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Page B 8 • The Dally Sef;!tlnel

Thursday, March 7, 20&lt;1:!

www.mydallyaentlrwt.com

ALLEYOOP

IRIDOI

NEA Cro11word Puzzle

PHILLIP

ACROSS

ALDER

'a

A I 7 S
KQ J I

t

w...
AQ JIII7

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&amp; At 3

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t I 6 4J
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t n 11
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18

DeAter· Nnrth

Vulnenble:: Neither ·
Wnt

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58

Pu•

Opcnlna lead: • Q

Falsecard
When a contract
looks certain to succeed, the defenders
should t:rlsecard to try
•
to deflect declarer
frmn 'a winnin~ line.
In this .deal, how
GO At4tAI&gt; WITt401JT Mi,
should the play proI fllNif. .I I&gt;ON'T
reed a Iter West leads
the
spade &lt;tucen
yl ANT TO r.NOvl
a~ainst four hearts?
MY FUTIJ#lf If
North's rebid shows
IT'S OIJT
a balanced hand with
four hearts, more
~
points than needed
for a one-no-trump
opening, and too few
for a two-no-trump
BARNEY
opening. . (With a
shortag&lt;•,
North
should make a splinter
rebid of three spades
or four clubs, anuounciug game values
with at most a singleton in the bid suit.)
The opening lead
marks East with the
spade ace, so declarer
ducks .the . fir&gt;t two
rounds of the suit,
THE BORN LOSER
hoping East will have
....
....
~
~
. I.
to ",waste
us ace. "
OOBODY
e&gt;.J\1 I4IOW rl"'~ Jlr.:&gt;T 'C.NJ:X:
ON N:WUI'IT OF I'lo\ !0 ~I
Here, though. the deUK£':&gt; ME
TI\EY'RE. --....._ ...,..........._,.,.,..,
fcn,Jcrs take the fir&gt;t
1\1 SC.f\00!..!
three tricks in the
suit. Then East exits
with, say, a diamond.
South's only problem
revolves around
•
the trump suit. Missing just the jack, he
should start with his
king (or queen). If
BIG NATE
everyone plays low,
' rl::;:-;1'\:;;l.l;&lt;S:T:r:-;:!.P&lt;:;;::f:;'-'~TH~i~$:-;&lt;1$~
he should cross to
THE ~-~~~ GROUP
OF ".A.Ttii...ETE5" I'VE
durnmy's
heart ·ace, .
II
GI'.IPES)
EveR COI'.CHED! 'r\:lU
WHAT?
retaining the power
NEED 1l:l GET FIT,
0
of his I 0 and here
fEOI'LE I
0
picking up the suit
without loss:
However,
East
' deflect declarer
might
-~
by dropping his heart
i
•
nine on the first
_.:::;:::=;~...;;;;;;,._.:.~
round of the suit.
'--:--....~o--~.-.JU This suddenly gives
PEANUTS
declarer a two-way finessing position. If
11.\JH~:M-~ EVER'I90D't'
C1MON! WE NEED TilE
West
has the J-6-4 of
601N6'?TII15 15
PRACTICE !AR£ '(()U MR.~IP I
hearts lelt, South must
ONLY A SIIOWER!
OF A LITTLE RAIN?!!
cash the queen (or
king), then finesse
dummy's eight. Here,
though, that costs the
contract.
To try to stop this
falsecard, declarer
should broach tromps
by leading low from
the dummy. Then it
is dangerous for East
to falsecard with the
nine because that
would &lt;abotage t.he
defense if West has a
singleton I 0.

Melp County's

11 Cualody
12 "DtiCiolure" ablr

DOWN

What's inside

m-'

Man surrenders
qfier 3-hour
stand&lt;!If

Of
MY tiANI&gt;S.

-.

Weather
Hl1h: 60s, Low: 50s
Details, Al

Investors play

T~&gt;iTY

!

MARCH 71

by Luis Campos
Today~

'HP

KUA

clue: F equals H

MUT'V

VFCHII

BFJT

RHTZR,

KUA'CJ

-

(SARHY

IJUTLCM

PJJI

EJZZK

L
IJJ

MJLM.'

YCHVHY)

PJLirFJC

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'Mathematics may be dallnad as the
subject In which we never know what wa are talking about.'-

Bertrand Aull8811

T~~~:t:~' S©~~lA..;..lGt.~s~~ won
GAMI

ldaod ~y CLAY I. POLLAN------

-

0 four
Rearran;e letters · of
scrambled ward1

rhe
b•
low to form four simple werds.

I

LEMHOY

Ir I I
I

I

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r I 1~ I

HUMNC

r

2

1

.

I.

--rrA1 Nr-G--r.-l6 _Ar--il :~:

"Every dog should have it's
day,"lcomplainedlomyhusband,
";~-~~-:::;~·;::;~·~:,"and that would be okay if they
r ·.
would bark from nine to five so 1
.
FL AS ET
. could have .. - ...... - .. -."
1

Is I 1 I

•

I

lt--r,-T,'r71,oel,-,,-1 O
L-..1..-..1.--..1..-.J.-.J.--J

'@

Complote the chuckle quoted

by filling In the missing worda
you develop from step No. 3 beJow.

PIINT NUMBERED ·
lETTERS IN SQUARES

Fri,lw, Motrdt X,

~U02

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Medium· Polyp- Lumpy· Comply .. PUPPY
On a poster outside a theater running a family raled
movie, the manager wrole: 'E very child not accompa- ··
nied by a parent will receive a free PUPPY."

2fJ) WhatcVl'T ynu do, don't·

be:

:1

loner. Gclting ill\'olvcd

with other!&gt;, even spontanc-

'"'ill

ou.dy,
mnthc yom rcsllcs.~
spi 1~i-t an(l give ym1 a 11l'\\' lt&gt;:1se

litl-. Know \\•h~o-rc to look
li lt· nmllliH..' l' :md ym1'1l find it.

0 11

Thc

A~tro-Graph

M at~.: h ,.

mak ~·r

in!&gt;tJJltly n·wals \\•l1icl1
si!'ll5 :~re rmiiJIItil..·ally perfect
rt1r you. M;ti\ $2.75 tQ Matdl makcr, r.:.h1 thi~ n~·wsp:~pcr,
t' .O. llo.&lt; 175H, Murroy IHI
Sta tiun , New York, NY
IOI~h.

ARIES (M:~rch 21-April
19) The bi~gi.:~t as~ct you hav~
workiup; for you to fulfill your
ambitim1~ expcrtatiom i~ your
inst in..:tivc ·kn ow- iluw in
~k i rt.ing arolp ld tlb~trunio m .
It '11 sen·e yo~ wdl.
TAU itU,~ (~pril 211-M:~y

20) Yuu'rc an c~pt·l·iall y ~om!
ll'arn cr. fi.rst, in JH' rceivi ng
tlu ;~ litic~ in pt hc~ ami thl·n ~r.

'1bur

fec.:livdy

t•mul.ttin~

tiv~ trait~.

their posiB&lt;,th your eye and

mind work in uni~un.

GEMINI (M:n· 21-June
20) You might l~;~vt' to ollljmt
ttl a ~hitlin~ cuudition, whith
could ocrur without w:~ruin~.
Fortunately. your adaptability
will c.:o mc tu your aid ;md
t-:llitle you mrn·ctly.
CIINCER (June 2 1-July
22) He neither owrlv as~t'rtivc
uor unduly compla(\'llt. Tlu:
l!lO!&gt;t propitinus courst• ro follow i~ to kL'\'P c.•vcrythin!{
down th'c~·"' middlt&gt; and in
prn}&gt;l·r b;llrmcc.
LEO Uuly 23- llug. 22)
. • Ct,-workL•rs and ;Jssnc ia tcs
wiU mirror your attitude. so
lllj')ke sure you havt' a smile
nn ynur tac~ :md a coopcra ~
liw !&gt;pirit at all ti111c s. It 'll p:1y
nfl. big time .
VIRGO (At~g. 23-Sept .
22) Should you find ymns\·lf
ilt:ting in a moum~crial rule,,
lu•nd ll\'t'T h.Kkwani co he f;1ir

and just. fhis will l'Vukc the
roopemtiun :111d desirrd resulr
ym1\llikc from ~uhordinat\''),
LIURA (Sq&gt;t. 23-0n. 23)
Uec.:amc )'tHI'II arr.1nge your
Jj.{CIHI.i pmj1crly, you wdl .hc
able lo finaliz e hl yom s.Jti~-

. I

NEW YORK (AP) Wall Street played it safe
Thursday, pausing for mild
profit-taking ,even as more
evidenc e of a recoVering
economy flowed in.
Analysts said investors,
while ·increasingly optimistic that a turnaround · is
beginning, are not convinced the market's latest
rally, which has included a
string of triple-digit gains
in the Dow Jones industrials, will las.t.
Wall Street was also concerned that a positive
assessment of the economy
by Federal Reserve Chairman
Alan
Greenspan
might signal higher inter.
est rates.
The Dow closed down
48.92, or 0.5 percent, at
10,525.37, losing some
ground from a 140-point
gain Wednesday.
Broader stock indicators
also dipped lower.
The Standard &amp; Poor's
500 index slipped 5.23, or
0.5 percent, to 1,157 .54.
The Nasdaq composite
index finished down 8.77,
also ·• 0.5
percent, at
1,881.63.

Lotteries

Ia
__..;;..____,
'lllrtbda.v----In tin· vr.:;H ;tlu.·ad, HHlr
most men~orablc cn•nt; ;ire
likL·ly to be those .pr~,~.· iflit:ltt•d
with, :uul llmn1g h, ti-kmh .
Tht!' camarade rit ~ till')' oiTn
p;ivl'~ you tl1c courat!:c to be
e\'crything you can bt!' .
PISCES (Feb. 20-M.or&lt;h

I

it safe

CELEBRITY CIPHER
Colobrily Cipher cryptogromo are croaled from quotations by lamous
people, pul and presant. Each letter In the cipher stands for another.

OHIO
Pick 3: 6·8·1
Pick 4: 4-7-9-7
Buckeye 5: 4-6-13-29-37
Pick 3 day: 4- 1-6
Pick 4 day: 9-6·6·0

Daily 3: 6·6·4
Daily 4: 9· 7-0-4

Cash 15: 1·11·14-15·16-20

- hal'J&lt;. come~

IQ

2 Sections - 11 Pill•

calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies

Obituaries

AS
86-7
BB
A4

A6
A3
A3
81-5

Sports

Weather

on the scene after sustaining
injuries from a shotgun blast
· allegedly delivered by her
boyfriend, Eric Qualls, also of
Middleport.
According to Middleport
Police Chief Bruce Swift, offiBY TONY M. lEACH
.cers rece ived a phone call
TLEACH®MVDAILVSENTINEL .COM
around 6:27 p.m. abou t the
MIDDLEPORT
A. shootin g of an employee of
woman is dead following a The Corner Restaurant at
shooting outside 3"'fvviddleport South Third Avenue and Main
restaurant ·on
Thursday Street.
evening and the main suspect
Upon arriving on the scene,
barricaded himself inside a Swift said officers discovered
residence before - finally sur- the body of Ackerman laying
outside the restaurant. Witrendering to authorities.
Becky Ackerman, 22, Mid- nesses told police that Qualls
dleport, was pronounced dead had entered the establishment

.

A2

c 2002 Ohio Valley Publishing co.

and forciNy removed Ackerman after threatening to shoot
several people inside the
restaurant.
"Once outside the restaurant, Quails allegedly shot
Ackerman point blank with a
·shotgun," said Swift. "After
fleeing the crime scene, Qualls
then barricaded himself inside
a nearby residence."
Me-mbers of the Gallia
County SWAT Team, along
with negotiators with the Gallia County Sheriff's Department, Meigs County Sheriff's
Department, Pomeroy Police
Department and Gallipolis

CRIME SCENE - The Corner Restaurant in Middleport was
the site of a shooting Thursday evening which left one person
dead. (Brian J. Reed) .

Please see Shootlftl. A3

Jump start on training Cross-county
titling is here
Meigs could lose revenue
to convenience
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEQ®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Ohio vehicle and boat buyers can now
buy titles for their cars and boats in any county in Ohio, but
the change in Ohio law could mean a loss of revenue for
Meigs County.
The Ohio Bureau of Motor Vehicles implemented the
new cross-county titling system in Franklin, Fairfield, Licking, Lucas, Madison and P.ickaway co unties in February as
part of a pilot program. On Monday, th e service wenc
statewide.
. State officials, including Lt. Gov. Maureen O'Connor, say
the new policy will benefit residents by way of added convenience.
"Cross-county titling saves time," said O'Con nor, who
serves as director of the Ohio Department of Public Safety.
"The burden of having to purchase a title in the county of
residence has been removed, allowing auto dealers and customers to have their vehicles and boats titled "'Y'vhere in
Ohio."
While the buyer's county of residence will receive che
sales tax revenue on the vehicle regardless of where the title
is purchased, and the one-tench percent poun dage on tax
collections, the county which processes the tick will keep a
$5 title fee charged by the lo'cal Clerk of Comts.
Because Meigs County has only one new car dealer, this
could mean a serious loss of rev~n u e for the Meigs County
Title Office, according to Clerk of Courts Marlene Harri-

Area residents develop skills for work
Job advaucement and en'hancemenl, and resume
and interviewing skills as well as comp_uter ski/Is
are at the center rif a four-week series of computer
classes offered to adults through the Appalachian
Center for .Economic Networks at Eastem and
Southem high schools.
.The Jump Start Worlif~rce Readiness Class is a
ftee four-u~tek series if evening classes where participants learn interpersonal communications and transferable technology skills necessary to secure employment. Word processing, data base, spread sheers, desktop pt~blisltitJg, PowerPoint and web browsers and e-

mail systems are emphasized.
The classes are held Mondays, 1i~esdays and
11Jur.day from 6:9 p.m. The 11ext series ~f classes
begin March 25 at the Cotmmmity Teclmology
Center al Southern High School. Students illlerested in enrolling i11 the classes can contact Briatt
Hou,ard at 592"3854. 11te CTCs, meamvhile, are
opett to the public from 4-6 p.'m., Mimday thro11glt
Friday, during tJOn-class times, ar1d community
members will have access to the lntemet a11d all other
computer applicatior~s. (Submitted)

Please.SH ntllnc. A3

THE WINNER

Meigs Co/ Rela for
Life planning 1nalized
•

W.VA.

Index
f.1ction a C011plc of maner~
you've left dangling. It'll give
.' you ;1 feeling of roiltcmment
.
SCORPIO (O&lt;t. 24-Nov.
22) You ll CVl'r do anything in
h;~.lf nH.';u;me, but you cnuld
slww tht' wMid that when
ytHl l' homc diplomacy ·as a
t.:hoic.:e, }'Oil t:an havt' everybody purrin~.
sAGITTIIItiUS (Nnv.
23-lJec. 21) PatienCL' isn 't
IH.'t:e~~arily yom lon~ snir. bnt
when you u'e it. it pays otT.
This prove~ to be trlll' wht•.n
n·wards and at·kllc)wlrdg111ent
for ~tmJ ct h i n~ )'Oll diJ :~ whi!t.•

One killed in Middleport shooting
.

· Marshall out of tourney, Bl

,..

Hometown Newspaper

3o~~

• lllumpno

35 Llul
WNkv
37 Guile!
1 llftaaure
Moore
40 lloborl E.
2 Comlc-alllp
t 7 Actre11
ond Spike
Jillion
41 Creplowoy
3 Subolde
4 UH,Ia
20 Dodgea
42 Sc~ll croft
"
Olrl
21 Caught •
43 Sulk
5 "Scream ..
anooze
44 Type or
director
22 Sea bird
code
23 Unwltty .
47 Sylloglam
Croven
3411edS..
6 Slomoch
comebecka
word
pen IMUll
24 Grab 1 cab 44 Cpl. and
muaclla
35 Join
7 Zlnrlddll
25 Tolklng bird
Sgt.
38 Commend
8 "Orinoco
37 Ll'l Abner
21 Throne
41 - Plllnea,
flow"
2t Mochu
111.
and Delay
olngor
Plcchu
51 Llnclacape
. 38 Droop
9 Thrulh'l
or por1rlll
dweller
31 Oahu
52 Pump lutl
3t Archlpel·
heme
neighbor
54 Fiber-rich ·
ogo compo- 10 Undlrgrod
·33 Enlreot
groin
nenta
-dega.

K J I l

Soellll

r.::.

1t Milling 1
llilry .
23 llftllllnce
unit
2e Of, to Fritz
27 BMW riYII
30 Blm loft
32 Follb8ck
111118gy (2
· wcla.) ·

• AI
•

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¥KQ1 15

U Thunnan ol

1 Show
41 Pillute
IPill oual
gru~r
S I I - from 44 Whet banka
• aiMO
do
10 Trinlr.el
50 . , _
12 Fillet
53 Her c'wtaa
13 E-.
!IS Workaby
14 Tenn
Venit
5e
a.llroom
15 lleck nwk
numbonl
11 IIOIIIIIng
57 Uthlrt'

K 5 I

' •

Tips f~r new parents, A4

(

(Elvis' to appear
at kick&lt;ff event
March 15

kick-off will feature Elvis
impersonatOr Dwight Icenhower, a 50/50 drawing and
door prizes ..itefreshments will
also · be available for those in
· .•&gt;..
atten danee
The Amehcan Cancer Soc!FROM STAFF REPORTS
ety, the na~on's largest · and',.
POMEROY Plans for
·
most respected
voluntary
the 2002 Meigs County Relay
for Life kick-off event have health agency, sponsors the
Relay for Life event.
been finalized.
The Relay allows particiThe event, sponsored by
pants
from all walks of life,
Farmers Bank, will take place
at the Meigs Middle School including patients, . medi cal
and support staff, corporaon March 15 from 7-9 p.m.
Following the theme, "Fri- tions, churches and communiday Night ac the Movies," the ty volunteers to join together

to fight cancer.
Tickecs for the kick-off
event are $7 for adults, $5 for
children 12 and under, and are
available ac ·the following loca.tions: Farmers Bank in
Pomeroy and Tuppers Plains,
The Meigs County License
Bureau ,
Meigs
County
Tourism Office, Meigs County, Chamber of Commerce,
Shear Illusions in Middl eport,
and the Racine Hom e
National Bank.
Tickets will also be avai lable
at the door fo r $9.
For more informatio n, concactJoann Crisp at 992-2136.

Dolores Wolfe of Racine was the winner in the 2002 Super
Bowl sweepstakes contest sponsored by The Daily Sentinel"'
and area merchants. She guessed the winning team, New
England, and the final scpre, 20-17, for the win. Here David
Harris, Sentinel sales representative. presents her with a
check for $50. (Charlene Hoeflich)

Aftentlon Aetna Subscribers

~·mr .

CII I'I~ I C:O itN

(Ike . 22J ;~r l. 19) - Be a take-charge
pcrso11, bt.•crniH' ym1r lt"ader~hip qu~litit.·~ ~rc very pronounced at rhis time. Jumr in

The Holzer Medic;al Center Emergenc;y Department .
offers highly'qualified doctors and nurses to help you .
with any medical emergenc;y.
Your Holzer emergenc;y service coverag~ has not c;hanged
and emergenc;y room charges remain covered by Aetna.

if you tind yoursdf in a 5ituation rhat lack~ direction.
AQUARIUS U:~n . 211fcb. llJ) Flow with evcou ;m d

don't fighr the (.'urn·nts. You
cuuld lh·rive b(.•nt;.firs, not ·
from 1hin~~ Yt'll do, but frc.Hn
things uth(.•rs do for you. Enjoy.

www .holzer.org

For more inform'ation, or·if you have questions,
~•ease call (740) 446·556a.
",.

------'

~·-- -·

,
.....

-

...

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the 'Holzer D~fference

.I

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PageAl

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Frlcl.y. March •• 1001

Olestra gets back seat-beeause public didn't buy it

Ohio weather
Seturd8y, March I

, ....-

•

CINCINNATI (AP)- Th~re was the
negative publicity, the label that wuned
consumers the product might cause
"abdominal cramping and loose stools."
Some consumers also had lumped the
fat substitute olestra into a category of
products they had come to expect as
lacking the taste they craved.
Procter &amp; Gamble Co. had spent more
than $200 million over 25 years to
develop the synthetic chemical made
from sugar and vegetable oil that is used
in P&amp;G's Fat-Free Pringles and in
WOW! chips made by Frito-Lay. But
olestra never took off with consumers.
A. G. Lafley, P&amp;G's president and chief
executive, last year decided the company
would no l~nger push to add it to other
products, such as frosting and salad dressing. And P&amp;G recently sold its olestra-

l....wl.

.

making plant in Cincinnati to '1\.vin snack ingredient. It was rolled out with
Rivers Technologies of Quincy, Mass., the promise it provided the taste of f~t
which is to make the product and sell it without the calories.
· P&amp;G has not released sales figures for
to P&amp;G for distribution.
' Marketing consultant Jack Trout in olestra and will not discuss specifics of its
Greenwich, Conn., says olestra flopped marketing research for the product, sold
because consumers had C&lt;?me to. expect under the brand name Olean.
Company spokeswoman Suzette Midunsatisfactory taste from nonfat or loY(fat products.
·
dleton, however, .aid P&amp;G hears more
"It's a classic example of ll).isreading often from consumers asking where they
the future ... of thinking people are . can find olestra-containing snack chips
going to change their eating habits and, than from those complaining about it.
of course, they don 't," said Trout, presiSome custoJllers remain loyal to the
dent of the Trout &amp; Partners marketing olema-containing chips and their diets
strategy firm, which ·has marketed .a benefit from the reduced calories, she
range of products, including caskets, said.
toothpaste, cajc.e mix and pizza.
"The decision to buy or not to buy
P&amp;G thought it had a big seller when really hinges more on whether or not 11
the Food and Drug Administration gave -particular consumer is interested in -a
olestra market approval in 1996 as a lowfat health food,' ~ Middleton said.

Inc.

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&amp;mJ

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Snow

Fireftgllttr drops lawsuit

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new athletic complex in his honor.
The complex behind Alliance High School wiH be named for Spc.
Man: A. Anderson, 30, of Brandon, Fla., who was killed Monday ••
with six other Army Airborne Rangers.
He graduated in 1990 from Alliance High School, where he was
a standout shot putter and wresded and played football. The community is located about 50 miles southeast of Cleveland.
"I called Marc's parents this morning and asked their permission
to set up a fund in Man:'s name and t'o put his name on the building, and they graciously accepted,'' Superintendent Arthur Garnes
said Thursday.
-

CLEVELAND (AP) - A slander suit filed by a city firefighter
against former Mayor Michael R . White was withdrawn just as the
trial was about to begin.
Neither side would disclose settlement terms between White and
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
derstorms. Highs in the upper firefighter Jonathan Parries.
Enjoy the unseasonably 60s. South winds around 15
Parries sued over remarks White made questioning Parries' 1999
warm weather while you can. mph. Chance of rain 70 per- acquittal on charges of theft in office. He was accused of taking thouThe National Weather Ser- cent.
sands of dollars meant for smoke detectors and fire prevention provice says a cold front late on
Saturday night.. .A chance of grams.
Saturday will bring a return of rain showers until midnight,
White told WKYC-TV after the verdict: "I'm really surprised,
snow flurries to the region and otherwise pardy cloudy. Lows based on the evidence as I know it, how a jury could believe Clevesend temperatures sliding into in the lower 30s. Chance of land did not get robbed. One jury verdict does not innocence
AKRON (AP) - A woman accused of helping her husba~
make.''
the 30s.
impregnate
her 16-year-&lt;:~ld daughter believed that the girl agreed to
rain 30 percent.
On Sunday, the · mercury
inseminate herself with a syringe, a defense lawyer said.
Extended forecast:
won't climb out of the 40s.
The mother did not know the girl had been threatened with a
Sunday...Mostly sunny and
The southerly winds that much cooler. Highs near 40.
gun by her stepfather, attorney Lawrence Whitney said Thursday.
CLEVELAND (AP) -The terrazzo floors of GundArena, home
contributed to two days of
"However bizarre we think it is, bizarre does not make a crime,"
Sunday night .. . Clear. Lows
of the Cleveland Cavaliers of the National Basketball Association he told a judge in closing arguments in the trial of Narda Goff. :
unseasonably warm tempera- in the upper 20s.
tures will hold readings Friday
Prosecutors countered that it didn't matter who inseminated tlie
Monday... Mostly
clear. since 1994, are breaking up and may require $1 million in repairs.
A
430-square-foot
segment
near
the
ticket
window
was
replaced
night in the 50s.
Highs 57 to 61.
girl With her stepfather's sperm, because she was a minor.
Sunset tonight will be at
Tuesday... Mostly cloudy. A rec;endy for $200,000.
Nearly 25 percent of the terrazzo around the arena shows signs of
6:3 I, and sunrise on Saturday chance of afternoon showers.
is at 6:53 a.m.
Lows in the upper" 30s and breaking down, according to officials with nonprofit Gateway Economic Development Corp., which owns the building.
·
Weather forecast:
highs in the mid 50s.
PAYNE (AP) - A school district that lost about Sl million it had ·
Gateway
officials,
who
blame
the
problem
on
poor
installation,
are
Tonight ... Partly
cloudy.
Wednesday. .. Cloudy with a
deposited in a fitiled bank has asked the state for help.
Lows in the lower 50s. South chance of showers. Lows near investigating whether the terrazzo "installer at Gund Arena, DeSpirit
The Wayne Trace Local school district is trying to get money
Mosaic
&amp;
Marble
Co.,
can
be
held
liable
for
the
repairs.
winds around 10 mph.
40 and highs in ihe. mid 50s.
through the Ohio Department of Education's "catastrophic fund"
Saturday.. :Mostly
cloudy
Thursday... Partly
cloudy
that is available to schools in extreme circumstances.
with a chance of showers in with a chance of showers.
The rural school district believed its money wa' secure, but later
the morning, then showers Lows in the upper 30s and
found that the money was gone.
LANCASTER (AP) - A former sheriff convicted of corruption
likely with a chance of thun- highs in the lower 50s.
Mark Miller, 46, a Wayne Trace school board member, has been
charges has been moved from a county jail to a state prison, where charged with embezzling at least $40 million and diverting more
he will serve his six-year sentence.
than $15 million to investments in gambling boats operatin~ in
Gary DeMastry, &lt;\?. had ~d he wanted to serve Ips senten~e. in a South Carolina and Aorida.
...
II
federal prison because his safety could be jeopardized in an Ohio
prison.
CIRCLEVILLE (AP) - · Officials at the Circleville Juvenile CorBut state corrections officers couldn't find a space in a federal
rectional Facility were ttying to determine' how inmates managed to
prison for the former Fairfield County sheriff. There are no federal
DAYTON (AP) - A man who prosecutors say stabbed and
download Internet pornography.
prisons in Ohio.
stomped two men and a '!\'Oman to death was indicted Thursday on
Computers in the prison offices and attached school were shut
DeMastry.
convicted
in
December
on
32
chargeS
of
using
taxpaycharges that could caqy the death penalty.
down until investigators had some answers.
·
er money for perianal use, was transferred Wednesday from Pickaway
A Montgomery County grand jury indicted Darrell W Ferguson,
Guards found the sexually explicit material during a cell search
County
Jail
to
Hocking
Correctional
Facility,
which
houses
many
24, on charges of aggravated murder, aggravated burglary and aggraFeb. 27. ·Since then, prison officials liave been interviewing staff
older inmates who need special medical care.
vated robbery.
memben and students and examining the computer network to
Ferguson, known as "Gator;' is accused of the Dec. 2o death of
determine who had access.
Thomas King, a 61-year-old man on crutches; and of the Dec. 27
The _detention center houses sex offenders up to age 21.
deaths ofArlie Fugate, 68, and his wife, Mae, 69.
ZANESVILLE (AP) - A man charged with killing a MuskProsecutor Mathias Heck Jr. said Ferguson knew the victims and
ingum County sheriff's deputy will go on trial Oct. 21, th~ prose- wanted to rob them.
cutor said Thursday.
.
ATHENS (AP) - A teen-aged neighbor of an Athens County
Henry Hager,27,ofGrove City in suburban Columbils,has pleadwoman found dead in her mobile home with her throat slashed has
ed innocent to shooting Sgt. Robert Tanner Jr., 39, during a traffic
been arrested in Tex.as, driving her car.
stop on Jan. 8.
VAN WERT (AP) - · Construction workers digging through a
Athens County SheriffVernon Casde said Denver Shover, 17, was
He is charged with one count of aggravated murder and could be building came across a piece ofAmerica's past.
·
stopped in Houston on Thursday while driving the car belonging to
sentenced
to
death
if
convicted,
said
Michael
Haddox,
Muskingum
'1\.vo Am~rican flag; with 45 stars were found in a closet inside a
Mary Jo Stalder, 62.
· County prosecutor.
Van
Wert County-owned building. The flag; date back to the late
Stalder's body was found in her mobile home near The Plains on
Hager
is
being
held
without
bond
at
the
Franklin
County
Jail
in
1800s or early 1900s.
Wednesday. Authorities were awaiting autopsy results to determine
·
Columbus.
"This is just a great find;' said Jim Beard, a hi~ory buff who is pre5~
when she died.
ident ofVan Wert County Jobs and Family Services."I have seen sim~
Casde said Shover was charged with a juvenile count of aggravatilar flags go for more than $1,000 at antique shows."
ed murder, but the prosecutor will ask a grand jury to indict him as
Both flags' have tears from the center to the lower right corner;
an adult. He said he expects that Shover will be returned to Athens
ALLIANCE
(AP)
-The
hometown
of
a
soldier
killed
in
a
fireThey were found last week in a closet that had been covered by ~
County next week.
fight with al-Qaida and Taliban fighters in Afghanistan will name a wall.
.

