~tJikc

ffilke Bing, Owner
Randy Bing,
Technician
Jim Bing,
Technician

BUSCH SERIES
Deur NASCAR l'hls Week,
Well. it' ~ the st ~rr uf an othc;r
~a.\Un nf rJ~&lt;:ing and as nice u th&gt;~t
i~ . it' ~ unfnrt unntc that ufttr the
, Da~tnna IDJ, it will lllsn hr another
l111lf-sea5un of li ~lenin~ to th~ two
blowhards uf Darrell Waltrip ~lid
larry McRcynuld!i . l fur ou~: 00 noc
care to listen to l"Oinmcntators 10obo
~c~ m tn think they arc the nne ~
doing it all. But Wllit)l lniRUIC , I
tll ink r ma)' tum nn the TV~ rum ull
the ~o uud an&lt;.! tum on the r11dill tu
listen to th e lace. I thin!: thut 'l the
only way I cftn 5tand it.
·Waym11.n Rrlntumlr
I.JMOinlon, N.C.

ROCKINGHAM, N.C.North Carolina Speedway
provided what Is somewhat
of a rarity In the Busch
Grand National ranks : a
Ford sweep.
Greenville, S.C.'s Ja!on
Keller, probably more of a
champlonshiQ contender
than most observers have
acknowled&amp;ed, thrashed the
field , crossln&amp; the finish line
6.208 seconds ahesd of
another Taurus, the one
driven by Greg Biffle.
Slde-Dy-slde flnlshea have
occurred more than once In
recent years at the
Rockingham track, but ae
Keller pointed out, the ease
of his victory was hardly an
anomaly,

•Driver HB, tl1e story of Dale

• MOll Sterllna: Marlin.
despite some h11rd luck,
leeds In points.

• NOT: Robert Yates

1. How many racers, in all forms of
motorsports , have been killed at Daytona
International Speedway since It opened In 1959?
2. How many drivers nave been kil led In tne Daytona
500?
3. Who·won the last Grand National (now Winston Cup)
11eld at Greenvllle·Pickena (S.C. ) Spee.dway?

Raoln&amp; teammates Dale
Jarrett and RICky Rudd,
29th and 30th In points.

•••••••••••

lr--

CPU

Fan Tips

WhnHotWW.Not

•

740·992-1998
740·667-6133

••••••••••••

••••••••••••

St. At. 248
Chester 985-3308

Earnhardt Jr.'s tookle season ·
(2000), was written by tl1e
drlvef along With hi! publicist,
Jade Gurss.
P~l shed by Warner Books,
it sells tor $23.95 arw:l ls
widely available In bookStores .
It Is e frenk account of
. Jt.t~lor'g "down-home modesty,
rock 'n' foil lifestyle and
bllndlnl Intensity on the
racetrec:k."
This bOok Is more
controversial than moat self·
penMd racer stories. Its
honesty Is sdmlrel)le, but
beware: You mliht 'NI!Int to
llNiew tl1e lanauaift before you
buy It for the kids .

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AROUND THE GARAGE

Bill Davis hopes to shore up his team's consistency
hi handlol hlmHl( utd tho WI)' he Ra.kinJiwn.

NASCAA Thll WINk

hiDIUII hlllt.IY'·
' ''E\'a)'bod)' 11 goln' to be lookil\j ,
"He certainly knows cat1,'' Davit at thlt raee under 1 bi&amp; m l~roacor:e,''
One of Bill O.Yit' Wbutnn CUp ~ntinued, "lllld undt!'Mantb c:l!'l. John Andrel'tl &amp;old. ''The rutwnMme
~ WMd Bwtoo, m::r~ th1 o.y. Ha'l bleD uwnd th lJ dial fur 1 I011J rul= will eht&amp;n!P the WtrJ thinil have
toni 500. Tbl olhtr, Hut Stricklin, time. I thmk for the r1111 time we're been done in the pest. NASCAR i1
go ina to htvc that cooperation and JO illJ to be lookina at thlnp really
faiW to mate 1ho fltkl.
Thlt\ not: the contllterlcy Dlvil Md DM'tmunlc:ldonlhat wt've !oalced for c:!o~ely,and 10 11'11 the ~e tcllrrut.
10 IOf\8 bmwcn the two ream ~.
"fti lllll'd to liB)' too much until 'oW
PIUllppodidaiJftllljobthoMiutfour lllldcr1tand hiJW th ndo Mffccta tho
- - "'
dw lop
dw"W.
(No.)....
23 (Sitlddlo)"'
bl ....
~. or fiw rtc:et lut )'tlf with O~Ve racing , ... The 1011 it 10 lfl\10 IOfrtC
..... tlMI ""''...... obi\ed"""' BIIM)' ~who forruerl~ dtoo: Davit' nwnrrt money, but we arc aoinM to
lo_M.....,.(Fob. ll),andhe&gt; IIOCOt\d IJodae)."
hllvc 10 Wlllt and see how thinMJ tum

~""""

pniJic mon comtonabl1 In the car,

X

~wecaniJitputTh~(Ftb.

14, ~'I 12'-mll~ quafii'Jln1

ONE·i:NGtNit RULE1 Team1
exempled from the new one·
qtne rule at Dl;ytona, bttt they wm
" nolly llko Phlllppt !.opel required to ute one powor plant lOr
(Stricklin\ CNW chid). I lib thl WilY practice, qualifyin1and the race It

,.,.), pt in 1M (Rockll\iftlm) nee

""r."''"'~

wttll

yea~~.

The 10.9 Niclten nttkt1 wuthe bctt
sineoABCi reloeut of the 19841ndi·

anapoll1 .SOO. It wu the hlv~eat-rared

Daytona 500 ever. N•if,en~ CltinWc;
81:1 million viewcn.
The hiahest ~ l'lltin11 (I u .~)
for 11 Daytona ~00 went to CBS In
1919.

1 :-:

STRANGE MOVE! Dctrite the:
flell tl\lt Sha'Nitl. Robb\110n beat the
OOdt 1o make the fiek111t Oll)'tona. her
out,"
BAM MotOI'IpOIU crew c)'lef, Eddie
X
Sharp. wu tln!d earlierltut ~NCek .
C.ChierToddy BI'I"Nnn will ali! me:
LOTS OF FOLKS our· shoo thi1 week 11 Lu Vep.~, ltobinTHERF.t NBC 'I OOVCI'IIe ofthe Day. 10n ditl not participate in Sunday'I
tona SOO drew the 1\lghclt ratinp of SLtbway400 at North Carol iN SpeedIn)' IYIOlOI'8pOrUIIGIOCIII in r.aarly 18 wwy.

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FRII

Notllble: Winston Cup
vete ral} Mark Ma rtin Is the
only two-time pole wlnnet....
No one has won the race
more than once ..••
Chevrolets hold a 3·2 edge
over Fords In the previous
five races. •

Your Tum

• NASCAR This Weett writer Monte Dutton ranks the
top 10 drivers headln&amp; Into ttlls waekend's race. last
week's ranklngs are In parentheses.

'

point5 and five rebounds in 23 minutes of play.:
Marshall's Ronald Blackshear also scored 11
points.
.
.
:
from PageBl
Chris. Kaman and David Webber led Cennh!
Michigan with 10 point5 apiece:
will keep battling and fighting."
Marshall mus~ win Saturday at Akron arid
Slay's and VanHoose's efforts were comple- · Northern Illinois must lose to Western Michi~
mented by strong bench play, most notably by for Marshall to host an opening round g3me ln
'
Ardo Armpalu, who finished the game with eight the tournament.

4.2000

lollws mo. Our Roaclon

be a part of the 3,000meter race walk. Boyles,
from 1\lppen PlainJ, burst
onto the national scene .last
year in the event and
makes his first appearance
in the indoor nieet. He is
rariked third in the NAIA
with a time of 12:25.44.
Robinson, from Lakeview,

hurdles. The Gallipolis native
earned a write of entry with; a
time of8.04. He is 36th in ~e
nation.
Red-shirt freshman Ray
Robinson will run in the 5~­
meter dash. The Ponsmoulh
native is ranked 17th in tll.e
NAIA. His top time this seasdn
was 6.47.
'
Ohio, is ranked seventh
The NAIA National Me~t
nationally with a time of begins February 28 and ru11s
13:30.92.
through March 2 at East TenSophomore Brian Mitchell nessee State University ln
'
is competing in the 55-meter Johnson City, TN.

Race record: Jeff Burton.
Ford, 135.118 mph, March

•••••••••••••

TOP TEN
because he's never done anything with patience. He can't
fight the healing process. He's
· got to take his time and get it
right."
Collins cautioned that Jordan might have to choose
between playing this season or
next.
"There's a lot of miles on
those legs, and Michael didn't
play them at a low level,"
Collins said." Michael played at
the highest oflevels. Michael at

2001

01 45180 el140J 912·8818 1r li88J 182-11118
,,

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Ca.ll The Daily Sentinel ·f or details
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PLEASANT
YALLEY
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�Page 84.

The Daily Sentinel

T-welves
don't back
down from
Lakers
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Considering they have
ne.~rly identical records, the
Minnesota
·
Timberwolves
should have no
reason to be afraid of the Los
Angeles Lakers.
The Wolves showed their
mettle Wednesday night by
beating the
Lakers 112101 behind
Kevin Garnett's.
:n
points and 30
from
Chauncey
Billups,
including
Gamett
seven straight
3-point shots
without a miss.
Billups wa.1 motivated by
Lakers coach Phil Jackson's
statem ~ nt before the· game
that the Wolves had a look of
fear when they played the
NBA 's two-time defending
champions.
"That's a little disrespectful
for him to say that," Billups
said. "This is basketball. You
don't fear anybody. We respect
that team, but we don't fear
anyone in this league."
With the third-most victories in the league and a 39-18
record - the Lakers are 3917 - Minnesota has every
right to feel confident. When
the Timberwolves get such a
strong inside-o utside game;
they can handle anyone.
Including the Lakers.
Billups., who also had 11
assists, nailed two 3-pointers
in the fourth quarter to keep
the Lakers from fighting back
and extending their fourgame winning streak. ·
"I got some open looks and
they went down," Billups said.
"So I said, 'OK, I'm going to
keep shooting."'
Shaquille O'Neal led Los
Angeles with 27 points, while
Kobe Bryant was held to 20.
The Lakers were visibly frustrated by the Wolves' defense,
which held Los Angeles to
45.8 percent from the field.
"When we don't have our
legs, we have to lean on our
execution to get open looks,"
Bryant said. "We missed sonie
open shots."
. Elsewhere in the NBA,
Seattle won its eighth straight
on the road, ~eating Atlanta
98-81. Also, it was Portland
105, Washington 101; Charlotte 104, New Jersey 85;
Philadelphia 82, Miami 72;
Milwaukee 95, Bostol) 92;
Seattle 98, Atlanta 81; Toronto
90, Orlando 85; Detroit 101,
Chicago 89; and Golden State
110, Denver 93.
SuperSonics 98,
, HawkJ 81
Seattle equaled the secondlongest road winning streak in
dub history. Rashard Lewis
scored 19 .points for the Sonics, who won 10 straight on
the road in 1995.
Gary Payton had 14 points
and 12 assists, moving past
Kevin Johnson into 14th
place on the NBA career assist
list.
·
Shareef Abdur-Rahim had
24 points and 16 rebounds for
Atlanta.

N.BA

•

•
Thur.tda~Feb.28,2002

1hun4ay, Febnlllry 21. 20Q2: ·.

Pi~no's men upset No. 4

Cincinnati,·74-71

.,.. .

