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                  <text>job market!

graduates
Rell-worlcl wonies

NEW YORK (AP) - .
When Jeffi'ey levy finished
QlUcge i.n December, he fig·
\Ired by .,ng he'd be con\·
lOOting 10 a new job on Wall
S1reet, earning $40,00G-plus
~ year and celebrating his
financial independence by
looking for his own apart.

at Cornell University in ltha·

a~euce for newer ·anecdocal.

ca, N.Y.
highfinns. are takina
"It's not that they've never jobs in the less glammlus oil
had to look for a job," Shafer ind defense industries. die
said. "It's that they've never said.
majority 011he ooleye&amp; repooted
faced real adversity."
At the University of Cali·
Job mar1c11t lndicam--. down
The change in climate. is fomia at Berkeley, whose
hom 1he p.wious year.
blowing through just about gradu~ were snapped up
every campus.
aunng the dQt-com boom,
ment.
.
At Cornell and nine other many companies that did the
Four li\onths later, Levy is
business schools that com- . most aggressive hiring no
still planted in his parents • ·
pare figures, with bare!¥ a longer exist That is combOOse in Melville, N.Y. He
month until graduation, JUSt pounding adrop in corporate
58 pen:ent ofMBA graduates turnout at campus' major job
doesn't need to :set the alann
have jobs. Thai is down from fairs in September and Januclock and his commute is ·
more than 80 percent at the ary. .:..St year, each fair ran
limited to the distance
same time in recent years. three days, with I00 different
between his bed and the
AP
SOme students, who headed employers each day. This
oomputer, where he logs on
off to graduate school as a year, each fair. was cut back
day after day, prospecting for
newest entrants. to the work way to change fields or jump to two days, with just 90
a~~ try to make a daily · force- most of whom were up the corporate ladder, are companies at each sessionschedule for yourself ... just still in grade school when the · gratefuljust to be going be.ck an overall drop of 40 percent
to make yourself feel like country faced its last reces- to their old jobs.
"We do not anticipate
you 'te doing something," sion - is letting the air out of . At the University of Texas going back to three· days.
says levy, who earned a expectations . artificially in Austin, where engineering That was symptomatic of the
bachelor's degree in finance inflated by the past decade's graduates were used to being great times which will never
wooed by the states' comput· return,'' said Tom Devlin,
from Hofstra University. in record economic boom.
er
and telecommunications director of California-Berke·
Hempstead, N.Y. "Anything · That · means fewer offers,
to get your mind off the col- often for less prestigious firms, once-common signing ley's career center.
lege job market."
jobs, at lower pay and with bonuses have all but dried
Evidence of the soft job
up.
Thousands of students, greatly reduced incentives.
market goes beyond the
''Our students, the really
now weeks away from their
"People anticipated when
own graduation ceremonies they came into business top-notch ltids, were getting
at oollege campuses across school that 'If I do well and four and five offers - and
the country, are encountering have a good background, it's certainly we're ·not seeing
mUch the same discourage- . all going to happen.' The fact that this ~ear." said Nancy
mel\t.
.
that, all of a sudden, that is Evans, director of Texas'
· It's not just that it's 'tough not true has sort of a been a Engineering Career Assis· · It hardly 5eems possible
to find a job. Even as mindbender," said Richard lance Center.
that it was only six months
Many electrical engineer· ago that terrorism struck our
employers make offers, the Shafer, associate dean of the
extta challenge for the graduate management school ing students, who had shown shores. But in that short period of time, every man,
woman and child in this
flower garden include noon to 1 p.m. at the Meigs country has learned that our
BugGeta, Deadline Bullets, County Senior Citizen Cen- lives will never be the same;
America's farmers and
Grandslam and Slugata.
ter: Before the exchange, at
ranchers
stand solidly behind
Improve . your garden 11 a.m., listen to various
f•vmNprn
against slugs and snails by Meigs County Master Gar· the nation in the fight against
fall. Overwintering adult cleaning up flower and veg- deners speak about plant tertorism. America's agriculslugs, sllails and hatching etable beds each fall of all propagation, caring for tute is an imj!Ortant part of
eggs laid last fall will be excess leaves and trash. ·perennials and basics of bee· national secunty and a main·
stay of the economy. Our
~mergihg alld are voracioUs Li~t the !lffi6Unt of earlr, keeping. This program is free
rural
communities are a
fteders of many of our early spnng-apphed mulch unt1l and open to the public. Bring reservoir
for America's
$pring leaves, especially late May (you may have to your extra · perennial divi· moral and religious strength.
purchase now to have avail· sions, seeds and bulbs and
hosiiiS. Control may be sim- able
The terrorists struck a terrilate spring). Drier exchange them for new variply providing them with a condi.tin
ions adversely effect eties for your garden. This ble blow at America's finanplace to hide during the day the growth of slugs and . event is sponsored by the cial center and govemrnent.
like a board and then to pick snails. Some homeowners Meigs County Senior Citi· They destroyed thousands of
~m up each day and kill suggest spreading sand,
zens Center and OSU Exten· IIves, but the heartland of
them. Drowning in partially wood ash, or diatomaceou5 sion Meigs County Master America beats stronger than
filled low pans of beer has earth around the plants you Gardeners.
ever. We didn't have people
proven sucwssful to . many wish to protect
(Hal Knun is the Meigs paclting up their belongings
hOmeowners with problem
nnn
County Agriculture &amp; Natur· · and running for the borders.
slUgs and snails.
Plan to participate in this a/ Resources Agent, The
Some chemical controls year's Annual Perennial Plant Ohio State University Exten·
that tnay be used around the Exchange on April 18 from sion.)
En!PioYirt ant pursujlg
~-!lois-~
thin
il past years, accon:ling to
a IIUMI)I 01 1&lt;12 ooi1e(/a8 A large

Companies surveyed last
fall by the National Associa·
lion OfColleaes arid EmPloyers said they planned to scale
bllck campus hiring by 20
percent But in a new survey,
still under way, about a third
of employers say they are
reducing job offers to gradu·
ales even further, . said
Carnille
Lucke11baugh,
employment information
manager for NACE. .
'"'Wo years ago you had
people (corporate recruiters)
going to spring break trying
.to get people on board," she
said. "It's just an incredible
shift."
More than 140 schools sur·
veyed by NACE report
salaries offered many of their
araduates are down this year.
Most business administration
maJors are taking positions as·
tramees instead of consul·
tants, for average pay of
$35,200, down 7.1 percent
from lust year.
·
Students majoring in logis-

America~ formers

Kneen

tution and you don't get
accepted? Is that the end of
your college plans? I would
hope that you would have
another plan-such as attend·
ing a local community col·
lege for the first year and
then reapplying for admis.
.sion to your college of choice
the next year.
It is important for our high
school graduates to give seri •
ous consideration to continuing their education at an
institution of hi~her educa·
tion. College IS essential
since most job opportunities

·Bowman
lromPipD1
who applied In the spring.
How would you like to be
paying back college loans for
severll ye!lfS after graduation, all because you didn't
apply to college early?
Also, students may want to
have a "backup plan." I
know that this tnay sound
unnecesl!llty to you, but what
If you only apply to o.ne lnsti-

·Smith

hom PllpD1

I

trlbution Will increase.
The new "Uniform'' table
11 actually the old MDIB
table, which wu previously
U8ed when 11 non-spouse benet'iciary wliB more thlll) 10
yeats younger than the IRA
owner. It gives a factor b!Jsed
on the joint llfe expectancy
o{ you attd someone 10 years
)'ounger.
Under the new rules,
eVetyone uses this table,
l'eflll'dle~s of your beneficiary sage att~ even If you ha~e
changed beneflciaries, have a
charity u a beneflciBI)', or
have no berteflclary. (There
Is one exceptlllrl. If yoUr beneflciaty is your spouse who
Is more than 10 yeats
Y!&gt;Unger than you, you use
his or her actual age alid the
old joint life expectancy
table, Under · this cin:umSialice, your minimum dlslri·
bution doesn't change.

No more Irrevocable

. decWou

The main benefit of the
new rules is that you are no
longer ''locked" into the ben·
eflcilll)' and minimum dislri· ·
butlon calculation method
you chose when you were
70-1/2. Another advaiitage Is

..

now whelf beneficiaries
inherit IRAs, they can stretch
distributions out over their
own life .expectancy.
Under the old rules, this
fantastic estate planning
technique Was only available
to people w~o chose. th.e
proper beneficiary and distri·
bution method at 70-1/2.
Depending on the initial
meth&lt;;Jii chosen, many bene·
ficlanes · would have been
required to. withdraw (and
pay ,taxes . on) the e~ti~e
1r11iented IRA balance ~~~n
a year. Now, all benefic1anes
can take advantage of the
"stretch "
Here'~ an example. Joe,
age 75, named his wife,Betty, his beneficiary When
he turned 70-112. He chose
the "recalculation" method
using thCir joint life
'expectancy. Sadly, Betty
passed away and Joe named
his son Roger, his new bene·
ficiary.'On ~- 31, 2000. his
account
balance
was
$300 000.
011L
With the old rules, Betty's
life expectancy is zero and
Joe caJculates the minimum
distribution using his single
life expectancy (12.5). Even
thouW! Roger is his new
beneficiary, Joe is locked
Into the beneficiary and
method he chose for his first
required distribution. Hls
'

nger tames Augusta ••• again, 6

available today require
advanced technical training
or a college degree. With so
many options to choOse from
including Certificate, associate dogree or bachelor's
degree~· college has
somethtng for everyone.
Make your plans today to put
college in your futute.
(Liqvme Rase Bowman is
vice president for ftnancitJl
and administratiye affairs at
Rio Grande Community Collese. P.O. Box 326, Rio
Grande, Ohio 45674, 2457236.)

tics and materials lliiUIIFment are also settling for.
trainee positions, with pay
averaging $39,800, down
12.3 percent
"Students are sometimes
very disappointed by the
. obvious OPI,Xlrtunities that
come in . thetr direction and
they are sort of trying to fig~
ure out whetl!er to compromise," said Marvin Reed, ·
director of The Career Center
at Hofstra. "Recruiting is
down more than 35 pen:ent
and it was ll9l just a slide in
numbers, as much as a slide
in perceived prestige."
·,
There are · exceptions.
Accounting graduates, nCarly
always in snort sup:r~nare
ave!'&amp;ging $40,300
·es;
up 3.2 percent from,last year;
according to NACE. Gradu~
ates from the nation's schools
of pharmacy are . also in
demand, fielding multiple
offers from fast-expanalng
drug store chains, jobs thaf
pay that $70,000 a year ot
more, career counselors say. '

support national security :·

Cireen·White game, 6

Family Fun
Fest offers ·
·something
for everyone'
Event planned for May 4 at
Family Life Center in Middleport

Deaths
Glenn F. Young Sr., 71
Buford Capehart, 63
Details, :s

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY -. "It's going to be a fun day not only fo;
krds . but therr parents and others who come by to partrcrpate m games and learning activities, take advantage of
health screenings, and enjoy the entertainment and food ."
That's what Brenda Curfman of\he Meib" County Health
Department said about this year's
Family Fun Fest, which will be
"Jt's going to be a
held at the Family Life Center in
fun day not only
Mrddleport on May 4.
.
It has been described as an
for the kids, but
event offering "something for
their parents and
everyone -just one hi~ multiothers who come
gcneratrun~l e.vent that centers
·by to pa:rfidnnlo
on the famrly.' ·
.
,_...,,.
The focus of the program is .
·Ill_ 90ffleJf ~nd
helping to develop posi tive life
leammg activities,
skills within the family . unit toke advantage of
whrle offenng health and ·social . health,..~
· .·
educational opportunities.
..v f!e!Jmgs,
In previous years, Fun Fest has
and enJOY the
been held at Eastern E,lementary entertainment and
School. This yca.r, Curfinan said
fcxxf."
the Middleport Church volun·
teered the Family Life Center
Branda Curfman, MeiQI
. and offered to provide the food. Cou!lly Health QePIIf'I!Mn1
Activities will begin at 10 a.m.
and continue until 2 p.m. There will b0 health screenings,
fun activities and learning opportunities along with· entertainment throughout the day.
They include hat making, art work, collage making and
poetry writing. El bear and Samahtha the Skunk wiU be
there along with fire trucks and emergency squad~. Kids will
be able to get temporary tattoos, enter hoola hoop contests,
enjoy nutritional snacks, and dance to the music of
th~

High: 80s, Low: 60s
Deblls, 2

Hoover Co.
employees
win Lotto
NORTH
CANTON
(AP) - At least one of the
45 Hoover Co. employees
who claim to have the winning ticket to the state
record $75 million · lottery
jackpot said she would be at
work today.
"I think I'm still in a
dream,'' Terrie Ross told
The (Canton) Repository.
"It's a shock to the system,
but a good shock."
The winners asked for the
cash option, which means
.they'll share $22.9 million
afier federal and state taxes if
the ticket is confirmed as the
winner. Split by 45, that's
about $509,000 apiece.
Only one ticket had'all six
numbers for the Super Lotto
Plus jackpot Saturday night

With the weather warming, George Wright, Pomeroy councilman, was joined by Dale Riffle, left,
village employee, for some work In the planting areas In downtown Pomeroy. Here they replace
landscape timbers around some of the small bed.s In preparation for early May planting of flow·
ers donated by Bob Bernltz of Bob's Market In Mason. W.Ve. Downtown beautification Is a project of the Pomeroy Merchants Anoclatlon. (Cherl~ne. Hoeflich~
.
r .,,
. ~ ....
,.
··'"""*
..

EASTER COLORING CONTEST

"Rockin' Reggie."

Tbere will be drug prevention awareness programs, f;ee
cho(esterol and blood glucose screenings, health information, eye. examinations, glaucoma screenings, beauty tips,
rnformanon on tobacco use prevention, finger printing,
blood pressure screenings, and immunizations. Numerous
door prizes will be a\Varded.
Wendy from Wendy's Rcstauram will be there and performing at 11 a.m. will be the Rock-N-Country Cloggers,
and. at noon Dwight Icenhower, Elvis impersonator.
Agencies hosting the event are the Meigs County Health
Department, Holze.r Medical Center, Holzer Meigs Clinic,
Meigs County Job and Family Services, Meigs County
Family and Children First Council. Ohio State UniversitY
Extension Office, Ohio University College of Osteopathic
Medicine Area Health Education Center.

Pick 3: 1·5·2
Pick 4: 2·0-8-4
Supmottu: 17·25-29-31·32·35
Bonus &amp;.Ill: 42
Kicker: 8·9·9·3·4· t
Bucktye 5: 5·2h23·26-30
PickS day: 7·9·3
Pick 4 day: 4-1·0.0

required distribution for

-

SPRUCING UP POMEROY

OHIO

2001 is $24,000 ($300,~
divided by 12.5). If Joe dies,
his son will have to with·
draw the entire account bal· ·
ance the next year.
"'Vs. New
With the new rules, Joe
uses the factor for his age on
, the new "Uniform" table21.8. So his required distributi on for 2001 is $13,76 I
($300,000 divided by 21.8).
That means, for 2001,
$10,000 more than under lhe
old rules can continue to
grow tax-deferred in the
account
·
When Roge~ inherits the
account, he. 'Y•ll be ~bl~ to
c.alculate mtmmum "::stri~·
lions based on ~1s hfe
expectancy, allowmg the
account to benefit from tax·
defetred growth even longer.
Most people :- ~tJ.t IRA
owners and benefic1anes will benefit under. the 'new
rule$, but the IRS Will let you
use the old rules for 2001 if
you wish. Before you with·
draw II!'Y money from your
IRA this year, make sure you
consult your financial or tax
advisor for more details on
the new rules and how they
will affect you.
·
(Mark Smith is an invest·
ment executive with Smith
Partners.at Advest Inc. in its
6allipolis ojfice.) ·

Whafs inside

\

Hometown Newsp11per

'•

people, particularly how well
1t attempts to feed its people.
Countries that support ter~
rorism arc never very good at
growing food. Their govern~
ments only grow hatreds.
might be justifiably
Jill Smith They
angry with .America if we
kept our food bounty for ourserves, but no country has
GUEST VIEW
been more generous with.
food and humanitarian aid
,
Instead, they wept and than the United States.
Terrorism
will
never
win
prayed for the dead and miss- .
1ng. They put out their flags, out over all that is good in
renewed their vows to tliis America. Farm families
great nation and asked God know that. Rural communi,
to bless America.
ties, the heartland of Ameri·
While we've watched air ·ca. feel broken-hearted over
travel, tourism and other the losses that occurred iii
industries work to rebound, our cities, but they are ftnil in
farmers have _pressed on, pro- their ~lief that God will
ducing the food and fiber that · bless America once more.
is so essential to our well·
(Jill 'Smith is organization·
being. One way you can take a/ director for the Athensthe measure of a country is Lawrence-Gallia
Farln
by how well it looks after its Bureau.)