· te ·
Warm con d"itj" ons WI"II evapora

Friday, March I, 2002

Ohio- coal ·backen seek
cou s support
Gallia commission~
pledge support to group
BY KEviN KELLY
KKELLYOMYDAJLYTRIBUNE.COM

. GALLIPOLIS -An area coal operator
has asked Gallia County, commissioners
for their support in promoting increased
use of Ohio. coal by the state's utilities,
citing job retention and economic development benefits to the local economy.
· "We'll do anything within our power
to help you 'Out,'' Commissioner Skip
Meadows said Thursday when commissioners met with Waterloo Coal Co.
executives Larry Darlington, Denton
Bowman and Bill Parks, who are looking
to convince "'"'erican Electric Po""r and

other coal users to put more state-produced coal to work.
Oak Hill-based Waterloo, · which
employs about 400 and works with
around 100 contractors, said smaller l:oal
operators are in danger of losing to outof-state coal producers that have made
•
prices attractiv~ to Ohio utilities.
"If these companies dump to~mage at
whatever price it takes to force us out,
that needs to be stopped,'' said Darlington, Waterloo's presiqent.
Thh executives said if smaller Ohio producers disappear, prices for coal stand to
skyrocket, and Meadows agreed.
"What will the price of coal become
after you guys are gone?" he asked.
Although Meadows and Commissioner
Shirley Angel advised the group to pursue their quest with legis!_ators, they

v·

In Concert

Vl11tage flaplcated

'

GALLIPOLIS- South have increased nearly ten
Central Ohio motorists cents per gallon since last
had to dig deeper into month now that the state
their. pockets this week as is switching to warm
gas prices rose more than weather fuel blends.
seven cents per gallon of
Another factm to watch
Ji'gular unleaded self-serve is the price of crude oil.
gasoline. The average Oil is now above $22 per
barrel on the expectation
Pr.i.ce of gas is •tU68 .
According to the Week- that major oil producing
·
I y FueI G auge,
to day 's nations will
· not increase
national average price 'of .production to adjust to a
self-serve, regular gasoline seasonal
increase
in
is $1.149, an increase of demand. If .this higher
less than two cents in the crude oil price is suslast.30 days. Average prices tained, pump prices will
in California, however, ''be pushed even higher. .

SINGING ON SUNDAY Sandy Richards will present a
concert Sunday at 10:30
a.m.
at
the
Pomeroy
Nazarene Church. Pastor Jan
Lavender invites the public.
(Submitted)

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

COLUMBUS !AP) - .An
upcoming debate over rules
governing the teaching of the
origin ·of life in Ohio has
drawn so much interest that
the State Board of Education
unidet~tifi~d
has moved it to an auditorium
that seats about 4.000.
At issue is whetl,ler proposed
science standards beil)g considered by the board should
allow the teaching of the has until the end of the year to guidelines, they will become
intelligent design concept in come up with the new sci- th e basis for a new 1Oth- grade
addition to evolution.
'
ence-teaching Standards.
pro'Eciency test and other stu"We've been overwhelmed
Supporters of the intelligent dent assessments.
with the amount of interest," design concept say life is too
The board invited two sciBoard of Education President complex and diverse to be entists from each side of the
Jennifer Sheets of Pomeroy explained merely through issue to participate in Monsaid Thursday. "There are a lot . evolution and an unidentified
day 's panel discussiop.
of media oudets that vyant to higher intelligence must have
Lawrence Krauss, chairman ·
attend-and just in the past few played a role. They 'say that's
of the Physics Department" at
days we heard there were not the same as creationism.
some school groups interestBackers of evolution say Case Western Reserve Uni- ·
ed.'' ·
intelligent design is merely a versity in Cleveland, and ;KenThe
intense
interest new spin on a decades-old neth Miller, a biology profesprompted the board to /nove effort to get religion in , the sor at Brown University in
Providence, R.I. , will support.
the debate on Monday from 1 classroom.
Supporting '
intelligent
&lt;;: the Ohio School for the Blind
In _1987, 'the U.S. Supreme
to the Veterans Memorial Court barred states from design will be Stephen Meyer
auditorium in downtown requiring the teaching of ere- and Jon athan Wells, ·both of
Columbus..
ationism in public schools.
the Center for the Renewal of
The board, which will not
Although teachers will not Scienc'e &amp;] Culture at the Dis·_ vote on the matter Monday, be required to ·follow the covery Institute in Seattl e.

Supporters of tire intelligent design
concept say lifo is too complex and
diverse to be explained merely through
· evolution and an
higher .
intelligence must have played a role. They
say that's not the same as creationism.

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Arch Coal - 20.92
Akzo-46.45
AmTech/SBC- 38.75
Ashland. Inc. - 45.80
AT&amp;T-15.88
Bank One - 39.50
BLI-13.16
Bob Evans - 28.80
BorgWamer- 64.73
Champion - 3.25
Charming Shops- 7.71
City Holding -14.97
Col-24.04
DG -14.-43
DuPoot- 47.52

Federal Mogul - .89
USB-21.64

Gimnett-77.10
General Eleclrlc- 40.95

GKNLY-4.85

Har1ey Davldoon- 54.27
Kmart-1.24
Kroger - 22.25
Landa End- 50.88
Ltd. -17.71
NSC-26.80

Oak HI Finlnclll-19. 15

OVB-23.85

BBT-38.02
Paoples - 21.50

&gt;·-·-,----------~--------------~------------------~-. I

•

"

.

Papaleo - 49.48

Premier- 8.32
Rockwell - 21.11
Rocky Boots -7.10
RD Shell- 53.75
Sears - 62.39
Shoney's - .34
Wai·Milrl- 61.70
Wendy's - 32.41
Worthington - 15.08
DaUy stock reporte are
the 4 p.m. closing
quotes of the previous
day's transactions; provided by Smith Partners
at Advast Inc. of Gal·
llpolls.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader SerVices
Our main concern In all atorlea Is
to be accurate. If you know of an
error In a story, call the neweroom
at (740) 992·2156.

Newe Department•

The main number is 992·2158.
Department extentlons are:

· 0111"-1 maneger

Ext. 12

NeWI

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or

Ext. 14

(USPS 213-110}

Ohio Valley Publlohlng Co.
Pubiohocl JNory ottemoon, Monday
lhrcugh Friday, 111 Court Sl.,
Pomeroy,

Ohio.

Second-class •·

postage pold at Pomercy.
·
Member: The Alloclated Press and
lhe Ohio N - - t l o n

This week's average
prices: South Ce ntral
Ohio Average $1. I 68;
Average price during the
. week of Feb. 26, 2002,
$1.094;Average price during the week of March 6,
2001 ,$ 1.348 .

scheduled
POMEROY - A meeting
to announce trips sponsored
by the M eigs County Senior
Center has been scheduled
for Tuesday at 1 p.m. at the
-senior center.
Betty Brent, Park Tours, will
be presenting information
concerning trips planned by
Park Tours . for 2002. An
Amish country trip. a trip to
Cambridge for the outdoor
drama, "The Living Word,''
and tour of the Dickinson
Cattle Ran ch, a trip to LaCo-

Shooting·

l y - or -or""''0..-k
$2
O..morMh
$11.70
on.rur
$104
Dilly
. .
50 cents
Sublcrlboll not doslrlng to _pey lhe

Ext. 4

MIIU subsatntlan

Cl111llled Ada

Ext. 5

www.mydallyaenllnel.com

POMEROY - A marriage
license has been issued · in
Meigs County Probate Court ·
to R oge r Lee Hubbard, 37,
and SandraRenee Carnahan,
24, both of Syracuse.

File dissolution
POMEROY - An action
for dissolution of marfiage
has been filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas
Court by Kimberly A. H aynes
and Timothy L. Haynes, both
of Pomeroy.

File foreclosure
POMEROY - A foreclosure action has been filed in
Meigs Co unty Common
Pleas Court by Farmers Bank
and Savings Co., Pomeroy,
against David W Hysell, Rutland, and others , alleging
default on a mortgage agreeni ent in the amount of
$29,986.76.
authorities around 9:30 p.m.:·
· said Swift.
Qualls is currently bei ng
held at the Southeast Ohio
Regional Jail in Ne lsonvill e.
"Charges are cur rently
pending and the incident is
still under investigation ," said
Swift. "We will release more
information as soon as it
becomes available."

7:10 &amp;
MATINEES SAT &amp; SUN 1:10 &amp;: 3:10

carrier may remit In advance direct to

Circulation

On the Web

License issued

Subecrlptlon ratee

Ext. 3

news@mydallysentlnel.com

son, whose
office has
processed four such titles
since the law went into effect
on Monday.
New car dealers in other
counties have, in the past, sent
"runners" to each county to
process titles for their customers. Now, Ricart Ford apd
other larger dealerships, who
· ha~e been very supportive of
cross-county titling when it
was being considered in the
legislature, can process Meigs
County customers' titles in
Franklin County.
"Cross-county titling is
designed to afford more convenience for the customer,

LONG BOTTOM - A
benefit for Ted Coppick will
take place on April 6, 5-11
p.m., at the Long Bottom
Community Building.
The events will include a
spaghetti dinner, auction and
live musical entertainment.
Prices are $5 for adul ts (drinks
and desserts included), $2.50
for children 6-12 years old
and children under 6 years of
age get in free.
For more information. co·n tactJuanita Wells at 985-4351.

Poetma"r: Send addreaa correc·

Advertlalng

Toeend e-mail

from Page AI

and it will do that," Harrison
said, "but if we lose many customers to Athens or Gallia or
even Franklin County, we
stand to lose a lot of reve nue."
In an attempt to make up
the loss in revenue to those
count.ies who experience a
loss, the state has agreed to
reimburse co unties 100 percent of lost revenue during
the first year cross-county
titling is in place, 50 percent
the second year and 25 percent the third.
The title office has traditionally paid for itself because
of fees collected from customers, Harrison said, but if
the loss in revenue because of
cross-county titling is dramatic enough, the general fund ,
could become responsible for '
subsidizing its operation.

City Police arrived at the
home to try and persuade
Qualls to surrender.
"After holding up inside
the house for several hours,
Qualls finally surrendered to

Benefit planned

11ons to The Daiy Sentinel, 111 Court.
St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

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Cllrler each week. No oubiiCI'Iplion by
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carrier •rvto.! Is available.

Other aervlcee

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Call 5.10 W. Union Street

Medical

During the two previous y~ars , the annual
switchover to
warm
weather gasoline blends
and to reformulated fuels
in April and May, sent
gasoline prices to re cord
highs.

Meeting

from Page AI

Correction Polley

Urgent Care!!

Mayois court

mec!U Dinper Theater, and a
West Virginia Fall Foliage
overnight trip has been
planned for the senior citizens.
For more information, ton. tact Alice Wamsley, volunteer
trip coordinator, at 992-3938.

Dinner planned ·

Subscribe today.
992-2156

Hometovm to honor soldier

Evolution deba~ movt;d to larg~r hall

'

MIDDLEPORT- Three
people· forfeited bonds and
four individuals were fined by
Mayor Sandy lannarelli during Middleport Mayor's
•
Court.
Those forfeiting bonds
agreed to lend th eir voices in support of
were
Roxanne K. Isaac, Vinthe mo~e with lawmakers and AEP, with
ton , $75, stop sign; Jason A.
whom Waterloo has a contract to supply
Autherson, Middleport, $65,
coal for this month.
speed; James W. Gibbs, Mid"What we need is to turn a short-term
dleport, $150, disorderly by
order into a long-term arrangement at a
intoxication.
fair price,'' Darlington said, arguing that
Those fined were Justin R.
AEP's Gen. James M . Gavin Plant and
Brown, Middleport, $15 and
Ohio Valley Electric Corp.'s Kyger Creek costs, no passenger safety belt;
Plant can benefit from using Ohio· coal.
Gary Rose, Middleport, $200
"Those two plants can \&gt;urn more coal and costs, assault; Tommie
than we're capable of producing and can Wamsley, Middleport, $200
burn Ohio coal if they'll let us do it," and costs, FRA suspension;
Darlington said.
1
James Kirker, Pomeroy, $200
. He added that commissioners might and costs,ALS suspension, $25
cite in their letters or resolutions support and costs, no hea.dlights.
..
for the efforts to retain AEP's coal conveyor from the former Meigs Mines to
Gavin, and for an extension of the state's
$3 a ton tax credit for coal-using utilities.
POMEROY - A mission
outreach dinner will be held
at the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church on Tuesday with serving from 4:30-6
p.m. The menu will include
homemade
noodles and
chicken, cole slaw, bisc uit,
beverage, and dessert.
The dinner is free and open
to the public.

Gas prices increase once
again in southern .Ohio ·

Dbb ict needs state help

Teen awested In sll'jiiat

LOCAL BRIEFS

ECONOMY

Gund's flocHs may need repairs

Internet poi found in jaB

The Daily Sentinel • Page A 3

•

Defense: Impregnation no aime

Ex-sheriff bansfeuecl liChli jail

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ytWW.mvdallysentlnel.com

\

A fne'iniluu wlllH~~tilm c11n be /Jf'OI'illed !II help
tktemine the needs ofthe climt '"'" potmtilll .
pt~yor squrces foi fhe reiJuesud &amp;~~re. Pluslmt lfU/ey
Mate Duty Home C11re isJCAHO, tJCcrttlittd.

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rFaces

Pleasant Valley Hospital knows the imponance of familiar faces and surroundings when fa~ed
with an illness or chronic medical condition. Pllllllt ftiiiV PriVItiiiiiJ I • 0111 prov1des
personal care, homemaker services, support services, companionship, respite care, sitter service,
private duty nurses and facility staffing.
All of the staff members are skills-ttsred and bonded to assure quality of care and protection.
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_Th_e_na_ny_Se_n_tin-=-_e_I_ _ _

___;ly the Bencl.

PageA4

Friday, March 8, 2002

Frldllf. ~rch .. 1001

•

DEAR C lc D LOVER: Your
letter may aven a tragedy. A wise
parent will remember that not all
dogs are friendly and will closely
supervise a dog's encounter with a
child until the parent is certain tlut
both the child and the dog can be'
trusted.
DEAR ABBY: Yesterday for the
ADVICE
first time in years, I stopped at a yard
sale. As I approached, a man was
free and socialize with other dogs. examining a Colt model 1911 .45What might happen in an encounter caliber handgun. He waved it
between a child and the wrong dog around, pointing it at everything in
terrifies me. Please pass on this sight.
request to parents: If you bring your
I asked the owner if the gun was
dog to the dog park, leave your unloaded. "Sure is;' he said. "The
~abies at home - or at least keep clip is safely in my pocket:' When it
them close to you and away from the was my turn to look at the gun, I
dogs. CHILD AND DOG pulled the slide back and out popped
LOVEll IN CALIFORNIA
a live round. I'll never forget the

Dear .
Abby

All-Ohio State
fair band
POMEROY - The call is
out for high school musicians
to perform at the 2002 Ohio
State Fair .with the 200 member All-Ohio State Fair Band.
"It's a great, low-cost
opportunity for school musicians to receive excellent

instruction, meet other musicians from throughout the
: Buckeye state and ·be a part of
· the fun and excitement at the
; annual Ohio State Fair;' said
: Don Santa-Emma, director of
the band.
· The band has been an
attraction at the Ohio State
: Fair since 1925. Students are
: housed at the Rhodes Center
: at the Ohio Exposition Cen: ter and room and board is
provided l:!y .the Ohio State
Fair.
Applications have been
maile&lt;;l to every public and
parochial high school in Ohio
and may be obtained from the
. school band director or by
contacting Santa-Emma, AllOhio State Fair Band, 2676
Country Club Blvd., Cleveland, Ohio 44116-2335, calling him at 440- 356-4894, or
· e-mailing him at santaem: ma@aol.com
· The application deadline is
March 31. .

. O'Bieness •
:; Empl:zee of the·
: Mon named
·
ATHENS - An O'Bleness Memorial Hospital
employee
who helps
to protect
the health
of the hospital's
patients .
and staff
has been
selected to
be
the

O'Bleness Employee of the
Interested persons 5 years
of age and up are invited tQ
Month for March 2002.
Charlene Fuller is a Vinton audition.
Counry resident and a certiFeaturing the unique
fied registered central ser- teaching style of Bonita
vice technician with accred- Grove, M.Ed., Chillicothe,
itation by the fnternational Ohio, "MI Brainy Kids" is
Association of Healthcare a fun, educational and
Central Service Material entertaining look at JearnManagement, a qualification · ing in the light of exciting
in
brain
not required for her posi- · discoveries
tion.
research
and
Howard
As a central service techni- Gardner's theory of Multidan, Fuller is responsible for pie Intelligence.
"MI Brainy Kids" is procleaning and sterilizing
medical instruments and duced by Dr. Greg Miller
towels used in various and directed by Minda
departments throughout the Hager, M.Ed.
hospital. "I enjoy making
sure that everything is sterite
and ready for surgery," Fuller
said. .
Fuller, who began her
O'Bleness career in April
On
1993, says she "enjoys mak- .
ing sure "that everything is
,
sterile and ready for
ATHENS - O'Bieness
surgery."
Memorial Hospital in
Athens honored some of
its biggest supporters at a
donor appreciation dinner held at the hospital
earlier this week.
COOLVILLE - Amanda
According to O'Bieness
and Todd Clark of Coolville Development Manager
announce the birth · of a son, Deborah Shaffer, about
Jeffrey Alan, on March 4, at 120 individuals, businessthe O'Bieness Memorial es and org~nizations were
Hospital, Athens.
recognized for contributing $500 or more to the
hospital during 2001.
Donors supported a
variety of hospital fundraisers, projects , programs
Rio GRANDE - The and other causes, includUniversity of Rio Grande
and The Little Buckeye ing the 2001 Annual GivCampaign
for
Theater will present "MI ing
Brainy Kids," a children's expanded rehabilitative
musical funded by the services, the O'Bieness
Martha Holden Jennings Hospital Charity Golf
Foundation, on April 17, Tournament, landscape
projects , diabetes educa18 and 19.
Auditions will be held
for "MI Brainy Kids" at the
Alphus Christiansen Theatre in the Fine and Performing Arts building at
the University of Rio
Grande, Monday at 6:30
p.m.
'*"

O'Bieness
honon donors
at '
• ti
apprec1a
dinner

Clarks
announce birth

Auditions set
at Rio Grande

tion, and the purchase of
new equipment for the
O'Bleness Birth Center
and emergency department:
In addition to monetary
donations, many of these
donors also gave of their
time and talents as volunteers for the hospital's
fund-raising campaigns
and other special events
such as the annual golf
tournament .
The appreciation event
began with a social hour
followed by dinner. During dinner, the Madrigal
Singers of the Athens
Music Club presented
musical entertainment.
Sheltering Arms Hospital Foundation Board of
Trustees Vice Chairman
Fred Weber extended a
welcome, and O'Bieness
President Rick Castrop
spoke in appreciation of
the support that 'enables'
O'Bieness to maintain its
miSSIOn of providing
superior healthcare to the
residents of southeastern
Ohio.
Castrop also discussed
how the board of trustees
is considering new programs to further meet the
needs of Athens and surrounding communities.
During the 2001 Annual Giving Campaign,
hundreds of hospital su'p~
porters donated more
than $107,000 to the
campaign. The funds will
be used to purchase
equipment and furnishings · for expanded rehabilitative
services
at
O'Bieness.

We are now offering free bus
rides from the following areas:
Mason, Pomeroy, Middleport,
Darwin, Five Points, Racine, and
Syracuse to Hillside Baptist
Church for Sunday Morning
Services. Included in the round
trip rides are fun for all ages,
singing, and a treat! If you would
like to join us fot the free ricle,
please call Pastor Dr. James R.
Acree, Sr at (740) 992-6768.

····.............

..

Tips for new parents
BY BECKY BAER

New parents need to be
cognizant of how they treat
their baby boys and girls. Boys
need more attention than
girls. Many times, however,
parents are afraid to give their
sons the personal regard they
require for fear of making
them a "mama's boy."

Baby boys have more health
problems, are more sensitive to
stress and are harder to soothe
than baby girls. When boys are
not given the attention and
affection they need, their
l~arning capability decreases
more than those of girls.
Parents need to talk to baby
boys continuously. Failure to
do so leads to slow language
development. On-going conversations with sons can also
help their intellectual progress.
Girls should be given the

--

opportunity to try new things ·
and fail without their parents'
constant help. If parents avoid
running to help their daugh..:
ters as they learn new skills,
the girls learn self-confidence
and are able to try until they
achieve success.
Parents need to encourage .
young boys to work with their
hands. Boys are not as adept in
fine motor skills as girls. This
can lead to problems in
school, such as learning to use
their hands and fingers to
write. Since boys may be more
active with their larger muscles for-running, jumping and
throwing~ they may need to be
given support to· try fine
motor skill activities. Coloring, interlocking puzzles and
beads and large needle sewing
can help them master tl1ese
skitls.

The Dally SentlneJ • Page A 5

'

costs, three days jail suspended, to days jail suspended, two
one year probation, wrongful · years probation, forfeiture,
entrustment; Kevin Vining, criminal trespass, Sl 00 and
The Plains, $100 and costs, costs, 10 days jail suspended,
two years probation, disorder- two years probation, restrainly conduct; Donald P. Bing, ing order, contributing; Jerry
Middleport, costs, to days jail R. Loper, Mason, W.Va., $200
suspended to three, two years and costs, 30 days jail suspendprobation, driving under the e.d 'to tWo, two years probainfl.uence, $1,000 and costs, six .lion, restraining order, domesmonths. jail suspended to 10 tic violence; James R . Brumdays, one year license suspen- field, Cainsville, Fla., S50 and
sian, two years probation, dri- costs, disorderly conduct, $100
vi~g under the influence (sec- and costs, 30 days jail suspendond .count), $250 and costs, six ed to 15, two years probation,
months 'jail s':lspended, two resisling arrest, $100 and costs;
years probation, driving under 30 days jail suspended to 15
suspension, costs, to days jail concurrent, two years probaconcurrent, two years proba- tion, possession; Kenneth M.
tion, underage consumption; Currence, Middleport, $30
Bruce Riffie, Pomeroy, $100 and costs, seat belt, $30 and
and costs, 10 days jail suspend- costs, speed; Adam W. Roush,
ed to one, two years proba- Racine, $30 and ~osts, speed.
Karla Smith, Orient, $30
lion, restraining order, domestic violence; Shannon S. and costs, seat belt; William H.
Pierce, R.acine;$100 and costs, Snuth, Reebles, $30 and costs,
forfeiture, left of center; seat belt; Matthew . W. Rees,
Thomas R. Stevers, Albany, London, $30 and costs, speed;
$850 and costs, 10 days jail Ry~n F. Wile, Pickerington,
suspended to three, six month $30 and costs, seat belt; Sharon
license suspension, tWo years S. Fields, New Haven, W.Va.,
probation, jail and $500 sus- $30 and costs, seat belt; James
pended upon completion of B. Harshman, Helstes, Texas,
RTP School;Tony R . Chapell, $50 and costs, speed; Victor
Pomeroy, $30 and costs, seat Chevalier, Jr., Reedsville, $30
b~Michael E. Greene, Mid- and costs, speed; Shana M.
dleport, $25 and costs, three Eabert, Garrison, Ky., $30 and
days jail suspended, one year costs, speed; Audra M. Harriprobation, restitution, passing son, Pomeroy, $30 and costs,
\lad checks.
speed; Robert C. watson,
"'lrrhomas
T.
Simmons, Apollo, Penn., $30 and costs,
Reedsville, $200 and costs, 30 seat belt; Edward E. McKindays jail suspended, two years ney, Mason, W.Va., $30 and
probation, resisting arrest, costs, speed; David B. Wash$200 and costs, 30 days jail burn, Marietta, $30 and costs,
suspended concurrent, two seat belt; Joanna L. Bedilion,
years probation, attempted Athens, $30 and costs, seat
assault; Robert L. Keaton II, belt; Charles F. Johnson, Oak
Coolville, . $50 and costs, Hill, $30 and costs, seat belt;
speed; Herbert W. Bare lll, Spring Lightfoot, Middleport,
Langsville, $50 and costs, three $20 and costs, seat belt; Kendays jail suspended, two years neth W. Madden III, Middleprobation, .underage con- port, $20 and costs, seat belt;
sumption, $50 and costs, three Jesse J. Wood, Rudand, $30
days jail suspended, two years and costs, seat belt, $25 and
probation, criminal trespass, costs. left of center; William F.
$50 and costs, possession; Roy White II, Long Bottom, $25
Neff, Ravenswood, W.Va., and costs, seat belt; Jarad P.
costs, 30 days jail suspended to Staats, Middleport, $25 and
one, two years probation, costs, left of center; Jamie N.,
menacing; John D. Witherell, Hupp, Long Bottom, $30 and
Pomeroy, $100 and costs, 10 costs, seat belt; Barbara Flora,
days jail suspended to three, Pomeroy, $200 and costs, three
two years probation, underage days jail suspended, one year
consumption, $100 and costs, probation, no
operators

.

MEIGS CALENDAR
Community Calender
Is published es e free
s•rvlce to non-profit
groups
wishing
to
ennounc:e meetings and
special events. The c:el·
endar Is not designed to
promote 1111lea or fundraisers of eny type. Items
are printed only as spac:e
permits end c:ennot be
guaranteed to be printed
a specific number of
days.

license, $30 and costs, se•t belt;
David W. Savage, Alban.y, $30
and costs, seat belt, $25 and
costs, fictitious registration;
Jeremiah R . Russell, S30 and
costs, seat belt; Charles E.
James, Middleport, $30 and
costs, speed; Donald L.
Greene, Racine, $200 and
costs, three days jail suspended,
one year probation, driving
under suspension, $25 and
costs, fictitious tag.;; Jamie T.
Terzopplous, Racine, SSO and
costs, three days jail suspended,
two years probation, theft.
D.
DeLacru.z,1
Justin
Reedsville, $30 and costs, seat
belt; Anthony J. Thomas, Middleport, $20 and costs, seat
belt; David M. Kestner, Mill- ·
wood, W.Va., $850 and costs,
10 days jail suspended to three,
six month license suspension,
one year probation, jail and
SSOO suspended upon completion of RTP School, driving under the influence, $25
and costs, left of center; Charlotte A. Ault, Middleport, $25
and costs, three days jail suspended, one year probation,
restituti,on, passing bad checks;
Nicole · D. White, Tuppers
Plains, $30' and costs, speed;
Ronald Lave~der, Racine, $25
and costs, three days jail suspended, one year probation,
restitution, passing bad checks;
Heidi Roush, Mason, W.Va.,
$25 and costs, three days jail
suspended, one year probation, restitution, passing bad
checks; Tammy Coe, Logan,
$25 and costs on each count,
restitution, three days jail suspended on each count, one
year probation, three counts
passing bad checks; Dana L.
Johnson, Gallipolis, $25 and
costs, three days jail suspended,
one .year probation, restitution; passing bad checks;
Michael A. Pierce, Pomeroy,
$100 and costs, three days jail
suspended, one year proba-

SU,NI)A'(
WELLSTON Ohio
Hills Catfish Club meeting
Sunday, 1 p.m. in the con·
ference room, Wellston
American
Legion,
to
accept new members. For
more information, call Tom
FRIDAY
•
POMEROY
Friday's Long 740·596·9068.
fun, food and fellowship
TUPPERS PLAINS
program at God's N.E.T. 6
to 10:30 p.m. Free meal Girls Basketball ban!:Juat,
and games in a safe envi· Sunday, high school gym,
ronment. Open to youth 9 2 p.m. Families to taka
through 19 with children covered dishes; athletic
under 9 to be accompa· boosters to provide meal,
drinks and table service.
nied by an aduit.
SATURDAY
POMEROY - Burlingham Modern Woodmen
Saturday,
5:30
p.m.
· potluck at the hall. Meat,
bread, drinks and table
service provided. Guests
welcome.