Qt,ribune - Sentinel - ~e

"'

•

double was his sixth of the season, but
only his second since early December.
. Louisville defeated the nation's
rou{th-ranked team ror the second
day he believed his straight time at Freedom Hall. 1\vo
team was gointl to beat rourth-rmk.cd sworn ago, the Cardinals bellt thenCincinnati on~ night.
No.4 Syracuse 82-69.
The Cardinah Were coming oft' a
"This was a wonderful win for our
dismal 56-SO lou 10 Saint Louil in players;' Pitino said. "They put in
which they shot 32· percent and had countless hours to get to a night like
lost eight of theit Jut 12 pmes.
tonight:'
Northern's ~e throw with 37 secBut Northern, a 6-foot w.lllc-on, was
true 10 his word.
·
onds left gave Louisville a 72-68 lead,
Reece Gaines scomi 26 points and but Immanuel McElroy's 3-pointer
Northern helped Louisville smother from the wing with 18 seconds to go
Cincinnati star Steve Logan and upset trimmed the deficit to one.
Cincinnati called ill! last timeout
the Bearcaa 74-71.
"I knew if we could slow him down, after McElroy's shot to set up a
we could win,'' Northern said.
defense, but Luke Whitehead heaved a
Logan, Conference USA's leading baseball pass to Gaines, who made an
scorer, had 18 to lead his team, but uncontested layup.
went 7-of-22 from the floor as he
The Bearcats led 38-34 at halftime,
faced double teams much of the night. building the lead with Logan on the
He missed a free throw, thrrw a pass bench with two fouls. His second foul
out of bounds and mls6red on a 3- was a technical called by referee Tom
pointer in the closing seconds to wrap O'Neill at the 11:49 mark when
Logan complained about getting hit in
up his oft' night.
"He wually makes the big · shots. the mouth on a drive to the basket.
They didn't go down,'' Cincinnati . . Huggins benched Logan the rest of
coach Bob Huggins said.
the first half.
The Bearcau (26-3, 13-2 CanterGaines made the resulting free
ence USA) had a six-pme winning throws and Myles scored inside to give
streak snapped and blew a chance. to Louisville its first lead at 14-12.
Gaines then started a 12-2 Louisville
win their seventh straight regular~season Conference USA title outright. run with a driving layup and two free
They clinched at least a tie.after No.9 throws. His first 3-pointer of the game
Marquette's upset loss at East Carolina 90 seconds later gave the Cardinals
their largest lead at 52-45.
on Thesday night.
"Why would you not come to play? . McElroy drew Gaines' fourth foul
I don't know. We w.:re playing for a on a drive with 9:53 remaining, and
conference championship. and a seed Pitino cook him out.
Cincinnati came back to tie it 62-62
in the NCAA tournament,'' Huggins
said.
with Gaines on the bench. Pitino put
The Cardinals (16-11, 7-8), mean- him back in with 5:31 left ..
while, earned Coach Rick Pitino his
Freshman Larry O'Bannon's ~e
biggest win since he replaced Denny throw with 3:05 remaining broke a
Crum last March.
·
,
66-66 tie, but Little dunked a putback
fleld
30
seconds later to give Cincinnati its
Gaines went 8-of-14 from the
and 9-of-10 from the free-throw line last lead at68-67.
and put away the win with a breakWhitehead scored insi,.te and then
away layup with 16.7 seconds left.
fed Myles on a backdoor ·cut for
Ellis Myles added 18 poinls and 12 another basket and a 71-68 l~ad with JOYOUS - Louisville's Reece Gaines shows his happiness during the second
half of hi~ team's 74-71 upset win over Cincinnati Wednesday. (AP)
rebounds for Louisville. till double- 1:33 left.

The Dally Sentinel • Page 8 5

www.mydallyMntlnel.com

:we
. Cove
..

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP)
Louisville guard Brymt Northern told
a
group
of
reponen on 1\ies-

1

NCAA

)

MADISON, Wis. (AP) -Kirk Penney SJ\ored 23
points and Devin Hartis 21 as Wisconsin cll'nt;jted
at least a share of its first Big Ten title in 55 ye){s
with a 76-54 victory over Michigan on Wednesday
night.
The Badgers (18-11, 11-5) also
wrapped up the No. 1 se~d in the
Big Ten tournament as they exten~ed their win- ·
ning streak to six games.
Wisconsin - which last won the conference
title in 1947 - holds the tiebreaker over co-leaders lllinois, Indiana and Ohio State, each Of which
is 10-5 with on~ game remaining.
Fans waved sigrts reading "Big Ten Champs" as
the game ended, then poured onto the court to
join Ryan and his players in celebrating.
Freddie Owens adde.d 1)., . points and Mike
Wilkinson 10 for Wisconsin.
Michigan (10-16, 5-10) was led by Chris Young
with 19 points, while Bernard Robinson Jr. scored
17 and LaVell Blanchard 14.
The Badgers pretty muc.h wrapped up' the victo-.
ry in the first half as they built up a 48-23 lead
behind 18 points by Penney and 17 by Harris.
Wisconsin hit its first seven 3~point attempll!,
including three each by Penney and Harris, in taking a 30-19 lead. Michigan went scoreless the last
6:48 following Young's basket to m:ike it 34-23.
The Badgers finished the half on a 14-0 run,
capped oft' by a 3-pointer by Harris in the final
seconds.
Blanchard, who scored Michigan's. first tO. points,
spent the last seven minutes of the·first hait\m the
bench with three foula.
1
Michigan made a brief run at the Badgers early
in the second half, starting out with a 10-2 run to
pull within 50-33. Bui Wisconsin responded with
3-pointers by Penney, Wilkinson .and Owens to
spark a 13-2 run that stretched the lead back to 6335.
~

NCAA

.

..,;:.

DAYTON (AP) Lynn Greer scored 31
points, including a layup ·that pushed the game
into .overtime, to lead Temple to
75-70 victory over Dayton on
.·
Wednesday.
. Temple (14-13, 11-4 Atlantic 10 Conference)
was leading Dayton (17-9, 9-6) by one point with
3:18 remaining when a 3-pointer by Brooks Hall
gave Dayton a 63-61 lead at the 1:42 mark. With
38 seconds remaining, Greer tied the score at 63,
sending the game into overtime.
Temple was leading 69-68 with 2:07 left in
overtime, when Alex Wesby fouled Nate Green.
Green made both free throws to give Dayton a !point edge and its final score of the game.

a

NCAA

A layup by Kevin Lydc and four free throws by
Greer gave Temple the victory and its eighth win
in the last nine games.
Dayton led most of the first half, and wa.&lt; ahead
38-36 going into the second half.
In addition to his game-high 31 pbintli. Greer
also was 4-of-7 in 3-point shooting and ,;,ade all
nine of his free throws. Lyde added 18 points for .
Temple and led his team in rebounds with 11,
Wesby scored 12 points.
Ramod Marshall led scoring for Dayton with
18 points and was 4-of-9 fi-om 3- point range.
David Morris scored 11 points,. and D.J. Stelly
added 10 for the Flyers.

Vanderbilt flattens Kentucky, 86-71.
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) The Vanderbilt Commodores
couldn't be playing much better
right now. ·
Reserve Brendan
Plavich
sco~d all but two ofhis 20 points
on 3-pointers, .. and the Commodores mapped an 18-game
losing streak to No. 11 Kentucky
with an 86-73 victory Wednesday night.
The Commodores (16-12, 6-9
SoutheaStern Conference) have
won two straight games, and
coach Kevin Stallings safd they
turned in their best game this
season as they shot 53 percent
from the field, including 11-of22 from 3-point range. .
·
"We're happy and excited
about this. I'm proud of' our

NCAA

team," Stallings said.
Matt Freije and Chuck Moore
each had 19 points for Vanderbilt,
while freshman Brian Thornton
added 17.
Tayshaun Prince played ali 40
htinutes and led the WildCats (198, 9-6) with 24 points, while
freshman Rashaad Carruth
added 22 points, including six 3~
pointers.
But junior Keith Bogans had
just two points, well below .his
1 t.3;..average. Coach Thbby Smith
also kept Gerald Fitch and Erik
Daniels out of the game despite
reinstating theJ'll to the team following a one-game suspension·
for reportedly using fake driver's
licenses to get into a nightclub.
"We just didn't seem to have
the energy that we · needed to

compete," Sttlith said. " On
senior night,.. teams are going to
be ready to play, and I thought
our team didn't respond with the
rype of intensity we needed to
compete."
~
The Wildcats still can clinch a
12th consecutive 20-win seasol'l
against No.8 Florida on Satorday,
but they need to beat the Gators
and have Tennessee beat No. 16
Georgia to grab a share of the
SEC's Eastern Division title.
Kentocky led only briefly
the opening minutes before Vanderbilt took control.
Cliff Hawkins' basket gave the
Wildcats an 11-9 lead at 14:55.
Freije scored to tie. the game a~ ·
11, and Corey Smith's 3-pointer
gave Vandy a lead it would never
lose.·

m

Sweetney, Georgetown end WVU ·postseason hopes
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (AP) If Georgetown makes it to the NCAA
tournament, Mike Sweetney will be
the reason why.
The forward scored 20 points and
added 17 rebounds Wedne!iday as the
Hoyas kept their NCAA hopes alive
with an 87-77 win over West Virginia.
"I cannot minimize the importance
of winning this game," Georgetown
coach Craig Esherick said. "It is
important tQ gain people's attention.
We have very big games left. I have
stre15ed that." ·
The Hoyas (17-10, 8-7 Big East)
must beat Rutgers in their lase pme
and win twice in the Big East Tourna-

:
NCAA

ment
ment. to get into !he NCAA tourn.aWestVif8lnill· (8-1~, 1-.14) has been
· eliminated from pdsaeason ·pllly after
losing eight straight. .
Sweetney, who leads the Big East in
field goal percentage, recorded his
15th double-double of the season. 1
"Right now we'~~: jwt playing our
hearts out for a bid," Sweetney ~d.
"We're tryirtg to win every game until
this regular se111on is over."
The Mountainem could not hold
Sweetney back.
"We couldn't handle Sweetney," said
'

..... _..... .
'

" ~ -- -

...

WVU interim coach Drew Catlett.
"He is probably the best iow post player in the league. He has big hands and
is strong, probably an all-conference
player."
Wesley Wilson added 17 points and
Gerald Riley had 16 as the Hoyas
dominated West Virginia inside.
"We play outside in, that's Georgetown ball," .Wilson said. "And when
Mike and I are in the pme together
1
we can dominate underneath. We'll
continue to play' hard, because we
want to impress the selection committee."
Georgetown hit 20-of-36 shots in
the second half, most off' lay-ups and
•

0

putbacks inside. However, both teams
got oft' to a slow start.
Georgetown missed eight of its first
11 shots, and WVU hit just one of 10
to start the game.
Georgetown led by just three at the
half, 36-33. A 12-2 run midway
through the second half blew the
game open. Leading 42-40, the H:oy.as
pushed ahead off seven fast break
points. West Virginia never got closer
than eight points afterward.
·
Chris Moss finished with 22 points
and 13 rebounds to lead the Mountaineers on Senior Night. Chaz Briggs
came off the bench to score 14 points.
West Virginia has lost eight consecu-

tive games and 17 of its last .1B. A loss
in the season finale would give the
Mountaineers their second nine-game
·losing streak this season. ·
"Look at us, we don't handle situa:
tioru well," Catlett said. "We can't
shoot outside, and we don't play
defense or take care of the balf"
Georgetown has beaten WVU si1c
consecutive times. It is the longest
streak in the series, which the H~
lead 20-17.
·
West Virginia center Chris Garnett
was mspended before the gan1e for a
violation of team rules. Lionel Armstead also .a id not play because of a sus;.
pension'

\

'

In one·week With us

.REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
t•l US YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

..

l\egtster

Place

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Monday thru Friday
8:00a.m. to 5:00 p;m.
HOW I.Q WRI.IE Ati All
Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response .. .

