<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="7326" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/7326?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-18T00:20:12+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="17735">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/4cbbd78ee112d09a42a4ea2b352bb15d.pdf</src>
      <authentication>02605493dc5bf04599f551a5cae83a64</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="23922">
                  <text>• •

·-

---

•

•

. .'

··-

••

•

'

Tuesday, FebNary 27,

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

'

200Jd

Hltfl: 401: Low: 201

•

Details, A3

••

s Scoreboard
11 . Boston COIIogo
12. UCLA

10
15
18
12
13
20
16
23

19. Syracuse

20·7

&lt;127

H

20. Alabama
21 . GoorgoiOWn

20-7
21 -5

402
340

14
21

1HJ

223

19

13. Notre Dame
14. Mialllllppi
15. KeniUCI&lt;y
16. Maryland
17. Oklahoma
18. St. Josoph'l

S..tlonll Flnll

March s
At VInton County
Logan (1 5-S) v. Martone (13-3), 7:00
Dlvlllon II
Dlotrict Somltlnoto
March S
At Rio Grande
Wt~hlngton

20-1 1,009
19-3 953
19..S 870
22-5 837
18-3 749
18·9 81 3
21-8 505
23-1 495

22. WisConsin

Court Houae (21-1) v,

PoltlmOUth (17-1). 3:00
Warren (1EI~) v. Greenfield McClain
(18-1), 7:00
Dittrlct Ffnela
March tO
At Ohio Unlveralty
Semifinals, Noon

'

N.C.-WIImlngoon 82. Old Dominion 59
Nortottc St. 11. Carolina St. 66
IIKIWEBT
Bradloy 74, 0111ke 50
Creighton 72. SW Mluourt St. 48
,Evansvlle 80, N. Iowa 54 ,
IHinols St. 79, Wlchlto St. 71
Ohio 77, Cont. Mlchlgan 64
5 . IllinoiS 81 , lndlano St. 59
Toledo "· Bowling Green &amp;4
SOUTHWEST
Jaci&lt;IOn 51. 66, Art&lt;.-Pine Bluff 64
Oklahoma St. 86, Texas Tech 58

23. Wake Forest
18· 9 213
24
24. TeJCII
21-7 175
25. Xavier
21-5 126
Olhert receiving votes: Providence 116,
Ohio St. 101, Tennessee 98, Fresno St. 84,

pLica votes

Creighton 57, Cincinnati 35, Gonzaga 30,
Georgia 51. 22 . lnalana 21 , uc INine 15.
Utah 10, CaUiomla 9, Hofstra 8, Georgia

Tech 6, W. Kentucky 5, Arkansas 4, Wast
Virginia 3, Mis&amp;Q\Jri 2, Southern Cal 2,
Oklahoma St. 1, Wyoming 1.

records

1. Sianlort! (70)
2. Duke .
3. Michigan 51.
4. North Carolina
5. Illinois
6. Flcrida
7. Virginia
6.1owoSL

9. Arizono

10. KaniBI

w-e.

25-1
25-3
22-3
22-4
22-3
20-5
19-3
23-1
19-7
21-5

EAST
Beaton College 84. Morris Brown 63
Cohnactlcut 75, Notre Dame 59
Sacred Heart 81, Quinniplac 69

Plo Pvo
1,750
1,654
1,612
1,474
1,427
1,415
1,289
1,258
1.228
1,078

1
4
.5
2
3
7
9
6
6
11

SOUTH
Alabama A&amp;M 90, Prairie VIew Bl
Alabama St. 71 , Texas Southern 52
Coppin St. 78, Howard 54
Delaware St 88, Florida A&amp;M 68 '
Ha~lon 66, N. Carolina A&amp; T 75 ·
MVSV 80. Grambling St. 83
McNease St. 88, Louiatana-Monroe 81
Md.·Eutem Shore 72, Morgan St. 53

$51 ,81l0.
16. (11) WI"' Burton, Dodge,
$74,495.
17. (27) Joe Nomochok, ~.
$68,730.
18. (23) Cuey Alwood, Dodge,

I

.I
392,

v

rq

.

.s.w

.:•
•
~ i
e3 :
i

332351
28 22 10 4
28 24 6 7
203454
49
louthaeet OlviiJon
W L TOI.
Washington
32 19 10 1
CarOlina
27 2-4 7 3
Florida
17 31 8 8
Atlanta
18 33 9 2
47 11
Tampa Bay
18 38 8 3 . 41
Butloto
TOlonO&gt;
Bolton
Monlrool

":; ,1
64so ..J,.