1

MONDAY
POMEROY Meigs
.County Republican Party,
7;30 p.m. Monday at the
Meigs County Courthouse.

HARRISONVILLE
Tuberculosis Clinic to give
· skin tests at Scipio Fire
RUTlAND
.Rutland Department Monday, 4:30
Baseball league s1gnup at ·to 6:30 p.m. reading on
the Rl.!lland F1re Depart- Wednesday. For more
ment Saturday, 1 to 5 p.m. . information, call 992·3722.
and March 14, 6 to 8 p.m.
·
fee, $15 for first child, and
TUESDAY
$10 for each additional
POMEROY - Begin·
child, not to exceed $35.
ning
Yoga Class starting
Meeting following signups
for coaches and helpers or Wednesday and contiru·
ing through May 22. Class·
anyone interested.
es, 5 to 6:30p.m. at Meigs
MIDDLEPORT - Mid- Multipurpose building. Call
dleport youth league 992·2681 , extension 233.
signup will be held in Mid- To register or get more
dleport Council chambers information.
on Saturday from noon to
3 p.m. Wednesday; 6 to B . CHESTER - Chester
Board
of
p.m., ano Saturday, noon Township
to 3 p.m .
Trustees, Tuesday at 7
p.m. at the Chester Town
STIVERSVILLE - Ban· Hall.

tion, attempted possession;

Brian K. Ross, Middleport,
$50 and costs, possession, $50
and cost, drug paraphernalia;
William D. L~hew, Pomeroy,
$100 and costs, 10 days jail
suspended to one, one year
probation, restraining order,
domestic violence.

alit sing, Saturday, 7 p.m.
Sliversville
Community
Church. Delivered, Dave
arid Debbie Dailey, and
Joe McCloud to sing. Others welcome.

•

Pomeroy mayor's court processes cases
FROM STAFF REPORTS

POMEROY . Several
people forfeited bonds and a
number of individuals were
fined by Magistrate L. Scott
Powell during Pomeroy MayorUs Court held earlier this
week. .
Those foreiting bonds were
Tina Neiglor, Pomeroy, $63,
speed; Linda Crites, Pomeroy,
$48, speed; Diana Murry,
Pomeroy, $63, failure to control;
Alyssa
Hoffman,
Pomeroy, $100, possession of
a controlled substance; Patricia Rickman, Pomeroy, $50,
failure to yield; Timothy
Grimm, Racine, $63, expired
Sean
McHenry,
tags;
Portsmouth, S100, no operators ·license, $100, failure to

Actual Size 1x3

FREE BUS RIDE

Nic

POMEROY - A number
of qses were recently
processed by Meigs County
Court Judge Steven L. Story.
Those fined were: Marvin
W. Muck, Middleport, $30 and
costs, seat belt, S20 and costs,
.stop sign; Summer D. Groves,
Pomeroy, S200 an~ costs, three
days jail suspended upon proof
· of a valid license within 160
days, no operators license, S20
and costs, speed; Hobart R.
-Childress, Racine, $850 and
:costs, 10 days jail suspended to
three, six month license suspension, two years probation,
-jail and $500 suspended upon
completion of RTP School,
. driving under the influence;
·Robert Butcher, Pomeroy,
· $100 and costs, three days jail
suspended, &lt;ine year probation, assault; Angelo J.
.Rodriguez, West Melbourne,
Fla., $20 and costs, failure to
control; Jeff ]. Roush,
Reedsville, S100 and costs, 10
days jail suspended to one, two
years· probation, restraining
:order, disorderly conduct;
··Earthel E. Perdue, Pomeroy,
·$850 and costs, 10 days jail
suspended to three, six .month
license suspension, two years
· probation, jail and $500 suspended upon completion of
RTP School, driving under
·the influence, costs only, disorderly conduct; Matthew Stewart, Middleport, $850 and
costs, 10 days jail suspended to
·three, six month license suspension, one year probation,
jail and $500 suspended upon
completion of RTP .School,
·driving under the influence,
$30 and costs, seat belt; $50
and costs, possession, costs
only, marked lanes; Floyd D.
Ollom, Guysville, $850 and
-costs •.iO days jail suspended to
-three, six month license suspension, two years probation,
jail and $500 suspended upon
completion ofRTP School.
Cheryl L. Hisle, Dexter,
$200 and costs, three days jail
suspended, one year probation, driving under suspension, $30 and costs, seat belt,
costs only, no child restraillt;
Jimmy L. Flora, Pomeroy, $20
and costs, seat belt, $50 and

look of horror on the faces of the is isolating the victim so that he or
owner and the man who had been she has no one to turn to. Control
- withholding money or freedom
waving the gun.
~
·is another warning sign of abuse.
I don't know what made me ~top
It's understandable that you pray
at that yard sale, but [ feel if! hadn't,
to
die, but there is help. As soon as
the gun would have eventually fired
and perhaps someone would have you can find a few minutes away
been killed.
from your abuser, you MUST call
Abby, I have never felt oudawing (800) · 799-7233. It's the number of
the National Domestic Violence
guns is the answer. Education is. Hotline.
The counselor can direct
CLOSE CALL IN YUMA,
you in devising a safe escape plan for
ARIZ.
DEAR CLOSE CAll: I agree. you and your children.
Let today be the day you flee
That, and trigger locks and backtoward a life worth living. Do it for
ground checks.
CONFIDENTIAL
TO yourself and for your children.
BETWEEN A ' ROCK AND A
(P~uline Phillips and her daughter,
HARD PLACE: You say you don't Jeanne Phillips, shart the pseudonym
believe in divorce. The relationship Abigail Vim Bu.ren. Write Dear Abby ~I
you have described is not a mar- www. DearAbby.com or P.O. Box
riage. One of the first signs of abuse 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.)

Meigs·County Notebook.

www.mydally~entlnel.com

County Court cases processed

Animal encounters sometimes dangerous
DEAR ABBY: Many cities have
set aside lond for use as "dog parks."
They are designed to be open places
where dog owners can let tqeir pets
off leash to run free. - .
Last Saturday, a woman brought .
her 18-month-old son into the dog
park. Several of us suggested to her ·
that it wasn't a go&lt;id idea to let her
toddler wander free among 20-plus
strange dogs. She said he had been
knocked down several times by their
own dog, and alw.ays got up and
· laughed and chased after the dog..
I am glad their family dog is childfriendly. My dog is not. Children's
quick movements, high-pitched
squeals and tendency to hit, poke
and gnb all scare my dog.
Abby, a dog park is designed to
allow dogs the opportunity to run

)

'

Person per ad
date Fri.,
29,2002
Fri.
i.II.I'CJ\ 22, 2002

Tessa Paige Will
Happy rst Easter I
Love, Mammaw &amp;. Papaw

appear; Ricky Bickford,
Philo, $50, wrong way on a
one way street; Neal D.
Bonecutter, Jr., Middleport,
$63, failure to control; Amy
Daughtery, Pomeroy, $48,
speed; George Cummins,
Racine; S47, speed; Lucy
Fletcher, Langsville, · $46,
speed; Cathy Stover, Gallipolis, $4 7, speed; Christina Holloway, Pomeroy, $52, speed;
Carolyn Jolly, Jackson, $43,
speed; · Alberta
Davis,
Reedsville, $51 and costs,
speed;
Jenna
Boring,
Macoon, Ga., $57, spee4.
Darla Merola, Gallipolis,
$53, speed; Angela Waldron,
Bidwell, $49, speed; Tiffany
Barnes, Racine, $51, speed;
TWila Buckley, Pomeroy, $48,

Mall or Drop off at the Dally Sentinel,
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, OH 45769
Child's Nam,..__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
·F
r o m________________________
. - : - - ' - - - : - - - - - - - - - -__
YourName

,DO·

MaiPIID

•

;•

••
••

'I

·~

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL
,.

..•~

I.

VISIT OUR GRAND
NEW LOCATION!
68 GANDER lANE
. In front of Wai-Mart

773-9560

.,

;. ~elfits u
fdr Meigs

p ,·~1 ~
111 s aper ~~I.

"

Sentinel

I

t•lda

•
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
. .
I

No appointm~nt necessary
Mon-Fri 8-8 Sat 8-6 Sun 10-5

County·
•••
every
••
.••• 'ddy.in' 7be Daily

i •

131M . . . .

I

license; Roger L. Roush, Jr.,
Pomeroy, S150 and costs, two
year probation, 90 days to
produce valid .operators
license, driving under suspension, $51 and costs, speed;
Heather Thomas, Racine,
costs due to valid ,opertors
license, driving under suspension, $53 and costs, speed;
Ryan Vanderhoff, Pol:neroy,
$63 and costs, fictitious tags.

•

,.••

/

•

tors license, no operators

lVI

Address~'-------------

Dr. Landry will be re-locating his office but will con#nue his iJfftlilltion with PletUant Va/Jey Hospital.
He is an 4fi»''O'ttl providerfor AE1NA, tU well tU most other insurances.
·

center;
Harold
Sisson,
Pomeroy, $100 and costs,
$1,000 forfeiture to Village of
Pomeroy Law Enforcement
Trust Fund, reckless operation, costs only, improper lane
change; Gary Fitzwater,
Pomeroy, $150 and costs, 90
days to produce valid opera-

•••••••••••••••••.••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••r•
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&lt;;:::o..,
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••
;.
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l'J.tiJ-[741J44HJ57

speed; Carol Hill, Radne,
$63, expired tags; Randal\
McCamish, Athens, $50, failure to yield right of way;
Sherry Herdman, Pomeroy,
$100 , possession of controll·e d substance; William
Nichols, Lima, $50, illegal left
turn; Anthony Carpenter,
Rudand, $63, red light; Dennis Durst, Long Bottom, $48,
speed.
Those fined in court were
Tony Robinson, Middleport,
$700 and costs, 180 day
license suspension, 10 days
j;!il suspended to three, $300
and jail suspen.ded upon
completion of DIP School
within 90 days, two years
probation, driving under the
influence, costs only, left of

•'

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740-992-2156

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�.... .

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_.....,.. --- ..

#"·~...

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Opinion

The Daily Sentinel
I

Page A&amp;

I

Ftldllf. Mr dl I. 2002

•

frld!y. Mjreh 8, 2Q(J2
~ots-CiorlotApoMa~o

IUnrV..,
Apoowlic Wonmp Center
s.Jnl Ave .. Middlqoon
Kevin Konkle, Pu&amp;or
Sundly, 10 a.m. and 6:00p.m.
Wednesday, 7:30p.m.; Youd! Fri. 7:30p.m.

CHr&lt;k ot

s- Clorlot

Ap»tolic Faith

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

New Lima Road
Sunday, 10 •.rn. and 7:30p.m.
Wcdncsdiy, 7:30p.m.

Den Dickerson
Publisher
Diane Kay Hill

Controller

Hope Baplkt Chun:h (Soutbel'll}
570 Grunt Sr., Middleport
Sunday school - 9.:30 a.m.
Worship· I I a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Selllice - 1 p.m.

I

'

.,

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Friday, March 8, the 67th day of2002.There are 298
days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
Three hundred years ago, on March 8, 1702, England's
Queen Anne ascended the throne upon the death of King
William Ill.
On this date:
In 1841, Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. ,
the "Great Dissenter;: was born in Boston.
In 1854, U.S. Commodore Matthew C. Perry made his second landing in Japan. Within a month, he concluded a treaty
with the Japanese.
In 1874, the 13th president of the United States, Millard Fillmore, died in Buffalo, N.Y.
In 1917, Russia's "February Revolution" (so called because
of the Old Style calendar being used by Russians at the time)
began with rioting and strikes in St. Petersburg.
In 1917, th e U.S. Senate voted to limit filibusters by adopting the clotl!re rule.
·
In 1930, the 27th president of the United States, William
Howard Taft, died in.Washington.
In 1942, Japanese . forces captured Rangoon, Burma, during
World War II.
In 1965, the United States landed about 3,500 Marines in
South Vietnam.
In 1986, four French television crew members were abductc
ed in west Beirut; a caller claimed Islamic Jihad was responsible. (All four were eventually released.)
. In 1999, former New York Yankees baseball star Joe DiMaggio died in Hollywood, Fla. at age 84.
· Ten years ago: President George H.W Bush and Democrat
Bill Clinton headed toward "Super Tuesday" claiming big
boosts from weekend victories. Ninety people were killed
when a ferry carrying pilgrims to a Buddhist shrine collided
with an oil tanker in the Gulf ofThailand.
Five years ago: President Clinton, in keeping with his push
for private businesses and churches to hire off welfare rolls,
ordered federal agencies to do the same.
One year ago: the Republican-controlled House voted for
an across-the-board tax cut of nearly $1 trillion over the next
decade, handing President Bush a major victory only .48 days
.into his term. Scott Waddle, the embattled conunander of the
•
Navy submarine that collided with a Japanese fishing vessel off
Hawaii, offered a tearful apology to the families of some of.the
victims. Dame Ninette de Valois, founder of the Royal Ballet,
died in London at age 102.
, Today's Birthdays: Actress Sue Ane Langdon is 66. Baseball
player-turned-author Jim Bouton is 63. Actress Lynn Redgrave
is 59. Actor-director Micky Dolenz is 57, Lyrici~t Carole Bayer
Sager is 55. Actress Jaime Lyn Bauer is 53. BasebalL (&gt;layer Jim
Rice is 49. Singer Gary Numan is 44. Actor Aidan Quinn is 43.
Actress Camryn Manheim is 41. Actress Andrea Parker is 33.
Actor Freddie Prinze Jr. is 26. Actor Jam es Van Dcr Beak is 25.
Rhythm-and-blues singer Kameelah Williams (702) is 24. P~p
musicians David, Bob and Clint Moffatt are 18.

G.... Epbo:opol Churclt
326 E. Main St .. Pomeroy
Rev. James·Bemacti, Rev. Katharin Fottcr

sem.ce. -

Pomeroy Flnt B.ptist
East ~ain St.
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- .10:30 a.m.

t'irst Southem lbpdst

SAINTS AND SINNERS

Mils famed revivalist really ·a kidnapping victim?
Kidnapping is a rather recent phenomenon in the modern world. The
w.ord first appears in the 17th century in
America, when children were snatched
off the streets and forced to work on
colonial plantations. "Kid" was a slang
word of the till)eS, referring to young
persons. "Nap" was originally "nab,"
meaning (as it does today) to seize or

George
Plagenz

arrest.

Kidnapping hit the headlines big-time
in 1932 when the infant son of aviation
hero Charles Lindbergh and his wife
Anne was taken from the upstairs bedroom of the couple's New Jersey home
in the middle of the night. A carpenter
by the name of Bruno Hauptmann was
later ' convicted of the crime, and sent to
the electric chair.
Today, kidnapping makes news regularly throughout the world. Abductors
are usually seeking ransom money but, as
is the ·case of kidnapped journalist
Daniel Pearl in Afghanistan, there are
often political motives involved. ·
The leading character in one of the
more bizarre kidnappings on record was
a woman preacher - Aimee Semple
McPherson.
Or was it a kidnapping?
Ferenc Morton Szasz tells the story in
his recent book, "Religion in the Modern Am erican West" (University of Arizona Press, 2000). Aimee, says Szasz,
probably ranked as the best- known
American woman before Eleanor Roosevelt.ln1923, she founded her Angelus
Temple m Los Angeles, a Pentecostal
church that d1ffered httle from other

transported blindfolded to a shack in the .
desert. She escaped from her abductors,
she said, by using the ragged edge of a
tiri can to cut the ropes that bound her
hands and feet."
Few believed this tale. Scoffers said it
was a hoax and a publicity stunt. Others
whispered that Aitpee had been off on a
rendezvous with Ken Ormiston, the
engineer of the church's radio station.
The city of Los Angeles threatened to
bring her up on charges (although, as
Szasz points out, she had committed no
crime). The national press covered the
event "in a manner reminiscent of the
1995 trial of O.J. Simpson," Szasz
observes in his book.
Eventually, the city's district attorney
declared there was insufficient evidence
for an indictment and the case faded
from the public eye.
Szasz concludes, "It is . not clear
whether snch adverse publicity helped
or hurt her movement, but it forever
cemented Sister Aimee in the public
eye."
When, at age 54, she died of an overdose of sleeping pills in her hotel room
in 1944 (the coroner ruled her death
accidental), the London Daily Mail reduced by wartime newsprint scarcity
to four pages- ran a 1,000-word obituary.
The curtain had fallen on what one
historian called "the last giddy spasm" of
revivalism in America.

COLUMNIST

Pentecostal churches, exc.ept, says Szasz,
"in the acknowledged charisma of its
leader."
"She merged her techniques as ·an
evangelist with vaudeville routines,"
writes Szasz, "as well as with .the a~ting
styles of the first generation of Hollywood icons such as Mary Pickford and
Clara Bow."
She once came on stage riding a
motorcycle and posing as a traffic cop to "pull sinners over to the curb and put
them back on the right road."
Whenever a situation called for a
scene, Aimee provided one, But the
scene that the lady evangelist played best
of all was her vanishing act in 1926. In
May of that year, as Szasz tells the story,
Aimee went swimming, disappeared, and
was presumed drowned.lnJune, however, she appeared in a little Mexican
town, looking quite haggard but otherwise unharmed.
"She spoke of being kidnapped by
. three crooks- 'Steve, Jake and Mexicali
(George R. Plagenz is a columnist for
Rose.' She told an exciting tale of being Newspaper Enterprise Association.)

41872 Pomeroy Pike
Pastor: E. Lamar O' Bryant
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wun;hip - 8: I ~ a.m., 9:45am &amp; 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7:00p.m.

First Baplist Chun::h
Pastor: Mack Morrow
6th and Palmer St .. Middleport
Sunday 'School - 9; 1.5 a.m.
Worship- 10:15 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:00p.m.
Racine First Baptist
Pastor: Rick Rule
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wedne!lday Services- 7:Cl0 p.m.
Silver Run Rapdst
Pastor: John Swan.'!On
Sunday School - \Oa.m.
Worship · lla.m., 7:00p.m.
Wedne~y Services-7:00p.m.
Mt. Union Bapllst
Pastor : David Wiseman
Sunday School-9:45a.m.
Evening-6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services- 6:30p.m.
Bethlehem Bapdst Chun:b
Great Bend, Route 124, Racine, OH
Pastor : Daniel Mecea
~
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Sunday Worship • 10:30 H.m.
Wednegday Bible.Study- 6:00p.m.
Old Bethel Free Will lblpdst Church
28601 St. Rt. 7, Middlepm.
'
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evenina · 7:00p.m.
Thursday Services· .7:00

HUialde lopUII Churclt
St. Rt. 143 just offRL 7
Putor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday Unified Service
Worahip • 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service• -7 p.m.

Wednesday Services - 7. p.m.

Folth B•ptlot Cburdl
Railroad St, Mason
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Fomt Run Baptllt
Pastor : Arius Hurt

WEST'S VIEW

Learning to hate hatred is not·a bad thing to know

---·~-··---·-------· ·--

---

Pearl Cbapd
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m. ·

Thppon Plola Cltarclt ol Cllrlst
Insltllmc:ntal
Worship Service - 9 a.m.
Communion - 10 a.m.
Sunday School - IO:IS a.m.
Y-· 5:30 pm SWKiay
'Bible ~tudy Wednesday 7 pm

Waltyan Bible Holiness Churth
7.5 Pearl St , Middlepon..
Pa!Jtor: Rev. Doug Co"
. Sunday Worship -9:30 p.m .. 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.

Bradbury Churdl ol Chrltt
Pastor: Jim Eaton
39:5.58 Bradbury Ruad, Middleport ·
Sunday School- 9:30a.m'.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

HysiH Run Hollo~ Churtll
Rev. Mark Michael
Sunday School-9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:4.5 a.m.. 7 p.m.
Thursday Bible Study and Youth - 7 p.m.

Rutland Chllrtb ot Chrilt
Sunday Sch&lt;iol- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - I0:30a.m., 7 p.m.

Bradford·Churclt ol Chrut
Corner of St. Rl. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
Ministc:r: Doug Shamblin
Youlh Mini~tet': BiU Amberger
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wo!lhip- 8:00 a.m.. 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:00 p.m.

I

lllhl'ran

Duttr Cbtuu ol Cbrllt
Puler: Nathan Robinlon

Sunday ochoo19:30 a.m.
Norman Will, •uperinlendent
Sunday wonhip- 10:30 a.m.

Cburclt ot Cbrllt.
Intenec:tion 7 and 124 W
Evqetitt: Dennil Saraent
Sunday Bible Srudy- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30p.m.
Yiodnelllly Bible Study - 7 p.m.

of Islamic education, because the more
we learn about Islamic schools, abroad
and at home, the more at odds their alltoo-often intolerant curricula seem to
be with the tolerant societies in which
they exist.
The Washington ·Post, for example,
recently reported on a couple ofWashington-area Islamic schools, including
the AI-Qalam All-Girls School, where
tnaps of the Middle East simply omit the
state of Israel, and the l,slamic Saudi
Academy, where several studen_ts told a
reporter "they are taught that it is better
'to shun and even to dislike Christians,
Jews and Shiite Muslims." Some teachers
"focus more on · hatred," one teenager
said. "They teach students that whatever
is kuffar:• or non-Muslim, "it is okay for
you" to hurt or steal from such a person.
A school text teaches that a sign of the
Day of Judgment is "that Muslims will
fight and kill Jews, who will hide behind
trees that say: 'Oh, Muslim, Oh servant
of God, here is a Jew hiding behind me.
Come here and kill him."'
The Journal story about the Netherlands doesn't include so many gory
details, just mentioning a Dutch grade
school that showed its pupils "a Hamas
videotape · that referred to Jews in
derogatory language." Gory enough. In
the Netherlands - the. country, after all,
of Anne Frank the government
determined that such. h'einous indoctrination is not adequate preparation for
life in ·the Dutch mainstream . Being a
Western country -- that is, boundlessly

'

tolerant and absolutely open - this
determination has provoked some controversy, with certain groups demanding
that Catholic, Protestant and Jewish
schools come under similar scrutiny.
Such groups, · of course, are the same
ones who would demand strip searches
for Granny to avoid "profiling" potential
hijackers, and, as such, form a predictable
part of the liberal landscape.
What. is pleasingly unpredictable is
that the Dutch government embarked
on such an investigation in the first
place. In a country kn~wn for the yigor
and bloom of both its tulips and its
moral relativism ·(think euthanasia and ·
legalized drugs), it is astonishing indeed
that tolerance and openness- which, as
critic Roger Kimball has noted, when
"absolutized" lead to moral paralysis have finally hit the wall. Is it a passive
virtue to tolerate aggressive intolerance?
The Netherlands says no.
,
"I believe it is bad to prepare children~
for a society in which you have to hate;
people, in which you instigate hate," said:
Dutch Deputy Education Minister
Karen Adelmund, describing those
aspects of the Islamic curricula now
under investigation. "That is, by the way,'
in complete violation of our constitu-.
tion .!. I hate that kind of education."
Hating the indoctrination of hate: :
What a good way to love your fellow,
man.

(Diana ·i#st is a columnist dnd editoriaL
writer for The Washi11gton Times. Slie ca11 be:
contacted via dwest@wasilingtontimes. com.) •

OUr Sariour Lutheran Chlll'th
Wllnut and Henry Sta., Ravenswood,
W.Va.
Putor: David Russell

----- ···

Antlquily BapClat
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:4.5 a.m.
Sunday Evening· 6:00p.m.
Pas10r: Mark McComas
Rutland FrH WID Baptist
Salem St.
Pastor: Rev. Piul Taylor
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Evening- 7 p.m.
Wedne.'!day Services - 7 p.m.
Sec:oad Baptist Church
Ra\'enswood, WV
Pa~ tor: David W. McClain

Hartford Churdl otCbrlot In
Chrlltlaa Unioa
Hartford, W.Va.
Putor:Jim Huahcs
Sunday School • I J a.m:
Wonhip · 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
WedneSday Services-7:30p.m.

( ' hurdt

ol ( . od

ML MorWI Cllun:b of God
• Mile HUI Rd., Racine
Pasror: James Satterfield
Sunday School- 9:45 a.m.
C:nins • 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

e. .

SL Paul Lulllenn Church
Comer Syctmore ~ Second St., Pomeroy

Rudand Cbardl ot God
Pa1tor: Ron Heath
Sunday Worship - 10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.
Sy.....,. Ftn1 Cbun:h of God

RACINE PLANING MILL K&amp; C JEWELER.S
Mill Work
Cabinet Making
Syracuse

212 E. Malo Street

Pomeroy

740.992-5141
... l.lltloor-lllrS90 IAJt M 1 -• r-oy. OH 45769

740.992-5444

992-3785
Davia-Quickel Agency Inc.
INSURANCE
·

Brogan-Warner

Full line of

INSURANCE '
SERVICES

Insurance
·
Products+
Financial
ENCIES Ine. Services

214 E. Main

992·5130
Pomeroy

·em

White Funeral Home
Since 1858 ,
9 Fifth Street

Coolville. Ohio
740-667-3110

";~t-,_e,a.t

-;:rttJ.,..e

174 Layne Street
New Haven, WV 25265
H. Anderson
Director Fax:

EWING FUNERAL

HOME
Dignity •nd $ervlce Alw•y•
Eatabllahed 1913

992-2121

{

Mone Cltopel Chut&lt;h
Sunday school - 10 a.m.
Worship · II a.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.
Faith Gospel Chun::h
Long Bouom
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip. 10:4.5 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedne~day 7:30p.m.

Sunday School - I 0 a.m.
Worship· I I a.m.
Wednesday Services - 8 p.m.

Mt. Olh'e United Metbodl1t
Off 124 behind Wilkesville
Pastor: Rev. Ralph Spires
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.. 7 p.m.
Thursday Services - 1 p.m.

264 5owtll lt&lt;M Avt. • MllltpoM, 01145760

Dyuville ,Communlly Ch~rch
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Hocklnaport Cllurc:h
Grand Street

Grolwn United Methodlll
Wonhlp- 9:30a.m. (bt &amp;: 2nd Sun),
7:30p.m. (3rd &amp; •hh Sun )
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.

Chester
Pastor: Jane Beattie
Wonhlp ~ 9 a.m.
Sunday School- 10 a.tn.
Thursday Services- 7 p.m.

Huel Community Church
OtTRt. 124
,P11tor: Edsel Hart
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Bethel Cburch
Towpship Rf. . 468C
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Worship· 10 11.m.
Wednesday Services- 10 a.m.

suJay School - 9:4.5 a.m.
'wonhip • II a.m.

AlrRd
Pa&amp;lor: Jane Beattie 1
Sunday School • 9:3() a.m.
Worship - II a.m., 6:30 p.m.

SyracuteMIMioa
1411 Bridaeman St., SyracuK-:
Rev. Mike Thompson.Pastor
Sunday School- 10 a,m.
Evenlna • 6 p.m .
Wednesday Service - 7 p.~_n.

Coolville Church
Main &amp; Fifth St.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship- 9 a.m.
TUesday Service• - 7 p.m.

Sunday School - I 0:00a.m.
Wonhip- l1 11..m.