\\'\I ll \1 I

\ II \ J o.. ,

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Display Ads

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-frldly for Insertion
In Next Day's Paper
Sunday In-Column : 1:00 p.m.
For Sundays Peper

AU Display: 12 Noon 2
Butlneu Days Prior To
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sunday Display: 1:00
Thursday tor Sundays

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·
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........_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _-:POUCI~ El: OhiO Vllley P\lbl~ng,...,..,.. tM rtght 10 ldlt, NjlcC. Gr Clnc.ilny M Many tiiM. Errora must N ,......._ an h first clly
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eny loU or • ..,... that
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• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
. . atweye oonftciMIIII. o C.,.,.. ma CM:1 epp!IH. , All ,..e ...... ~IIIMntll . . 1Ubfltll to the Federat FM HoUIIng Act of 1818. • Thl1 I
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aooepraontyn.ipWIII'rted,..l'tllllltlngEOEIIblncllirdL W.wlllnotlrnowlnglyJCcapt:lny.w.rtillnglnvktledonotthelaw.
·

IIELPWANJID

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Modo~A

I~CUAITY

SEA ICES
TURNED DOWN ON
· l.iij·
-- - - - - - ·
lor·
Ford &amp; EMPLOYMENT
V
Noo&lt;l 5 ladles lo sell Avon. SOCIAL
ISSI?
29,30
31 Ford Roadster,
Malropolllan
No Fee Unleas We Wlnl
...' oon Li"hl Escorts. Full In
fair or
condition,
(740)944- Gallla
Aulhori+-·,
381 BuckHoualng
RldnA (740)446-3358
•
''
•· RN Hou88 Manager --~-·
1-ooo
•••·582·3345
and Female 1931 .
Rd, Bidwell,
OH 45614.
·~
Se•·lce Mala
"
025
F
lo
100
bed
skilled
nursing
Escorts. Prompt Prola081o.
(740)446·
I,
ax: r
nil Discreet &amp; Confidential.
(740)446-6728 will accept facility. This Is 1 fulltlme Will Oo Ironing In my
anfri to 6am: (740)388·
applications lor a Malnte- dayshltt position. Excellent home. Pk::kup &amp; Delivery
1;"gg
nance Supervisor. A re- opportunity lor the right can- Available. (304)675-8383
auma should be hand dellv- d
u
- ... nr
~&gt; \1'hy walt? Start meeting
D1!.U'" nANIED
Brad or mal)ed so that lt will c
Qtio singles tonight, call toll •
be rteelve&lt;t by the Authority c
).ae 1..S00·786-2623 ext 11-1
on or before March 15,
1e21,
/HOUR TO START
2002. The Maintenance Su·
(upon completion of training p&amp;Msor will: plan, coordllor a New JOB or nata and oversea all as·
;. ANNouNCEMENTS • Looking
CAREER???
pacts of maintena~. de-·
Then don't miBB this qppor- velopment, renovation and
slt.:p work on 140 ·apart•
tunitylll
All-American Longaberger CALL: 1-888-WWOBS
mems, 12 Individual homes,
BUs Tour! Dresden/Hometwo office buildings and 5
~aad. Basket included, $82. 100 WORKERS NEEDED vehicles and will be respon·
P.rlzesl 6-15-02. Seating
"Aoemble ora118, wood
&amp;ible for pUrchasing an(j In·
limlted. Hurry! 740·742nt
Strong computer
2824.
items:,.M~~a:-1 pwkrovided. :maoz~e a must The Su·

·

. 1110

r'

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

·

r

GIVEAWAY

--------

AVON! All Areasl To Buy~
Shirley Spears, 31&gt;4
To a Good Home Only. 3 e75-1429.
House Gats, Fixed and De- Bates Bros. Amusement
clawed. (7.0)446-8525 after Co:is looking tor enthuslas5:00pm
tic individuals spring/sum·
mer 2002. Must be at least
lnrrAND
18 years and able to travel.

L~-------..,1

t

Sell.

FOUND

nance employee requires a

~1ng k Mad

r ~~ Ir ~ I

1 -3 Bedrooms Foreclosed
Homoo From $199/Mo., 4%
Down, 30 Years at 8.5%
APR. For Listings, 800-3193323 Ext. 1709.
2 bedroom house in Pamer-

j

2 Bedroom House, Po_mer·
oy, OH. Near End of Bndge,
$4500, Needs Repairs,
(740)367-7886
2 BR Houoa, Cheshire, OH
Central Air, No Pet&amp;,
MOBFOILER"~
$375/mo. plus deposit.
.3JU.J!.
• (
) -404 alter 6pm
740 446
3
St Rt 7 s, 4 Bedrooms, 2
$36,900.00· 28'x48'· total Bath. Fully Equ"'ped Kitchefectric- 3 bedroom· 2 bath· en. $7001 month. (740)367·
2x6 exterior walla· thermo·
pane windows· skylights ()2!9
and much, much mora. Fra"
M OFOBILER H
delivery- setup- concrete
~foote-·
and
~~
... unda~_lnnlng
'}!
up to SOF of utility lines.
Now through March 151~, 14K70 2 bedroom, total
choose your colors.
electric, $300.00 a month,
Cole's Mobile Homes,
No n.ot.tl.
5150.00 dopo·•t.
E
Ath
..
.....
15266 US 50 ast,
ens, 740-742·2714
.,;t
Ohio 45701, (7,40)592-1972.
·
1980 Hillcrest, Nice COndl· 2 bedroom mobile home fpr
tlon, 2 BR, Gas Furnace, rant, no pels, (740)992·
5858
Central AC, 1 Owner,
$7500. (740)256·1914
2 Bedroom Trailer on 218.
$250/mo. Water Furnished,
1989 Spruceridge. 14x60, Deposit and Aolerences
good. condition. Will help Required .
No
Pets.
with delivery. . Cali Harold. (740)256-1008 .
740·385·-71