Control Dlvtllon
.,
W L TOI.
St. LO&lt;IIa
39 15 7 2
Dolroll
38 16 6 4 811 .
NuiMIIe
28 29 8 2 82 :
Chicago
26 29 5 3
COIUmbUI
19 31 7 6
51 •
NoftllwOOI Olvlolon
' I
W L TOL
Pta
40
12
9
·2
91 : '
COiolldo
322155 74 .
Vancouver
292492 69
Edmonton
222511 4
59
Caiglry
222983
55
Minnesota
P•alflc Dt\flllon
W L TOL Plo
34 18 10 0
San Jose
76 1
17 i t
352152
Dallas
29 19 12 .2
72
Phoenix
272681
63
LosAngelea
18 33 8 5 49 '
Anaheim

':; •
t
I
Wi

overtime 1011.

Now Jersey 5, Florida 3
Calgary 3. DaMas 2
Tuooctay•oa.mao
Phoenht: al Boston, 7 p.m.
Burtalo at Ottawa, 7 p.m.
Chicago al Washlnglon, 7 p.m.
Montreal al Phlladtlphil, 7 p.m.
Caronna at Atlanta, 7:30 p.m.
Now Jersey at N.v. lslanao,., 7:30 p.m:
Los Angeles at Ni.stwllle, 8 p.m.
;

·

Wednudl(l Qamu

PhOOnlxtl
San

I

IA8EIAI.L
A....... nLII...

ANAHEIM ANGEL&amp;-Agroodlo
- . .Vi.
with LHP Mark LulcultWioz on o '"

cantract.

"
,:

Ntllonll Lllg•

CINCINNATI RED&amp;-signed 38 Alta~
Boone to a one-year concract.
"'
BASKETBALL
j
Natlonol Blokoll&gt;all Aooocilllon
·j
BOSTON CELTIC&amp;-PtiDod G
Anderson ond F Jeromo Moloo on . ~
lnjuroclllll. AcUvalaCI G Randy Blown ""
G-F Adrian Glltfin from tholr~ulld llal •

KorVt

FOOTBALL
NatloMI Footbllll League
•
PHILADELPHIA EAGLEB-Signod P

Jason Malecki.

...
I

•

.•

wh0

world and The New York Times
We love it when ·people say
called it$ u .. • some of the best
nice things about us.
Golf Digest recently listed
· pubpc golf on ~art~." . .
to!f Magazme listed THE
Alabama's Robert Trent Jones Golf
SENAToR course at our new Capitol
Trail among the top 50 golf
HilFlocation among its ~P new
destinations in the world!
cowses in the country and THE ' .
.A,nd in its current Places to
LE,qJSLATOR course in the top 25
Play ratings, Golf Digest gave
newcomers. And wait until you
most of the Trail's 21 courses
THE JUDGE!
4 stars-and some even got 4'fi. ~
.~~ So, we hope you1l understand
Not bad when you consider that
wfien, like all good golfers, we
5 stars only go to those once-in·
a-lifetime courses. And all of the
~e to brag about our scores.
~:: Call today to book your golf ·
Trail's courses got top honor.s for
afld hotel package and get ready
service.
Frequent Flyer Magazine listed ~!&gt;r one of the best golf trips in
us among its top 10 trips in the
the world.

1-\t

•i

,,"
..

,,"

'

f

f

tlb

'

'•

0

ut

to

scores.

"

FROM

'

,,"

,.,

')'

'I

'

'·'

"'•' '
·'

'·'
...
;

'

.

•'
l

SILVER LAKES

OXMOOR VALLEY

GRAND NATIONAL

Ho•ml/1#

A. ...~

lli,.,.I¥N"'

0,./ib/AtW.'"'

!54 HOLII

II HOLI:I

IW HOLI:I

MHOLU

llollrd, A3

/11', STAFF REPORTS

WASHINGTON - When President Bush called Tuesday for a $1.6
trillion tax cut and urged Congress to
make it retroactive, he got hearty
applause from Ohio Sen. George
Voinovich, who previously opposed
much smaller cuts.
Voinovich said he believes the Bilsh
administration can rein in federal
spending and pay down the federal
debt - · two big issues for the fOrmer
governor 7 and now believes the fa!tering economy makes the time right

"

..,,

no. ..

Greer~pilk

3e HOLIEI

C~P'tTOL HiLl..

NHI/1

Plwmilll

1M HOLKI

D4 HOI.II

I';'·

31 HOLII

'

.,•
I

•

Alabama'• Jtob1rt 1'r1nt JonH·Golf frail 378 holu of world-class golf on eight sites

'

'

1.800.949.44 44
· u~111v. rtjgolf.com

-

.

I'

'

II

·-

.