Mr:lp Cooperative Parish
Northeast Cluslcr

Faith Valley l'lllbemade Church
Bailey Run Road
Pastor: Rev, Emmett Rawson
Sunday Evening 7 p.m.
Thursday Service • 7 p.m. ·

Coolville United Mothodllt hrlth
Putor: Helen KHne

Mt. Olin Communlly Chun:h
Pastor: Lawrence Bush
• Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wedneday Service - 7 p.m.

Torch Church
Co. Rd. 63
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
w h' ' 0 30

Unlwl F1lth Church
Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By·Pass
Pastor: Rev. Robert E. Smith. Sr.
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m ., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7 p.m

'\a1an· tll'
, MJddliport Chun:h of tbe Naurene
Pft!ltor: Allen Midcap
Sunday School· 9:30a.m
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wcdnc:sday Services- 7 p.m.
Pastor: Allen Midcap

Full Gospel Llghthnuse
3304.5 Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy H!!nler
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Evening 7:30p.m.
Thesday &amp;: Thursday - 7:30 p.m.

Reed1vDie Fellowship
Church of the Nazarene
Pastor: Teresa Waldeck
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.

..

SWISHER·&amp; LOHSE
fLOWER
PHARMACY
106 BUITERNUT AVE.
We Fill Doctors'
PO~OY,OH 992-6454
'Prescriptions
992-2955
Pomeroy . 'Flowers for all occasions"

6nouller'•

Ingel's Carpet
169 N 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH

j'lre &amp; 6afel!'
TOLL JAW

1 Itt Ill 0117
een-oua

992·7028

Ave.

.

•
\

Services: .limurday 2:0!1 J}.fll.
God's Templt• or Praise
3!665 McQuirl· RJ. Pomeroy, Uhi"
Pastor: W01ync 131\ku lm
Services: Thur~ . Nile" 7:0fl pm
New ~·h urch No Sunday ~crvkc
c~ tahl i ~hcd .

Salem Communil y Church
Ueving Road, West Columhia. W.v...
Paswr: Clyde Ferrell
Sunday S~.:huul 9:30 um
Sunday c\'cni ng scr\'itc 6 Pm
Wednesday scrvio.:c 7 pm

l'l' n ll'rosta I
Pentet:ostal A.~stmbly
St. Rl. 124 , Racine

Paswr: Willimn Hobm:k
Sunday School. 10 uJn .
E'·e ning - 7 p.m.
Wedncsdny ~rvicc s- 7 p.m.

l'n·sh~

ll'rian

Syrac'u~r: Flnt

United Pn!Sbylerlan
Pastor: Elder Robert Crow
Sunday Sehoul- 10 a.m.
· Worship - II a.m.

l:larrtson\'llle Pmbyterlan Church
Worsh ip - 9a.m .
Sunday SchOoJ . 9:45 a.tn.
Middleport Presbyterian
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Worship · 10 a.m.

1'\l'lllh - lla.\ \•ht·llli'l
I y •
Mulberry Hts. Rd., Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Law insky
Sarurdny Services:
Sabba th School - 2 p.m
Wor.;hip · 3 p.m.

I 'nilt'd Brt'lhrl'n
Mt. Hermon United Brethren
In Christ Chun:h
Te,., as Community off CR 82
Pastor: Robert Sanders
Sunday Schoo;\] · 9:Jil a.m.
Worship. 111:30 n.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7: .10 p.m.

Eden United Hrethn:n In t.:hri~l
2 lf2 miles nmih of Rcl.'dwilk
on St:1h: l~ ou t c 1:!4
Pnstor: Rev. H:ohcn Mark le}
Sundll)' Sdull1\ · II a.m.
Sunday Worship· I O : UIJ;~.m . &amp; 7:00p.m.
Wednesdlly Services . 7:JO p.m.
Wednesday Yuuth Scrviec • 7:JO p.m.

, South BeUtel New lestament

Blessed are the pure Crow's Family.Restaurant
"Festurlng Kentucky Fried
in heart; for they
Chicken"
shall see God.
W. Main St., Pomeroy
Matthew 5:8,
992·5432

..

.

---·-----

Mt. Moriah Baptllt
Fourth &amp; Main St., Middleport
Pastor: Rev. Gilbert Craig, Jr.
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:4.5 a.m.

Middleport Communlt)' Chut'eh
, 57.5 Pearl Sr., Middleport
Pastor: Sam Anderson
Sunday SchoullO a.m.
Evening- 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7:30p.m.

Rl.clne
Putor: Brian HatknCIB
Sunday School · lO a.m.
Worship . II a.m.
WednCAday 7 p.m.

Wonhlp ·9:00a.m.
Sunday School- 10:00 a.m.

Jo'ull (;ospel Clturdl of lhe Uvlng
Savior
\ RUJM. Antiquity
Pns10r: k s'L' Mllfris

Harrisonville Community Cbun:h
Pastor: Theron Durham
Sunday· 9:30a.m, and 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

EutU:tart
Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Wonbip . 9 a.m.
Y/ednesday- 1 p.m.

St. Joha Lutllcran Churdl
Pine Orove

Nt!W Life \'il'tury Cent er
3773 Gcorxcs Creek RuuJ . Gall ipoli s. OH'
Pastor: Hill Staten
Sunday Se rv ice~. 10u.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 1 p.m. &amp; Youth 7 p.m. , ·

The Believers' Fellow11hlp Mlnlslry
New Li me Rd, Rutland
Paslor: Rev. Margaret l Robin son
Services: Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.
Sunday, 2:30p.m.

Mofning Star
Pastor: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School - II a.m.
Wonhip . 10 a.m.

W - y Service 7:30p.m.

W(irship . 7 p.m.

Wednesday Service - 7 p.m

Faith Full Gospel Church
Lcmg Ronom
Pastor: Steve Reed
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday. 7 p.m:
Friday • fellow~hip servic e 7 p.m!

Cannei·Suttoo
Cannel &amp; Bashan Rds.
Racine, Ohio
Pastor: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - I 0:4~ a.m.
Bible Study Wed. 7:00p.m.

noon

Cli rtun. W.Va.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.

Abundant Gract R.F. I.
923 S. Third S1., Middleport
PastorTere~a Oalo'is
Sunday oervice, 10 a.m.
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.

Bethany
Pastor: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worshi)'l- 9 a.rri.
·
Wednesday Services - I 0 a.m.

Sacrament Service 9-IO:IS a.m.
Homematina: meeting, 1st Thul'l.• 7 p.m.

R. Jew~ll

M'ddl

A1ape Life Ceater
"Full-Gospel Church"
Pastors John &amp; Patty Wade
603 Second Ave. Mason
773-5017
Ser\lice lime; Sunday 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday 7 pm

s.Jr:m Center
Pastor: William K. Marshall
Sunday School- 10:15 a.m.
Worship - 9: 15a.m.
Bible Study: Monday 7:00pm
Snowville
SUnday School-.10 a.m.
Wor.~hip . 9 a.m.

Tltr: Churth of Jt~~~~
Christ or LaUe,... Day Saints
Sl. Rt. 160, 446-6247 ur446:7486
. Sunday School! 0:20-1 I a.m.
Relief Society/Prieslhood II :0.5-12:00

Pa.~t.or: Wayn~

p un:b
Sunday Servtces • lti:UIJ a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m
t ., 1 eport- astor: Glenn Rowe
Thursdll y. H&gt;O p m
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.
·
' ·
Sunday Service. 6:00 p.m.
Rr:Joidng ur"' Church
Wednesday Service - 7:00 p.m.
500 N. 2nd Ave., Middlepon
Pastor: Mike Foreman
·Hanest Outreach Mlni!ilrle!i
Pastor: Emeritu ~ L&lt;~wrcnce Foreman
47439 Reibel Rd ., Chester
Worship- 10:01) am
Pastors : Rev. Mary and Harold Cook
Wednesd ay ScrvK:cs. 7 p.m.
Sunday Services: 10 a.m. &amp; 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Clinun Tabernude Chuf'(h

Rutland
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- \0:30a.m"
Thursday ~rvices - 7 p.m.

l .alll'r-l&gt;a\ Sainh

Chodt otCltrlot
I'IM«: Plllllp sS"""'y School: ~:30 ~m.
Wonhlp Service: 10:30 Lm.
. Bible Stlxly. Wednet&lt;lay. 6:30p.m.

Calval')' Dible Chu,rt"h
Pomero}' Pike, Cn. Rd
Pastor: Rc~·. Blackwoo&lt;l
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship 10:30 a.m .. 7:30 .p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m.

Ash S

Rock Sprlnp
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School - 9:15 a.m.
Worship. 10 a.m.
Youth Fellowship, Sunday ~ 6 p.m.

Laurti Cliff Free Methodist Chun:h
Rev. Les Strnndt and Myra L. Strandt
~uudtay School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:00p.m .

-

Commuldty of Christ
Portland-Ratine Rd.
Pastor: Michael Duhl
Sunday School - 9:30 1:1 .m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services • 7:00p.m.

Asll Street Ch

Pomeroy
PWitor: Rod Brower
Worship · 9:30a.m.
Sunday School- 10:3S a.m .

Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.

. '

We've heard about Pakistan's Jslamist
religious schools, or madrassas, where
hundreds of thousands of Pakistani boys
and young men have been indoctrinated
in the hate-based teachings of radical
Islam . A goodly chunk of the $600 million in economic aid the Bush administration has designated for Pakistan this
year is for re-esiablishing that nation's
school system, which both governments
now recognize as having long been a
state-sponsored,
terrorist
training
ground.
·
But a radicalizing Islamic school system turns out not to be exclusive to any
one coumry. The Wall Street Journal
reports that the Netherlands is investigating 10 of the country's 32 state-sponsored Islamic elementary schools after a
Dutch intelligence study found that
many of these schools are funded "by
what it called an intolerant I.slamist
foundation in Saudi Arabia and a society
it said is controlled by Libyan intelligence." The intelligence report also says,
"a number of the schools are run by
boards with contacts to militant Islamic
organizations such as Hamas."
The government insists it's not attacking Islamic education, but rather seeking
to guarantee that Islamic schools, like
other government-spC,nsored schools,
"work toward th e integration of minoriti es into Dutah society." (With a population of 16 million, the N etherlands is
h01ne to some 800,000 Muslims.) This
rationale may say more about the polite' ness of ihe Durch .than the blamelessness

Pas10r: Charles !McKenzie
Sunday School 9:30a.m.
Worsbij; ~ II a.m., 7:00p.m
Wednesday Service-7:00p.m.

PI• Grove Bible Holiness Church
112 mile off Rt. 325
Pastor: Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday &amp;:rvice- 7:30p.m.

( lthl'r ( hurdH·.,

Stiven:ville Communi ty Church

Calvary Ptlartm Chapel
Harrisonville Road

Leading Creek Ri, Rutland
Pastor: Rev. Dewey King
Sunday school-9:30a.m.
Sunday worshlp •7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meeting- 7 p.m.

Le1an, W.Va. Rt. I
Pastor: Brian May
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship · 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study-7:00p.m.
Fa.itb l''ellowship CruSMde for Chri~l
Pastor: Rev. Fr.tnk.lin Di\:kt:ns
Service:: Friday, 7 p.m.

Mlnenvllle
Pastor: Bob Robinson
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m .

VIctory Baptllt lndtptndtnl

S2l N. 2nd St. Middleport
Pastoe': James E. Keeaee
Wonhip- IOa.m., 7 p.m.

Heath {Middleport)
Pastor. &amp;ob Brower
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship- I 1:00 a.m. ,

Rele of Sharon HoUnt11 Church

ZloD Church of Christ
Pomeroy, Hanisonville Rd. (Rt.l43)
Paator. Roger WalSOn
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Worsbi.p - 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Serviec~ - 7 p.m.

Laupvllle Cbrlltlltt Churclt
Pastor: Robert Mus~er
Suoday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m.

Fomd:Rua
Pastor: 8ob Robinson
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Wonhip - 9 a.m.

Danville Hollnaa Cbun:h
31 M7 Stale Route 32S, Langsvlle
Pastor.: G~ Jackson
Sunday school - 9:30a.m.
Suoday worsbi.p- 10:30 a.m. &amp; 1 p.m.
Wednesday prayer ~ice - 7 p.m.

lleorwallow Rld10 Cbun:h ol Cbriot
Pastor:Tmy Stewart
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 6:30p.m.

Sunday Schdot • 9 a.m.
Worship· JO a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Pertland Flrst Cburtb ol t1ae Nuarme
Pastor: William Justi1
Sunday School -I 0:00a.m.
Morning Wonhip - 10:45 a.m.
Sumiay Service . 6:W p.m.

Flatwoodo
Pastor: Keilh Rader
Sunday School · tO a.m.
Worship · II a.m.

I lolinl'"

Worship-9:30a.m.
Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.
Pastor-Jeffrey; Wallace
ISland 3rd Sunday

Hltkory !Dib Cllorclt ol Cbrltt
E\'angelist Mike Moore

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip -.10:30 un., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Holy Eucharist I I :00 a.m.

Community Cbun:b
Pastor: Rev. Amos Tillis
Main Sm:et:, Rutland
Sunday Wonhip-IOM ~.m.
Sunday Service-7 p.m.

While'• Chapel Wesltyan
Coolville ll.oad'
Putor: Re v. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School . 9:30 1:1 .m.
Worship-l0130a.m.
Wedne.sday Service • 7 p.m.

Rutlllld Cllun:h ol. the Nuarene
Pastor: Rev. Samuel W. Bllllye ·

£aterpNe
Pastor. Keith Rader
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
WOBh.ip - 9 a.m.

Sunday School and

Youlh Minisler: Bill Frazier
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 8:1S, I0:30a.m., 1 p.m.
Wedntsday Scrvic:es- 7 p.m.

Rutl&amp;H First Baptist Cb•rt.b
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
WOJShip - I 0:4S a.m.

Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
,Wednelday Servk:es- 7 p.m.

A.b"'l' (Syncuse)
Putor. Bob Robinson
Sunday School~ 9:45a.m.
Won.hip • II a.m.
Wednesday ServiCe•- 7:30p.m ..

l12 W. Main St.

Fr...tom Gotpd MIJolon
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31
Pastor: Rev, Roger Willford
Sunday SchQo.l. 9:30a.m.
Worship- 7 p.m.

0Mter Cltvdl ~ llle NuareM
Pastor: Rev. Herben Orale

CeDtral CluMer

Ministet: ADtbony Moni.J
S..... y School· 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip- I 0:30a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday
7 p.m.

Keno Cburdl of Clirllt

Enron debacle makes
pension law changes·critical
Congress to get to work immediately on his proposal to enact pension law changes that would prevent
another Enron-style scandaL
That's sound advice .. Thousands of Enron Corp.
employees have had their nest eggs wiped out
·'
because they weren't permitted to dump ~apidly
falling company stock in their 401 (k) plans. ·
Nonetheless, executives profited handsomely because
they were under no .such restrictions.
The president's plan would give workers 30 days'
notice before their accounts could be frozen, allowing them to more easily sell stock in their company.
It would also give employe_es greater freedom to
diversify their portfolio ....
.. . Other bills before Congress call for more changes
in 401 (k) plans. One measure ... would bar employees rrom holding more than 20 percent of their
retirement portfolios in any one stock.
Whatever plan Congress eventually adopts, it needs
to focus on dealing with the president's recommendations quickly. Because of the shaky economy,
there's more potential for corporate failures and with
them, the potential for swiftly wiping out the retirement hopes and dreams of America's workers.

Secood A Lynn. l'l&gt;mcrOy
Puaor: Rev. Craig Crouman
Worship IO!lj; a.m.
SUJ.lday School ~IS a.m..

Middleport Cburclt ot Chrlol
!lth and Main
Pas10r: Al Hartson

Move fast
• The Tribune-Democrat, Johnstown, Pa., on
Enron and pension laws: President Bush has called -on ·

,.......,. Cllorcb

l'ooleroyW.,W...Cb.,..otCbrlot
31226 Children'a Home Rd.
Sunday School· II a.m.
Worship- IO...m., 6 p.m..
Wednesday Service~ • 7 p.m.

NATIONAL VIEW

flldw N-.rew
PMtor: Jan Lavmdm
SUDdly SdaooJ · 9:30a.m.
Wonbip- 10:30 a.m. lod 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service•- 7 p.m.

Puwr: Jane Beaaie
Swxily Scllool ~ 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m.
1\leldly Servica • 7:30p.m.

v-w Chard~ ot ct.rlot

Mason, W.Va.
Pru1or. NeU Tennant
Sunday Services. 10:00 a./n, and 7 p.m.

Unrn to II•~ etlhor 11n wekfHift. TlleJ thtJilld 1H kn dtD11 3()1) wonh. ,tU """'
,., Jubj«tto Midnr aM'"'"' H tirud and illt:IIUh lllliJNJ• aNI ttllpluutl ll.&amp;~.whr.
ND utuigntd lrntrs will H p11biUIIN. Ltltus sluJ111d H ill cotNf 14stt, diUnJJilll
inileJ, 11o1 prnoMlhkr.
Tilt api11imu upNJud i11tlu l!Dllillllll b11low an tilt coiUI!IIJIU of till Ollio lWlq
PubliJiiing Co.~ tdiJorliJI board, u11Nu othtrWilt IWitd.

* GniftOuti!IIM a...a

Wonbip • 9:]0 LID.
Suadly smooi- 10:30 a.m.
Bible Sllldy • 1 p.m.

' '' l ' lllhh ol ( .od
Uberty "-bly ot God
P.O. Box 467, Duddina: Lane

,_.,.CUrd&amp;

r.,.... ....... so. .....

P•ge A 7

Siher Rtdp
PasiOC Robert Barba'
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
SWl. WM!Up - 10:10a.ni.,6 p.m.
Wednesday Sc:rvk:e - 1 p.m.
Carletonletc~oadoul CJtun::b
Kin&amp;obury RDOd
Putor: Rcbt'n vlnce
Sunct.y School - 9:30 a.m.
Worlbip Servia: 10:30 Lm.
Evenina Service 6 p.m.

SUIIda)' kbool · 9;30 LDL
Wonblp • 10:30 ~m.. 6 p.m.
WMt e 11y Setvieel· 7 p.m.

I
f ...
Wonbip- 9:30 Llll.
SIIDd&amp;y ScOOol - 10:30 a.m.
·P'll1t Sund8y oC Monlb- 7:00 p.m.la'Vice

Suaday School ~ 10 a.m.
Wonbip ~ J I a.m.
WedDeaday Senioet ~ 7 p.m.

Puaw: 1.-ry BroWR

•

'--

Sw&gt;diy S&lt;bool • 9:30 Lm.
Wonbip • 10:30 a.m.

....._,PJ. ~

Suo. ....... !):)()~ ..
Doiloy . 1:30 ~...

1

Worship · 9 ;3() LtD.
S.....y S&lt;hool · 10:30 un.

OJ. While Rd. off St. Rt. 160

Suo. C.0. ·1:45-9;15 LDL,

In

w"""'"'

~olGoiolPo •• '

I) Ave., ~. 99'2.-5191

s..q.o. U3-5:1$p.m.;- 5:30p.m.

sn

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-892-21511• Fax: 740 1182·2157
, www.mydllllyHntlnel.com

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

,.,_..,.__E._

The Dally S.nt!ntl •
Worship . 10:4' 1.m.• 7 p.m.
Wedneadriy Service~ - 7 p.m.
s,..-.. caM rltiM: Nazarae
PIIWrMibAdkm.

Placr. Bob Randolph

- l l e v. DavidR-'1
10 .....
Eveni.q Scrvk:a... 6:30 p.m.
Wedoetda'1 Service~- 6:30p.m.

s.....ySchaol...t

--~Qordo

161 * 5

,_.

Apple...tS&lt;coodS~ .

w:-'

Vonbndl...t Wild Rd. •
Pulor.l..... Miller
SUllday SdiiJal . 10:30 ~DL
Evenina;- 7:30p.m.

The Daily Sentinel

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s-~oy Sdl(&gt;ol io"""""" ........ 11- ! ...... ) ...
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.....

-.

.,_

Meigs County 's 01t1PM Plnri.sr

EastMain

Pomeroy. Oh
'Lit u~ ~ahd !lOtH

~

W

thou&amp;h t~ with (/Jil~f~l ra•~·

740·992-2644

74D-992-6298

MY. arace .is sufficient
for thee: for my
strenath is made
Perfect in w·eakness.
II Cor. 12:9

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992·6376

I .

�Inside:

The Daily Sentinel

NFL signings, Page BJ
NBA roundup, Page B4
Col/eg basketball roundup, Page B5

,Page 11
Fttay, Mlirch .. 2102

FRIDAY's ·

Reds
Bohanon to
have elbow
surgery

HIGHLIGHTS
NCAAMen'e
Thu..-y'e GemH
Toumamente
MAC
Querlerflllllla
Ball St. 62, Miami, Ohio 50
Bowling Green 60, Akron 56
Kent St. 82, Marshall 70
Toledo 62, Cent. Michigan 54
Big Ten
Flret Round
Iowa 87, Purdue 72
Michigan 72, Northwestern 51
Minnesota 84, Penn St. 60
Atlantic 10
Quarterflllllla
Dayton 81 , Saint Joseph's 74
La Salle 72, Temple 66
Rid i IkA id 78, St. l!onalientule 69
Xavier 65, UMass 59, OT
Atlantic Coaet
Flrat Round
Florida St. 91, Clemson.84, OT
Blg12 .
.
Firat Round
Colorado 67, Nebraska 60
Kansas St. 74, Baylor 73, OT
Missouri 79, Iowa St. 59
· Texas Tech 80, Texas A&amp;M 71
Big Eilst
Quarterfinals
Connecticut 72, Villanova 70
Miami 84, Georgetown 76, OT
Notre Dame 83, St. John's 63
Pittsburgh 76, Boston College 62
Big Sky
Firat Round
Montana 82, N. Arizona 64
Weber St. 84, Portland St. 62
· ·
Big West
Firat Round
Pacific 78, CS Northridge 66
UC Irvine 72, Long Beach St. 65
UC S. Baibara 74, Cal Poly-$LO 65
Utah St. 61, Idaho 41
Conference USA
Querterflnala
Charlotte 78, Tulane 69
Cincinnati 79, South Florida 57
Houston 80, Memphis 74
Marquette 84, Louisville 76
Mld-Eutarn Athletic
Quarterfinals
Howard ?1, Bathune--Cookrnan 52
S. Carolina St. 63, N. C.A&amp;T 61
Mountain West
Flrtt Round
San Diego St. 62, BYU 51
UNLV 120, New Mexico 117, 20T
Utah 69, Colorado St. 66
Wyoming 69, Air Force 67, OT
Paclllc·10
Firat Round
Arizona 73, Arizona St. 56
California 67, UCI.A 61
Oregon 66, Washington 64
Southern Cal 103, Stanford 78
Southeastern
First Round
Florida 81, Auburn 63
LSU 69, Vanderbilt 62
S. Carolina 69, Mississippi 67
Tennessee 68, Arkansas 61
· Weetern Athletic
Quarterfinals
Fresno St. 72, Louisiana Tech 69
Hawaii 71, San Jose St. 56
Nevada 72. SMU 66
Tulsa 72, Boise St. 53

ttliwllalt0/1
..

Racine Area Community
Organization (RACO)
and
Home National Bank
invite you to a reception, on
Saturday, March 16 from 1:00 to 4:00pm
at Racine Southern High School Gymnasium
to honor John T. "Tom" Wolfe
for 54 years in Banking
&amp; Community leadership.
There will be a special program at 2:00p.m.
Refreshments will be served. Bring your old
photos and memories and join us.
,,'

"'.

'

~.

·-

Pro Basketball
NBA
Thurtday'i Games
Petrol! 95, Washington 92
Memphis 122, Indiana 111
:San Antonio 99, Houston 97
Penver 104, New York 93
Dallas 122,' Toronto 103
:Seattle 92, Charlotte 89, OT

Kidd gets

fingered for
nasty gesture
. NEWYORK (AP)- New
Jersey guard Jason Kidd was
fined $5,000 by the NBA for
making an obscene gesture
toward fans Wednesday night
in the Nets' loss to Phoenix.

•••••

Check out Sunday's Times
Sentinel for all the coverage
of Friday's district hoops.

SARASOTA, Fla. (AP) Brian
Bohanon, a. non-roster pitcher in camp
with the Cincinnati Reds, · has been
scheduled ·for arthroscopic surgery
Monday to repair a stress fracture in his
left elbow.
"We are going· to take the fractured
piece out and hopefully have him
throwing in a few days," the Reds' team
physician, Dr. Timothy Kremchek, said
Thursday.
Kremcheck will perform the surgery
in Cincinnati.
Bohanon is expected to return to the
Reds' complex to begin rehabilitation
on Tuesday.
Bohanon, who signed a minor league
contract on Jan. II , will start the season
on a minor league disabled list.
"We'll start rehab here for I 0 days ·and
see how he progresses," Kremchek said.
"We're optimistic that if he starts now,
he'~ be at the ·big league level in a few

weeks."
Bohanon will be the third Reds
pitcher to have surgery this spring.
Chris Booker will miss the entire season because of a torn labrum and rotato~ cuff in his right shoulder. Jose Silva
is expected to miss about six weeks fol lowing removal of bone chips and spurs
from his right elbow.

BE STRONG - Marshall forward JR ' VanHoose, left, pulls a rebound away from Kent Stale forward Antonio
Gates during their quarterfinal game of the MAC tourney at Gund Arena Thursday. (AP)

Disa

intment ends

CLEVELAND (AP) Kent
• State is close to home. The Golden
Flashes just aren't ready to go back
there yet.
With Trevor Huffman scoring 24
points and Antonio Gates 23, Kent
State extended its winning streak to

American conference semifinals
with an 82-70 win Thursday over
Marshall.
Kent State became the MAC's
first No. 1 seed in three years to
avoid getting knocked out in the
quarterfinals. And Kent State
. enhanced its chances of making the
NCAA tournament even if it doesn't win the conference tourney.
The top seed hasn't won the
MAC title since 1996.
"I wouldn't be surprised if it did-

coach Greg White. "That's nothing
against Kent."
Kent State, which shot 63 percent
in the second half and closed with
an I 1-2 run, will play No. 4 seed
Toledo in Friday's se~nifinals.
The Rockets advanced with a 6254 win over Central Michigan.
.
Huffman became his school's
career scoring leader in the firsr half
.and then helped Kent State hold off

•

Reds keeping eye on ·Kearns Browns sign former
SARASOTA, Fla. (AP) If Austin Kearns doesn't win
the Cincinn. ati
Reds'
right
field job over
two more experienced players, he likely will o~en the
season at Triple-A Louisville.
But he might not be there
for long, givet;~ the speed at
which fellow top prospect
Adam Dunn rose through the
minors to play for the Reds
last year.
. Reds manager Bob Boone
said he would be comfortable
promoting the 21-year-old
Kearns this spring.
"He's a guy y.ou could
bring up to the big leagues
and he'd learn .We could do a
lot worse," Boone said.
The organization wants to
give Kearns plenty of playing
time, no matter where he is,
Boone said.
"He's not going to sit any-

where," he said. "It will be
like Dunn last year."
Kearps is, competing with
Juan Encarnacion and Ruben
Mateo ' to start in right field.
Dunn is the sta&lt;ter in l'eft
field.
Kearns and Dunn both
started last ·season with the
Reds' ,Double-A
Cha.t tanooga
Lookouts.
Bla
· Kearns fell behind when a
torn thumb ligament in
ended his season in May.
Dunn, meanwhile, pressed

Rea

·For The

Red 5

The Heart of Racine

OQ.

Dunn hit .334 with 32
homers &lt;lfld 84 RBis in 94
games with Chattanooga and
Louisville. H e was promoted
July 20 and hit .262 with 19
hom ers and 43 RBis in 66
games for the Reds.
Dunn se t a National
League record by hitting 12
hom ers in August, the most
homers by a rookie in any

month.
After his recovery, Kearns
attracted the Reds' attention
with a strong season in the
Arizona Fall League. H e led
the league in on-base percentage (.460) and was second in batting at .371.
Kearns - began this spring
with only two hits in 11 atbats, but hasn't gotten down.
"I've done all right," he
said. " I've hit the ball hard. It
just seems like I hit it right at
somebody. I think it will
work out all right."
Boone praised. Dunn's hitting.
"He knows what he's
doing," he said." He gets himself in a real good hitting
position and squares on the
ball."
Kearns and Dunn have followed similar paths so far.