I

i

no
ge n ~eneral maintenance (buildngs
and sites) electrlo, plumblng, carpentry, heating and
refrigeration, and vehicle
upkeep, SuP:ervlsor and employees will lake •on can•
one w--• al 8 time av111ru 4
_,
... ,
weeks. Must be able to stan
work on or before April 1,
2002. Good benefits.
Full TIIme LPN N·o Week' or Eveends, Holldaye,
p
•u
1
1
~~~{'P~1 Y n ~rsc: ~t needs battery 304-773-5452
nru.PI"E'n
189B14x700akwood
180, Galli~~~. (740)446 •
9820
n11.~,Do~
2 bedroom 2 Full Baths,
1
1
O·
H
Central Heat &amp; Air. Includes
Gallipolis ' located home
FOR~...
stove, liVIng room furniture,
health agency hiring partAE Construction
~
12x16 Elevated Deck ask·
time &amp; weekend AN's May
od 1l
. ing $25,500. 080. Call
11 b th
lead to FT. No home health ~=ms~d~~ ~~~·riC:
1 yr. old house, 3 bedroom, "(304)675-6281 alter 7:00
experience
necessary. painting, trim doors, win2 balh, cia, vauttad ceilings, p.m.
Competitive wages plus dows. Free Estimates.
located In the country on 4 Limited Or No Credil? Gov-·
mileage. ·Apply at 3084 St (304)675·7738
acres, 575 •000 • daytime emment Bank Finance Only
At 160, Gallipolis. or phone
740-998-6606, after 740- At Oakwood In Barbours(740)441-1393
Ali Makes of Lawn Mowers; 742·1807.
ville, WV 304-736·3409.

wo,,.,

1

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BEAUTIFUL
APART- New short queen mattress,
MENTS AT BUDGET PRI· '$100; 5000 BTU ale condl.'
CES AT JACKSON ES· tlonar, $tOO·. 1r comput01
TATES, 52 Westwood Drive monitor, $50, (740)992lmm $297
2369
&amp; to ·$383.
c Walk
11 740to -----::-1
9
:~2568~ q ~8t ~ouslng- Realdenll.al Home Owners

oy, $260.00 per month, Opportunity.
$75.00 deposit. 740-9854258
SPACE
FOR
lbNr

want your own home?
Own your own land? We dol
CaU (740)448-3384 to quail·
fy for your new dream
home.

r

1

~ I eo ~~ ·I

Seize the opportunity.!
$11,500 below recent conilied e.ppra-.
•--• Grea1 family
neighborhood ·
Green
School Dlolrlct, Close to
Holzer. 4 Bedrooms, 3 Fu~l
Baths, In-ground poo .
$162,000. For details and
appointment
(740)4463139

I

mind and body. Start today. 2 Small Engine Mechlnica.
J" Clark Ken
Karate
40)367 "222
Slo
ay
po
Call (7
-w
or
p
740-742-2546
by378AddlsonPike.
Shop Online 0
Acoess To A Computer?
www.marvkay.com!btpeooer47.
Eam $450.·$1500.
Your Miry Kay Independent
.. Monthly PT
Beauty Consultant, Bridget
$2000.-$4SOO. Fuii-Tlma
www.OurAnswer.com
Spencer.
800 585-0760
Young, 5 yr. old church in
1·
·
Gallia County, looking for
Attention
f!noinled &amp; experienced mu·
Leadera Wanted
atclansfor Praise &amp; Worship lmemational mail order, free
'.am. any Instrument. Info &amp; bookl 1 rl 11
e P n ng provldedl
Appt. call (740)446·9043
Tue., Wed., Fri . 9:00am1-800-218-7543
1:00pm or call .(740)3889459.
WW\N.Money-Dreams.com

ott,...,_

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%~ 11"6 IIELPWANIID 11110

Loo~ng

Private Party Ads Under $100

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Bored With Your Workout Free informa11on p4&lt;Q. 24 Hr. parvlsor will oversee a staff
·
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workmust
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Routine. Exercise

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C•llll Couty, OH

10 - •

Badgers .clinch Temple tops Dayton
share of Big Ten

Meigs, Gallla,
And Mason
·c ounties Like
, No One •
Else Can I

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Mob!le Home for Rent
(740)44 6- 1279

r

--

APARIMINfS
FUR RF.Nr

16x80 sites, $100/mo. 740·
992-2167.
Siorage Space for rent 4033
squa~e feet. with metal
s~lv1ng. Located in q1t~ of
p 01nt Pleasant. lnqwe at
(:304)674-0102

Ir10

Beautiful Allier Vie; ldeal
1
For1 Or2People, eeren·
cas. Deposit, No Pets, Foster Trailer Park. 740·441·
0181.

I

HOUSEHOLD

Tappan Hi efficiency 90 plus
gas furnaces including oil
and
electric
gas fumaces. Hi
Efficiency
Heal
Pumps, featuring Tappans
Free incredible warranty
package.
.
·
BENNETT'S HEATING •
COOLING (740)448·9418
or 1-800-872-5967.
www.orvb.comlbennett
_;,;..:.;,;_ _ _ _,-,.,Sears Kenmore Sewing Machine, $50. Smith Conona
Slerl!ng Cartrtdge Electric
Typewriter. $25. (304)8953739

~ -----...,-.....,-

Walnut Lumber. 800 ft. lf1 .
Kiln dried and Surfaced.
..,
$1.00 pe••
board It,
1 Yellow Westinghouse (740)446·9966
Electric Stove with self
.
cleaning oven. t · white Ken- . Waterltne Speclal: ~~ 200
more HD plus washer. PSI$21.00Per100,1.200
PSI $35 oo Per 100 "..I
white Kelrinator Electric
·
. •.
Dryer. AU work fine, $75 Brass Compression Ftttings
each or $200 for all. Call ~OS~~~ANS ENTER PAts..
(740)245·5186
ES J k
Oh'o _ •
1 • 1 800
ac son,
Appliances: Reconditioned 537-9528
washers Dryers Ranges =-'-. - - - - -AefrigratOrs, Up To 90 DayS Authent•~ Replica Luke .SkyGuaranteed! we Sell New walker Llghtsaber,. $200 . J.
Maytag Appliances, French Gordon Starwars 1.24 Scale
CHy Maytag, 740-446·7795. D1ecast, $50. (304)67550 52 _ _ _~7-:-::.:;::..,
For Sale: Reconditioned Dog Run Chain Unk 2·
washers, dryers and refrig·
)(
, sections or 1.
1011 1011
erators. Thompsons Appll- 10x30ft. sections $125.
ance. 3407 Jackson Ave- (304)675-4249
nue, (304)675·7388.
Formal Dresses lor Sale.
Good Used Appliances, Re- Sizes 11- 16. Call (740)379·
conditioned and Guaran· 2746
w:~g· es,w:;~e~~·frig~rZt~~:: ~F-,.-.-G-.-.-F-uc-na-,-.-.-.nd-A-Ir
Some start at $95. Skaggs Conditioner Estimates. Call
(740)446-6308 or 1·800Appliances, 76 Vine St., 291 -0098. II you don't call
(740)446·7398
us we both lose!
£1.....,....-.co

U"UVLO

•

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1 and 2 bedroom apart-

Weekly pay, living266
tacllllies
2950. Help wanted caring lor the Small Engines; Kerosene 1994 14li70 Sunshine New Double Wide on Pri· ~==:~:~~ d~~~f~: C~hoa/lopeh~~;a~rp~~~~~ g~~~ Full size mattress/ box
Contact us al 740elderly, Darst Group Home, Heaters and Salamanders Home, total electric with. vale Property, 1·5 Acres. quo·red no pels 740·992·
'
'
$95
a ~~.'It·1 ng
•
-•
11
ge Repaired.
Call
Mike
•
•
(740)446-7444 1-877-830- ' springs,
.
Fcund
Brick Layers Ne8dad for now """'1'n~ m n mum wa • ( ) .7504
heat pump, 2 bedroom, 2 Call (740)446·3583 to pre· 2218.
. Free Eslimates, Easy Frames, $25. TeleviSionYoung dogs Black! White New Oak Hill H.S. Call new shiHs. 7am-3pm, 7 Bm· 740 446
9162
baih, stove, refrigerator, qualify.
.
.
d
as 13~ color. $35.
Call
11
1
Border Collie.
(800)892-8100 or Reporf4to 5pm, 3pm-11pm,
Pm· Allolyourhomerepalrs,ad· washarldryer &amp; water soft·
1br. Furnished, Newly Aa· lnanclng, 90 ays 5am8
(740)256-1529
Red Chow mix A~ . 7 &amp;Rock- job.traller.
7am, .call740-992-5023.
dltlons &amp; remodeling. 24hr ener 8x10 out building, all Over 10 \lead homa&amp; priced modeled. No Pets. Deposit, cash. Vi~al Master Card. '-'-=·:.:..,,:c.c_-::--:--::
springs Rd. 740·992·3091
Required. Drive- a- lillie save alot.
Grubb's Pi11no· Tuning &amp;
==:::;.-:--:c:-::--:-- Home &amp; Garden Party is emergency · seMce, senior on 1oox50' lot, $35,000. under $3000. Will help with References
CABLEieTV -tALEI S. &amp;ReglodnH· now hiring Start your own citizens discount. 22yrs. ,994 Buick Skylark, 70,200 delivery. Call Nikki 740-385· (304)675-3042
New and Used Furniture Repairs. Problems? Need
Found; Black Lab Dog. Ad·
miles. excellent condition, 9948.
A nice 2 bedroom upstairs Store below Holiday Inn Ka - Tuned? Call The Piano Dr.
dison, Ohio area. Call al cab ma .... et ng ~~I - home ba~ business with e~&gt;:p. (304)576-2065
52:.:5,..,.-'-;:;--;::6·_4::
54,400 firm. Day phone Pilot F&gt;rogram· No Credit/ apartment In MlddiBJXln, oall nauga, Ohio. Used mawess 7· 4
:0
:c..4c..4;:.
(740)367-7966
after lng compan~ is see ng little to no investment Interhlghly motivated responai· I
conducted MOnday . David's Home Repair. 740·992-2696, evening 740- Bad Credit and Firat Tlme evenings, (740)992-6849
sets, dressers, chests, ~dspendent Herba!lle Dis·
5:30pm.
ble self-starters for door-to- v ewa
.
•· Plumbing, Electrical, Paint- 992 ""92
b d
h
b nkbeds
door sales fn Point Pleasant March 4. Cali Pat Miller for lng ate (7401256 •9373 or
-vv ·
Home Buyers. FA5 and
e s, couc es. u
, tributor, Call For Product Or
lost Black &amp; Tan Mala
40 379
1
- (740)441-5707 .
3 Bedroom on Route " 2, ~ovo,:~~~r~:~s~:~:~: Christy's Family Living, ~=~Ter~e~=~k:.n~~~ ~~e~~ Opportunity. (740)441-1982
Fo)lhound. •447 on side. area. Valid drivers license ~;ppolntment (7 _)
DQ.It Cleaning
(304)875·5332
st:~d of renting. Call 33140 Now Lima Rd., Rul· 740446·4782. .
JET
•Klngabury area. II aeon and own deptn&lt;lablt trans·
Industrial Equipment
Let us make your l"e much 3 bedroom In Mldd!epon (740)446·3218
land, Ohio, 740-742-7403.
AERATION MOTORS
please call AI Dattwiller: portetlon are required.
Salea and Job Contract
S 1 304 675 call Tom Anderson afte;
'
Apartment, home and trailer
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In
Home 992·6273, work 992· Sales experience preferred.
Flexiblehoure,paidtralning, SalttPerton.Experlence euler call hela
" 'Spm (740)992 .3348
we heva approximately 20 ren111a. Commercial storenA••QliDi
Sloe~. Call Ron Evans,~5500, call 591-8836.
2938
tr8\ltl opponunities avella- · Required. For additional
Hava ref.
'
·
used homes for under lront1 available for lease . ...._
800-537-9528.
Lost: Male Boxer- Antwera bla.(804)28B·9630
Information
GBOiges Portable Sawmill, eyr old houH on 1.87 $2000 call1·800·837-3238 Vacancies now.
AI
A tl
1
11
'1o Scooby· Vlclnll't' of 2nd CNA'a &amp; Raaldant Allll·
Call ~304)675-4005
don't haul your logs to the acraa, 2 mliel oulllde Vin· tor' Into:
Cl an 2br W/D Hookup Buys or,1s:4 · ES:~r~:ln ~~ King Size Mattrase &amp; Box
Avo., Gallipolis. (740)441·
304 75 1957
tantl. Appiloltlona Ara Now Live In Houaeleeper, 1 mill just call
-8 "
· ~n. ~~~~ :~~· ~~~~~:·
LoTs &amp;
Re~erence 'and Oapoeil. NO ~~e 124 E. Pomeroy, 740· Springs, Refrigerator. Allin .
, 0792.
Being Aooeplod For CNA'o Child Welcome, Small So~ Moving and Hauling: Clean t~x o Cover•d ~orch;
ACREACE
Pats. (304)878·5162
992·2526. Russ Meece, Good Condition. (304)875·
Loot: Male Cal, Flully Ytl· &amp; Resident Alllatanta. ary, Some BabY,IIttlng R• Out BuMdlnr., Banmenta, 10 x1o out building, Asking __
•
br ulet owner.
5162
low with Light Strlpoa. Cor·
::ag'6dd
$65,000. (740)388-8630
Country homes, nloe loti,
Sue's Selectables on the ·r W;:.a:.:t:.kin-s-Pc_od_u_c-to: -Do_u_b-le
ner of Kraue Back and 688.
·
Aowont (7.0)44Hl93t
aa, Paid MHII, Pald -VIca·· McClure'• Rutaurant no:w (740)448- 7604
Cape COd Styte Home· located on Rt 33 between $300. month + R~f~;33es In Middleport. Dolls. glass· strength white and dark va tlona, EmployH DIICOLifltl hiring all 3 locatlonl, full Ot·
. 48 R, 2eA, Full Batemtn1 Pomero~/Athena. Call 740- +Deposit. (740)44 •
ware , Aladdin mantels, and nil Ia, extracts, pepper,
&amp; Avallebla ln1urance, In· pan-tlml, pick up appllol- Top to Bottom Cleaning and Garage. Remodeled In 992·2187 for details.
Eftlcienc~ Apartment for mora. (740)992-0298
spices dessert mixes salllrtated Applloanta May Ap- lion at location ·' bring back Service. Profeulonai clean- 1999 (carpe~. linoleum, winRent. Utliitlel Included,