'

Melp County's

W.VA.

Dally :t: 8-4-6
Dally 4: 0.5·6-0
Pat::wbal: 16-22-32·33-38 (13}

Index
1 Sadlon - 10 Paps

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
pear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
, Sports
Weather

3
7·9
10
5
4

3
3
6-7
2

c:&gt; 2002 Ohio Valley Publhhlnl Co.

THE WINNERS - Winners In The Dally Sentinel's Easter coloring contest pictured here with
David Harris, advertising representative, are Olivia Cleek of Pomeroy, 4 to 8 age group, first;
Breanna Taylor of Racine, second, 9 to 12 age group; Ben Tillis of Rutland, second, 4 to 8 age
group, and Julie Tillis of Rutland, tnlrd, 9 to 12 age group. Winners not pictured were cat Maynard of Pomeroy, 4 to 8 age group, third; and Molly Smith of Pomero~. 9 to 12 age group, first.
Arst place prize winners received $15; second place, $10, and third place $5. (Charlene Hoefl)ch)
·

FUN FEST PLANNING - Gathering recently for a final plan-

ning session In preparation for the May 4 Family Fun Fest
where everything Is free and the public Is welcome were
representatives of the host agencies. In the planning group
were left to right, standing, Jaclyn Sheets, Connie Little,
Becky Baer. Diana Jeffers, artd Margie Skidmore:. and seated, Heather Haggy, Brenda Curfman, Leanne Cunningham
and Teresa Dunfee. (Charlene Hoeflich)

Hoi- Clinic 06/GYN Dlp&gt;rimont, ontJ
•
lb. CHM Boon~ of,4Jcoii.,J. 011/g 'Alldi&lt;ricn and Montoi Hoo1t1&gt; Sonri&lt;.t

•M
Satlurdcw.

A.nril

•1... Gwo•lc

~d111

WhM Doo1

··~···

20, 2002 • 7:30AM • Registr~a~lion~;diSr;;;;kF;;t
8:00 · I lAM ·lectures

bvot~: ~.t!~~=!_;o~=:=~~~-~-.
5

L.:=::=~~~~~~~~~~~~~=====::===~~

1

II Wllam 5chmiclt) JD • AIIMflinf Dirfdol, Oftio Slafll Medical a-wl
and Crolg KlmWt, Pharm. D., IMA, MS, 1PH • $y11M1 Dirfdol 171
I'I.Gmoq S. .W:.., '*"- IAetlittJI CMIIw

·For mort information or lo

eali

'

44•·1011.

MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org

�\

Monday, ADrll15, 2002

Ohio .

The Daily Sentinel
Tuesday, Aprl116

.1 Col•"""'• 112"il4· I

0
W. VA.

0 ~--~-·~·

Vlo--

Showell

M1•d• AprilS.-

•

COLUMBUS (AP) As Ohio is looking out for his district's concerns, Supreme Court.
•
debates the authority of health boards to whereas the president must look to what
There, supporters of such bans have
ban smoking, Republicans must lead the helps the entire nation.
another prominent Republican ally.
charge without their chief flag bearer.
Sen. Lynn Wachtmann, a Republican Attorney General Betty Montgomery
Both the GOP-controlled House and from Napoleon, sponsored the . Ohio issued a legal opinion last April statin8
Senate have passed a bill that would pro- smoking ban bill, one of several attempts that Ohio law.does allow health board's
hibit health boa!ds from issuing compre- dating to at least 1995 to limit health
hensivl" smo.king bans without the boards' authority to issue such bans.
· to ban smoking ,in all public places.
approval of elected officials.
Wachtmaim and other . supporters of
The opinion, which has leg:al weight
Gov. Bob Taft; a Republican, has the bill argue that only elected bodies but is not as Strong as a law, says the
threatened to veto the bill in its current such as city councils .should be able to boards have the ability to issue such bans .
form. A joint legislative committee has enact such bans.
as long as the regulations are necessary to
been trying for five months to work out
They also argue that the bill ~inforces promote public.health, and as long as th~
a compromise with Taft.
existing law, which they say also pro- rules are "reasonable, nondiscrirninato.:.
The split between GOP lawmakers hibits health boards from banning smok- ty" and don't conflict with other state
and Taft is a classic case of competing ing. ·
laws.
·
constituencies, said James Lindeen, a
"I do not condone legislation by
.The state Supreme Coun has beeR
University of Toledo political science appointed boards," Wachtmann said asked the same question that led to
professor.
.
when he introduced his bill almost a Montgomery's opinion: does state law
State lawmakers report to a few hun- year ago.
give health bOards the authority to enact
dred thousand residents, whereas Taft
Anti-smoking activists are grateful for such bans?
,
must represent aU 11.4.million Ohioans, '111ft's support,· without which the bill
The case before the court stems from
probably would have passed by now.
he said.
il ·comprehensive ban that the Toledo:
"T he statewide constituency is in
"One thing we have found ironic is
favor of trying to limit smoking in pub- that Republicans typically talk about Lucas County Board of Health approved
lie places, but nonstatewide constituen- local control, and that's what this is," said in June. A federal judge delayed the ban
cies look at I)Us more as go~~rnment · Chris Schulte, a Tobacco-Free Ohio while the state Supreme Court debate~
infringement, and 'My right to smoke:" spokeswoman, .referring to the health the law.
•
Lindeen said.
boards.
In Meigs County, however, a similar
The split is a familiar one at the federWhat Ohio law says - or doesn't say ban approved Jn November is in force,
allevel, he said, especially when it comes - about health boards and smoking said Norma Torres, Meigs tounty healtJ,.
to economic policy. A local congressman bans is currently before the Ohio commissioner.

I MMan.ld 110'182' I •

Clol.l&lt;tw

Pap~

GOP officeholders split on smoking ban

Ohio weather

SuMy Pt Cloudy

~

T·lloons

Rain

Aut'ries

Snow

k:e

Near-record temps
expected for T~esday
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

It will be dry and unseasonably warm across the Mid-Ohio
Valley on Tuesday, the National Weather Service said.
Te111peratures wiU climb into the 80s over most of the region
and could set new records at 1ome locations.
Lows on Monday night were expected to be around 60.
It still · will be warm on Wednesday but clouds and showerS
will move into the state ahead of an approaching cold. front.
Sunset today will be at 8:10p.m. and sunrise \)n .Tuesday at
6:52a.m.
Weather Forecast
• Tonight... Partly cloudy. Lows in 'the lower 60s. South winds
5 to 10 mph.
Tuesday... Partly cloudy. A chance of showers and thunderstorms in the afternoon. Very warm with near record ·highs in
the mid 80s. South winds around 10 mph. Chance of rain 30
percent.
Tuesday night., .Partly cloudy. Lows in the lower 60s. ·
Wednesday... Partly cloudy with a chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Continued warm. Highs in the lower 80s.
Chance of rain 30 percent.
Wednesday night ... Partly cloudy with a chance of showers.
Lows in the upper 50s. Chance of rain 30 percent.
Extended Forecast
Thursday... Pardy cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstorms. Highs in the mid 70s.
· friday... Mostly cloudy. A chance of showers and thunderstorms du,mg the day... Then a chance of showers. Lows in the
upper 50s and highs in the mid 70s.
Saturday... Partly cloudy. A chance of showers and thunderstorms during the day... Then a chance of showers in the
evening. Lows in the lm~er 50s and highs in the lower 70s.
· Sunday... Mostly clear. Lows in the lower 40s and highs in the
upper 60s.

stow

See Butch eoo~s
on Page 6 in tbdiy.s Sintihel

.gnMip puis out of

SUppollilll
CINCINNATI (AP) The city's most influential
group of black clergy has left
the coalition conducting ·a
boycol! against Cincinnati
because of the state of race
relations.
The Baptist Ministers· Conference of Cincinnati has voted
to pull out of the Coalition for
a Just Cincinnati. The decision
was announced Friday, when
U.S. Attorney G.eneral John
Ashcroft signed an agreement
between the federal government and. the city reforming
the police department.
The Rev. Calvin Harper,
president of the Baptist Ministers Conference, said Saturday
that the organization will take
a position on the boycott
soon. He said the group left
the coalition because it wanted more autonomy.,
:·It's really a decision about
our group being free to
choose our own position and
speak for itself on issues,"
Harper said. "It's not a vote or
a move against anything, just a
desire to be independent."
The group, which regularly
endones political candidatea
and issues, represents moat
Baptist preachen in the region
and was one of the most politically powerful organizationi .
affiliateli with the coalition.
Rev. Stephen Scott, who is
vice chairman of the coalition,
said the conference waa concerned about becoming involved
in a potentially costly lawsuit
6led aginst boycott backers.
The Cincinnati hrts Association has sued the boycott back-

ers, claiming they hurt business
by persuading entertainers
such as Whoopi Goldberg and
Bill Cosby to puU out of
scheduled performances.
The boycott began after,
riots broke out last April following the fatal shooting of an
unarmed black man by a
white police officer.
William lqrkland, president
of the Mrican-American Cultural Commission and a coalitiqn member, said the Baptist
ministers' decision won't affect
the boyc:ott.

Pl,.;.n! \l.lfoyl-jocpi!•l. indud1n9 !he
8"".J of TNc!eoc. momb."' oF !ho meJieol
•t.ff, employee&lt; onJ volvntee••· ..ouiJ like to
,.lute l=ronci&gt;

G.J=ugc&gt;ro, MD.

" Fomil4 p'l't:!ditioner, who recentllj T"tti.,...J

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

a~er 75 ljtCIT"~ oF deJictateJ

tewice to

h;,

pc;1tienh , communit4 Glnd the Fcacil it4.

Th.nk you to• !ho J;ffo,..nce.youm•Jo ..

'
.We remember those who have
passed away
and are especiaUy dear t.o us.
Wa will publllh a apeclal page dtvotad to !holt who are gone but not forgotten. They will be
similar to the umple ba!Qw:

•

:~nch Art Colony

to offer variety
of workshops

, GALLIPOLIS
The
french Art Colony. 530 First
f.ve., Gallipolis, will be offering workshops for both young
children and adults this
inonth.
·
• "Amazing Mathf' instrudted
liy Lori Billings and open to
~hildren ages 5 to 7, will be
held Saturday, April 20 from
10 a.m. to noon.
• Participants will explore
math concepts such as _number
relations, measurements, patterns and problem solving
using skittles, M&amp;Ms, gold fish
crackers, graham crackers,
paints and playdough.
,. Through the use of food,
Ji.m · and ,games students wiU
,compare, create and apply
mathematical ideas. Tuition for
ihe two-hour workshop is
$20. All supplies are included.
"Scrapbooking," instructed
by Connie Kitchen, open to
students age 14 and up, will be
held Saturday March 30 from
10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Participants
. ~ill complete two theme
scrapbook pages. Students will
receive protector sheets, scis"
· sors, one sheet of colored letters and will have oodles of
supplies available to make a
meaningful and creative page.
Those taking the class will

JOUlll'lbutt.

David c. Allllmrl .
lab' 10, IHI•A\af I, 1110

Mar God't anplt
Qutde :vou and
protect :vou
throqhout time.

2. May Ood cndle you In Hltllllll, -llld forevtt.
3. Panver mlllld, never fcqoaen. May Clod hold you In lhe palm of
Hll hand.
4. Tlwdt you for lhl wondlrfulda)1 we shared lopthlt. My prt)'ffl
will be wllh you undl we meet apln.
5.1be daya welbared wilt 1weet.llonllo • you tpln In Clod's
btlvtnly a)oty.
6. Your coun,e llld braVII)' llllllnaplre u. all, aad lhe memory or your
smllo fills • wllh joy and laqhler.
7. Thoup out or siJh~ you'D forever be In my he.ulllld mind.
8. The dayllllly come llld ao, but lhe times wellwld wlll always remaln.
9. May dte IIJht of peace lhlne on your race foretemlty.
·
10. May Ood'1 anpl•lll'lde you and proleet you tlwulftout dme.
II. You were allllht In out llfa !Jill bu1111 forever In outhoarll.
12. May Ood'•IIIM lhlne over you for all lime.
13. You 111ln our lhoupu llld pnyen from mornlna to niahllnd from
yarto year.
14. We IOIId dllsiiiCIIIp wldlalovlna klu for llllmal ralllld happlne~~.
1!. May dte Lonl bieN you widl Hll pa llld warm, lovlna hart.

TO REMEMBER YOUR LOVED ONE IN THIS SPECIAL WAY,
SEND $7.00 PER LISTING • $12 IF PICTURE INCLUDED
Fill out the form below and drop ofF to

--Finn
·:"oes59

The Daily Sentinel
With Fondest Memories
Ill Court SL1 Pomeroy, OH 45769

Fullq , pe

"'-''"'
""'DM1

DEADLINE: FRIDAY, MAY 17, 12 Noon
r-----------------~------------·-··-·--·-··"'1•1
P1we publish my tribute in ihe apecial Memory Plge on Friday, May 24.

Dateofbirth------------------ Dlle,ofpwin,_ _ _ _ __
Print Y l l u r n i h e r e - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - A~&amp;-------~--------------~n~~WL----------

City

..........
......,

--

fiiiiii1
l!!!!iliJ
[tfl

I

Glenn F. Young, Sr.

RACINE- Glenn F. Young, 71, Racine, died Monday, April
15, 2002, at his residence.
He was born Jan. 30, 1931 in Zanesville, son of the late
George and Carrie Ward Young. He was a retired, selfneed to bring four to six phoemployed teleVision repairman and a veteran of the Korean
tos for each page and the picConflict. He was a member of the Drew Webster Post Ameritures should be related· in
can Legion.
.
some W.y - family vacations,
Surviving are his wife, ,Marie Erwin Young; three daughters
birthdays, animals, a trip to the
and sons-in-law: Carrie and Jtobert Roush of Beverly, Tanya
zoo. Tuition for the five-hour
and Stanley Walter of Racine and Vanessa and Charles Jacks of
workshop is $30.' All supplies
Ra'Cine; two sons and daughters-in-law, Glenn "Bud" Jr. and
are included in the tuition fee.
Trina Young, Racine and Jeff and Pam Eisen brei of Homestead,
"Calligraphy," instructed by
Fla.; 12 grandchildren and a brother-in-law, Kenny Erwin of
Nancy Donohew, will be held
Bowerston.
Saturday, April 13 from 10
Services will be held at 11 a.m. on Thursday in the Cremeens
a.m. to noon. Participants, ages
Funeral Home in Racine with Rev. Jim Cundiff and Rev.
13 and up, will learn a brief
Mike Atkins officiating. Burial will follow at Carmel Cemetery.
history of lettering/calligraFriends may call at the funeral home on Wednesday from 2phy, will discuss and learn
4 and 6-9 p.m.
about different pens and
materials that can be used, but
more i'mportantly - how to
hold .the pen to achieve the
correct technique.
COOLVILLE- Buford Capehart, 63, Coolville, died SaturStude~ts can sample differday, April 13, 2002, at his residence.
·
ent fonts, backgrounds and
Born November 28, 1938, he was the son of the late William·
will be given verses to pracand Opal Living Capehart.
·
tice. If interest is shown, addiHe is survived· by his wife, Alice Byus Capehart; two sons,
tional classes will be given in
Sheldon of Coolville and Patrick of Kentucky; four daughters,
the future. Students will need
Patricia Greenwalt of Little Hocking, Melissa Hayes, Brandie
to bring a calligraphy pen and
Capehart and Vickie Capehart, aU of Coolville; four brothers,
paper. Tuition for the two. three sisters and eight grandchildren.
hour workshop is $12.
funeral services will be held at 11 a.m. on Tuesday at the
Those interested in any of
White Funeral Home in CoolVille. Officiating will be Rev.
the workshops are asked to
. George Horner;
call the French Art Colony to
Burial will follow in the Collville Cemetery.
pre-register, 740-446-3834.
Friends may Visit on Monday from 2-4 p.m. and 6-9 p.m. at
Financial assistance is availthe funeral home.
able. All FAC programming is
offered through support of the
Ohio Arts Council.