.Ram Ryan Tucker

CLEVELAND (AP) - After upgrading their defense in
free agency, the Cleveland Browns finally addressed a suspect
offensive line on Thursday by signing RyanTucker to a four-year contract.
· Tucker, who played right tackle for St . Louis
last season, should help a Browns offense whkh
ranked last in the NFL in rushing in 200 1 and has undergone an off-season ·reshuffiing.
.
The Browns recently released offensive tackle Roman
Oben and guard Jeremy McKinney was taken by the Houston Texa~in the expansion draft. In addition, Ross Verba is
moving from left guard to left tackle.
HRyan is smart, athletic, versatile and aggressive;· said
Dwight Clark, Cleveland's director of football operations.
"He can play guard and tackle, but we project him at right
tackle. We are committed to running the ball more effectively and acquiring Ryan will go a long way in helping us
achieve that goal."
Earlier this week, the Browns signed free agent defensive
end Kenard Lang and safety Robert Griffith to long-term
deals.
·
The 6-foot-5, 305-pound Tucker was released last ,week by 1

NFL.

PIHse see Keams, B2

I

/·

PIHH SH Browns, B:Z

,._is

fir IIDr&amp; llllnJIIIIDR: 304-815.;5250
"

.

Please seelrlbe, B2

Please see Herd, B2

FIIIIIIIIIIIICIIIIIJ llni11.111MI ..Irl&amp;

II

KISSIMMEE, Fla. (AP) Jim
Thome and Bruce Aven each hit tworun homers Thursday
as the Clevela nd Indi ans beat the Atlanta
Braves 6-2.
Atlanta took a ·1-0
lead in the first inning
on an RBI single by
Vinny Castilla, but
Cleveland roughed up
..._..._.._ _._......, Braves' starter Greg
Thome
Maddux for four runs
in the third.
Brady Anderson led off with a single

16 gaines and advanced to the Mid- n't happen again," said Marshall

Underachieving ·
Herd bounced ftom
tourney

The PillS . . IIIII
designed for people who need an
intensive, individnalin:d team approach, but who are physically able to stay at: home.
Our PVH professionals offer physical, occupational and spccclt therapies. We serve individuals
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goals an: to improve •••••••••~• and ....... •Ill of you or your loved ones.

+

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I

Pllge B 2 •The Dally Sentinel

Friday, March 8, 2002

www.mydallysentlnel.com

GOrdon ·out with shoulder injuty; Pujols sprains ankle
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

•

The Chicago Cubs are searching for a
new closer after Tom Gordon went down
with an injury. The St. Louis Cardinals
feel ·fortunate that Roo_kie
.
of the Y~ar Albert Pujols
only spru_ne~ his ankle.
. On a day whe? lnJ~n~ made. the
btggest news at spnng trunmg,.the Cubs
!~rned,!hursday !h~t Tom Go~on ~as a
severe shoulder InJUry and wtU be ude.
lined for the foreseeable future.
The Cubs had counted on Gordon to
come back strong from an injury-plagued
season. Instead, a second MRI exam
Thur;sdayco~med thetr wo';t fears.
"1~ s a ~~~ficant ~nJury t?,at s gomg ~o
requtre stgmficant ttme o~, Cubs ,Prestdent Andy MacPhail satd. We don t have
· fra
a tune me yet.
""''
· of ·It, b ut
we don •t kn
. ow th e seventy
.
•""
..
we know tts severe.
Cubs trainer Dave Tumbas said the
injury occurred in the back of Gordon's
right shoulder.
.
Minus Gordon the Cubs will use Kyle
Farnsworth and' Jeff Fassc:ro to close
games. They both held the job last year
when Gordon was· hurt but Cubs manager Don Baylor reall; wanted to use
them in setup roles.
"It's a blow," Baylor said. "But we can't
give up the season because we lost Flash."
Pujols left the Cardinals' exhibition
game in ~upiter, Aa., with a sprained left
ankle after stepping awkwardly on the
· bag at first.
Pujols was trying to beat out a
grounder to third in the second inning

•

MLB

against Philadelphia's Brandon Duck- think this prognosis is good for us," Kent
worth when he was hurt. He was down said.
for several minutes in foul territory just
RoYALS 2, TIGERS 1
outside of first before leaving the game.
At Haines City, Fla., Mike Sweeney
"It looked scary to all of us," manager homered off Detroit's Jeff Weaver in a
Tony La Russa said. "!he fact he walked matchup between the main players fiom .
otf, 1 think he was more upset at hi~lf one of last season's most spectacular
· than anything else. I think there isn't any- brawls.
thing serious there." .
ASTRDS 4, DoDGERS 2
Pujols' status is day-to-day, and _he will
At Kissimmee, Fla., Wade Miller
be evaluated Friday. The Cardinals won
pitched four scoreless innings in his secthe game S-0.
ond spring start to help Houston defeat
In other injury ne)Ns Jason Giambi's
left hamstring still hasn'~ healed, and the Los Angeles.
DEVU RAYS 8, YANKEES 5
New York Yankees' first baseman won't
At St. Petersburg, Aa., Wilmy Caceres
return to the lineup until at least Saturand Troy O'Leary had two-run singles
day.
"It's not as good as you want it to be," during a five-run seventh-inning as
J 1i
.d .. ,
. .
Tampa Bay beat New York.
manager oe orre sat . 1t s not an mJury.
RED Sox 1, ORIOLES 1
· h "
1t •s 11·gh tness m
t
ere.
Giamb'
. d
Ia
k
At Fort Lauderdale, Fla., John Burkett
t. rmsse
two games st wee
b
f ft h
·
'gh
d extended his string of hidess ipnings to
~cause ~ 1e
arnstrmg II tn~ss, an six Thursday as Boston tied Baltimore in
his .leg stiffened durmg Mondays ·-game
a game called after seven innings because
agatnst Mt~nesota.
of rain.
Meanwhtle, shortstop . Derek Jeter
MAiwNs 8, TwiNs 5
could return to the Yankees' lineup by the
At Melbourne, Fla., Minnesota's Brad
weekend. He has been out smce Sunday
because of a strained neck muscle and Radke gave up one run in three innings
probably wo?'t ~lay urltil next wee!&lt;;. . . before Florida rallied from a four-run
San Franctsco s Jeff Kent ts, opttrmsllc deficit to win.
RANGERS (ss) 7, Bl.UE jAYS 3
about returnmg to the Gtants hneup by
At Dunedin, Fla., Hideki lrabu threw
opening day.
innings as Texas beatToronKent left for the Bay Area on Sunday three shutout
,
for. tests on the broken b~ne m hts left ·to.
MARINERS 5, CUBS 2
wrtst, whtch revealed rmnor hgament
damage. He returned to Arizona to begin · At Mesa, Ariz., Jamie Moyer allowed PIVOT MAN- Milwaukee Brewers' Jon Zuber is forced out a,t
one run in three innings, and Dan Wilson second bass as Chicago White Sox's second baseman Ray
rehab work.
~
Durham (5) attempts to turn two. (AP)
.:
"My rehab history has been quick, so I had three hits 'as Seatde beat Chicago.
"We remain very interested
in Cris."
It's unclear if the St. Louis
Rams are as high on Carter
fromPapBI
anymore.
the Rams, who drafted him
Carter came to Cleveland
in 1997 (fourth round) out· on Tuesday night for a visit
ofrexas Christiap. He started and when talks with the
in 31 of St. Louis' last 32 Browns progressed Wednesday, the 16-year veteran
games.
''I'm looking forward to called the Rams and told
playing for a high-energy . them he would be late for his
guy like (Browns coach) visit.
But St. Louis told Carter
Butch Davis who has been
successful every place he's not to bother coming.
been,'' Tucker said. "I iike
"He supposedly got tied
where the Cleveland Browns
are heading."
Martz. "So we'll ·
move
Meanwhile, the

Browns

Putting puts Faxon atop leaderboard
CORAL SPRINGS, Fla. (AP) - Brad Faxon
rarely dissects or deviates from his putting technique. He knows it works, and he showed it during the first round of the Honda
Classic.
Faxon made two 30-footers
. and four more from beyond 10
feet, shooting a 7-undel" 65 and taking the clubhouse lead before heavy rain suspended the
opening round Thursday.
"I try to putt like it's shooting baskets with
your friends," Faxon said. "I try to make it so easy
and simple and thoughdess .... I putted great. I
had good feel around the greens. I saw the lines.
But that's when I putt my best: when it's easy.
"I know there's..no explanation for that or
nothing that will sell a book, but I don't really
worry about that."
Faxon birdied four of his final five holes, getting off the TPC at Heron Bay just before play
was suspended. Nearly 2 inches of rain had fallen when the first round was postponed.
The round was to resume Friday at 7:30a.m.
EST. Second-round tee times were pushed back
five hours, a move that guarantees the second
round would not finish Friday and will continue

PGA

Saturday.

Friday's forecast called for partly cloudy skies
with a 20 percent chance ofrain.
.
Skip Kendall, having teed off on the par-S
16th when play was stopped, was one shot
behind Faxon and one stroke ahead of Fulton
AUem, Per-Ulrik Johansson, Dudley Hart and
Michael Allen.
Only 33 players in the 144-man field finished
the opening round. That could benefit Faxon,
especially if he keeps playing like he did Thurs-

day.
"I know I'm going to be there," he said confidendy. "I hope my golf swing hangs in there and·
s_tands up, and I putt like I did today, it will be
.
ruce.
,
Faxol! has three top-1 0 tinisht;S this ~easo~J·li':
tied for second at the Nissan Open and !Ws'ltea
third at the Match Play Championship. He could
have won both had it not been for a few missed

.

~~n~;edC~:!,an~~:c:~i~~

n;

putts.

Faxon blew a chance to extend his semifinal
match against Kevin Sutherland with a threeputt from I 5 feet.
He just missed it to the left and it rolled 3 feet
by. After Sutherland missed his par, Faxon pulled
his putt for a bogey, snatched up the ball and
threw it toward his caddie.

.
ercl
H

'·

I

frequendy than we did,'~ Golden Hashes up 33-31 with
White said. "Whether we 38 seconds left.
were fouling or not, that's a · Huffman's basket
also
ftom Pap 81
tough statistic."
pushed him past Burrell
A loss in the quarterfinals to McGhee as Kent's career scorthe Thundering Herd (15-15) a No, 8 seed would havejeop- ing leader. McGhee scored
with some big plays down the ardized Kent State's chance of 1,710 pointS from 1976-79.
stretch.
being chosen as an at-large
Slay hit an offcbalance
"This is do or die," Huffinan team for the NCAA tourna- jumper to tie it 33-aU at halfsaid. "It could be a short sea- ment.
time, but the Thundering
It's a predicament now fac- Herd couldn't get the big
son or it could be a long one."
Tamar Slay had 22 points, ing Butler, whose strong regu- shots in the closing 'minutes of
Ronald Blackshear I 9 and Jar season could be overshad- the second half.
J.R. VanHoose ,16 for Mar- owed by a loss to Wisconsin- . And although his talented
shall, which lost by 40 points Green Bay in the Horizon seniors - Slay and VanHoose
to Kent State last month but League quarterfinals.
- ended their careers withwas within 71-68 on Slay's
Kent coach Stan Heath out a MAC title, White, whose
feared his team may have been town house in West Virginia
basket with 2:59 left,
However, Demetric Shaw distracted by the NCAA spec- was destroyed by fire before
got a putback for Kent and ul;!tion.
the se¥on, was proud of his
Huffinan stole a pass and went
"I was concerned that our team's effort.
in for a layup, giving the players read the papers and
"It's been an emotional
Golden Hashes a 75-68 lead saw the TV saying that we . year," he said. "This team has
were in,'' said Heath, in his overcome a lot of adversity.:'
with 2:06 remaining.
Blacksliear's follow made it first year at Kent. "I didn't feel
75-70, but Andre Mitchell and that way at aU."
Huffman made two free
And his team didn't look
throws each and Kent State like it was NCAA worthy for
went 7-for-8 from the line in much of the first half.
the final 1:22 to seal it.
. Unable to get into any kind
Marshall was called for 14 of offensive flow, Kent State
personal fouls in the second trailed for most of the. first half
half to three for Kent State. , before Huffinan hit a 3-point"They got to the line more . er from the corner to put the .

agent
Carter.
,
"We had very productive
discussions," said .\,' team
spokesman Tod!l Stewart.

ftomPapBI
Both players were taken in successive
rounds of the 1998 free agent draft. They
played together during the f999 season at
Rockford in the Midwest League. Both
played at Billin~ in the Rookie Leagoe.
They stood out when they were teammates for the Reds' Class A Dayton Dragons

'.

fromPapBI
and advanced to third on a
double by Omar Vizquel.
Travis · Fryman then hit a
fly ball to right field that
was dropped by Gary
Sheffield, allowing Anderson· and Vizquel ,to score.
Thome then homered,
well over the right-field
fence.

With a blli!lch ot NFL play-,
ers changing teams Thursday,
the best of the lot, Larry Allen,
stayed put.The four-time All-Pro
offensive lineman, eBuaUy
adept at guard or tackle, had
his contract extendec:t by four
years by the Dallas Cowboys.
Although he had two years
remaining on his deal, Allen
was given a $12 million signing bonus. His new package isworth $3 7 million for six
years, through 2007, when he
will be 37.
"It was an easy decision,"
Cowboys owner Jerry Jones
said. "We think our offensive
line is one of the strengths of
our team. And the strength of
our strength is Larry Allen."
Allen, 6-foot-3 and 326
pounds, made the Pro Bowl
Seven times in eight seasons,
missing only as a rookie. He's
been voted All-Pro four times
in the last six seasons, making it
at tackle and guard, where he
?lrrently plays.

"It's been hard most of my
life, not having much growing
up,'' Allen said. "Now I can
have everything I want.- I'm
glad Jerry did this."
Another player with Pro
Bowl credentials, defensive end
Willie McGinest, re-signed
with New England. He took a
cut in pay to remain with the
Patriots, although terms were
not disclosed.
McGinest made two huge
plays in the fourth quarter of
the Patriots' Super Bowl victo-

ry.

.

With the Patriots leading
17-3, McGinest was called for
holding rurming back Marshall
Faulk, negating Tebucky Jones'
98-yard fumble recovery
return for a touchdown. The
Rams scored a touchdown two
plays later.
But with 4:32 left in the
game, McGinest sacked Kurt
Warner for -a 16-Y,ard loss that
forced a punt.
New .England also has
agreed to send troubled wide
receiver Terry Glenn to the

MAKES
OTHER
TAX
FORMS
QUIVER
IN FEAR.

Packers for a 2002 fourthround draft pick, plus a pick
next year that will depend on
Glenn's performance. But
Glenn has several grievances
ftled against New England
over suspensions, fines and the
withholding of $8.5 million of
his signing bonus. Those issues
have delayed completion of the
trade.
·
A hearing on the grievances
is scheduled for Friday.
A deal to send Saints running back Ricky Williams to
Miami also is on hold. But
both sides met Thursday.
"There are a few tweaks we
made here and there,'' Dolphins senior vice president
Rick Spielman said. "Wt;, came
to a happy medium 'On some
things: There's still some work
to get done:'
Saints general manager
Randy Mueller said Cleveland,
which also had made an offer
for Williams, has dropped out
of the bidding.
· Rams wide receiver Az-zahir
Hakim left the NFC champions for a $16 million, five-year
deal with the lowly Lions. He
cited the legacy of Barry
Sande~ a.s part of his decision.
"The Lions have always been
a part of my heart, because I
gre~ up watching Barry for aU
those years," Hakim said. "I
think aU of us looked up to
Barry and the thiO'gS he could
do ·on the field."
Hakim, 24, also returns
punis, although he lost that job
with St. Louis because of fumbles. He is a threat as a runner
on reverses, and also has
thrown touchdown passes.

DISMANTUNG, PART II Former St. Louis Rams linebacker London Fletcher holds
up his Buffalo Bills jersey
during a news conference
announcing his signing with
the Bills Thursd~. (AP)

here."

•
Carter's slight could bene.tit the Browns, who would
love to add him to their roster. Carter, who starred at
Ohio State, has also visite_d

5b Louis Rams wide reciever Az·Zahir Hakim (81), one of the many weapons

in the Rams' high-scoring offense the past three seasons, signed with the Detroit Lions on
Thursday. (AP file)

• San Diego, which lost
defensive tackle John Parrella ·
to Oakland, signed Jason Fisk
away from Tennessee for $12.5
n:Ullion over five years. Fisk is
guaranteed $5 million during
the first two years of the contract.
The Chargers also signed
former Washington center
Cory Raymer to a $10.5 million,
five-year
contract.
Raymer will get a signing
bonus between $2.25 'million
and $2.5 million.
• Kailee Wong, who led the
Vikings. in ta ckles, got a fouryear, $12 million contract with
the Houston Texans. He will
play rush linebacker in the
expansion team's 3-4 defense
rather than middle linebacker,
where Minnesota played him.
-Steve White, generally a

backup defensive end in Tampa
Bay, joined the New York Jets
with a four-year, $7.25 million
deal. He is expected to be part
of a rotation with young ends
John Abraham, an AU-Pro, and
Shaun Ellis:
• After London Fletcher
passed a physical, he signed a
five-year, $17 million deal with
Buffalo. The former St. Louis
Rams middle linebacker gets a
$4 million signing bonus.
The Bils lost inside linebacker Sam Cowart to the
New York Jets the previous
day. •
• Pittsburgh agreed to a
(our-year contract extension
with tight end Mark Bruener,
who had one season to go on
his current deal. Bruener,
injured for most of the 2001
season, had been scheduled to

in 2000. Kearns hit .306 with 27 homers and
.
104 RBls. Dunn hit .281 with 16 home runs
and 79 RBis.
Kearns said he feels welcome in camp. HaU
of Fame catcher Johnny Bench gave him ba~­
ting tips before one exhibition game.
.
"He told me to turn it loose," Kearns said.
"These guys treat you like you played here
for a while. They are some of the nicest people you ever want to meet."

earn $2.6 million this season,
with a salary cap value of $4.5
million because of his last sign ing bonus.
• New Orleans signed
Jacksonville cornerback Jason
Craft, a restricted free agent,
to an offer sheet. The Jaguars
have seven days to match it or
take a fifth-round draft choice
from the Saints.
• Offensive lineman Matt
Willig signed a one-year con tract to remain with San Francisco. An 11 -year NFL veteran
who has played for six teams,
he was a backup at three positions for the 49ers last season.
• Quarterback Dameyune
Craig, who threw only eight
passes during four seasons with
Carolina, signed a one-year
contract with Washington.

P The Indians added two
more runs in the eighth on
Aven's pinch-hit, two-out
homer off Kerry Ligtenberg .
Atlanta got its other run
in the ninth on ;. solo
homer by Wes Helms, who
is competing with Julio
Franco for the Braves'
starting job at first base:
Ryan . Drese started and

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Larry Allen re-signs
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 3

""""Atiothe'r-i' fr~ t agent Wh~
had visited the Browns, line;:;
for .this
backer Kailee Wong, agreed
set fur a week:'
Martz said three Rams Thursday to a four-year, $12
coaches and four players, million contract with the
including quarterback Kurt Houston Texans.

Keams

Thome

www.mydallysentlnel.com

)

Warner, had arranged theil'
schedules for Carter's vtst~.
Warner was scheduled t9
have dinner with Carter.
"Maybe in another week
or so we'll revisit this," sail!
Martz, a stickler for promp(ness. "It's just not how we do .
things. I think it's more tlie
agent than it is Cris. We wish
him wen in his endeavois
and we'll move on from

set . Miami.

•

Friday, March 8, 2002 ·

I
~·

'

~ ---~L----------------------~--------------~--_,------------~~-,------~

__ .._____ _

l
. I

�6

PaQe 8 4 • The Dally Sentinel

www.mydallyMntlnei.CClin

Mavericks win
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

43rd·game ...... most in NBA

~

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Frldllf. March .. 2002

March Madness? Top four all make MAC tournament semis .

Seven Grizzlies finished in double figures as Memphis snapped an
eight-game losing streak and set a
franchise record for points scored
in regulation. The win was the first
over Indiana in franchise history
after 13 losses.
Pau Gasol added 23 points, 15
rebounds and seven blocked shots
for Memphis, including five in the
final two minutes.
Jermaine O'Neal led the Pacers
with 31 points and 12 rebounds.
Jamaal Tinsley added 28 points and
nine assists.

The Dallas Mavericks don't have
the NBA 's best record. For now,
they have the most victories.
Dirk Nowitzki scored 35 points,
Michael Finley had Z5 and · Steve
Nash added 19
points and a seasonhigh 15 assists, helping Dallas shoot 65
' percent in a I Z2-1 03 victory
Thursday night over the stumbling
Toronto Raptors.
The Mavericks (43-18) have one
· more win than the Kings (42- 17), .
but ·Sacramento has a better winning percentage, .712 to .705.
PISTONS 95, WIZARDS 92
SPURS 99, RocKETS 97
"I remember when our record
Jon Barry made a 3-poinrer at
Tim Duncan had a double-douwas reversed," said Finley, who in
the buzzer and mouthed "Go ble by halftime and finished with
his · first full season in Dallas was
home, go home" to the Washington 30 point$ and 16 rebounds Thurspart of a ream that went 20-62.
crowd as Detroit celebrated.
day night to lead San Antonio to a
. In other NBA games, Detroit
"I was just telling them to drive 99-97 win over Houston.
· edged Washington 95-92, Seattle
home safely;· said Barry, who went
Rookie Tony Parker added 16
rallied past Charlotte 92-89 in
4-for-4 and scored 13 points.
points and a career-high 10
overtime, Memphis downed IndiBarry's basket accounted for the rebounds, while Malik Rose scored
ana 122-111, San Antonio edged
only points by the Pistons in the 14 and David Robinson grabbed
Houston 99-97 and Denver defeatfinal four minutes. After being . 12 rebounds. The Spurs had a 52ed New York 104-93.
down 92-85, the Wizards tied ,it on 26 advantage on points in the
Finley, Nowitzki and Nash were
Courtney Alexander's acrobatic paint.
especially dominant in the third
San Antonio led 94-87 after
reverse layup with 1:42 to play.
quarter, scoring 29 of the Mavs' 33
Corliss Williamson scored 23 Parker's long 2-point jumper from
points. Nash and Nowitzki had 10
points and Jerry Stackhouse had 19 the left baseline with 55 seconds to
each and Finley added nine.
The biggest surprise for the for the Pistons, who lead the Mil- play, but a furious Houston rally,
Mavericks was their aq:uracy one wauke~ Bucks by a half-game in keyed by four points from Steve
Francis and a 3-pointer by Walt
game after hitting only 37 percent the Central Division.
Williams, cut the margin to 97-94.
and scoring a season-low 81 points.
SUPERSONICS 92,
Two •free throws by Antonio
Dallas made 12 of 15 shots (80 perHORNETS
89,
OT
Daniels
with II seconds left helped
cent) in the fourth quarter.
Shammond Williams scored five seal the win.
Dallas did it primarily by taking
Another 3-pointer by Williams
easy shots. The game was heavy on points in the final 40 seconds of
overtime
after
Desmond
Mason
with
1.8 seconds to go provided
layups and dunks, rather than the
mad-bomber style the perimeter- tied the game on a soaring left- the final margin, as Daniels was
oriented Mavs often rely on. The handed dunk off a missed 3-point- able to run out the clock after
Mavericks'
offensive
success er by Gary Payton as time ~xpired receiving the subsequent inbounds
pass from Duncan.
. enabled them to win despite being in regulation.
Payton
led
Seattle
with
19
points
·
. outrebounded 51-34.
NuGGETS 104, KNICKS 93
"We're on the verge of some- and nine assists, while Williams had
Juwan Howard had 30 points,
thing good," Finley said. "Right 16 points and eight rebounds.
Jamal Mashburn led visiting · seven rebounds and nine assists as
now, we can't look at the standings
Charlotte,
scoring 23 of his 27 the Denver Nugge~ beat the New
and hope other teams lose. If we
keep winning, I like our position." points in the second half and over- York Knicks 104-93 Thursday
Toronto trailed by 11 in the first time. Baron Davis added 15 points, night.
Denver, which had lost eight of
. quarter, then led briefly in the mid- but missed four free throws late in
its previous nip.e games, shot 55
. die quarters - yet never by more regulation.
percent after making less than 40
than one. The Raptors scored only
GRIZZLIES 122, PACERS 111
percent of its shots in six ofits pre23 points in the third quarter to fall
At Memphis, Jason Williams had vious nine games. The Nuggets KUDOS- Dallas Mavericks forward Dirk Nowitzki from Germany gets a pat
behind by double digits and never
33 points and 11 assists in his first were 12-for-19 in the first quarter on the head from teammate guard Steve Nash from Canada after Nowitzki
made it close again.
The Raptors have lost 13 . in a game since Feb. 19 as the Grizzlies when they began a 13-0 run that hit the 30-point mark ln the second half of their game against the Raptors
ThursdaY· (AP)
•J
' tt ' • t
,,
had a rare offensive outburst.
gave them the lead for good. '

NBA

The Daily Sentinel

1

row, four shy of the franchise
record, and held a team meeting
after the game.
Vince Carter led Toronto with
19 points, but most carne after the
game was decided. One game after
tying his season high with 43
points, he was shut out the first 10
minutes and had only one field
goal in the first half.
Toronto's next two games are
against Miami ancf Orlando, then
the Raptors get New Jersey, Sacramento and Minnesota - three of
the top five teams in the league.

Page as

Friday, March 8, 20Cr.!

CLEVELAND {AP)- Four.Three. Two.And
one.
After seven years, countless upsets and enough
madness to fill March and several more months,
the top four seeds have advanced
to the semifinals of the MidAmerican Conference tournament.
"'
Barely.
. Keith McLeod hit a fadeaway 3-pointer with
SIX seconds left Thursday night as Bowling
Green got the last .spot in the semis with a 6058 win over Akron.
"We're happy to survive," said Bowling Green
coach Dan Dakich. "Everybody has a role on
this team and Keith's job is to make the gamewinner."
McLeod scored 29 points and showed why he
was the league's MVP during the regular season

MAC

by nailing the shot after missing his five previous
3s and four free throws dowti. the stretch.
The third-seeded Falcons (23-7) will play second-seeded Ball State (20-10) in Friday's second
semifinal. The Cardinals advanced with a 62-50
win over seventh-seeded Miami of Ohio.
In the opener, top-seeded Kent State (25-5)
will play fourth-seeded Toledo (16-13). The
Golden Flashes downed eighth-seeded Marshall
82-70, and the Rockets beat 12th-seeded Central Michigan 62-54.
It's the first time since 1995 that the MAC's
four highest seeds have moved into the semis.
And it's only because of McLeod's clutch
jumper.
.
Akron trailed by eight points in the second
half but rallied tQ take a 58-57 lead with 12.6
seconds left when Byron Thompson grabbed a
rebound and htt a tO-footer.

Bowling Green pushed the ball up and
McLeod drove the right side, stepped back and
stuck his 3-pointer - Bowling Green's first of
the second half
.
•
· Mcleod had missed two free throws with
23.9 seconds remaining and two more attempts
with 5:19 left when Akron's bench was called
for a technical.
Following two timeouts, Akron had one last
chance, but David Falkner missed a 3-point
attempt just before the horn.
Rashon Brown scored 21 points and Darryl
Peterson 12 for Akron (10-21).
TOLEDO 62, CENTRAL MICHIGAN 54
Keith Triplett scored 22 points and Terry
Reynolds got 12 in the. second half for the
Rockets ,'who scored just two field goals in the
final 10:10 bu·t had enough to hold off the
· Chippewas (9-19).

Central Michigan managed just one field goal
over the final 16:37 and made only four baskets
in the second half. CMU also had 27 turnovers.
David Webber, playing M final game for the
Chippewas, scored seven points on 3-of-13
shooting. He missed all seven 3-point attempts.
BALL ST. '62, MIAMI, OHIO 50
Theron Smith rook over in the second half,
scoring 19 of his 29 points for the .Cardinals.
Smith added 11 rebounds and Patrick Jackson
had 12 points for Ball State, which earlier this
season upset Kansas and UCLA on consecutive
nights in Hawaii.
Ball State made just two turnovers.
Alex Shorts had 17 points to lead seventhseeded Miami (13-18), which had made it to the
semifinals 10 straight years and had been in the
past five MAC title games.

