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P-ae B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

www.mydallysentlnel.com

w.dnuday, March 13, 2002

AA~I~J~.E~YV.o~O~P~~------------------------------~~~~~~~~::::.;.~mo~K::~~~:::::N:E:A::C:r=o=.=.=w=o=r=d=P=u==~=.=~.====~:
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----==~~~~~~~--- -

PHILLIP
ALDER

tL""

ACROSS
1 1111.

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25 Compll-

w••

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monll

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, OPf!nlnelud: ??

BARNEY
TIME TO

FIXSUPPE~!!

WANNA TAKE. M'(
PLACE HE~E, PAW
?

..

..

•• I ,

,...THE BORN LOSER ....
[ CN-&lt;'1 GET CNL\t-.E W\TI-\OIJT
C.UCKli'IG ON 1\N 1\D..

...
p-1\NC&gt; [ (1\t-\'\ ~IGN Off UNU3?
l CLICK.Ot--1 N--1. p,,c:&gt; I

'f ·~ &amp;.I~G Bli\C..KfiWL£.DBY'
M'&lt; INTU::t-.la ProiJIOCR 1

It IS well-known
that one person's bad
news is often some ..
one t·l~e·s good news. ,
This d ea l is a !(OOd
example. What do
you think happened
i11 three no-trump redoubled?
This deal occurred
durin!( a lunchtime
rubber- bridge game at
the Columbus Club,
Indianapolis. South,
Joe Cain , opened one
no-trump. West was
the imaginative AI
Sobel, who was the
chief tournament director of the American Contract Bridge
League from i 942
until 1969. He overcalled two diamonds!
North doubled for
penalties. Now South, .
who had to get back
to work, decided to
end d1e rubber «by
jumping to three notrump. With the fish
on the hook, Sobel
doubled. North, who
was ap1ullcd at the
penalty points thrown
away, thought he saw
how to recoup those

"losses"

~-

foolllh

3 Dog In
22 Sc,..n.
"Girfleld"
writer
4 Sllowod ""'
Wily
Jomea

2t Snow

5-

23 Pllld

30T....

e Uvy'obNr
7T!Md
aa.-

24-d'lllll-

8 1111 till naw
33-Jou· 10 "Woofl"
11WIIMIInd
lnlmll

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34 NIYal

17 Brtlle

38 lmpode
40 Auditor

.

20=.

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"r1

e'"..n~n,

-

21 Fencing

31 Sly

degreo

oljlzz

Bv BRIAH J. REED

.

Marvin B. Wilson, 93 · .
Ruthie J. Jordan, 32
Wilbert Barber, 80
Inez E. Roush, 84

Wl-!0 KNOWS? WI·N NOT?
COULD' 6E ! TIWE AGAIN !

-In

·•

Today's clue: I 6(/UIIIS U

'PAYG

AC

MLO

CLJXNV

VLAKL

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PNCOC

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PAMMPG·

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PI SCES (feb. 211-March 20)
-- There won't be any fn•c
rides bt'in~ h;mdrd 011[ ot' w:ttiu~ mnu:thin~ fm rw thinll
tod:~~· . If yo u want to add dolJan Lo yom wallet, you'll have
ttl work for it . Know wht'rc.·
to lo nk for romanct• and
YOld l fitid it. Tht.' A~tro­
Graph Matrhtnahr in .~tant !y
rt'Vt':J\s whkh signs arc ro11Mntir;~lly pcrft•c t for you.
Mail S2.75 to Matchm aker.
c/t) thi .~ n e w sp;~J,cr. 1'.0 . uQx
l 75 H, Murra y Hill St.ltiun,
New York. NY 10\5(~,
ARIES (r.jmh.,21-April I~)
-- If you dun't fl'cl det•ply
ro nfidcut :~bou t wh:1r ·you're
· doing today. you'll ;~uract
m•gativc rcnllt~. Bdi n •c in
your~elf lim, :111d the rest will

t:1kc c&lt;trt• of itse-lf.

TAURUS (Ap ri l 211- May
20) •• F~·t·llliK wrry fi1r your~ clf brin~~ o n ckpre~-~ iou and
hop t•Jcssll l'SS, lll;JJ..ir lg III:I[[Cn

worse for you in5tcJJ of bctn·r. In order to op~ro1tc ctTcc uvl'ly tod:~l, tum ~·our attitlldc aroum .

C;EMINI (May 21-June 20}
' -- Your luck will11ot hold out
(or you wl.1cr~ mnncy i~ ·,oncerucd today, ~o don 't pkm on
llnn c Fortune to be there fur
you if y&lt;m spend or invc~ t
· funds foolishly . Uc~pn1dcnt.
CANCER Qune 21 -Jooly
22) ~- 13ecauM..' ambitious ob~
jectivcs might not be 't oo r:&lt;~!l­
ily fulfilled today, be pr~parcd
to exert a vigorom ~C't·oud m ·
lhird effort to 3chit!\'t' what
you envision ,
LEO Quly 23-Aug. 22) ..
Althiml(h sometimes a hum:h

or fe eling coulJ put you on
the right track, today will nut
be one of those davs. Give
· priority to your logk~l asse~s­
mcnu.
VIRGO (Aug 23-Sopt. 22)
The dea ls mi~ht be out
tht·re. but chanccs an· yoll·n
not rcco~nizc them [ {lO easily
wday . Sleep o n nny mom·y-

mnkinl( propositions bdore
you t:~kc ~ plun~e .
~ llliRA- (Sopt. 2.1- 0 ct. 23)- Don't allow otht'n to illtlucnce your thinkin~o~: Imlay if

••

"

you are wrestling over a prob- "
lcm th;1t n~eds to be solved. ~
C hances are their way will ""

.,

only confuse the m:mer fur- oil~
ther.
SCORPIO (OCI . 24-Nov.

,"
'

...

22} -- If you hope to ac.:com- .l
pli~h your goah today, you ....
lmd better keep your eye on ~
the ball. h might be all too
1
e:.~y to take things for granted

~

and get careless if you let your

"'

gut~rC.l

down.

"1

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) -- Dl.' careful about
what you say and to wh,om
today when it come.~ to oH~·r-

;:

ing your t)pinion nbout some-

:

thing important. You might
be wrun~ in ways that could
·prove costly.
,CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jan. 19) -- Don't agree to do
sonu:thing that i~ t1pposed to

:.."'

your bcner judgment today

1

;;

•

' Hlp: 701, Low: 501
Details, A2

:Postal service
: faces deficit
:WASHINGTON (AP)
..:....T he Postal Service is facii\g a 1~ of mqre ~$2 •
, ·· liillion t@i' ~ar as !llail voldihe"-itgS'~ati'd
s.iniJi~ing w,: m~il and c;leaning •
)lp con!Jminated . offices
mount.
Postmaster General John
E: Potter told a House
~PPJ:IlPiiatlons subconunit- .
tee Wednesday that the projected deficit for this year is
"somewh'ere above $2 billion."
The post office is ·s eeking
~ 3-c~nt Jncrease in the
price of sending a letter, to
37 cents.
If the higher prices do
not go into place early, losses could rise to $3 billion or
more, Potter said.

cosrsor

Lotteries
OHIO

Pick 3: 1·3·1
Pick 4: 7-9-1-Q

.
s'upad,aao: 8-17-18-26-29-36

BOnus 1111:3
tclcnr: 8·3·7•9-1-5
Pick 3 day: 1-9-3
Pick 4 day.: 1.~5·1-7
W.VA.
Qally J: 3-8·9
DallY 4: o-8-7-6

.Powllbll:, 4-27·28-33-49 (39)

·Index
•

-~ 2 SldlaU- II .....

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorial's
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

A4
85-7

88
A4
· A6
A3
A3
81

A2

·c lDOl, Of\io Valley Publllhll18 co.

NEW EQUIPM~NT- Jim Freeman, wildlife. specialist and watershed coordinator for the Meigs
Soil and Water Conservation District, examines a new tree planter recently purchased by the
district. The new equipment can be renteq by landowners who plan on undertaking various tree
planting projects. (Tony M. Leach)

Tree planter available
to local landowners
FROM STAFF REPORTS
designed trailer for hauling
POMEROY -To further it, and a five-foot spacer
.its mission of assisting ·pri- whee.!, cost about $4,100.
va'te ' landowners in the wise Funding for the machine
use of their soil and ·, wafer, .came-from a special Leading
resources, the Meigs Soil and Creek · Improvement Fund
Water Conservation Dis- administered by the USfWS
trict, in cooperation with and Meigs SWCD.
the U.S. Fish and Wildlife , The Forester is a heavyplanting
machine
Service, has purchased a new duty
tree planter.
designed to provide an eco"The planter arrived from nomical means of pla~;~.ting
the . manufacturer just in thousands of seeds .
time for spring tree planti"ConserVlltlon plantings
ng," said Jim Freeman., . inv01ve .lots"-"'£ trees," said
wildlife specialist and water:. Fre~man .
''}"he
typical
shed coordinator for the dis- streamside tr~.5_.planting protrid.
jeer under tli~;federal ConThe tree planter is a ·servation Reserve Program,
Forester model, designed for or the Meigs ·SWCD Leadtractors having a minimum ing Creek . J~provement
of 25 horsepower and three- Project requires a tree spacpoint hitch.
ing of one tree every I 0 .feet.
· A scalper blade and That's 436 trees per acre or
trencher poin·t open up the 4,360 trees in a tO-acre area.
ground for seedlings, which
"That's a lot of trees to
are inserted by a passenger pla~t by hand," he added.
seated on the planter. A pair
According to Freeman,
of packing wheels then· clos- Meigs County was one of
es up the trench .
' the few counties in southThe planter, a specially eastern Ohio without access

,

..
::
~•
•
::

just because It's an easy out.
Ch~mce5 are the penon who'll
g~t hurt will be you.
AQUARIUS Oan. 20-Fcb. · '
19) -- Just do what llt"c~ob doing today withom any moan ing. Oth~rwise you might at- .,.""~
tem1lt to conceive .an elabo- , ~
rate rationalization that will
deccive no one but yo u. .
::..~,

:j"
'.

'

to a tree planting machine .
'' It is hop ed that availability Of the tree planter will
encourage ·more landowners
- who may be intimidated
by the sheer number o.f trees
required - to participate in
conservation tree planting
programs,"' said Freeman.
V'inton and Pike counties
have
simi lar
planting
machines.
Freeman said · the Meigs "
SWCD will make th e tree
planter . avai lable to private
landowners ot~tal basis
for $25 per day, including
delivery.
In addition, landowners in
Athens and Gallia counties
with property in the Leading
Creek Watersh ed will be able
to borrow the planter.
" Lime spreader s, no - till
de ills and seeders are al so ·
available to landowners," he
added. "The tree planter will
also be available to landown ers simply wanting to plant
trees fo r windbreaks, wildlife
or other purposes."

.

toward preparing local law
enforcement, firefighters and
· EMTs for incidences of mass
destruction .
"Since Sept. 11, every
em ergency
management
age ncy tliroughout the
narion has been focusing
their attention on how to
deal with a terrori st atiack,"
said Byer.
"This money will allow
our agency to design a more
efficient anti-terrorism plan
and help fund additional
homeland security exercises
for Meigs County's first
responders," he added.
Byer said later this year the
county lS expected to
re ceive around $58,000 from
another fed eral grant developed to help counties purchase add iti onal communications, personal protection,
and decontamination and
Please see Funds, A3

Pomeroy Merchants
to join in Middleport
Association yard sale.·
By CHARLENE HoEFUCH
HOEFLICH®MYDAILVSENTINEL.COM

parking lot ..
All advertising and other
expenses ·of promoting the
yellow flag sal e will come
from fees. Chapman will
have charge of distributing
the yellow flags used to mark
sal e locations. She suggested
including sidewalk sales on
the same days .
Getting downtown r6ady
for planting flowers was discussed and the purchase of
timbers to rebuild some of
the planting areas between
the street and the parking lot .
was approved .
Geo rge Wright, along
with other volunteers will
do the work before tim e to
set out the .flowers, whi ch
aga in this year arc bein g
donated by Bob Barnitz of
Bob's Marke t in Maso n.
Approval wa s give n to

POMEROY
The
Pomeroy Merchants Association has decided to join the
Middleport . Commun ity
Association in its annual yellow flag yard sal e to be held
the fir st weekend in May.
Meeting Wednesday at
Farmer's Bank, Annie Chapman reported that she ·had
been co ntacted by a member
of the Middleport group
inviting Pomeroy to . take
part.
She noted that plans are
being made to expand the
gtant yard sale over a wider
. area and to include flea markets at the Hartinger Parkin
Middleport and possibly on
the Pomeroy parkin g lot.
There is a SS fe e for participating as an individual or
family and a S10 fee for
space in the park or on the Please see Merch1nts. A3

Free Screenings
People's Bank in Middleport

Prldtiy, March I 5
tzOO •• • i I zOO a•
Non•Paatlng Cholesterol and Glucose Screenings
•

' m
.
Sponsorari by rho Hoizor Moclical ConMI' Community Health and Wellneu Deparimenl
. coiloborolion with Holzer Exira Cora and the Meig• County Health Deparlmenl.
For mor~ inlormalion, please call !he Meigs Covnly Heall~ Deparlmenl al

MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org

(740) 992·6626

:~
I

. ''

POMEROY - To help
with the cost of planning for
a possible terrori st attack, th e
Meigs County Emergency
Management Agency will
receive $1,600 as part of
Ohio's Terrorism Co nse·quenc e Management Preparedness
Assistance
(TCMPA) program.
The grant mon ey is part of
$250,000 rece ntly released
by th e Federal Emergency
Management Agency to
Ohio's county emergency
management agen cies for
training, planning and antiterrorism and homeland
security exercises.
Liob Byer, director of the
Meigs County Emergency
Management Agency, said
Wednesday the $1,600 will
go toward counter-terrorism
planning and the implementation of exercises geared

•

~

JRX

from a Middleport residence
after several hours of negotiation s between himself and a
nego tiating team from Gallia .
County that included Gallipolis Police Officer Greg
Frazie r and sheriff's Sgt.
C huck Kas ee.
A preliminary hearing is set
in Story's co urt today. Qualls
is represented by Gallipolis
attorney William N. Eachus
and Ath ens attorney K.
Robert Toy.

Meigs County
wins anti-terror
training funds

NEW EQUIPMENT

BY TONY M. lEAcH
TLEACH@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

~ Ciphar ~- are crutod from CIUOtltlona by ramoua
people, put lllld -·Each
lloe olphar'tllnda foi ·

ttl

·TJm m by, M.u·d1 14 . .111U2
Tht.• vt.•J r alwad cmdd he
your tiiue f(, r \\'t.'l•ding 011t
that which is unprodu &lt;:rivc iu
yo ur lifi:, be it ."lt'tivitil!s or
fri e nd ~ . .111d n·placc thl"rn with
l]Ua!ity ~ituaciuns tho1t propels

Qualls, 26, was charge.-,F riday with aggravated · murder
and remains in the Southeastern Ohio R egional Jail in
lieu of a Sl million bond set
by Co unty Court Judge
Steven L. Story.
He is accused of shoo ting
Ackerm an, 23, just outside
the Middleport restaurant,
after entering and threa tening to shoot custome rs and
other restaurant workers.
Qualls was later rem oved

by Lula Campoa

I'

13

whom were dining ai the
Corner R estaurant in Middleport at th e time of the
sh ooting, were ca lled to
appear before the sessio n of
secret testimony.
Officers of the Middl eport
Department
and .
Police
Meigs Co unty Sheriff's
Department and others who
witnessed or assisted in the
investigatio n of last week's
shooting also attend ed the
seSSion.

CELEBRITY CIPHER

1·

i

week's
shooting
death of hi s
estranged
girlfriend,
Becky Ackerman.
The
grand jury
met at th e
Qualll
Meigs
County
Courthouse Wednesday, and
several witnesses, some of

Details, A3

whose lead It is, he
~=-==·==·=::~
won't know what to ,
OP RA V
lead . Here, that
.
m
I passed a used car lotwhe~
3
would presumably reI~
they ad~ertised cars 'like new':
suit in South's win·
·
·
· .
After browsing around the lot'l
ning an overtrick for I
BA J R E B
concl_u.ded that the only thin~ th~
plus 1,500 (counting 1-.,--r-"T"-,~..,...-1· was hke new was the -.-.. .
00 for the insult and :
5
the chuckle quoted : ·
1 Complete
.
.
.
.
.
.
by f1ll.ng 1n lh mi:u1ng words ..
500 for the threeyou develop from stop No. 3 below. ;,
game rubber).
t;
I
PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
5
In those days,
14
THESE SQUARES
•'' ••
though, declarer was
I
allowed to request his
left-hand opponent to
lead from a specific
SCRAM-I.ETS AN$WERS .
.
4.
suit.. So, declarer
Cousin • Lousy· Wharf· Negate - THAN USE
:;.
asked Sobel to lead a
A mother was trying to confide in her son about the :~
diamond, which alstrangeness of being an adult. "As you get older " she :
told him , "you'll find that good sense is easier to' have .~
lowed Cain to rake in
THAN
USE."
•·•
two redoubled over.,
tricks. His atiernoon
at work flew by.

ABSOLUTELV ~ALSe! A
SURE T~IN6! NOW AND Til EN!
WHO CARE5?TRUE AGAIN!

POMEROY -The Meigs
County grand jury convened
Wednesday and is . expected
to return an indictment
against Eric Qualls for last

March Madness, BI

:t~~~~~f\;.~·~~;6~ r·-.,.A,...:L;....:I;_.,.:O_;V.-~~
TRUE!~A~5E!TRUE!~A~6E!

grand jury convenes.

BREEDOMVDAILVSENTINEL.COM

nent doesn't know

PEANUTS

l

Qualls
indictment
expeded

IOUI1d

39 FliZglrllcl

nol•e

.

21 Monogoom

18 UnlftMIOI...
lncomclly
tiWI
UCiul
38 HIQIIHI

21 Puppy

·ou

-~h ..c·;.i' ..

,..

12 IIIII

37 AcldlllGnol

43~··

he redou-

bled.
Sobel was mentally
pairing himself on the
back for his shrewdness . He was deliciously contemplating
slowly cashi ng his
seven heart tricks,
which woulq result in
three down and a
penalty of 1,600
points.
However, suddenly
East' led the club three
out of turn!
Today,
South
would surely follow
Goldwater's Rule: AI-

Hometown Newspaper

a.....

Cuplfllrlnt

VuiMrabJo: Both

Melp County's

2 Not

21 PINIUI'I
cl'llt

Dealer. South

....,

DOWN

11 Llkoly
11 Amortcl'a

A 1.1 t
A K J 7

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15 E 11 Vlpor

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K 18 J:

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13
14 Concur

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•

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10 lenfllalll
52 11811

on.n..
burning
5 Overly
53 ()pp DII d
HIIIIIMitlll 114 fonnltlon
10 Put up wllh
IJyeq
12 S1ront
55 Shlp'a

t KillS

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Eastern, Southem top AII·TVC picks, B1

I

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�•

•

•

Page_A2

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel .

Thundlf, Much 14.2002

www.mvcMflyaentlnel.com

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

•

LOCAL BRIEFS

Lesbian couple asks for equal custody rights

Ohio weather
Frld8y, March 15

I ~~on- lw113· I •

. , M

···..

ol Columbua l51'•• I

KY.

COLUMBUS (AP) - !\lesbian couple are asking the Ohio Supreme Court to
let them seek shared custody of their children, in a case attracting national scrutiny
by supporters and opponents of the
request.
Teri Bonfield and Shelly Zachritz of
S\lburban Cincinnati want the Supreme
Court to overturn a ruling by a juvenile
court magistrate that denied their request
·
for equal custody.
Justices heard argulj1ents in the case
Wednesday. A. decision is expected by
sununer.
Bonfield and Zachritz, who have been
together 14 years and have six children
between them, had requested a court
order from Hamilton County acknowledging their equal standing as parents.

Bonfield adopted two sons in 1996.
Using artificial insemination she gave
birth to a son in 1995 and then boy and
girl rwins in 1998. Zachritz later also gave
birth to a son by artificial insemination.
The couple said each woman needs
legal custody for all six children in case
something happens to one of them. While
Bonfield is the natural or adoptive mother of five of the children, they said,
Zachritz has been the primary caregiver
and the children consider her their parent.
A magistrate for the Hamilton County
Juvenile Court ruled that the court didn't
have jurisdiction .under Ohio law to grant
the couple's request.
The magistrate said that in Ohio, "parent" typically includes only the biological
or adoptive parent.

The First Ohio District Court of
A~ upheld the decision, so the couple appealed to the Ohio Supreme .Court.
People should be treated as parents
under Ohio law, even if they are not biological or adoptive ones, if certain requirements are met, including consent fi:om the
parent with legal cUstody, said Sallee Fry
Waterman, the couple's attorney.
The definition of parent should be
expanded to include "a second or psychological parent," she said Wednesday.
Waterman described such a person as
som~~e "who provides . the day-to-day
caretaking responsjbilities and assumes
responsibilities for the children and forges
a parent-child type bond with the chil-

Chance for rain will increase ·
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Ii will seem even more like
spring in Ohio on Friday
with showers and possibly
thunderstorms in the forecast,
probably late in the day, the
National Weather Service
said.
Daytime temperatures will
top out in the 70s.
Another mild night was on
tap for tonight with lows in
the upper 40s and lower 50s.
Sunset . 111night will be at
6:37, and sunrise on Friday is
at 6:43a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight...Partly
cloudy.
Lows in the lower 50s. South
winds 5 to 10 mph.
Friday... Mostly cloudy. A
chance of showers late in the
morning, then a chance of
showers and thunderstorms in
the afternoon. Continued

warm with highs in the upper
70s. Southwest winds 10 to
20 mph. Chance of rain 40
percent.
Friday night ... Showers likely. Lows .in the upper 40s.
Chance of rain 60 percent.
Extended forecast:
Saturday... Partly
cloudy.
Highs in the mid 50s.
Saturday
night ... Mostly
clear. Lows in the lower 30s.
clear.
Sunday... Mostly
Highs in the mid 50s.
Monday... Mostly
clear.
Lows in the upper 30s and
highs near 60.
Tuesday... Mostly
cloudy
with a . chance of showers.
Lows near 40 and highs in the
lower 60s.
Wednesday... Mostly cloudy
with a chance of showers.
Lows in the lower 40s and
highs in the lower 60s.

. Driver cited

Mllnln Wilson
!fAZARD, Ky.- Marvin B. Wilson, 93,Emmalena, Ky., for.merly of Meigs County, died on Thesday. March 12, 2002 at
Hazard Nursing Home in Hazard.
· He was born April 7, 1908, in Wayne, W.Va.
Surviving are his wife, Roberta H.Wilson;.two daughters and
.sons-in-law, Ainslee and Henry McKnight of Columbus, and
,Pamela and Dennis, Shepherd of Hindman, Ky.; and three
grandchildren and five great-grandchildren.
, Services will be noon Friday in Hindman Funeral Services
Chapel, Hindman, Ky., with Glenn Noe and Brad Mobley officiating. Burial will follow at Mountain Memory Gardens in
Hindman. Friends may call at the funeral home from 6-9
'.tonight.
· ·

Rulhle Jordan

TwO plead to swindle

o~.~r~~!~·c have a criminal record;' said his la~r. Je~

CLEVELAND (AP) -Two city·grocers have admitted swindlini; the federal food-stamp program for $15 million and Iaundering the money through banks in Ohio and the Middle East.
Abdellatif Abuzahrieh and Ali Jaber Faiz pleaded guilty
Wednesday in U.S. District Court to conspiracy to commit
money laundering. Their deals with prosecutors call for each
man to spend 3 1/2 years in prison.
Their pleas came in the second week of their trial on money
laundering and food-stamp fraud before Judge John M. Manos.
Abuzahrieh's wife, Shahrazan, pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor charge of food-stamp fraud and could get probation.
Manos will sentence them this summer.
·

Haupt. "We're hopeful the court will consider some alternate
punishment other than prison:•
Co-workers at the Hoover Co. plant in North Canton gave
. money, toys and clothing to Davis for an orphaned 7-year-old
niece they had never seen, police said. A union raised $1,700. ·

COLUMBUS - Ruthie J. Jordan, ~2, Collll)1bus, died on
Sunday, March 10, 2002, at her residence.
She was born Jan. 11, 1970, in Columbus, daughter of Ida
Mae Conway Jordan, and Phillip D. Jordan. She was a pharmacy technician.
; Surviving in addition ro her mother are her brother and sis·ter-in-law, Ron and Cindy Jordan of Columbus; and several
aunts and uncles.
Services will be 1 p.m. Friday in Ewing Funeral Home in
Pomeroy, with b11rial to follow at Reedsville Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home from 7-9 tonight.

Buckeye 5 goes tO 6 nights

Wilbez t Barber

dren."

.

0 2002 AccuWoathor, lnl:.

CLEVELAND (AP) - The Ohio Lottery's Buckeye 5 drawings will be expanded fi:om four nights WQekly to six nights
beginning April 3,lottery director Dennis Kennedy announced
Wednesday.
·
.
Bucke~ 5 deputed in 1992 as a Tuesday :ind Friday night feature; Mohday and Thursday drawings were added in 1993. The
latest expansion will mean a Buckeye 5 drawing nightly from
.
.
CINCINNATI (AP)- Officials say they are surprised by the Monday through Saturday.
tone of a federal proposal to reform the city's police department.
. After months 9ftalk ab9ut cooperating' with the city, the U.S.
DElli Ill 11111-WIIf I UIB
Department ofJustice delivered a proposal last week that Mayor
Charlie Luken~alled "onerous:'
He said it called for too much intrusion into the day-to-day
work of officers.
.
"Our law department said what they got from the Department of Justice was not consistent with what they expected,"
Luken said Wednesday.