· Buford-Capehart

E. Cleveland teachers strike
over contract demands

'

EAST CLEVELAND (AP)
-Teachers and staff went on
strike Monday to press . their
demand
for a pay increase. The
, POMEROY Folklore the refusal to pay the doctor's
district hire,d . substitutes to
•nd folk cures and the super- · bill.
The meeting, conducted by keep schools open.
$titions of early settlers was
Teachers set up picket lines
featured in a program "Old Ashley, president, was held at
outside
schools, carrying plac~uperstitions of the Pennsyl- the Meigs County Museum
yania Dutch:' presented by following a a steak dinner ards reading "Teachers on
Strike" and pumping their fists
Keith Ashley at a recent fueet- there.
ing of Ewing Chapters, Sons
It was reported that a letter and cheering in response to
~f the American Revolution. to the president of Ohio Uni- honking by passing cars.
Outside Shaw High School,
Ashley explained that the term versity protesting the celebra_
some
students shouted sup.'l'l:nnsyl.vmia Dutch"teftrred to tion of Presidents' Day on
3he German settlers ofPennsylva- Dec. 24 to avoid a holiday in port to several dozen pickets.
Jlia. the \Wltl ''Dutch" coming February had received no Some students . emerged from
the building to complain there
'lrom the \Wltl "DeUtsch," which reply.
~:'German."
A history of the descendants were no classes.
"I don't know why they
• He introduced the program ofjohn Entsminger, a Re\iolumade
us come in. They're not
J,y mentioning that . due to tionary soldier , buried in
~ack of today's extensive med- Meigs County, was received doing anything," said Shanan
leal knowledge, folklore, folk by the chapter and shown to Baker, 16. "Everyone's just
hanging out in the cafeteria."
cures, and superstitions were the members.
Baker left school and said
. ~ll the early settlers had to
Members were urged to
lreat devastating and annoying complete the SAR census, she might return. She said stu~seases. Some of these ideas which is being conducted by dents were sent to the gymna~ve proven to have merit, but the National Society SAR to sium and auditorium to await
· )nany do not, he said.
locate relatives of current plans for the day.
Messages seeking comment
"Cures for diseases such as inembers in order to invite
on
classroom arrangements
~omesickness, hiccups, cancer, these relatives to join. Mem. 'hieve_ry, freckles and warts bers were also asked to bring were left at the school and the
)\'ere given. Even a cure for nominees for the SAR flag district offices.
At Mayfield Elementary
lh'unkenness was given using award and good citizenship to
'he placing of dirt from under the · next meeting when the School, 13-year-old John
Moncrief, a seventh-grader,
.~he finger nails into whiskey final selections will be made.
said
he was looking forward to
{or the drunkard.
It was reported that the
: "Cures · often involved Rev. James Hanna has been ill a resolution to the strike.
:Strange uses of animal waste, and is currently in a physical "They should just go in and
~ouching corpses, shutting .a rehabilitation center in Jackfinger in a door, mice, dew, son. James Cline of Beverly
:nd . other such items," he has had heart surgery.
•dded.
The Ohio Society SAR
The Pennsylvania Dutch state conference will be held
fhought
that
"baldness on May 3-5 and the National
Qecurred from standing in the SAR Congress is set for June
iain during the dog days of 28 to July 2 at Nashville, Tenn.
~ugust," and that one of the The next chapter meeting is
Community Calender Ia
l!est ways to stay healthy was set for April 25.
I

•

•

State------ Zipp.__ _

Make Cbedl: Payable co THE DAILY SENTINEL

L------------------~--------·-··-·--·-··-·--·.1

teach and people should pay
them:" he said.
· Mary Alice Conkey, president · of the East Cleveland
Education Association, said the
strike resulted from differences
over pay and other issues.
"They offered a 2 percent
raise," Conkey said. "They
gave the c·ustodians union a 3
percent raise, which they
qeserved. But what does that
say about their attitude toward
the teachers?"
Administration officials said
schools will be open using
substitute teachers and administrative personnel.
"The teachers will b.: out
there for a long, long time
because we will not give them a
6 percent raise:' said Superintendent Elvin Jones. "We can't affiml
it, and that's all ·there is to it."
Conkey said key issues in
the contract are better security 'in the schools and better
Jhotection from health hazards
in the buildings, some of
which are undergoing reconstruction and repair.
The union represents 461
teachers, guidance counselors,
social workers, psychologists
and librarians in the district,
which has 5,800 pupils. A
three-year contract . expired
Apri13.

LOCAL BRIEFS
EMS log calls

answer any questions con.c ernmg
immunization
requirements.
POMEROY - Units of
the Meigs Emergency Service
answered 10 calls for assistance over the weekend: Units
POMEROY -The Meigs
responded as follows:
County·
Health Department
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Saturday, 9:23 a.m., New wiU conduct a Childhood
Lima Road, Drew Goce, Immunization Clinic on
Tuesday from l-7 p.m.
Holzer Medi ual Center; ·
Parents are asked to bring
10:50 a,.m., Count)' Road
their child's shot records and .
7A; Lewis Williams, HMC;
3:14 p.m., Maples, Harold children must be ac.c ompanied by a parent or legal
.
Hudnell, HMC;
Sunday, 8:40 a.m., State guardian.
Route 7, Nancy King, HMC;
1:01 p.m., Beech Street,
Margaret Nun, Pleasant Valley
.
Hospital;
6:35 p.m., Collins Road,
SALEM CENTER - Star
Sara McDowell, PVH . .
Grange #778 and Junior
Grange #878 will hold a
POMEROY
Sunday, 1:21 p.m., Second potluck supper and fun night
Street, auto fire, Jennifer April 20, with potluck at 6:30
· p.m., followed by fun night.
Arthur vehicle, no injuries.
RUTLAND
Final plans for hosting Meigs
Saturday, 11:51 a.m., Happy County Pomona Grange on
Hollow Road, motor vehicle May 3 will be made.
All members are urged to
accident, Vicki
Possiter,
attend.
HMC;
8:32p.m., State Route 124,
Stephanie Pridemore, treated;
Sunday, 1:35 p.m., County
Road 5, Jeffrey Junruh, treated.
·
POMEROY
Meigs
Couni:y Health Department's
Cardiovascular Health Program, in conjunction with'
Holzer Medical Center's
POMEROY - Children Community Health and Wellwho will pe five years old on ness Department is conductor before Sept. 30, 2002, are ing a free cardiovascular
eligible to attend kinder- health screening on Thursday
garten during the the 2002- · from 9 a.m. to noon at the
03 school year.
health department. Primary
The kindergarten registra- focus wiU be on veterans and
tion schedule is as follows: their families. Screening serApril 4;. Harrisonville Ele- vices will include blood presmentary, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., sure measurement, nonfasting
740-742-3000;Apri117, Salis- cholesterol and nonfasting
bury Elementary, 8:30 a.m. to glucose measurement, and
3 p.m., 740-992-3404; April body fat analysis.
22-23, Pomeroy Elementary,
8:30a.m. to 3 p.m., 740-992. 2710; April 25, Rutland Elementary, 8 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.,
PORTLAND - Summer
740-742-2666;Apri129, Mid- D. Groves, 23, 45340 Pomeroy
dleport Elementary, 8 a.m. to Pike, Pomeroy, was cited for
failure to control by the Gal2:30 p.m., 7 40-992-3387.
Parents are asked to bring lia-Meig'l Post of the State
their child's birth certificate Highway Patrol following a .
(hospical record will not be one-car accident Saturday on
accepted), so.cial security card County Road 35 (Portland).
Troopers said Groves was
and immunization record ·to
westbound, four-tenths of a
registration.
Children should have had mile west of Ohio 124, at
5DPT, 4 Poli, 2MMR. 3 I :30 a.m. when the car went
Hepatitis B, and one recent off the right side of the road
TB Skin Test before entering and struck a ditch.
school. A school nurse will be
The car suffered functional
present at registration to damage, the report said.

Clinic planned

Granges meet.

Saeening

available .

·schedule
released

Citation issued

•

MEIG·S

t

CALENDAR

Red Cross bloodmobile allhe ·
Senior
Citizens Center, 1 to 6
publlahtd ee a tree aervlce
to non·profH groupe wleh· p;.m.

~

'

)

The Daily Sentinel
Reader services
Correction Polley
our mAn COIICII'Il In II IIOOells
to be In-1110ry,
· ·ell
Hyou
of 111
enor
theIcnow
,_room
It (740) w.!•2158.

11111

New• Depr.rbi .....ta
m.n l1llll1ber 1s 1192·2158.

Deplm1lni extentlclnl 1re:

N~e~~~~~------------------------------------~--~il

Relationship to me, ____________.;__ Number of aelec:ted vene _ __

U.A:.III-·M*

..

SAR learns about
Pennsylvania Dutch

a.. .....,.,....

UIIEAI

Deaths

!

I. Wa hold you in our tllouJhll and memoriea torevu.

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Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Second-duo
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~oo~-.ngtopoyme

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ThoOtily ~ . ~wilt bt glwn
NCII- No MIICI'*"" by
mol ponnl1lod In ..... - - """"
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lng to announce II!Htlnga
and apeclel eventt. The eel·
endar Ia not dealgned to
promote aalet or fund-raltere of any ·type. lteme are
printed only aa apece per·
mlta and cannot be guaranteed to bt printed a apeclftc
, number of daya.

THURSDAY
RACINE - Southam Ele· ·
mentary Kindergarten regis·
tratlon, Thursday and Friday.
Call for appointment, 949·
4222.

POMEROY
Plant
exchange at the Senior Citi·
zens Center, 11 a.m. . ProMONDAY
Pomeroy gram by Ma$1er Gardene -, .
POMEROY
Chapter 186, Order of tl1e Take flowers to exchangu or '
Eastern Slar, Monday, 7:30 give to those who have none.'
p.m .
SATURDAY
POMEROY
Computer
ALFRED - Allred United
cl&amp;$1 lor seniors; 9:30· to Methodist Church breakfa$1,
10:30 a.m. at the Senior CKi- Saturday, serving 6 a.m. to 11
zens Cen!er.
a.m. Proceeds to go for a missions project.
LETART- Letart Township
Trustees, Monday, 5 p.m.
RACINE - MI. Moriah
office building.
Church ol God, Mile Hill,
Racine, special singing, . 7
WEDNESDAY ·
p.m. Revival service on April
,
POMEROY
American 28 at 6 p.m.

A sincere thank you to all
·who donated and helped
with.the Ted Coppick
benefit. You are
greatly appreciated.
The Ted f:oppick Family

·Meigs·4th,
5th (It
County tmc:k
See Page 6

-

'

•

'

�Opinion

The Daily Sentinel
a

The Daily Sentinel ·•

~

-~BY the

•

_The_oa_ny_Sen_tin_ei_.

IIM._..__twt'11'
IW"
MIUC
.

••

•
••

t'OW1'rbU tMY M~,
Coot.P WI!

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740 11112·21111• Fu: 740 11112-2157
-.mydallyalntlnel.com

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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Den Dlcktnon
Publlaher

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Controlw

Chiii'Mne Hoeflich

o.n-1 MaNiger

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NATIONAL VIEW

··...

..

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,

•

nnn

Safer?
Government still has work to do ·
in strengthening airport security

Bend
Ukdding planner~ dream is a nightmare

DEAR. ABBY: I have been
,engaged for 18 months,· and we slill
have not set a wedding date. Every
time I talk to my fiance about it, he
sugests we elope to Australia or
something. At fint, it was because of
his job. When I finally pinne~ him
,down about what was bothering
.him, he confemd that he absolutely
does not want a wedding reception.
He wants to marry me, but he wants
;it to be just the two of us. No guests.
Abby, the irony of it is that I 1111 a
professional wedding planner. My
dream is to have the wedding I have
alwaY' pictured. I want about 100
friends aro11nd me at this important
.time. However, my fiance cannot
stand to be the focus of attention,
,and he says he wo111d be miserable if
I make him go through with it.
I tried to draw an analogy by asking him how he would feel ifl told
him he could not ~ a policeman

·

Dear

Abby
ADVICE
anymore because l would be miserable. He says it's not the same
because that is his job. Well, I am a
professional wedding planner and
coordinator. This would be MY ultimate dream Job. Please don't teU me
to scale down the wedding - it is
not possible to invite one cousin and
explain you carinot invite the other,
etc. I'm at a loss about what to do. ..;._
FRUSTRATED IN TEXAS
DEAR .FRUSTRATED: I have
good news and bad news. The good