vas an'd liniments. Cal17.40ply Dally Mon.-Sun. 9·14. between
9.30am
&amp; lng at affordable prieta, dows furnace central air, ExCellent tor building, 2 acre
·Single $325 Couple
MlscruANEOUS
49-3027
5300
9
Come SH Ull Rovono· 10:00am, Monday lh"' Set· R•ldantlat, offlct, remodel· oeptlc and root). Fenced flat lot, 2 mlleslmm Rutland (740)256·17B9 oc (740)446:
MERciiANJJISE . :::::.::::::.:·..;.·_ _- : - wood Care Center, 1113 urday.
lng and construction clean back yard. Shoestring Ridge on Crtmeant Rd. (740)742- 8677
Walkins Products: Double
4f
YARD SAL&amp;
WaBhlngton St., Aavtnl· Middleton Estates wilt ba up, Confidential. 992-2979 Rd. 1127,000. (740)441· 2803
7 piece Generation Kitchen strength white and darlc: vaPoMFl«&gt;YIMmDLE. wood, WV. References Re· hiring Support Asaoclatea or 992·1391 .
0365
S
A
2 112 Gracious living. 1 and 2 Knife Set. New, paid 560, nllla, eKtracts, pepper,
Lw.;.iiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiii'
quired,
"" ) .ar~ 11
Lot for ale· pprox.
bedroom apartments at VII· Sell sao Nl 2 h t of spices, dessert mixes, sal·
(direct care wo....era · ....,..p • Wlii BabysH in my home. For ule by owner. Nice bi- acres, cleared &amp; ready lor Ia 9 Manor and Riverside
'
· ce • c es
vas and linimonls Call 740baaement
sale·Tuppere
Customer SaMce
cants must PHI back· Monday- Saturday. Call level home on 1 acre near building, gravel driveway, Ag rtmentS In Middleport drawers, $20 a~d $30 .
_
· ·
949 3027 ~---~
Plaine U. M. Church, March
$1000·$5000
ground check and drug (740)367·0437 Ask for Peg· Cheater. Tnree Dedroom, water &amp; electric available, F~~ $278_5348 . Call 740 : Childs Desk, 4 rawers , =~--·
1at, ~·1, 2nd. 9-2, clothing, .
PT-FT
acreening. Must have drlv- gy Saunders.
two ba1hl, onKar garage, Poner
area .
Asking 992-5064. Equal Housing $15. (304)895-3739
Bun.DING
tlloheo, lumlture. f\IIOO.
Training Provided
&amp;nl l~an... Startlng Wage
family room with llreplace, $13.995, Call (740)446· ()pponunltles ·
Slll'I'UFS
11 1
800-350-6188
IS $6.35 per hour. . ntersun room. New central heat- 4514 from 8·5 or (740)446·
··
YARD SALEeattd, contact Rhonda Bali
Ina &amp; eic syatem. One ml· 3248after6pm .
Newl~ Remodeled, 2 Bed- King Size Waterbed, 12
Pr. PLEAsANT
'
at ~740)448·9876. Applica- riO
Bt.rsiNEss
nute off Route 7 but still prlroom Apl Stove/ Relrlgera- drawers underneath, mir· Block, brick, sewer pipes,
I
Olg Into a New TCarelerl tioos will be taken Monday
OPPoim.JNrrY
Vl1e ~740)985-3981
.
REAL FsrATE
tor Utllllles Paid, $4001 rored bOOkcase headboard , windows, lintels, etc. Claude
Heavy Equipment rain ng through Friday, 8:00am·
•
·
WANIID . . m~nth. 46 Olive St., $150. {740)446·6962
Winters. Rio Grande, OH
a 4:00pm
4 Family Yard Sale Satur- Program II Leam to opet'Bual11
INOntl!l
Must stll now due to health,
(740)44fl-3945
Lo,osoat, $ OO. Hidebed , Call740·245·5121 .
1
day, March 2, 2002 Krodel Trackhbes, Backhoes,
•
.
EY PUBLlSH 2 bedroom house with de·
·
ClubhouM. 9·4 m.
doz:era.
Call
NOW. Pan·time AN and Pan-time O~IOC VALL
d that tschad garage 306 N. 4th .Credit worthy ~uyer looking
$100." Living Room Chair,
1·BOOo81Q-3520
LPN'a tor ,00 bid nul'ling INQ
· recommen •
S M
s2oooo 304_ for 3-5 bedroom hoult to
$30. Full Size Mattress,
... ~AucnoN AND
facility Excellent opponunl· you do buelnasa with people
t., ason,
'
•
bu
Gallla Maaon or Now Taking Applicat ions- $60. (740)446r9742
...._
FOR'3A'LE ·
Fl.EAMARKEr
Domlno'o now taking appll· 1y lor.' challenging and r" you know, and NOT to sand 682·2 156, 304•232 •7310 ·
M~go, plaaoo call Jim, 35 Wool 2 Badcoom Town· :::.::c...c.=--==~-caUonlfor llrt drlvel'l, Qai· warding experience. Sign money through the mall until Ntw Home . Vinyl Sidlng , l i992·3187
i i i i f i . - 4 0 house Apartments, Includes Mlddi,&amp;IQn Doll, $tOO. Ra· AKC Registered labs,
iipollt and Pomeroy loca· on bOnus, great •tart ratel, you have invlltlgated the Shingle Roof, '3 a.droomal
Water
Sewage, Trash, cllner Chair, S50. Lamps, Chocolate
or
Black.
Rick Purson Auction Com· Ilona only. Apply In peraon. oxctllent regulotory compll· ollorlng.
2 ' Bath, $499 Down. Cell
S35Q1Mo .. 740,..6.(J(J()8.
$tO. (740l 687-3814
(740)44Hl93t
pony, full time auctioneer, E
I $350 In one day once hlotory. lntorootod
(740)446-3570
.
complete auction HI'VI~e. am up o I t rea Invite candidate• lhould apply to: Start Your Buainess To~
.
.
Pomeroy, large 2 bedroom, MOBILE HOME OWNERS
.
plus
fo uyoUr hom• Rooksprlngt Rthabnttat!on day...
Shopping Ctn- New Roof, WindoWI, Siding
HOUSES
Run, wid, 1/rel, lur- lntertherm &amp; Coleman gas, Tiny Yorkshire F»upplea, 8
n3-5447.
.
~ur1 r rot sionai picture Center, 38759 Rocklprlnga ttr Space Available A.t AI· &amp; New Deck. Three Btd·
FOR RENT
nla ad , lg. yard·petlo, no oil &amp; electric furnaces In- wka old. 2 males, $400
or (~40)S~B-2 , 17
Road,
Pomeroy,
Ohio lordablt Roto. Spnng Valley roomo, Ono Bath, Double
pelt, (740)992-6686
eluding hi all lclancy heat each. (740)256·6476
.
WANtED
party.
o4678CI, Kyla L.. , RN, Dlrec· Plaza, Cai1740·448-0101 ·
Car Garage. Two Storage
.
Spacious 2br. 1ba, Duplex pump systems . we carry a
ro BUY
· EARN WHAT YOU ARE tor of Starr Development. 8
.bu lntu tor lila-· BuHCII1'1QI, $~2.000. Shaded 3 bedroom hOme Mlneravnle with Washer/Dryer Hookup comp1e1e line of~ Mobile To good hOmes· 2 white
WORTH!
74'0-e82·8808. 'Equal 0~: n:!':ribo! &amp; Kirby partl, Level LOt. (740)448·9478
area, river view, s.-so pef $460 . month. Depolit/Refer- home parts &amp; accessories. B,a~car pupple!l , 1 Au~trallan
·
•
Work From t-fome
portonitv Employer Encou bags &amp; bellli and to many Partially Remodeltd home, month, reftrencH rtqulred, enc• Required No Pets In BENNETT'S HEATING &amp; Shepherd
puppy,
,
3 Bedroom. Ono Slory In
$55047000 PT(FT
aging Wori&lt;P'- Dlvtrall\'. pano to mention, $1,000, 2 Bedroom, 1 Bath, Full dopooll raqulctd, no pate. P lnt Ploooant (740)448· COOLINQ (740)446·8418 Sholtla/Goldon Retriever
country otlllng In Gollla
Ont..,n•Or\1·Trolnlng
• - Py'- ~-~ Porm (740)387.o812
Baoamont Largo Unattach· 7.0·902.e777 anor 8pm.
4~70
or HIOil-172·5817
mix ; t Cloldon Ralrlevoc
County or Point Plea1ant
Provld«&lt;1
••· ·,
... - •
www.orvb.comlbennltt
pupp~: 1 Samoyed, 1 Aua127 Kine
2
area on Land Contract. www MonayMontyNow.oo
lnaunnoe.
MoNEY
oar garage.
• New Haven· 3BR houae in Twin Rlvtr Tower• e.ecep1traHan CaMie dog: 1 black
Cown Payment Amount m (e0o)51~-e813
Looking tor I deplnellblt
• .......,
on Or., $60,000. (740) 441 • town. jUit" remodeled, new
lng applications now tor
N!W AND UIID STEEL Lab/Golden Retriever mlxl
(Nagotlablt), S35P per ·
·
Tum Pl1yer lor Agent Stiff
10 .I.A.II\['Ii
•
0485
carpll, paint, nice ~ard and
Unitt available
Steal Beams, Pipe Rebar pltaH oall 740-667·9712 or
month. contact Todd or RHplr~tary TheriPIIt. Full poaltlon who lllntereatld I ,
.
Ranch Sl)'ie 3 Bedroom,' 1 one car dttlchtd garage.
Maroh 1, 2002
For Concrete, Angle, Ch•n· 740·992·3354
Jennifer (740)258·1028
Time .Pollltlon, Ohio , Ll· w!Uing to laarn. Pleaat Qet Cash Faattl
S100- Bath Llrge LR DR Kitch- No Peta would oonalder a 1br Hud Subsidized apt for n•l, Flat Bar, Steel Grating irrroii
. F;.ll;.NSM:-;t~"USI':::•~~CAL.:":":~--,1
.
'
cenaed RRT/ CRT. Mon· p~ appllct.tlan at 808-A 1600 Euy Qua!Hicltlone.
3 Ca • Ga' I 3 lMH tO own. Pltall Call t idertv and dl..blld EOI-I For Drains , Drlvewayt l &amp;
U IYI&amp;:ol" ·~
Abaoluto Top Dollar: U.S.
m
Ill
Novir Luvo Homol Fundo
S75,oo0.
304·882·2241 $375 por
(304)875·6879
Silver, Gold Colno,
Plan, Hoallh In- URGENTLY
NEEDED· DopooHod·Chocldng
A:· 2827
month $350 Socurll\' dopoo.; Upatolro Fumlohod I Bod· Wodnllday &amp; Fnooy, 8om·
1111, Olamandl,
o
ano• Contact· Bow· pluma donol'l, ••m 150 to count Next Day. LOana
Clbl
11
m Apt Utllltlt1 Paid 4.30pm c 1oaed Thursday,
1
01
1
••G
Pilot
(7,0 )448:
Sunday.
4249
ond Avenue GalllpOIII, 740· St., Ill po .'.;.
' Toe 740·582-1181
FDICIEOL 1·800·387·1Q08. lion. 740-588-2383
. NHdod, 304·
•
·
4927
44e·28o42 . •
(740)44e·12~
..
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.

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Progr~ 72~;ntoro (~OI448·B519,

R:O~or :~~~:o~: Inform~~

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,... 8 I • The O.lly Sentinel

www.mydailyMntlnel.com

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=- -

Business Services

CRESS GREENS. You cut Ear com, $2.25 bushel, 1997 F-1!50, ext.- Cob, 1985 C1'1ociuNto, 235 HP/
II.DO r- -.., Nru.rtt Paul Karr, (7.00)985-3538
Vo&lt;y Good . Condnlon E - mooor Now SOots
cut 112.00 por buohel.
$10,995 OBO. (~)875- Corpot. -·Power hoaCi
Fonn.

' Jargoi

ilijp;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
FARM
~

I

·-·---iiiii-,..1
-·52"
2D -

-5 ..-

Hay lor aole- kwi- 7 on' 4llll4
any amount, WI
_..

·

1140-1315or740-9&lt;19-27M. 91 5-10 truck 4K4 4.3 U.. Call ·E..,_ aher 8:00:
$5000. .
(740~
WI Ti
Ha1 &amp; 8~~ re 10 85S.IDtruck2wd,2.8111ot - . - - - - -......-.
Diooou""n.
eng. aU1omotic $1 DOD. 304- IIU Aum PAlmi &amp;
blo. Heritage
Farm. 875-3102
•
A'"""flPI!!lS
•
(304)675-5724.
95 Rongor, - · e" lift ld1,

:""V:..;:'

0:,

I

s-

Ylldman Rldl

cut, $1,000. ~
. Mlf pc~r'rd brulh !'OQ. 11
Horoo Hon&lt;1l Engtno lor

riO

I

Auros

FOR " •• _

UN
behind 4"'hNior,
....000. (740)31111 0438

""""

33'
Swamporo,
5spd., CD, Nice
Truck, · Blldtlll -

$10.500. (740)753-3588 •

~

2000 Banshee, Pro-cirouit
pipes, Nover raced. Needs
roar a.le bearings. .
$3400/0BO. Must soli.
(304)&amp;74·0292 (304)882·
3878
=:-:-:-,.--,---::c---:-:C':'

ilj.r-------.1

.. .

·-------'·condition.

.

~h~~~~ Zl~ha~n· ~:

call 17401992'20n

Ir

Honda XA 200. E•cellenl eS11mate call Chet, 7'""992·
lntro~id, Condition. (740)245·5815 ~632
::~r3-·-.:----~""'1

"'--'------~

.~

'Eux:nuCAI}

R£i.1UGEHA110N

I

BEEF

OK LIVESTOCK AUC· $2,200.; 1990 Camaro, red,
•
.
noN, MAYSVILLE, KY. 80 V6, auto., $1 ,800; 1992 Ca· rr=;~~:;:;;;~~'i':'~:;;;::~T:::~~~:;:;;;=;ANGUS,
15
POLLED marc, V6, auto., $2,500.
~:::a1i ~~ ~Ai'·-~fff fj':! l~~ ~;J't!i!~
742 2357

HEREFORDS.

THESE ?40-

=~~~'c,GUA~'ri~:::r

~==i ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ :!€.:E.j ,-;;~

-

1997 Salum SCI Sporty, 2

The

Me I g 1
Inc.,

am/fm cass.,
sunroof, which IIIs a privata
• Happy Ad
· .OO+mpg.,
$4,500, (740)007·
I
_ _;,:;,:;,:,.___ _39_1_4___· _ _ __ nonpro I corpor.t on
lntendo to oubmlt on
1998 Ford Contour GL, BOK application lor 1 ,
miles, $4500. 1994 Ford capital grant under
142K· tho provlolono of
Tempo
GL,446
Scyl.,
200
740
2624
S2 · 1 1 •
Section 48 USC 53 10
1999 Honda Accord LX, 4· of the US DOT
DR. 4cyl .. Sliver, 30,000 Federal
miles, PS, POL, Excellent
Condition,

$14,900.

(740)379-2398 ahor 6pm.

93 Legacy Subaru Wagon,
$3500. (740)992·5200

say
isn't so;
Aay Smith
is the big

l'lecllle

5-0

Star Auto Sales, across
lrcm bonk In Racine, 011io,
aflordabla .used cars and
lrucks. 740·949·2451

oervlce

that · Ia

needed

prior

FORSAU

1985 Chevrolot Truck Bod,
17401388 36
-04
1990 GMC Ctub Cab, 350
engine, Automatic, 4x4,
Good COndition, High Miles,
$6500 OBO. (7401448' 1021

-===============::,

r

'laking applications for

HOWARDL
WRITESEL
Roofing- Home
MaintenanceGutters- Down

Ma!J.agers