Proposal leaves offidals cold

LET DUTil LIGHTEN
•

COIPildiiEIIEIIIIS Ul EUCTIIIIIIC RUIIII
Will IUU• • .I lmEI OF llYS DR lOla
IEPD•a 01 TIE CHOICES YOU ll\llE

Man admits false daim

IICOIE· TDbVDANTU

CANTON (AP) - A man who accepted gifts and money
from sympathetic co-workers after falsely claiming that his sister
had died in the World Trade Center attacks has pleaded guilty to
theft.
,
33105 H1l;mcl Roacl . Po m eroy. OH
Ronald Davis, 49, of Canton, who entered the plea Wednesday, e,c;1uld ge.r 011e year in prison for the fifth-degree felony tt
CINCINNATI (AP) - Hamilton County commissioners sentencing before Stark County Common Pleas Judge Sara Lioi .
have approved an agreement that guarantees a child's race will
not be a factor in adoptions . .
But a federal judge still needs to approve the consent decree..
Comforting America. One
The agreement ends a three-year battle over a county policy
Seat At A Time
that made it more difficult for prospective parents to adopt children of a different race. It calls for the appointtnent of an our- ·
side monitor to ensure that the county follows federal laws barring consideration of race.
·
A lawsuit filed in 1999 claimed that black children had to
wait much longer for adoption than other children. It argued
that the county's goal of matching black children with black
parents was unfair to the children as well as the couples who
would provide them with loving homes.
WASHINGTON (AP) Ohio farmers tried to stay
optimistic Wednesday as
House Agriculture leaders
PARMA (AP) - The mayor of Cleveland's biggest suburb gave them conflicting views
plans to cut 10 percent from every city department to eliminate on whether Congress will
a S3. 8 million budget gap.
pass a new farm bill before
Mayor Gerald Boldt did not announce how many layoffs this year's crops are planted.
would be involved but told union· leaders on Wednesday that 15
"It looks real difficult," said
po~ce officers and 18 firefighters could be let go in two phases Rep. John Boehner, an ·ohio
cuts over three weeks.
.
Republican and vice chairBoldt said the prospect of layoffs wasn't meant to push his man of the committee.
proposal to halve the 2 percent city income tax credit for resi- "There is really no consensus
dents who work out-of-town. Such a move would raise S6 milon what direction we ought
lion a year.
.
to be going:•
Council Majority Leader John Stover said he opposes reducBut Rep. Charl~s Seening the tax credit.
holm assured the Ohio Farm
Bureau Federation members,
in Washington for their
CLEVELAND (AP) -' A drug suspect accused of faking his annual lobbying trip, that
death at sea and trying to collect on the life insurance has been they have nothing to worry
about.
indicted.
"We should be' able to
Raphael Little, 29, of Cleveland, faked his death at sea last
complete
our work before
summer to avoid prosecution in a drug-trafficking case, prosecutors said. He was arrested five months later by Cuyahoga the end of next week," said
Stenholm ofTexas, the rankCounty sheriff's deputies..
His plan fell apart when he tried to collect on life insurance ing Democrat on the compolicies worth S140,000, Cuyahoga County Prosecutor William mittee.
Farm gro.ups have been
· Mason said.
lawmakers
to
A county grand jury indicted Little on Wednesday on charges pushing
of tampering with records, taking the identity of another, approve a compromise bill
forgery, check fraud, assault on a police officer, obstruction of by March 22, the beginning
justice, obstruction of official busine~o~, insurance fraud and of a two-week congressional
attempted theft.
recess, so the legislation.
could apply to this year's
crops, most of which will be
planted in mid-April.
"We're going to be plantiCLEVELAND (AP) ~ A federal judge admonished Rep.
James A. Traficant Jr. for submitting a staff member's claim that ng our crops in the next few
an FBI agent intimidated her without showing how it pertains weeks or months without a
to his bribery case.
.
farm bill in place," said Bob
Traficabt filed an affidavit Wednesday from Danette Palmer, Peterson, federation vice
who said she was intimidated by agent Mike Pikunas last week president and a Fayette
outside the courtroom. Palmer said she needed medication to County farmer of eorn, soycalm herself
J the.
d confrontation.
. beans, wheat, hay, hogs and
. ·after
U .S. D 1stnct u ge Lesley Wells told Traficant - who IS b f ttl "It
d
.
h.
If
h
h
h
·
h
h
ee
ca,
e.
comes
own
d efcen dmg 1mse even t oug e IS not a lawyer - that e as
1 · "
~ toTphanmng;
d·
h
a responsibility to back up his claims with court motions.
"Th'IS IS· not anyt h.mg top1ay aroun d With
· "Wells sa1d
. atiter t he b
e states
pro
ucers
k.
h · · ave
·
h db
d" · d
'
een rna mg · t e1r annua1
JUry a een ISmlsse .
'} ·
W h·
'
Traficant a"]:&gt;ologized and said he would file a supporting PI grunage to
as mgton
motion before testimony resumed Th~rsday.
for sehv:ral yeadrs, but many
say t e1r agen a has never
.
been more urgent.

11 -TIE liGHT ·CHOICE

Adoptions to overlook race

(7 40) 992-9355

Lane

Farmers
travel to D.C.,
hoping to
nuage bill

Parma plans budget cut

of

Drug suspect indicted

Judge lectures Traficant

•

: Thundav. March ·14. 2q02

I•
..-----·-----------.---~-

.

LETART, W.Va. - Inez E. Roush, 84, of Letart, died on
Wednesday, March 13, 2002, at Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point
. Pleasant, West Virginia.
She was born August 4, 1917, in Letart, daughter of the late
Jonas Wesley and Icy Dora Rickard Roush. She was a homemaker, and attended St. Mark. Lutheran Church..
Surviving are a daughter and son-in-law, Eleanor and George
H . Hoffinan of Letart; grandchildren and th~ir spouses, Benny
and Samantha Hoffman, Joe and A:nna Hoffinan,Jane and Greg
Haddox, Jennifer and Brook Thomas, Julia Hoffman and Jessica Hoffinan; five great-grandchildren, Jeremiah Hoffinan,
Jonathan Hoffman, Joshua Haddox, Grace Haddox and
Christopher Thomas; and several nieces and nephews.
.
Services will be held at 1 p.m. on Saturday, March 16, 2002,
at Fogelsong-Tucker Funeral Home in Mason, West Virginia,
with the Rev. George Weirick and the Rev. David Russell officiating.
Burial will follow at Broad Run Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral home on Friday, March 15,
2002, from 6-9 p.m.

REEDSVILLE L Wilbert Barber, 80, ofReeclsville, died on
Monday, March 11, 2002, at his residence.
, He was born on January 22, 1922, in Reedsville, son of Lola
Reed Barber and t~e late Delbert Barber.
Surviving in addition to his mother are his wife of 59 years,
Gladys; a son and daughter-iD-law, Robert and Virginia of
Coolville; a granddaughter and her husband, Amanda and Eric
Fisher of Columbus; a great granddaughter,Ameera of Columbus, and three stepgrandchildren: Keith, Karen and Kenny;
:rhree brothers, Jerry of Montana , Kenneth of Hebron, and
:RonaJa.ofReedsville; three sisters, Thelma S1nith and Margaret
:Buckley, both of Overbrook Center in Middleport, and Kath;:Ieen Miles of Chester; and several nieces and nephews.
: Along with his father, he was preceded "in death by two infant
,~brothers and a sister.
i Services will be 11 a.m. Friday in White Funeral Home,
Coolville, with the Rev. Robert Sanders officiating. Burial will ·
·follow at Heiney Cemetery: Friends- may call at the funeral
:home from 6-8 tonight.

i

lnezL Roush
.

.I

"Unfortunately, the amounr
of I!'Oney distributed is determined by the size of thl!
county's population;• said
Byer. "Larger counties, who
have a broader tax base, bigger
budget and who can most
likely pay for additional training and equipment, receive
the most money."
"Don't get me wrong, any
·amount of money we receive
is greatly appreciated, it's just
hard for smaller counties to
keep up with the cost of
training and equipment," said
Byer.
"I feel the people who
reside in smaller counties are
just as important as those who
live in larger ones," he addeq.

Funds
from Page AI
detection equipment.
"Our agency recently completed a vulnerability study
and concluded there are specific areas within the county
that need special attention;'
he said. "This money will be
spent on equipment that will
allow us to effectively monitor these particular areas for
any terrorist activity."
Even though Meigs County received portions of both
federal grants, Byer said offi·cials should reconsider how
the money is dispersed. ·

Merchants
from PageA1

Wright to purchase whatever
limbers he needs, along with
dark green paint for the four
junction boxes . Enhancing
the boxes with artwork on
: CINCINNATI (AP) - · Hamilton County commissioners hardboard attached to the
' ~y~~pp~ved an agreement '!Iat guarantees a child's rae~ will boxes was again discussed and
~15t be a factor in adoption!.
·
Wright displayed a suggested
•
$• But a. federal judge still needs to. approve the C&lt;msent decree. piece · for the changeable
•: The agreement ends a three-year battle over a county policy mural. He expressed a need
::that made it more difficult for prospective parents to adopt for local artists to help with
the project.
l•children of a different race. '
.
The green and white
It calls for the appointlhertt of ~n outside monitor to ensure
j~hat the county follows federal laws baqmg consideratiOn of awning being donated by
Capital · City Awning of
Columbus will be put in
~ .
place soon, and the trees
'
•
which line the planting area
will be pruned, it was report••
ed.
Improvements to the vil•AEP - 44.86
Feclelal Mcigul- .83 , Premier - -8.80
f....., eo.t- 21
U$11- 22.01" · · ··
ROCkwell- 20.94
lage's appearance through the
4ss
. Garii'ieit !..:&lt;75.50 · Roclcy Boota - 6.98
demolition
of several . old
RD Shell - 54.58
~TIIChi88C - 38.80 G4jnMI Eleatric - 40
Seers - 52.65
houses and buildings were
"Aihlw Inc. - 45.08
GKNLV- 4.110
~T&amp;T -15.71
Hel1ey Davldllon -54.61 Shcney'a - .35
noted and it was decided to

Adoptions to overlook race

f'
Jrrace.
~

..

~.:

.

LOCAL .STOCKS

.

i-.. :