I
~

... ·-4

·-

--~

--·----------·-------------

the child tax credit, significant reform
of the estate tax, and the elimination of
the marriage penalty. These are examples of tax relief that will directly help
working families:·
Voinovich has been somewhat of a
lone wolf in the Senate, insisting cutting the national debt should be a
greater priority than the tax cuts.
The former Ohio governor said he
had a series of meetings with top Bush
administration officials, including Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill and White
House chief of staff Andrew Card.

They laid out the reasons they wanted
his support for a tax cut andVoinovich
laid out the reasons he believed the
country needed to pay doWn the debt.
Bush's plan calls for $1.6 trillion in
tax cuts and $2 trillion in debt reduc'tion. Between the debt reduction, the
promise of a budget request that holds
the line on spending, and predictions
that the budget surplus will be larger
than previously expected, Voinovich
said he could enthusiastically support
both the Bush plan and call for eXtra
reductions to take effect right away.

B+6

87
M
A3
BUS-6

A3 .

. ··1,];~~1.

Bv ·H• J~ '!'IEIERT

AS

OHIO
Pick 3: 7~ Pidt 4; 7·5-00
Kenny YW••· director of thel Melp Coun1¥ Recycllrg IIOd utter ' .lluc:lce)oe 5: 6-16-22·32-37
PiBiOntlon Pt91PIIm, standi btlldt the now recycllrg Station Dt1
Depot S1NOt In Rutland. Tho etstiOn II one of 118YB1'81 'located
W.VA.
Dliti 3: 9-2-8 Dllily 4; 9-S.l-4
around Mitge County for use In oollectlrt n!C)'Ciablo materials,
sUch as newspapers, cardbDard, platies, glass and motel cans •
Future plans call for a recyclable etst10n to be pilloed at Forlled Run ...,_,. 0 2001 Ohio Volley Publiohlna Co. .
State Perk aear ~ Bottom. (Tony M. Leech photo)

•

.

, . ,

. lotteries

••

1-

~

Weather

.

•'

II

Sports

~
I

2 Sldla-11
Plpl
.
!' ' .

Objtyarjes

,.'«

..

be in the details:'
"We have yet to see a budget telling
us how the president hopes to accomplish the things that he talked about;'
said Strickland, whose district includes
Gallia and Meigs counties.
"I am con~erned that he is proposing a large tax .cut based on 10 year
revenue projections that may or may
not result in the anticipated surplus.
"There is no doubt that American
working families need and deserve significant tax relief,' ' Strickland said
"For that reason, I support doubling

Calendar
'Ciissifieds
Comics
Editorials

'

I

hiAGNOLIA GROVE

•••

•

'
1•1
''!

.for an iriunediate cut in tax rates.·
"We are in a recession," said
Voinovich, a Republican. "I don't want
this country to go into a deep rec.es. sion like we had when I was mayor·of
Cleveland in '82-83 arid you couldn't
get anything done because the econo- ·
my was so had.
·
"We have got to do 'Something now
to turn around this funk."
U.S. Rep. Ted
Strickland, DLucasville, said that wlUle be thought
Bush "gave a good spee'!:h" in his State
. of the Union Address, "the devil will

·sentinel imple~enting cl~n air ruling

.,'·

'

HIGHLAND 0AKII!,- .

POMEROY - The Ohio Environmental
Protection Agency has authorized the water
qUality impacts associated with the construction of the Ravenswood Connector project.
EPA held a hearin[l to solicit conunents on
the project on Nov. 9, and on Tuesday issued a
statement announcing that the water quality
impacts have been authorized.
While construction of the 16-mile roadway
will not be allowed to exceed state water quality standards for the protection of human
health or aquatic life, the EPA, according to ·
Tuesday's statement, believes that the project
will result in only limited degradation to the
existing water quality of Kerr Run, Straight
Hollow Creek, Nease Creek, Bowman's Run,
Yellowbush Creek, Oldtown Creek, Granny
Creek, Silver Creek, their unnamed Ohio
River tributari~ , ·and 1.36 acres of adjacent
wetlands.
The agency Was required to solicit and evaluate comments on the technical, social, economic and environmental impact of the proposal and issues related to the lower water
quality.
Ohio EPA considered all conunents before
making its final decision.
To compensate for the 1.36 acres of impacted wetlands, ODOT will create, enhance and
preserve about 2.4 acres of wetlands near the
Rocksprings Fairgrounds northeast of the U.S.
33 and Ohio 7 interchange near Pomeroy.
· The 2.4 acres will be part of a larger wetland
complex consisting of approximately 15 acres.
ODOT has committed to provide stream
mitigation in the form o£34,420 linear feet of
either stream bank or in-stream enhancements
or preservatio·n.
Anyone interested in making thei.r property
available for possible stream mitigation sites
should' contact the Ohio EPA at 614-5442139 or ODOT at 373-0212, extension 704.