I
I

Military tribunal proposal carries troubling questions !
-

I

1

In not only our civilian courts, but !'
The ,presiden.t's order setti'!~ I!P mili"
• St. Petersburg (Fla.) Times, on airport security; The
also
in court-martials, verdicts can be .
tary
tnbunals
was
sharply
cnt1c1zed
by
nation's airports are safer since Sept. Ll, but the governappealed to the United States Court of •
some
constitutional
scholars,
fonner
ment still has work to do. Passengers and bags aren't . court-martial officers, and journalists
Appeals, and ultimately to the Supreme '
being adequately screened. There are jurisdictional probCourt. But, the mifitary tribunals'
across the political spectrum.
lems to resolve between local police and the newly creatIn response, Secretary of Defense
appeals procedurcrinvolves only a milied federal securjty force. Transportation Secretary Nortary rev1ew panel apPOinted by RumsDonald Rumsfeld - who has a bright
man Mineta also announced the government will not
feld,
which can tnclude civilians 1
Nat
future in television once he leaves
appointed temporarily as military offi- :
meet its December deadline to outfit the airports with
office - was assigned the responsibiliI
Hentoff
cers.
,
ty
of
damage
control,
and
released
explosive detection machines. Congress and the public
From the military review panel, the :
revised regulations.
have expectations, and Mineta needs to meet them.
COLUMNIST
verdict's
final chance for an appeal is l
Under
Rumsfeld's
direction,
some
of
·
Enacting these measures will improve security across the
·
the
pt:esident,
who, In the first place, •
the egre~ious -excesses of the presiboard and give a needed boost to the travel industry.
decides who will have been put before t
dent's onginal version' have been modThe government's new vigilance has bolstered the conJonathan
Turley,
a
constitutional
law
the tribunal. He can desianate the secified. Keep in mind that George W.
fidence of the flying public, but security still isn't adeBush and the rest of his administration professor at George Washington Uni- retary of defense as the final stop in the ,
quate. Despite a federal takeover of airport security operhave continually said that everything versity, has had extensive experience as appeal process, but the Supreme Court :
ations, screeners still make inexcusable mistakes, passen~
they do in the war agaihst terrorism will a lawyer in national security cases in is out of the loop.
gers still get weapons on board and the process for
be within ''the bounds of the Constitu· federal courts, including civilian courts. · As Turley emphasizes, the review •
searching passengers and bags lacks order and consisten"
In The Los An~eles Times, Turley panel will not havifto apply federal law ~
tion."
cy.
The tribunals are now called military emphasizes the dtstance between parts m tenns of the rules of ev1dence. With ;
commissions, and the trials will be of the Rumsfeld tribunals and the. no independent judicial review, "this :
Improving the system requires more than money and
creates the mere pretense of le$al :
open to all, including to the press. Evi- American rule of law:
federal control; it ~uires a new intolerance for under"It
is
cle.
a
r
that
the
new
rules
were
process ... the framers expressly demed :
dence
will
have
to
show
guilt
beyond
a
achievement, sornethmg for which the government is riot
reasonable doubt. The defendant will written by prosecutors to govern their ihe president (the power) to Crel\le and ·
always known.
:
get military lawyers at no charge. If he own prosecutions. The biggest changes mete out his own form of justice.
· can afford it, he can hire a civilian are in areas prosecutors ffnd inconve- "It takes , more than a few rule i
lawyer, who will have to b!: cleared for nient- sucli as proving that evidence changes to remove the 'kangaroo' from •
is authentic before using it. According- the courl," Turley continues. "One can :
security purposes.
.
However, serious violations .of the ly, tribunal prosecutors will not have to shampoo and pedicure a kangaroo. But :
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
essence of our system of justice - due authenticate evidence - or even show it does little to change the ~ ·
·
~f a,president's own menagene of jus- !
process (fairness) -remain. A glarin~ a chain of custody."
Today is Monday, April 15, the 105th day of2002. There
.
are 260 days left in the year.
· example is the standard by which evi- Through how many hands did the uce.
Today's Highlight in History:
. .
·
dence will be admitted at the trials. Any evidence pass through before aniving Charles Gittins, a judge advocate and :
evidence that has "probative value to a at the military tribunal? It is conceiv- lieutenant colonel in the Marine Corps ;
In the early hours of Aprill5, 1912, the British luxury liner
able that the evidence of "probative reserve, has said in 1be New Yoiic :
Titanic sank in the North Atlantic off Newfoundland, less · reasonable person" will be allowed.
As Barbara Bradley, National Public value to a reasonable person" could Times: ''Congress should exercise its ·
than three hours after striking an iCeberg. About 1,500 people
Radio's knowledgeable reporter on !.ave come from a prisoner in another oversight to prohibit employment of i
died.
legal matters, points out: '"That means country where torture is a "reasonable" military commissions within U.S. bor· :
On this date:
ders arid require that militarY trials con· ;
hearsay or seeond-hand evidence" will way to extract infonnation.
In 1850, the city of San Francisco was incorporated.
be allowed - contrary to the rules of The new rules do require - unlike ducted outstde the United States com· ;
In 1861, three days after the Confederate attack on Fort
olir civilian federal courts. Hearsay the originalfresidential order- that a ply with the due process, inclu~­
Sumter, President Lincoln declared a Slate of insurrection and
encompasses gossip, rumop, assertions sentence o capital punishment will -mdependent judicial review, provi
called out Union troops.
·
and accusations that cannot be verified. have to be imposed by a unanimous in coun-martlals."
In 1865, President LincOln died, several hours after he was
And, it is possible that witnesses can military court. But, wliatever the sen- That's the American way.
shot at Ford's Theater in Washin~on by John Wilkes Booth.
tence, the convicted defendant still does (Nat Hentoff Is a nat/onatly renowned
Andrew Johnson became the nabon's 17th president.
US!: pseudonyms.
not have independent judicial review in authority on the First Amendment and
The
authenticity
of
evidence
is
cruIn 1892, General Electric Co., fonned by the merger of the
.· the Bill of Rights.)
cial to verdicts of guilt or iMocence. the Rumsfeld tribunals.
Edison Electric Light Co. and other flfms, was incorporated
in New York State.
In 1945, during World War 0, British and Canadhin troops
liberated the Nazi concentration camp Bergen-Belsen. .
KILPATRICK'S VIEW
In 1945, President Roosevelt, who had died April 12, was
•
buried at the Roosevelt family home in H&gt;:de Park, N.Y.
In 1947, Jackie Robinson, baseball's ·first black major
league player, J1Wie his official debut with the Brooklyn
Dodgers on opening day. (The Dodgers defeated the Boston
Braves, 5-3.)
lill996, a California jury foUnd Lean- rate sentences for two identical crimes, time.drug dealer in Michigan. There was :
In 1959, Cuban leader Fidel Castro arrived in Washington
dro
Andrade guilty of shoplifting. On as in the Andrade case, cannot be served no majority opinion, but seven Justices t
to begin a goodwiU tour of the United States.
In I 989, 95 people died in a crush of soccer fans at Hills- • that charge he was sentenced to life in concurrently. Unless the Supreme CoOrt separately stuck w~th the proportionality :
borough Stadium m Sheffield, England.
·
- prison.
acts in his favor, Andrade will be 87 test established in the Hefm
In 1990, actress Greta Garbo died in New York at age 84.
If that summation sounds like some- before he could apply for parole in 2046. Getting back to Leandro Andrade: In :
Ten _years ago: Russia's deeply divided Congress of Peothing out of "Les Miserables,'' listen The Eighth Amendment to the Consti- fmding his life serltence grossly dispro- ~
ple's Deputies formally endorsed President Boris Yeltsin's
more closely. Andrade .is a drug addict tution is a rubber band. It sayi that portionate to the theft ()f nine vicleo- 1
eronomic refonns. Countries barred Libyan jets from their · who launched his criminal career with "excessive" bail may not be required, tapes, a panel of the 9th Circuit empha- t
airspace and ordered diplomats to go home because of
petty theft in 1982. In 1983 he pled nor "excessive" fines imposed, nor sized that it was not invalidating CallLibya's ref116al to tum over suspects in the. bombing of P.an
guilty to three counts of residential bur· "cruel and unusual" punislune!IIS inflict- fornia's three-strike law in eoto.lts holdAm Ai~t 103. Hotel magnate [..e{)na Hehnsley began serv•
glary. He was barely out of prison for ed. As always in constitutional law, ing was lim.ited to resentencing because ,
in$ a pnson sentence for tax evasion (she was releaSed from
that felony before he 'was convicted of everything comes down to definitions. of the "uilusual circumstances" of the 1
pnson after 18 months).
·.
transporting marijuana Sentenced in Over the past 22 years the high COU!1 has case. ·
Five years ago: The Justice Department inspectOr general
1988 to eight years in prison, he served handed ({own three relevant opinions When the 'Supreme Court hean the
reported that FBI crime lab agents produced tTawed scientif·
less than 18 months.
comlnling the "cruel and unusual" Andrade case next winter, the justices t
·ic work or inaccurate testimony in major cases such as the
Released on~· Andrade returned clause.
also will hear the appeal of Gary Albert ;
Oklahoma City bombing. In Saudi Arabia, fire destroyed a
to petty theft m 1990. There followed In the Rununel case of 1980, the court Ewing. 1\vo years ago be wasconvicted 1
tent city outside Mecca. killing at least 343 Muslim pilgrims.
another conviction for transporting mar- upheld a life sentence imposed upon a of stealing three golf clubs from the pro r
Jackie Robinson's number 42 was retired SO years after he
ijuana Sentenced to six years in prison, ~time loser in Texas, &amp;ut there were shop at a Los An~les golf coune. t
became the first black player in major league baseball. ·
he served less than 30 months. Then he -ameliorating circumstances. The ~ Because of four pnor convictions for ~
One year B_BO: U.N. investigators arrested Bosnian Serb '
waa out again. but in November 1995 be consideration waa that under the state s serious offenses, he too wasiCIItelleed to :
anny officer Dragan Obrenovic in connection with the Serstole five videotapes from one Kmart liberal parole polic_y, Rwrunel would be 2S years to life. He too challmgta his :
bian Army's slaughter of as many as 7,000 Muslim men and
Slore and four more from another Kmart. eligible for parole m only 12 years. .
sentence aa grossly disptoportionate to :
boys. (Obrenovic, who has pi~ innocent, i.s expected to
The state chose to treat the Kmart thefts Tn the Helm case of 1983, the court the crime.
face trial fhis fall.) Punk rock icon Joey Ramone died in New
as felonies. A jury found Andrade guilty leaned the ather way. The defendant had Such banh punishments cannot be :
York at age 49.
·
·
and the trial court threw the book at him a record of six nonviolent felonies tennCd "unusual," not if half the Slates :
Today's Birthdays: Actor Michael Ansara is 80. Country
- 2S years to life for taCh theft. the ten- Defore he was convicted of writing a permit them. Are they also "cruel"? You :
singer Roy Clark i.s 69. Rock singer-guitarist Dave Edmunds
tenceatobeservedllOII!ItCIItively.Three rubber checlc for $100. Under Soudl makeebecall.lntheAndradeandE~:
is 58. Actress Lois Oilles is 55. iV producer Unda Bloodfelooy Slrib:s, and Andrade was ouL
Dakola's recidivist starute, Helm wat cares, I would vOle to uphold the st.-e s :
worth-Thomason i.s 54. Actor Michael Tucci is 52. Actress
Their
laws
vary
widely,
but
about
half semeoced to life imprisonment with no strike three. You can bet the rmdl that :
Amy Wright is 52. Columnist Heloise i.s 5 I. Actress-scn:enthe slateS have similar statutes for lepeal possibility of parole at all. The Supreme Justices Stevens, SOitter, ~ and
writer Emma Thompson is 43. Singer Samantha Fox is 36.
offenders.
California's 1994 law is the Court reversed: The sentence was bod! B~eyer will VOle to give these 'loscn a '
Rock musician Ed O'Brien (Radiohead) is 34. A«or Flex is
toughest of them .all. After two convic- cruel and unusual. It was "grosAiy dis- · base on balls.
'
32. Actress Emma Watson is 12.
tiOilll
of
"serious"
felonies,
a
third
conproportionate"
to
the
gravity
of
the
(l.eUen
to
Mr.
Kilpatrick
lhouJd
be
:
Thought for Today: "Political histoly is far 100 criminal and
viction for any felony brings a mandata- crime.
·
sent in ~ of thit new~p~~Per, or by e- :
pathological to be a fit subject of study for the youn11. Oliley
minimum
tenn
of2S
years.
The
senIo
the
Hannelin
case
of
1991,
the
mail to k:ilpatjj(at)aotcom.)
:
dre!J should acquire their heroes and villains from fiction," ttnce c.1llliO( be R!duced because of court split 54 in affmnin. a life-withJames f. Jli/palrick Is a columnist for :
W.H. Auden, British poet (1907-1973).
pri.son work or good-time credits. Stpa- out-parole sentence imposed upon a big- Univenal Pre11 S~.
:

!

I
t

TODAY IN HISTORY

Victim.of Identity
theft? Social
.
Security can help ·
BY EUZAIITH CRUMP
SOCIAL SECURITY

Did someone steal your
identity? If you are the
victim of identity theft, we
want to provide you information to help you repair
the damage. We are especially concerned · when
someone commits identity
theft by using your Social
Security number. ·
If you think someone is
. misusing your Social
Security number, call the
Social Security Fraud
Hotline at 1-800-2690271. In the lint half of
200 1, our hotline received
nearly 54,000 reports of
suspected fraud-almost
29,000 for misuse of the
Social SecuritY number.
You should also file a
report with the Federal
Trade Commission (FTC)
Identity Theft Hodine by
calling 1-8771DTHEFT
(1-877-438-4338). The
FTC tracks complaints
and will refer your victim
complaint to the appropriate law enforcement

ease.

•

!

I

SIONED IN MILWAUKEE
DEAR
DISILLUSIONBD:
Pl~ase don't be so hard on yourself.
Intelligence, education and compe·
. truce do not guarantee that a penon
of either sex will automatically
choose the right spouse. And why.Ao
'1
you think your husband's. former
wives are laughing at you1 If anyone .
can empathize with your unhappiness, they can.
Since your husband refuses counseling and is unwilling to work on
your marriage, go without him --:if
only to underst:md why you have
tolerated this hostil~ living arrangement for as. long as you h~ve. After
that, you'll know what to do.
· (Pa11liHt Philllpl aild Iter daughttr
. )eamte Pltiltips share the pswdonym
. Abigail Vtm Buren. Write Dear Abby at
www.DrarAbby.co."

69440, Los AHgeles, CA 900~9.)

&amp;x

.

SCIENCE WINNER

to investigate and
prosecute identity thieves.
In addition to the help
you receive by contacting
the fraud bodines, we help .
you correct your earnings
record, if it contains incorrect information; ilsue a
replacement card, if your
Social Security card was
stolen; determine whether
we can assign you a new
number, if you want one;
Breeanna Manuel won the relllonal competition In the botany
and give you information
class science fair held recently at Marshall University In Hunton how to contact the
Ington, w.ya. She Is a fourth grader lit the Mason Elementary
School, and the daughter of Oonlta lind Kurt Sayre and grandfraud units of each credit
daughter of Sylvia Sayre and Joyce Manuel, Racine. Her probureau and creditor to
gram
was titled "Plants and Sun,• and featured chamomile
remove incorrect informaherbsl!rown In dark and sunlight and their pro11ress. (Submittion from your credit
. ted)
record. (Social Security
cannot t1x credit record,.)
You can help prevent
•
theft of your identity by
•
keeping yout number and .
card safe. Show your card
to your employer when
Paul Karr, left,
you start a job, so your
took part In the
records are cor,:ect. Then,
free health and
put it in a tafe place-don't
financial checkup
carry your card with you.
proaram held
Don't give your number
recently at
to anyone who ask&amp; for it.
Peoples Bank

CHECKUPS

In Middleport as
Tracey O'Dell,
R.N., does some
cardiQYllacular
eoreenlna. The
. eventwss
sponsored by the
Mel&amp;s County
Health Department, Holzer MedIcal Center Community Health and
Wallneaa Department and Peoples
Bank. (Submitted)

+
'

lXlAdRuu

'

May8tb

ONLY

$10.00
lneludet Photo
DeadUae:
May 2nd at 5:00 p.m•

.

-------------------------~
Name of N u r a e • - - - - - - - - - - - - 1
Place of Employment
1.
Your Name
I
Addresa

I

----------------------------1
.....;._1
Phone #1 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _
Ads Must Be Prepaid

Mall or Drop off at

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, OH 45769
1

All ads must be prepaid

•

Tbe Melp County CommiMlonel'l wiD hold the ftnt of two publle hearlnp at the
omu o1 the Melp County Commillloner~, Courthoule, Pommy, Ohio on Aprll%5,
2002 at 1: 00 P.M., for the purpoH of provldlnJ the public Information and
·ncelvlnJ eommentl 11 to the notice of a«eptaaee of pre·applleatlODJ for Jrant
fundiDJ from the USDA, Rural Development Houalna Pretervatlon Grant PJ'OII'Im
for hOIIIIIIJ rehabilitation or re,.tr pi'OJI'IInu.
Tbe Rural Development HOIIIIDJ Pmervatlon ProJram provlclea F•nt fundiDJ to
quallned public apnelea, private non-profit orpnlzat~oDJ, and other ellpble
entltlel to Ulllt very low-low Income home owaen repair and rehabllltate their
bomea In naral araa. Tbe averap Jrlllt award baa been ~,000, hoWever, the State
• 111117 not award more than 50~ of the State'• alloeadoa to a llnaJe eatlty.