IOBank OM- 40.45
13.87

. ;;!!1,.1 -

· k"Bi Ewna - 28.72

!~- 64.29

~~~-3.07

Kmart- 1.78 •

WII·Mart- 61.99

KJWI!- 22.21

Wlf!Qy'a-31 .58

-+ 54.811. '
., LICI.'.::.17.&amp;8
, L.anii(&amp;Mi

\YIIrlhlngton -14.78
Dqly stock reportl are

'

NSC-2U6':
the 4 J .m. closing
thli previous
I~Chllmilg Shope -7.&lt;15 Oil&lt; HI FIWCial-18.1l6 qoates
day's traneactlona, pro:"CIIy Holding - 15.50
ova - 24:40
vtdl(l by Smith Pamers
;col- 23.98
BBT- 38.20
at Advelt Inc. of Gal-15.35
P80plea- 22.10
lipolis.
. :.ouPont- 47
Paplklo - 411.57

S
.;oa
e.

the Daily $~p.tjnel

. "- .Ohio-,
.. Pllblltlllng
t1ue0) .•
Reader Services PUbllol1ld allemoon, CO.Monday·.
(IJ8III
tNifY

· ·Correction Polley
Our main aoucem In all ator1ee II
to be accurate. It you 1&lt;.- 01 an
error.In 1 aiOIY, CllfiN ,_room
at (740) 1182·2156.

New. Depertmenta

The main number Is 9112•2186.

Depantnent extantlonf are~
o ....l managw
Ext. 12

•
or

Ext. 13

Ext. 14
Other Hrvlcel

AcM!i1111ntl

Ext. 3

Clreulatlan

Ext. 4

CIMIIfled Ada

Ext. 5

Tound•m•ll
newsOmydaiiV100tinel.com

On tha Wllb

•

w,vw.mydallyaantinel.oam

lhrough Friday, 111

=

Court St.,

'Pomeroy,

Ohio. S.cond·cllll
pold oil Pomeroy.

r. The Allociated Preas and
lho Ohio N..._ AIOoclallon.
, _..r. .. c:oneo·
IIOnOID The Dally SoriiNI, 111 COurt.
. St., Pcineroy, Qhlo &lt;15789.

Sublcrlptlon rat11
" By-or..-.-

OnoOnoOnoyoar

$2

$8.70

$104
Dally
50 coni&amp;
Suboalbenl nol dealrlng lo pay ll1e '
carrier ma~~~ln advance direct to
T1lo Cal~

. CI'ICIH will be given

No IOOocrlpllon by
mall permttt.d in ·arMs wtwre home
canlor eeMco It available.
canlor 'aoh -

MID
subsafDIIan
lnoldt MoiOo C&lt;llriiY-

. 13 Weeki
26 Weeki .
52 Woeko
. ·.

$27.30
$53.82
$105.58
.

·Rollo oulaldt Molga Counly
13 Weeks
26 Weeki
52 weeki

..

$29.25
$56.68
$109.72

Information and appointments are available by calling
Donna Grueser at 992-388~
or 992-5592. Deadline for
appointments is March 25.

CHESTER - 4 Bren: M.
Parlrer,17, 46686 Guthrie Road,
Coolville, was ci!"M for assured
clear distance by the GalliaMeigs Post of the State Highw.ty
Patrol following a two-car accident Wednesday on Ohio 7.
Troopers said Parker was
POMEROY -As a cournorthbound
in
Chester
Township at 5:15 p.m. when tesy to its members, the Meigs
he failed to slow in time and County Chamber &lt;&gt;f Comstruck the rear of a slowing merce will be sponsoring a
car ahead of him driven by luncheon seminar on March
Ashley L. Burton, 19, 27664 27, from 11 a.m. t.mtil 1 p.m.,
at the Meigs Senior Center.
Ohio 7, Middleport.
_
The seminar, titled "BusiDamage to both cars was
ness Headaches 101," is free to
slight.
all chamber members and will
be presented by ,Family or
Owner Managec:j Business
(FOMB)
Solutions.
POMEROY - Units of
"Business Headaches 101" is
the Meigs Emergency Service
answered three calls for assis- an interactive seminar designed
tance on Wednesday. Units to provide Family of Owner
Managed Businesses with easyresponded as follows:
CENTRAL ~ISPATCH to-implement ideas for some of
1:41 . a.m.; Ro.cksprings ·their most common problems.
Rehabilitation Center, Pat Attendees will also hear how
Hindy, Holzer Medical Center. other business owners have
handled these headaches.
POMEROY
For details, call the chamber
5:57 p.m., HMC Clinic,
office at 992-5005. Chamber
Robert Grueser, HMC.
members interested in attendREEDSVILLE
ing
should RSVP on or
.1:55 p.m.; Ohio 124, Virginia Hoselton, Camden- before March 20.

Seminar
planned

EMS runs

Clark Memorial Hospital.

· 'dlefts probed

Kindergarten
~ registration

POMEROY Several
POMEROY Children
thefts are being investigated who will be five years old on
by the Meigs County Sheriff's or before Sept. 30 are eligible
Department.
·to attend kindergarten during
reports, the 2002-03 school year.
According t,o
Robert Reeves informed
Registration and screening
deputies
that
someone for new kindergarten students
send a letter of appreciation tentered his garage on Tuesday, will be conducted during
stole a racing transmission and
to Pomeroy Village Council.
April and May in all three
John Musser, president, attempted to steal a welder.
school districts.
Richard Barker reported
reported on development
ln. Meigs Local School Disprojects including the new that someone entered his trict, registration and screenboat docking facilities and the garage on Tuesday and stole a ing will be conducted as folwalking path. He said the 16-inch Craftsman chain saw, a lows: April 29, Middleport
docking will be bid in June Stihl chain saw, a Husky chain Elementary School, 992and should be completed saw, and a Poulan chain saw.
3387; April 25, Rutland EleAnyone with information mentary School, 742-2666;
before Riverfest to be held
can call the sheriff's office at April 17, .Salisbury ElemenSept. 27-28.
992-3371.
He also noted that the
tary School, 992-3404; April
Jason Castle reported that 4, Harrisonville Elementary
walking path "appears to be a
. go" with everything includ- his van had been broken into School, 742-3000; April 22
ing funding falling into place. and several tools, a generator and April 23, Pomeroy EleThe importance of getting and other items were stolen.
mentary School, 992-2710.
proj~ct chairman · in place
Eastern Local , April 15 and
early was discussed and Peggy
16, Eastern
Elementary
Barton volunteered to again
. School, 985-3304; Southern
this year serve as chairman of
Local,Apri118 and 19, Souththe Ducky Derby, a feature of
POMEROY - The pre- ern Kindergarten, 949-4222.
Riverfest.
Barton reported $4,333.47 school department of the
in the treasury with $1,982 in Athens-Meigs Educational
the old Bank One Christmas S~rvice Center, housed at
ornament fund designated for Pomeroy Elementary School,
downtown beautification. The will conduct peer screenings
possibility of reviving the from 1-2 and 2:15-3:15 p.m. ·
ornament project was · also The purpose of the screenings Hi9~
is to find typically developing
discussed at the meeting.
peers to serve as models for
preschoolers with educational
and developmental delays.
A typically developing peer
·is a child who displays no
delays in speech, motor,
social/ emotional behavior or
communication abilities. Preference will be given to those
children turning four by Sept.
30. Transportation will be the
sole . responsibility of the parent.

Screenings
scheduled

CONGRATUlATIONS
Carpenters
Lo,c~l Union 650
110 Years in Pomeroy.
March 16, 1982 - 2002

Henry C. Peery
Business Representative

1954-1979, Retired

�•

_The_t&gt;a~ny_Se_ntin_~~-· ~BJ the

PageA4

Bei'ld

Yupslavla to

oman copes wit teen rape
DEAR ABBY: I would like to
respond to "All Alone in Tucson,
Ariz.;• the 14-year-old girl who had
a miscarriage and is afraid to tell her
mother.
Just weeks before my 16th birthday, I was raped by a longtime
friend. I found out I was pregnant
when I had a miscarri~ge the day
before Thanksgiving. That was 10
years ago. Like ''All Alone," I told no
one. It was the loneliest time in my
life. I sought medical care, weathered
the changes in my body and shouldered the painful loss aU by myself.
To this day, my mother has no
idea. I am now in therapy and learning to cope with what happened. It
has been a slow process. I should
have sta~ed 10 years ago.
I pray "All Alone" takes your

what the circumstances of conception, can be devastating:- FIND-

Dear

Abby
ADVICE
advice. It can ·spare her years of confusion, loss and pain. Looking back, I
wish I had spoken with an adult a teacher, clergyperson, a counselor
- anyone who had the life experience and compassion· I desperately
needed.
"All Alone" should join a support
group either in her community or
online. Pregnancy loss,. no matter

Internet at www.nationalshareoffice.com.
ING PEACE IN NEVADA
DEAR ABBY: When I was 17,1
DEAR FINDING PEACE: experienced the saine thing "All
That's true. I'm sorry you didn't call Alone" did. The difference is, I did
your local rape crisis hotline at the . tell my mother, and she was
time of your assault. It might have extremely supportive.
saved you years of pain.
My mother often quotes what my
An exce4ent resource for parents grandmother used to say: "God gives
grieving the loss of a baby through ·you only what you ·can handle."
stillbirth, ll)iscarriage or newborn Abby, I live that philosophy. What
death is a group called SI-J/1RE Mom didn't )mow, but God did, was
Pregnancy and Infant Loss Support that I was in an abusive relationship
Inc. SHARE is a nondenomination~ with my boyfriend. I was punched,
al, not-for-profit organization that screamed at and blamed for .every
provides grief resolution and healing bad thing that happened to him.
following the death of a baby. It can
I am now 33, married to a wonbe reached at SHARE, St. Joseph derful man who loves me, and have
Health Center, 300 First Capitol two beautiful children whom I love
Drive, St. Charles, MO 63301-2893; with all my heart. My mom was
or call (800) 821-6819, or on the right, "God gives you only what you

c:h8npna•

.
~bar~

that philosophy, and I'm please(!
your story had a happy ending.
However, no teen should remain in
an abusive relationship out of fear or
intimidation. I advise younger readers who may be in an abusive relationship to seek help from a trusted
adult. If none is available, the
National Hope Hotline for Youth
Crisis and Suicide, (800) 784-2433,
will listen and refer teens in trouble
to local agencies.

(Pauline Phillips and her daughter,
Jean~e Phillips, share the pseudonym
Abigaill11n Buren. Write Dear Abby at
www.DearAbby. com or P.O. Box
69440, Los Angeles, CA. 90069.) ·

Meigs County Notebook 'How to ~uc~eed in Busi~ess Without
Denny birth
POMEROY Ronnie
and Bonnie Denny . of
Pomeroy are announcing the
birth of a son, Caden Alexan..,..--, der, .born
Jan. !3 at
Holzer
Medical
Center. He
weighed six
pounds, 14
ounces.
Mr. and
Mrs. Denny
Cllden Denny have
two
other children, Brittany Nicole, 17 and
Andrew Ryan. 13.
Maternal grandmother is
Myrl Gibbs of Hartford,
W.Va., and paternal grandparents are Earl and Betty Denny
of
Middleport.
Lillian
Demoskey of Middleport is
the great-grandmother.

Harris birth
LONG BOTTOM
Ronald and Sheila Harris of
Long Bottom
'
announce
the birth of
...... . a son, Donald Ryan
Harris, Jan.
19 at the
Marietta
.__ _ _ _ Memorial

.

. 'l·
.

.

...~

Don11d H1rrll

Hospital.
The infant
weighed eight pounds.

~aternal ~randparents

are
Wilma Hams of Long Bottom and the . late Mayford
Harris, and maternal ·grandparents are Christine King of
Winston Salem, N.C., _and the
late Virgil King.

First birthday

observed

great-aunt, Katie Robinson of
Rutland, who was celebrating
her 87th birthday on that day,
also attended.
Pizza, pop, chips, cake and
ice cream was served to the 44
guests. The party had a teddy
bear first birthday theme.

Takes second
place

CHESTER
Shayla
NEW HAVEN, W.Va.
Madison Honaker celebrated
her first birthday on Feb. 10 Eight year old Bradley Tate'
with a pizza party at the MJ took second place in the
and ' Family Restaurant .in
Buckaroo
Chester.
race
and
placed secAttending were her parents,
Jeremy and Amanda Honaker
ond in best
of
show
and her siswhen
ter, Selena
competing
Honaker of
Chester;
against 31
her grandother cars
the
parents,
at
Don and . B11dley Tate South
Bonnie
Central
Pooler of Pinewood
Derby
held
~-..__....:.:J Stewart, Ed recently in Athens.
Shayla Honaker and Teresa
He is' the son of Chris and
Diddle of Marsha Tate and grandson of
Rutland, and Gary Honaker Jim and Gerri Tate of New
of Mason W.Va.; her great Haven. He is a Buckaroo in
grandparents, Ernie and Ferra the Royal Ranger Troop
commanders
Jim
Lou Barringer of Reedsville, with
and Bob and Betty Pooler of Osborne and Charlie Tabor
Middleport; her great grand- at the Bethel Worship Cenmothers, Velma Taylor of Mid- ter.
dleport, and Minnie Honaker · The boys race cars which
of Mason, W.Va., and her are constructed from kits
great-great-grandmother, Ada which. consist of a block of
Taylor of Rutland.
pine wood, two axles and
Several aunts', uncles and four wheels put together to
cousins, including her great- exact specifications.

Really Trying. to play at RIO Gran,de

RIO. GRANDE - The
endless workdays and sleepless
nights associated with the
American Dream come to the
Alphus Christensen stage
April lith when "How to
Succeed in Business Without
ReaDy Trying!" is presented ·as ·
part of the Valley Artist Series.
cu,tain time is 8 p.m. in the
John Berry Fine and Performing Arts Center at the University of Rio Grande.
Created by Frank Loesser
and Abe Burrows over 30
years ago, this musical continues to dazzle audiences with
its music and well-written
script.
Some of the musical num. hers have been up-dated or
taken out to reflect modern•
day America, but the timeless-

·
For information, caU CQ!lness of gray flannel suits, executive boatd rooms, commutes nie McNerlin at 1-800-282from suburbia and water-cool- 7201, ext. 7364.
er romances continue to
entertain today's audiences.
The satiri~ edge ofLoesser's
lyrics and the book, which
was primarily provided by
Burrows, have been honed
and further defined to reflect
modern tastes.
Finch is the main character
. .
- played by Matthew BradI
erick in the 1995 and Robert
Morse in !961 on Broadway
-who connives his way from
the mailroom to the boardroom in a company called
World Wide WicketS. Finch,
through music and a snappy
script, manages to make an
unscrupulous nerdy character
seem beguiling and hilarious.

Sl.OO
Bag Sale

, :THURSDAY
RA&lt;;:INE - Sonshlne Circle
of Bethany Dorcas United
Methodist Church Thursday, 7
p.m. 'women to make or dec·
orate Easter bonnets to be
worn during the evening.
Prizes for lhe prettiest, funnl·
eat and most original. Lois
' Stt~rrett to present the pro·
gram and Janet Theiss and
Mattie Beegle to serve
refreshments. Women Invited.

•

Allied INops
search for
ai-Qalda

Senate rejects fuel-efficiency plan

Israeli forces
dig in .

Humane Society .
Thrift Shop
march 15-16

· Bush says
S~ddam still
a menace

Enron lawyen
on hot seat

. U.S. military .
officen default
aedit cards

2002

from Acquisitions Fine 3eNelry

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School Board. 7 p.m. Monday
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TUPPERS PLAINS - . ·sATURDAY
POMEROYMeigs
Coun·
Chapter
186, Order of the
VFW 9053, Thursday at 7
p.m. at the Tuppers Plains ty Retired Teachers, Satur- Eastern Slar, Monday, 7:30
day, Trinity Church. Speaker p.m. at the hall.
hall. Dlnn~r at 6:30 p.m.

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Spring Sav ngs!

POMEROY - Preceptor from Serenity House. ReserBeta Beta Chapter, Beta vations, 992-3214.
Sigma Phi Sorority, 6:30
Thursday night at the home of · POMEROY Return
Eleanor Thomas. Tea party Jonathan · Meigs Chapter,
with a program on teas. Daughters of the American
Social committee lo host.
Revolution, luncheon at
Meigs Museum • Saturday,
CHESTER
Regular 12:30 p.m. Margaret Parker to ·
meeting, Shade River Lodge, speak on bicentennial plans.
Thursday, 7:30 p.m. Refresh· Phone 992·6103 for reservaments following meeting.
tions.
FRIDAY
SUNDAY
RACINE - Racine village
CHESTER - Chester Ball
water board meeting at the Association, Sunday, 2 p.m.
municipal building Friday, 2 at the Chester firehouse. Parp.m.
. ents urged tQ attend.

2002

Sunflre SE Coupe

.

MEIGS CALENDAR
Community C1lend1r 11
publllhtd 11 1 frat ltr~vlca . to non-profit groupa
:wlahlng to announce
'mHtlngl 1nd lptCIII
ennt1. · The calendar 11
.not de1lgned to promote
·· ..111 or fund·rllltrl of
·any type. Item• 1ra print·
·td only 11 1p1ca parmltl
and cannot be gu1r1nt1ed
to be printed a apeclflc
,number of d1y1.

were killed in fighting with
Israeli troops early Thursday.

ThundiiJ. ~rch 14, 2002

BELGRADE, Yugoslavia
(AP) - Serbia and MonteneWASHINGTON (AP) -The Senate ago.
Sen. Christopher Bond, also a cogro signed a historic accord
has rejected a plan that
uld have
Conservationists say motor vehicles sponsor, acknowledged "it's going to be
•
' Thursday that will radically
required the auto industry to ipend mil- account for 40 percent of the oil used several years" before regulators could
restructure Yugoslavia, giving
lions to produce cars, trucks and sport across the country, and higher mileage develop new computer models to make
SHAH-E-KOT, Mghanistan
_the nation a new name and its
~tility vehicles that run 50 percent far- levels would help reduce U.S. reliance on changes in the current standard if the
(AP) - Allied forces combed
ther on a gallon of gas.
_republics greater autonomy to
oil imports as weU as deal with environ- proposal became law.
through the rubble of smashed
prevent the country's final
The industry and its unions lobbied mental problems such as climate change.
Any changes "in the short term are
caves in eastern Afghanistan on
breakup.
The Senate debate, however, focused going to have· to be very modest," said .
hard against requiring a 36-mile-perThursday, searching for inforThe agreement, reached
gallon average by 2015. Supporters of on the potential fallout from the pro- Bond, R-Mo.
mation on tlfe al-Qaida netunder mediation by the Eurothe higher standatd said it would have posed mileage increase : job losses in the ' Until recently, Congress has barred
work that once sought refuge
saved millions of barrels of oil and could auto industry and the production of regulators from even studying fuel econpean Union, was signed by
in the Shah-e-Kot valley.
Yugoslav President Vojislav
have been reached through current and smaller cars, which opponents of the omy increases.
The troops met little resis'Kostur.ica, Montenegrin Pres- ·
emerging technologies.
standards said could lead to more traffic
Both sides referred to the academy's
tance and officials said many
Instead, the Senate told the Trans- fatalities while depriving Americans of report. It said mileage improvements - .
ident Milo Djukanovic, EU
enemy fighters had escaped.
portation Department with a 62-38 vote lower-mileage but ro,omier minivans -and as much as 42 percent for SUVs and
foreign policy chief Javier
&lt;;:anadian forces took the
.Solana and other Serbian and
Wednesday to develop new fuel econo- SUVs.
miniyans - were feasible using current
·lead in the mop-up work folMontenegrin officials.
my rules over the next two years but did
Minority Leader Trent Lott displayed a and emerging technologies, but that
lowing Operation Anaconda, a
The new country. consisting
not require specific mileage increases.
picture of a two-seater, bubble-like sub- more people could die in accidents if
12-day battle for control of the
of two semi-independent
Separately, senators voted 56-44 to compact. a Daimler-Chtysler that gets automakers, forced to act too quickly,
60~square-mile area..
states, will be renamed Serbia
exempt pickup trucks from future 70 mpg and is sold only in Europe. "I
Light infantry troops went
made smaller and lighter vehicles:
mileage increases.
·
'and Montenegro, said Serbian
don't want every Am~rican to have to
int\) the area "flawlessly and ...
Kerry maintained the 13-yelr lead
l'rirne Minister Zoran DjindSen. John Kerry, the 36 mpg proposal's drive this car," said Lott, R-Miss.
they secured the initial objectime in his .legislation was enough for
Kerry accused opponents of his projic. The republics Will share a
sponsor, said the proposal that replaced
tive without any difficulty;'
automakers to meet the new standard.
defense and foreign policy, but
his in a broad energy bill was "an artful posal of. "extraordinary, ridicUlous scare
said Commodore Jean-Pierre ·
dodge, a great escape" from doing any- tactics" prompted by the auto industry. He cited plans by the Fotd Motor Co. to
will
maintain
separate
Thiffault, the top Canadian
thing about fuel economy. "We are going ' "No ,-\merican will be forced to drive have an electric-gas hybrid SUV on the
economies, currencies and
officer at Central Command
backward;' said Kerry, D-Mass.
a different vehicle. The technology is market that gets 40 mpg by 2004.
customs services.
in Tampa, Fla. "There was no
His allies argued that it is impossible to
Federal fuel economy rules have not available today to meet the higher stanKostunica told reporters
opposition or contact with the .
address
the broader issue of energy conchanged in 15' years, noted Senate dan!," Kerry said. He cited a National
earlier that the political accord enemy."
Majority Leader Tom Daschle, D-S.D., Academy of Sciences study last year that servation without reducing gasoline use
calls for new federal elections
Marine helicopter gunships
who said the vote was "a missed oppor- concluded significant fue) efficiency by passenger vehicles. They account for
in the autumn, and that. the
blasted cave entrances Wednestunity ... to pass meaningful" standards.
improvements were possible without about 8 million barrels of the United
parliaments of both republics day, seeking to stop al-Qaida
States' daily consumptio!l of 19 million
The House already has turned down making cars smaller and lighter.
would set to work on constiand Taliban fighters from
But Sen. Carl Levin, a co-sponsor of barrels of gasoline.
significant increases in auto fuel econotutional changes. The coun- escaping after U.S. and·Mghan
"America will only grow more and
the alternative' that passed, rejected
try's new name will not take troops seized control of the
my.
Automakers now are required to meet olaims that his approach would not more dependent on foreign oil" without
effect until lawmakers ratify battlefield.
the higher standards, Sen. Susan Collins,
a fleet average of 27.5 mpg for sedans improve fuel economy.
.The accord.
But Afghan commanders
She was one of only six GOP
R-Maine.
It would require federal regulators to
and ·20.7 mpg for SUVs, minivans and
said many enemy fighters pickups. Kerry's proposal would have issue new ·mileage rules within two lawmakers who favored the tougher
including their commander,,
combined the two categories.
years, but "in a way that does not harm requirements. Nineteen Democrats and
Saif Rahman Mapsour - got
The average for all vehicles wa.&lt; 24 the domestic manufacturing industry," 43 Republicans favored the Levin proaway before Afghan troops
..
posal.
mpg in 2000, about what it w:is 22 years said Levin, D-Mich.
RAMALLAH, West Bank overran three villages and a
.(AP) - Israeli tanks moved commanding ridgeline early
.deeper into two West Bank Wednesday.
United States will consult plead guilty. The ·newspaper debts banks have had to "Credit card abuse in the
towns Thursday, just ahead of
' with allies on Iraq but didn't said the company told the Jus- writ e off on Pentagon military will never stop
the arrival of a U.S. mediator,
rule out unilateral action.
tice Department · in a letter credit cards. Commis- until the officers clean
and troops killed four Palestinthat the planned charges are "a sioned officers are being up their act."
ian gunmen in intense street
gross ·abuse of governmental implicated as· well.
Grassley
and
Rep.
fighting. In the Gaza Strip,
power."
Sen. Charles Grassley, Stephen Horn , R-Calif.,
three Israelis were killed when
R-Iowa, gave a House chairman of the governan explosion went off near a
WASHINGTON (AP)
panel a list Wednesday of ment reform subcommitWASHINGTON (AP) tank. ·
President Bush has declared
713
military officers tee, said th ey will ask
In biblical Bethlehem, Pales- that Osama bin Laden is fad- The role of Enron 's lawyers in
who have defaulted on Defense Secretary Dontinian militiamen shot dead ing into irrelevance. Saddam the company's coUapse is
$1 . 1 million in debts on old H . R um sfe ld to
two suspected informers for Hussein remains "a problem," being examined by congreswhat
government-issued cred- decide
Israel. The attackers tl)en tried however, and "we're going to sion,al investigators while
should be tak en against
WASHINGTON (AP) it cards .
Enron's former auditors face a
. to hang the body of one vic- deal with him;' Bush said.
It's not only civilian
"Somebody over in the the officers, who range
indictment
for :.t im from a building on
Shortly after the Sept. 11 possible
lieutenants
to
and
privates · Pentagon needs to come from
!Manger Square, overlooking attacks, Bush said he wanted destroying documents if nego- workers
;che Church of the Nativity, bin Laden "dead or ·alive." tiato.rs fail to reach a settle- who are responsible for down hard on the officer colonels and a Navy capfl&gt;ut were stopped by Palestin- Since then, as bin Laden van- ment with the Justice Depart- the $62 million in bad scofflaws," Grasslev said. tain .
l ian policemen. The militiamen ished and the war progressed, ment.
Representatives of the
!Ieft the scene, firing their Bush shifted his message, sayaccounting
firm Arthur
l~eapons into the air.
ing the war was about more
Andersen LLP, which has
t' In Ramallah, Palestinian 'than one man.
:}vitnesses · initially said some
Bush took that rhetoric to admitted massive shredding of
ifsraeli forces were pulling out new territory in a news con- Enron-related documents by
:~arly Thursday. However, by ference Wednesday, saying of its employees, have been nego:!laybreak it became clear that the al-Qaida leader: "I truly tiating with federal prosecu:troops remained in the city, am not that concerned about tors over the past week to 10
:and a regional army comman- him. We shoved him out more days, according to people
familiar with the talks. They
')aer, Col. Yair Golan, said tanks and more on the margins."
Vice President Dick Cheney spoke on condition of
'had changed positions for tac~ fica! reasons, but that the is on a coalition-building mis- anonymity..
· :Ramallah operation was not sion to the Middle East to The New York Times
make a case for widening the reported in its online ·edition"
:ewer.
; i Palestinian security officials war on terror to include Iraq Wednesday that .senior. Ander:!aid four Palestinian gunmen under Saddam. Bush said the sen executives are refusing to
..

can handle." - BEEN THERE IN'

INDIANA
DEAR BEEN THERE: I

Nation • World

.The Daily Sentinel

Thursday. Mardl14. 2002

Page AS

King lOt

PRII
Perking

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

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•

�Opinion

The Daily Sentinel

Page A&amp;····

•

ThUNd8y, March 14, 2,®2

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 7

www.mvdallvHntlnel.com

1hund11J, M.lrdll4. 2002

AMERICA AT WAR

The Daily Sentinel

&lt;

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Hunt for ai-Qaida lighten continues

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nw

NATIONAL VIEW
•

Dishonest
Lack of administrative backbone
·perpetuates cheating epidemic
• Daily News, Bowling Green, Ky., "" plagiarism: It's a
cheaters market.
.
Rut Kansas biology teacher Christine Pelton discovered
this a r her decision to fail 28 sophomores for plagiarizing
semes er projects. You would think the school board would
have backed up this teacher, who understands that cheating
hurts honest students who have to compete as well to get into
better colleges.
Not so.
ln a move sure to help spread the dishonesty epidemic, the
board ordered Pelton to go easier on guilty students. This, even
after her principal and su·perintendent supported her decision
to give the students a zero for the assignment.
What happened? Parents complained. The board caved.
She resigned. lt should have been the board members ....
By refusing to back this teacher ·_ even in the face of frus trated parents, whose anger certainly should have been directed toward the dishonest actions of their offspring- this school
board illustrated, in living Kansas color, a sharp decline in
integrity.
... Perhaps most disturbing about Bellamy's story was the
response from McCabe, who has researched academic dishonesty in high schools and colleges, McCabe said the Kansas
episode demonstrates why many teachers ignore cheating
because they do not believe they will get support from their
board when they try to crack down.

•

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Thursday, March 14, the 73rd day of 2002. There
are 292 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On March 14, 1743, the first recorded town meeting in
America was held, at Faneuil Hall in Boston.
On this date:
In 1794, Eli Whitney received a patent for his cotton gin,
an invention that revolutionized America's cotton industry.
In 1.900, Congress ratified the Gold Standard Act.
In 1923, President Harding became the first chief executive to file an income tax report.
In 1939, the re)&gt;ublic' of Czechoslovakia was dissolved,
_
opening the way for Nazi occupation.
In 1943, Aaron Copland's orchestral work "Fanfare for the
Common Man" premiered in New York, with George Szell
conducting.
·
ln 1951, during the Korean War, United Nations forces
recaptured Seoul.
In 1964, a jury in Dallas found Jack Ruby guilty of murdering Lee Harvey Oswald, the accused assassin of President
Kennedy, the previous November.
In 1965, Israel's cabinet formally approved establishment of
diplomatic relations with West Germany.
In 1967, the body of President Kennedy was moved from
a temporary grave to a permanent memorial site at Arlington National Cemetery.
In 1991; a British court reversed the convictions of the
"Birmingham Six,'' who had spent 16 years in prison for an ·
Irish Republican Army bombing, and ordered them rel,psed.
Ten years ago: The Associated Press obtained the names of
22 of 24 of the worse offenders in the check overdraft scandal at the House bank; topping the list were former Rep.
Tommy Robinson of Arkansas and Rep. Bob Mrazek of New
·
York, both Democrats.
Five years ago: Surgeons at Bethesda Naval Medical Center repaired a painful torn knee tendon in President Clinton's
right leg; the injury had been caused by a freak middle-ofthe-night stul!lble at the Florida hom of golfer Greg Norman.
.,.
One year ago: Inspectors tightened U.S. defenses against
foot-and-mouth disease a day after a case was confirmed in
France. Doug Swingley won the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog
Race in Alaska for the third straight year.
Today's Birthdays: Former astronaut Frank Borman is 74.
Singer Phil Phillips is 71. Actor Michael Caine is 69. Composer-conductor Quincy Jones is 69. Former astronaut
Eugene Cernan is 68 . Movie director Wolfgang Petersen is _
61. Country singer Michael Martin Murphey is 57. Rock
musician Walt Parazaider (Chicago) is 57. Actor Steve Kanaly
is 56. Comedian Billy Crystal is 54. Country singer Jann
Browne is 48. Actor Adrian Zmed is 48. Prince Albert of
Monaco is 44. Producer-director-writer Kevin Williamson is
37. Actress Megan Follows is 34. Actor Jake Fogelnest is 23.
Actor Chris Klein ("American Pie") is 23. Actress Kate
Maberly is 20. Singer-musician Taylor Hanson (Hanson) is
19.
Thought for Today: "There are only two kinds of people in
the world that really count. One kind 's wheat and the other
kind's emeralds." - Edna Ferber, .American author (18871968).
.
',

.,.

•

RYAN'S VIEW
.

'I

Making the middle class the new endangered spedes
Alvin Spencer works for the U.S. Postal
Service in San ·M:iteo County, just as his
father did. But Spencer's life is nothing
like his father's. The elder Spencer owned
his home back in the 1960s. But Spencer,
after 24 years on the job, is still renting,
movjng from one East Palo Alto house to
the next as rising rents continue to take
larger bites of his paycheck. He jokes
dryly about moving to Arkansas, where
his mother grew up. At lea.&lt;t there, a post:
man's salary might be worth something.
Spencer is among a dwindling population in the urban corridor of the Bay
Area: the middle class. The ppor stay here
because they can get public housing.
The rich stay because they can afford
three-bedroom hames that now often
cost $1 million and up. But the middle
class is like the kid left standing in musical
chairs. There is no place for them anymore.

If we don't figure out how to create
affordable housing; the Bay Area could
become the first metropolis in the United
States without teachers, firefighters, nurses, bus drivers, pediatricians, police officers, construction workers, pharmacists,
'\.
cooks and mechanics.
"The workforce is leaving. The hou,sing
crisis here is truly a crisis,'' said San Mateo
County Supervisor Mike Nevin, a former
San Francisco police officer. " It's the most
important problem we face right now."
Nevin's sons, also San Francisco cops,
have had to move to Petaluma to find