·------... Bush's EPA faces decision on
'IOclay's
Recyding station

,,'•'

..

CAMBRIAN RIDGE

FROM STAFF REPORTS

.

~1

HAMPTON COVE

•

Agency says connector
won't be boon to local
water quality

Voinovich, Sbickland weigh in on Bush tax plan

ALABAMA'S

~T'Ilu!N
LF

trail exposes residents
to Me1gs County's great outdoors

highway
impacts

"

..

brag

their

Propo~ed

PIIIH -

.. ,

only ones
I ove

· RACINE Textbooks
Were approved and personnel
is.1ues decided during Mon·
day's regular meeting of the
Southern Local Board of
Education.
The board approved the
adoption of social studies
textbooks .for grades 7-12 as
endorsed by the .AthensMeigs Educational Service
Center textbook committee. ·
·• New adoptions are made
~ry five yean and when
purchases are made, they are
!=hosen from the adopted list.
Representing Southern Local
:Were
Donna Norris and
Jerry Bibbee Ford In Middleport has been sold to the Ford Motor Division, and will close. Bibbee said MonR.yan Lemley.
. day that the sale Is part of a nationwide Ford program to eliminate smaller dealerships. B!bbee has oper·· :: The health course of study
ated the dealership, located on South Third Avenue In Middleport, for 26 months, although an auto dealfur grades 7-12 was approved, ,
ership has operated there since 1904. He will maintain his Bibbee Motor Co. operation in Tuppers Plains.
.w hich was reconunended by
(Brian J. Reed photo)
·
the Athens-Meigs ESC health
· ~ourse of study committee.
Representing Southern Local
were Connie Enslen and Bill
Hensler:
: The board also accepted
amounts and rates as determined by · the budget com. mission . and certifying the
" necessary' tax levies for . the
tounty, audit9r. , . ,
:.
Carol Mahr, ~rant writer for the
BY ToNY M. ·LIACH
ODNR said that more than 22
;, In pc;nonnel· ·matters, ·the ..:. ' __ ,
SfNTINE ~fiEWs,s;~FF
• org~nlzations we~ awarded a· total ptqjetf," said 'Thesday the wildlife
board approvei:I the folloWing .
RUTLAND - Me1gs County of $50,000 by !ts Division of trail is to be located adjacent to the
substitute teachers for · the
students will have an opportunity Wildlife to encourage citizen pro- ne\v elementary school ori Ohio
remainder of the 2000-01
to better understand Ohio's jects that help further wildlife 124 near Rutland. Construction
school year on an as-needed
on the trail should begin sometime
diverse ecosystem and wildlife diversity.
bam, pending approval by the
·
conservation techniques now that
The program isfunded through in early spring.
Ohio Department of Educa"The new wildlife trail will prefunding for a new wildlife educa- contributions to the ODNR's
tion: Donald Crump, Aimee
sent
an excellent opportunity for
tion trail has been approved.
wildlife diversity and endangered
King, Jan Eldridge, Deborah
Meigs Local School District was species tax checkoff program , students, as well as the community,
Hutchinson and Erika Untch.
recently named a recipient of a Additional funding comes from to get an up-close look at Ohio's
The positions of elemen$5,000 Wildlife 'Diversity Grant sales of wildlife conservation vast array of wildlife species and
tary secretary, library aide and
designed to help educate Ohioans license plates featuring the cardi" their habitats," said Mahr.
~omputer lab · aide were
"We feel that providing educ a~
about the state's variety i:.f wildlife nal, Ohio's official state bird.
~ccepted for Southern EleOut of 64 individuals, organiza- tion about our state's rich diversity
species and promote the Ohio
mentary pending approval of
Department of Natural Resources' tions and schools who applied for of wildlife and how to protect it is
the finance commission.
mission to ensure a balance the grants last fall, Meigs was one of utmost importance," she added.
The filling of these posiMahr said the new trail will be
between wise use and !,Protection of three recipients to get the maxc
of natural resources.
'1,
imum award of$5,000.
PIHH - 'n'lll, A3
tl

Ct-nh

EPAOKs

,•. ,ji

~~·-'} ·-

s.

the

Bibbee Ford dosed

FROM STAFF REPORTS

Mandly'a Gamn
Ottawa 3, N.Y. Rangera 2
St. LOUIS 7, San Jose 2
vancouve'r 5, MIMeiOta 2i

•

aren't

"''