CltlUIU are eneourap4 to attead thll meetlnJ on April ~5, 2001, to make
~Uge~tlonl 1Dd eomaMDtl and to provide publle laput on varlout aetlvltln which
lllllf be undertaken .. thiJ propam.
If a partlelpant wiD need nslllary aida ( lnterpnter, braflled or taped materlala;
·...tatln llltenlna de't'lee, ,ofber) due to a dt..biUty, pleue contact Glort. Kloa,
Clerk, prior to Aprll25, lGOl, at 740-992-2195 Ia order to ensure Chat your needl
will be KC41111modlted. 1'lw Melp C..•...,. Courtboule Is banc!fapped atercllble.

Written eommeatJ .w ill be ampted until 1: ot P.M., Aprlll5, :zocn, and may be
melled to the Me1p Couaty Commlllloaen, M.... CountJ Courtboule, Pomei'O)',

I

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

NOTICE OF FIRST PUBLIC HEARING

Oblo 4$1(/),

or PO.

~gency

Is three strikes law utifair, crnel?Yl&gt;u make the call -.

Mondlly, April 1S, 2002

news is I'm not going to tell you to attempts at conveniltion or a social
scale down the wedding. The bad life with him, and any efforts to disnews is I think you should rethink . cuss .our few disagreements. ry/e
marrying your fiance u aU. A man almost never argue because he often
would have to have his h••d
en-·s~d
-~uses
to •·lk
or e·u
-. '
"
"
....
.. n rep1Y t.o my
in concrete not to know th·•t
•• g-e•'n""
) He also .-fu
1
•
' " u ... .
. ses counse •
woman's wedding day is one of the ing of any kind and. rejects literature
most important events of her life. As on "-l·tl'onslu·ps
or dep-"l'on
•
·~~
·
a profe$$ional event coordinator,
Abby,• pleasa• teU your ..
- ade..
- t0
your life revolves around social run, don't mlk, away from a man
events.
who's been divorced more than
. k beyond t he we dd'mg once.There's a reason why he's sinplease thm
to birthdays, anniversaries, events gle. 1 trusted his version of how his
around babies - all the occasions past marriages fell apart. 1 trusted
you will want to mark with a cele- that his cour#ng behavior w:~s the
bration. He won't mnt to partici- real him. Wrong. It was just dating
pate, and if.he does, he won't enjoy behavior. The happy put of our
it. You two can try counseling and marriage lasted only a few months.
perhaps compromise. But will you His ex-wives must be laughing·at me
be happy with someone who is so because I've discovered what they
introverted and self-centered? Only kn~w years ago. I am intelligent,
you can answer that one.
capable and educated - and still I
DEAR ·ABBY: My husband· made a profoundly stupid mistake
rejects my romantic overtures, my when it came to love.- DlSlLLU-

.

•I

HENTOFF'S VIEW

I

I

PageS

.........,....,

·-·-•MIIWAI.O

IR

Jetr'l'bontoa, Pmldeat
{

'

�•

•

•

The Daily Sentinel

Inside:

•

Local roundup. Page 7

•

•

Page&amp;
Monday. Aprll15, 2 -

. Monday, Aprll16, 2002

PREP ROUNDUP

•

#

~astern boys still perfect; Eastern girls rolling
BYSconWOLR

MoNDAY's

HIGHLIGHTS
Pro Baseball
MLB
Sundlly'l O.me•
Netlonel Logue
· Sundlly'l O.me1
Florida 7, Adanta 0
N.Y. Mets 6, Montreal 4 .
Phllldelphla 3, Clnclnnlll 1.
Houslon 5, St. Louis 4
Arizona 6, Colorado 3
Milwaukee 4, San Francisco 3

Clbl5, f'lllstur,tl1 , 11t2m. ra!n

San Diego 1 , Los Angeles 0
American League,
Sunday'• O.me1
N.Y. Yankees 6, 6oston 2
Kiln•• City II Clevelllnd, ppd
Tampa Bay 5, Toronto 4, 10 Inn.
Minnesota 13, Detroll 7
Baltimore 9, White Sox 4
Seattle 9, Texas 7
Anaheim 4, Oakland 1

Meigs fourth, Eastem fifth at VC f!. third
Jacket
f0 r.TiIger..'

BY JIM SOULIIY
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT
M cARTHUR
- The
Me•g:; M ara uder track teams
and the Eastern Eagle track'
sq;tads participated in the first
annual Vinton County lnvitationa! Track Meet at Vinton
County High School on fri day night. Girls and boys teams &amp;om
Meigs,
Eastern, Vinton
Co unty, Federal Hocking.
Alexander, Nelsonville, Trimble and Miller took part in
the meet.

The Mdgs boys finished
fourth with 5(&gt;.5 poims and
the Eastern boys came m fifth
with 40 points.Vinton Coonty ~on the boys divisio,n with
117 pomts. Eastern s R.J.
Gibbs finished fmt in the
shot put with a toss of 42'1.75. Darren Scarbrough of
Eastern finished in second
place and Meig:;' JP Varian
placed third.
Mt·ig:;' Ryan Stobart .finishcd sixth in the high j timp
while Urucc Glover and Gary
Moore finished fifth and sixth

OUT FOR A RUN - Rodolfo
Milanez runs
In th~ 4X800 relay for
Meigs. (Jim Soulsby)

.

respectively for the Maraudcrs in the long jump.
Eagle Ross Holter placed
second in the discus while
Jeremy Roush grabbed a fifth
place toss for Meigs. The
Meig:; 4x800-meter team of
Grant Arnold, Gary Moore,
Lee Layton and Rodolfo

'
AUGUSTA, G•. (AP) -'Tiger Woods knew the rou~
.t ine.
Tug the brim of the cap
coming up the 18th·fai!1Vay.
Tap in the
winning
putt. Smile
and wave to
the gallery.
Give mom
and dad' a
big hug, as
well •as the
n.ew
girl~
friend. Head
Woods
to
tht:
putting
green
to
pick up a
green jacket.
Woods, the meticulou$
Master of Augusta, has been
planning these moments for
a lifetime - and Sunday, it
was time to win his third.
championship on one of
golf's hallowed grounds.
Don't forget, Jack Nicklaus
was 26 when he won his
third Masters in 1966, which
also made him the first te
win back-to-pack titles·.
Woods won his second title
last y~ar and turned 26 in
Oecember.
.
By winning Sunday, he
could. check a couple more
things off his list.
"Besides Jack Nicklius,
Tiger is the best player
(ever),''
said
runner-up
Retief Goosen, a helpless
bystander as Woods cruised
to a three-stroke victory.
"Give him a couple more
years and I think Tiger will
be even greater than Jack
Nicklaus. It's just a matter of

PIIIH ... Meli•• 7

Pro Basketball
NBA
Sundlly'e Qamee
Philadelphia 95, Orlando 89 .
Indiana 86, Washington 80
Milwaukee 98, Charlotte 91
Toronto 101 , New Jersey 82
Portland 128, Lakers 120, 20T
New York 94, Miami 67
Memphis 98, Houston 95
Dallas 113, Sacramento 100

Wahamatops
Blue Angers ·
NEW HAVEN - The ·
Wahama girls tenn'is team
handed Gallia Academy a 5-2
loss on friday at the New
Haven courts.
Wahama took the singles
seu 3-1 to establish a co mmanding lead. Krista Roach
topped Eva Lyon 8-3 at first
•ingles, while Natali e Weitman topped Rachel Haas at
third singles, 8-3. Shonna
Hal!!cd also won for the Lady
Falcons at fourth singles, l:!-3
over Amanda Wothe.
Leighla Hojat was the lone
Gallia singles player to win, 98 over Miranda Fields.
The other Gallia win came
at third doubles, where Maggie Fisk and Laura Sojka won
by forfeit.
Roach and fields won over
Kelsey Huffman and Lela
Hojat. at fint singles, 8-1.
Weitman and Jones aho
bened Angels
Raffan and
Micah Eberhard at ·second
singles, 8-6,

HOT PURSUIT- Marshall defensive tackle - and Hanrian High School graduate- Josh Cordell (84) pursues a ball carrier during Saturday's Green-White football game. (Andrew Carter)

Trainin
Cordell, Mullins wrap up spring
drills with the Herd

Jill

Wahamawlns
again, 14-0
ELIZABETH Adam
Rickard tossed a one hit
shutout while Ryan Mitchell
and Ryan Hodge continued
to wield the hot bats for the
Wahama White Falcons Friday .evening as the Mason
County team breezed past
hon Wirt County 14-0 in
shortened five inning contest ·
due to the ten-run rule.
lticka,rd fanned six Tiger
batten and walked two in
notching h" third mound triumph of the 2002 •pring
b:neball campaign. A pinchhit single br R.hye ·leading off
the final frame waJ the lone
safety Rickard gave up in ,.
pitching Wahama to its ninth ,
comecutive win.
Mitchell and H~dge paced
a nine hit WHS offensive
attack with a single and a ·
double each, Ryan Roush
added a two run triple with
Gabe Lambert, Scott Johnwn,
Anthony Mitchell and Brad
Roush adding a single each.
Ryan Mitchell drove in four
runt on the afternoon with
Lambert andjohnson chasing
home two runnen apiece.
Bradford Cluk and Hodge
were also respomible for driving in a run for the White
Falcom.
Miller took th.s lms for Wirt
County (7-3) with Alltop
working in relief for the
Tigers.
Wahama is slated to host
highly touted Charleston
Catholic this afternoon in a I

a

BY BuTCH COOPER
BCOOPERG)MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM
HUNTINGTON, W.Va.
- At 6-foot-5, 295 pounds,
Josh · Cordell is a commanding presence wherever he
stands ... even on the sidelines of the
Marshall
University
football
team.
On Satur·
day, during
the GreenWhite
game, the
Mullnl
annu~l Marshall football
scrimmage that marks the
end of the spring practice
.season, Cordell watched the
Thundering Herd defense
during a rare moment away
from his starting defensive

tackle position.
While all eyes were on
Heisman Trophy hope Byron
Leftwich and 2001 BiletnikofT Trophy semifinalist
Darius Watt&lt;, Cordell was
working to
solidify his
spot on the
Herd
defense.
·

"We've
changed our
defense up a
little bit,"
said Cordell.
"It's more of
Cordell
a
hardnosed defense now, and I'm
just glad I can contribute to
it. It's been an honor to play
here at Marshall and to play
hard ball."

PIHMMIMU,7

WHAM BLOCK - FreShman tight end Jeff Mullins goes Into
motion for the Herd offense Saturday. (Andrew Carter)

time."
for the final round of the
Masters, a superb collection
of players lined up to challe nge Woods.
Goosen, the U.S. Open
~hampion, was tied for the
lead. Vijay Singh, Ernie Els,
Phil Mickelson, Sergio Garcia
and Jose Maria Olazabal were
in the wings, waiting to challenge.
On rhis day, par wa5 good
enough. Woods shot !-under.
71 - his worst score of the
tournament but all the
contenders went down hard.
Goosen
dropped
four
strokes in the first four holes.
Mickelson started with two
birdies, then bogeyed the next
two holes. Els had a glimmer
of hope until .he put two balls
in Rae's Creek and took triple
bogey. Singh deposited four
balls in various bodies of water
- including one lie threw in
himself after missing a putt.
Woods cruised to . victory
with a 12-under 276 on the
toughened-up,
redesigned
Augusta National. Goosen
made a couple of late birdies
for a 74 - and seemed satisfied with his position.
Mickelson shot 71, wound
up four strokes back and " still
the best player never to win a
major.

Bobby Labonte takes flag at Martinsville
NASCAR

'

MARTINSVILLE, Va:,...-(AP) aean-driving Bobby Labonte provided a storybook ending to Kevin Harvick's day 0 ( reckoning. proving that . cured lots of the bwnping and banging
driven don't have to beat and bang to ·that typifies Martinsville .and other
win in NASCAR's Winston Cup short tracks in the series.
~-ri~.
Labonte, thoogh, decljned to engage
The former champion drove like one in the paint-s"1Jpping. choosing to bide
again Sunday, getting himself into posi- his time and set him'l'!lf up for a run at
tion fot a late move and then being the checkered flag.
handed . ·lead he would not relinquish
Harvick's
growing status
as
by Tony Stewart to win the Virgmia NASCAR's bad boy was solidified
500Winston Cup rnce.
hours before the race, when the govEven on a day when K&lt;'Vin Harvi ck ~rning Body made him the first driver
wa5n't allowed co race became of his barred tiom an &lt;'Vent because of rough
rough driving in the past, the race fca- driving in the senes' 54-year history.

Harvick's pe~alty came after he
clashed several nmc With Coy Gibbs
·during the Advance Auto . l'ans 250
NASCA!~ Craftsman Truck Serk-s race
Saturday, and ulnmately wa.1 told to
park hi&lt; truck after 188 of250 laps.
Harvicks Richard Childr&lt;oss-owned
Chevrolet wa5 driven instead by. 61l~in
Kenny Wallace, who spun out after 73
laps and wound up 32nd.
bespite the buzz about Harvick and
his unprecedented penal~ in the g;.rnge
area before th'e race, the :&gt;IKJ laps went
on in typical Martinsville fashiQQ_with
most every car leaVJng the track WJth
marked- up exterior&lt;
.

In all, there were 14 caution flags that
slowed .the pace for 104 laps, many
. caused by the nose-to-tail and side-1¥.side contacr. that are, as m~c~ a part &lt;!f
the .526-mile tracks tr.ldiaon as hot
dogs and l&lt;'llout crowds.
The race even ended under a firuJIlap caution ~r a crash, allowing
Labonte to ~ISC ~om~ m the glow of
the pace cars flashing lights.
. Instead, Labonte won with an :M'I'"io
age speed of 73.951_ mph, . .
.
· the lOth ~fferent dnver to WJn m the
last I 0 VISit&gt; to the .526-mile ~k. the
longest, oldest and tighteSt run 111 the
Winston Cup series.