homes they could alford.
A lot of metropolitan areas around the

ho!llebuyers with down payments and
loans.
But the housing-fund allocations are
one-rime deals with no guarantees of
future funding. Without government and
conununity help, the middle class is as
good as gone. "The market is not going to
take care of this and get wages and housing back in balance;' said Lisa Milton, a
housing advocate with Peninsula Interfaith 1\ction.
So Milton, Trejo and Spencer planne!J
to join an expected crowd of 1,200 others
L1st night at the Fox Theater in Redwood
City to rally support for affordable housing. The gathering brought togeth~r
politicians, community activists and members of 25 local congregations.
Leonard G~ldberg is a retired doctor .
with an expensive home in Los Altos
Hills. But he expected to attend the rally
last night with membeJ;S of his synagogue.
"The housing crunch is happening all
over,'' Goldberg said."But we have been at
the vortex cif the cone from the beginning .
of the high-tech revolution. This is directly affecting the middle class, but we're all ,
suffering for it. Our children can't afford
to live near us. Our parents can't afford to
move closer to us in their old age.
"If we d9n't do something, we'll be
even more fractured as a community than
we already are."

country face shortages of affordable housing. But the gap between wages and housing costs is especially .wide in the Bay
Area. Low-income fan1ilies that, in another time and place, would have moved into
the middle class are stuck where 'they are.
From 1993 to 2000, household incomes
for the lowest 20 percent of the nation's
workforce rose by 15 percent. But in
Santi Clara County, for example, incomes
in the lowest 20 percent increased by less
than 1 percent when adjusted for inflation
and the significant increase in the local
cost ofliving.
Now, the recession and layoffi are
quickening the exodus of the middle class
and those aspiring to it. The Trejo family
has lived for five years in a one-bedroom
apartment in East Palo Alto for $990 a
month. Two daughters sleep in the bedroom. Two sons sleep on futons in the living room. Jose and his wife sleep next to
them on the floor. Jose was working full
time in construction, so he saved a little
each week in hopes of someday buying a
home. Six months ago, the work dried up.
"We can live on our savings for another four months if we are very strong,'' he
said. "But in the last few months, I have
seen many families leaving because they
no longer can pay the rent."
Last Tuesday, the San Mateo County
Board of Supervisors voted unanimously
to add $2 million to its housing trust fund,
which it began last year with $1 million.
aoan Ryan is a columnist for the San FranSanta Clara County has a housing trust risco Chronicle. Send comments to her in wre '!f
fund of$20 million. The money subsidizes tl1is newspaper or se11d her e-mail at joanryansnew construction and helps first-time fgate.com.)

•

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

Diplomacy begins for our side by supporting Israel
It's time' for the Bush administration to
get serious about Middle East diplomacy. It shouldn't start by criticizing Israeli
Prime Minister Ariel Sharon as he tries
to pound Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat
to the·peace table.
The return of President Bush's envoy,
retired Gen. Anthony Zinni, to the
region this week may be the beginning
of concerted peace efforts, but there's
reason to think it's not.
Even though violence is getting worse
by the day, Zinni is not leaving until late
in the week, suggesting that the trip is
mostly designed to protect the 11nation mission of Vice President
Cheney, who's scouring support for a
U.S. attack on Iraq- a worthy endeavor.
Absent the Zinni m1sSion, Mideast
experts say, Cheney was likely to
encounter nonstop questioning about
what the United States would do for
Palestinians as he tried tq 'persuade Ar•b
regimes to assist a U.S. campaign against
Iraq. Now he has an answer.
·
But the .last time Zinni went to the
region, in December, he was met by a
round of savage Palestinian terrorism
against Israeli civilians and quickly
returned home.
The administration's attitude has been
that Zinni wouldn't return until the
Arabs and Israelis were ready to talk
about a cease-fire, which they may not
be even now.
It's up to Zinni and the administration
to lean hard - and keep leaning - on
Arafat to stop Palestinian ,/violence,
which is the key to getting Sharon to
stop using violence in return.
Practically no one, Including in Israel,
wholeheartedly supports Sharon's bruteforce tactics - including bombing raids
· against Arafat's various offices. But they

~hen theY"ll know that they can't keep
using terror to win political achievements.''

Morton
Kondracke
COLUMNIST
are designed, after all, to force the Palestinian leader to live up to his promises to
end attacks on Israelis.
Meantime, the administration is sending mixed messages, suggesting that U.S.
support for Sharon may be wavering just as the going is getting toughest 'for
Israel.
·
Previously, Bush has been unswerving
in his backing of Sharon - to the point
of refusing to see Arafat - but ·last
Wednesday Secretary of State Colin
Powell rapped the prime minister in
Congressional testimony.
Thursday, when · the President
announced the Zinni mission, he went
out of his way to say that he undt.W:stood
that his "friend" Sharon needed to protect Israelis . from terrorism and that
Arafat is not doing enough to stop it.
On the, other hand, Bush also said,
"the administration ~peaks with one
voice," approvingly adding that Powell
had "pretty tough words for both sides"
and accusing Sharon of "causing violence to escalate" and, implicitly, of!acking "a vision for peace."
Sharon did indicate, in one characteristically undiplomatic outburst, that his
policy toward Palestinians is this: "We
have to cause them heavy casualties and

On the other hand, contrary to P~­
ell's accusation, Sharon explicitly has n6t
declared all-out war on Arafat or the
Palestinian Authority he heads.
That is the policy being recommended by Sharon'• right-wing rival, former
Prime Minister Benjamin N etanyahu,
who has called for destroying the P.A.,
driving Arafat into exile, and sendin_g
Israeli troops to reoccupy West Bank territories now under Palestinian control.
U.S. policy and American public attitudes have to be based squarely on die
reality that there .would be no violence if
Palestinians didn't initiate it and ifArafat
lived up to his promises to bring it 11nd~r
control.
Sharon's policy, as be said at one point
last week, is to W3ge "an aggressive and
continuous campaign, without letup, and
when the other side understands it can't
achieve anything through terror, it will
be easier to enter negotiations."
Zinni needs to tell Arafat that if he
doesn't fulfill his obligations to control
violence, the United States will back
Sharon as he demolishes Palestinian
infrastructure.

Zinni might also advise Arafat that his
refusal to end terrorism could bring
down Sharon's government - which is
not likely to lead to a victory by Israel's
Labor Party, which favors withdrawn! ·
from the West Bank, but by Netanyahu.
In short, the way for the United States
to begin making peace is to convince ,. ;;.
Arafat that he's on the verge of losing
everything he's achieved in his career 'if
he doesn't do,his part.
I

(Mortotl Ko11dracke is executive . editor ~1
Roll Call, tl1e 11ewspaper if Capitol Hill.)

~.W-w----------~----------~----------~------~--------------~-------------------------------------- ~--------~·-------

. ··-

-~ ~-

.

SHAH-E-KOT,
Afghanistan (AP) -- Allied
forceS combed through the
rubble of smashed caves in
eastern AfghanisJan on Thursday, searching for information
on the al-Qaida network th~
once sought refuge in the
Shah-e-Kot valley. The troops
met little resistance and officials said many enemy fighters
had escaped.
Canadian · forces took the
lead in the mop-up wo{k following Operation Anacc:mda,
a 12-day battle for control of
the 60-square-mile area.
Light infantry troops went
into the area "flawlessly and
... they secured the initial
objective without any difficulty," said Commodore JeanPi~rre Thiffault, the top
Canadian officer at Central
Command in Tampa, Fla.
· "There was no opposition or
contact with the enemy."
· Marine helicopter 'gunships
blastecl
cave
entrances
·.Wednesday, seeking to stop
. al-Qaida and Taliban fighters
· from escaping after U.S. and
Afghan troops seized control
of the battlefield.
But Afghan commanders
said many enemy fighters ' including their commander,
SaifRahman Mansour- got
· away before Afghan troops
overran three villages and a
commanding ridgeline 'early
Wednesday.
U.S. officials said they were
holding about 20 prisoners
• who were being interrogated.
' Pentagon officials had
,repeatedly said the only
··choice facing the enemy
·'troops was to "surrender or
' die," although Afghan commanders had been prepared to
allow them to leave.
A U.S, officer estimated that
'500 ai-Qaida fighters were

Afgtian fighters with the U.S.-allied forces
leave .the Paktla province village of Shah-e-Kot, Afghanistan,
Wednesday, March 13, 2002. U.S. and Afghan troops pur·
sued ai-Qaida fighters ln the mountains after seizing control of
the Shah-e-Kot valley following a 12-day bombing and ground
battle in which coalition forces claimed hundreds of enemy
fighters died. (AP)

kiUed in the offensive. But
Afghan troops said they found
only 25 bodies in the initial
sweep of the area. Others may
be 'buried in collapsed caves.
Leading the final assault
were Afghan commanders Zia
iodin and Gul Haider, who
had floated the idea of a
negotiated exit.
"They're trying to slip
away,'' one Afghan commander, Mohammed Qasim, said
of the al-Qaida and Taliban
fighters. "They're going in
different directions in the
mouraains" toward Pakistan,
he said.
In an attempt to block their
escape, U.S. helicopter gunships, including Marine
Cob..~:as, blasted cave entrances
~eclnesday with . rocket and
machine gun fire.
About 500 Canadian troops
landed high in the . snowcapped mountains to search
for al-Qaida fugitives. U.S.
helicopters that brought them
in flew close to the jagged

terrain to avoid possible
enemy fire.
. The Canadians, who were
joined ' .by about 100 U.S.
troops, made their way up icy
mountain trails, carefully
avoiding unexploded ordnance littering the area after
days of intense American
·airstrikes.
Lt. Col. David Gray, an
operations officer of the U.S.
10th Mountain Division, said
about 500 enemy fighters
were killed in Operation
Anaconda, ' mostly
nonAfghans from Osama bin
Laden's terrorist network.
"What we have done is
denied ai-Qaida of its most
important, well-trained fighters," he sa1'd .
However, it was unclear
how many enemy fighters
died in the biggest U.S.-led
offensive of the five-month
Afghan war, which brought
conventional
American
ground troops into combat
for the first time in the five-

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define status of deta1nees
at Guantanamo Bay
GUANTANAMO
BAY
NAVAL BASE, Cuba (AP) A human rights panel . urged
the United States to determine the legal status of
detainees at Guantanamo Bay,
where the military on
Wednesday said twO holdouts
had broken their two-week
''hunger strike.
' The Organization of Amer_ican States panel said in a letter to U.S. rights groups that it
has asked the United States to
take "the urgent measures
necessary to have the legal sta'tus of the detainees at Guan'tanamo Bay determined by a
'competent tribunal."
"l~s a major victory," said
Michael Ratner, vice president An inmate of Camp X-Ray Is escorted out. of an interrogation
, of the Center for Constitu- hut· at the U.S. naval base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba on
:'tional Rights, one of three Wednesday, March 13, 2002. (AP )
' New York-based human rights
,groups that challenged the mission on Human Rights,
detentions last month in a based in Washington, didn't
. petition to the commission of immediately return calls seek. the Organization of American ing comment. U.S. military
States.
, ·
officials didn't immediately
' The military 5ays the 300 offer any reaction.
While human rights advo'captives at Guantanamo Bay
include fight~n of the al-Qaida cates have insisted the captives
terrorist network and the fallen are prisoners of war, the U.S.
..Afghan J':iliban regime.
·
governme.nt has resiste~ ihat
. U.S. officials are determin- term, saymg they are illegal
· .ing whether and how to pros- . combatants.
.
Nevertheless, the military says
ecute the men, and say those
not tried
a military tribunal it is complying with the spirit
~:;J emp,ow•ere:d to order the death. of the Geneva Convention.
. penalty could be prosecuted in
Marine Brig. Gen. Michael
·. U.S. courts, returned to their Lehnert, the commander of
home · countries for prosecu- the detention mission, said
tion, held indefinitely or Wednesday that while the
captives' treatment "might not
. ·_released outright.
· Officials of the OAS Com- satisfy everyone in the inter-

r
'

ON THE MOVE -

· shattered mud-brick village in
U.S. officials had hoped to
month conflict.
Initial U.S. estimates put the jeeps mounted with 30-cal- prevent a repeat ofTora Bora,
total number of enemy com- iber machine guns.
the cave complex U.S. troops
batants at 150~200. The figure
U.S. officers said Operation hammered for weeks in
later was increased to 500- Anaconda yielded valuable December on suspicion that
600.
information about al-Qaida, al-Qaida . leader OsaJna bin
O~e Afghan commander, blamed for the Sept. 11 ter- Laden was inside.
.Naeem Sadat, said a captured rorist attacks that triggered
Afghan militias from the
Taliban fighter told him there the war on terrorism.
were 14 Arab commanders
Col. Frank Wiercinski, a area conducted most of the
and about 2.50 Chechens brigade commander of the ground fighting at Tara Bora,
around the village ofShah-e- !Olst Airborne, said cave and U.S. authorities said they
Kot when .the Americans ini- searches had turned up al- apparently let many al-Qaida
tially attacked. They were Qaida trammg manuals, fighters escape to Pakistan.
joined by a large number of bomb-making equipment and When Tara Bora was finally
Afghans who deserted as the other intelligence on the ter- overrun, there was no sign of
bombing grew more intense, rorist network.
bin Laden.
he said.
Afghan · commanders said
they found about 25 bodies in
the valley, which they judged
were those of Chechens,
5AIMT
based on skin and eye color.
PADDY'S DAY
It was not known whether
others may be buried in the
scores of. nearby caves. Afghan
commanders said earlier that
the al-Qaida force also
You won't have to
included Arabs, Pakistanis,
look hard to find biq
Uzbeks and Uighurs.
savinqs on all .,our
"I think we got a lot of
St. Patrick's Da.,
them but we're not really
favorites.
sure,'.' said one U.S. special
forces officer, who refused to
give his name. He said operaTIMEX WATCHES
tions would continue in the
area for 30 to 35 more days, ·
30%0FF
but on a smaller scale.
Fighting died down during
the last five days, enabling the
FRIDAY ONLY
United States to withdraw
P~ck
Carton
40%0FF
most of the estimated 1,400 ·
tro&lt;!ps from the 1Olst AirMen's
borne Division and the 1Oth
Mountain Division who
Colognes&amp;
fought in the battle .
Complete Stock
The coalition casualty toll
since the offensive began
March 2 stood at eight U.S.
special forces troops and three
Afghan allied fighters.
On Wednesday, U.S. special
.forces and Afghan troops
Assorted
drove through this bombChocolates
Good Auorlment 2. 78 to 3 oz
In Christmas Wrap
1

refusing food.
Between· 10 and 20"taptives
usually refuse at least one of
their daily meals in recent
days. Cox said he didn't have a
figure for the number who
skipped meals Wednesday.

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•

The Daily Sentinel

NCAA tourney reports, Page B3
Reds relievers pounded, Page B4

.

•

111ur1Uy. M8rc:h • •• 2002

THuRsDAY'S

·HIGHLIGHTS
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SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

WELLSTON - Easrern senior Garrett Karr claimed Player of the Year .honNmlonallnvltatlon
or. in the Hocking Division of the TriTOUI'flllment
'\
Valley Conference boys balloting during
Wldneeda!f'&amp; o voting of the league's coaches, while
Openlng Round
fept_ale counterpart Stacie Watson, EastRichmond 74, Wagner 67, OT .
senior post player, claimed the
Dayton 80, Detro~ 89
· H~cking Division Player of the Year
Vanderbilt 59, Houston 50
horton.
_La. Tech 83, la.-LI!fayetie 63
Tenn. Tech 64, GR&lt;lRiia State 62
· E:is~n dominated the voting for the
Firat A~ ., ,
.;, league's · top honors as boys' mentor
Syracuse 76,
.~ntt.ire 66 ' · HoWle "t;ald\vell again claimed Coach of
. ~ Carolina 74, VIrginia 67
. •th&amp;Vear:hph9n in the division. ·
Minnesota 96, New Mexico&lt;fl2 ·
··"-"
Nick
~
and Joe Garrett earned
"LSU 63, Iowa 61
Player of the Year and Coach of the Year
· ~le 81, Fresno State 75

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respectively for the Belpre Eagles in the
Ohio Division oftheTri-Valley Conference. Vinton County's Mark Truax
claimed Coach of the Year honors for
tHe girls in the Ohio DiviSion . while
Whitney Blackburn of Belpre, Whitney
Maiden of Nelsonville-York, and Haley
Sowers ofVinton County claimed a TriPiayer of the Year honor;
Karr joined teammate Chris Lyons on
the first team, while Southern senior
Dallas Hill ilso made first team along
with Trimble's JeffTrace, Miller's Jeremy
Paige, Waterford's Seth Arnold, and Federal Hocking's Derek Quinn.
Southern junior Justin Connolly

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Pre Baseball
MLB
Spring Training
Wednesday's Games
Montreal 6, Boston 5
Detroit 9, Cincinnati 1
Texas (ss) 15, Mlnnespta 1
Tampa Bay 1, Toronto 0
Baltimore 6, Los Angeles 5
Philadelphia 5, Pittsburgh 4
Cleveland 11; Yankees (ss) 5
N.Y. Mats 10, St. Louis 7
.S an Diego 4, Oakland 2
Milwaukee 10, Chicago Cubs 2
:San Diego 11, Anaheim (ss) 6
Anaheim (ss) 11, San Fran.10
Seattle 11, White Sox (ss) 4
Arizona (ss) 5, White Sox (ss) 4
· Atlanta (ss) 9, Florida (ss)"5
· Ronda (ss) 4, Houston 3
Atlanta (ss) 4, Kansas Ci!Y3
1\~zo'l (ss) 13, Colorado 9

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** NOTICE TO. Al:L OUR FRIENDS '";;;·-·~

sign-ups
RACINE - The Racine
Youth League recently held
its organization meeting and
will be holding sign-ups this
Saturday, March 16, 2002
froni 11:30 to I :00 at Southem Elementary. Tl)ere will be
a · ;econdary sign-up date on
Saturday, March 23, 2002
from 11:30-1 p.m. There wiD
be a sign-up fee of $20 per
child for insurance, plus a S1 0
concession fee. For families
with more than one child, the
family fee is $30 plus a $10
concession fee. Anyone inter. rsted in coaching a team
should notifY the president at
signcup time.
: There are eleven different
)lge groups for both boys and
:girls: T-hall, ages 5-6; Girls
: fviinor League, ages 7-9; Boys
:Minor League, ages 7-8; Pee
: ~ee Girls, ages 10-12; Pee
..flee Boys, ages 9-1 0; Boys
:Little League, ages 11-12; Jr.
;Girls Fastpitch, ages 13-15;
:~oysJr. Pony, ages 13-14;boys
:l&gt;ony League, ages 15~16, and
: tirls Fast !'itch, ages 16, 17,
: and 18 if returning to the var: lity squad.

During a 2 month trial period, Turnpike Ford of Gallipoiis wiD only seD pre-owned vehicles that have passed a 50 point
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to our customers, knowing that all pre-owned vehicles at our dealership are covered by at least a

3 month or 4000 mile power train warranty and have pas_
sed a 50 Point Inspection!
We at Turnpike of Gallipolis hope this makes your pre-owned vehicle purchases less stressful and also allows you to see that
we're not only interested in your business today, but are interested in your future.
•

~

WE VALUE:OUR CUSfOMERS
AND ARE COMMmED TO TAKING CARE OF YOU!
From Your Friends At Turnpike Of Gallipolis

WHEEL ALIGNMENT .

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:: Disbid all-star
game slated
JACKSON - The District 13 Basketball Coaches
Association has set the date
for its District 13 Senior Allc
Star games for Monday,
March 18 at the University of
Rio Grande.
· The format pits members of
Division's I and II against
members of the . Division Ill
and IV te.ams .i n both boys
and girls competition.
. The girls' game will start at
6 p.m. The boys' game will
follow.
All tickets are $5.00 at the
gate.
r : There will also be a 3-point
shooting contest and a slam
d4nk contest for both boys 1
and girls. : All area · ams, players, and
rans are invited to attend this
•
r
event.

. ,.

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M.
(AP) - At least Dan Dickau
and his Gonzaga teammates
caught one
break in the
West bracket
they can sleep through
Morning Madness.
While the Zags are shutting
off their alarm clocks, Misso uri and Miami already will
be dealing wich shoe clocks.
Local tipoff time at The Pit
for their first-round game
Thursday: 10:40 a.m.
"I've been kidding them,
'You better win or no one's
even going to know you were
in the tournament,'" Missouri
coach Quin Snyder said
Wednesday. "People will get
up for breakfast - 'Was Missouri in the tourn;unent?'" ·
The early start, set up to
help coordinate television
coverage across the country,
startled Miami guard John
Salmons.
"When I first heard it, I was
kind of. surprised," Salmons
said. "I didn't know it was
even possible ,to play at 10:40
in the tnorning."
No. 4-scedcd Ohio State
(23-7) and Davidson (21-9)
will follow that game, and
then comes the night session
with the players and teams
sure to draw the most national attention.

NCAA

YoUth diamOIId ·

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AII·TVC. 81

LAY-UPS? NAH - Ohio State's Matt Marlnchinck slams a dunk shot during practice at the
NCAA West Reglonals in Albuquerque, N.M., Wednesday. Ohio State faces Davidson in the
first round Thursday. (AP)

Turley .f.eave~
her mark on· Rio

COLUMBUS -Eastern senior center Stacie
Watson was named to the
2002 Division IV All-Ohio
girls basketball third team
announced Wednesday.
Southern's Amy Lee was
an honorable mention
selection .
For. the complete D-IV
AII-O hi'o list, see page B2.

B,MARK WIWAMS
FOR THE SENTINEL

RIO GRANDE - Renee Turley came to Rio Grande
five years ago as player who had unlimited potential. She
leaves the Redwomen program having lived up to that
potential.
.
. Turley leaves her mark as one of the
best \O ever play fo.r the Rio Grande
women's basketball program.
The 5- foot- 10 wing player from
Racine exits Rio Grande as the fifth alltime leading scorer" in the history of the
p~gnim with 1,585 points and the seventh all-time leading rebounder (688).
Turley w~s a part of two NAJA
Turley
National Tournament teams, two Amer.
ican Mideast Conference Tournament
championship teams and the Redwomen vyojfat least 20
games every year during Thrley's time in the pl:ogram.
Turley led the 2001-02 team in scoring at t4.7 points
and was the second leading rebounder at 5.6 per game.
She was second on the team in assists at 3.4 per gan).e .
and topped the team in steals with 81.
"-·
She was first team All-American Mideast Conference as
a semor.
Rio Grande finished the year at 22-12 and reached the
quart,elfl!Y.lls •of the AMC Tournament.
S~e \ has· been nominated for -ilie Kodak All-Am erican

11earn.

,'1;

. r~
;l ~ ~.....-

"Rene~

"'

..

)l

'\.II

was an ex&lt;;cllent open-court player, very quick,"

said Rio Grande head coach David Smalley. "She was the
best slasher in the league and a great jump shooter."

Ple11e 1ee Turley, 11

Dickau leads Gonzaga (29C
3) against Wyoming (21-8),
before No. 3-seeded· Ariwna
(2~-9) plays UC Santa Barbara
(20-10).
With his mop-top flying,
shooting from all angles and
scoring more than 20 points
per game, Dickau might be
the most fun college player to
watch. The senior guard also is
one of che best and was picked
for the All-America team this
,
week.
"I think he epitomizes the
,best side of the NCAA tour- ·
nament," Snyder said. "He's
what this time of year is. all

about."
Ohio Stare coach Jim
O'Brien agreed, having seen
Dickau on TV and in person
at tryouts this summer for the
World University Games.
" ! don't think it takes long
being around him to tell that
he's a special player," O'Brien
said.
"He's kind of like the boynext-door, too," he said .. ·
"Everybody's rooting for
him."
Well, maybe not everyone is
so taken with Dickau and the .
Zags.
Despite finishing ranked
No. 6 in the nation and its
recent NCAA tournament
success, Gonzaga drew only a

Please see Madness. 81

THE MAN- St.
Vincent-St.
Mary's LeBron
James waves
around a towel
as he cheers for
his team in the
final minutes of
their 80-4 7 win
. over Warrensville
Heights on
Wednesday.
James, a 6-foot·
7 forward. was
featured on the
cover of Sports
Illustrated three
weeks ago. (AP)

Chosen ·One wins aga.
regional semifinal victory over
. CLEVELAND (AI') LeBron James got a taste of Warrensville Hei ght&lt;.
what his future
"I liked it, it was great," said
h?lds Wednesday the junior who has inspired
111ght
and t-alk of entering the NBA draft
1
loved almost every minute.
before high school graduation .
The larges t crowd ever to
Scalpers outside
Gund
see a high sc hool basketball .Are"'! got up to $50 for a $5
game in Ohio - 20,562 fans ticket to see the 6-foot-7
in a sellout at the Cleveland guard, who was featured on
Cavaliers' home court - · the cover of Sports Jllustrated
watched \he 17-year-old bas- three weeks ago with the
ketball prodigy help Akron St. headline, "The. Chosen One."
Vincent-St. Mary to a 78-49
James chose to "sct up team-

Prep

,.
~- ";.~· ·

wbbed All-Ohio

Madness starts
early in New
Mexico today

NBA

Boston 97, New Jersey 89
Atlanta 105, Denver 102
Orlando 119, Phoenix 114, OT
Detroit 85, Cleveland 84
Houston 96, Minnesota 95
Sacramento 92, Philadelphia 88
L.A. Clippers 96, Washington 75

$20;910

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T#ltson, Lee

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.
earned second-team honors, along 'with
Eastern senior Bradley Brannon. Eastern
Coach Howie Caldwell earned the
Coach of the Year honors in the Hocking Division while guiding Eastern to
Tri-Valley Conference and Sectional
Championships with a 20-4 overall
record and a District Runner-up honor.
Caldwell last year guided his dub to the
State semi-finals with a 23-3 record,
accumulating a 43-7 record over the past
two seasons.
Southern girls Coach Scott Wolfe
joined Caldwell as Hocking Division
Coach of the Year in the girls division,

:. Pro Basketball
.•

Palf.1.1

"

mat~s for easy baskets, play
intimidating interior defense,
and let. fellow j~mior Romeo
Travis take center stage with a.
career-high 31 points.
"! •just make sure my team
doesn't lose," James said, after
totliljng . _,.
p&amp;nts,
12
reb"cru.ids~ 'l~iifl assists, six
blocked shots and countless ·
standing ovations. "Anytime I
rleed to score, I can score."

lJ? .

Please see Cho1en, 11
'·I

�.

'
Page B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

-.mydallysentlnel.com

Thursdlly, March 14, 2002

1Urley

junior, averaging
10.5
points, 4.2 re&amp;ounds and
2. 7 assists.
fnAPapB1
· She earned AMC honor
mention honors as a sopho"She was a very talented more, scoring I 0. 7 points,
athlete and was our go-to collecting 4.5 rebounds and
player," Smalley added. dishing out 2.4 assists per
"Renee had the ability to game. She was second on
make her teammates better the team in .reals with 72
due to her unselfish style of. on a team that finished 27play."
~ and appeared in the
Turley was tabbed second NAIA Division I National
team all-conference as a Tournament.

Chosen
fnwnPapB1
When the Fighting Irish (21-3) did
not score for the first 3:12 of the second
half, James simply drove •past his defender and dunked.
"I came to play in th.e first half, too," he
said. "We were up by 18.''
. He had five points, six .Ssists and three
blocked . shots by halftime as the Irish
opened a 43-25 lead.
About the only thing that annoyed
James was a lack of respect from the losing Tigers (23-2) and their fans. ·
In a two-minute span with the game
well in hand, James broke loose for a
thundering slam dunk, ignored another
chance to dunk by feeding Chad Mraz
for an easy layup, swished a 3-pointer

... zt.l.

.
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r::....v. s..

Hal-

·.,.. Fort

A!JoMrv.
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· 11*. MiMoonlllloldiMI

a_... - -

, Halgolo.

Madness·
f1om PageBI
sixth seed in the West. The
Zags, Duke and · Mich!gan
State are the lone teams to
reach the round of 16 in
each of the last three years.
Perhaps the tournament
committee · didn't · see
e'\ough of Gonzaga. After
all, the Zags don't usually
make a lot of TV appearances until March.

Her first-season of playing (1'198-99) saw her bum
on to the college scene as
second team all-conference
and a member of the allfreshman
team. · Turley
scored 14.2 points (second
on the team), pulled down
7.5 rebounds, (third on the
team) blocked 42 shots (led
the team) and dished out
2.4 assists per game (second
on the team).
She was red~shirted dur-

from well beyond the NBA arc, and
swatted away two more shots at the other
end.
"I did that and one of their guys said
they still didn't respect my game,''.James
said. "I just laughed."
Coach Dru Joyce said . his players got
fired up when they heard Warrensville
students chant, "Bring on LeBron," eatlier in the week.
" Sometimes you should be careful
what you ask for," said Joyce, who
replaced Keith Dambrot as coach this

season .
The crowd got what they wanted.
Having performed, James left with 3 :36
to play and a 69-38 lead. As if oon cue,
thousands desened the atena.
Travis, who made 14 of 16 shots from
the field, credited James' mere presence
for his
success.
"When they key on LeBron so much,

own

Salmons, whose Miami
team will share the same
locker room as Gonzaga,
admitted he had hardly seen
Dickau. Ditto for Davidson
coach Bob McKillop..
"I know about his reputation, but I haven't been able
to watch their games. Is he
like Hank Luisetti with his
jump shot?" McKillop said,
a joking reference to the
Stanford star of the late
1930s.
Certainly Salmons or
McKillop would like to face ·

March Madness is
here!!!

...........
r .-...

fromPageB1
sharing the honor with Garrett Powers of Waterford, and
Jeni Hendricks of Federal
Hocking. Caldwell and Wolfe
earned similar honors last
week in the Associated Press
balloting, and the same honors in the coaches' District 13
balloting.
In his first year at Southern,
Wolfe guided the team to a
17- 5 overall mark, the third
highest winning season at
Southern and a Sectional
Championship.
Joining Watson of first team.
in the Hocking Division were
Amy Lee and Brigette Barnes
of Southern, Heather Fulmer
and Cassie McKown· of
Waterford, Tracy Sidwell and
Sheila Gilchrist of Federal

Ectw;'=

•winner

l

SundaY, Merch 17

:

•
AtMallonAtMa
•
Plttoburgh
• Pltlllburgh·Central Connecticut State
:winner vs. Calllomla·Pannsytvanla

~winner

•

:
•

, ,, .ID.WU.T AEOJONA!.' i ,
Fir.! Round
Thurldey, Morch 14
At Edword J0111a Dome
St. Louie .
: . Kansas~) ... Holy Cross (18-14)

•

'

At ARCO Arena
Sacramento, Celli.
Oregon (23-8) va. MorJtena (18-14)
' W. FORIOI(2Q-12)vs. P-dioe(22-8)
;
Frtdey, March 15
•
At Tile United Centar
'
Ch~
~ IRinOia (24-8) vs. S. Diego State (21-1 1)
. Florida (22-8) vs. Creighton (22-8)
At AmertCIIn Alrtlnea Centar

I

Dell•

Mila. Stale (26-7) VB.~ St (21-8)
T-(2Q-11)vs. a.-, Colsgs (:!o-11)

. Second Round
Saturday, M""'h 11
At Edwlrd Jonea Dome
·.
,
St. Loula
, Kansas-Holy Crosa winner vs. Stan·
• ford-Western Kentucky winner.
•
At AACO Arena
i
Sllcfllllllnlo, Calli.
' Oregon-Montana wJnner vs. Wake
1 Foreat·Pepperdlne winner
Iunday, March 17
AI The.U- Center
Chlcego
llllnola·S.n Diego State winner vs.
Flor1da·Crelghton winner
At AmertCIIn Alrtlnee Centar

•'

Dell•

: Mlllilllppl Slatt•MCNII18 State
winner v1. Texas-Boston College
' winner
'

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tight:" Olson
said Wednesday.
~
, .
"The first ,ew times you re m
it, you're uptight yourself and
it's hard for the kids not to see
that.''
What iriost fans · in Albuquerque are hoping . to see is
No. 3 Arizona versus Gon~rda '
d
d
ga in Satu y s secon roun .
Gonzaga, along with Duke