T.wo points for a win, one point tor a

'

Golfers

'

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomero-y, Ohio

Southern
board
approves
textbooks
I

..

entine

Mtlp County's
Volu"w ~ 1 "'umb&lt;-t 1 ~~

Wtttem Cotn.•ICI

-

•

February 18,1001

·a

Jr..

llon'o Collogo Bookotboll
Monday'a Scorn

through Fob. 25, total polnla bued on 25
points tor 1 nrot-place vote througn one
JJ'Mnl lor a 25th-place vote and previous
ranking:

I

,..xa,

Dlvlalon 11
Dlatrlct S-.nHint~lt
AP Women'• Tap 25 Poll•
Fob. 21
At Ohio Unl-tlty
Zane Tra ce {1 9·2) v. Waverly ( 13·91. The top 25 teams in The Associated Press'
, women's collage basketball poll, with first·
8:15
place votes In parentl'ltses, rec ords
Chesapeake {21·1) v. Unioto, a:oo
through Feb. 25, total points based on 25
~arCh 1
points lor a first-place vote through one
At Ohio UrMverlllty
Wheelersburg (21·1) 11. Peebles n s-7), po!nt tor a 25th-place vote and last week' s
ranking:
6:15
W-L
pta Pva
Eastern Brown (16·6) 11. Belpre n9·3),
1.
Tennessee
{36)
28·1
972
1
8:00
2. Notre Dame (2)
25· 1 927
2
Dlatrlct Fln111
3. Connecticut {1 )
24·2 906
3
M1rch a
4.
Duke
24·3
804
7
At Ohio Unlverllty
5. Louisiana Tech
25·4 796
6
8;1 5 &amp; 8;15
6. Gaorgla
23·5 754
4
7. Oldahoma
23·4 744
8
Division IV
8. Purdue
24· 5 706
5
Dittrlct semnln•t•
9. Rutgers
20·6 648
9
Marchi
10. Iowa St.
22·4 604
10
At Ohio Unlvorolty
23·4 597
11
Whiteoak (18-3) v. Symmes Valley (16- 11 . Florida
12. Xavier
25· 2 533
12
5), 6:15
23-2 48i
13
Waterford (11 -10) v. Manchester (1-4 -7) , 13. Vtah
14. TexaaTech
21 ·5 484
15
1:00
.15. Va(ldarbHt
19·8 435
18
March 7
16. LSU .
18-9 373
14
At Ohio Unlvar~lty
17.
Colorado
20·6
327
18
Eastem (18-3) v. Portsmouth East (13·
18. SW Missouri St. 20-5 287
20
8), 8:15
19. Pann St.
19-8 243
19
Portsmouth Clay (18 -5)v.'Grean (12-9)
18·8 237
21
8:00
• 20. Wisconsin
21 . N.C. Slate
18-9 159
17
Dtabict Fln111
22. Arizona St.
19-7 157
23
ll11rCh10
23. Iowa
17-9 102 25
AI Ohio Unlvorolty
24. Bayklr
19-7
70
24
7:004 9:00
25. Clemson
19-3
85
Others receMng votea:Orake 51, Walholngton 41, Villanova 30, Toxu 29, 21 . Colcrodo St. 15, Loulsvino 15, TCV 12.
Idaho St. 8, George .Washington 7, MaryAP llon'o Top 25 Poll
land 7, St. Mary's, Cal. 7, Denver 4, Michl·
The top 2! teams in The Anoclated PraH' gan 3. Bosloi1 CoUege 2. Oregon 2, Arizona 1, Stanl01d ·1, Stephan F.Austln 1.
man'a college
poll, with flllt·