'

'

The O.lly Sentinel• Page A7

www.myallyeentlnel.corn

singles around a Cacy Faulk
walk, an error, and aYoung single. This pwhed the score to
17-1.
Against Vinton County. Eastern plated three runs early and
never fell behind in pmting a
9-3 win. Scoring three runs in
the first, Lyons led the charge
with a single, Young singled,
and Putman and Holter
walked, and Cacy Faulk had an
RBI single.
Eastern scored another run
in the second inning when
Brannon walked and scored on
a Lyons double. Vinton County
plated a run in . the second
inning on a Lucik single, a
Cecil single, and an error.
· Eastern plated fi¥e more runs
in the fourth inning on singles
by Cody Faulk, Young, Putman, a Lyons walk, and Ben
,man.
Holter home run. VC scored
, . In Thursday's non-league single runs in the third and
.wjn, Smith fanned fanned sixth innil)gs.
Jeven, walked one, and hit one.
• lOwen fanned two of the three
EAsTERN GIRLS DIUJB SG
he faced. South Gallia had one
TUPPERS PLAINS - .
hit, a double by Jason Merrick. The Eastern Eagles had one of
r Eastern hitters were Chris their best ever outing! in club1Lyons with two doubles, Char- bing the · South Gallia Lady
Ue Youn~ a single, Woods a sin- Rebels 29-0 Thursday night in
..gle, Putman a single, Ben a mercy"rule ·shortened girls'
,Holter a triple, Ken Amsbary a non-league softball action at
Aingle, Smith and Owen sin- · Eastern High School.
;gles, Cody Faulk a single, and
Krista White and Kass Lod:Bradley Brannon a single.
wick combined for a no-hitter
1 •Five walks, an error, and a in posting the win. Eastern is
Holter triple gave Eastern an now 7-1 overall and is 4-1 in
.early lead, then a booming the TVC Hocking Division.
Lyons double knocked home
Krista White went three
otwo runs for an 8-0 lead. East- innings for the win, while Kass
-ern added six more in the sec- Lodwick pitched the last two
ond for a 1~0 lead. Big hits in frames to get the save. White
'lhe frame came from . Lyons, fanned seven of th~ nine batters
,Young, and Putman. SG scored she faced and Lodwick fanned
in the fourth when Workman · four ofthe six she faced. White
reached on an error and scored walked just one.
on a passed ball.
Eastern dominated from the
Eastern scored three more start, pleasing Coach Pam
.runs in the third inning on Douthitt in what had already
.Amsbary, Smith, and Brannon proven to be a three-wi.n week

ern. Eastern added another run
for the Lady Eagles.
Tifl'eny Bi!Sell had ~ double in the sixth ~e when Janet
·
hin
do bled
d
red
and three walks 111 reac g · Calaway
u
an sco
base six times overall. She also on a KasS Lodwick single, 4-0.
scored five runs. Katie R.o~rt·Eastern really got some
son, Sandy Powell, and Alyssa breathing room in the top of
Holter each doubled, Janet . the seventh when four straight
Calaway tripled, doubled, and errors on balls hit by Yea""t,
D'
singled; White had three sin" Bissell, Jenny Armes, and Powgles, Nikki Phillips two singles, ell, the Calaway had a two-run
Barringer a double, S. Bar- double. LodWJ. ck ~allowed with
"
ringer a double and single, and another RBI double and EHS
Armes a triple.
.
. led 8-0 before VC plated a run
E
d th
astern score
ree ames m in the finale for the 8-1 final.
the first and second inning!,
Eastern bitten were Lodthen plated 15 in the third and wick with two doubles and a
eight in. the fo. urth
. to secure . s!'ngle, Janet Calaway two
. douthe lopstded wm.
bles; Krista White a triple,
MCARTHUR
The
ll
d ff.
Sandy Powe a single, an Ti Eastern Lady Eagles kept eny Bissell a single. Jones and
abreast the top oftheTn-Valley Ratliff had the only two VC
Conference Hock.ing Division h•'ts .
standing! by defeating Vinton
'
County 8-1 Wednesday night
RESERVE
. S ·WIN
5·0.,u ....m&amp;u
.
C
Th
·
• ~·
V
at mton ounty.
e WJn
RACINE - The Southern
d
I . d
pushed Eastern to 4- 1 in the Lad 11
d6 1
Y oma 0 reserves c ••me
eli
I
eague stan 1ll!$ an - over- a 10-7 win over the Belpre
all.Kr•'staWh'.l.e agam' pl' tched a Golden Eagles Wednesday in
.
.
"
great game by striking out 12
Vinton County batters and
h
walking none in another great now move to 2 - 0 on t e s~a-

SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT
EAST MElGS- The Eastern EagJ.,' are off to their best
start in
and renuin undefeated at 7cO after claiming a
tough 9-3 win over league foe
Vinton County on Wednesday
and a 17-t triumph over nonleagile South Gailia Thursday.
• Coach Brian 'Bowen's troops
have marched thiough some of
the toughest competition in
_the league so far and have
p:nuined unscathed. Pitching
has been one of the ingredients
.10 success for Eastern this sea.~on. . Charlie Young
bas
~merged as a top performer,
but Ryan Smith was the main
:Thursday with help from
Jonathan Owen, and Wednesday night senior fireballer Jim,mie Putman was the main

ynn

'

.Meigs

.,
I

...

fftNIIPllp&amp;

•Milanez ,finished fourth.
Sprinter 'fYson Lee, stiU recovering
.from a leg injury, finished second in the
;100-meter daSh with a time of 11.7
while Brandon Werry placed fourth for
Eastern with a time of 11.8. John Diddle
, grabbed second in the 1,600-meter run
,w ith Grant Arnold finishing iixth for
.Meigs.
·
, The Meigs 4x1 00 relay team of Lee,
..Glover,' Adam Wise and Jeremy Roush
.Dnished first posting a 47.2.Joe Howard
of Meigs was sixth in the 300-meter hur1Pies; Rodolfo Milanez finished fifth in
, the 800-meter run. Werry scored for the
·,

MU

r•• ,.,
Cordell didn't take long to
•contribute to the Green team's
'~!forts Saturday as he ·was
involved in the lint Green .
•tackle of the game.
·•· The Green team, consisting
10f the Thundering Herd's 6nt
and some of the second tem1
·oplaym, went into the game
.down 24-0, but managed ro
~ a 42-36 lead before the
.scrimmage came to an end.
1 'Tve had a few daw1 this
·spring, but I've .been able to
work them out," said CordeD.
r"l've improwd a lot. I've hit
· 'the \ftigiU room last rummcr
•and worked on my feet and my ·
hands and it's really paid off."
Meanwhile, Marshall head
-coach Bob Pruett is very
impc aed with the Hannan
High School product.
' "josh's ~ done a good
· job for w," said Pruect. "He's a
.startiJlg ~ tackle. He's
·J.ust a redshirt sopholllOle He's
big, saong guy that can run.
His best football is in tiont of
1
1

a

l

him.

"I expect him to be a~
fine player for us."
While CordeD stood on the .

sideline. on

effort. The freshman hurler .bas s6n. ·
Southern
hitters
were
quickly established herself as
. · . daD . . h
.
d
one of the league leaders, and Mlrm
avis Wit a tnp1e an
·
single, and a single by Nikki
has kept the E astern JUggernaut
Riflle 'and a double by Asblee
intact for another great run in
.
Hill. Belpre had seve(l h1ts.
2002. ·
Southern took command in
Sarah Ebem was the losing
~
th · ·
h
J ·
pitcher. She fanned eight and t h e •our . mnmg w en en
Hill walked, Nikki Riflle
walked three.
Eastern broke open a score- walked, and Davis tripled
.
less deadlock in the top of the home two. runs . Bnttany
third . inning when Amanda Denny was hit with a pitch and
Yeager walked, Tiffeny Bissell Holly Duffy walked as Davis
singled, then Holter the cour- came home on a passed ball,
tesy runner stole home. ·Bissell the score 6-5 Southern.
An Asbl
then came home aboard a
. ee Hill doub)e an d
Sandy Powell RBI single, the Riflle single led Southern to
three runs in the fifth to help
score 2-0.
· ·
White led the fourth inning P ut the game away. Mmnda
· off with a triple and Morgan Davis was the winning pitcher
Weber knocked home White .w ith five strikeouts and four
on a 1-6 ground out, 3-0 East- walks.

Eagles again when he placed third iii the
200-meter dash and Wise placed fifth for
the Marauders. Diddle placed third in the
3,200-meter run for Meigs while the
Meigs 4X400-relay team placed fifth.
The Meig:! girls finished fourth with
7 4 points and the Lady Eagles came in
seventh with 18 points. Vinton County
and Federal Hocking shared the girls'
tide with 1OS points each.
Jami Hayes placed sixth in the discus
for the Marauders, while Megan Garnes
captured third in the 1 00-meter dash.
Garnes was third in the high jump with
Shannon Soulsby of Meigs getting fifth
place. Brook Bolin, the defending TVC
hurdles champion, placed first in both
the 100-meter (17. 7) and 300 meter
(54.8) hurdles for Meigs. Jennifer Chadwell placed third in the 300-meter hur-

-was looking ro make his mark

dies for the Eagles.
Emily Story grabbed third in the 800meter run for Meigs , while Brandi
Thomas finished sixth. Story had a
fourth-place finish in the 1,600-meter
run. Jennifer Hayman placed sixth in the
200-meter · dash and· fifth in the 400
meter run for the Lady Eagles. Shannon
Soulsby took first place honors · in the
400-meter run with a time of 1:05.8.
The Meig:! 4x200-relay team of Shannon Soulsby, Brook Bolin, Cassie Lee
and Megan Garnes edged a strong Vinton County quartet to finish first with a
time of 1:58.2. The 4x400-relay team of
Soulsby, Garnes, Bolin and Justine
Dowler finished second. Eastern's 4xt00
team placed second.

Dennison will be the fiont- gone atrer this year. If I put in
Mullins got a great deal of runner ibis !&lt;'ason, but Mullins, my dues and work bird as I can
playing time for the White who started ~ a long snapper and get some snaps in here and
squad, on the field at tight end for the White team, will be
there, hopefully l can make it
for most of the offensive pro- Waiting for his chance.
next year:'
cessions.
"I had a good one to learn
The Thundering Herd
"There's four tight ends off of in Chris Massey," said
competing and three under- Mullins. "Dennison is a great opens its !&lt;'ason Aug. 31 at
cbssmen," said Mullins. "I'm
long snapper. This is his fifth · home against Appalachian
hoping to get in there every
year. The way I look at it, hes State.
once in a while. I'm hoping to .
Public NotiCI
make it big on special teams
this year."
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
FURNITURE
Mullins, who has grown to
PUIICHAIIE FOR
252 pounds at Marshall, was in
lliEIGS COUNTY JOB
almosr ~ special teams play.
• FAMILY SERVICES
Silled bide .... bo
return and kicking teams.
..-v.d
by IIMIMelga
"I definitely think that will
County Board of
be my biggest shot," said
Commlaalonara In :
their office lee llld
Mullins of being on special
In the CourthouH,
teamS. "The depth charts right
Socond ltraet,
Pomeror, Ohio 457et
~ ~ me on quite a few
Longaberge,.
unUI 1:00 p.m. on ,IIMI .
special teams on the lint team
25th day of April
Basket Bingo
and !heres quite a few of them
2002, and 111 that lime
oponail by the Clark
that ~ me on the second
hursiday, April 18th, 2002
of
Nld Soard and
team also. the ones I'm not on
6:00p.m.
rtlld aloud lor the
6nt team. So hopefully I'D
puoat
ol
Middleport American Legion
lurnltura ror the
~ a chance at 6nt team. I
Mill St. - Midd!,eport, OH
lllalge County Job •
wmt to get on the field as
F8fnllrS.ri
.
$20.00 for 20 Games
much as potsibie."
Spacltlcatlona tor
aalcllumltuN _ , bo
Held by the
Pruett likes Mullins, and
obtained from the
Guiding Hand School
despite the number of tight
Clllfl of Soard of
..... County
ends that will be 6ghting for
For TICkets
Comml11lonara or
playing time this year, believed
Call 740-367-7371
Jane Banke o1 the
he can be a pla)u on the
Splillhe Pot • Refreslhtn4tnta
~of-·
FamiiJ
Service•
offensiw side of the ball
Dobbers- $1.00
dullng.-nat
"We run a three tight end
• The l.ongol*lll' Co•'*'l' or
working houre,
lt'e ..... ,'PI 111 ...... nln
olfensealot,.Oitlookslilcebe's
llondaJ throu1h

hard coming back, but its fun ."

the other

I think he's · going to be an
llas a redshirt &amp;eslunan.
· exullem: college foocbaD play·, "I enjoyed that and getting cr. For a redshirt freshman. bl;'s
'some (playing) time," said g&amp;lg to play a ~-"
.
Mullins- "It's a liale dilfemlt
In the meantunr. Mullim
being a ~ and a half of£ and name has also come up as a
being tedlhirted. It's kind of long snapper. Senior Cory

t"uhli\ \ .. tl{'"' ~~~ ''""f'-'1"'"
\tU.II lo:I~(U ' I' f...llt•'ol . hdt\HI'tt ~~~ht IU htUI

NOTICE OF ELECTION at 1:30 a.m. and tu tot tiMI purpo11 of
ON TAX LIVY If
Nnllln open until 7:30 PROVIDING
EXCESS OF THI! TI!N p.m. of aa1c1 dly.
ADOO'IONAL
..LL LIIITATION
• ordw oflhlloard GENERAL REVENUE
llevlaad Coda,
o Etect10111 ol Melge FOR CRIMINAL AND
81Ctfon13101 .11 (G), County, Olllo.
ADIIIWISTRAnVI!
1701.11,1701.25
Dellld Aprll4, 2002
JUSTICE SERVICES
NOTICE ta IMINby John - N.
I hie, AND . PAYING THE
given
that
In Chalrperaon
I! x pI! Ns E
0F
pureuuce ot a Rita D. Smith,
ADMINISTRATION OF
R.. otullon ol the DINC!or
SUCH LEV~, for ·a
Vlllllll Council of tile April 1, 15, 22 1 21, continuing period ol ·
VIllage ol Racine, 2002
time, beginning July 1,
Ohio, paaalld on the
2002.
4th day ol February,
p'ubllc Notice
The polla tor uld
2002, there '!IIIII be
election will be open
eubmlttld to 1 vote of NOTICE OF ELECTION at 1:30 a.m. and
the paopla of aald
ON TAX LEVY IN
,.....In open until 7::10
eubdlvlelon at a EXCESS OF THE TI!N p.m. oluld day.
Primary ELECTION lo
MILL LIMITATION
ay order of the Board
be held In lha VIllage
llevllild Ct~(G) ol Electlona of Melga
of
Racine,
Ohio,
at
the
Secl701ona
Ohio.5, :1002
regular placaa ol
5 5.11,3SO
57os' .25 ' County,
Delacl March
voting the,.ln, on the NOTICE Ia hereby John
N.
IIIIa,
7th day ollllay, 2002, given
that
In Chelrperaon
tiMiqueatlonotlevylng purauence of • RltaD.Smlth,
a tax, In , _.. ol the Reaolullon ot the Director
.
ten mill llmhatlon, tor Vlllege Council ot the 'Apr u a, 15, 22 a ae,
the benefit of Racine Vlllege of Middleport, 200 2
VIIJage tor lhe purpoM Ohio, paaud on the
ol current Expan-. 20th day of Fabruary,
Said lax .being a 2002, there will be ·
...,tacernanl of a tax of aubmltlad to a vote of
1.7 mille at • rete not the people of aatd
axcaacllng1 .7 milia tor aubdlvlalon at •
·each one dollar of 1'rlmary ELECnON to
valuation, which be held In the Vllllge
amounta lo MventMn ot Mlddtaport, 0hlo, at
cent• ($0.17)·tor each ·t11• Ngu1ar p1acea o1

7

~:~c~es;_r;~e:c:ftb~an~~t•;.~; ~:.~:~~~ f0~11~: ~~; ;~~~~;h:r~~Y~:0~2~
y re.
the queallon of

going in really get totnt pby'side of the 6dd. 20Ql Gallia ing time," ,aid Pruea. "I think
Academy grado•atr .JdF Mullins bei a reaiJy &amp;GOd, 1011gb pl.t)u. .