and Michigan State, are the
only schools to reach the
round of 16 the past three
seasons.
Arizona versus Gonzaga
would match last year's
national runner-up W:ildcats

.

BRISTOL, Conn. (AP)J._ The NCAA
tournament play-in game was seen in about
70 percent more TV households than last
yeat's gal1\.e between the 64th- and 65thseeded teams. .I
Siena's 81-77 victory over Alcorn State on
h' d
11
Thesday, night in Dayton, 0 10• . rew ab ·
cable rating on ESPN, meanmg a out
980 000 households tuned in. The game drew
abo~t 580,000 homes on TNN in 2001.
It was ESPN's first men's tournament game

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war
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. under an agreement reached in July, ESPN
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•••

WARMING UP- Kentucky guard Keith Bogans ~hoots during
practice at the NCAA men's basketball tournament Wednesday
in St. Louis, Mo. Kentucky plays Valparaiso on Thursday,
March 14 in a first round game. (AP)

against the perennial tourna- coach Bob Williams said.
Wlllll~
ment d;lrlings. It also would
The ·Gauchos, out of the
..
feature a baseline-to-bas8ine Big West Conference, aren't
meeting between two of the intirhidated by Arizona, says
country's best point guards: junior forward Mark Hull.
Arizona's Jason Gardner and
"We've
played
USC,
Gonzaga's Dan Dickau.
UCLA, Stanford when I was a
Arizona (22-9) and UC- freshman,", he said. "We se~
Santa Barbata (20-1 0) meet in them on TV all the time.''
Gonzaga has thrived as the
the final game of Thursday's
first round. Gonzaga, a mere underdog in recent tournasixth seed despite the Zags' · ments and comes in with its
29-3 record, plays No. 11 highest seed ever at No. 6.
Wyoming (21-8) in the first After setting a school record
Top it off
game of the evening's double- for wins this season, tQe Zags
with a set of
header.
belieyed they deserved better,
Serta
II
No. 5 Miami (24-7) and but coach Mark Few says
No. 12 Missouri (21-11) met that's not an issue anymore.
in the regional opener, fol"That's one thing our prolowed by No. 4 Ohio State gram's always done a great job
(23-7) against No. 13 David- of, understanding that when
son (21-9).
the ball goes up, seeding doesGardner, who made himself n't matter,'' Few said. "It inieligible for the NBA draft last tially upset our guys, but now
April, then decided to return they're focused."
for his junior year, said the
Wildcats are well schooled in
the perils of looking ahead. ·
"The year we lost to Wisconsin, we were looking forward to playing LSU," he said.
"At this point, any teatn can
bea' you."
Wildcats forward Luke Walton adds the Wildcats aren't
the only team that needs to
worry.
"I think Wyoming's a great
team, so they (Gonzaga's players) can't look ahead, either,"
he said. "I'm not even personally set on playing Gonzaga
yet. AU I'm thinking about is
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ment. The Wildcats kept ir
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~ .
Gallipolis 446-2265
going despite losing four
starters from last year's team.
.
'
•
ll.lppers Plains 667-3161
"Arizona presents five
unique challenges, and they're
all starting for them," -UCSB

Play-in game draws better than last year

.

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Ohio Sl. (23-7) "'· Davtdeon ( 1·8)
Miami (24·~ vs. Miuouri .21•11)
I'At~y11onMetohA~• ' ,
·-Plttlburgh
Cincinnati (30-3) vs. Bolton Unlv (22·81
UCLA (IQ.11) v1. Mlnlallppl (2tl-10
At
Cenhlr
Oldlhoml (2'1-l)vs.II.-Ciolcallo (20'13)
X.vlar (25·5) v1.. Hawaii (27·5)
• IIOOnd Round
a.tunlly, March 11
.
At Tile Pit
• Albuquerque, N.M.
Arizona·UC Santa Barbara winner
va. Gonzaga-Wyomlng wiMer .
Ohio Stata·Davldaon winner va.
Mlami-Miasourl winner
Sunday, Merch 17

Cincinnati-Boston Unlveralty winner
vs. UCLA-Minlaalppl winner
At AmeriCIIn Alrtlnee Cenhlr
Della•
·
Oklaholna·llllnols-Chlcago winner
vs. Xavter·Hawall winner

.
•

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M.
(AP) -Lute Olson has made
·~
· " ·
18 consecurive trips to
.
the NCAA
tournament, reached four
Final Fours since 1988 and
won a national championship.
But he knows - all too
weU - that no resume is
good enough to give a highly
seeded team like his immunity from a first-round knockout.
Fifteenth seed Santa Clara
knocked' Olson's No. 2 Wildcats out in 1993: Two yeats
later, No. 12 Miami ofOhio
eliminated No. 5 Arizona. In
1999, two seasons after their
national title run, the'Wildcats
- a No. 4 seed - lost to
13th seed Oklahom~. Two
years ·ago, Wisconsin's run to
the Final Four included a second-round win over No. 2
Arizona in Salt Lake City.
Could UC-Santa Barbara,
another 13th seed, be next
against this year's Wildcats?
The. 67-year-old Olson hopes
not. . .
'·
"I thi1!k the expenence of
'having been in as many as
we've been is certainly helpful
in ternu of making sure that
.. the team ~oesn't get up too

01 .·

.~.,!_.
.lbrA.,....,!~UC~S-P.~N,M~~~;·. '

~~-.-~ ..~-·,.- _ .
Gonzaga (2 ·3) va. Wyoming 21·8

At=:!":.~~,.

INGElS
' 106 N. 2nd Avenue • Mlddle_Eort, Ohio
(740) 992-2635 .

UCSB looking to ·play ~indergirl
NCAA

• Stanfooj(19-9)vs. Weat.Kentucky(28-3)

~h. With four

Financing &amp; Layaway Avallsble
We Alao·. Accapt: Visa I MasterCard I Discover

NCAA
.

g:;;,'

at 10:40 in the morning,"
Hurricanes coach Perry
Clark.
Snyder was looking ahead
to Thursday's
pregame
shootaround. It starts yikes! - at 7 a.m.
"We'll get them pumped
up with coffee and go," he
said.

tnntn
AII-TVC

ST. LOUIS (AP) -The KansasJ~yliawks coach Dennis Fdton said. "We played the
At~
have to prove themselves again after a nearly same way with him that we did without him.
_ ~U....11
flawless~ season:
"I _think you're QUki~~ a grave mistake if
Silnll81. Alcorn S1atot n
·
The }liyluwb, the No. 1 seed in the Mid- you JUSt try to stop bim.
lAST REGIONAL
west Regional, went undefeated in the Big '12
Stanford's 7-foot Curtis Borchardt led the
Flmllollnd'
regular season, then lost to Pac-10 with 11.4 rebOunds per game and
-:r~o:._
Oklahoma in the conference. averaged 17 points.
8t. Louis
tournament final: They play
Western Kenll!cky is the last Sun Belt Con• Matquetle
K8ntuckY (2&lt;»)
""Valpat1lilo
(25-7)
Thimday
nigh
..
t
in
their
NCAA
first-round
ference
team to win an NCAA tournament
(26-8) va. Tulia (2&amp;-ej
~.llllcfl15
game against Holy Cross.
·
_ game. in 1995. Stanford has lost three of its
At Tile MCI CenW
· "We try to put that loss behind us and for- last five games, but is in the tournament for
· ~arytand (~ (17·18)
get about it,'' guard Jeff Boschee said. "But I the eighth straight season and is looking to
Wlaconein(18-~va.St.km's(20'11)
don't think we want to forget about the make it eight straight first-round victories.
,. ~cl:na) $:a~~:
fhings we did wrong, and the carelessness. It's
Kentucky .is a shaky No. 4 seed in the East,
. Michigan Stale (19-11) . ·
•
a whole new tournament and everyone is 0- losing four of its last nine games in what's
' AITIIellnlled~
' :
· '" ·
.
,.
Chlc8go
. . . 0."
been a tum~tuous regular season. T he Wid
i ~~1-l)vo.l.blayStale(19-1'2Y
.. ~Kansas (29-3) became the first Big 12 team cats are less than confident heading into the
TaxasTech~R~~(26-7)
.to go 16-0 in conference play, led th~ nation Valparaiso game. '
·
.
s.tuldt!V, ·Minoh 1&amp; .
in scoring ~d ;had.a _ school-record II 100"It's been a very distracting season, and
At
Domi
poirit'games,
'·
·,
. hopefully we'll learn from it," forward
• Kentuckv-Valparalso winner vs. Mar·
The Jayhaw~ had season lows in points, · Tayshaun Prince said.
.
queHe-l'ulsa winner
field-goal percentage and 3-point percentage
The lowlights for Kentucky (20-~) mclude
.t'=u~~:!
in the loss to the Sooners, which resulted in the recent firing of athletic director Larry Ivy
Wuh~Ofl
them dropping from No. 1 in the nation after and the suspensions of guards Gerald Fitch
Marylanci-Aicom
tate-Siena
wina
three-week run to No.2 behind· Duke. But and Adam Chiles. Fitch has been suspended
. ner vs. Wlscon~n·SI. John's winner·
· Connecticut-Hampton winner vs.
· they've won 18 in ~ row in the first round of three times, for trying to use fake identifica. winner
NOI1h Carolina State-Michigan State
the NCAA tournament and are 28 1/2-point tion to get into a nightclub, for sculling with
AI Tile United Center
favorites to get past Holy Cross (18-14), the teammate Cory Sears and for missing curfew.
·
Chicago
Patriot League Tournament champions who
Valparaiso (25-7) is in the tournament for
, : !t:x':~~.;,~~~Jth~~~~~~=nev:'·
have 10 of 12.
the sixth time in seven years and reached the
"Their
transition
game
is
the
most
devasround of 16 in 1998. This season, the school
SOUTH REGIONAL
tating I've seen in 10 years,'' Holy Cross coach set a record for victories, and coach Homer
Fl,.tRound
Thu,.day, March 14
Ralph Willard said. "Obviously, if we get into Drew said he has 22 Kentucky tapes to
At The BI-LO Center
a
shooting contest with Kansas, we'll lose.
review in hopes of extending the record.
G-nvllle, S.C.
Duke
vs. Winthrop (19·11)
.
"We have to make the whole better than
Marquette, making its first tournament
. NoCr9
~1-101:-.i""- (18-111
the
sum
of
the
parts,
because
their
parts
are
appearance
since 1997, fi,nished ·second in
I'Jabsma(26- ...
Allanlc(19-11
Okla. State ( 3-8) vs. Kent (27-5)
Conference USA behind Cincinnati and ltas
better than our parts."
AIARCOAI'IIIII
Kentucky-Valparaiso was the first game in one of the stingiest defenses in the country.
S.c,.mento, Collf.
SO. Cal. (22-9) W. N. C.·WIII i U01 o(22-9)
St. Louis, followed by No. 5 Marquette The Golden Eagles rely on guards Dwayne
Indiana (2D-11) vs. Utah (2fol!)
against Tulsa in another East game. In the Wade (17.8 points,6.6 rebounds) and Cordell
Friday, March 15
AI MaiiOfl A..
other Midwest Regional game Thursday Henry (15.1 points).
. Pllllburgh
night, No. 8 Stanford plays We~ tern Kentucky.
Marquette and Tulsa are both 26:6, but ,
·. Pitt j27-5) vs. C. Conn. State (27-4)
Both Stanford and Weste~n Kentucky fea- Tulsa is more tournament-tested, makmg the
· Cali omia (22-8) vs. PaM (26-6)
Second Round · .
ture 7-foot centers. Western Kentucky's 7-I field for the third time in' four years. That's
· Sllturdoy, March 18
Chris Marcus is averaging 16.1 points and particularly impressive considering it's. playing
. At Tile BJ.I.O Center
·
Grwnvtlle, S.C.
nine rebounds and has played well since under its third coach in three years, with John
; Duke·Winthrop WIMer vs. Notre
returning in February from an injury that Phillips following Buzz Peterson and Bill
• Dame-CharloHe winner
Self. "It's an amazing tribute to the players
sidelined him for two months.
" Alabama-Florida Aflantlc winner va.
: Oklahoma State·Kent State winner
"We've never. been overreliant on any one that we continue to be successful," Phillips
•
' At ARCO Arena
player,
including Chris,'' Western Kentucky said. ·
s.c.......tc., eetrr.
: Sou1hem Cal~omla-North C8rolina·
, Wilmington winner vs. Indiana-Utah ,

...

Will meet next Monday, March 18th
·fo.r nomination and election for a
Vice-president
Meeting will begin at 7:30·pm .
All members ore urged to attend.

Hocking, AUory Hooper of
Trimble, and Ashley Hinkle of
Miller.
Southern placed two members on . the second team,
sophomore Katie Sayre and
junior Rachel Chapman, and
Eastern did the same as Katie
Robertson and Sara Mansfield garnered second-team
laurels.
Meigs'
player
Matt
.Williamson earned secondteam honors in the Ohio
Division, while Jaynee Davis
earned first-team honors for
the girls and Samantha Pierce
claimed second-teatn honors.
Davis was joined ·on the
first tearn by Haley Sowers,
Kristi Hayes, and Holly
Pridemore ofVinton County,
Holly Coates and Whimey
Blackburn of Belpre, and
Whitney Maiden and Ashley
StandaU ofNelsonville-York.

a big favorite against Holy Cross

Alnn..EST
ONJ•IGIIIOUND

Eagles Club 2171

•

Much 14. 1011 .

AGlance at

• • wd
•
I had better make those shots,'
the
6-foot-6 junior forward who also had 11
rebounds, "I was determined to make
.
every easy putback."
The Fighting Irish moved to within _
three more wins of a third straight title
- their first in Division II. The school
moved up from Division IJI this year
after winning two straight . championships.
_ In the state finals last March, James and
the Fighting Irish attracted the last
record Ohio high school ' basketball
crowd, with 17,612 at Columbus' Value
City Arena.
Akron will play 3 p.m. Saturday in the
regional final at the University ofToledo.
In the first game ofWednesday's doubleheader, Lakewood St. Edward beat
Cleveland St Ignatius 72-58, advancing
to the Division I regional final on Saturday night in Toledo.

Dicka u later in the tournament. That couldn't happen
until the W10st Regional
final in San Jose; Calif.
For now, Miami (24-7)
has other things to think
about, such as getting up for
its breakfast matchup against
Missouri (21-11).
"Not a college game. I've
played a few pickup games

PageB3

The Daily Sentinel

in.g the 1997-98 season.
Turley played 134 games
and Rio posted a 96-41
record during he playing
career. Other career numbers for Turley: 343 assists,
241 steals and 102 blocked
shots.
She will graduate with a
degree in Sports and Exercise' Studies.
Turley is the daughter of
Ed Turley of Racine.

,·

.,

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Celtics, Clippers gain ground in playoff races

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e.
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Pearson, Ford, 132.699 mph,
May 11, 1968 (Rebel 400)
Not•ble: In the 45 4()().

Ward Burton, Pontiac,
173.797 mph , Marcn 22,

199e
Rae• record: Davia

KFC

• NASCAR This Week writer Monte Dutton rinks the
top 10 drivers headint: Into this weekend 's race. last
week 's re nklngs are In parentheses.

Dear NASCAR Th .. Wetk,
llwve often wondered how race
~ar drivers m1ke the twi1'h mental·
ly from 11o0ttkc-nd competitive TI1Cing
kl normal drivins on public road5.
I woul d 1hink tha1 making the
tBn~ition from 150-piiB mph 10 SS
mph would be hard to •djuJt 1o.
How do dti vrn cope with the u~e
ro compete olf1he track?

'J

·--lNI-

ltorll .. Marlin Ninth p i - otllllon't llad
Tan, Sto..t ChMin&amp; o .....,plonohlp
I. H Molt llonMth Laolllllko o COIIt-r
4. (3) JofiCio.....,
NovorNIIIy.-up
5. (5) Word Burton
IMitl oiU-ort lor li willie
8. (-) D. Earnhardt Jr. Flnlllly lOt untiiiCkod

7. (8) Jell Burton
8. ( 7) Mark Mortln
B. (4) Bobby Lobonto
10. (9) Rpn Nowmon

Crow's

I'm pullin g for the No. 20 ~ar.
Go Tony!·
John Spalne
Mo•al Morrl1, IlL
Dri~-erJ

WINSTON

Alop-· outoldo top 20
Flnlohlni the boet he con
E..... trouble
othlo biotottrock
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228 Main St.
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Drive-Thru Window

992-5432

MIIHt;
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Power Tools &amp;
Accessories

Ridenour
Supply

CUP

HAMPTON, Ga. Superstitious Tony Stewart
doesn't like the color &amp;reen
or the number 13. He won"t
even spend the night In a
hOtel room whOse diJitS add
up to 13. Somehow, though,
he had to manage his 13th
victory. He couldn't skip the
number 13 In that area. ·
Naturally, In a way that
only a superstitious racer
could appreciate, the 13th
vk:tory came at Atlanta
Motor Speedway, where he
had never finished better
than ninth.
"Finally,' Stewart said;
"It's been a long time
coming:
Joe Gibbs' two-car Pontiac
team has won six times at
Atlanta MotOr Speedway, but
the previous rive came from
Stewart's teammate, 2000
Winston Cup champion
Bobby Labonte, who
struggled on Sunday.
"Bobby's always had real
~OOd luck here; said
Stewart. "I'm sorry he didn't
have a very good day (37th),
but I'm just really proud of
the euys on my team .~
A notoriously slow starter,

Bing's
Auto
Repair

Jun "f! ojrtll safd driving

high mci11g speeds is much fike
th t! ,veryduy drivttr rlai11g 70 mph

Q/

tb~

inlrrstalt'. They 're sa
acr:u.,IO~ to Jrivingfa.rt.

rio"'"'

X

our NASCAR nu Wetk.

I am writinw thia letter i11 ~ard
to one that I read m a recent issue of
my local ncw11papcr. The letter was

momenta

complainina abou 1 NASCAR not
doina anylhint~about Sterling Mar·

FROM LAST WEEK

Family

WIN,.: Darlington {S.C.)
Raceway (1.366-mlle track),

Your
Turn
l.llttn ... 0. ......

TOP TEN

1tut h•d hi•

hn droJ11inJ below 1he ~llow li ne.
Well, if1his ~n had watched

Stewart's victories have
occurred aerller In each of
his four seasons as a
Winston Cup driver. As a
rookie In 1999, he won for
the first t ime In September.
In 2000, he won in June;
and In 2001, the season 's
first victory came In May.
Already considered a
contender for the
championship, Stewart's "
victory in the season's fourth
race leaves him In Ofth place
In the season standln&amp;s,
three weeks after he left
Daytona In 43td place.
On Sunday, Stewart held
off another slow starter,
Dale Earnhardt Jr., to win
the MBNA Amer1ca 500 by
about six car lan&amp;ths.
Althouth an earlier race
wes unofficial. It was the
second time this ~ar Stewart
has ou-tdueled Earnhardt, and
In the aftermath of the
BudWeiser Shootout at
Daytona on Feb. 10, Junior
said almost the same thlnf,s
he said on Sunc:llrr':
WAen he tried to make a

the

an honen ml srake. And NASCA R

writer would 1hi nk

Jim Bing,
Technlclan
.

ba~k.

740·992-1998
740-667-6133

I'm sure

he ...,uuJd ~membe r somet hing that
Earnhardt had dnne sim ilar 1o the
action Sterling did.
Ihma Borden
StallerdJ"IIIe, ~

•••••••••••

....

Fan Tips

••••••••••••
WlldallotliVhnNot

1.

Technician

did iuue a penally to him for th i5.
I am a die-hard Sterlin&amp; M~tli11
fan, and I am IW"C.thatthe writer of
the complain t lencr is a die-hard
Dale Ea rnhardt fa n. So, for sume
reuon, people like us lh ink. our
dri~ era ca n do no wron11. If !he

HOT: Jony Stewart has
fi~IOhod fourth, fifth and
In the past three
races.
• NOT1 Kevin Harvlck is
32nd In the points
atandlnaa.

1. Following Davey Allison's death, who was
the nen driver to compete In Robert Vates ' No. 28?
2. When Steve Park was Injured at Oarllnaton In
September 2001, who was chosen to drive In his place
while he was sidelined?
3. Wl1o succeeded Darrell Waltrip In Travis Carter's Nd.
66 Ford?
'
litUjpog ppo.,L "I
QOiiiiiiiM A:UUQ)I ·~ UOPJOE)

.&lt;qqoy 'l

••••••••••

•Georgia's Officia l-Raci ng
Hall of Fame Is being built in
Dawsonville, the state's
raci ng hotbed, at a tourist
anractiOf'l called T~under
Road USA that Is scheduled
to open later this spring,
Unlike the North Carolina
raclna hall, Georala will limit
Its Inductee~: to those with
connections to the state.
Raymond Parks, the
dominant car owner of
NASCAR's early yeara, was
named Ftlday aa the hall's
first member.

AROUND THE GARAGE

11 0Court Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Phone 992·1135
E-Malllmootfrognoi.MI
"""'perlormo"'"'"rodot.com

nascar Diecast
i Collectible Shop

!

Dessens pitches in
simulated game

(acroaa from Rutland
· Bottle Gaa)

Main Street
Rutland, Ohfo

740·742·2289
1·800·837-8217

Jeff Gordon criticizes NASCAR for Las Vegas 'no call'

~Doftll,
Thlo Wool\

SARASOTA, Fla. (AP) - Rain
has put the Cincinnati Reds' pitching staff behind schedule, so Elmer
Dessens - the likely
starter on opening
ftl
day - pitched a sim:
illated g.ame Wednesday lo he and Chris Reitsma could
pitch on the same day.
Manager Bob Boone said he
flipped a coin to see which pitcher
would work in the simulated game
.nd ~0 would start against the

BedS

~

2002 The Gttton (N.C.) Guetta ·

~lti1MM bjl Lln~.-..1

Prttl

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•

(800)2ei5--0134 • For rtiMM ,...k of March 11, 2002 • Ott'-': Ctrta&lt;hlltllotiM.. 8111110\8, Fll .

...

i
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Place Vour .Business's Ad here

Call :The Daily Sentinel for detai-ls
Dave Harris or,Debbie ,Call

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~

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PISTONS 85,

CAVALIERS IU
Corliss Williamson scored 11 of his
16 points ' in the fourth quarter as
Detroit overcame the absence of Jerry
Stackhouse.
Trajan Langdon made a desperation
shot for Cleveland with 1.1 seconds
left, but his foot was on the 3-point
line. After a timeout, the host Pistons
were able to inbound the ball and rf!n
out the clock.
RoCKETS 96,
TIMBERWOLVES 95
At Minneapolis, Steve Fraricis scored
21 points, including the g.ame-winning free throw with 9.7 seconds left,
as the Rockets sent Minnesota to its
fifth straight defeat.
·
, · The Wolves held a late lead, but collapsed in the final minutes as Houston
took advantage of sloppy passing and
closed the game with a I 9-7 run.

HAWKS 105,
NUGGETS 102
Jason Terry scored 31 points and
Shareef Abdur-Rahim added 25 as
Atlanta earned its 12th straight home
win over the Nuggets.
Terry hit 11 of his last,12 shots after
PLAY HIM TIGHT- Detroit Pistons' Corliss WiJiiamson (34) goes up to
going 0-for-2 in the first quarter. He
knock the ball away as Cleveland Cavaliers' Tyrone Hill (32) goes to the
was 5- for-7 on 3s.
basket in the first half Wednesday in Auburn Hills, Mich. (AP)

Red5

Randy Bing,

to the media.
So there wu no reuon for
NASCA-R. to apply any more penal·
tie~~ to S1erlin1.
The IICCODd iuue that was .;om·
plained about wu when Ste rling
ao t out 'and trie d to fix his front
fender.
Yu, Sterling should no1 have
dol'lc 1hat, but I' m !urc: that it wu

MAGIC 1190

SUNS 11., Of
At Orlando, Troy Hudson had a
career-high 34 points and Tracy
McGrady scored all 10 of the Magic's
points in overtime.
McGrady finished with 35 points,
going 4-of- 6 from the field and 2-for4 from the foul line in overtime. Overall,.he was 14-of-28 and added eight
rebounds, eight assists, three steals and
tWo blocked shots.
Hudson made 14 of a career-high
23 field goal attempts and was 5-of-10
on 3-point shots. Horace Grant had 17
points, and Monty Williams added 16.

. SARASOTA, Aa. (AP) ._· Craig Paquette hit the first of
:Detroit's five homers off Cincinnati relievers Wednesday as the
: Tig~rs piled 11p 12 hits and rolled to a 9-1 victory Wednesday.
Knucldehall specialist Steve Sparks held the
Reds to one hit and one walk in five innings.
Bill Simas took over, retired two batters and left
·the g.ame after feeling a twinge in his elbow. A precautionary
-MRI was scheduled.
: Reds starter Chris Reitsma also pitched five scoreless
innings, giving up five hits, before the Tigers started their home
run barrage ag.ainst minor leaguer Ricardo Aramboles.
· Paquette hit a solo homer over the wall in center, his first of
the spring. Randall Simon followed with a single, and Ryan
Jackson homered to left. After Chris Wakeland walked, Brandon Inge hit his first homer to left for a 5-0 lead.
.
It was the second time in two days that a Reds pitcher gave
up multiple homers in one inning. Lance Davis gave up four to
Philadelphia in the first inning of a game Tuesday.
Davis returned to Cincinnati and had an MRI on Wednesday that found inflammation in the back of his left shoulder.
He will return to Sarasota on Thursday and start a strengthening program that will keep him out of g.ames for four to six
weeks.
Juan Sosa had a run-scoring single off left-bander Gabe
White in the eighth, and Mitch Melusky and Craig Monroe hit
DING-DONG· · Detroit Tigers' Craig Paquette (8) trots around
.
consecutive homers to make it 9-1.
third base behind Cincinnati Reds pitcher Ricardo Aramboles
Ken Griffey Jr., hitting .182, drove in the Reds' run with an
following a two-run homer Wednesday. Aramboles allowed the
RBI double off Matt Miller in the seventh inning.
first three hitters he faced to holl)er. (AP)

mike Bing; Owner

500) . Even Jeff Gordon admiueJ
that it wu his fault 10 his crew and

Mutombo had 14 points and 17
rebounds for the Sixers, who had won
four in a row.

Tigers pound Cincy relievers for five homers

(Beside Goodwin's
Auto Sales)

a linle doKr, he would

»«n that Sterling ~~etua lly didn'1 dmp all the WilY dawn, but only
his back 1lres wert forced down
when he WB~ trying to avoid a crash
with Jeff Gordon {in the p aytona

run on Stewart, Stewart

985-3308

rq~la)'J

ha~e

Intuitively understood that
ridln&amp; In front of Earnhardt's
car diminished Ill
performance aerodynamically.

St. At. 248
Chester

Evetrt "'"'"'IIHIIfl..
JII..
C record:

lony
1. ( 1)
2. (2)

1111/(f

Burton

. ·:

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Owner/Operator

a

••••••••••••

CONSTRUCTION

lArry W. Banks,

NBA

mile races, only nine of them

L

BANKS
(740) 992-5009

West Coast swing before beating
Toronto on a wt-S&lt;:cond shot Tuesday
night. The Nets and Cellics will meet
one more time, on April 7.
"We are still the. best in the East, and
berth.
we're not hearing any footsteps," said
f:&lt;&gt;ng-suffering fans of Jason Kidd. who had 23 points, 13
.
those two franchtses finally have some- rebounds and eight assists for the Nets.
·thing to be happy about these days.
CUPPBRS 96, WtZAllDS 75
With only five weeks left in the reguAt Los Angeles, Michael Olowokanlar season, the Celtics have chance to di had 22 points and 11 rebounds and
Win the Atbntic Division, and the Elton Brand recorded his lOth straight
Clippers have a chance to snap their double-double.
. li~~-year P?~tseason drought:
,
Brand had 19 points, 15 rebounds;
: I think Its probably the biggest wm five assists and four blocked shots as
fot ~~s o~ization in three or four the Clippers extended their winning
years, Antome Walker wd Wednesday streak to four games - their longest
night after Boston defeated New Jer- since they won four in a row nearly 13
sey 97-89.
.
months ago.
, The outcome moved the Celtics
The Clippers shoot for their first
within three games of the Eastern five-g.ame winning streak since early
Conference-leading Nets.
in the 1995- 96 season Friday night
: The Clippers, meanwhile, moved . against the Los Angeles Lakers. The
~ithin one g.ame of Utah for the Clippers beat the Lakers 95-90 on Jan.
:e ighth playoff spot in the West by 23 after losing twice to the two-time
. defeating Washington 9f'&gt;..75.
defending NBA champions earlier.
Richard Hamilton scored 21 points
In other NBA g.ames, Sacramento
edged Philadelphia 92-88, Orlando for the Wizards, who have lost five
outlasted Phoenix 119-114 in over- straight and seven of nine since
time, Detroit nipped Cleveland 85-84'" Michael Jordan underwent arthroHouston beat Minnesota 96-95 and .scopic knee surgery, and 12 of 14
Atlanta defeated Denver 105-102.
overall.
Walker scored 30 points and Paw
KINGS 92, 76ERS 88
'P ierce scored 23 of his 32 in the secChris Webber had 22 points and 1I
ond half, going 6- for-8 from 3-point rebounds despite a dislocated right
,r ange. Vitaly Potapenko had · 12 index finger that could sideline him
rebounds, and Kenny Anderson had 10 for Sacramento's next two games.
assists and a key basket for Boston after
Peja Stojakovic added 21 points and
the Nets erased an eight-point deficit Mike Bibby had 12, including a key
to tie the. score at 89 with 1:53 left.
jumper in the final minutes as the visThe Celtics scored the last eight iting Kings won their fourth straight
points of the game, igniting a crowd and improved the NJ3A's best record
that has been waiting since 1995 for to 46-17.
the once-proud franchise to return to
Webber hurt his finger at the end of
the playoffS.
the first quarter, but returned midway
•. The Celtics have now beaten East- through the second. The injury
•e rn Conference playoff contenders seemed to affect his shooting. He
· Philadelphia, Orlando, Detroit, Wash- missed 11 of 13 shots before scoring
ington (twice) and New Jersey during I 1 points in the fourth.
their six-game winning streak.
Allen Iverson scored 32 points, Der·
New Jersey lost four straight on a rick Coleman added 20 and Dikembe

Ryan Newman, Ford, 170.301 147 lap_
s /200.802 miles
mph , Match 16, 2001
When: 4:30 p.m., Friday
Mve been won from tM pole,
a.c.~:M k:hael
Lalt ,..... wlnMr: Bobboj
Waltrip, Pontiac, 138.140
Hamilton
BUICHIERIU
mph, Sept. S, 1992
Event ~ltfylna; Neont:
Notlble: This will be the
Jack Sprague, Chevrolet,
What: Darlington
21st season the Busch
162.878 mph , May 11.
Raceway.com 200
Series has raced at
2001
Whtre: Darlington (S.C.)
Oarlin~ton.
Rae JWGonl: Bobby
Raceway (1.366-mlle track),
147 laps/200.802 miles
--::-cRA=m=MA=N-=TR==u"'c"'K- Hamilton , Dodge, 105.461
-!:!!!~~==~- mph, Moy12, 2001
Wtt.n: 1 p.m .• Saturday
What: Craftsman
Notllbte: Last ye~r wauhe
Lut , ...... winner: Jeff
Annlversal)l 200
ln&amp;l.'gural truck race there.

Diw.ICia IRs: I 16~200
• .:.-• ...4-. • FlC

Wllat: Carolina Ood&amp;e
Dealers 400
•
·
1 p.m. """'....,,...,.
.
WheN: Darlington (S.C.)
• C:au:&amp; 1'lualc. CI:Ae;ua...... , 200 Raceway (1.366-mlte track),
6 p.m. ·Saturday· ESPN2
2931aps/400.2 miles
-euo.-~-- . : 1 p.m.,Sunday
1 p.m.• Sunday • Fox
Last r•at't winner: Dale
Jarrett
EHnt quolllytoc NCOnl:

•

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Boston Celtics are gaining
ground on th~ New Jersey Nets. The
'
Los Angeles Clippers are
wtthin reach of a playoff

COMING UP ON THE CIRCUIT
WINSTON CUP

B5

The Dallv Sentinel • Paqe

~

day, may get another look now that
Lance Davis is out of the picture
temporarily.
Lance Davis g.ave lip four home
runs to Philadelphia in the first
inning Thesday and returned to
Cincinnati for an MRI exam that
found inflammation in the back of
his left 'shoulder. He was expected
to return to .Sarasota on Thursday
and begin a four- to six-week program of long toss and strengthen·

ing.
Petroit gers.
·
Davis, Howington and Brian
: "The coin came up heads," Bohanon were the only lefthanders
~oone
said.
in the mix for a starting job.
· Reitsma pitched five scoreless
(nnings, giving up five 'hits in the Bohanon had arthroscopic surgery
Reds' 9-1 ·defeat against Detroit. Monday to repair a stress fracture in
bessens faced Cincinnati outfield- his lefl; elbow.
.
ers Kel\. Griffey Jr.. Adam Dunn,
I SPARKY ANDERSON TO VISIT
Juan · Encarnacion, Brady Clark,
REDs' CAMP
Ruben Mateo, Raul Gonzalez and
Hall of Fame manager Sparky
P.nthony Sanders.
· Anderson was expected in cainp
': "I felt good. I was working on all Thursday with a group of 65 fans 1
,jny pitches;' Dessens said. "My arm who are following the Reds in
·· l"as feeling 1up and down. I threw spring training,
60 but I could throw more,"
Anderson managed the Reds
:: HOWINGTON MAY GET ANom- from 1970 to 1978 and won World
::
ER CHANCE
Series titles in 1975 and 1976. His
': 'IY Howington, reassigned to the Detroi,t.Tigers team won t~e World
'Reds' minor league camp on Mon-. Serielin 1984.
· .
•I •
&gt;

Public Nolkts in N..rspapers.ll
Your Rlihlto Kno•·, ll&lt;lil'ered Riihllo Your

Each bid shall be
accompanied by a
Bid Guaranty and
Sealed Proposalo Conlract Bond In an
will be received by amount equal to the
lhe Treaaurer of lhe 10111 aum ol lhe
Eaatern Loc:el School propooel Including all
Dlolrlct, 50008 St."Rl. ldd alternatives, all
881, Reedsville, Ohio In accordance wllh
45772 until 12 Noon the current statutes
ori March 22,2002 and of lhe Stele of Ohio,
Bonda will be
lm!Mdlalely
returned
to all
thereafler will be
opened ond reed
aloud for the
lurnlehlng ol all
and
m1ter1111
performing ell labor
ADVERTISEMENT
FORBIDS

neceaaary

1

M LB

subsequent to the
aWard of contract to

the
IUCCe&amp;IIUI
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Contract

to

awarded
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for:

Construction

(3) 7, 14, 2002
2tc

to

tollltrucl
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Gymnaelum
Air
Condlllonlng", Work
.ohall be In conformity
lo lhe Drawing• end
Speclllcellona
prepared by MKC
Aaaoclataa, Inc.
Plano
ond
Spoclllcattona lor
Information
,
purpoMI, are on file
al tho · Olflco of tha
Superlnlendent,
Eaalern Local School
. Dltlrlcl 50008 St. Rt.
681, Reedevlllo, Ohio
45772 ond lhe Office
ollhl ArchlleCI.
Coplea
of
SpeclflcaUont,
Drawing•
1nd
Propoaal Formo
togelher wllh any ·
further lnformallon
dulred, may be
obltlnad by lha
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRES S
lllddera from the
of the
Seattle Mariners pitcher Ryan Anderson has a Office
shoulder injury that requires surgery.
Ar.ohltacta, MKC
·
And he'll miss the entire season. Aaoocloleo Inc., 104
Fair Ave., NE, P. 0.
Again.
II ox 1002, New
.
The 6-foot-10 left-bander, nick- Philadelphia, Ohio
named the Litde Unit because of his resemblance !~~~13 · :~1 ~=~:~~~~
to Randy Johnson, is scheduled for surgery conformity wllh lha