For patching crew, order
pulling crew, and
shipping crew. Will pay
according to experience.

Call
·I

Spout

Flat Wod,
Kepl""menll. • Wollu
•n" Drives,. Stencil
Crete

Free Estimates
949-1405 TI'N

Free Estimates
ScrvinJ Ohio and W.V.
wv 11031712

.

'

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.r. KeeP

··l&gt;o .
ACUPU/ti:CTU#li6TS T AKf

..

Owner: Terry Lamm

ROBERT BISSEU
CONSTRUOION

o3o

A UthOrtZe
' J Agent

992•5479

month.

•New Homes

•Garages
•Complete

,.

Remodeling

Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

740-992·1671
7122!rFN

'

' ~~~~==~

: THE BORN LOSER

.'· ,..
~

I'VE.

"milllh

~IW:&gt;
f'\'( .
~

morris

F199 Esiu I
DR Eilsel Qrt ·

ROOM .

HERBALIFE
1 Lost 27lb.
in 32 days.

(740) 992·3470

I'IUST.. . W.O.lT. ... 'TIL .. ..

tc.ELL '&lt; .... LEAVE~...

Repairs 6 Parts

Sunset Home
Construction

Distributor

100%
natural/Guaranteed

740·992·7036

: PEANUTS

It was a. dark
OJ1d stormy niqht.

WEST SHADE
BAR,ERSHOP
Cl..od Jan. 30, 3111,
Feb. lot
Open
Tuo, Frii0-5:00 p.m.
Sat. 8:30 ·ll:OO
Georae K. Vee.
Feb. I·Man:b I
Shop will be 1'01 houri
&amp; doys Man:h Ill
Sorry for your lil&lt;on•.

So what else
i5 new?

'

.

ITHURSDAY

FEBRUARY 28 I

and
brains
""'mao&lt;goouomakoup

FIELDS
PLUMBING

..'·

'

Pl r~n • ;in~ vnm m oVl'~ wdl
,tdV. I IIC~' L, alw ;•y~ hdpful.
b11 t in tho: )'1.' ;\ t ;~h b\li. thi~ w ill
~\TlJVe t o be V~l')' vah•ahlc . It
will l'llh.llll'C )'f.Hi f :lbiJity lOr

'•

~;,rn c r i n ~ l.ngcr (.:·l in~ th:m

usu:l!.

nMd to look Offtll ond

Paige Cleek
Independent Beauty
Conoullant
II~ High Street
Pomeroy. OH ~5769
740·992-2802

•CammBrclo

our seryk;es:
Compl!lte ohaull
syattm, computer
allanmentl, computer
balance, ohockl &amp;
llrull, radlotor new &amp;
repair, tie rods, ball

www.maryk.y.comlpliJtelltk

tt(304)6
882-2343
WYUo

2U

..

We'ye added to

co,., FMI•good

llvetmart.

•-,..

~

the in lh tl' II LL'S tlJ;~t ' ll (.\U\' l'rll
you ill the yt•ar ~ht•.ai. Sl;nd
for your Astro- G r.1 ph prctli't iom hy nMilin~ $~ tu Ast ro Graph. c'/o th i~ m·w~p.lpl·r,

P.O. Box
S t;~ tion.

1 7~K.

Murr.ty Hill
Nc:w York, NY

111 15tl. lk . ~ UTl' to ~l.1t1: your

olntJ, etc.

Zm.har ~i~W ·

Advertise your business on this page
~ ., for qne month for as low as $25 '

·

wishfu l thi;1king t' ilp in Lia:
dosct and n•pla cc. ir \\'ill! r~.·:d- ,
ism rL'~1 rJi11g y(l\lr ··:\pabil iEics
for accompli~hmc:nt. Gc:r a
jump on Ii i'~.· h y umln~t.llldint-:

Shop
(304) 273·3271

to breoktnrough lkln

frogranctt to eolenHflcatly
odvonct&lt;J fOrmulol.
Mary !Cay hat all you

-- S 1 H'C:t'~~ is within y m1 r ~r;~~p
• b~·L·;w~t' \'t&gt;u ' ll l~ .1vc ym1r

Bill's Tire

• Rtii!Mntlal

·-

B

OCBA

YCTRXO

WI

HGJBTR

(YMXOHL

UCBDRXM)

S X N M S X T' · J M C V G X

. '
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Music Is medicine lhat's pleasant to
lake.•- OdeHa
"I epitomize America." -

John Denver
WORD

GAM I

O four
Rearrange lett&amp;rs of
scrambled wcrds

the

be·
low to form four 'lmp le words.

I

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.

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role L';n·h pl.i)" .\ 111.1)' be ~i~nili ­

canliy d i tfercnl fro m the

i11

740-992-5232

Ra ..aowood, WV

New'Hivtn, WV

ZLBHL

C

BPXCT.'

l:r idav, M.trr h I, ::!tJ~I.,! · "-

33795 Hillllul RJ. •
Pommy, Ohio

408' 5th Street

RN

BT

----~---~~~~----------

PISCES (h ::b. ~11-. M ;m;h :!0)

Beauty

'UCBDRBDS

I

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)

Today's ciua: /equals Y

thcr would look imelD L 0 w ';~~.
Getting tired of our neighbor
ligcnt if it were East
1~ 1 1 1
•• complaining about his age, my
with the singleton L.-I..-I..-I..-I..__,
husband sighed, 'Everyone was
honor.
young at one time. but not every·
All play s work
B 0 RME S
lone has been old-·-·-·."
when the five missing 1--.-,-T,-,1-:;s-,1'-6-,1--!
CQmplele the ,chuckle quoted
by filltng in the missing words
3
2
d
dubs arc divi ing - ·
you develop from s1~p No. 3 below .
Uut in case they are
4- 1 or 5-U, the 11:\ PR INT NUMBERED LEH ERS IN
~
THE SE SQUARES
thoughtful play is first
to ca sh th e ace . A UNSCR AMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
Whatever happens, ~ TO GET ANSWER
you continue with a
SCliAM.Lm ANSWERS
low club toward the
Intone - Shawl- Eider- Leaven - WAITED ON
\0 and must -- sooner
1dale a gentle man who is lhe strong s ilenl type. The
or lat er -- establish
only lhing is that when we dine out. we nev er get WAITED
thot second club trick.
ON

'(

985-~16 Chrll

SeU.Storage

KAY~

·

! ~___:,~~!!!!!!J

•
•
I

High&amp;! Dry

. MARY

by Luis Campos

Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by famous
peep,., Pill and present. EICh letler In the cipher atands for another.

there is no reason · to
make this risky play,
\vhich will gain only
wheu East has either a
doubleton honor or
king- queen-third.
With this loyout,
though, it costs the
IDii)""'\:JLjS'f"~Kiii~ · cou tract. West tokes
declarer's club jock
with , hi s siugleton
king and plays a card.
~outh con no lo nger
co 11 e c t that second
club trick.
I·kre, starting with
dummy's dub 10 or
Icadi n g I ow toward
d U 111111 y 'S clUb 1()
works fine, but nci -

I

RIVERVIEW MOTORS .~~~
FOR THE BEST DEALS IN THE AREA

Many Income Tax Vehicles to Choose From Plus
AGreat Selection of Dependable Pre-Owned Cars
2 Blocks above McDonalda Lower Pomeroy, OH
YOURLASTSTOPCARSHOP
MON-FRI 9 AM - 7 PM SAT 9AM • 2:30PM

'

-

BIG NATE

740-378-6349

Equipment

742-2455

CELEBRITY CIPHER

f~===::J

Independent

Farm Equip.
and Dozers

992·2155

1f&gt;l(,('£~!

...

~

11

D

Nt:OCEN

. W~\0\INCoo
1\ c.e.T

p

llnlues 6Collectibles

I"'

'

&amp;EN

1111:

macks Pocket

The Daily
Sentinel

•.

Erich Fromm, one
of our most f:tmous
j"ychologists, wrote,
- "Reason is man's faculty for grasping the
world by thought, in
cu ntrou.littion to intt.·llig~nce, which is
ma11's abi li ty to manipulat e the world
w ith the help of
thou!;ht."
t;rasp th e' key way to
manipulate
the
North-South cards in
this deal to land nine
tricks. What is your
line in three notrump after .We st
l~atls tilt' spadt• jack'
There arc 21:1 combined points -- appropriate for February 28
-- but ·you have only
~ight
top · tri cks.
Clearly, the dub suit
must provide the vital
ninth winner, · but
how should you attack that suit?
For so1ne reason,
there is inclination to
f)lay a club to the
jack. "I was taking the
finesse;, partner." Un fi&gt;rtunotely, in the
cold light of day,

.
--

Jeff 'IJ!Tarner
In~.
f f,

Ellsl
All pqa

Let's sec if we ca n

~ew

6~11lT1

"

iftt t

Take a peek
at the
classifiedsl

wo~t~l&gt;flli~G

Additi~ns

space for
$50 per

511 Hidden
60 Kyoto tllh 11 Thol ohlp 39 Rouoeo
12 Hubby
up
cornpetlllcn 61 Copper
13 Dworl wllh 41 Smock
23 Brynner of t&gt; coin
opectaciH 44 Frooh
"Weat·
17 Gemotone 48 Milke
world"
DOWN
19 Myotlqueo
bllketa
24 Mother
1 Moth 1"'001 20 Metallic
rlbbll
47 Slllor'o
abbr.
oound
roply
26 Reddishbrown
2 Put Into
22 Upper part 48 Thlcl&lt;oot
service
23 De or ja
49 Food the
horn
3 Holl-ol·
25 Lenncn'o
kitty
29 Baoeball
Famer .Mol
wlfo
51 Pomperlng,
a tal
4 Instruct
27 Wedding
lor ohort
"' 30 Utrnool
~
degree
5 Curved
vow 1ite
53 Llon'1
6 Cruaty roll 21 Deoltnlng
quarttrl
32 Sit down
7 Ve•
31 Work In lfte 55 All dodo
heavily
gsrden
56 Prince
34 Potato buy 8 Speaker'o
platform
33 Energy
Vallant'o
36 Tounllng
9 Kind of
35 Door
eldeot
Cty
ranch
opener
57 Dirty pllce
37 Cravat

Grasp this

•

"

w~e"' r~ev

in this

problem

3
A J I 1

Nori.
3 NT

anlmall

58 Ronge

21 Athletic

~

Openlna lc•d: • J

BUY A

Cellular .'

K

f'aq

I NT

(740) 992 0739
;;;;;;;~·:~;:;;~:;~~·:;;;:

.

•

WKt

&amp;tutil

Roofing, Decks
Remodeling,
Drywall and

.,

A K 2

•

T~f PINS . OUT

,

fraction

a

Q 6

•

54 Pock

19 Joint

Salol! II

•

52 ThiiiJWoy

18 Min.

Dealtr: South
Vulnerable: Both

Windows • Roofing
COMiliiGAI...,I!51DilfiUl

I a·

ruleo .,

. Q1017
• Q 10 1
6 Q I I 7

• .r ' • '

robe

merttelllt 50 Weier
16 Breoke the
boiler

E.,t

• J 101 7 .
• J ''

L\ \1\J'S

~LL

15J-

..

Wt'!Ol

((!\'!Ill I I tO\
Spcc;l•ll•ig lpj

Alexis Taylor Gardens

LOST
Black &amp; Tan Male Foxhound
11447 on aide Kingsbury Area.
Ileeen please call AI Oettwlller
Home 992·6273 Work 992·5500
Cell 591·8638

•

•Replacement
.

with a copy to th~ j .[ ll , [j [ ll ~ fl 1 t; 11t !i lfitl, '~!; !1~
Admlnlotrator,
Pat ...-....,
J.D. CONSTRUCTION
Moore, Office . of - · "
Tn n ol t,
0 h 1o
New Homes &amp; Remodeling
Department
of
"Specializing In Log Homes
Tranaportatlon, PO ~
&amp; Rubber Roofs"
~
Carpentry, Masonary, Roofing,
Box 81111, Columbuo, fi j1· Garages, Pole Buildings, Concrete
; 1.''.1•
Plumbing, Electrical, Painting, Decks,
Ohio 43218·0898; · ... i
Roofs &amp;Siding
' 11 1·
Siding, G'utlers, Pressure washing,
(814488-8855).
Mr..
Commerciai&amp;Residential
....._,
requeat one standard
1!!!!r~.-,.
"ff'!!IIIP"•'
Heating/Cooling, Concrete
van.
(2) 14, 28,2002
tJl u'
(740) 992·3987
II~'
It Ia projected that 2tc
. . Owner&amp;
. Opeiator, Jo.hnDean TFN . •
(740) 949·1521
~
~
~
100 person I . with
••.•.. •.'•. 11'1 1-,_, ,'t: ~,
various dloabllltleo
Public Notice
:• ,•.'•. 11- _
-,_ ' ~
.·a·•. .1'1
1-an-466·1234
will use the oervlce
~
seven daYs per w"k
lor varlouo actlviiiH
The 2001 Financial
Including
' report lor SUTTON
tranaportatlon to jobo TOWNSHIP
I1
oltn,
medical completed
and
oppolntmento
lor
recreotlon/leloure and . available
1n o p e c 11 o
n public
by
mat~nrss"
actlvltloo.
appointment wllh
The
Melgo Clerk at 43410
10°o Discount
lnduotrleo,
Inc. Dutchtown Rood,
lnvtteo com menlo Racine, Ohio 45771.
on all orders
and propooolo from (2) 28
·
• 011 change $18.95
over S5.00
all Interested public,
We stock all major
private and para·
transit operatora
217 E. 2nd
brands
Public Notice
Including
lUI
Pomeroy, Ohio
operatoro, for the
In compliance with
Mike Hill . 104
992·5906
provlolon ·
of Amended Section
trenoportatlon
311.11 of the Ohio
service to peraona Revlied Code, a lull
with
varying and complate copy of
dloabllltlu which tho ennual financial WICK'S
report of Melgo HAVLINC and
~~~'::,o"':uon
County Ia ovelleblo
coneerno within our lor public lnope.ctlon EXCAVATING
urvlcloreo.
at the office of tho
-Hauling •Limootane
Bryan Reave•
Operotoro who oro Melgo
Counly
oQravel•
Sand
•ToptOII
BeciUnen.•Nerf Bar
lntereoted In offering Auditor,
Malga
New Homee, Room Addltlone,
•Fill Dirt -Mulch
propoo111 to provide County Courthouae.
• Tonneue Cover
Garagee, Pole Bulldlnp, Roote,
11rvlco
ohould The AudHor'• offlca
•
Ventvlsor • Bug
contoct Robert · A. ho.u ra are Monday
Siding, Decka, Kltchene, Drywall
&amp; Fun Line
Sbleld
Wood,
Auxlllory through Friday, 8:30 ·
6More
S.rvlooo Dlreotor et a.m. to 4:30 p.m. end
of Other Ac&lt;eaorles
Melgo lnduotrllo, Inc. tho
FREE ESTIMATES!
telephone
'
I I
I I I
'
1310 Cerleton Street. number 11 740-812·
I'
\ 1 j, II 1 ' rl 1 ll r
Syracun, Ohio 45778 2818.
740·742·3411
to obleln lull detollo
(7~0 ) 99~ · ~&gt;82/
of the type of (2) 28, 2002
tranaportatlon
tic
tranoportAtlon
sarvlcn lor tho
peroons
with
Dloobllltleo within
Molgo and Galllo
Countleo of Ohio for
per 1 on a
wIth
Dloabllltlu ~ This
application will