Xavier, UD Cincy domiftates its toumey opener
~:.advance
.

•

PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Having sur.: vived a difficult game with Massachusetts,
:· Xavier is looking ahead to a team not expected to last this long in the Atlantic 10 tournament.
The Musketeers will face Dayton, which
twice lost to Xavier this season, in an all-Ohio
semifinal Friday night. La Salle,
the only Philadelphia team
remaining after a 72-66 upset
of Temple, will play Richmond in the other semifinal.
If the first twO tournament games are any
indication, the Ayers will be. Dayton averaged
• 84.5 points in wins over Saint Joseph's and
· Rhode Island
No.24 Xavier overcame a. stunning tying
shot at the end of regulation to beat Massa; chusetts 65-59 in overtime in the first quar: tei1inal Thursday.
: Romain Sato scored 21 points for Xavier,
: which made only 14 field goals the entire
· game, but went 33-of-43 from the foul tine.
The Minutemen outplayed Xavier, but
were called for 28 fuuls to Xavier's 15. That
didn't escape Massachusetts coach Steve Lappas.
' Eric Williams, a backup forward for UMass,
heaved in an improbable 3-pointer fiom 24
feet away with 0.7 second• left in regulation
to tie it at 52.
Xavier {23-5) outscored Massachusetts 137 in the extra period
•
Probably the only A-10 team with an
·: NCAA tournament berth locked up. Xavier
· · had trouble getting some of its best players
: involved on offense. Massachusetts (14-16)
:·: used changing defenses, including a triangle: · and-twO and a box-and-one, to keep the ball
: out of the hands of David We.t, the confer: ence 's player of the year.
·• West w:lS held to 14 points, eight in over: time, on 3-for-6 shooting. Lionel Chalmers,
: Xavier's third-leading scorer at 13.1 points
· per game, w:lS held to three. Kevin Frey
: scored 15.
·Shannon Crooks led UMass with 16
: : points, and Micah Brand added 15 points and
· 12 rebounds.
'
LA SAIJ.Il 72, TEMPLE 66
. : Mike Cleaves scored 28 points, and La Salle
' : almost certainly dashed Temple's NCAA
:' tournament hopes.
·. Rasual Butler added 16 points for La Salle
:: (15- 16). Cleaves, who shot 9-for-17 fiom the
; field, had 11 rebounds.
; Lynn Greer scored 20 points for Temple
· :: (15-14), which had trouble hitting shots on
: .the perimeter. The Owls shot 39 percent
· fiom the field and hit only seven of 30
:; attempts fiom 3-point range. Kevin Lyde
·added 19 points, and Brian Polk had 16.
: Buder hit a free throw to give La Salle a 70:66 lead, and Greer misSed a 3-pointer with 15
: seconds left. Cleaves knocked down twO free
:7 throws with 13.8 seconds remaining to seal it.
:: The loss probably will send Temple to the
: NIT. It would be the first time coach John
:Chaney hasn't made the NCAA tournament
:since 1989.
DAYTON 81, SAINT JOSEPH'S 74
· Brooks Hall's 13 points led six players in
double digits for Dayton.
: Sean Finn had 12 points and 12 rebounds
•for Dayton (20-9), which earned its third
: straight 20-win.season.
·
: Saint Joseph's (18-11) must hope for an
· NIT bid to continue its season. The Hawks
were led by Bill Phillips, who had 25 points
: 11 rebounds.
·
RicHMOND 78, St. BoNAVBNTURE ~
: Reggie Brown matched a career high with
:30 points as Richmond shot 64 percent from
: the floor.
Jonathan Collins added 14 for Richmond
(18-12), which shot 17-for-20 on attempts
:inside the 3-point line.
: j.R. Bremer, one' of the country's leading
: scorers, had 18 points on 6-for-21 shooting
: for St. Bonaventure (17-12). Patricio Prato
: had 19 points to lead the Bonnies, who shot
38 percent from the field and.17-for-44 from
behind on 3-pointers,
Richmond and La Salle split their regular.season meetings.

C IN CINNATI (AP)- Fifth-ranked C in ci nnari was
so dominant in its first tournament game that Steve
Logan turned into a \&gt;ench warm er.
The Bearcats coasted in the Conference USA tournament Thursday night, allowing Logan and the re st of
the starters to take a seat and watch
their backups finish off a 79-57 victory over South Florida.
The Bearcats (28-3) advan ced to
the semifinals and took another step in their drive to
get their first No. 1 seed in the NCAA tournament.
They'll play Charlotte, a team 'they've bea ten twice this
season, in the semifinals. ·
Logan, the conference's two-time player of the year,
scored 15 points in 23 minutes and settled uncomfortably into one of the cloth-covered folding chairs at
courtside with the game in hand .
"You know me - I'm never happy on the bench,"
Logan said. "But it was for a good cause, and we got
some younger players exper ience."
C incinnati has won all seven of the conference's reg·ular-season championships with its unrelenting style.
Coach Bob Huggins, who rarely gives his starters time
off in blowouts, made an exception to keep Logan and
the rest of them fresh.
·
"This is probably going to be good for him," Huggins said. "He's played a lot of minutes this season . This
has go t to help him."
The Bearcats certainly didn't need him after the first
few minutes.
Feeding off the energy from i hometown crowd at
an arena 15 minutes from campus, the' Bearcats quickly rattled the Bulls (19-12). who were handed their
mos.t lopsided defeat of the season.
South Florida fell behind by 29 in the first half, its
biggest deficit of the seaso n, and never got closer than
18 the rest of the way even though Cincinnati rested
its regulars for most of the second half.
The 57 points were a season-low for South Florida .
which shot 35 percent from the field and had 15
turnovers.
"They were just tougher than us, ,plain and simple,"
coach Seth Greenberg said. " I thought they were magnificent this evening."
Logan direc ted an offense that made quick work of
South Florida's ·overmatched front line. Eight of
Cincinnati's first nine baskets came fr-om within 3 feet
of the rim, a measure of th e Rearcats' dominance as
they pulled in front 19-4.
"We wanted to send a message to everyone watching
us that we were going to come out and ' play hard." said
Leonard Stokes, who had 11 points. " I think we did
that tonight."

(•USA

A-1 0

SCORING MACHINE- Cincinnati guard Steve Logan (22) drives against South Flori·
da in the first half, Thursday at the Conference USA tournament in Cincinnati. (AP)

Stanford routed by Southern ·cal in Pac-10
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Things got even worse for Stanford once
Southern California coach Henry Bibby put in
his· reserves.
''It's probably one of the best offensive .games
we've played aU year," Bibby said after No. 22
USC routed No. 16 Stanford I 03-78 in the ·first
round of the Pac- 10 tournament Thursday night.
"We were making shots and everything was
working offensively for us."
The Trojans built a 23-point lead in the first
half and never looked back, shooting 55 percent
from the floor and 76 percent from the foul line.
Sam Clancy led five USC players in double
· figures with 25 points. Brandon Granville added
20 points and 11 assists, reserve Desmon Farmer
19 points, David Bluthcnthal 17 points, and
reserve Jerry Dupree 10 points.
After USC starting guard Errick Craven got in
foul trouble in the first half, the Trojans didn't
. miss a beat. Dupree scored eight points in 12
minutes, and Farmer scored 10 in 12 minutes.
The fourth-seeded Troj!lns (21-8) \viii play
top-seeded Oregon in Friday's semifinals at Stapies Center. The No. 9 Ducks (23-7) defeate~
Washington 86-64. Also in th e Pac-10, No. 15
Arizona (20-9) ~eat Arizona State 73-56 and
California (22-7) stopped UCLA 67-61.
It was USC's third victory over the Cardinal
(19-9) this season. The Trojans won the first
meeting by eight points in Los Angeles, then
won the second by 19 points in Stanford's worst
loss at home since 1993..
·
Casey Jacobsen and Curtis Bori:hardt each
scored 17 points to lead fifth-seeded Stanford.
NO. 9 ORE(&gt;ON 86,
•
WASHINGTON 64
Luke Jackson scored 16 of his 27 points after

ToplS

J.:.._ _.,.::.....IC.....Ilioo

DO THIS - Louisville coach Rick Pltlno calls a
play during the first half against Marquette,
Thursday. (AP)
halftime, and Oregon beat Washington in the
6rst Pac- 10 tournament game in 12 years.
The win was Oregon's sixth straight and gave
the Duc\&lt;s their most victories in a season since
1945, when they won 30 games.
Doug Wrenn led the eighth-seeded Huskies
(11-18) with 14 points and seven rebounds.
· No. 15 AluZONA 73, AluzoNA ST. 56
Luke Walton had 25 points and eight
rebounds a.1 the Wildcats (20-9) beat Arizona
State.

Jason Braxton scored 12 points for seventhseeded ASU (14-14).
No. 13 MARQUETTE 84, LoUisVILLE 76
Cordell Henry scored 24 points and repea tedly darted through Louisville's intense lull- ·
court pressure, steadying Marquette (25-5).
Reece Gaines scored 29 points for the Cardinals (18-12).
No.7 PITTSBURGH 76,
.BOSTON COLLEGE 62
Donatas Zavackas scored 16 points, and
Chevon Troutman added 15 for the Panthers
(26-4), who took control with a 21-4 surge in
the first half. .
Boston College (20-11), which defeated
Pittsburgh for the Big East tournament title a
year ago, is in jeopardy of missing the NC AAs.
No. 20 MIAMI 84, GEORGETOWN 76, OT
Marcu's Barnes scored five· of qis career- high
27 points in overtime, and Miami reached the
Big Eas t semifinals for th e third time in four
years.
The Hurricanes (24-6) play Pittsburgh for a
berth in the title game.
The loss might have dealt a severe .b low to
Georgetown's chances of receiving a bid to the
NCAA tournament. The Hoyas (19-11) had
won four straight, but are ranked high in the
computer ran kings.
No. 11 FLORIDA 81, AUBURN 63
Udo nis Has) em had 22 points and 10
rebounds in a perfect shooting performance,
and Brett Nelson hit six 3-pointers for Flo rida.
The Gators (22-7) play Mississippi State in
Friday's quarterfinals. They'll need to win four
games in four days to take their first SE,C tournament title.
Auburn (12- Hi) got 23 points from Marquis
Daniels, but finished its worst season •in ce
going 11 - 17 in 1990-91 .

I

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Pt~ge

B I • The Dally Sentinel

...-

. ..

-

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~

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Dally In-Column : 1 :00 p.m.

Monday thru Friday

Monday· Friday for Insertion
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HOW IQ. WRITE Ali AQ.

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All -American longaberger
Bus Tour! Dresden/Homestead. Basket included, $62.
Prizes! 6· 15· 02 . Sealing
limited. Hurry! · 740-742-2824.
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Exercise your
mind and body. Start today.
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740-742-2546

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Lawrence, Gaiila, Jackson,
Meigs areas. There will be
5 to 10 families chosen to
become part of the pilot
project. Qualified applicants
may receive up to $40.00
per day reimbursement. In·
terested
parties
Call
(740)534·3379 ask lor Robart. if you -have previously
called, please call again.
Young, 5 yr. old church in
Gallia County, looking for
anointed &amp; e"pe.rienced muslcians lor Praise &amp; Worship
team , any Instrument. Info &amp;
Appi. _call (740)446·9043
Tue;;- Wed ., Fri. 9:00am1·OOpm or call (740)388·
o4s9

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GIVFAWAY

L._ _ _ _ _ _ _...

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Adorable
kittens. lilter
trained free to a good home
only {740)843-5268
'
Free mix breed cute puppies call740.949·2127
'
Lo!rr AND
FOUND

:Walkways. l&amp;L Scrap Met·
,ala 0pan Monday, Tu-y,
oWednesday &amp; F~day, Bam' 4:30pm. Clolad Thursday,
,,Saturday
&amp;
Sunday.
;(740)446-7300
•R-tlal nun
~-~-.. _ , . . .

.
Found 2 Dogs Big 16 area:
1 large Black/White male. 1
very small black &amp; Gray temale. Both have red collars.
Call304-937·3tt8
Lost· Male Chihuahua. BuIaviiie Pike area. Reward
Offered. Call Durall McCoy
at (740)446-41·22 or come
to 2128 Bulavliie Pike.
(Would parson who called
Wednesday please call
back. we cOuld not:·locate
address).

Rick Pearson Auction Company, full time auetloneer,
complete auction service.
Licensed •66.0111o &amp; Welt
VIrginia, 304-773-5785 Or
304-713-~7.

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20-30 Gallon Aquarium
Hood
and3951
Llghl Preferred.
4 882
(30 l
•
Absolute Top Dollar: U.S.
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M T S C0I Sho 151 Sec
· • ·
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p,
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ond Avonuo, Galllpollo, 740·
446•2842
·
Wanted: Old Pinball Ma·
chines, Juke BolCes and
Other CO{n Operated Equipment. Huntington. (304)429·
3333

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Bates Bros. Amusement
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Weekly pay, living loalltlos.
Conlact us at 740·2e6·2950
.
Chlldcare Workers needed
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No eKptrlence required.
Must havs High School Dlploma. Call (740)534 -1217•
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____ ·-

(740)446-3358
NEW EDUCAAE CHILD
DEY. CENTER IN PT.
PLEAIANT.
TEACHER
ASSISTANTS 5 full·tlme
with benll'ill, 2 part-time, 5
Substltuta. HS or OED ,...
qulred. Must b1 18 year~
old. Experience with pr•
school children pl'lferred.
1!01!. Send Aftume &amp; aov~
tr tetter: Peraonnel, AI. 1,
Box 48, Pt. Pleuant, WV
:2::55::50;.::__ _ _ _ __

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1'lwNING

ru

MmCEJ UNI!XU

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WANI'ED
To Do

AE Conotruotlon
rtmOCitllng, roollng, bath
roomtr drywall, Interior
palnUng, trim docro. win·
crowa. Fret eatlmatoo.
(304)875·n:l8

1~

Escort Drlvera needed for
averalzed Loads. Call Lam·
4 74
Trucking (30 )6 •

- - - - ·ij

Information,~~

TUR~ED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY 1881?
No Fee Unless We Win!
1·888·582·3345
Will Do Ironing In my
home. (304)875-8383

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ldvtr'tiHITIIntl for rul
....te whfah Ia In
vlotltiOn cl the liM. 01.1r
-.are~

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HOMFli

FOR SALE

M

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OBFOR~C!.~
""""'

1992 Palm Harbor 14x70,
2BR, 2BA, E•oollont Condt·
lion. 57 Jay Dr Lot 3. Parle
Lano (740)245-94112

I

••
Brlclt/ 1
1 ~re.
r1vor 1ront,
v•
nyl, 3 BR, 2
2 Flrepiaces, 2Hardwood
Ap000 oq • floors,
Full Buo
pro• •
"·
•
mont, $1150,000. (740)448·
0538.

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(740)448-7444. 1·8n·8309162. Free Estimates. Easy
financing, 90 days same as
cutt VIlli Master Card.
Drive- a-liHie savi alot.

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New and Used Furniture
Store below Holiday Inn Kanauga, Ohio. Used mattress
sets, draBSera, chests,
beds, couches, bunkbeds,
baby beds, enter1ainment
centers, desks, dinettes. 1·
40-446- 782.
7
4
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Reconditioned Washers &amp;
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aUm"od or No Crodll" Clov·
•m
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Buy 01 sell. Riverine Anti·
quee, 1124 East Main on
SR 124 E. PomBfoy, 740·
992·2526. Russ Moore,
owno&lt;.

Sue's Selectables on lhe 'T
In Middleport. Polls, glassware, Aladclltl mantelS, and
more. (740)992..0298

Now Taking Applications35 Weot 2 Bedroom Town·
1'10UII Apartmema, lncludea
Water
Sewage, Traah,
S3ii0/Mo., 740-448·0008.

MaicEu.ANroul
UO:::

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, • ..,..CHAIIJISE

•

*Prom Dreu• ~Marl-Lea~.
Aubergine (Light Smokey
Lavender) color,
Size
, Paid
• sell for
18120
5150
_ Shoes· Size
,
5100
9 112
$20. (740)446-7553 or
) 6.
1740 44 3194

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bulldlilr":m. Cltu water at
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SOul
e 304-875·3284
2 Bedroom Mob!le Home, 1
Block from Rio Grande Col·
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1
CIA $27"/
th
New Double Wiele on Prl· age,
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mon ·
vatl Proport)l. 1-5 Acroo. (740)669·8405.
Cali (740)446-3583 to pre- 2br. 1ba . In Country.
quaWiy.
Frontlbock porohea, 5275 .
Over 10 uMKI homes priced mo $100. Deposit. Ret. Reunder $3000. Will help with Qulred. No Pets. (304)578·
dellvefY. CaiJ Karena, 740- 3117 or (304)582·9303
38•-9948
or
•
Beautiful River VIew ideal
Pilot Prograrri· No Credit/ For 1 Or 2 People, Aetertn·
Bad Credit and First Time . -cu, Deposit, No Pets, FoeHome Buyers. FAS and tar Trailer Park. 740-44·1·
Gov8rnmenl loans Avails- 0181 ·
ble. OWn your new home in· For Rent: 2 ·Bedroom Trailer
stead of renting. Cal! in Bidwell. Phone (740)388(740)446-3218.
9081

•
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Storage Space for rent 4o33 Free Gaa Furnaces and Air
aquare feet. with metal Conditioner Eltlmataa. Can
(740)448-(13()8 r 1 800
0
shelving. Locahtd in City of
'
•
Point Pleaoatll. Inquire at 29HI098. II you don~ call
Ul wt both klHI
Orubb't f.leno· Tuning &amp;
Repaira. Problema? N"eed
Tho Plano Dr.
HOl/SEHOLD
, . 740525

(304)~74.0102

rro

Tu"":k~all

ro~-

UUUlRi

..,
Appliances: Reconditioned
Washere, Dryers, Rangea,
Refrlgrators, Up To 90 Daya
Guarantaedl We Sell New
Maytag Appliances, French
Cll)' Maytag, 740-446·7795.

-- -- ... ---- .....

Independent Herballfe Oil·
tributor, Call For Product Or
Opportunity. (740)441-1982
.
JET
.·
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; '3ebullt In
Stock. Call Aon E'Vana, 1·
800·537-9628 .

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

lul~olze

-r

MISCAL

(304)675·1571
1
:
OOfRllM£rli(I'S
'96 Jeep CherokH, Runs
Very Good. 8alvege Title,
· Yamaha Organ double key $3900. (740)448-1682
~rd with foot pegs, music
...and bench, $325 or trade, For Sala: 89 Ford Ranger
·1740)949-2789
PU· Blue, Ext. Cob, 4 cyl., 5
r
Speed, Gaod Condition,
FRUITS &amp;
$1800. Coli (740)446-4514
VF.GETABID
or (740)446-3248 after 6pm.

I

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:CAESS GAEENS. You cut
$6.00 per bushel. Already
cut $12 .00 per bushel.
..,.Available Now through
• March. Charles McKean
·Farm. phone (740)446-9442

Hloa~landt cookwhar~~. o)8th7~

Ont bedroom opanmont In P octo o male . 1 - ~
Point Pl..oant. Fumlohod, ~28:;0:;1-----~­
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r'
'

I \lt\l "l 1'1'1 II\
,\ IJ\I "\1( 1(1,

16

FARM~

Esrnpmgg

r

r~

I

•
19n Ford F150 480 V-8,
4K4, Headers,·4 ban'el hOtly
double pumper carb. Bad
Liner, with tralltr Hitch.
$1200./0BO.
(3()4)458·
1590

I

19114 Joop. Naw Top, New
Wheels and Tlrea, New
Paint. Must See. (740)258·

POSITIONS
Expanding Home
Health Agency will
be accepling
applications for
Registered Nurses
to make home
health visits.
Flexible
scheduling,
competilive pay
. and mileage '
reimbursement

FOR MORE
INFORMATION

contact Tla at
304-675·7400 or
l-801J.746-0076.

1

992-5479

aida wllh Tan Laalho; IniOn·
or, Grtal Condlllon. 011
Changed evtry 3,000 mllel.
,.(304:::;:;):::47:,::55·;:2:::8()::6:,::8ost:::..:::OII:::•::;r·:...
1999 Aod ZR2 S-10, 4•4,
Loaded, Auto, 88.000 mlloo.
PS, PL,
CO
Player,
(740)441·1302, (740)378·
2798
: :.:=s----truo-k--,---~.--L-t..
91
, 11~·,.;,".,d•ho•u•oo~·~(7•40,;)::"88•2•7•88"'9 ang. 5ap.~ New Ttrt1. MuIt
HAY &amp;
~-and • nvo toApprecloto.
•
GRAIN
• $4,800. (304)875-3?02

r

~~

~Hay

&amp; Bright Wire Tis
Straw, Year 'Round Delivery
&amp; VOJurrie Discount Avalll·
nble.
Heritage
Farm .
(304)675-5724.

/l ;

10

441 3

97 AstrO Van, 58,000 mUea,
air,' crulsa, tilt, PW, PL ,
AMIFM Cassette, dual air
bagt, AB~. uata 7, llka
new, ~uit sell! (740)379·
21341eavo mo111ge.

FREE ESTIMATES

740-992-1671

.•

HERBALIFE

Equipment

lndependenl
Dislributor

Repairs 6 Parts.

I LOst 271b.
in 32 days.

on alllllilkes of
fann Equip.
217

Pomeroy, Ohio
992-5908

742-2455

P/8-

HOWARDL.
WRITESEL
Roofing· Home
MaintenanceGutters· Down
Spout

CONTRAOORS, INC.
Racine,

• Oil change $18.95
We stock all major
brands

and Dozers

E. 2nd

Ohio 45771

740-985-3948

CONCREif/IILO&lt;K/BRICK
• Footers, Walls, Sreps •
Flal Work,

Replacemel}ts, • Walks
and Drives • Stencil ·
Crete
Free Estimates
Serving Ohio and W. V.
wv 11031712

Mike Hill

Owner

100%
natural/Guaranteed

.

-

-

740-992-7036
VMW.herbs4ileslae.

Hill's Sell
Storage

Shade River AG.Service
"Ahead In Service"
35537 St. Rt. 7 North • Pomeroy, OH 45720

29670 Bashan Road

Equlne12
12% Sweat Hone feed

Racine, Oh io

................ $5.00150

45771
740-949-2217

Sweat Stull
12% Sweat.Horee feed ................ $4.40150
Hunllrs Pride 21% dog food .........$6.95150

Free Estimates

Economy BHI 12% Block feed ... $6.751100
Traca Mineral 81ocka......................$4. 75150

949-1405 TFN

18% Layer Crumbell ..................... $8.25150

.Sizet S'x'O'
to 10'x30' ··,
Hours
7:00AM - 8:00

PM

mo. pd

1!1411

~..
- ¥:\.
t_l] . t! j Jil!!c
f@~~~
··-· •

-· •

· II

_II

•

.... •

.f.!!!IIP'"t.....

,

gjj rt.

J.D. CONSTRUCTION

WrtdoM&amp;

New Homes &amp; Remodeling

Mill

" Specializing In Log Hori]es

Carpentry, Masonary, Roofing, .
Plumbing, Electrical, Painting, Decks,
Siding, GuHers, Pressure washing,
Heating/Cooling, Concrete

. lnll 1 !11
Brlrd ra11eS IW can

lrirst

Certai19ed, Siri1cb1

~

(740) 949·1521
1-an-466-1234

A

~

(740) 992:3987
Owner &amp; Operalor, John Dean

\f.c'~
TFN

&amp;i:o..lfll:o..~N:-i.-.r.­

ilt!!! !fl!!j ll. 1!i m••, 111 11 '1: 11 t u

Spedalia!lf; In·

. Roonng, !;Cks
Remodelirig,
Drywall, and
Additions '

'\

DEPDYSAG
PARTS
All

Makes Traclor &amp;
Parts

Equipment

Factory Aulhorized
Ca se- IH

Parts

Dealers

I{)()() St. Rt. 7 South .
Coolville, OH 45723

Owner: Thrry Lamm

(740) 992-0739

r~1

Tii,·.·

Commercial &amp; Res ident ial

fjjn!

( ()'S 11&lt;1 ( II()'

FOR THE BEST DEALS IN THE AREA

~

&amp; Rubber Roofs"
Garages, Pole Buildings, Concre1e
Roofs &amp; Siding

LA!\IM'S

RIVERVIEW MOTORS

740-667-0363
..