-•II
In parentheses,

I

A - Dhllolon
W
L Pel.
01
Pt;iodolphlo
42 16 .724
392. Miolnl
33 23 .SBi
8
Now Yoltl
32
23 .15112 8 112
392, Oriondo
29 2e .527 11 112
sse,450.
Boston
2s 32 .439 16 112
19. (7) MIGhlol Won.... Cltovrolol, 392, Now Jo,.oy
. 20 38 .345
22
536,110.
Woshlngton
13 .w .228 28 112
.20. ( 17) Mark Martin, Fort!, 392,
C.Oirol Dlvlllon
$84,611.
.,
W
L
Pel
GB
21 . (19) John AndreHI, Dodge, 391, Mllwauku
35 20 .8311
174,237.
Charlotte
31
26
5
SW
50, Lamar 44
22. (1 5) Ken S&lt;:hlldor. Pontiac. 391, Toronto
29
.518 6 112
Sam Houaton St. 87, Tew-San Anto~ 551 ,500.
.
Indiana
2!1 29 .463 9 112
77
23 . (14) BHI EllloH, Dodga, 39 • Clevolana
22 32 .407 12 112
Texas 78, Mlssourl61
583,283.
Dotroll
21 35 .375 14 1/2
FAR WEST
24. (37) Mike Skinner. Chowolet, 3111, AUontl
18 39 .316
18
Colorado St. 63. Air Force 55
570,584.
Chicago
9 46 .164
26
Wyoming 81 , New Mexico e 1
25. (28) Ron Homoday Jr, Pontloc, 390,
Woolom Conteronco
$37 ,960.
-..OMolon
WOmen'o Collogo Bookotl&gt;oll
26. (24) Robl&gt;y Gordon, C hevroltl, 390,
W
L
Pel
OB
Monday'l SCOrN
$41 ,625.
Viah
38 17 .691
EAST
27. (10) Brett Bodlna, Ford, 390, SanAntonio
37 18 .673
1
Monmouth, N.J. 80, VMBC 75
S37,350.
011111
35 22 .614
4
SOUTH
28 . {38 ) Matt Ktnstlh, Ford, 389, Minnesota
33 2• .S79
6
Bethune-Cookman 75, Savannah St. 64 $45 ,200.
Houalon
30 27 .526
9
Coppin St. 78, Ho~ard 74
29. (3 5) Terry Labonte, Chevrolet, 389, Denver
29 29 ,500 10 112
Delaware St. 70, Florida A&amp;M 59
$69,100.
vancouver
18 39 .316
21
Duke 72, North Caronna 87
30. (32) Jimmy Spencer, Ford, 389,
PacHic Dlvl1lon
Ea.st Carolina 79, Gardner-Webb 84
$42 ,375.
W
L
Pel
GB
Furman 68, ETSU 64
31. (43) Hut Stricklin, Ford. 389. Porttana
39 18 .ils4
Grambling St. 85, MVSV 72
S33.750.
LA. Lakers
37 18 .673
1
Hampton 82, N. Carolina A&amp; T 50 .
32. (29) Rick Mast, Chevrole t, 388, Sacramento
36 r e .667 1 112
Morgan St. 55; Md.·Eastem Shore 45
S33 ,675.
Phoenix
34 · 21 .618
4
Norfolk St. 83, S. Carolina St. 57
33. (20) Jason LeMler, DOdge . 387, Sea111o
29 28 .509
10
Prairie View 63 , Alabama A&amp;M 61
S41 ,500.
L.A. Cllppoos
20 39 .339
20
Texas Southern 89, Alabama St. 64
34 . (39) Todd Bodine, Ford, 387, Golden State
16 •1 .261
23
II lOWEST
S33 ,425.
ll&lt;&gt;ndoy'l Gomoo
Chicago 51. 74, lna.-Pur.-lndpls. 73
35. (42) Bucklhot Jones, Dodge, 383, Boston 85, seattle 82
Oakland, Mich., n , Youngs~own St. 52
$41 ,300.
Ct\arlotte 82, Indiana 72
UMKC 52, Oral Roberts 45
35. (9) Kurt Busch, Ford, 383,$41,250. ~lwaukoo 98. Philadelphia 91
W. Ill inola 71 , Valparaiso 66
37. (5) JeH Burton. Food, 379, $53,050. l'!&gt;rtlana 95, Houston 89
SOUTHWEST
38. {13) Jeremy Mayfield, Ford, 364, Golden State 85, Chicago 78
Ark.·Pine Bluff 62, Jackson St. 58
$72 ,424.
Vtah 99, Atlanta 82
39. (4) Rlcl&lt;y Rudd. Ford. 355, $63,482. Ortanao 93, Denver 86
40 . (34) Mike Wallace , Fort!, 355, ~JGias 103, L.A. Cllppars 92
$41,015.
.
•
Tuoldoy•o Gomoo
41 . (40) Stacy Co~on, DOdge, 295, Gle)loland al Toronto, 1 p.m.
NASCAR.Ouro Lubo 400 Rooullo
engine failure, $32,965.
, Wllshlngton at Miami, 7:30p.m.
At Narlh. CaroiiMI Speedway
42. (30) Kenny Wallace, Pontiac, 118, Seatlle at New York, 8 p.m.
Aocldnghlm, N.C.
crash, $32,910.
Ponland at San Antonio, 8:30p.m.
LIP Lontlh: 1.017 miiH
43. (25) Dale Eamhardt Chavrolet, o, 0611as at Vancouver, 10 p·.m.
1. (2) Steve Park, Chevrolet, 393, crash , $88,924.
·
·
L.'A! Clippers at Sacramento, 10:30 p.m.
S144,593.
.
Time of Race: 3:34:21
.1
Wtdnttday'a Olmta
2. (3) Bobby Labonte. Ponllac, 393.
Margin of viCtory; 0.138 second
M~aukee at Indiana, 7 p.m.
$125,727.
Winner's average speed: 111 .988 mph
Torpflto at Atlanta, 7:30p.m.
3. (1) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 393,
Cauuon flags: 4 for 52 laps
New Jersey at Chartona, 7:30p.m.
$125.987.
Laod changes: 20 among 10 drive,.
Ml•ml 01 Phillldelphla, 8 p.m.
4. (8) Tony Stewart, Pontllc, 393,
lap loade,.: J .Gordon 1-13; Pork 44- Dalldit ot MI...-, 8 p.m.
$75,245.
47; J.Sponcor 48; B.Jonoo 49; S.Co~lon
01 Chicago, 8:30p.m.
5. (41) Ricky Cravan, Ford. 393, 50·5~; J.Gort!on 58-73; Park 74 -104;
ol Vtah, 9 p.m.
$50,180.
PhOOnbc. 10:30 p.m.
J.Goodon 105-127; M. WaMrip 128;
8. (8). Johnny Banaon, Pontiac, 393, B.Labonlo129·129; R.Rudei13Q.132; Port&lt;
11 OllnWir, 10:30 p.m.
$59.880.
.
133·161; J .Gordon 162·179; B.Libonto
Stalit 10:30
7. (33) Rusty Wlllsce, Ford, 393, 180-210; Ma~ln 211-211; J.Gordon 212'
$68,350.
245; Martin 248; J.Gonlon 247-250; Pork
8. (26) Sto~lng Mortln, DOdge, 393, 261 -308; J.Gort!on 308-338; Park 3311-393
$84,370.
Top 20 In polnls: R:Wollace 311; Martin
9. (18) Dava Blanay, Dodge, 393, 298; W.M~p 291; Hamtnon 286; Part&lt; 255;
NHL
$43,610.
Elliott 254i J.Gordon 253; CreVIfl 249;
Eootom Conllronco
10. (18) Dale Jarrett, Ford, 393, Prasoley 248; Nemedlok 242; Sodler 239;
Aflondc Olvlolon
$91,237.
Jarrett 238; Benson 229; Schraclor 226;
11. (22) Elllon Sodlor. Ford, 393, B.Labonle 223; Stewart 215; Atwood 212;
W L TOL Plo
$50,805.
Rudd 211; Eamhart!l, Jr 209; B.Bodlne Philadelphia
33 18 10 2 76
12. (31) Robert Poessley, Ford, 383. 205.
NawJersey
30 17 12 3 75
$57,171.
Pittsburgh
32 21 7 2 73
13. (21) Bobby Hamlllon, ChevrOlet,
N.Y. Range,.
25 32 4 1 55
393, $50,280.
N.Y. Islanders
17 37 s 3 42
14. (36) Kevin Harvlck, Chevrolet, 392,
Norlhout OMolon
$84,887.
NBA
W L TOL Plo
15. (12) Jeny Nadaeu, Chavrolot, 392,
Eootomeonterenco
onawa
38 18 8 2 , 82