(7 40) 843-1249

Eagles 2171 Dance
Band "Stone Street"
8·12
March 1st &amp;2nd

•
•

• Footers, Willi. Slops•

wood

42 Pol_,ou•

lllllke
compoundo 42 Sltrlll berke
12 oiS Twlotod
14 Unleolon
47 Sltelk'o

•

•

COIKIEif/II.OCII

40 L0ft91&gt;0w

I Pirate
c.pgin
10 Organic

'

-·Ohio
45771
740885-38tl

31 Distort, 11

1 SNtre

r

(OIJU(TOIS, II(.

.....

ACROSS

ALDER

:::~~!:."~~~:~ovla! ~~:·a'~~: ~u;;::.:• .Iff;\ Afr... ~
~
fJA !Jr.t.. !!f.\11
1
1

.J

l

---

P/1

on all makes of

Experienced

PHILLIP

,_._..

I

Excellent Condition, $700.

_ _ _ _ _ _, ; , . . _ _ _ _ _ _ _
110HelpWanted

to

preparing a propooal.
Public Moetlng will
be March 13, 2002 at
1:00 p.m. lithe Melgo
lnduotrleo Office In
Syrecuoe~ Ohio.
Written commento
or propo11l1 muot be
oubmltted within 30

·------..-!;
i

TRUCKS

.. •

nu.-.._

740• 667 • 0363

1996 Grand Am, Red, 4

dr. coupe, gold, 5 sp., ale, lndultrles,

.

New Homes • Vimy 1
Siding, New Garages

Progressluetilp line

All Makes Tractor &amp;
""uipment Parts
£.At
faclory A thQ'zed
Case· I~ P::s
Dealers

PUBLIC
''''" '''"''~"''"'""
FUNDII!G.
FOR MORE
IN- -''-''----'---'--~PI ::~~·~7~6~;~7-~:~ Lc"'N
= o=T=I=c=E=s==··=·="'...==.•=
,..=··=·"=···=...=
...=
. . =·:=··"":··.~
FO. CONTACT
CHARLIE
BOYD (110e)783+118

NEA Cro .. word Puzzle

BUilDERS
. IIIC.

li ,.,_._
Doors-=II
...._ .,.,..
.....,,......,
flrty IJinls 51..0

6:30

.

/()()()St. Rt. 7 South
• Coolville, OH 45723

ConditiOn, GOOd T1res,
Residential or commercial
CATTLE (740)446-4536 aftar'Spm
99_Fisher 16' open V Bot· wiring new servk:e or re-PERFORMANCE BULL
tom Boai with New Gal 1 'M 1 Lk:e sed 1
4
SALE.
MONDAY.
MARCH
1996
Escort
Wagon,
~I.,
Trailer.
No · Motor, $2000. WVoo0306
~r:;, ~~d:nour
nEiec:c~·,
4TH, 1:30PM AT THE NEW 5· speed, 90,000 moles, (740)245·9109
:l04-675-1786

BOYD

1111&amp;0 2171

I H - ,..,_,_,
L.,..!f 11R11illlll!l

PIRft

Sportsterl,sport, low m1les dows, baths. mobile home
AT STUO·AOHA StalliOn&amp;· 1995 Cava11er LS, $4000, 1041.4, (740)742-3146
repair and more. Fot free

FOR SALE

BISSEll.

omertv flgles

D£POYS AG

COOK MOTORS. (7401448·
nonce- Painting, vinyl sld·
0103
99. Haney Davidson, I ~DO lng, carpentry, doors, win·

~r;• Farms, 13041895· 199S. S·IO Blazer, Good _

p

(740) 992·3194
992·6635

17401245-048 5 after Opm
- - - - - - - -·-

BoAlS &amp; MOWRS

Economy a..t 12% IIOck fwd ... $1.7511110
Trac. Mlntralllllocb....................;$4.75150
11% Layer Crulllbtll ..................... ..

.

The Dally Sentinel • P~ge B 7

www.mydallyaentlnel.com

: AUEYOOP

To place on od Cull992 21 )6
'

Thurwday, Feb. 28, 2002

. BASEMENT
FREE ESTIMATES
WATERPROOFING
l'rlgresslue
unconc1i1ional lilotimo guar·
CoueriiiJIII c.....w~ 741)-992•7599
antee. Local references fur·
- - · (NO SUNDAY CALLS)
nishod.
Establlshod
1975.
~:;;;:;,;;;;;::;~
'------~'-1
~------~'~~~
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 448·
0870,
1·800·287-0578.

now lor 4-H projects. Pro· 1997 S-10, 73K , $5295. 15 Brand New Condition, - - - - - - - , ,
ven Champion Bloodlines. others starting at $1495. S8500. (740)379-2601
C&amp;C General Home Malnte-

r

.. ,

(10'&amp;10' &amp;10'1120')

Full Blood Boer Percentage 1996 CorsiCa, 83K, $2695. 200 1 Harley Davidson 883 Rogers Waterproofing.
kids and lemal~s . Reserve 1993 Cavalier. 9BK. 52195. Hugger, 5 10 Actual Miles,

'Looa war Star Poco' black 1995
D.odge
foundation. also AOHA and 80,000 miles. New Paint,
APHA horses for sale, $3900. (740)256-1619

~

MANlEVS
SELF STORAGE
Beech St. .
97
mlddleport, OH

--..

l989 Ford Probe, 4 cyl. tur·
bo, High Milos. Runs GOOd.
740 992
1 l -ll664
I.JVESroCK
1993 Ford Taurus, good
740·742; 1314
4.H GOATS FOR SALE. 1995 Beretta, 83K, $2695.
1850.

~ j;

1/1-411 rno. pd

==-=:::c.c.:="":.,=:'-:--

Usad. 5 H.P.
(304)675-3824

;

-

Hours
7:00AM - 8:00 PM

r

Trov Silt Tiller Brand New.

3SS37 SL Rt 7 Nortb • Pomeroy, OH 45720
Equine 12
12% aw..t HorN fiBd ........-.-ss.ocwo
lweltllvfl
12% Sweet HQI'8e fled ................ 14.40110
Hllnllra PrldB 21% dog food ........$UMIO

" I ', ..
'

rhv.

Ir'o

"Ahead In SeNice"

291170 l!alhan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771

•

For Sale: 89 Fotd Ranger
PU· Blue, Ellt. Cab, 4 cyl., 5

r40

Shade River AG Service

7-2217

-·
To

Speed, Good Condition,
$1800. CaN (740)446-4514
1989 Camaro SS 350 auto, or (740)4*3248 111tr 6pm. Loa...ii
Now Holland 489 911 Hajbl- PS, P8. N~e &amp; Straight.
na, PMw Ouardl and SICkle, Fortll Green In color.
VANl &amp;
1 1978 Javoo camper 21ft.
e.collont
Condition( SIO,SOO (:l04)675-3B24
4-Wils
pull
behind $3000...
(740)245-5815
(304)882·3507
Now Holland
Manure1 1978 Dodge 2 Door, Elcep- 1988 Dodge Caravan, 1887 Fifth Whoel sprin1er
Spr-. (740)4.46-2514
llonall1 Good . Shape, 100,000 miles. Runs, $250. RV 30ft. Verj Good Condf.
79,000 actual m1les, No (7401256-660 1
tion ('"')89r ...... .~ ,.,
Time fOf Frott Seeding Pas- · Aust, Never Been Wrecked, -:::~::--:-::-:::--:--:·
~ ~ ""
. . 4 Rod, F·250, 4K4, Loove a Message (:l04)8481ura and Ha1 Fields.
. . White with Rod vinyl lop 199
11200
ATV 8roodcol1 Soedera, 12 and rod Interior. (740)446· 130,000 miles. $7,000 flnn.
VOII Hlgl1 Oualliy, Als'rn011 9780
(740)388-9055
ATVa, $295.
Jlm'o Farm Equlpman1 Inc. 1987 Nlssan Maxima SW
(740)4.46-2484
loaded
. , sunrool. 6cyt.
MOJUKCYCUS
•·-~-;_,;_ _ _ _ _ s12oo. oeo (304)675·6893 .._
_ _ _ __... L..w..;IMI'KUiiiiiiiliil'"'"""'liiiiliiiorl"
Never

Hill's Self
Storage

COot;:l lalj Rebuilt, Lola of
ExtfM. Ew r"lnt Condition

?•

Thu...ctay, Feb. 28, 20112

· Phone
992-21 55
,.
\I

.

'

Atl.t ES (March 2 1- Aproll '&gt;)
-· Se\ thl' c.".llllpll' whe11 dl'.llinp; wilh (ltlwr•. t~r n t;lkin~ .i
poin t to ~i.'t' th at C\'l'rYllllt' is
tn•.ttl."' d ,;qually. T hey, in tmn .

will lwhaVi.'

~imil .u·l y

to you.

TAUilUS (1\pril 211- M,ry
20) -- A11 arr.ut j.!.t'll 1t'11t you
~h ;I VC w ilh " ,·n--workcr will
wrn otlf w lw nnllu.dl ~· ~11nd

u th ~r.