:Green

PUBLIC
NOT I

no,_

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Tile ConunlaeiG,..,.
... .,.. the rigid f4
l'ljlct aiiJ alld ell
blda and/or •c c111
. . batt bkl for

....,
the

Intended

Glcll1ll ~ CJIIIl

llalaa

CouniJ

ca ...•·• r'r,..
(4) .. 11, 211112

ac

11
The pone tor aald
election will ba opan
II 1:30 e.m, end
Nmaln opan until 7:30
p.m. of nld dly.
By ordar of the Board
of Electlona ol Melga
County, Ohio;
Dated MarCh 11, 2002
John
N.
I hie,
ChalrpeNon
Rha D Smith
DINCI~r
'
April 8, 11, 22 a 21,
2002

levying a tax, In
exc••• of lha tan mill
llmttltlon , lor the
ban•lll of Middleport
VIllage lor the 1111rpon
of Fire Protection.
laid tax being 1
,.newal ol 2 milia at a
rail not exceeding 2
(two) milia lor each
one
dollar
ol
valuation
which
amount• io twenty
centl $G.20) tor IICh
hundrad dollara of
valuation lor live (5)
Public Notice
yeara.
The polla for aald
NOTICE OF ELECTION election will be opan
ON TAX LEVY IN · at e·.3o a.m. and
EXCESS OF THE TEN ,.main opan until 7::10
p.m. of aald day.
LIMn:·"•:rtON
· MILL
Br order ot the Board
Ravlaacl Codll,
Sectlona 3501 .11 (G), o Elactlona ol Melga
5701.18,5705.25
County, Ohio.
NOTICE I1 h b Dlllld March 8, 2002
N..
lhla,
given
that . , . InY John
purauance ol 1 Chalrparaon
R.. olullon or tho ~~!:.::o~mllh,
Board ol County
Commlaalonera
of tho April I, 15,. 22 &amp; 21, _~==~==~~
County ol Malgl , _2_00_2_ _ _ _ _ _
Help Wanted
Porneroy,Ohlo, paaMd
-;;;:~;;;:;;~~:,::;
on the 14th day ol __P_u_bl_lc_N_ot_lc_•_ r
February, 2002, there
ATTENTION
will be aubmlnecl to a' NOTICE OF ELECTION
N'S
vote ot the people of ON PROPOSITION
LP
'
eald aubdlvlolon II I Rev. Coda. SaoI. .ARCADIA NURIIN
Primary I!LI!CTION to 322.02; 511.01, 21 ,28;
CENTER
be held In the County 513.08; 517.04, 05;
Part·lime positions
. of Malga, Ohio, at the 701.29, 31; 7~1.14;
regular place• ol 748.3; 3501.11 (a)
are available on
voting therein, on the Notice Ia · horaby
affemoon and
7th day of May, 2002, given
that
In
midnight shill.
oI
We offer excellent
the que1tlon of Iawing pur • u 1 n c •
a tllx, In axe••• of the Raaolutlon . of tho benefits thai Include
tlln mill limitation, lor Board ol County
Health Insurance,
the blnelll of llltlga Comm1111onera ol the
County Hullll Dlatrlct County of Melge, 401K, Life Insurance,
tor the purpoae of Pomeroy,
0 hI o,
compelltlve wages
Current Expan111.
peoaed on the 2111 and opportunities fOf
Said tax baing a day ol Fabruory, 2002, advancement. 11 you
...,1_1111nt ofatu of there will be eubmllllld
J
1 our
1 mill( I) II I rlltt not to • vote of tho people would like to on
exCMCIIng 1 (one) ml!l of aald Malga County team, apply In pers
for nch one dollar ot at the Prlmery Election betWeen 9:00a-4:00
valuation, '!IIIIIch to bl hold In the .
or you can call
amounta to tan conta County of Malge, Ohio · Stacey Duncan at
S0.10) for . . chat the regular placea '
740 .667•31 56
hundred dollare of ol voting, therein on ARCADIA NURSING
valuation for live (5) TuHdly, the 7th day
y11r1.
of May, 2002, the
CENTER
The polla lor aald quaotlon of one-halt
East Main Street
•!action will be opan percent
and uM Coolville, Ohio 4572
740·667-3156

••Jt•

EOE

$2,000
1

.Sign-on Bonus
Full-Time RNs &amp; lPNs
Flexible Sclu!duling
Pleasant Valley Hospital, a non-profit healthcare
facility, currently has open positions for Registered
Nurses and Licensed Practical Nurses. Applicants must
have a current WV licenSe.
Excellent s&amp;lary, holidaye, hospilalization, dental, life
insurance, vacation, long-tetm disability and retiremenl.
·11 is tha policy and prattice of Pleasant Valley Hospital lo
conduct background investigations before a candidate ill

hired. .

-

Join our family of professionals 1o be lhe resource for

community heaHh service needs.

For more .information:

Pleasant Valley Hospital
C/0 Human Relourcft
2520 Valley Drive
PolntPteosant. WV 25550

(304) 675-4340
AAIEOE

�www.myclllllytentlnel.com

The Dilly Sentii'MII • Page AI

Gtribune - Sentinel We cove.....,
Melfi, Citlllt,

M11on
Counties Llkt
~nd

No OJ'It
Else Cant

In one week With us

REACH OVER .285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS

P/1
DlRII:C'ltHt

0 ll'

N U RS IN G.

Responsible for 24-hour administration of
I 1 I. I
\

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

Word Ads
OtiiV 1n•C01Um'H l ~ OO p.m.
Mond•v· fl'rld•v fa~ lnatttlon
h' Na•t ~lly'a Ptptt

Q!spiey Ads

All Oitployt U Noon I
Dualnota oova Prior To

PubiiCIIIOn
Sundoy tn·Calun•n: I tOO p.m. Sunooy OIIPiiV l I tOO
Sundtva· Pt,u
Tnuradtv fOF Suttdl'fl

,,:u·

Includes Free Yard Sale Sign I
Up To 15 words, 3 Days
Over 15 Words 20¢ Per Word
Ads Mus.t Be Prepaid

ao

,t I I I II

I I\ I

nursing services for the facility. fakes
responsibility for the cmtdltion and care
aiven to the residents.&gt;Must have Ohio
RN license, previous bON/Asst. DON
e~perlence preferred .and L1'C experience
a must.

.

I! II I,

lt lntertsted, pJeae tonlatl

Ptlvttt Partv Ma u~dtr it~o
Worda J Deva • lt~h aen~ P11etd
• No COft\MtN:IAI Adi
• No Tlektti/Pu1tbrt!l Mlffioll

Or Gtrtoe/Ytrd So ill •

~lmlt ~

Humiln Resourtes at 7-'0·992·2104,
Momlll)' throu11h Frldll)', 9 am • 4 pm

Per PtrtGn.

Mill 'fol Ohln lltlltV I'Ubll!hlnQ, ~~!Third
Avtnue, IS~ IIIptilll, 0~ •$Ul

• StiH Your ,t,da With A Ktyword ' lncludt C.omplttt
Oturlptlon • ln c: t~,~dt A PriCI • Avoid A.bbthlttlona
~clclrt11 WI"'IF\
~no•la ~un 1 Ooya

• lncluelo Pnono Numbtr And

• Ml

Nttdtd

THE BEST,
SO SALARY IS ·
NEGOTIABLE/

·CONTIAOOIIS. INC.
Racine, Ohio 45771
740.885-3848
CONC~Elt/llOCk/B~ICK
' Footen., Walls, Ste'ps •

Flat Work,
Replacemen1s, • Walks
ond Dri~es • Slencll

, Crete ·

Free Bstlmutes.
S•rvlng Ohio und W.V.
WVII03171l

HOWARDL.
WRITESEL

Roofing- Home
MaintenanceGutters· Down
Spout
Free Estfmstes
94 1405 TPN

l

Sunset Home
Construction

Cellular
Authorized Agent

Bryan Reevea
New Homea, Room Addltlona,
Ga111gea, Pole Bulldlnga, Roofl,
Siding, Deckl, Kltchena, Drywell
&amp; MOI'II

992-5479

740-742-3411

JetlWarner Ins.

FREE ESTIMATES!

. BANKRUPTCY
can relieve a debtor of financial obllaatlon• 111d
· ananae a fair distribution of assets amona
ctcditon. Apenon l!llin&amp; throuah bankruptcy
may retain certain property, known u
"exempt" property, for his or her pc1'8011al use.
This may include a car, a house, clothes, and
household aooda. You should direct any
queatlone regardlna bankruptcy ~ an attorney
before proceedlna. for information teganllna
· BankrupiA:y contact:
WIUialll Salnnek,Attomey
(740) 59MOZ5
Atbeu

·

?50 East State Street Phone (740)593·6671
Athens, Ohio

WI 1\lllll

Hill's S!!lf

• Cllliltlllllil WitH In

IOUihooi'-"i Ohio

Storage

• I hollr lhllll

• 10 IMidinlo ho 1 nui'H i'ttllo

• LJid blcik envtronllllftt

28670 Saahan Road

Racine, Ohio

Altllli Ill iiiCIIUIOd lild

Urint.,._k.t•
' lllllijitlttiW. IIIJ'Itnt jiADiilllt
Wt DUIItHII~ ftiYI tilt

4577t
740·141·2217

.

IOIInilfil flellltlon li~llllbi011
1fuM tlmtl•llllliltt

Hour•

Aroadla Nuralil'\n

l~od"

Bo\ I X'l
\liclcllt-porl, ( lltio -l57t.H

II
Local 843-5Z64
~~~~~ia.:! Supplement; Life Insurance;
IE
and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
IDet~tal, Retirement,
&amp; 4tllK Rollovers;
Mtijor Medical

WERRY'S

Business Services
All Ml!kes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Ca!C·IH !'arts

H. llnpp. \gt·nf

7:00AM ·8:00PM

Center

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUOION
• Ntw HOi'lltl
• Oar•o..
• Complttl
· lltmodtllng

WmLEONES
Now acclptlng

chlld,.n
Day, evening,

(740)HN3tl

AIIMikM

(100!8!3-3110

a Modtla

• Top • ~tmoval • Trim

New Homu • VInyl
Sldlna • New 011'11Jeil
• 1tepllwe111ent

Wlndowi • Jtooftna
COMMIIClALIIIIIIHIDiliiiAL

I

"One Price.
Anytime.
All the Time."

PLUMBING
ELECTRICAL
APPLIANCES
RESTAURANT
EQUIPMENT

• Bucket Truck

Onion Sets

Fui(Linc of Uulk Gorden Seed• .
Fertilizer Spcclflc•IIY Designed for Gurdon Crops

care avallabla
992~8975

New Fertilizer Buggie11
All buggies have been pattern l~sted Lo mcel
Agronomy Association Slundard!

or ~mall@

MI!Y1tlhgribuam

I tl' · 1!1• · i'lilN
• 11 1 '.I l'idN IINCI
It

Labor Wllflnty

Seed Potntoes

~~~~~~~

~

~

14-HR.
SERVICE

rnbbl!!.

• Stump Grinding

74G-882·1871

II

10Yr. Part. .

HEATING
COOliNG
REFRIGERATION
COMMERCIAU
RESIDENTIAl

140·667·0363

t

Heating &amp; Cooling
Frto Eltlmllll

1/1:1.
11!•1

r

BrytnUqulp.

J!SJ7 St. Rl. 7 North • Pomeroy, OH 4S710
4-H reed for lambs, hogi, steers, chickcn11 ond

Tree Service

a

I

HEN D{l /X

Shade River AG Service
"Ahead In Service"

JONES'

andw~ekend ·

W.lorvlct

Oealct'l '
1000 St. /It, 7SrJuth 8top complrt
CoolvU/;, OH 43723 1 ,FII!I !ITIMAT!I

II

&lt;118101

r '( I 11

1111
17481

J,l), CONSTRUCTION

New Home• &amp; Remodellna
"Spceiallzina In Loa Home•
&amp; Rubber Roofo"

lf!ilj

A
fll.••:

~

R1plac1m1nt Windows

Uvl~til

PAll! ESTIMATES

740-H2·718t

....

ff!•.•J

ll!f:t,.

Oaraaeo, Pole Bulldlnao. Concrete
f:toofo &amp; Siding
Commercial &amp; Re•ldentlal ·

lll itt
&amp;

(740) 992-3987

ill!~

Owner &amp; Operator, John Dean T,N · .

ftftftftt:J~.~

LIME· ~~~
STONE .High&amp; Dry
DeiiVel'lld &amp;
8pl'llad.1S.OO
per ton~ 81o 10
tone, lmll•d
call tor
C1ll:

591·21-

Self-Storage
33795 Hii.JIIII RJ.
Pommy, Ohio

740-992-5232

Pomeroy Eagles
BIDG02171
fuel'!l Tbulldog
6 SUnday
Doon Open 4:30
ferty birds start
6:30
Progrmlue top Une
Thursdays
Praaresslue
Couerell on SUMIIys

YOUR CODCRflf
CODDECTIOD, LLC
Bedllnen •Nerf Bar
• Tonneue Cover
• Ventvlsor • Bua
IShlltid &amp; Full Line
Other Aoc-riH

(olemanl3

HERBALIFE
lndepeildent
Dlalrlbbtor

'
I

I

'II

II~O)lJ'!~

I Lost 27lb.
b132 days,
100%

'&gt;II?/

(740) 742·8015
Quality Concrete Work
Driveways, Patios,
l&gt;arklng/play Areas.
Sidewalks, Floors
28 ytll'l Experience
F,...EIIIIMIH

(toll,...,

877·353-7022

AB Video
&amp; Tanning

naturai/Ouaranleed

Free lslunates

740-992·7038

11111 JIP.I:I./1 Sl • MUirlll'llflrl

140-992-9158

CMI.
~

::r.~~~~~
&amp;liolltfO ., ..,...
•

•

~.
,..
(li!U,-tHHO

lttUirilll,

O.WIIi--~~~-

ClltC
~

MIPI!fll(fo

o twlo

diwl. lilliw, molliii-IIOIN
,.,.,
ltld -01111,· 74(jl.fft.
fO( , . .
............
~aU:

aa,.J-.au.ld.

r..or. ow. 45769
1

~1ctYOII

Call Count on•

o.w

GtMArma

.,,

:

M1dowalt

978eedl St.

llddleport,OH
(11111' 611'120')

992·3194

LlcenMd &amp; !neurad
Health Problem•?
Want_Mo111 Leleure Tlm1?
Tired of Mowln17
Not A ?.rl'al Chic 1n?
LIMIT D PENINGS

(740) 992-1536

liking
~

II IBI

Bilrd rwnes )Q.Iatn
bUilt

Certai I I•
I.Mne

WILLIAMS
EXCAVATION
(Syracuse, Ohio)

, Bulldozing,
Trackhoe/Baekhoe,
land clearbtg; Septic
tank, ditching. water

FIELDS
PLUMBING
405 5th StrNt

New Haven, WV
•Realdentlot

•Comm•rcla

lines, .she work,

basemc:noolfoolcfl,
drivewayo, ponds
(Insured)

Free Estimates
740-992·3985

,

et(304)6
882·2343
WVU.102124a

.....

I

l

'

�.. .
Pegt A10 • The Dlllly Sentinel

Nk)nda~April15,2002

www.mydallyeentlnel.com

ALLEYOOP ·

aamo1:
PHILLIP
ALDER

ACROSS
1 POll
I =~

I......

IUddlnly
1Z Dolllp
U Oruall Ml
14 Paelnlllll

....

15 Mnllnl
Dna..-

• AJ t
• Q 4 I

• t' t

""'"
¥

A I I 3

-~.
20 Chllllr

A Itt'

t I
4AkJ ,I Ot

21 OelaiMpy
22 lrull'a PluiO
23 YM-IIIoln
H Mlrlllllkl
n Pollllltl
30 Clink
31 ltu!CIV 33 Ytdtlon ·
:M Dllp llell
31 Pulh 1 nit

Deller: South
Yulntrtbtt: BOitl
WUI

. 1..

NIM'tll

f11.JI It
fllu ' ••

IY

Oilf!ttlnlletd: n

More errors

fi~St

VEGETAgLE
5AVING$
ANP

'. ,,

BARNEY
HOW nrD WOMEN G?IT TH'
RIG-HT TO VOTii ...
DOES
ANVONE
KNOW'?'

•I

THE BORN LOSER
~

~

IF YOU '!&lt;:~ FINI~f\E:D l--ilT~'(())~
f.'\i.P-L, WE. :)1-\0ULD &amp; GOlf'.~(, I

'

P"'"

"'l

Wl-\1\\ IN &amp;..1\2(".:1 N!f..'(OJ COl~
OOWt-1 Ti-\a£ 7

jU~i 1\

.......
411 IUIIIIdpoAI
47 Unduly
411 Arttfect
50 Toon'allghl

bUill

11 DeiiiOr'l
-.

w-··

u

II

r.\11-\LlTI:, 0 \\Ef...

.· - -/

53=

Dowblr or
Shriver
. DOWN
11 Fllrtetlouo
20
Photnlclon
1 a-ball
dtiiY
VIP
22 Quell
2 Actor
23 Prefix lor ·
Baldwin
cycle
3 Lukl
Skywllklr'a 24 Not thelrl
25 Buoy 11
¥uru
4 Hml
I Audibly
11

35
37

38

40
41
42
43
44

Spying on
Curty-lalled
doga
Ad colllmlllll
Pruchlrlike
Clrwl.,..
Slll!llll
Tlmbtr .
Brlcklll of

::!:

I I' I Ia

I I I' Is
I' 1 v r
1

I·

11

I

I'

IMONDAY

APRIL 151

What's Inside

...