Wednesday to repair ' a torn labrum, part of the Oonorol Codo of
Ohio, and aholl bl In
.
'mil
shoulder joint. He had surgery to repatr a st ar a aaalad anvalopa
injury on March 6last year.
1ddreuod lo lha
"It's a shame. It really is," Mariners manager Lou Boord of Education,
Eaolern Locol School
Piniellasaid.
Dlotrlct,
and
The injury was revealed when the 22-year-old andorold
"EI1man1ary School
Pitcher's .left shoulder was examined Wednesday
,
.
Oymnulum
Air
.
Mariners trainer Rick Gri ffi n said th IS tnjucy conditioning" on lha .
probably is different from last year's.
outalda of the
"It appears to be in a different spot," Griffin said. •n,:lo';\ddar a hall
San Francisco closer Robb Nen sprained his left wllhdraw hla bid for 1
ankle covering first base ag.ainst Anaheim and is period of olxty (80)
expected to be sidelined at least a week.
doyo altar lhl dlle of ·
racelpt of bldl.
He was taken to the Scottsdale Healthcare hosA dapoe)l of Fifty
pita! for X-rays, and will have an MRI exam ($50.00) · Doll1r1 Ia
Wednesda"
roqulrad to oblaln
r
one (1) eat of
··At Thcson, Ariz., Curt Schilling bounced back o raw 1n go
a nd
from a bad outing by striking out. seven in five Speclftcallona which
Sco reless inn1' n'"' in the Arizona Diamondbacksi 5- Ihe depoalt will be
"'"
rolurnod lo lha
4 victory over the Chicago White Sox in a split ra1pactlvt p1rty after
receipt of lholr bid,
squad game.
.
1nd alter the
Ray Durham and Frank Thomas hit consecutive documanta
111
two-out homers offJohn Patterson.
.
ralurned wllhln
Schilling, who allowed eight r'u'ns on I 0 hits in IIIIHn (15) d1ya after
rda receipt ol bide,
2 2-3 innings against the White Sox &lt;in Satu y, ahlpplng chargeo
gavel up ·three hits and walked none.
·
propold.

Ryan Anderson out
for season- again

Unaucceald'ul blddafs

11

MEIGS COUNTY
BIKERS ANNUAL
SPRING PARTY
. March 16th at MIZWA
Adm: $5 ·
Live Music 8·12

Wet T &amp; Buns Contest
Come Join The Fun
GalliP.olis located home
health agency
hiring PT &amp; weekend
RN/LPN's may lead to full
. time position.
Competitive wages.
. Apply at
3084 St. At. 160,

Gallipolis, or phone
441-1393
All You Can Eat

SOUP SUPPER
Vegetable Soup, Chili Soup
Bean Soup
Also, Roast Beef Sandwiches,
Hot Dogs,' Sloppy Joes, Pia

RUTLAND FIRE HOUSE
Friday, March 15th
4 pm -7 pm
Proceeds go to equip

new COI}Cesslon trailer

'

�'

·,

~rihune

Thuracllly, March 14, 2002.

Thurtday, M•rch 14,2002

www.mydallyuntlnel.com

- Sentinel - 1\e ster

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 7

:i"--AN-f·._~~~n~ C.....n~.•-..._,l.t_...~.SI.LE-.._,1 F*
...

llo'l' "' .... ll.'w• • Ar4f. Floody Eaator:
E e.t Yo1n on -'white CKC
~ 2 •112•

C L·A 55 IF I E D

ft

Baautlfut as GMC Sonoma, Ext. Cab, 2001 . Honda ~ . VLX
~ 2.2, 5 apood, Bad cove•, Deluxe 600, 1,500 mi._,

· HNr•~. 740- Shill Tzu poopploa,
.00 Aollod
hood,
Racing
· Det&gt;oeit will hold. Stripos, CD Ployor, New
owrw.
740-992-1050
tlrH •nd clutch, 82,000
~-.,.. R
rrOiooonqne, FloofSherp
8
I
I
1 11:
otwollor Pupplaa, Full Trur:il $55oo 1740)689
Jn
·
•
- M&lt;k..,Ot1. Dolo, glooo- lliooded, Grut Looking, 0302 '
.... - · and Would mal&lt;t 1 graal Easter .:.:.;,;;__ _ _ _ __
,.,., 1140)112~
gift. Mother &amp; Fathol on '96 JMp ChorokM, Runo
MawHMUII
1111. 1140)2118-17811
Vory Good. Salvage Tltte,
To Good : 3 Collie $3900. I140)446- 11182
puppfoe, a Border Collie fo- FO&lt; Solo: 89 Ford Ranger
....
malo. a Somoyed, a email PU· Blua, Eld. Cob, • cyl., 5
1 'lOt of
Torrfor, a black Pug, a Gold· ·Speed, Good COndition ,
Wlng
-.
C;!"/'~~· End on Retrlovor-Sheltla ml• S1800. Call (740)446-4514
11
. .v . • _,.,... 515 puppy, a Biacl&lt; Lab-Golden oo (740)446-3248 after Uprll.
Nth. Stt of Wofld Boo6c Retriever mix, a purebred
• ·· Encyclopldlu, 175. Small Blue Hlolor, • rare SchlpVAN!! &amp;
•

-on ••

.
~

j 111M.
2· 236$25.
- ·Soara
S30. Fuai
2· P205
011 _

• "" 131).1)6715-2801

=·

All Olsplay : 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
Publication

Includes Free. Yard Sale Sign!$
Up To 15 Words, 3 Days
Over 15 Words 20¢ Per Word
Ads Must Be Prepaid

In Next Day's Paper
Sunday In- Column: 1:00 p.m. Sunday Display: 1:00 p.m.
For Sundays Paper
Thursdav for Sundays Pa

6

Private Party Ads Under $100
20 Words 1 Days • Each Item F&gt;rlced
• No Commercial Ads

• No Tickets/Purebred Animals
Or Garage/Yard Sales· • Limit 3 Per Person
Mall To: Ohio Valley Publishing, 825 Third

Avenue, Galllpolls 1 OH 45631

HOW IQ WRITE A.!i All

' \ \ I l l \ II ' I I \ I "

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~

l.l

Etcorta. Pfon"'P'

II"'

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YARD SAtE~·--tiGiiAUJI'OLISiiiiitiiiiiiiiaoo...
...,
March 14- 15, S:OOam-Spm,
349 Lariat Drive, Acrou
from Fairgrounds, Halsey
TV's, lawn mower and
kitchenware
·

Moon Light Escorts. Fun
SeMoe Mate and Female
Profeulo-

1'111 Dilcrwt &amp; Confidential.
(740}~

15pm 10 61m.
1788.

Why wall? S1art meeting
Ohio olngleo ton!Qht, call tol
free 1-800-766·2623 ext
1821 .

r~

~y lhli~~E~nOt~om~uot~bo~-~~~~~~~r~~~~

• St1rt Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Comp lete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbre\llatlons
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads ·snould Run 7 Days

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

I

IIDPW-

II'"

IIDPW•-

Trfbunt-Sentt,....,....tW
POLICIES: Ohio V.ltly Publl.hlng
wfll be l'npon1lbte
NWYW thll'orrllilht
1'10 mor.
to.._
lMn
rwiKt.
lhti 1:011
Gr ano.l
of thetny
IPKe
..t •t~~upftd by U..llt'l'Of' Mel only the ftqt
any lou or lltplltM that rMulle from tht publiclitlon or oml11kH1 of .n -.n~ CQfl'Ktlon will tMI IMdllln the nr.t av•lhlbtt ~ltlon. • Box
. . . . ..,, conflden1t.l. • Cunwtt , ... ctrd 1ppi1H. • All re.l ntlte Mfvwrtl........
tubjKI to the-Federal Fair Hou11ng Acl of I HI. • Thll
eb;ndlrdt. We wt11 not
'
1 In vhll.uon of the llw.

II'" ~ I

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•--~iiiio~--_..1 t ~~

All I'Nitttlte advef'tlslng
In thlt niWIPIPif' II
•Uibfeet to the Fedtrll
Fair Houalnt Act of t911
which maUa II Hlegal to
ldvtfttte "any
ptefwlenoe, 11mtt8tton or
dlacrlrnlnlllan taa.c~ on

Doing spring deaning? Donate reusabl8 Items to
ReUse lndusttieal N. C~
lumbus Rd., Athens. High·
way 50, Albany. 740·698·
8200.

"l''"r---:W.~Amm
..........-....,

YARD 5.uJ!.
STNA's. Plea~· a"81~11n
PoMEAov/MmDLE person or call ane a ng

n

Ir

AP~

A811rlng South. Woul(t tove Lot lor Sail-' Approx. 2 1/2 . Deluxe Apartment. 2
to take thl1 house with US! acres, dea,red &amp; ready tor room, 2 lull bath, extra

Are you an energetic motl- Esoon Drivers needed for Disney Beach Vacation, 6
vated person looking tor a Oversized Loads. Call Lam· nights great hotel S8criftce
rewarding career? Scenic bert Trucking (304)674· for$~ 99.00 6~4-523-8792
Hills Nursing Center offers a 3636
wanderful amployment op- - - - . , . . . - - - portunlty. We p~vlda excel·
lndu.trlal Equipment
lent skl!led and 1nt&amp;mledlate
Saln and Job Contract
care w1lh a comprehensive Sales Person. Experience
rehab department. We are • Required . For additional
currentty seeking CNA's or
Information

1

6

Great deal for someone building, gravel driveway, kitchen,

who wants 2500sq ft., 4
bedrooms, 3 baths, loads ol
e)(traa,
lnground pool.
Green
School
District
$162,000 (well below certi·
fled apprallal). {740)4463139

bedlarge

new appliances

1800 6q H., city park and riY·
er view, hw floors, skytighl,
private parking, 4 antique
fireplaces, 3rd floor, central
ale and gas heal, $875, ref·
erenca and deposJI • Greg
Lots for sale· (1) 0.377 Smith (740)446·2282 or

watar &amp; electric available,
. Porter
area.
Asking
$13,995,. Call (740)446·
4514 from 8-5 or (740}446·
3248 after 6pm.
.

~it~ &amp;AJ~I~2·~s:. ~17_40..;)_446_-7_3_1_3

--:-ca="-;(004:.:.;:..l4;.c1:;.5-.:;38:;.1:.:6c....._
roco, colOr, rotlglon, ...
- - - - - - - - :::::
_ _ __
'
To Do
lemlllll ttltut or RIUOMI For llle by owner: Nice bi- Porter araa, flat &amp; raady to Furnished Apartment. 2
~-iiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiii-1 for more Information ·at McCiura'a Restaurant how ~-------· ortgln, orenr Intention to level hOme on 1 acre near oet up on AEP el-tnc Rooms and Bath Clean No
'
,
(740)448-7150
hiring all 3 locations, full or ---.
m
Chaster. Three bedroom,
·
"'"' •
·
·
Big yard aale-Wad,·Fri, anti·
.
part·tlme, pick up appllca·
AE Construction
mtlle •nr au
central sewage system, &amp; P,ta. References and De·
~
tool8 E ..., It
&amp;
proltronct, limitation or
two baths, one-car garage, water · available.
Call posit Required. 17•0)446·
' ~
ques,
ems
Full time Waitress Needed tlon at location &amp; bring back remodeling, roofing, b8th
dltorlmiMtiOh."
family room with fireplace 17411) 6
1 M Fl8 5
19
-, much mora, rain/shine A I I P
u-lld . between
9'30am
&amp;
aun room. Na·w central heat~
44 -45 4 •
• .
_,5::...:.---:----:-::
Bradbury Rd. Middleport.
PP Y n arson. n\1 ay 10·00am Monday lhru Sat- rooms, drywall, interior
lkndWtthYOUIWorllout
'
.
_ln_n-_G
_a_lll,:.po_l_ls_
. - - -·.;
'
palntlng,tnmdoors,wln·
1'1111-porwlllnot
lng&amp;a/caystem. Qneml·
Rw,;~TE
Furnished Efficiency. All
Routine. Exercise your
u ay.
dows. Free ES11mates.
knOWinGlY accept
nute off Route 7, but still prl·
...,.1'\.J.,.a&amp;:.U'
Utilities Paid, downstairs,
&amp; jointer. lathe. a Help wanted caring for the MEDICAUDENTAL BILL· (004)675-n38
octmtiHmonto ,.,,..t
vata. (740)965·3961
, 5215/month. 919 Second
mind ond body. Start today. Planar
good welder, 4 trailers dlf· elderty, Darst Group Home,
A (740)''• 3945
Jay Clark Kenpo Karate fi!Hent sizes, many Oltler now paying minimum wage, lNG COMPANY has lmme-. - - : - - : - - - nt.m which II In
For Sale or Reri1. House In Credit worthy buyer looking ve.
-.:;~·
• 7&lt;40-742·2$46
things. Beglna Thura. and new shifts: 7am-3pm, 7am- diate Openings tor People All Makes Lawn Mowers
v1011tl0n of the caw. our · New Haven, One story, 3 for house to buy, Galli&amp;, Ma· Gracious living. 1 an&lt;t 2
continues If the wealher Spm 3pm-11pm 11pm- to Process Claims. $15· and 0\Jidoor Power Equip·
rwcttrtarehlfeby
bedroom, 1 bath, Washerf son or Meigs please call bedroom apartments at VII·
Compuler Technical Sup- continues warm. 992·7012 lam: caiiJ40-9Q2-5o23.
$45/hr. Potential. Will train. ment Repaired. Free Pickup
lnfotrnH U1atall
Dryer. Call for Details • •Jim, (740)992 187
laga Manor and Riverside
port a'llaltable on line or call
PC Required. CaM Nowl 7 and delill8ry available. Call
dwellings ldvllf'tlaed In
(3(M)8:82-3585
Apartments In Middleport.
&amp; lellve message, afforda·
AUCI10NAND
Bates Bros. Amusement Days 1·600.935·3971 Ext Mikel740)446·7604.
thlo-poponro
From 527 348 . Coll 740ble, glpollardalhotmail.com,
FLEA MARKEr Co. Is looking tor enthuslas- :.*2:;1.::9---,-..,.--..,.- All ol your h·ome repairs, ad•v•ll•bll on •n ~qUal
House ror sale or rent to ~;=:::;;:===:, 992-5064. Equal Housing
740-1143-5127
~
tic lndlvi8uale spring/au.,. '"Moo I
E
N
dh~
&amp; --~'1
24h
opportunity-·
own w/ down payment.
Oppor1unltles.
nl ght
aeorts
ow
-OIJ'
r"''""""' ng.
r .__ _ _ _ _ __ , Newty remodeled, 1 bt'.,nat·
u.-....-.
NOTICE
Rick Paaroon Auction Com- mer 2002. Muot ba at least Soaking Femo'- Eacone emergency IIOIVIce, oenlor
ural gas heat, central air,
"""""'
Modain 1 Bedroom Apart·
Poopie'o Dogs rulnlnfj my
pony, full lme auctlonatr. 16 yooro and able to travel. and Dancers. C8111740)388· cltlzene discount. 22yre.
county water, lot Is 100x200
FOR RENT
mont. 11•0)441-0390
.
property In Eckard Chapel
complllle auction eervlce. Weekly pay, living facltittes. 1799.
exp. (304)578-2066
. in GaiHpolls Ferry area 304.. 3 ·• ,
, ,1.. Newly Ro--·-·~ 'D-•
Ad. area will be shot Ralph Licensed .68,0hlo &amp; Wast Contact us at 740·2611-2950
....:....;,......;_ _ _ _ _
IJOME'l
"~~ 2 ~
Amos.
Vlrgln.la, 304· 773-5765 Or Block·brick layers only $1011 Mothers Dream I
Cenlfted O.ycara provider,
FOR Sn ~
675-6269
~
·3
B"toom$s1~;:'1o~
room
Apt.,
Stova/ Refrtgera·
1
,---,--..,.-,-C'":"'
304 nl-5447
Stay Home
2 openings, In Pomeroy, ·--itiiiiiiiii~iii-• New OOublawlde on priVate omas rom
o.,
. tor. Utilities Paid, S400/
Young, 5 yr. old church In
•
·
sign on bonus/ $50. referral Be Your Own Bosal
{740)992·3509
.,
Down, 30 Years at . 8.5% month
46 OII"Ye St
Gallla County, looking for
bonus. Apply at Jab site Oak Eam up to
property, ,.5 acres. Call APR. For Listings, 800-319· (740)445-3945
,··
1
1
2
ooofnted &amp; e•~rlencad mu· C
·
WANnD
HiU H~h School 5093 St.Rt. $500·$8000/Mo
David's
Home
Repal•.
12 Story 3br. ba. on (740)446-3093 to quality.
3323 E•t. 1709.
~- &amp; Worship
10BUY
93N akHiii,OH.
PI umblng, Eloct"-1
Rd.1 Point
llclana tor Praise
PT/FT
. '~ • Palnt• Greer
Sitting on
acre, 2Plellaant.
car ga· Naw tlou&amp;e· financing avail· - - - - - - - - - - - - - · - - - - " - .
telm, any Instrument. Info &amp;
Cllnlc•l Director needed 1-800-810.0705
lng, ate. t740)256-9373 or rage, fruit trees. Serious able to qualified buyers. 0% 2 Bedroom House, Sovth Now Taking AppllcatlonsAppt. call (740)44e·9043 Absolute Top Dollar: U.S. for an outpatient alcohol www.CUhNowAndForever.com (740)441·5707.
Calls only. (304)882·3801
down. teoo aq It, 2 112 on State Route 7. Refer· 35 West 2 Bedroom TovmTue., Wed., Fri. 9:00am· Silv81', Gold Coins, Proof· and other drug counseling Nttd 5 ladles to 1811 Avon. Excellent Care tor peraona
bath, 3 Bedrooms, custom ence Required . . Appro)l:l· house Apartments, Includes
1:00pm or call {740)388· seta, Diamonds,
Gold and prevention agency. Re- {J40)448-33S8
In my Christian Country 1 Aae, liver front, Brick! vi· oak trim &amp; cabinets, gas mately 15 miles SOuth. Water
sewage, Trash,
IMSS.
Rings,
u.s. Currency,· eponslbllftlel .lnolude: dlagHome. Non-Smoker, Mo· nyl, 3 BR, 2 Bath, 2 Arei&gt;la· fireplace, laoge kitchen/din· 1740)441·1917
S350/Mo., 1-.oooa.
M.T.S. COin Shop, 151 Sec· nosing, screeninga/ovalua· Nood aomeone to care for bile. 1004)682·3680
"""' Hardwood floora. tv&gt;- lng, 2 112 car garage on 1
GivEAWAY
ond Avenue, Gallipolis, 740- tlons, review of client charts, my r:nother In Cheltllre, 8 ::::.::...!:~=.;:;;:;;.._ _ prox 2,000 aq ft. Full Base- 112 acres. $119,900. Porter 2 Bedroom Houoe Front Pleasant Valley Apartments
.,__111!1""___... +18-2842.
0888 consultations, quality a.m. 1012 noon. 7 dayo/Wk, Gaorgeo Por1ablo Sawmill. manl, $180,000. 1740)+18- area. 1740)446-4514 t1115pm Straai Mason. (304)773· Are taking applications for
~
I
assurance. trainings, ouper· 740-387-1!302don~ haul your loga to the 01538.
or (740)+18-3248 after 6pm 5604 Leave Massage.
2BR, 36R &amp; 4BR. Appilca· .
load
'-"..:;;"-"='---- mill just ca11.304-e75·1957.
lions are taken Monday
·
Shallo
ell p mp and ·•-•
1
2 MM pupllo ~e away to
w w
u
vll:tlon, c lent case
• etc. Poatal poalltona: Cierkslcar·
1994 Sunahlne Home on Wanted: 10 people wanted 3 bedroom house in Ches- through Frtday, office local·
good home. Mixed· Moltly tank, call (740)892·2272
ExPerience In chemical cle- rllfllsortera. Np. EKp. r&amp;- Moving and Hauling: Clean corner lot 50 x 100 H.. with no credit to buy a new ter, dr, carpeting, remodeled ed at 1151 Evergreen Or.
[abl Csll {740)448·95&amp;2
Truck Camper Self con- pendency. LPCC, LISW, or qulred. Benefits. For exam, Out Bulldl'l'' Basements, washer, dryer, stove, refrlg- home. Must meat minimal bathroom, many Improve· Point Pleasant, WV, Phone
RN wnooo
declaratlon
ltlte- salary, and tntlng Informs· Garages, states, Tre ...
·• , erator, central air, water requ 1reman ts.
Call ments, references, deposits, Number Is {304)675-5806
includee
aubetance
PUI"\nltl to giveaway 10 talned. Good Condition. ment
""'toorno. can 1740)245• 1004)675-4082
abuse asoaaamant and tlon call. 1830)393·3032 ~~~. Etc. Odd Jobo. Call ooftansr, elorage bulldln~ 6 1740)448-3570.
evenings (614)501-6339:
E.H.O.
, -·
•-•
Se
d
_76_2_6a_m_·_6p:..m.,-7_da-;y-•
.
_
_
1740)446·7804
•
10',
$35,000.00.
Daytime
u~.1
BR
$
Rei
3 , 3951mo
_.., - · , , Wantod: Old Pinball Ma· .counH11 ng raqu.~.
n
:.._..:.,.______ 992·2696, Evening 992·
OBILE"""""'
aroncBB Twin Rl\1811 Tower accept·
... , _
chints, Juke Boxes and resume by March 27, 2002 Anplnltory 'l'hlr&amp;plat. Full Wll presaure wash houae1, 0092
FOR SAt..E
and Deposit Required. 1 1/2
lng apptlcatlonl tor
AND
Oth.or Coin Operated Equip- to: FACTS,
Olive Street, Time PooMion. Ohio Ll· trailers, and docks. Coil
~
• mile out S68. No pets .
FOtJND t.
mont. Huntington. (004)o1211· Galllpolle, Ohio 45631 or cenaad RFIT/ CRT. Mon· .. ,.,.238 ook for Ron or 2 br. house , full baoement, t969 Clayton mobile home, 1740)446·3292
tbr. HUd SUIIaldlzed apt.all
~
•
~AX to (740)448-8014. day·
Friday.
9:00am· ::'oa.::•:.:•ccm::;aa=ea,oe:::.,·c::::'--:- oentrol air. W/0, atove, ra· 14x70, 2 bedroom, 1 bath,
ulll. paid for aldar1y and
EOE, M'FIH
5:00pm. COmpethlve Wage.
frldg. lncludod $42,000. cia, appliances and mora, Pilot Program, Renters
dla·
l"m milling- IInce Thuro·
~etlremont Plan, Health In· Worl&lt; Wanted! Will ooro for 304-8715·3853.
must sell, boat offer. Needed, 304-738-7295.
abled E.H.O 304 75-6879
""',:ve you _, mo? lm
COmmorolal lneuranot CUI· aurance. contact: Bow· alder1y day/night. E•p. Rll·
1740)992 9-7
a
and Whl1e Hulky. I
tomor 6arv~• Reptooonta· man'a H~ra. 70 Pine orence. (31).1)875-7961
2 hornet on ono lot In Mid· ·
• •• ·
MOBilE HoMES
SPACE
hove 2 of my 3 pupa wHh 1110
live ICSR). Join the toam of Sl., Galllpolla. OH •6831 ,
ditpOrt, $59,500. SOOit by 1999 14X80 Clayton 2 bed·
FOR RENr
.
FOR RI;Nr
me, tho1oro 4 molltho old.
IIDJtWANil'D
I growlog Independent In- 1740)446·7283
·appolnlmont onty, 1740)992· room, 1 bath. Good Condl· ~
Tray, Mv name Ill .
sur1nct agency. Poaltlon :.;.,;.;.:.;.;,;.,;=;_---- ll~l"'"-:-~~~~ 8154
11on. 1304)875•4445 afl or 14x50 2 BR, Walher &amp; Dry· t8x80 altn, $100/mo. 7&lt;10Maille. I'm vory friendly.
available April 111. Must
IHAWNEE MENTAL
fl10
BusiNEss •
PINH c.ll P~acllla Oodrtll. IWANTEDI
hove 01portence in an il\IUI· HEALTH CENTEFI, INC.
OPI'oJm.JNm
3 Bedroom Houoo for Sale, 5pm.
ar, Refrigerator, Stove, 992·2187.
Comp COnley Rouah Ferrall 39x27 1994 Fairmont OOu· $300/mo plus depoalt. No
·
(740)388-6183. I live on Do- Sarloua Pooplo To Work anco oftlce aattlng, ouporlor Direct care Service Provld·
drtll Fload, Vinton. They From Homo Cali 1-868-8 16• cuetomor relation akllla, or for our Scioto County
Lane.
1304)662·3565 blewida, 2BR, 2 Balh, Must Poll. (740)256·1044
.
Space lor rent 4033
mill ua.
oe8ol
knowledge of oommorclal Adult COmmunity Support
INOTJCEI
1740)992-55n
move.
1740)258·6128,
feat. with metal
"·'- Chlh"-•··- B ~. "'mpitCalnBiz.com
lnauranco. Acord appllco· Program· Boonolor dlorao OHIO VALL~Y PUBLISH·
(740)268·1597
2 bedroom mobllo homo for
Located 1n City of
l.olt.' -~
~-. u· """ ~
tlono, and . bll~ computor and Ohio LSW or LPC"pre- lNG CO. recommend! thet 3 Bedroom on Route 2,
rent, no pate, (740)992·
Inquire, at
IaVIIIe Pike 1111. Floword !lEarn wh.oi you oro worth okllla. Salary commonoureto forred; applicant muat hove you do bualnoao whh pooplo (304)875·5332
79 14•70 Bayview (w/ Don), 6868
(~~~~~-::..--,
8100. Clll Dorsll MoCoy at
from homo
with ••porttnco. Sand ,.. knowledge of oommunlty
you know, and NOT to oond 3 6odroom, 1 both In Ra· Now Since 97, C/A, Water, ,:;;.;---~:-:---:- il
C140J4!~ 4122 PlOt' ~~ told
lntantlmall o:.:S.r.
sum• end rtflt'•ncts 10, •uppon sytt•m compo·monty through the mell until oint. Convenient location Heater, Furnace, Front 2 bedroom mobile home tor
i121-laVIIII kl. , ..ou
IHI00·$8000 por month, McFadden lnaurence Sorv• , nonto, 11tonalvo knowledge you , have IIWIItlgetod tho .137,800.00. 7•o-IMS·3228 Poroh, Shed and Wooden rent In Middleport, $2eO dt·
person Who oolled March 0,
Frtl Booklet .
loot, Attn: COmmorolal and background In menial
offortng.
Fence, Loll ol Remodtllng, poolt, $250 rent, no pota, " - - - piiUI call book, w&lt;t could ·
1-800-2•1-nllol
Llnaa Dept., 48 Publlo htllth prlnclplellond crtala - - - - - - - - 3 bedroom, In M~loport, Must SH, $8000. (~)075· 1140)~2·5030
llddroa).
Square, Ntllonvlllo, Oh lntorvontlon. Competitive
Stan Your Bualn111 To· call Tom Andon~on after 3008
2br. 1ba. In Country. :o~t:l: ~:"::'
'"AmN'TION"' Now Hlr· 457&amp;.4. If quootlona cal17&lt;10- ealory, flnlblo work ached· day... Pnmo ShOJlf)lng Ctn· llpm, (740)992·3348.
-~n-v-on-t-ory_R_a_d_u-ct-lo_n_So_lo Front/back· porohea, $275. 20 milo radlu'a of Point'
• • - \ " ' " - - - - - , lng For 2002, Pootal Jobe 7&amp;3·1905 or (600)962·75&amp;3. ula and IICOIIInl tllhoflt
tor Spaoe Avallablo At AI·
mo 1100 Oopoah Ref Re~~-~
$13.21·$24.50/hr. No E~popocklgo. Full·tlmo pooltlon fordable Flott. Sprtng Volley 387 Aouoli Lane. 2BA, Sun· All now and pro-owned
p
·(004)·578 P - 1~)075-3374
rUA " " " " " ' '
rlonco Necaaeary. Pold Computore/lnternat Uoors avall-lmmodlatlly.
Plaza, Cai174Q.,j48.(JtOt .
room, t.e 6alh, Scraaned In homoa roducod for quick qulrod. 0 111·
•
·
\111· 411\ ~ P I '-.I
• Trolnlng. Full Bonoflta. For Wanted. $1500 mo/PT, PloauundroaumotoHu·
Back Porch, Fenced Book oalo. No rouonablo offer 3117or(31).1)5e2·8303
lnformatlor&gt;'LIItlnga. COM 7 $!1000. rno/FT.
.
man Floaourco Dlroctor, PO S - buolnou for oole- Yord, Ntw Siding, Now rofuoed. 18 now and 10 Baautlful River VIew ldul IIIII""~~~.-;;;;~
llnyor A""'a P'orma Daya 1-868·720·8083 • · Froo Booklet. 688-229-8268 lloJC 1507, Portomoulh, OH now FlalnboW &amp; Kirby ports, Building, (740)«1·1033. pro·owned homoo to For 1 Or 2 "-!o, Rtfaren·
HOU!IEHOIJ)
Slooe1923
1705
24hr. Rooordlng or vlah
415882, "'FAX: (740)3S5· . baga &amp; balta and to many 1140)367·0514.
choooo from. Colo'a Mobile ceo, Depoalt, No Poll, Foe·
Gooos
woallhl
porta to mention; Four
Homoo, US 50 Eaat, Afh.
T 1111 p
Ang,. Praduotlon 740
441
oyoura.com
B208.Appllcallonaaccopted beauty eaion atotlona and 3BFI, 2 6ath, Locatld Near ene,OH 740-592·1972
tor "
ark,
"
"
Moroh 23, 11002· 1:OOpm 100WOAK!AIN!!DED WYN/.
-mblo cralta, wood
Domlno'o Pizza of Point until pooltion II filled .
2• bulb Woffe Tanning bod. Ewlngtcn, Sltuatod on 4
Ol81.
Applloncoa: Reconditioned
Union Stockvarda,
1tam1. Motorial provided. Plouont/Eiaanor/Winflold g~~~i:E'i'~tgJR~RCE 1740)387.(JfJ12
10111. $7eO down poyme~t. Limited Or No Crodlt'l Gov- Nice, Clean. 2 Bodroom In Walhllrs, Dira, Fl.,_,
HMIIbOro, Ottio
,
To $480+ wk.
now hlnng FuM·Time &amp; Pan· AGEO.
•
W.A.C., No Paymtnll for 80 emmont Bank Finance Only country. 1140)258-8574
Rtfrlgratora,
To 90 Dayo
OFF!RINQS
Frea·lnformotlon pkg. 24 Hr.. Time eafe drlvtra. COmpotl· ;,;:;;::;;;._ _ _ _ _._
M~.
dayo, No Polnto, No cloolng At Ookwood In 6albouro·
Guarontoodl
·Sell New
eor.rng 2 Bulla; 20· Lof1V .
1·801-428""7150
Uva Pay &amp; Fle•lblo Soiled· URGENTLY
NEEDED·
LVAl'
coota. Contact David. 1· villa, WV 304-738·3409.
Troller for Reni Muon. Maylag A.ppllanota, F'"""h
Yoorllng Bulle; 1D- Open A GROWINQ BUSINESS ule. Apply In parson oi20VI· pluma donora, eam $50 to
800·333-6910.
Now 14170, 3 bli2bth. Only ~~773-6268or(304)773- Clly Mayiag, 7•().448.7795.
and Straat. Pt. Pi.
$80 per weak for 2 or 3
Loon of AU
Cape Cod Style Home· . $976 down &amp; $169. par/mo. '1:111"'"~~......~~...,
Purtbrod Hllforo; 10· Open NEEDS HELP! Worl&lt;
Bred Flax
From
EIIPLOYMENT SERVIOES
'IYfiH Availob'-1
4BR, 28A, Full Basement Coil Nlkkl740-385·7671
'
Location! .
Avorago Gaillo Metropolitan Houalng 68
&lt; No Foes, all Credit
and Garage. Remodeled In No Crodlt/ Bad CrediV 1at
FOR RENr
·orators. Thompoona
I·
5
All yoo~lng bullo ond 1 $400/Pon·Time·$1500/Full· Authonty, 381 Buck Ridge
1..
accepted
1999(oarpat, llnoloum,.wln· Tlmo Home buytra/ FAS
ance. 3407 Jockoon ••·
mdarlti' of tho 01hor T1111&lt;1 par Weald Paid Vaca· Rd, Bidwell, OH 45614. Wonted: Somoone to taka
Coil Toll Free
dowa, fumaco, central olr,
1004)875-7368
fol Toblcco tiona, BonuHa, Training! (740)448·0251,
Fa.: care ol homo. Fraa room.
1·868·294·1379
eeptlc and •oof). Fenced Loana/ Government FHA 1 and 2 bedroom apart· nue,
·
llttiMttnt Monlea
Web alta
(740)448-8728 will accept and board. small salary. - - - - - - - - back yard. Shoestring Ridge Loans
Available,
Call menta, fumished and unfur· Full ilza 4 poatei' bed with
·
·
WWN/Goals2Succoss.com
applications for a Malnte· 1140)357~308
Problems Paying Bille Call Rd. $127,000. I740)U1· 1740! 4411•3216•
nlshed, security deposh re- epr1nga end matt- $125.
Selling 68 Htad
888-754·5430
nance Supervisor. A reToll Free 1·868-699·3064. .:.0385:.:.;._ _ _ __ _ _ Over--10 uaed·homes priced qulred, no pets, 740·992· large antique marble top
II,. Groupo Ropr-ntod ATTENTION I We Need sumo shoulfl~.\'" hendhe dellwllvl·l We are now accap!lng ap- We can Hslp. All typea of under $3000. Will 'help with 2216.
cha$30001 IMedl oome work)
s
It
EXT 086 G
arad or rna ttU sot t t
pllcatlona tor elCptrlenced loans. Good, Bad, No Cred- Par1lally Remodeled home, daNvBf)'. Call Karena, 740or both tor $400. 2
1
umm creo
Halpl Earn up to $1000· ba'recalved tly tMa Aulhonty grill &amp; prep cookS. apply at It Bankruptcy W-me.
2 Bedroom, 1 Bath, Full 385·9948.
15 COun Street. Vary n~a Largo caooa of croftfng oupo
'Henry' ' SAF Adam 5522· $7000/MO PT/FT InternS:- on or before March 15, Harfo Kountry Kitchen, Ra·
Basement, Large unattach·
apanmant, 2 BR, 1 1/2 plloa botlt fO&lt; 150. ..-s29
8l48 ' Twin Valley Precl· tiona! Mall Order/E·Com· 2002. Tho Maintenance Su· cine, Ohio. betwHn Sam~
ed 2 car garage. 127 Kine- Want 1 new home? own Bath, New Gas Furnace, be._ l2pm· 6prll
~=~: u:g~-4~X; moroa COmpany Complete porvloor will: pion, ooordl· 11om, no phone calla,
SERVICEli
on Dr., $60,000. (740)441· your own land? We dol Call ~· Srf'~ Kl~a~, ~ff Good
'
WoodhiU S&lt;Jprom
C
Training/Free Booklet 1• nata and oversee all aa· rrpi~aa;;H.;,·-::----...., ~
0485
1740)446·3384 for your new treet ar ng.
o oo s
UoeC Appilancaa, Re-

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moua 7001

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AVON! All Areasl To Buy or ~nts~~~ ~':vtduaJ ~~~~:
Sell. Shirley Speare, 304- two olflce buildings and 5
All bulla will sell with a 675·1429.
vehicle• and will ba rss~
Braodlrig lloundnesa E•am
e- ·
Act Nowl
llibla for purohaslng and InAuctlonMr: Ron Krell Be Your Own Boas From ventory. Strong c¥~P'!!~'
8 ~
·"'
Home! Fortune 500 COmpo· skllil are a must.
For catalogl and other
ny Needs 'Help! $1500· porvlsor woll ova,... .a staff
infor·
$8000/MO PT/FT Free In· of 3 and mutt ba atjje to do
fOrmation Gall Now!
the · work ol any malntemation contact
Wllllom 11ro
1·800-390-1241
nan,:e employee raqulrea •
10270 Zion churchr:oad www.BaelcProlita.com
workerallmngalnknowfedgetenancolbulnlidgen-l;;t
Elida, Ohio 45807
Phone: 1419)339-46 45
Driver Needed: Require· and sltea) eleotrlc, pfu
E 11
oil
mente: COL Class B. Tank lng. carpentry, heating and
0
·ma : alrayer we .com &amp; Haz-Mat, High SChool Ed· refrigeration, and vehicle
ucalfon or equivalent. Bene- upkeep. Supervisor and em·
n
,.,Zio1nLC. hEun~aRhoad
fill: Insurance, vacation, ployaes will take "on Call"
8
9
• oEllda, Ohio ·~ •
401K Plan, etc. Must apply one W8{1k at a time every 4
In peraon. United Energy. weeks. Must be able to start
Phone: (419)339-341 7
lncJ Burllla Inc., Gallipolis, work on or before April 1,
E-rnaU: bengllohOwooll.com OH. •
2002. Good benefits.'

BT UltriVO)(

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45807

II

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1· Get Cash Fast!l StQ0-$500.
TlwNING
Easy Qualifications. Never
leave H~l Funda Oepos·
heel-Checking Aooount Next
Qolllpoltl CII'MI" Collego O.y. Loans By County Bank
(Caraara Ctooo To Home) of Rehoboth Beach, DE
Call Today! 740-446-4367, Membar FDICIEOL
1·800·214-&lt;&gt;452,
1-800-397-1908.
Reg tiiD-05·1274B.
-===::-::=~:TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /S8f?
1176
NO Fee Unless We Win!
MI!Ol!lAMXJl5
t-8811-682'3345

I

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::P::A;.:IC:::E~RE::DUC=::TIO::-::N~I-10-:.5 ~::today! Trade Ins wei· :~:51~~ ;;e~~~~a;~t!: ~:;3.ltlo::..,:~:. 06,;~:

Acrae with 1999 Fleetwood
Modular Home NHr Galtipo.lie. E~ecellent Condition.
Privata, Country Setting.
Stocked Pond. Additional
7.5 Acres Ava11abli&gt;. Coil Ja·
nell Call at Century 21
Homes &amp; Ujnd ICtflular f
(304)634·2596 or Office 1·
1!00-731·9011).

Ranch Style 3 Bodroom," 1
Bath. Large LR, DR. KitchWltl Do Ironing In 'I'Y on, CIA, 3 Car Garo"". a
2 Free Tickets to the IMAX homo. 1004)675-6383
Acres, $75,000. · (740)37flo
Theater Perdido Kay/Pen·
2627
sacola Vacaton cond 5 di0
Two day promotion. Every·
1
0 If B h
~~r
poou 1 andeac ~~abt·
thinQ must go! Save Thou·.
Perdido S n Reso... o u ·
sandal Register tor free
11
u
oWs. This weekend only at
800.·.227·2390
08kwood Homes of Gallipo·
www.pardldosun.com
lis. 1740)446·3093

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posit
and
references.
We hava approximately 10 (740)446-4928
used homes for under
$2,000, calll-800-837·3238 BEAUTIFUL
APART·
for Info.
·
MENTS AT BUDGET PRI·
CES AT JACKSON ES·
B~
TATES. 52 Westwood Drive
AND BUIUliNGS
from $297 to $383. Walk to
L,~-atiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiir·· shop &amp; movies. Call 740·
4411-2566. Equal Housing
Office building In Miners- Opportunity.
vine, 800 sq. ft., 8/c, cov· - " - - " - - - - ered parking, ceiling fan, Christy'a Family · Uvlng,
$300/mo,, 614-676°1681 .
33140 Now Lima Rd., Rut·
land, Ohio, 740·742-7403.
LoTs &amp;
Apartment, homo and trailer
ACREAGE
rantals. Commercial storefronts available lor I&amp;EIBB.
Vacancies now.
Country homes, nice lots, .:.:;;;;;;:::;;.::~;;;...--located on AI 33 between Clean 2br. W/0 Hookup.
Pomeroy/Athens. Call 740. Reference and Deposit. No
992·21671or details.
Pats. (304)675-5162

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"~ Boautiful Ethen ANon Soifd
Oval Coffee Table
• • With llovoled Glau Top..
• New $400, Aaklng $275.
: 1140)256-a.45
;: Buahllno aofa &amp; chair,
: . bllgolbliHI/mewa, excellent
• condition, $350; new short
"' queen mattress, $100.
: (140)992·23118
~ Cobia 2000 CB Radio.
:;:$275. Tempo 2020. Base
• CB. 100 WT Radio, $250,
• · 5pc TOW&lt;tt. $10 ooct1. Opti·
: mat Amp 200WT, $45.
• . 1740)3118-0159
•
• Olnotte Sat $85 .• Grey Sofa
- 1125.• Wood Dining Table
_w/Btnch
$100.
Call
,- 1~)875.,j123 or (304)875, 19311

:,woOd

Rangaa. and Rtfr1geratora,
Sorriit ltart at S&amp;i5. Skagga
Appllancta,
VIne St.,
1740)4441-7398

1e

:.._.:.:..:.:.:..'F.:...--,.-

Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
Chlpel Aoad, Porter, Otllo.
1740)448·7444 1-677-830·
9182. Free Estlmeteo, Easy
flnaoolng, 90 days aome as
cash. Visa! Master Card.
Drive- a· little eav. alot.

New noral pr1rit couch and
chair, paid $1300 wtll"ll for
$600. 258·9366
White Kenmore Weiher and
Dr;er Set, $150. Late,Model
Almond Whlr1pool Washer,
$100. Olher Walhert and
Or;ers, $65 each. CaN after
6:00pm. 17.-p)446·9066

.,

'u

Electric Working Flinger
• Washer with Spare Parts,
"· $75 OBO. Sat of Rinse tubs
on ltlnd, $30 OBO. Call
(740)367·7266
Ethln AI'-" Gold· Framed
Mfrror. 35'x35', Pertect
Condition. New $250. Aok·
: lng 1125. 1740)251H144S
For Flont: Large COmmar·
clal Advlrtlslng Sill", 20 ft..
At 35. Clll (740)448·1127
·
," Free Gu Fumaces and Air
"~ Conditioner Estimates. Gall
• (740)446·6308 or 1-600·
291-0088. If you don't call
- us we both loael
.

F.ARM

EQuu:MENr
Farguacn 382, 55
hr., like new,

LlvEsrocK
lO month Quarter Wal&lt;ll.
$700. 8 year old Walk01,
$1000. 1740)386-11265
• YIOI Old mull ""n rode a
llttlt. $1500. (304)576·3259
4-H GOATS . FOR SALE.

e-.

FuU 6iood
Ptroontago
klda and females. R-rva
now for o4-H p&lt;ojactl, Pro·
ven Champion BloodNnoa.
1740)245-0485 after 6pm.

::::.=."'::'

Regletarod Red Angua, thet

J'~ra~

8110 want to ;.;,t fann with
good house (140)682· 7689

r

.

JIA.y &amp;
GRAIN

.
1

1000 lb. round belee of hey,
l121ea.l740)992·7468
Round bales of hay for sale,
1200 lb.-1500 lb. bales.
740·698·8211 leave mea·
sage

i

::.or

993 H.D. Sportstar 12).000
milao • . original. 1304 675·
1580

~

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a-

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BVILDING

.·

St.iPfuFs

~

1

Flo

Auros
S
'--"'FORiiiiiiiALEiiit-pl
•
1968 Buick Century, runs
good, many new pans,
$500.00. 740-992·1933

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·. : doektd,

111

·ahOtl

• •• wormed, 7&lt;10-7•2·2525
,.

~·

Black Lab Pupo.
Bom 1·1-o2 .
(31).1)8715-5192

Pragresslw

~

• Replacemenl

Windows • Roofing
COMIIElUIL ood I!SID!HIIIl
FREE ESTIMATES

741)-992·7599
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

TfH