T N

~~~
High 8l Dry

Self-Storage

AUCTION

33795 HilaruJ RJ.
Porrrnoy. Ohio

atAmoie's Rea
Market
Sun. March 1Oth
at 12'00
for more Info

740-992-5232
WEST SHADE
BARI;IER SHOP
Clolltd Jan. 30, 31st,
Feb. 1st
Open

FIELDS
PLUMBING
405 5th Street
New Haven, WV
•Residential

· Tue, Frl 10.5:00 p.m.
SiL 8:30 • ll:OO
George K. Vac.
Feb. !·March 1
Shop will be re1 houn
&amp; days March tat

•Commercial

e;:; (304)0
882~2343

Sorry for your lnconv.
985-3616 Chris

WY Ua 1025243

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Free Esllmales

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ottlo

t"'""

Bryan Reevea
New Homea, Room Addltlona,

Garages, Pole Bulldlnga, Roofa,
Siding, Decka, Kltchena, Drywall
&amp;More
~REE ESTIMATES!

740-742-3411

Replacement Windows
· American Lil•in1~l
Patio Roo•ms I

• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• Naw GartgH •
• Electrical 1 Plumbing
• Roofing 1 Gunera
• VInyl Siding I Painllng
• Patio and Porch Oteka

TFN

Sunset Home
Construction

All around mechanic with
computer E!Xperience to I
up parts.
Call 740-446-1 044:

Stop &amp; Compare

morris

Townohlp
tru1tee1 will hold 1
lpeclal meeting on
Wlldnelldey, 3/13/02 II
8:30 p.m. II tho
Pagevll_le Town Hall to
diiCUII the cere and
m1lnten1nce of the
townehlp late and
cematerleo.
(3) 8, 11, 12

1886 Jeep Chlf"OI(ee 4x4,
.Rebuilt Tran~Julon, New
Parts, Needa Englna·or RabuHt. $1.200. (740)448-7928
1994 Red, f·2150, 4xo4,
130,000 mlleo. $7,000 llrm.
(740)366·9055
.
~:::::.::..::.:::__ ___
1995 Orand ChtrokH Lim·
ltad. 4x4, White, loaded,
$9800. (304)862·20150

Remodeling

7122fTFN

Scipio

740-992-9734

•New Homes
•Garages
• Complete

Illest SlloH .... Slltt
37Mt Ttltll 11Ht Just

Public; Notice

·,_:c : •uvMJU\..A
_ _ 11998
Ch.vrolol ConYilreiOn
_
Van 43,000 mllaa, Ntw
".~------· Tlrea.
TV, VCR, Cooler,
Loto ot Extre'o. Brown oul·

- 4·H QOAT8 POR IALI.
w'Fuil BlOOd Boer, Parctntege
_kldl and femal11 . A.H ervt
_, now lor 4·H P -· Pro;~,van Champlort 8toodllnea,
,(740)248·0485 after llpm.
..
.. Reglttered Red Angua, that
-·moot tol&gt;acco program re...qulrementa. J:C. 820 MOCCI,
~alao want to ront lar':' whh

TIWlAPIST
10 Veers E~pericnce
Spccializina in: Deep
11ssue, Swedish. Shiat..su ,
Craniosacral,
reflexoloJY. Myofascial
and Yop Therapy Gift
Ccrtific•les Avail•ble
$30-4.5 minutes
~$4!1 - 1!5 minutes
["- 7~!J85-3345

(318, 2002

Call

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION •

Kris
Kaniedd

Authorized Agent

Robert E. luck
Judge
Common
Plou
Court,
Probelo
Dlvlllon
Melge County, Ohio

·~~~74=-----------­

, -20 Horse Yardman Aiding
Mower, 52" cut, $1 ,OOQ. 42"
sen propelled brush hog, 11
Horse Honda Engine for
.:use behind 4-whealer,
St,OOO. (740)386-0436
. .
·).III•Chalmero Dozer. HD·
~,, Power Shill, Excellent
Condition.
$14,0110.
,(740)379·2427

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

Jeff Warner Ins.

4

.r . ~ I::,~

740-992-7599

S.dBys

Cellular

M.

I

•

UCENSED MASSAGE

r ,. . - Ir-

llny Yorkshire Puppies, 6 1994 Ford F-;50 123.000
-;"NkS old. 2 males. $400 ml.las. 300 Bey. 5 ~ .
,each. (740)256·6476
aaklng
$4,800.
Call

s

condition, $3150, now aho,t
queen .manr... , $100.
(740)992-2389
F
1
T d TO
or aa or ra ' ·
·30
Ferguoon Hl/t.ow Range.
E•tra Molor porto. $2300.,
Twin River Towers accopl· Now king Cutter 811. rtnloh
11!111"":~-~~-...., lng appllcatlono now lor mower $1160., 88 Ford F·
-HoMEs
Unitt aVailable
160 truck
FISIPB,AJC,
,............
March 1, 2002
auto trenomaolon. $2800.,
FOR RI!N'r
1br. Hud Subtldlzld apt. lor Now Trolling Motor Craft•
-• oldo"'' and dloablld EOI-I man t&amp;• thrust $70 ~-11 al
~
(304)875-8879
tor 4pm. 1-304-578·2897
14•150 2 BR, Waohor &amp; ONer, Refrigerator, StM 1 •
For 1111; 20K w. natural
$300/mo r:lus d!lpOIIt. No
gao generator, no control
""'
_P_tta_.,.;l7_40...:.,2_58_·_1044~--c•
FOR RENT
panel, ran ltao thtn 800
_.j houro In lllotlmt. Aaklng
2 badloOm mobile home lor ,
.
$1500. 11 lnttrHied piNH
rent, no Pill, (740)992· 18x80 lites, $1001mo. 740· ce" Judy at Arcadil Nurelrig
68M
992·2187.
' Ctnter, (740)887·3,56.

ci ..__

Ao •!!S! IIIIlS

PER DIEM,

g• Cometary_Lots .tor Sa...
PrlmOLocatlon M d Hill
, oun
.
(513)563-2731 avtnlng.
Antique Bedroom aulte &amp;
b .... F h
""'
urn ure.
ot ol

Spaclouo 2br. 1ba. Duplex
wllh Waahar/Pryor Hookup
$450. rnonlh. Oepoot/Rtltr·
tnco Aoqulrad. No Peto. In
Point Pltuant {740)448·
4270 •

Auro PARIS &amp;

..

• Tqp • Removal • Trim
• Stump &amp;rinding
• Bucket Truck .

FREE ESTIMATES

I-

. cac General Home MalnlePainting. vinyl 11&lt;1lng carpentry &lt;1oo&lt;s wlncroM l&gt;atha 'mobile 'home

ropa1;

litO

e

(740)446·3945

'

•

seooo.

~

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

~

c

(740)24$..e 109

=

Clueriii

•

Tree Service

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement
Windows • Roofing
COIIIIII!W. IIIIi lllllllOOW

'**

(740) gg2-3J94
992

JONES'

BUILDER$111C.

DllnO,.tlO
flrl!l
stlrt
i:3l
l'l1tresslue tep lllte

(lfllr 61fl201

tral•.

112
: r d N!n
(3ci '· 7, . : 2002
-tlrea. exhauat and. carbora· 31
, Block, brick, sewer plpas, tor. $2,000. (740)379-2535 - - - - - - - 'Windows.llntals, etc. Claude
· Public Notice
! Winters, Rio Grande, OH 1979 Ford F-250, 4K4, PS, - - - - - - - oCall740·245-5121.
PB, Auto, Excalont Condl, . ..,;;.;;,;;;.;;,;;.;;.._ _, Uon. $6500. (740)448-(18.27
IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT,
11982 GMC pick-up,
PROBATE DIVISION
L
bed, 89,000
miles, spoke
new
MEIGS COUNTY,
,
paint
job, wllhe
OHIO
6 wk old . registered Cocker wheels, alum. toolbox, aekSpaniel
puppies,
tails lng $1950, (740)949-2521
.
docked , 1st shots &amp;
n!'-~-----....,
wormed 740- 742•2525
1984 F-150, 112 ton,
•
$1.000. (740)367-7187 ev•
IIELPWAN!ID
' AKC l.ab Puppies. Choco- nlng, (740)388.0173 day· · - - - - - - ·
late and Yellow Pop, Cllam· time.
~ion bloodlines, . British
• Blockyhoads. Bom January 1990 GMC Clull cab 350
.
; 6, 2002, $400. (304)372· engine, Automatic, '4x4,
..a-42
Good Condition, High Mil...
·AKC Aegistered • l.aba. $5995 OBO. (740),146·1021
, Black. (740)44Hl931
1993 S·10 Pk:t&lt;up, Now VB,
5spd, Air, 1lh, Very Good
--.,..-..,.-,..,.---- Truck, S3.ooo. 1987 314
Black lab Pups.
Ton, 4x4, 350 Fuet lnj. Very PART-TIME AND
"
Born H .02
Good
Shapa
$4500
_ __:(:;.
304=)6::.75:._·5:..1..:.92:..·- ..,. (740)441-4318 •
.
FULL·TIME

Lw----;,.-_.1

r

'

12 .

L.C. Smhh 12GA. Double,
12GA. N.E.S.S. Slug Gun
Model 48 Ram. 16 GA. Auto. (304)675-1564

r

(140)742·2852 •,

1

-------1 Kerosene heater- new,
never been opened. $50., 1
Moll
small window air condition·
2 BR House, Cheshire, OH. lng Room •. Bedroom. $2751
aed bo
blcy
11
Central Air, No Pals, month
plua
deposit. :~. ~~i'sweep, ~ks ~~
1 SSO. (304)B •
$375/mo. plus depoalt. (740)367-7015
. mowsr
75 2895
(740)448-4043 after Bpm
Modern t Bedroom Apart· 2 Toasters 2 iuce St o tor
3 bedroom homo Mlnarovlllt mont (740)446.0390
both, 1 small GE Microwave
area, rtver ~lew, $450 per Newly Remodeled, 2 Bed- Oven $20, 1 TV Zenith Sen·
montl'1, retet"encll required, room Apt .• Stove/ Refrlgara- try 2 18 Inch oolor $95., 1
deposit required, no pets, tor Utilities Paid $400/ Typewriter
$60 .
Call.
740·992-(1777 after 5pm.
month. 4
Olive Sl., (304)875-2895
'

Houoa ror Aent or Sail In
MoiOOI'IIIIe. Call (740)440·
72114 aok lor CoMis.
::;.:..:..::::;;.;.:;.:.:.;;.:;:.:-:
Program, Aenterl
' 1998. Rodman 2br. lba. Pilot
Ntedtd, 304-738·1295.
Central
Air.
$I1,000.
(304)87S.M03 ahor 5 pm.

~---iiiil~iiiio-.,.1

-..,....

condillon&amp;d and Guaranteed. Wuhers, Dryers,
Ranges, and Refrigerators,
Soma start at $95. Skaggs
Appliances, 78 Vine St. ,
(740}446-7398

8

so

ltnol\1ngly - p i

For Sale: Aacondilloned
washers, dryers end refrlgerators.· Thompaons ~I·
ance.' 3407 JackSOn ~v•
nut, (304)675-7388.
Good u-....1 a.nn~tance~, Re-

r

3 bedroom house In ·Chesler, dr, carpeting, remOdeled
bathroom, many Imp. rovemonto, rolortncoo, dapoolta,
evenings (614)501·8339.
·
&amp; Aoomo, 2 Kitchens and a
Bath, Nice. $5001 mo pluo
1980 Hlllcrtlt. Nlca Condl· deposit: May aoll on Land
don, 2 BA, Gas Fumaoe, Contract. (740)441 · 1337,
Centrll AC, 1 Owner, (740)448·4737, (740)367$7500. (740)258-1914
7015

Thlt nowopapor \IIIII not

lnlarmod thtt all
dYMiflngl ldvertiMd In
trlla nowopapor are
svsiiMfe on en ~uel
opponu

IF16 H~

2

$38,900.00· 28'•48'- total
eteclric- 3 bedroom- 2 bath2xe eKterlor walla- thermopane windows-- skylights
and much, much more. Free
delivery· a~tup- concrete
footers- underpinning and
up to 50F ol ulllll)' llnoo.
Now · through Marct1 1!th,
chOose your coto11.
Cole's Mobile Homn,
15266 .us
Eaot, Athena,
Ohio 4570f, (740)892-1972.

Bat~,

•

~~W~OI~Tm~u~ot~bo~•~•pooE"'tiMIE~~~~~~~~~~

1 t:"':?t

r

All rul HIIM ldver1111ng
In this MWipllper II
IUbfect to lhl F.....t
Fair HoLIIIng Act Of 1HI
which m•kn It llt-.gel to
ectYtnllt"lfty
PNteNnct, limitation or
dlscrlmlnlllon baed u
r'lte. color, Nllglon, MX
familial atatus or ftltlon•l
origin, or any lnlentlon ta
makt any suoh
pMfer~~not, limitation Of'
diiCI'Imlnlllon."

BISSELL

li ct .....

;or

Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631

~==:::;;;===:,

pII etiilj fllleS
811602171
fwrg 11lur frg

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE
97 Beedl st.
mlddl......
...,.. ', OH

!

Mall To : Ohlo Valley Publishing, 825 Third

New 14•70, 3 br/2bth. Only 1 and 2 bedroom apan$975 down &amp; $189. per/mo. ments, fumlshed and unfurCall Nlkkl740-385-7871
nlshed, security deposit requtred, no pata, 740-992l..ors &amp;
2218.
ACREAGE
·--iiiiiiiiiiiO.-" 15 eou•" Street. Very nice
apartment, 2 BR, 1 1/2
50 % ol 400 Acres at Frazl- B~th, New Gas Furnace,
er Bottom wtlh 14 Room AJC, Spacious Kitchen, Off
Lodge. $350,000. (304)545- Street Parking. Overlooks
6491
Park and River. No Pets,
·
$595/mo. plus utilities, de·
65 Acree Henderson on us posit
and
references.
~~~your~ ~
AT. 35 at lnr,rsection. (740)448-4928
·
Call 1740)446-:3384 10 quail· $65,000 (304)S4 5-ll491
2 bedroom apartment, $300
ty for your ·neW dream Country homes, nice Iota, month, deposit &amp; raterences
hom
located on Rt 33 between required, Main Slreet. Mae.
.Pomeroy/Athens. Gall 740- son, (304)n3-5801 .
.
For .sale by owner: Nice bl· 992 _2187 far details.
laval home on 1 acre nBBr
BEAUTIFUL
APART·
Cheater. Three *room, ~cellent for bUilding, 2 acre MENTS AT BUDGET PAltwo baths, one-car garage, fiat kJt, 2 miles from Rutland CES AT JACKSON ES.
family room with fireplace, on Cremeans Rd. (740)742- TATES. 52 Westwood Drive
sun room. Naw oonti'BI heat· 2803
from $297 to $383. Walk 10
1 &amp; a/
o
1
shop &amp; movies. Cell 7400
ng
system.
ne m • Lot 1 •-1 •··- 2 112
ute on Aout8 7 ..... s1·11
prtor oa e- ,.........,ux.
446·2568. Equal Housing
1
' uu
n
acre a• cleared &amp; rea""
vata
(740)985-3981
.., tor Opportunity.
·
building, gravel driveway, =~=:!'c----.,.New Home. Vinyl Siding, wattK &amp; electric available, Chrlst~l'a Family Living,
Shingle ROOf, 3 Bedrooms/ Porter
area.
Asking 33140 New Uma Rd., Aut2 Bath, $499 Down: Call $13,995, C811 (740)446· land, Ohio, 740-742-7403.
("J40~7.0, if-' ,.. Tt 1_,, 1 45.14.. from 8-5. or.-(140)446- ~&amp;~&amp;=rt~ ~~~:::
New ho!..isa- llnancing avalt- 3248 ....r 6pm.
fronts available for lease .
able to quaHfied buyara.. 0% Lots for sale- (1) 0.377 Vacancies now.
down. 1800 sq It, 2 112 acr.,. St4,000 &amp; (1) 0.45~
balh, 3 Bedrooms. -custom acres~ $15,000. Alr11ne Ad, Clean 2br. W/0 Hookup.
oak trim &amp; cablnet11, gas Porter area, flat &amp; reaely to Reference and Deposit. No
fireplace, large kltcMn/dln· set up on. AEP electric, Pata. (304)675-5162
lng 2 112 car gara,d&amp;. on 1 central sewage system, &amp;
112' acrtt. $119,900: 1 Poner water
avhllable.
Call Deluxe Apartment. 2 bedarea. {740)448-451• tlll5pm (740)446-4514 M.. F/8·5.
r=~~. fu~:th,:;~~a~~~
or (740)448-3248 after 6pm
RFALilsrAlE
11800 sq ft., city park and rillPartially Ramodeled home,
ut.----.
er view, hw floors, skylight,
2 Bedroom, 1 Bath, Full __
HnluEU
• private. parking, 4- antique
oh
fireplaces, :Jn:1 floor cent/'ll
:2~~~';::, ~~':t1ne: Credit worthy buyer .looking ale and gu heat, M;e, ref·
on Dr. $60 000. (740)441- tor houae to buy, Gallla, Ma- erence and deposit . Greg
'
'
son or ~alga, please call Smith, ~740)448·2282 or
0485
.
Jim, (740)992·3187
(740)448-7313
PRICE REDUCTION! 10.5
Acres with 1999 ·Fleetwood
Efficiency Apanmenl for
Modular Home Near GaliipRenl. Utilities Included,
oils. ElCcellant ·Condition.
SSOO Single. S325 COupae.
Pn·vate, Country Selling.
(740)25&amp;-1972 or (740)448Stocked Pond. Additional
-.:,_ _ _ _ _ _ __
7.5Acres Available. Call Ja· r10
HoiiSES
1h
A
nell Gall at C•ntury 21
FOR.Il&amp;vr
Furnls ed
partment 2
Homott &amp; l.aJ1d (Cellular •
• Aooma and Bath. Clean. No
(304)834·2596 or Olllco 1·
Pets. Relerenceo and De800·731-9011),
1 -3 Bedrooms ForeclOsed posit Required. (740)446Quiet selling, yet close to Homes From $199/Mo., 4% _15_1_9_ _ _ _ _ _ _
Down, 30 Vaara at 8.5%
town. Near golf course and APR. For Ust!nga, 800-319- Gracloua living. 1 and 2
~~h ~ :u:;, :~~ ~~ 3323 Ext 1709.
bedrO: apanmen~~t ~1In kitchen with oak cablneta,
lage
nor and
rs a
2 bedroom. Mlddlepo~. ap- Apanm0!1tS In Middleport.
ad~kv• ~~oupnr1vapoocv 'fa~~~ pilances, w/d, references, From $278-$348". Call 740·
•
deposit, $375/mo. pluo ullllt· 992·5064. Equal Housing
$90,000. (740)441-1913
lea, (740)742-2424 afler Opportunities.
6pm.
Ki~en, Dining Aoom, Liv-

1

All ' Maktl Lawn Mow'ira
and tOutdoor
Equip·
R IredPower
F
Plckun
men epa
· ret
•
and delivery avallablo. Call
Mlkt (740)446-7604.
Ail of your home repalra, ad· _
2_hom_H_o_n_o~ne-lot-ln_M_Id_·
dltlona &amp; remodeling. 24hr
$69,500. Seen bv
o rgoi'Y'!II 11rvlce Hnlar ..,.....
'
me · ~,
•
appointment only, (740)992·
Citizen• 1 dlacount. 22yra. 8164 .
:••::P::.
' (:;:304,;:;.:)5:;;7..:6-..:2:;:08:;;5;...,-.,....
•
3 Bsdroom on Route 2,
Davld'o . Homo Aepalr. 1304)675-6332
Plumbing, Electrical, Paintclinical stan 1 muot. 'Con- lng, etc. (740)258,9373 or Cape Cod Style Home·
1
7
tact Pate Som"mer, Medl
Homo Health, 430 2nd. Drywall Flnllhecll Patchod. 1999 (carpet. linoleum. win·
Ave .. P.O. 987, Galltpoill Reference•
Available. dows, furnace, central air,
01-1 4!563t . 800-481-6334 (740)2581873
1
d
I) F
d
•FIJU benefit package lnclud·
•
sept c an roo · ence
lng health insurance and ElCoellent Cal'l for persons back yard. Shoestring Rid~
401 (k) included. Also Hir- In my Christian Country Ad. $127,000. (740)441
lng RN·FTfleldstaff
Home. Non-Smoker, Mo- 03~
wanted; Someone to take bile. (304)882·3880
Cozy 1.5 Stol)', 1250 sq fl.,
care of home. Free room Georges Portable sawmill. Open Loft, 1.5 acre, Porier
and board, small aarery. don't haul your fogs to the Area. Asking $79,000.
(740)357·2308
mill juot call304-675-1957. (740)367-7193 &gt;

(740)~ -~70 .

Aanch Style 3 Bedroom, I
Bath, Large LA, OR, Kitchen, CIA, 3 Car Garage, 3
Acree, $75,000. (740)3792627
Ill
Retiring to south, ae ng
well below appraleal. Green
SChools. 4 bedrooms. 3 full
baths,
lnground
pool,
$162,000. For mora dalaUs
&amp; appointment. (740)4461
3139

1

.

Col'-

Cllltlpollo c.-r
~CarHre Cion To Home)
all Todayl740·448-4367,
1-800·214-0452.
A;:5·12748.

0

~

I

TAX PROBLEMS? IRS
AND
STATE
Trouble&amp;
Solved! Past &amp; Present. No
Cost
Money
Back. Hurry Call
b Myar
1·800·487·1992.

r11

s

20 words 7 Days. Each Item Priced
• No commercial Ads
• No Tickets/Purebred An imals
Or Garage/yard Sales • Limit 3 Per Person

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Prlva{i:,~si'!uoo

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Doing op~ng ctoanlng? Qo·
nate reu1ablt ltemt to
RtUot lnduot~tfl N. CoFull Hme Waltrtll Needed. lumbuo Rd .• Alhono. HIBJ;Albany: 740·8 •
Apply In Poroon. Holiday wa6o
82 . .
Inn- Clalllpolll.

Rtllablt PoriOn -ntod lor
U
Computer nternet
111'1
......
Wanted. S1SOO moiPT, ll~ht houookooplng &amp; goner$5000. mo/FT.
a health oaro monlto~ni
Free Booklet. 888-229-(1288 "pactlng ltmalt. M-F. -4.
24hr. Aocordlng or vlolt
(740)441.()888
www.wealthlayours.com
RHplratory ThtrlpiiL Full
DATA ENTRY
Time Poaltlon. Ohio U·
P
Cl I
I Dodo
Cenood RRT/ CAT. Mon•
rocHI Will
a ms
ra.
T Ior
d.•v.
Friday,
•·.OO•m·
ran.
•
PC ~ulrtd
5·00pm Com~ltlvo Wage
1·800·240-154e, oipt. 928 A'erlrem'ent PI';: HHtth
0 lno'
I kl
II lurance. Contact: Bow·
om
• now • ng app • man'o Homocaro, 70 Pint
catlonolor oalo drivers, Gal- St., Galllpollo. OH 45831 .
llpollo and Pomeroy loca- (740)445-7283
tiona only. Apply In person. AN Supel\'laor (FT), coordl·
Eam up to $350 In one day nation-supervision of r,"tlent
plua free plcturea. Invite
...... . .~
o nd
y,our l"endo
to your hOme cart. UCtniRN In
1
11
VN. Must haye P.P.S. ex·
or a prolosolonal picture """"net and ·lamlllar 1&gt;1th
party. (740)878--2417
;dicare and JCAHO

Ads Must Be Prepaid

Aockspnngs Aehabllltallon · Moving and Hauling: Clean
Center FacUlty, a premier Out Buildings, Basemen~&amp;.
10D-bed skilled nursing Ia- Garages, Estates, Trash,
ciUty, has an Immediate Etc.
Odd Job&amp;. Call
opening lor an SJCperienced (740}448-7604
Dietary Manager. WIU be re- Will Babysit in my nomi.
sponalble for maintaining,
trandlng and making recom- Monday· Sal'!_~ay. PCall
mendatlans for nutritional (740)367-o437 .-:k for tO·
needs. Previous manage- gy Saundere.
mant experience and cart!fled manager course preferred. Enjoy our team-baled
environment, anf.1 our excel- r10
~
lent wage and benefit packOPfoRTuNrry
age. lntarealed candidates
contact: Rocksprings Aeha·
INOnCEI
bllhatlon Center, Attention: OHIO VAllEY PUBLISHAlbert Parton, Administrator, lNG CO. 1"8CC1mmands that
36759 Rocksprings Aoad,
b
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, VOli do usiness with paop18
Phone 740·992-6806, Fax you know, and NOT to send
740·992·2676. Extendcare money through the mall until
Haallh Services, Inc. Is an you have Investigated the
equal oppor1unlty employer offering.
that - o -gas wo~Nace
d"··rs~l1y~.
Mlu••F ON '""'
Start .Your Business . To,..
day... Prime Shopping CenOwn a P.C.1 Put It To ter S'pace Available At AfWortd Up To $25-$75 HR. forclable Rate. Spring Valley
PT/Ft For a tree booklet Plaza, Cali 740-446-0101.
call; (800)226-5948 or v1111 Sweeper bualnesa for saleus online:
n·ew Rainbow &amp; Kirby parts;
www.NewCashToola.com
bags &amp; belts and to many
pans to mention, $1,000,
SHAwNEE MENTAL
(740)367-0612
HEALTH CENTER, INC.
·
Olrect C&amp;l'l SeiVIce ProvldMoNEY
er for cur Scioto County
TO loAN
Adult Community Support
-Program- Bachelor degree
La~~n of All
ar'ld Ohio LSW.or LPC pre&lt;rupea Available!
larrad; applicant muat have
~Fees. all Credit
kr'IOWtedgeofcOmmunlty
aooepled
suppot1system campoCall Toll Free
nents extensive knowledge
1-886-294-1379
and ~kground In mental
health prlnciplea and CriSis
l'lloFEWONAL
tnterventlon. Competitive
Stxvle»i
Ia fl &gt;dble "' had-

.s

T'U&lt;lTUI.I!Il

s

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

11180 'to~ I ro ~ It M~~ I

sao

::.::=====;;::::=
Need 5 iadlu to sell Avon.

20¢

.,.
alwlya
CurNn,t
l'lllefOE
cud...,....
AllrNI......
ICCtptt
onlycanflditrrtlal.
i*p ,..nted •llde
mMI:Ing
ttllndll'da. •We
will

Full II
111
package.
• me pos on
available immediately,
Please send raaume to HPOu·
Box 1507, PQrtamoulh, OH
45BB2, or FAX: (740)355·
8206.Appilcallonaaccep,ted
until poahlon lslllled.
EEO/MFVHIWOAK FOACE
MEDICAUOENTAL BILL· DIVERSITY ENCOURlNG COMPANY has lmme- AGED.
diate Openings lof People
to Process Claims. $15- UROENTLV
NEEDED·
$45/hr. Potential. WRI train. plasma OOnors, eam $50 to
per week lor 2 or 3
PC ~equlred. Call Nowl 7
Days 1-800·935·3971 Ext hours weekly. Call Blo Life
Plasma Service, · 740-592·
•219
6651 .
Mothers Dreaml
We are now accepting apStay Home
pllcatlons tor eKperianced
Be Your Own Boss!
grill &amp; prep cooks, apply at
Earn up to
Hart's Kountry Kitchen, Aa·
$500-S8000/M0
cine, Ohio, between Sam·
PT/FT
11am. no phone calls,
1·800-(110.0705
www.C..hNowAndForevtr.com ploue.

oil

Help wanted caring lor the
....ATTENTIQW• Worlc From elderly, Darst Group Home,
Home! Up to $25·$75 HR. now paying minimum wage,
PTIFT Mallorder or Internet new shifts : 7am-3pm, 7am·
866-248~1526 for Free 5pm, 3pm·11pm. 11pm·
Booklet!
7am, call740-992-5023.
AVON! AU Areaal To Buy or wantedl Serloua People To
Sell. Shirley Spears. 304• · Work At l-lomel PTIFT .Free
Booklell 81)0. 218 •1591.
675•1429,.
;

Sec

IIFlJ'WANIID

3

rHe~"VH

~-·~~~-

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Are· you an energetic mot!· Local
siness:
retary
vated person looking for a Position Available. Must be
rewarding career? Scenic_ personable, communicate
Hills Nursing Center offers a well, multllasking, salt motl10
wondertui employment op- vated, willing
work In
port1Jf111y. We provide &amp;lCcef- warehouse
atmosphere.
~t skilled and intsrmediate Send Resume to: W.VA.
l '"''
car. With a Compr.h.n'iv. Electrtc, Attn: Human Rerehab department We are sources, PO BoK 6688,
currently seeking CNA's or Huntington, WV 25n3.
STNA's. Please apply in EOEIM/FN!H
person or call Jane Darling Melnttnanct
Director
tor more Information at Must possess excellent ver:
740 446 7150
1 )
bal and written communlca·
Are you looking tor the op- lion skills, must be able to
portunl1y to join a winning completa reports and docuteam and beCome part of a mentation,
must have
fast growing health care in- knowledge or carpentry
dustry? Scenic Hills Nursing w:ortc., plumbing repair, elecCanter is offering Nurse trieal repair, painting, equipAide Training Classes be· me~t maintenance, ground•
ginning Marcf111' 2002. It Is mamtenance and general
a 75 hour course,lastlng lor repair. Knowledge of long
11 days, Monday through 11
term care. StateanciFadendrFriday 8:30 to 4:30 . This Is
Mea and regulations 1
a great opportunity! Stop by building code. Please send
today for an application or resume or appty ·ln paraon:
contact Amber Campbell, Overbrook Canter, 333
Instructor, at (740)446-7150 Page Strati, Middleport, OH
45780.
740·992-11472.
Attention
Equal Opportunity Employ..
Leaders Wanted
ar.
International mail order, tree
,
booklet printing provided! McClure • Restaurant now
hiring all 3 loCations. run or
tlon at location &amp; brlng back
1•800•21 B· 7543
www.Money.Oreams.com between
9:30am
&amp;
10:008m, Monday thru 8at·
- - - - - - - - umay.