s.

Health department report, Al
URG Red men take AMC crown, B1

lhundlf

ASSOCIATED·.P.f.!~SS WRITER .

WASHINGTON ~ .· After passmg muster
before the U.S. Supreme Court, contentious ·
new air pollution standards fot smog-causing
ozone and soot appear ba~k on track, with the
Bush administration facing a decision on how
quickly to implement them.
EPA Administrator Christie Whitman
embraced 'Thesday's decision by the Supreme
Court as "a solid endonement of EPA's elfurts to
protect the health of millions of Americans &amp;om
the dangen of pollution."
Still, it remained unclear when the EPA will
reimpose the new standards, which were issued
in 1997 and then pulled back, pending th e outcome of the court challenge.
On Thesday, the hlgh court unanimously
rejected industry arguments that the EPA acted
unconstitutionally in issuifi8 the standards, and

t

that the agency should have taken into account
industry's costs for compliance as well as public
health considerations. No such cost-benefit
requirement exists when issuing health standards
under the Clean Air Act, the court ruled.
Whitman's approving conunents about the
court decision prompted relief &amp;om environmentalists, who have worried that President
Bush, under intense pressure &amp;om industry,
might not pursue the tougher Clinton-era soot
and ozone standards.
No environmental regulations issued over the
eight years of the Clinton administration
unleashed more controversy and industry opposition than the air quality standards for soot and
ozone.
The rule, pushed by former EPA Adrninistrator Carol Browner, was met with intense industry lobbying and even stiff opposition within the
White House.
·
~

'

�.