~~~·-:::::-:::::::-••

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

Kris
Kanleckl
LICENSED MASSAGE
THERAPIST

•New Homes

10 Years Experience
· Specializing in: Deep

85 uncoln Towncar, 302
Engine, Now Shockl, Muf·
flor. Oil Pump, Blue With
blue !nelda. Very wall taken
cana of. $875 finn. In Dllh
CD. 1740)368.()159
8S Marquis for Parts, Whole
Car, $250. (740)245·53113

92 Buick Pari&lt; Avenue m~ny
ntw parta, new brakll.
13040n:J.5109.

I

~~

1980 Chevy 112 ton, 8 cyl.,
IU1o; 1915 Ford 1/2 10n, 6
cyl., $880.00 oach. 7&lt;10IMfl-2700
•

&amp; 1982 GMC pick-up, full·slzo
bed, 88,000 mllaa, new
point

job,

white

opoke

whoofa, alum. toolbOl&lt;, aok·
I'1Q $19f!O, 1740)1MR·2e21
1968

F-250 ••4, 351 5
epood, $4,200 OBO. 740992·7458

2WD,

.\

• Garagee

Tissue, Swedish, S hia1su ,

Jeff Warner Ins.
Authorized Agent

992-5479

Craniosacral,
reflexology, Myofascial
and Yoaa Therapy Oift
Certificates Available
$J0.4S minutes
$4.5 • ?S minutes
740·985-3345

•Complete

Remodeling

Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

lleSt SIIIH llr11er S1to11
37609 TtltiS ROlli, Just

er

7

740-992·1671
7122/TFN

H

morris

macks Pocket
llnlues 6Colledlbles

HERBALIFE

Equipment

Independent

Repairs 6 Parts

1 Lost 27 lb.
in 32 days.

Dislributor

on all ~kes of

• on change $18.95

Fann Equip. ·
and Dozers

217 E. 2nd
Pomeroy, Ohio
992-5908

742-2455

P/B

HOWARDL.
WRITESEL
Roofing· Home
MaintenanceGutters· Down
Spout
Free EsUmates
949-1405 TFN

·CONTRAOORS, INC.
Racine, Ohio 45n1

740-985-3948

CONCIETF/BLOCK/BRICK
• Footers, Walls, Steps •
Flat Work,

Replacements, • Walks
and Drives • Stencil
Cre1e
Free Estimates
Serving Ohio and W. V.

wv li031712

100%

We stock all major
brands
Mike HID

natural/Guaranteed

740-992-7036

104 Fifth St1reet. 1!_~~11."·

Shade River AG Service
"Abead In Servlc~"
35537 SL RL 7 North • Pomeroy, OH 45720
• 4-H feed for lambs, hogs, steers, chickens and

rabbits.
• Seed Potatoes

...,.

a~...,

• Full Line of Bulk Garden Seeds

• Fertilizer Specifically Dt;signed for Garden Crops
• New Fenilizer Buggies
• All buggies ha\'e been pattern tested to meet
Agronomy Association S1andards

TFN

"Specializing In Log Homes
&amp; Rubber Roofs"

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

.1/1:.,.

Garages, Pole Buildings, Concrete
.Roofs &amp; Siding
Commercial &amp; Residential
~

IJ.lUi

took you

from us some time
ago. We miss you

and love you very
much and now Dad is
there to be with you.
No more pa~n or
sorrow

you'll

bear.

·You were the best
any
one
parents

could ever have .. We
Jove you &amp; miss you.
Sadly

missed

Coke,

by

Marilyn,

Jumbo,

out

Grandchildren.
sisters &amp; brothers &amp;

friends

t)~~f.;j «;.~
&lt; 0\S I Rl &lt; 110\
Spedalizinjlln:

Roofing, Decks
Remodeling,
Drywall, and
· Additions

~

Owner: Terry Lamm

in the
classiHed
The Daily
Sentinel
992·2155

(740) 992-0739

Many Income Tax Vehicles to Choose From Plus
A Great Selection of Dependable Pre-Owned Can;
2 Blocks above McDonalds Lower Pomeroy, OH
YOUR LAST STOP CAR SHOP
MON-FRI 9 AM · 7 PM SAT 9 AM · 2:30PM

.........

FIELDS
PLUMBING
405 51h Street

New Haven; WV

"Quality Home
Improvements"

• Residential

Compelithe Prka

Nell Homeo • Rem&lt;&gt;deUna
Rooftn&amp; • Room Addldo111
SldlnK • Pale Buruo
Dtcks • Garqa

1

1

AddHion• &amp;
Romodollng •

Fre~

e;:

Ellbnltes • WVIJl9U

(740) 992-2753
(740) 992·1101

Factory Authorized
· Case-IH Pans '

Oealers
1000 S1. Rt. 7 South
Coolville, OH 45723

740-667-0363

33795 HiLuuJ Rd.
PoiiUIYIJ, Ohio

740-992-5232
G&amp;A
Sanitation
33561 Bailey Run Rd.
Pome(OY, Ohio 45769
Owner
GeoeAnns

882·2343

&amp;More

FREE ESTIMATES!

740.742-3411

WICit'l.
HAULING and

. EXCAVATING
Bedllners •Nerf Bar
• Tonneue Cover

• Ventvlsor • Bus
Shield &amp; FuU Line
of Other Accessories
1

I ' \.

,j,j,

I\ 1I \II I· II· ''
4118101

'Haullng•Limealont
oGrlvtl • Sand •Topsoil
•Fill Dlri•Mulch

•Ba;s

'-.1111•111
'I I

I

II II

(740) 992·5822

'

(740) 992-3470

MARY KAY'

Beauty
and
brains
From gorgeou• makeup
to tx.okltnough lkln
coro. Fool·good

trogranc.. to ldenttftcattv ·
octYone.O lofll'lllklt.
Mor; Kay hOI 011 you
nMd to lOok gNIOI Mel
live wnort.

New G1r1g1·1

Paige Cleek

ElectriCII &amp; Plumbing
• Rooting &amp; GuHert
• VInyl Siding a Pointing
• Pith) and Porch Decka

1

)ndependeni Beauty
Consultant
I I~ High Street
Pomeroy, OH '457 69

Free Estimates

V. C. YOUNG Ill

740-992-2802

992·6215

P~, Qnlo

All Makes Traclor &amp;
· Equipment Parts

"Sef'Yice You
Can Count On"

New Homas, Room Additions,
Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofe,
Siding, Decke, .Kitchens, Dryw11JI

CARPENTER
SERVICE
Room

DEPOYSAG
PARTS

High&amp; Dry
Self-Storage

, Bryan Reeves

YOUNG'S

1t: f@

RIVERVIEW MOTORS ~~e«tt«t
FOR THE BEST DEALS IN THE AREA

Sunset Home
Construction·

whafs
·new

~~L~~

(740) 992·3987

Owner &amp; Operator, John Dean TfN

(740) 949·1521
1-Bn-466·1234 .

?~.

dod

7:00 AM • 8:00 PM

New Homes &amp; Remodeling

~&amp;Aifwt

Mom,

Hours

J.D. CONSTRUCTION

~&amp;t&gt;u

""-' 1411.

29670 Bashan Road
Racin.e, Ohio
45n1
740·948-2217

• Onion Sets

LAMM'S

.,. "'"'""

Hill's Self
Storag e

~f&amp;CJCtCi~~

1 111

llpm.
-:-:-:-::----=:-:--::::

1988 GMC 1600 pickup,
V8,
automatic,
:: ..Ferriale dog 8 mo. Qld, 120,000. miles, runa good,
• opayed, all altoto, lovH cnll· $2,500.00. Call ~-773·
5305 evenings.
dron 448-0183. ·
·-

Tllursdays

Siding • New Garages

o

I

AKC Reg. Black Lab puppial for lilt ,good huntlrlil
• •· proopacil voice mall ..,.
•.. "7183 or ooll 304-875-4469

992-6635

CMrall on SUndap

[7' 40) 992•3194

New Homes • Vinyl

Ia hereby warranty given. For
given
that
on
further Information,
S.turdaty, March 11, or for an appointment
2002, at 10:00 a.m., a to Inspect collatarol,
public 1111 will be prior to 111e dote,
t994ChevyC.maro,Excal· hold at 211 Weal contact
Sh.•ll•
lent COndition. 66,000 Second
Street, · Buchanan at 992·
mun. 56800. (740)446· Pomeroy, Ohio, The 2138.
4528
Farmero Bank and
·
·
Stivlngo Company, Ia (3)13,14,15,2002
1994 Dodge Splnt V-8, high oelllng for caoh the 3tc
mllaaga, no major mechen!· following collaleral:
cal problems, runs good.
1 88
F0 R0
In Memory
$1,100.(004)895·3422aftw RANGER
4X4

!'""

~
(
...
: · 6 wk old roglatortd COC:kli
• Spaniel) pupploa,
IIIII

_

l'rotresslue top Une

BUILDERS lilt

1999 Ford Escort, ·Auto,
4cy1, 4 door, 66,000 miles,
runs and looks good. $750.
(740)441·1083
·
1990 Olda Calais, 2.5 .
$700. 1140)388·9265
1992RedChryllierLaBaron
Convertible, 66,000 mHaa, .
V-8, Air, Tit. Cruise. 11800.
1740)256-1 652

Block, brick, plpoo, 1.8· 1 apeod, $17150 OBO,
•. - · llntoll, 110. Claude 1740)387·72&amp;3
Wlnllrt, Rio. Grtndt, OH

'·i

(10'X10' lj 10'•10')
NO

BISSEll

I

r«&lt;

83 Ford Esoort LX, 4 Door,

Prm:. -

6:30

farty birds start

=:::-c:--:-c:--:-:-

'

'

IMPRo·--..