'

GEMINI. (Mav 21-Jr" " 20)
-- Pa l ~ will 'vdnm1~ yotlr
wmpany ,even if ir i~ me rely
vi~itin~ wirll l',lc h ntl n:r ovn
tht· tch·phom.•. ~ m 1pl y h.wing
llll' ( Oiltat:l will bL' l'llOl[~h fOr
yo u.
CANCER (Ju 111.' 2 1 ~Jnly

, yc.·l no n ne \\;ould label
yo u gh b. Tho se \\-'110 lt ~tl' ll
and oh~erve you will he aw.1re
ll1at wh .H you &lt;. ,1y comes

~ harp

str.1i~ht

fi·o m the

ln!&lt;~rt.

SCO I1.PIO (0". 2&lt;-Nuv.
22) -- It won't bt· any choirl'
fu r vou tn .rhomt" betwc.·en
prof;t :md pridt• of :IL" t'Oll\~
pli~ hme1 1t . Ad1i{'\'l ll~ sc l f-c~­

tetm cuul~i Wt'.ltly otltwcigh a
tHOUilfOlin {lt ~ilver.

2.:!) -- T hi s is a ~;ood d;~y co

SAC:ITTAR t US (Nov. 23·

drc;un ~1p ~omc uf those
ch.mgcs you'd like to lllake in
vnu r mrromal i n :o.:~. Yom
;nind i ~ sh;1 11, and )~o m ~yc is

Dec 21) --. A l';d might be
riv;ht thc.•n:• fur yo u whl'll you

h'l'n. :md rhe n·~u h ~ ~ hnulJ
bL' 1110' [ pk;I(Ol!\t.

LEO Urdy 2J·A"H · 22) -CI.M nrt·~

an.·

nothi n~

wi ll r.H lll' your L'av;c , but l"\'Cil if you
should wince i n w;~nl\y, tlmst•
armnuJ y011 will l lCVfr know
ir. You ' ll kcl·p your plt'.ls;mt
dt•mt•anor th H) ll !.[hnut 11 all .
VlllCO (Au~. 2.l-Scpt. 22)

-- It nnt-!ht be

i.'.t~in th .111

liSLlal to pie ce tO).!;t'thd· the
111 m.1ir ~·mt'n• workin~ 011 ,
Ut•c.1u~t· vou'll hi.· IJUH~' ~u..: ­
n·~~!ld th;111 USt!.tl in J.:.tlhl'Till~
infmm oninn you lll' l'd .'
LI BR A (Sc.•pt. ::!J-Ort. 2J) Your w it ' nlllld ln· r.1znr

'

need him m lwr Llu:· mm't in
ulfcring cnmlru ctivc su ~~c s­
riom th at could c.·~c:\ pc yoll .1t
the.• 11\0IIlt' llL You' ll wckonll'

the input .
C APRICORN (Doc . 22Jan . I\!) -- Your ;tlly i11 J joint ·
'-'mlcavor may b~ ,t hit slower
than you , but \Viii h.IVc th mg~
u ndl'T nmtrn l nt all time~. omd
l'YL'ntua!ly a cron{p!i~ll hi~ or
her pa rt.
IIQUAiliUS 0'"' 20-Feh.
19) -- lkr ~HI5C you 'rl' .1lrt'.\(ly
aw ,1 rc of wh ;lt ym1 kn ow. ir
\viii he 111ust \,ltid~·iu~ fi.1r you
to lis lc11 to w h,lt other people
knt')W l t'J ;1 gn·ar w.ty w
1-!·1 ~ he r ;tddilinn.ll k11 ~"\·bl~('. ")

.\

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•

-

'

Bengals hire John Cooper, Bl
..

•

a1
.

Melp ~unty's

What's inside
, I

I

AM!IIIICAN

•..,_

#C0096

LUlCUIIIV

· UPTO

. $llJ988

$llJ375

Commissioners,
school board
reach deal

SAVINGS

liZ

#C0102 .

Spotlight: 1,.00 Years of 4-H

i
LINCOLN

J1

Hometown News,.per

$5700·00

Portland Elementary to be .
transferred for community use
Virginia upsets Duke, Bl

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEIJ@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM
POMEROY - Meigs County Com~1issioners accepted
the Southern Local Board of Education's terms for the
transfer of the Portland Elementary School on Thursday,
finalizing plans for use of the building as a community cen-

Deaths
HaFVey E. Allensworth, 54
Gene Rice, 79
LeonaK Roach,99

ter.

At the commissioners' regular meeting, School Board
President Ron Cammarata, Superintendent James Lawrence
and Treasurer Dennie Hill presented a sale agreement which
the commissioners approved, setting down terms of the sale, .
including a stipulation that the county will return to the
school board proceeds of any future sale of the school property.
Under the terms of the agreement, the board will be entitled to 60 percent of the building's original appraised value "·
if sold before 2012, 50 percent if sold before 2027, and 40
percent if sold before 2077.
The building was vacated at the end of the 2001-0;:!
school year, when the district consolidated its elementary
students in the new Southern Elementary School.
Portland Community Center Inc.. a non-profit community group, hopes to develop the property into a community center, to include an interpretive history center about
Morgan's Raid and the Civil War Battle of Buffington
Island, according to JeffThornton, president of the board of

Details, A3

$20,970
2G02 TAiaiSSE

l002fXPI..OIER

SAVINGS UP TO

$23802

$4~000

4 Door, #C0253

#C0163

$17662

"

..

Weatl1er
Hlp: 50s, Low: :JOs
Details, A2

&lt;HI WEEK - Meigs County Commissioners Jim Sheets, Jeff Thornton and Mick Davenport, ·
joined by county 4-H agent Chip Haggerty, second from left, declared March 3-9 Ohio 4-H week
in Meigs County. The commissioners will hang a Centennial banner, shown here, on the front
of the Meigs County Courthouse next week. (Brian J. Reed)

Economy
grows

commissioners.

: WASHINGTON (AP)
-:-.The U.S. economy grew
~;the fourth quarter at its
fi!l:est pace in a year, pow~ted by the biggest jump in
consumer spending on cars

... aJ&gt;d,~· gQ.Qd$ , -

since 1986, the government
reported Thursday.
The latest snapshot of the
economy's health as measured
by the groSs dOmestic product
suggests that t)le recession,
"!hich began in Man:h, has
probably entled and may turn
out to be the country's mildest
~turn ever, analysts said.
GDP, the total output of
goods and services produced within the United
States, grew ·at an annual
rate of 1.4 percent in the
final quarter of 2001, considerably stronger than the
0.2 percent growth rate first
estimated, the Commerce
Department .said.

Lotteries
01:110

Pick 3: 2+1
Pick 4: 1-2-0-7
B11ckeye 5: 7-18-19-25-30
Pick 3 dey: 3·0-Q
Pick 4 dey: 5-7-4-0

..

WHEEL ALIGNMENT

2-w::l!l~~: :::::~~ ~.995
••

tabor may be required on some vehicles.

·

TIRES ·

W.VA.

Deily 3: 5-0-1

.
Daily 4: 9-2-5-7
Cl~ 25: 1-3-8-9-20-21

We will meet or beat any competitor's
advertised once on the same tire.

We fealure all m.jor brandl: Goody..r, Flrn10nt, o-ral, Mlchtln. B~one.
Conli'ltntal, UNIROYAL. BF Goodrich. Moun11ng and balancing may be txtra.

----------------------$1
Q95

FORD FAC I ORY

MCIURCRAFT

• Service lniile up to' 5

BUGSHIELD ..

quarts~~!fl~~

starting
at

Motorcraft oil filter • Perform Muhi·Polnt Vehicle Inspection
• Lube • Check and fill necessary fluids • AU In 29 minutes
Of

less • Diesel vehicles

be e&gt;etra.

FORD MOTOR CO.
I
FLOORMATS

s4soo

Installed

SPLASH .G UARDS : KEYLESS ENTRY

Starting
at

Starting

at

$1 0 ·
Pair

~ Sta~ing$180

Index
.. i SectiDR Calendar

12 PaiU

AS

Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies

84-5

Weather

. A2

Obituaries
Sports

86

AS

A4
A3
A3
81-3

. C 2002 Ohio V1iiey Publishina CO.

The group has applied for a $100.000 grant through the
Ohio Scenic Byways program, and the county hopes to add

4-H Centennia
t 0,
-

Please He County, A3
i

.

POMEROY
'"'.
.

0

~.

.

BY BRIAN J. REED
POMEROY - Ohio 4-H Week is always
observed the first week of March, but this
year's observance is extra-special, because the
youth program turns 100 rhis year.
The Meigs County Commissioners signed a
proclamation Thursday declaring March 3-9 as
4-H Week in Meigs County.
·
4-H has changed a lot since its inception.
Members still experieace fairs, projects and
camp, but school enrichment and entrepreneurship programs, youth-at-risk activities and urban
gardening . are also included in the program,
which is no longer exclusive to farm kids.
Ohio is considered the birthplace of 4- H,
and this year's statewide Centennial celebration
is intended to increase public awareness of 4H, energize current 4-H members and volunteers, and to recruit additional members and
volunteers in all 88 counties, according to
David "Chip" ·• Haggerty, Meigs County's
Extension agent for 4-H.
The current 4-H program and its "learn by
doing" approach to education was started 100
years ago by a Springfield teacher nan1ed A.B. Graham, who observed the difficulty many students
had in applying science to real-life situations.
He believed they needed a way to pf:!ctice
Jfhat they learned in a school outside the walls
df the classroom·.
He recruited some students for an after. school club he created that would apply what
they learned in class to the world' around them.
The idea soon became the foundation for the
"Boys and Gids Agricultural Club," the fore runner to today's 4-H clubs.
It's now the largest youth organization ·

DROP BOX- Residents of Pomeroy can pay their water bill
In a more timely fashion now that a new drop box has been
placed behind the Municipal Building. (Tony M. Leach)

world, with more than 6 million members in
the U.S. al&lt;me. Haggerty estimates Meigs
County membership at around 600, in · 40
clubs,
Meigs County's 4-H clubs remain relatively
traditional, Haggerty said, with. community
clubs - many of them devoted specifically to
livestock - showing fair projects every August.
Most of Meigs County's 4-H'ers are still
rural kids. Eastern Local School District.claims
the most members, and while youth in M~4c
'dleport, Pomeroy and other towns are jus~~
welcome to join 4-H, they are fewer.in number than farm boys and girls.
,
While Ohio 4-H Week is coming up, the
program's Centennial celebration will be a
year-wide celebration. Meigs County 4-H
members and advisors will participate in a
Power of Youth Pledge, which charges them
with community service, and a nationwide
youth conversation, which will address · the
needs of young people and their organizations.
"The whole purpose of 4JH is building life
skills," Haggerty said. "That includes teaching
kids to be responsible, teaching them leadership skills, and making good decisions."
"Even tho11gh 4-H has changed a lot in the
last 100 years, those basic objectives haven't
changed at all;' he said.

Water bill payment
now made easier
'

:--~~~--~~~-, 11111,... txtrl, Ubar not lncludlcl
'(

'

• •

• •

Veterans Memorial Skilled Nursing Center in Pomeroy

EXPERIENCE
I

992-2104
I

"'

1I

...J .•

--

lEACH

POMEROY - Paying the monthly water bill will be
much easier now that a drop box has been installed behind
the Pomeroy Municipal Building.
Mayor John Blaettnar said Thursday a new drop box has
been placed behind the building so residents can pay their
water bills in a more coilVenient and timely fashion.
"Before- the installation of the drop box, people wanting
to pay their water bill had to do so by either going to a specific business downtown, where the bills' were collected, or
visiting the water office inside the Municipal Building," said
Blaettnar.
"The process was very time consuming and a change was
definitely in order," he added.
•
Several weeks ago, the downtown location discontinued
collecting water bills leaving customers with no choice but
to take it to the water office or mail their payment in.
"Now, people can pay their bill by just driving up to the
box and dropping the payment inside," he added. "However, people .can still pay their bill inside the water office" if
they choose to do so."
Blaetmar said the drop box is conveniently open 24-hours
a day for "those on the go," and all payments placed within the box are collected on a daily basis.
..

.

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Commislioners declare
Ohio 4-H Hteek
in Meigs County

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