!::::!:..:~~.:.:~--

I \ ll 'l t 1\ \II"\ I

ffELp WANJID

IIFlJ'WANim

A GROWING BUSINESS
Equlpmonl
NEEDS HELP! Work own
Sales .and Job Contract
Flex Schedule From Any Sales Person. Experience
locaUonl
Average
Required. For additional
$400/Part-Time-$1500/Full·
lnformadon
Tlme per Weeki Paid VacaCall (304)675-4005
lions, Bonuses, &amp; Tralnif1gl
Web site
Kipling Shoe Company Is
www/Coals2Success.com
now accepting applicationa
888-754-5430
tor sales position at Point
Pleasant &amp; Gallipolis loeB·
Act Now!
lions. Apply at Store.
Be Your Own Boas From .
.
,
Home! Fonune 500 Compa- Utile Johns Cltgo In VInton
ny Needs Help! s 1 soo~ Is now hiring Full &amp; Part
$13000/MQ PT/FT Free In· time cashlsrs. All haunt.
formation Call Now!
Competitive wages, bonus·
1 -6~390-1241
·
es and 401K. Apply In perwww.BaslcProfits.com
son 9:00am-3:00pm

I

WANI'EO
TO BUY
L.--..:.:~;;:.:,-_.1

·

11116

I

1990 Cotdillac Sedan Dtvllle
"--·
0ok1 Edition. e - t Conond
For 1r8e
dhlon. Garage Kopt.
Budgol Prlotcl l\'1..,._ lllllmata caH Chit, 740-992Day (740)440-4487, OY8· Ilona All Typoo, To 1!323.
nlng (740)448-4282
Ovtlr
10,000
Tranamllilono,
Rebuild Klta, 740-245-&amp;en, • .-~~--'"'!""..,
:r~n HlofflcloflC)' 90 pluo 19111 Corolca. $1200. 1966 Cell: 339-3785. . Eux:nucAIJ 1
. gas urnacoo Including ofl Meroury,
11011.
1987
&amp;
lti17RJGERA110N
:and He11actrlc gas IUma• Buick, $750. Honda Civic,
~~- _
~
'
. oes
Ellk:loncy Heat
1984 OMC 314 Ton
lYliUI\"' ..........
Pumps, featuring Tappana 4x4, S750. 1988 Ford 31
Raa6denlfal or commlt'Cial
' Free incredible warranty Ton Van 1000 (74QVloa.
·
wlr1ng, new 11Mce or re4package
•
·
,__- 1978 Jayco Camper 21ft. pairs. Master Ucented etec9906 •
: aENNETrS HEAnNO a
pull
Oahlnd
S3000... trlcllln. Rl!leni&gt;ur Elactrlcal,
' COOLING (740)445-1418 19115 Cavallor LS, $4000, (304)882-3607
WV000306, 304-675·1786.
1-100-1172-5867.
call (740)9112'2077
-r:::=::::===::
www.orvb.com/bennttl
1995 S-10, ~95. 1988
.S.msung Microwave, S25. Cherokee, o4x4, $2495.
• (740)446-9429
19911 Cofalca, $2695. 1994
: sot 01 17, 7_5 4 LUG cavalier, $2495. 1997 Oklo
.~Chroma Prime Wheels and Achieve, Low Milas, $499S.·
:Cayton Low Profile llres. ~K MOTORS (740l446w17•7.5 4 Lug, Fits most lm·
NOTICE: II hereby
IN THE MATTER OF
.ports and others. Used only 1998 Grand Am, Red, 4 given
thlt
on
SETTLEMENT
.,our months. Asking $1300. cyl., Sedan, Clean, Well s.turdly, March 9,
OF ACCOUNTS,
:;ror wheels end tires. OBO. Kept, $4800. (740)367.()683 2002 , at 10:00 a.m., a
PROBATE COURT
public ae(e will be
• (304)675·3902/(304)675" 2895
1996 Honda Civic LX. Auto, h ld
MEIGS COUNTY,
:;:;:~------ Air, Cruise, PW, POL, 4 e
II 211 Weat
OHIO
.Smilh COrona Word Pro- Door,
Black,
$69SS. Second
Street,
"easor
$25.
Phone (740)368·9678
Pomeroy, Ohio, The
Accounto · ond
,(304)882·2755
Formera Benk. end
::-- -::-:-:--;::-,-,.,---, 1999 Olds Alsro. (740)256- S.v(nge Company 11 vouchore of the
.Stove, Old Style Wood 9197
11
'
following
named
Burning Kitchen
Cook
oel ng for Clllh the flduclory hu been
Sieve. Empire Brand· call 2000 Sliver Chevy Impala 4 following collateral:
lordelails. (740)379-2111
door. 3·4 Liter. PW, PL, CD
2000
HONDA flied In the Probate
~:-:-:-=--:'-=:'-'-=.:,:.:,.,.,. player, aluminum whHII. TRX450S 4X4 ATV Court, Melge County,
Ohio f!&gt;r epproval and
Walenlne Special: 314 200 $10,000 (304)675-5258
478TE220XY4105441
PSI $21.00 Per 100: 1' 200
lllllement.
PSI $35.00 Per 100; All 89 FOrd F·150, 302, Slpd,
The Fermerl Bank
ESTATE NO. 28185
Brass Compression Attings Good Tires. $3500. 93 Mer- I n d
S • vI n g I
•
Tho
Th(rd Account
In Slock.
cury Capn Convartlble, 4cil. Com ... ny, Pomeroy,
of Jennlf•r l. Sheoto,
. RON EVANS ENTERPRI9- 5 apeed, 87 •000 mllea, Ohio, reeervee thl
ES Jackson, Ohio, 1·800· 53500· (740l441 .oa:l7
right to bid et ·thll . Connrvllor a,. Opel
537·9528
93 Buick LaSab&lt;e, excellent 1111, end io withdraw JeenlY,..
Unle11 exception•
Watkins Producls: Double condition, (740)949·2045, the above colloterel
ere ftllld thereto, oold
strength white and dark va- reduced to $3400.
prior to ..... .Further, account will be eat
· niUa, extracts, pepper, 93 cavalier AS, $1400 304- Thl Farmer~· B1nk
for hoerlng boforo
spices, dessert mixes, sal- ..675-4274
1nd
S 1 vI n g 1
.
11ld
Court on the 8th
vas and liniments. Call740·
Company flllrVII
. 949·3027.
Uvetye Auto Sales- 1991 the right to rajecteny dey of April, 2002, et
which time ea(d
FOrd Aerootar Van, $1400. · II bid
b -A
WOAKSTATIONS(2) $400. 1989 PonUac Flreblrd v 8 Or I
I IU m,.,..,, . eccount will
be
,ea..IBM PC 300. Intel Cole· 5spd, $1800. 1990 f'1inllae
T hI
I b 0 vI
coneldorod
ond
· ron 533 MH2 Socket 370 Grand·Am. S120D. 1984 deecrlbed colllleral
continued from dey
processor, Intel 810e Moth· Mercury Cougar, $1200. will be IOid .... II•
to,
dey until flnelly
erboard
~hlpset,
64 1990 Pontiac Grand·Am, where · Ia~, with no
MBIAAM, Windows 98 ap. $1200. 19112 Pontiac Grand- expreaelld or Implied clepondof
Any
peroon
eratlng System, Samaung Am, $1o400. SIK more cheap wa.....-u given
'48X CD Rom Drlva (SCC. cars. Call (740)366·9303
F......,
f ' h
lntorelled mey file .
148 F). 5 GB Hard dnve,
·
or
u rt er written exception to
Accton ·EN12207B Network Star Auto Sale&amp;, acroaa Information. ·o r far an
Interface Card, 3Com lm- from bank In Racile, Ohio, appointment
to eald account or lo
'Pact IC modsm, Optlquost affordable ulod C8fl and lnepect colleterel, · moliere pertaining, to
17" 071 monitor. PS/2 Kay· truckl. 740-849-2451
prior ·to eele dele . the execution of tho,board (Win96~-· P&amp;2 two
'J'RIJQ(S
contact
Sheila truat. not Ina th•n
\bulton mouse. (304)875Su.E
Buohenen · 11 882· live dlya prior Ia, the
,2895
•
FOR
2138.
tot lor hearing.

POUCII!8: Ohkl V...,. Publ
..tHng
theforright
M edit,
or uncel
any time.
'f"rrlluM.s.ntfnel.fttoltW
wtll
be retpOMibM
no mON
IMn the CHt
of UMany-'
ap.otl at
OOCUP*f
by the ..-rol' II'MI onfr liN flrttlnMf'tlon.
eny tote or expeMt that IWUftt from the pubtlceUon or om/uton of., ldw•U•t,..IIL COI'I'Ktlon Mil be made In thl tint r.tlllebM .clition. • Box

Abbrev iations

• Ads Should Run 7 Days

I

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IIFlJ'WANIID

A~old

15

15

Thursday ror Sundays

• Jncl uae Phone Number And Address When Needed

Bu

Foster Parents.
Local Agency In Ohio seek·

r

1116

Description • Include A Price •

Up

sunoay DISplay : l:Oo

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete

Successful Ads
Shou ld Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...
\\\,()(\(I \11\ IS

IS''""'" Iri·Column:
1:00 p.m.
sundays Paper

Includes Free Yard Sale Sign!$
To
Words,
Days
Over
Words
Per Word

I

:11200:::;_ __ _ __
1w1 3D rt 11avo1
,_bid houot $8500.
'all G-Gae EC 250 orrt ....,..,_
Now Crabnon
7HP,
SMO.OO- 304-67S1
bike, $2700. (740)"* M2 . oi230- 6pm.

~~~ ~~!1:.r. g~:w~~~1'l ~~~:· ~~~..$~=

t(~r/cfa./'u

Display Ads
All DISplay: 12 Noon 2
:~~:~c":t~o~'Y' PdorTo

Sm&gt;_&amp;
.......__

••=•IQI

I

To Place
~rtbune
Sentinel
l\egtster
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call TOday... or Fax To (740) 44&amp;-3008
or Fax To (740) 992-2157
(304) 675-5234

OUJ.r/tiru

r

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1997 Filth Wlltal
RV 3011. Vory Goc!!l Cordi·
lion. (304)8115-3044 or
LMw a 11 age (304)1M8-

Toboooo Planta lor Sale. "'!"' . . Sponoter 12 •000
Col Now and ..... ,.,_, mlloa, original. (304)875- iii;ir~1l~;;;;;;~
To r8MMI yoor ..rty apr1ng 1560
11r:~-"':'":"::-"-.,
planting ... Dewhurst
Bo.\1S &amp; Marolts
Gi'HnhooiOI
(304)895"··•www.OnJb.com/bonnott
37401(304)895-3789
fUR.,.,...
aAIEIIBn'
~urray Lawn Mower· 18
·
WATEAPROOFINQ
. t-IP, 42" cut, Good Condl·
10' boe.t with
good Unoonditioual llletl~ guar"~35
Ill
• , tion, $200. (740)379-2111
r•o
Aums
(71o40r ~9-2'or11 . omall tako, an.... local roltror- lur· , _ _ _ _
-_uu
__.JIII
FOR Su.E
•- •
nllhtd. Eotabllahed 1975.
~EW AND USED STEEL
V Bot Coli 24 Hro. (740) 446911 Flehor 18,
.Sieel Beams, Pipe Alba'
tom Boat 1&gt;1t~
G.i 0870, Aogera Baoom.tnl
••••••••••••••••
'for Concrata, Angle, Chan- 1966 Plymouth Rallan~ 4 Trallor No Molor S20Q0 Walatproollng.

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR
NOW ONLINE

(}jfie~ 1/o((JI-~

Boa

lnlenherm
&amp; Cottman
~oil
&amp; electrk:
furnacesIIU
,,.;
•Ciu&lt;ling hi eff~llncy hoat
pu"'l&gt; II)'Sitmt. We cany a
complete line o( ' Mobile
I homo parts &amp; IICC88a0rleo.
•BENNEIT'S HEATING 6
:cooLtNO (740)"*M1f
.or 1-eoO-f72-5187

.In one week With us

~~~~----~~~

-lAir

Oeok. 4 Dnl-. on Round
Shelve

CLASSIFI&amp;D

I.__ ....., L.r_...;:;rAl-.:~~"-..,.~

~
Oalooofhaylor-. Ill Clwv - - .. 4x4,
30x20 Ve . N : p om, 1200 lb.-1500 lb. Oaloa. $17,000. LT Ptckago,
· lor s'tudo~IJI H~m.=' 740-696-82 11 leave mo• (740}448 31144 dtys · or
$20, Two CoMectabte Rl~ sage
(7.tC)?18 855!5
gety Ann Dolls, $10
(740)9115-A409
·
· ~~·~~,: hav.
Mo~tJ~ro:rus
·IIOIItl.E - E 0-118
)
~
•
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The Dally Sentinel ~ Page B 7

WICK'S.
HAULINGaad

EXCAVATING
BedUnen •Nerf Bar

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MARY KAy''

Beauty
and
brains
From QOroeout makeup

to bM&lt;Jkthrough t kln

co,., Fni-good

trogronc•• to ICitnttncolly
advonciKi tormulot,
Mory ICoy ha1 oil you
n•~ to look great on d
llv• tmort.
·

Paige Cleek
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Independent Beauty
C ons ult ant
I 14 High Street

Pomeroy. O H 15769
740~ 992-2802
www.m ar~ly.com /paile cleek

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Following a heart
attack, Walter Matthau cQmmented,
" My doctor gave me
six months to live,
but when I couldn't
pay the bill, he gave
. montIts n1ore. "
·me
SIX
BARNEY
The problem in this
I KNOW!!
Jeal is to de cide
I WUZ ON
which &lt;uit 10 attack
TH'OTHER
first. You are South,
DE OF TH'
DG-E
·
the declarer in three
II
n o- lr~mp . West leads
the heart queen to
your king. What
next?
West's three-heart
opening .traditionally
shows a decent sevencard suit and some 59 high-card points .
Now, though. as anyone who has played
GAN
GO JlJ$T ONf PAY
tournament bridge
/"'
GIN6flt
will be aware, ·the requirements have been
Vflt.fVS MAltY ANN
going down quicker
AltGlJMfNT1!
than the Titanic.
North's double is
for takeout, showing
short hearts · and
· length in the . unbid
suits. South goes for
THE BORN LOSER
the nine-lrick game.
(At another vulner(()fo/'£ Cif'.l,
ability, he might pass,)
K.EN!'l€ I
It looks natural to
1-\Et:LI
attack diamonds immediately, but with
this layout, the contract dies. East wins
with the ace and re. turns his last hearl .
With only eight tricks
(une spade, two
hcarl s, three diamonds and two
clubs), you might
hope to establish a
lung club, which
needs both the suit to
break 3-3 and East to
have to win the third
round of the suit.
.However, you are
more likely lo take
the spade fmesse .
lll•.l Here, neither plan
,. works.
PEANUTS
. Now try playing a
club to dummy's
CIIAlUE BROWN. AT WloiAT POINT 110€5 A
WHEN HIS PLAifERS TROT OUT ONTO THI:
king, followed by
MANAGER I(NOW IllS TEAM IS IN TlOU8Le?
AELD, AND ONE OF THEM TRIPS OVER SECOND
running the spade
queen . If the finesse
wins, you knock out
the diamond ace and
collect at least one
overtrick. Here the fi.
nesse loses and West
establishes his heart
suit. However. when ·
...
you dislodge the diamond ace, East has no
heart to return.
Again, you rake in an
overtrick.

Cell-phone
bans, Dl

Mason girl's wish

32 Dlatlnl

3

34 Not even
35 Frat lllltr
37 Cook In 1

Show of

4 Pep

6 Untul, 10
Bloke
7 London
cafe
8 Brown beor
9 Rlllred

tklllel

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40 According

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24 Groin
. holder

41 Ftrmenled
IH
43 Dwarl't

25 Army
outfit

44 lvyLHgut

cousin

ualls' bond set at S1 million

ochool

26 Kin.

45 "Dukoo ol
Hazzard"
dopuly

neighbor

47 SubmH

28 Up In lhe
air
29 Nobleman
33 Whloko~
grain
35 Servolho

4t Benchmllrk
49 Moktlacl

Charged in murder of
Middleport girlfriend

51 Funny
Charlotte
53 Dawn

. goddtlt

wine

36 Kupo com-

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BY BRIAN

)'l'&lt;lf ahcotd, &gt;·our hi~­
impron.· mcnt ~ c ould
1
l'O lli C aht ii1t rlaou~h your
pt.·r~otl;tl rd;tt iom hip~ . From

their itH l'.rV(' ntions, wnditinm .
in ~('llt'ra l ,,:ou\d t:!kc a rurn
for d1 e be ncr.
PI SCES (l'&lt;b. ~ll-M arch
20) Kit·k a em or pmmd some
nails int o a board imtcad of ·
~uundi n g

otT nn imJU~.:cnt unlookcn. Bottled up emotions
co uld t•xplode on you if yn ll

do n't find ;m oudcr. Trying to
patch U)~

:1

broken romance?

The Astro-G raph ·Matc.:hmakcr r;m h1.·lp you unllcr~t&lt;l lld w hat to do tn make the

n•lationship work. Mail S2.75
M .nc hm aker, c/u thi s

to

ncw~papcr, P.O. Box
Mmr;~y 1-l ill Statin n,

175M,
New

'York. NY 10 15(,,
ARIES (March 2 1- April
PJ) That w hich you do for
your f.·uui ly or lov1.•d uu~ will
be grt•at ly appreci;,tcd and
hcart . wa rm i ng . Ho wever,
don't turn arouml omd wrcck
·1,vh.1t }'Oll did with an ac t of
sdfi~ hn css.

TAURUo (April 20-May
20) !:;nmcwhcrc &lt;llnng the
way, you Lo uld change yo ur
thought that being swt.•t•t and

I

II

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J.

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

l;tlgh School. basketball. 81-3

Deaths
Harry E. White; 68
Audrey E. Wall, 89
Rev. Edward Min~us, 79
James 'Mack' Lak1n, 69
Wayne Hudkins, 98
Dallas C. Lewis, 75
Rebecca Ackerman, 23
Details, A6

POMEROY -Bond was set Fri·
day at $1 million cash for Eric A.
Qualls, 26, acc used of killing his
·
girlfriend on Thursday.
· Qualls, of Brownell Avenue in

Middleport, was · point-blank range, near the entrance
arra igned before ofThe Corner Restaurant on South
Meigs
County Third Avenue at Main Street Thurs·
Court
Jud ge day evening.
·steven L. Story
Ackerman was a waitress at the
Friday morning. Middleport restaurant.
He is charged with
Middleport Police Chief Bruce
a count of aggra- Swif1 said Qualls allegedly entered
vated murder, a the restaura.nt and forced Ackerman
first-degree felony. outside after threatening to shoot
Quail&amp;
Qualls is accused other employees and customers. Her
of shooting Becky Ackerman, 22, at body was found just outside a· back

CELEBRATION OF 4-H .

by Luis Campos

Celebrity Clpher cryptograms are created from,QUOtations by famous
people, paat and present. Each letter tn the cipher &amp;landS lor another.

Todsy's clus: H BqUsls K

'X

YKXGH

NMUT

LTMW

YTZY

HXGF

BN

MLT

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Weather

M

VBP

OSBA rep
to visit

SMG

UMEPXLT

T~~:~~r S©~J)lA-&lt;Zt.trse

. GALLIPOLIS -AI Meloy,
deputy direc(or of -hoard
development· for the b hio
School" Boards Association,
will meet with citizens and
staff in the Gallia County
Local Schools on Monday at
Southwestern
Elementary
School.
Meloy has been retained by
the board of education in itl
s~arch for a new superinten·
dent.
. He will meet with administrative staff from 2-3 p.m.;
teaching staff from 4-5 p.m.;
support staff from 5:30-6:30
p.m .; and community and
parents, 7-8 p.m.
Meloy will gather input
that will be used by the board
as it interviews candidates for
the job and checks their references.
Areas that will be addressed
include maJor issues facing
the district for the next three
to five . years, performance
expectations for the new
superintendent, and personal
and professional qualities
·sought in the new superintendent.

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I know a woman who was tty4
1ng to attract the attention of a niQe
1
~=-=~·:;:·:::·:;::_.,'ooking bachelor. She bought
,
some very expensive perfume
DU S E N D
and all it attracts is - - - - - - -.
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PRINT NUMBERED LEITER S
IN THESE SQUARES

A
V

UN SCRAMBLE LETTERS TO
GET ANSWER

I' I,, 1J
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IIII I III

SCRAM-LETS ·ANSWERS
Homely- Munch- Agam- Festal · MY NIGHTS
"Every dog should have it's day," I complained to my
husband "and that would be okay if they would bark'
from nin~ to five so I could have MY NIGHTS."

.is wt&gt;:~k ,1nJ powerl ess
arid, imte;t.d, take nn bl'ing
plcil~&lt;lll t

dominecriu~ r~nd l1g;greqs ivc .
Don't f&lt;tll i11tn thi ~ trap.
GEMINI (May 2 1-Ju nc

20) If yo u' re nut carcllll, thost'
ln whom you choose to contide could be very }1our
l·hoi,c;s. Those ti.·cling.~ o( relief yuu gtlt in spillin g th e
b~ans ctltlld turn in to emotion~ of rage.
CANCER Uuuc 21-Jul y '
22) Turnabout is f.1ir play. So,
if you dou't 'vant anyone to
:1buse your g~ncrOsity, mak1.'
Hire you :~p ply th e ~:'! m e standan!~ to yoursel f as WL"I!. ·
LEO Uuly 2.1- Au ~ . 22)
Not cooperating with persons
\vhu are making every effort
to couper:-..tc with you cou ld
turn into a bitt~ r lc s~on when
VOlt diSCOV~r the limits o(
their ll:ttiencC.
VIRGO (Au~. 23-Scpt.
22) Even if you're rig:ht about·
your ideas and su ggestions being superior to1 others, if you
handle dispatching them
poorly, you wo n't J,ook as
sm&lt;trt as yoll think you ,arc.
LIURA (Sc'pt. 2.1-0ct. 23)
Totlav may bt• ~nc of those
days 'when. U}Hlll occi\sio11,

CHESHIRE- Cheshi re officials
are demanding Ohio Environmental
Protection Agency conduct a "thorough review" of plans to build a
synthetic fu els operation at the Gen.
James M. G~vin Power Plant.
Mayor Tom Reese sai~ that unless .
OEPA proves the synfuel facility
planned by DTE Energy Services, a
subsidiary of Detroit Edison, will
not harm village residents or the
environment, the state should not
allow the facility to be built.
DTE has applied through the
agency for a combined draft air and
surface water permit to install.
A public hearin g was held in
Cheshire on Feb. 12, and OE PA
extended the public comment on
the application until March 1, two
weeks later than the original deadline. .
During the hearing, Reese asked
for a 30-day ex tension so more
could be learned about the operation and DTE.
Cheshire residents, R eese maintained, "have a right to know if their
environment and th eir health might
be affected by the plane.
"This basic right has been denied
us, however, by Ohio EPA's failure
to condu ct a thorough review of the
synthetic fuel plant and its failure to
find out whether it poses any una cceptable environmental and health
risks," he said.
No answers?

YBP

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'If you don'l feel a lhrill when Pegg~
LH tlnga, you'ro dead.' - (Muelc ·critic) Leonard Feather

Rea rrange kltters of
0 four
JCrambled words

KKELLY@MYDAILYTRIBU NE.COM

Details, A3 .

XGYMSY.'

YBATV

BY KEVIN KEUY

HIBh: 40s, Low: JOs

JKMY

RTLZBG

MGF

ZYMV

BN

XZ

yotl turn out to. be a bit of a
risk taker. Don't push your
luck too f.u . Know when to
walk away while you're still- '

ahl'ad .
·
SCORPIO (Oct. 2~-N ov.
22) Although things could

fRQ~· "!;lfl·BEGINNINGS - This vintage photo supplied by Galli a County Extension Service office shows a 4-H
i!CtfvltY. 'pOssibly at camt~, fl'om dayii,;P.JllSt In Galli a County. 4-H In Galli a is being celebrated t~is year on the occasion of ~he gr.ganlzatlon:S .1-00tl\_l:llr.jij;lay_ln Ol)lo. ;.,• ·
·
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ars
Program gets statCUJide recognition
.

I

BY KRIS DOTSON
KDOTSON@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

G

ALLIPOLIS - It's been 100 years of fun and
hard work for Ohio 4-Hers and this past week,
Galli a County honored its rich . history with
activities and displays throughout the county as well as a
full year of planned celebrations.

lhe 100th anniVersary of 4-H's
intemationalr non-formal
educational youth development
program for youth~ 5 to 19 will be
celebrated statewide this month.

The lOOth anniversary of 4-H's international, non-formal edu cational youth development program for yout}ls 5 to 19 will be celebrated statewide this month.
It all began in Ohio when on Jan. 15, 1902,A.B. Graham recr_uited 85 students in Springfield to join the Boys' and Girls' Agricultural Experiment Club.

Plun SH Cheshire, M

Community input session 'slated for Tuesday

" Sedlon1 - J2 Pepl

· Calendars
Celebrations
Classifieds
~omics

Elear Abby
Editorials
.Obituaries .
Region
Sports
Weather

start out well con cerning a
very important partnership arrangement, if you sec things
beginning to go doW11hill, try··
Lo correct it immediately, not;
compou nd it .
: ·

SAG ITTAR IU S (Nov.
23-Dec. 2 1) It's OK to tackle'
a major projet.:t, but should,

C6
C2
02-7

insert
Cl
A4

P.6
A2
82·6
A2

· Q 2002 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

· you fmd yourself becoming
irritable- and impatient, k110W 1
when to cal! it qttits and tiuish .
-,
thit1 gs anot her day.
CAI'It !CORN (Dec. 22J an. llJ) Chanct:!l ·'are that
}'9ll 'II br p!t:-as;uH and happyKo-lm:ky, until you run in to
.\ omconc who h;u acqui red

Center at 1191 Ohio 160, Gallipolis. added.
A written summary of Calha's
"The prim~ry purpose of . this
GALLIPOLIS - A new strategic. meeting is to get broad local partic- issues. and .goals identified at the
developmenl plan will be formulat- ipation in defining the key develop- meeting will be developed and availed for counties served by the Ohio ment}bsues and goals for the cou nty able to all interested. OVRDC's
Valley Regional Commission, and in o~er to continue growth and website (www.ovrdc.org) will post
Gallia County commissioners are deve!&amp;!,pment for the next five years," updates of progress on the plan
seeking the public's input.
co un~y
commissioners Shirley through 2002.
OVRDC and its Gallia ~ounty Angel, Bill Davis and Skip Meadows
OVRDC, based in Waverly, assists
caucus, a consortium oflocal leaders said in 'a letter to community leaders. · Calha and other area counties in
and organizations, are hosting an
"We need your . experience and obtaining funds for needed projects
input rn.e~ting for Thesday from 3-5 insight in definin g these issues for through such sources as · the
and the region," they Appalachian Regional Commission
p.m. in the meeting room of the 911 the
Bv KEVIN KEUY

KKELLY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE .COM

River Cities Nurse On·Call
1·800-462-5255

~1hle to get. Jea l mi~Y won 't ln~ ­

t.:o m c vou .-

Um.

20Feb. 19) So long as l.'veryth_ing
is goin~ yom w:1y, you'll h;~ve
(',. the following you desire . Um,
if that 'hangcs, and you be ~
ctllllC · bossy or demanding,
you'll find yourself standing

If you have health questions or conce~ns, call
River Ci~es Nur~ On-Ca~ and speak to a
specially trained RN.

alone .

Check wilh your physician oboul medication concerns.
\

and U.S. Economic Development
Administration.
The organization has worked with
Gallipolis, villages and townships .
The local caucus' organizational
meeting on Jan. 31 listed such
endeavors as utility replacement in
Gallipolis' 2-1 / 2 Alley, a proposed
widening of O hi o 850 from U.S. 35
to the Dan Evan s In dustrial Park and
the Kanauga- A?dison· sewer project

Please see Input. A4

The Holl2'~1 Health Hotline is now...

sunwthin~ you h:lVen't bt'cn ,

AQUARIUS

entrance to the restaurant.
During his court appearance Fri·
day, Qualls requested the appointment of counsel, and Story appoint·
ed William N. Eachus of Gallipolis
and K. Robert Toy of Athens as cocounsel.
A preliminary hearing in his case
will be held on Wednesday at noon.
Qualls re~uin s in carcerated at the
Southeastern Oh io Regional jail in
Nelsonville.

·Cheshire
wants
full
•
rev1ew
by state

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Sattnday, M.trch !l, 2002
In the

mt
-

40 "-Jude"

1

Index
~l'St

•

39 SIOWI

11 Wr ler

11111

5 Optna wldo

38 Forbidden

10 Ecl!r.t

27 Diamond

honda

comes true, A2

•

lnatnlmenl
54 Lollon

viiT~OVT T~E

MARCHal

Restoring precious

• 52 -Wind

we

I FRIDAY

INSIDE

memories,tCl

lddlllve
veaglo
55 Loud noiH
17·Showroom 5&amp; Collgulll'o
modol
nepMw .
11 Hawk'l
57 D"Urbervllle
Mil
girl
sa Gellhl
20 Plundoro
22 Mdu.
drtfl
23 Egvo. In
59 Workoul
biolOgy
locllet
24 Ffollt
27 -cop
DOWN
30 CUIUellth
dolenH
1 Taxi
31 Pricey Cit
2 Wrllor
logo
Selon

TI 4 1

MONEY

48 VII
50 Gold, to

11 &amp;riJ

A72

Vulnerable: North-South
~..

A lllarx

Soon, to

15 Elghl IIIII

. Q IOI$
• Seut•
6 A IG 4
9 AK

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13 ,....
Juliol
14 Pley -

.. A K S

TEMPO

comboe
44 Long lor
... 11111oria1
Chute

1 IJncllr.
giOIIIId

,.

•

Friday, March 8, 2002

www.mydallyaentlnel.com

Page B 8 • The Dally Sentinel

ALLEYOOP

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MEDICAL CENTER
Discov~r the Holzer Difference

•

www.holzer .org

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