I

;..Cif1740-248-1121.

middleport, OH

fvel1 T1llnMg

I

sa

9742
WatiQine Spacial' 314 200
PSI S21.00 Per lDo; 1, 200
PSI $38 00 Per 100. All
comprelllon Flttlnga
• In S1ock.
;,.' RON IVANI ENTIRPR18• 1!1 J - Ohio, 1-801).
' 837·&amp;628

&amp; Sclldlg
llHrs Opea 4:30

• ...__ _ _ _

w~h 87 Eaoort
buiH. $1200. (740)446-7928 trailer. 50 force outboard
mOtor, 2 gaa tanka, ski ond
1991 Toyola Picl&lt;up 4••· 5 otho•
..tras. .$2,900.
opeod, good tires, runs (304)675-7845 leave mes·
good.
$4,000. Phone sage.
1304)675-2178
iiii~'!""-~-~....,
jlliO
.
AA~,.!'
199-4 Chavro'-t Blazer, 4 1 ·
~~
wheel drive, 4 door, 5-10
Body typo. $3900. Call
Budget Pfloed
1740)245·9238
1ton1 All Typas, Access To
1~· Ro!f. F-250, 4••. Ovaf 10,000 Transmissions,
130,000 miles. $7,000 nnn. Rebuild Klta, 740-245-6877,
Call: 339-3765.
(7-40)386-ll055
1995 Grand Cherokee Um·
lted. •••· White, loaded.
$9600. (004)882·2050
1998 Chevy Blazer LS, 4X•.
4 door, V6 vortec, automat·
lc, 76,000 miles, PW, POL.
1976 Jayco Csmpor 21ft.
cruloo,
AMIFM/CD, pull behind, New IVC,
S7.11VS.OO. Colt 304-n:J. steeps 4 , Mint Condition.
$3000. 1004)682·3507
5305 evenings.
1996 Ei&lt;plore• KLT, •••.
loaded, case/8 disc CD, 1976 Pace Arrow (Dodge)
hlgner mtlas, $8900.00. Motor home, 2flft, aatt con·
_740_·94-'-fl-_2_22_1_ _ _ _ talned. Roof Air, Generator,
Full 6ath, Sleeps 6. Good
tR99 Red ZR2 S·10, 4x4, Shapo. $4000 or may trade.
Loaded, Auto, 68,000 miles. (740)245 •5235
PS,
PL,
co Player,
(740)441 · 1302, (140)379- 1999 Brockwood Ultra Lite
2796
21' trailer, tows easy, self
contained, 740-992· 3226
1997 Pontiac Treneport van,
99,000 mllaa, very good
condlllon. V6, automatic,
'l It\ I ( I "
PW, POL, power sliding
door,
cruise
control,
HOME
AM'FMICD. S7.99S.OO. Coli
304-n:J-8305 81/anlngs.
·~~""
92 lsuzu Rodeo, 4 WD, 4
Dr, Fuel in)., 5 Spd, 120,000 :C,~· ~~,i :~
mi., $5,500 obo. 1004!675• nanca,
free
estimate,
3964
(004)n3·8550
94 Gao Tracker 4x4, 5
lh
1 ·4•ooo
BASEMENT
speed ¥!' 1 8 r,
u,
WATERPIIDOFINCI
miles, New Paint, New Top,
$3300 OBO. 1740)387-7253 Unconditional Nfetlme guar-'
antee. Local roferences fur95 Ford Ranger XLT. ~lue, nished.
Established 1975.
4 0 V6 8' lift 33' S
• •
'
·
uper Call 24 Hrs. 1740) 446·
Swamper, E~et. Cab, $9595 0870, Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.
OBO. (740)245-0135
98 Chevy Suburban, 4x4,
$17,000.
LT Package, C&amp;C General Homo Malnta·
1740)446·3844 days "' nonce- Painting, vinyl sld·
1740)+18-9555 evenings . lng, ca~ntry, doo-, win·
·,.....
'•
dows, baths, mobile hOme
MOTORCVOES
repair and ·more. For free
..,
• estimate call Chat, 740-992·
6323.
1991 Haney Davidson 1200 lrir~F::,"!'.E•,•••CAJJ-"':"'..,
Sponster, Black, .Lots of
n-·~
Chroma, 15,000 miles. E•· ~ ....-......ERA110N
cetlent COndition. 1740)446·
8217 evenings.
Residential or commercial
wiring, new aervtce or re1999 Honda 400EX. Perloct pairs. Master Llcansod alec·
COndition. $3650. Call trtclan. Rldeno~r Electncat,
1740)446-00121n 011anlng. WV000306, 004-875·1766.

1 FTCR11 T2LPB27023
1995 Beretta, $2895. 12)
The Farmers Bank
1996 COrslcas. $2695 and and
SavIng a
$2995. (4)· S·10 trucks· Company, Pomeroy,
1987 to 1997. 1993 Ford Ohio, reserves Jhe
Ranger,$2195. 1991 Chevy right 10 bid at thla
· packaflo.
Truck, High Milas, 11995.
I hd
'.:. IENNITT'S HEAnNG &amp; Othera In Stock. COOK 1111, and to w I raw
_COOLING (7.0)441·1418 MOTORS 1740)448-0103
the obove collotoral
or 1-100-872-811117.
prlorlo ealo. Further,
- - c""""'nnott 1995 Cavalier LS, 54000, The Farmero Ban~
• ·.
•
•
::ca=l,.'l7'-'40':')c:.99:.:2:.;·2=0:-77':-::-_-: . 1 n d
v 1n g a
: Sameonlte Blue &amp; White
, Patio umbrella Sal· 4 Swivel 1995 Dodga Spirit. good Company reo a rvaa
~ chairs, Round Table whh condition, $2850.00. 108K the right to noject anY
"' Urnblalla and Stond, $450. 1740)94tr3228.
or all bldo aubmllted.
· 1740)258-6445.
Hlgholt 1996 Honda· Civic LX, Auto,
T hI
I b 0 VI
". Quality.
Air, Cruise, PW, POL, 4 doacrlbod collateral
Tandem Aile Trailer 25•6 Door,
Black,
$8995. will be oold "ao II·
;~ 112 Electric braklo wHh 1740)388-9676
where lo", with no
~ ralla. •25 Gallon Water 2000 i&gt;onHac Sunfire, Red, oxpreoaed or lmpUed
: tank. 1004)'773-5108
21,000 mllee, 2 door, CD
\ TelevJalon 13" color $35. Player, Sspeed, Aluminum
' . QuiHing frsmoa $25. Ttlavl· wlleelo, A/C, 1740)441-1547
• lion ooblnot oak $50. can .2001 PT Crul~r. Automatic,
~. 740-258·1528.
7 ,000 mllaa OBO, $14,000.
• Twin Btd, $80. Now Sl1 CU· 1740)256-8169 •
./·blc Rofrlglrato&lt;. Si25. Full 78 lrti I 4 door $250
• S~t Bad Compioto. $100.
paa,
•
•
- Bally Swing, 515 , 1740)446. neede work. (740)387·5030
••
·,
.,

FOR SALE

hlleny fllles
IIIIG02171 "

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE
97 Beech st.

Tr•n•,.._

Hay &amp; Br!ght Wire , Tie
Straw, Year Round Delivery
'
&amp; Volume Discount Avalla' Grubb't Plano· Tuning &amp; ble. · Heritage
Farf!1.
" Flopalro. Problema? Naod 1004)675-572•.
Tuned? Clll The Plano Dr.
SEam &amp;
• 740-446-4525
. ,........... ~-· Ho•-itf8 01 ..,_..,Fiii!Kiiiiliiui!i&amp;ill,iaoo..,
•...,.......nt
·~
a·
· · lrllutor, Cel For Product Or
Opportunity. 1740)441-1982 Tobacco Plants for Sail .
C&amp;ll Now and order Plants!
JET
To reserve your ear1y spring
AERAnON MOTORS
planting ·call Dawhurot
• Ropalrod, New &amp; Robulh In Graenhoueas
(304)895·
. Stock. Coil Ron Evans, 1· 374011304)695-3789
800-537-9526.

:, Love-t, $1 oo. Hldabed,
$100. Microwave, $25, Llv· lng Room Chair. · $35.
Sweeper, $15. Car Saat,
$25. 1740)448-9742
· ' MOBIL! HOME OWNERS
' 1--~-- &amp; Col
, . I I - I I lVIII!
eman gaB,
oll &amp; furnaces Ineluding hi efficiency heat
pump syateme. We carry a
complete line of Mobile
· ttome ports &amp; acc.soonae.
' IIENNETT"S HEAnNQ &amp;
• CDOUNG 1740)4411-1418
1-IOCHI72-7
·--OIVb.corn/ben- ·
'" NEW AND USED STEEL
'" Steel Baams, Pipe Raber
FO&lt;Concrata,Angle,Chen. nal, Aot Bar, Staal Grating
For Drains, Onvewaye &amp;
Walkways. L&amp;L Scrap Mal·
ala Open Monday, Tuesday,
" Wednelday &amp; Friday, Bam4:30pm. Clooed Thursday,
Seturdey
&amp;
Sunday.
" 1140)448-7300
:
I A-1 - c T-n HI efficiency 90 plus
~ gu fumar:aa Including oil
" and
eleCtriC gaa fumo·
011. HI Enlcloncy Heat
_Pumps, laatunng Tappan•
; , Frao Incredible warranty

"99 GaaGae EC 250 0111
bike, S2700. 11•0)446-11182

RebuiHNoodl
Tranomlsslon,
, Parts,
Engine orNew
Fie- 67 Bayiner

"-·
.,... Baby 1tlml for llle. Cafl

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

In ~ corumn : 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Frl~ay for Insertion

VF.GETAB~ES

:.,. -.to

675-5234

4-WDs

3 Honda Gold Wing ,liopon
Cado. sg,ooo, 1304)576·
3259

Illlrllr.:Bru;~rs""":&amp;":MoroRs~~~l
'

111188 JMp Cherokoa ••4,

Fumact Bumor wftl P'll11l
t1 and - · 165, Guar· CRESS GREENS. You cut
work. (1-40)387· $8.00 per bushel. Already
WI 7728
. cut $12.00 per bushel.
,.r
Available Now through
,.~ e Cornollry Loll for Sale. March . Charleo McKean
' •'' Pr1me Location. Mound Hill. Fann. phone (740)446·9442
II;
15t3)155W731 ovenlng.

(304) 675-1333

Dally

F'Rurrs&amp;

or

•

1\eglster

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

r

~

PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

Display Ads

ns.~r~s~: ~~-~·687·9712

r

·
· 'oeo;.

Nooll!orl, $4750
SkJd Houra.
1140)441· 1547

Ml:ac:HANDisE
·---~=-.,1

In One Week With us
REACH OVER 285,DDD PROSPECTS

Word Ads

2001 Yamaha Rapa, -

I"'*'

r

":!.,.. ruoa. -*"·

To Place

S1lll ...W Warranty $4,500

112·2121. Fluu Moore. -

We Cove-""
Meigs, Gallla,
And Mason
Counties Like
No One
Else Can!

M7roRcrau

~. mar)ic.ay.com/pliaec:teek

TFN

' l

�/

I .

Page 8 8 • The-' Dally Sentinel

'

•

AUEYOOP

NJ:A Cro .. word Puzzle
PHILLIP

ACROll
1 l'roihy

ALDER

I Knolaor
bllmpo

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11 AclrHa
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. 17 Faculty
held
11 Get dirty

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• X 141

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31Tepeover

33 Aden'•
34

57 GoHout
5I GrOll

DOWN
1 Guoh out
2 Whim
3 Sword

P~"f OF Tttf POfT~Y
· ~ ANI&gt; t..OG" eooKS

JUST vlfNT UP
FO~

NO

~ttYMf 0~

llfASON•
BARNEY
C'MON !' TI-IAR 'BIT IN'
LIKE CRA*."tAN' I'M
OUTTA BAIT

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18 ~

light

4 IJmoal bOll
5 Itch
IHoiiVIn
.

COUIIna

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:e::.....
31-PiiYW'rfihi

20 Dellvar a

21

·What's Inside

34 Tllurmenol
·fllm1
37 Cld4

22=~
mlllld

::==..
41 lllroh bfnl
.....

.-

·-·1

=

Buckeyes sutVive, 81

Deaths
Kenneth W. Luman, 82
Randall Randolph .
Ralph E. Oiler, 77
Eddie L. Patrick, 33
John Westfall, 83
~r~ S. Netter, 54
Details, A3

P"

"&lt;I

P"

.....

TI-l( E:&gt;DT Tl-\lt&gt;(, 1M Tf\C. WORLD

Wfl-~1

WOU..D &amp;. H-I( 5EC.O~D

FOR. YOlJWCUD&amp;. TO
(,0 Ot-H, ~iRic.T OICT1

&amp;.ST Tf-\ll'I.G 7

I
ii---i

-----...·

TEN INCHES

OF F"ESH
POWDER~

•

..
•

•

0
I

I

I

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0

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i~---·~~-·--~-~~
-I
e=~~==~~~--------~L-------~~-~--·-~··------~
PEANUTS
I'VE OFTEN WONDERED WJ.I'I'
'lOU DECIDED TO 15ECOME A
CACTUS WI-lEN 'lOU MIGHT
AAVE SEEN AN ORAN6E TREE ..

I ,

lnveston
cautious

0

.

.I

NEW YORK (AP)
Caution 1dominated stock
tradlng Thursday a~ investOrs
made modest purchases -of
blue chips but.. aiso collected
profits, limiting the market's.
advance and ,giving the tech
· sector a losing session .
'
.;
Wall Street's gains grew ·
out of news from the govSt. Patrick's Day was eelernment that companies are
. ebrated In a big way Thursrebuildlng their inventories .
day at the Senior Cltlzens
Analysts said· investors were
Center. Many of the
also cashing in wins from
senlol'EJ arrived wearln' the
the past month.
green. and two Holzer Hospice staff members, KeJJI
The Dow Jc;mes industrial
Templeton, grief coordinaaverage closed up 15.29, or
tor. and Anita Moore. vol0.2 percent, at 10,517.14
unteer' coordinator, cosafter falling 130.50 Wednestumed ,. as leprechauns. ·
day. The Dow. bas gained ·5
en tertalned :' t/le group and
percent in the past month,
passed out shamrocks.
and on Tuesday hit its highAbove,
Moore does a dance
est closing level of the year,
with senior Elsie Smith as
10,632.35.

Lotteries
OHIO

Pick 3: 3-4-3
Pick 4: 7-9-6-7
Buckeye 5: 11-13-15-23-25
Pick 3. day: 2-7-9
·· Pick 4 day: 7-6-8-2

SC:RAM·l~S ANSWERS
Frolic- VIola - Vapor- Jabber- PRICE

!THURSDAY

I passed a used car lot where they advertised cars
.'like new'. After browsing·around the'lot I concluded thaf
the only thing that was like new was the PRICE.

MARCH14l

W.VA.

.Daily 3: 8-9-o
'·

Dally 4: 9·3-3-6
Cllsh 25: 2-8-10·16-18-20

Index
2 Section• - 12 ......
Frid.,y, M:lrch 15, 20(12
Yuur sclf.-c:ontidcnc~ hot~
grown considcr;~hly. h1 ,.ituation!i wh~o.•rc you lll :'IY hav._•
bCt.•n c:ontcn t to be :t f.lllo\\'cr.
in t hl• n·ar aht•ad vuu will
now wa~u to t&lt;tkc o'l, a more
comJmmJin~ mlc.
Plsc;:r:.s (feb. 20- M:~rdJ 20)
-- If you d m rem.tin thick
~kiuned &lt;~g.Jiiist c.:ritici~m todd)'

you can take on a taltcrin~ ·
!&lt;itu:.tion and reorganize it.
There arc always those who
w~nt thing~ fixed , without
~ hanging anythlnK. GPt a
jliiiiF' on life by untlcrstomding
the intlucnn:s thar'll p;"vern
you iu rh~ year nhcaJ. Srml
for your Anro~Gr:~p h prt•dk ..
tion!'.. by 111:1iling S2 to Asrro- .
Gr~ph.

r./u thi~ ucwsp:~twr,
1•.0. llox 175K, Murroy Hill
Station, , N•w York. NY
10 15(). lle' sun.• to U&lt;1te your
Zodiac sign.

ARIES (M.irdt 21 -April 19)
~- The comcqucl lct.'s .of your .
beh:tvior or aclivities rnday

could a,lvcnclv affect othen if
V011'rc

too "Cif-in,·o lvec1 to

~CCO~IIiZL' their prub\Cnl!\.
Think ur. tlu.·m, anJ they'll
think of y&lt;~t1.

TAUilUS (Af&gt;ril 20-Mny
\

·20) t .. :- Although you're not
prone ro get :mltry too e:uily,
when yuu .Po. ynu c:&lt;1n hold a
prolonged grudge:. Sho11ld.
you get hot under tltc cOllar
today, try' to be forHivi ng. ·
GEMINI (Moy 21 -J un• 20)
-- If )'OU .l llow fc1.• lin~ s to
govern your attitude today,
~mall i~sue~ could cause you
comid(.•rable fn15tr&lt;1tion. Take
time to think thing~ nut, and
J,robll.'tns wiU ev&lt;1porate.
CANCER Uun&lt; 21-July
22) -- Ch;mccs are vou'll reMTt't it if you choo5c ·to igt'lorc
your good jml~nH~lH toJtty
n.nd deride to p:1s~ along gos- .
stp. You could cause trouble
for the persom invnlvcd.

LEO (Jr1ly 23-Au~. 22) -KidJinK yourself about reality

c.:mtld cotuse you to makt" a
very bad judgment call tod;ty.
· You\·e got thC' brrdtu to fip;ure thin19- our without r.csortin~ to hood\-..·inkins yourself.

. VIRGO (AuK. 23-S&lt;pt. 22)
-- Stand up for your rights to ...
dr~y aud don't :~How anyonl! to
coerce you i~to involving
yomself in sumethinK in
which, you do wan.t to pilrticipatr. lle your own persnn.
LIIJRA (Sept 23-0cr. 23) -

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
DearAbby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

- Think of your competitors
' :a being bener than you or at
least as ~ood as you &lt;1re, and
you'll fare very well today.
Underestimating thenl would
leave you vulner;tble to defeat.
SCORI'/0 (Oct. 2~-Nov. '
22) -- Thing• you enjoy doing you'll do with gr~!'lt efficacy torlay, but when it comes
to ·tasks or a"signments you

find diuasteful, it'll be quite
ai10ther.story.
~

rant in Middleport, where she worked as a
waitress. A private funeral service for Ackerman was held Monday.•
,
The indictment was filed on Thursday
BY' BRIAN J. REED
morning, shortly before a preliminary hearing
BREEOil&gt;MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM·
to determine probable cause was to be held in
POMEROY - The Meigs Co~nty Grand · Meigs County Court.
,
. .
Jury has returned a three-count indictment
Crow contmued Qualls bond of $1 molhon
against Eric A. Qualls, accusing him of two cash, set last week by County Court Judge
counts of aggravated murder and a count of Steven L. Story.
kidnapping in the March 7 shooting death of
Qualls' next court appearance will be an initial pre- trial on March 25. A final pre-trial
Rebecca Ackerman.
Qualls, 26, of Middleport, pleaded innocent hearing was set for April 15.
'
to the three charges on Thursday afternoon
William . Eachus of Gallipolis is lead trial
before Common Pleas Court Judge Fred W. counsel on Quails' behalf, and K. Robert Toy
Crow III: The two aggravated murder charges of Athens is co-counsel. Both were ori_ginally
carry possible death penalties, and all three appointed by Story last week, and attended
charges carry firearms specifications. Crow set Thursday's arraignment,' as did Meigs County
~ase for trial on May 7.
Prosecuting Attorney Pat Story, and assistant
.-/ Qualls allegedly shot Ackerman, 24, at point- prosecutors Christopher E. Tenoglia and Linda
.· blank. range just outside The Corner Restau- Warner on behalf of the state.

Weather.

S©"RJ!lA-L££!fs· .....

BIG NATE

ualls arraign

Happy St. Patrick's Day! .

-In

· THE BORN LOSER

RACINE

Villa e seeks ~
fun s·for
water plant
.

3-count indictment
handed down

23 Rft-K:e 47 Tiny loll
24 Mr. Fudd ol 41 · - - ,

Leaders in time! of
cartooM
mona•url"
•end other men
25 "The - · 48 The
to their deaths. Most
31110IIdmlp 10 F1m.
17 -~
50 PluM
probably do it withrefuge
lllln
lllbt.
11 Gloomy
21 Ceremont.l 51 Wind cllr.
311oho
out giving the matter
. 1ft
52 VItO
1211M... ol
lttwkll
a second thought, but
"SpMd"
30 Ml-'a
113 Plwllx lor
II LAX
some obviou•ly conVIfMft
40,GO'Uimlll
IIIIUIItore 32 :::'Vlln 54
pllltiC
sider the sit~1ation .
Durjng a speech iu
London's Guildhall
on July 12, 1945,
Dwight D. Eisenhower said, "Humility 1hust olwoys be the
portion 'of any man
who receives acclaim
earned in the blood of
his followers .a nd the
sacrifices of his
friends."
llridgi: player• sacrifice cards and tricks,
but -- in theory at
least -- no blood is
spilled. · In this deal,
you reach four hearts.
West storts with the
two top clubs. How
CELEBRITY CIPHER
wouldlyou proceed?
by Luis campos
With' a minimum
(;-.y C/Plerer'IPIOII,....,.- hom quolll-111' , _
opening, two spades is ·
pooplt, pul and - ' · &amp;ch
lht clpllor alando for anothor.
Todlly's clue: w equa/3 P
a much better rebid
than two diamonds.
And when. North re- .
OBTR
LBX
TCHRX
'FVRHU
ceivcd spade support,
HR
YLXHZ
HX
~JSBJFTO.~
he upgraded his hand
to a game-force from
...:.. VTLIDFHL
VJHXXTL
a game" invitation.
If South ruffs at
'RXJDLNT
ABK ·WBXTLX
trick tw'o, he foils. If
he draws all the
UATDW
FVRHU
HR.'
trumps, then, when
UBKDJO
LBTZ
he knocks out the
•
spode ace, the defendPREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'Uo II the little shadow whiCh IUIII•
ers nm fh e clubs. And
ac.-- the grill and IOHe IIUH In the sunset.' - Crowfoot, 1111'.
if declarer, after learnwarda
ing about the 4-1
WOlD ·
heart break, tries im- TIIAT DAILY
:
'UIZIII
mediately to drive out - - - - - - - Ultd ~y CLAY I. 'DIU.N _.;__ _ __
the spade ace, East
Roarrongo I'"'" of tho
ducks the first round,
leur ~eromblod wordo ~·
wins the second, and low lo form lour olmple wcrda. 1.....---._,--,
give• 'his partner a
RHUSTH
spade ruff. An even1
2
tual diamond winner
I
I
I
1
1
.
is the defense's fourth

...........

Tttf

Hometown Newspaper

Wlllllnga
5I CIIIHna

21 &lt;Mtlllghll 7 FIUII

w~r

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Melp County's

55 Tornado

....
:::r . ......

21 lluggtfl

l .......

•

41 Ylldng

- -·23

De&amp;ler. Soullt
YM!nenable: EMst·Weat

~0/&lt;f

INSIDE: 2002 Home .mprovement Edition

Thursday, March 14, 2002

-.mydllllyMntlnel.com

· C&gt;

A3
63-5
B6
A6
A4
A2
A3
B1-3
A2

2002 Ohio Valley Publisloina Co.

BY TONY M. lEACH
TLEACHI#'MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

RACINE - Tentative engineering reports on Racine's
proposed water treatment facility were discussed during village council's recent meeting.
·
·
Engineers Richard Sanson and Aaron Pennington of
SIECO Inc., Lancaster, presented
council with a draft of the prelimiilary engineering report on the village's prop.osed new treatment
facility.
~ffer reviewing the reports,
Mayor Scott Hill and Clerk David
Spencer informed council they
recently filed fot a grant through
the DistreS&lt;ed Area Program for ·
money that would help fund the
project.
Council adopted an ordinance
which will require cross connections on certain water hook-ups
·throughout the village. This is a ·
requirement of the Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA) and will prevent back flows into the village water
supply.
Council approved a resolution declaring the following
items as surplus: a 1984 Ford dump truck; a snow plow; a
1990 Ford one-ton flat bed truck; and a 1992 Ford fire
engme.
The resolution authorizes the mayor to offer the equipment for sale to the townships, and if the townships are not
PluH IH Racine, .U

Freeman appointed
to health board
BY BRIAN J. REEO
BREED®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

•

Templeton works the
crowd. Recognized. as the
best dressed couple at the
hollday fling were Mary
Lou and EU&amp;ene Hawkins,
right. of Middleport. (Charlene Hoeflich)

Environmentalists win concession
in bill limiting EPA fines in Ohio
. COLUMBUS (AP) - . The
Ohio Environmental Pro;Jtection Agency would have five
years to clear · its backlog of
pollution cases under a bill a
Hou•e committee approved
Thursday.
The original proposal would
have given regulators up to
two years from the bill's enactment tO impose fines in cases
where the EPA had been
aware of a problem for at least
three years.

POMEROY -Dr.Joseph Freeman, D.O., was elected to
the Meigs County Board of Health during Thursday
evening's annual meeting of the Meigs County General
Health District Advisory Council.
The council, made up of the presidents of township
•
boards of trustees, the president of the Meigs County commissioners, and village mayors, or those officials' designees,
meets each year to appoint a board member and to hear
reports on the board's activities and the accomplishments of
the health department, which the board of heiUth oversees.
Freeman. who practices family medicine at Holzer Meigs
C linic, replaces Dr. Scott Smith, D.0. State law requires the
board to include a physician who lives or practices in the
county.
Ed Durst, ·president of the · Meigs County Township
Trustees Associatio~. was .re-elected president of the Advisory Cou ncil , and Marco Jeffers was re-elected secretary.
· Scott Wilford, Southeastern Ohio regional coordinator
for ihe Health Advisory Network, discussed the network's
activiti es in light of the anthrax scares following the Sept. 11
attacks .
According to Wilford, the Ohio Department of Health
' suspicious substances from every
has tested more than I ,600
area of the state including Meigs County, but none were
determined dangerous.
Auditor Nancy Parker Campbell presented information
about the health department's operational budget, and the
effect that a voter rejection of the board's proposed 1-mill
levy renewal would have on the budget.
Ba.•ed on a year-end carryover of$22,000, Campbell projects a $208,000 operating deficit at the end of next year if
the levy is not renewed.
The annual meeting was held at the Meigs County Multipurpose Senior Center.
,

The bill also would limit the
time the agency has to fine polluters in new cases. That deadline J:emains at five years from
the dlscovery of a problem. .
Backers say the measllre is
designed to give businesses
and developers more certainty
about when pollution cases
will be resolved. Opponents
say the bill could allow polluters· to e~cape penalties by
arguing that a problem existed
for years before a formal

.

invcstigation .began .
n
While
environmen,tal
activists won the concession on
cases already under review, they
failed to get the Hquse .Energy
&amp; Environment Commi ttee to ·
force companies to inform the
EPA of violations in writing.
The committee voted 11 - 6,
mostly along party line• with
Republicans prevailing, to rec ommend the bill for passage.
The EPA h_as about 240
cases under review.

. SAGITTAit/US (Nov. 23Dcc. 21) -- Uad fe&lt;iing. could
result tod&lt;1y if you or a friend
expect r(Jo much fron1. one ·
another. Give each other free~
dom of ar:tion, and nil will
tum out well.
....
CI\PRICO/lN (Doc. 22Jan. IY) -- Small domestic issuu could be blown tQtally
out of proportion today if you
· allow petty things to domin;uc, such

a~

Attention Aetna Sulascrllaen

•
"

The Holzer M~ical Center Emergency Department
offers highly qualified doctors and nur.ses to help you
with any medical emergency.
Your Holzer emergency service coverage has n0t changed
·and emergency room charges remain covered by Aetna.

"'

•

how much

mmconc ~pent on a r;ocial activiry. Let it go.

'•

For more i~formation, or if yo~ have questions,
please call (740) 446·5568.

AQUARIUS Uan. 20-f&lt;b.
19) -- •Follow' your ·own advice tod&lt;1 y imtead of li.~tenintt
to do-gooJrrs who butt imo
your busin~:~s. e5pecially 'i.vhen
it comeHo the pcnonol affairs
of you~ loved ones.

"

\J

.

"' .

-

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

.

www.holzer.org
.

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