3

April llo, 2002

In th(' year •head, continue
tu stkk to any ~mlcavor that

you've been workinM an.

With rc1olve, pcru:vcrance
:Old

dili~~nce,

ynU could at

long la•t realize a harvclt.
AlliES (March 21-April19)
•• You ""'Y not accomplish
your aims, not bc~:.uAe you

&lt;lidll't thi11k your IIIOVeS
through thoroughly. but be· .
cau'e yuu could ('ucleuly
choi1~e dirc:ctiunl without

c•u•c. Trying 10 patch up •
broken romance? The AmuGraph Matchmaker can help
you unJmr.tnd w1,.t to do t~
""kc the relalionship work.
Mall 12.75 to Matchmaker,
c/o thi• newspaper. 1'.0. Uox
1758, Murray llill Station,
Nrw York, NY 10156.
TAURUS (Aprll 20-May
20) •• Stay tho course and
avoiJ ukiu~ any gan~bles -· or
&lt;1noc.:i.iltrs who may br prone
to

takt them. Eithtr could oet

you back u.n your hecl1.

GEMINI (May 21 -June 2U)
•• When It comes to any pan'nenhip arrangcmenu . the

rules of the game ntuJt be
cl"ifoeJ and fully enforced. ·

'

.

Without them in place, 'eiLhcr
· party cuuld go mr•y ond
&lt;&gt;\tot trouble.
·
CANCER Uune 21-July
22) -- You may nan olf un
tht risht foot by worki1111
1luwly ond carefully. Huwever, thould tirne $tart co run
ouc, you could brcomc: reck-

Jess and spoil the ~ntire til·
deavor.
LEO Uuly 23-Aug. 22) ..
Stick with your tried and true '
friends and forego getring Involved with an unknown &lt;II •
tity . Son1eone about whon1

you know little may betray
· your trult.

vm.co (Aug. 23-S.pt. 22)
-· If you get sidetracked by
petty issues. there's a chance

chac you won't condudc ali
endeavor to which you've de ..

voted considerable time,
which could cauoe neptivo
efTecu.
LIURA (Stpt. 23-0et. 23) •
• FollOw your own counsel

and do what you know to be
correct. If you listen to un·
wi1e advice from another, it

could sabougo your aims.
SCOII.PIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) .. Think twice before In·

Votving younrlf in a financial .

endeavor. such " putring up
your hard-earned money on .
som(lthins that 's not

your~.

You could lo!e it all.
·
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) .. Ke&lt;p those with
whom you shart a special endeavor informed about your
intentions. If Y0\1 don't, they

could thwart your efforts
when it comes lime to ihlplement thern .
J

•

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jan. 19) •• You can often discern what the end results
might be before you embark
on an endeavor, bu t that m11y

not be the ~asr this time:,

however. Don t take chances.

AQUARIUS Uan . 20-Feb.
IY) -· You are 11ill in that cy· .
de where the imprtllion you
make on people will be llrong
anJ la11ing. Ueware that you
don't make it a bad one.
I'ISCES (Feb. 20-Much 20)
-- Partial victories will not
h11ve any ligniflun,e m the

large ~ehente of lhin(ll. Nothing it a fait accontpli jult be ..
cause you've worktd on it for

a little while.

Qualls trial
continued
until August

&lt;

Watson signs with OVC, I 1

Deaths

BY BRIAN J, REED
BREED&lt;I&gt;MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM
POMEROY - The trial of a Middleport man accused of
killing his estranged girlfriend last month has been contitl·
ued until August.
Meigs County Common Pleas Court Judge Prcd W.
Crow Ill approved Eric A. Qualls' request for a continuance.
,of his murder trial during a final pre-trial
hearing on Monday.
Quails was s!'hedulcd to go before ;t
jury on May 7, but his wurt-appointed
attorneys, Williat)l N. Eachus of Gallipolis
and K. Robert Toy of Athens, told Cro~
the continuance was necessary in order to
complete the investigative amt mitigation
work re~uired by the dcfeme team .
Qualls, 27, of Middleport, is charged
Qualla
with two counts of aggravated murder one carrying a prior calculation specific•tion - in the March 7 shooting death of Rebecca Ackerman. Ackerman died of a gunshot wound just outside the
Corner Restaurant in Middleport, where she worked as a

Glenn F. Youn~ Sr., 71

Detalll, AJ

.. .

Weather
High: 80s, Low: 60s
Detail•. A2

Tough day on
WaiiSbeet
NEW YORK (AP) Mixed ~arnings from Citigroup and .Eli Lilly ·set off
more sdling on Wall Sireet
Monday as investors, still
unimpressed by first-quarter reports, shied away from
commitments to stocks.
Trading volume was light,
a reflection of investors'
unwiUingness to participate
u neil corporate forecasts
become less murky:
Analysts said that until ·
companies start to expren
confidence that business is
improving, a rally is unlikely.
The Dow Jones industrial
average closed down 97,15,
or
1.0
percent,
at
10,093 .67. It was the bluechip gauge's lowest close
. since Feb. 22, when the
index was at 9,968.15.
Broader stock indicators
also struggled.
The Standard &amp; Poor's
500 index fell 8.46, or 0.8
percent, to 1,1 02.55, while
the
technology-focused
Nasdaq composite index
lost 2.41, or 0.1 percent, to
1,753.78.

Lotteries
OHIO

Pick 3: 2-6·0
Pick 4: 6·3~4·2
Buckeye 5: 1-4·19·26·33 · ·
Pick 3 (nlpt): 5-9-6 ·
Pick 4 (nljht): 0·5-7-·4

W.VA.

Dai!Y 3: 5-4·9
DallY 4: 7·4-9·1
Cesli 25: 3-4&lt;5-13·21· 23
, --------~---------

Tut~doy,

ROAD CONSTRUOION

45ro~

T~~:t:~' s~ttcillA-a£trs·

BIG NATE

Hometown Newspa,.r

Melp County"s

longnt

I Sport•
More errors are
38 llllut up
"nbno"
41 r;:-:lth
made at trick one
31 Trojan wer 1 Alr·tralflc
47 MuiCUIII
CIUN
0/0•
than at any other
epaam
31 Lock .
I Zlgug
trkk. So, for the next
•• londillldlr
OjltMI'
0011111
-Brown
40 "Tile Oold 8 Nil, In
three weeks, let's look
lug•
S.v111e
at some ·of the possi1uthor
10 Swill hor11
~rr-'1!~,....,...._
bilities faced by the
three active players at
trick one.
First, · of cuurse, is
the ta~;ing (on Tax
Day) opening lead. If
you were West, what
would you lead
against four hearts?
How often have ·
you suffered like this?
The bidding is over,
~nd you are. the declarer. No lead is
. forthcoming. You tell
your left-hand oppo•
ncnt that it is his lead.
"It is? How did the
bidding go?" 1\nd after you tell him, "Let
me have that again."
CELEBRITY CIPHER
Then he · starts to
by Lula Campo• ·
C.ltbrtly Clphtr cryptogram• oro crootod from quototk&gt;no by tomoua
think about his lead.
pooplo, pootond prooont. Each lolltr In tho cipher llondolor onotlltr.
You should analyze
Todey's clue: E equals U
the bidding as it pro gresses; workinK out
SMTEAZR
'· I ·N R A H .J J R 0 S
the hand-strengths of
8 N R
H X
8 R R 8 N
. all three other players.
PHSN
Then most ·of the
HO
ZKPO
HXFTYfi-SKL
time your lead will be
inforrped, not a gues~.
UTM
8 N K .l
8 N R Y
F K Z Z
Let's go through
fiLBMKFBHTXO.'
West's options here.
A club . is lousy,
K.K.
O. FNHZZHXJ
straight inti&gt; declarer's
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'Oireclor~ are wonderlu't...l hope
lhiY hlvtn'l found oul yel I don't know what I'm doing. •
first-bid suit. The diaAnthony Hopkin•
·
mond queen looks
tempting, but again it --------~~----~--~--~~~-------.is a suit bid by an opUloo~ ~y CI.AY I, POlLAN
ponent. -A trump il
potentially suicidal. 0 ~earrcnge letter• of tl'l1
teromblod word1 bo·
That leaves the spade low four
to form four 1lmplo word!.
two, which would be
my clear choice·. Also,
NA C 0 R 0
which is mega-::.imporII
tant, the low-card
lead guarantees an
honor in the suit. {If
H I T NN
you do not 'have an
honor, lead high.)
Here, East wins the 1"'-~"1:-:-'-''"":':-:o--il N
first trick with the
T L 0
People keep asking me how
spade jack, cashes the
~
~
granny has lived to be so old .
sJlade ace, and returns
. _ . . .•
Granny told me that the way to
the spade four. West l"'--:-:--::-:-:-:-:--:--.,,tp r~l?~ ~~e- ·s~ li·f.e is to do nothing
U S ·I V A L
• 0
exits in a minor suit,
and the defenders l--,~ar-"11r"l9!"""'11-.,l-"'l--l G) Complooo tho chuckle q~otod
by filling In the milling words
await the setting trick ~-'-..1-....1-.t.._.,....l you dovolop from lltp No. 3 bolow.
in hearts.
PRINT NUMBERED
Note that on any I .'I;P. LETTERS
other opening lead,
declarer · can get ,
home . Also, if West ~,i.litiijiL,_L_L..J_LJ....:LL..J
leads the 13th spade at
• SCUM-LETS ANSWERS
•'.
trick four, South can
Arouse • Limbo • Unity· Needle • I was BORN
succeed with a Devil's
Smart
coed: 'You ftunk~d the history exam!' Not so .
Coup -- try it and ·
smart
coed:
'I know. But all the questions were aboul
see.
things that happened before I was BORN."

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

J..OAN

41 Mell
43 Chair

11=-chlnOt
...
17 Mr.llndllr .54 DJ'a auppty
1I l!llctlon
SS Flrmi up

... 1111 .

111\MII

Eastem girls stop Belpre, B:J

NII:A Cro11word Puule

Index
2 llctiOII- 1:1 Plpi

Calendar
XX
Classifieds
83·5
Comics
86
Dear Abby
· AS
Editorials
A4
Movies
A3
Obituaries
A3
Sports ·
81·3
Weather
A2
c 2002 Clhlo Vllloy Mtlthlfll Co.

WORK DI!LAYI!D -Rainy weather has once again temporarily delayed work on Phase II of the
Ravenswoo,d Connector project. Despite the temporary delay, officials with ODOT say the project Is still on schedule. When completed, the connector will link u.s. 33 with the Ritchie Bridge
and 1·77 In Ravenswood, W.va. (Tony M. Leach) .

Weat er orces
new ea .o•n
reJect

waitress.

BY TONY M. LIAcH

· PUlE POLNTS . - Rain has once again
forced worken on Phase ll of the Ravenswood
Connector project to temporarily put down
their tools.
'
However, all crews should be hack on the
job around the beginning of May, according to
officials with the Ohio Department of Transportation (ODOT).
Greg Huffinan, ODOT project engineer for
Phase II, said Monday inclement weather has
once again delayed construction on the second.
of three segments of Super 1Wo highway that
will ultimately connect U.S. 33 with the
Ritchie Bridge and lntentate 77 at
Ravenswood. W.Va.
However, most work crews 'should return to
the job around the first of May.
''Even though bad weather has caused a
number of delays over the last several months,
construction on our segment of the project is
slowly moving along," said Huflinan .
"We have some workers still on site and we
anticipate a majority of our crews returning
J,round the first week of May," he said. "Overall, the project is still on schedule because our
wor~ docket· allows , for possible weather
delays."
Huffinan added, Weather permitting, over

~Coalition
8Y 1&lt;1111 DemoN
KOOTSONeMYOAILYTAIBUNE.COM
GAL;IPOLIS -'- You're
not domg yourself or your
children any favors by being
the cool parent and hosting
parties where you allow teens
to drink in your home and that's the message behind
the .coalition "Parents who
host, lose the most."
"The campaign is a
statewide initiative through
which Gallia County applied
for a mini-grant for $2,000,''
said Marissa Pulk, communi-

the next couple of week~ work crew~ will
attempt to pour decks for both the westbound
and eastbout)d bridges that span Ohio 7.
".Besides p6uring' decks, we will also focus
on the completion of exit rJmps and the installation of catch basins," he said.
Phase II will encompass about four miles of
highway beginning at the end of Ohio 7 near
Five Points and ending .20 miles cast of a Sutton Township road in the Morningstar area.

·

If convicted, Qualls could face the death penalty.
Crow also ruled on several proct'dural motions, and
granted a motion to allow Qualls to appear in court without restraints.
Quails' defense team has tileq 12 additional motions in his
case, and Crow will hear those motions on May 13.
Prosecutor Pat Story and Assistant Prosecutor Christopher Tcnoglia "'ppcared on behalf·of the state.
·
Quails remains in the Noble County Jail in lieu of a $1
million ~ash bond.

•

TL~HOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

·'

TAX DAY!
1

The scheduled date for completion of the project's second section is November 2003.
The cost of the Phase II segment will total
$21.3 million.
Meahwhilc, work crew~ with heavy equipment are busy moving thousands of yards of
dirt and rock for the project's first phase, which
involves six miles of highway from the Ritchie
Bridge to th~ intersection of Ohio 124 and
County Road .35 (Portland).
·
Drainage pipes are being installed and additiona! land is being cleared for the arrival of
large earth moving equipment at the site of
Phase Ill, a 4.5-mile gap between Morning
Star and Portland Road that will ultimately
connect all three sections.
The total cost of the 16-mile connector project, once finished in 2004, has been estimated
at $75 million.

JUST IN TIME- Beth Call·of Pomeroy prepares to mall her ·
federal Income tax return so as to meet Monday's filing
deadline. (Tony M. Leach) .
0

offers wamlng for parents

ty educator with Gallia-Jackson-Meigs Board of Alcohol
. Drug Addiction and Mental
Health Services.
· "With this money, we created a coalition oflocal agencies and organizations: Gallia
County Local Schools, Gallipolis City Schools, GaUia
County Chamber of Commerce, PACTS/New Alternatives, Holzer Medical Center, Ohio State Highway
Patrol- Gallia, RSVP, GJMBADAMHS, Universicy of

Rio Grande, and the Gallia newsletters and running a drink and drive.
County Sheriff's Depart- 30-second public. service . Parents can be prosecuted
announcement on local cable ·under the law for 'participatment."
"The goal of the coalition and on HMC's in - house TV. ing in any of those actiom
According to th e pamphlet, mentioned above and everyis to disseminate information
a
program of Ohio Parents thing associated with a violaregarding no.t having parties
for teens that involve alcohol. for Drug · Free Youth, it is. tion, such as personal prop erWe're just trying to arm par- "illegal " to make alcohol ty, can be confiscated.
Repo.rt underage drinking
ents with the 'information available to children other
host
o'r
by
calling the anonymous,
than
your
own,
to
they need to make wise decisioris."
allow teen drinkin g parties in t.OII-free Hotline at 1-817-4The group is passing out your home, illegal, unhealthy MINORS.
For information,
ca ll
pamphlets, posters, speaking and unacceptable for anyone
to civic organizations, putting under age 21 to drink, and Melinda Norman ar FACTS
flyer s m loC3l business unsafe and illegal for teens to at 446-7866.

Mecl

Week Is April 14·»

R
MEDICAL CEI'ITER
JACKSON

Holzer Medical Center · Jackson solutes our
Medical Laboratory ProfMsionals during this special week.

Discover the Holzer Difference

wWw.bolzer.org

,.
•

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