.. . . . . ... .

.. . .

.........

..

•

Page A 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Meigs Co

Health Departmenrs annual report

s

BY CHA•- HoiPucH

physicians, Scott Smith, D. 0.,
James Witherell, M .D., and
POMEROY - The new Doug Hunter, M .D., volunmillennium brought many teered their time to assist in the
changes to the Meigs County screening.
Health Department, but one
thing did not change: its philosChildren's services
.
ophy of providing low-cost
Drs. Witherell and Hunter
health services and screenings continue to provide services
. through a monthly Child and
to all county residents. .
The annual report ISSued Family
Health
Services
recendy by the agency's new (CFHS), Well Child Clinic
health commissioner and (WCC) coordinated since
administrator, Nor1112 Torres, August by Nancy Broderick,
details last year's many advances RN. Torres reported 462 chilin providing access to health dren from birth to 2f received
care, especially to those who are the services including a physical
uninsured or underinsured.
examination, blood lead and
- Keith Little, left, Is direc~or
New programs and expan- blood iron screening, blood
department's
environment
services, .and Mike Cooper Is , a
sion of existing services grew pressure, .height, weight, dental
ABSTINENCE
EDUCATION
Coordinating
an
abstinence
edu·
,:&gt;anitarlan in training. The agency's new ca~d. iovascu]ar edu~!l·
extensively last year and Torres services, developmental screencation
program
in
the
schools
as
a
part
of
the
Health
Departtor
Is B!!tsy Nicodemus, seated cente[, .and Tracey,.• O'Dell •i~ ·
noted that the trend is continu- in g. vision, hearing and speech
l
ment
services
are
Kathl
VanMeter,
L.S.W.
coordinator,
left,
the departm·e nt's new cardiovascular health education.
,
ing this year.
screenings, social and nutritionand
Brenda
Phalin,
health
educator.
·
al assessments and referral serDental program
vices. Funding for the lead dolls to give children a handsServices incl11de horne visits
Funded for three years by the screenings are provided by the on experience of what it would to educate families in the treatSisters of Saint Joseph Charita- Lead Poisoning Prevention be like to become a parent. A ment process, revisits to schools,
ble Fund of Parkersburg, and Program.
total of 1Z schools were visited phone calls, referrals to other
coordinated by Beth Cremeans,
Maureen Hennessy, speech and 3837 student contacts were agencies, vouchers for the
CMA, the Dental Defense and language pathologist, coon- made. An active interest is t.1ken shampoo and licemeister comb
Grant program focuses services sels parents after evaluating the in the county's youth by also dispersal.
on those Without insurance.
children's speech and hearing attending and co-sponsoring
The program includes oral patterns.
community organizations and
Statistici
health presentations at schools
Janet Bolland, registered special events.
Edwina Bell, registrar and
· and in WIC groups where the dietitian, provides nutritional
The year of2000 was, unfor- vital statistician, reported that
emphasis is on the importance education for clients. Carol
1
h 1 f,
h · there were 1'58 deaths recorded
Tannel:illl, RN, RSVP .volun- tunate y, was t e ast or t e
of dental care for a lifetime.
March of Dimes Prenatal in 2000 and 53.2 percent were
Supplemental . monies are teers at the health department Smoking Cessation Program. heart (cm!iovascular system)
proVided by the local clubs, ·as do members of the nursing Pregnant smokers are given related. 329 birth and 672 death
civic organizations, and busi- assistant class of Meigs High
fi
· d
11
School
to
help
in
the
various
support
and
encouragement
to
certi
cates
were
1ssue
,
as
we
nesses to purchase toothbrushstop smoking, as weU as, infor- as, 1075 plain copies for geneal. es, floss, and toothpaste to disprograms.
mation on the harmful effects ogy research. There were no in- ~ARD OF H~LTH .:.... Making up the Board of He!!lth whl•~h
tribute at presentations pro·Out-of-county
physician smoking has on the fetus. A county births during the year,
handles health and environmental services and statistics
moting good oral hygiene specialists provide services for total of 68 enrollees received
the
county are left to rig!it, seated, Norma Torres, Health compractices.
the. specially clinics coordinated
Environmental
monetary incentives to quit
ml~sioner
and ' administrator; Margie Skidmore, nursing diri!C.
Margie Lawson, DDS and by T. C. Ervin, RN, BSN.
ki
d f h
1y c
health
services
to'l, and T. C. ~rvin, assistant nursing director; and bact,
Children from birth to 21 are smo ng an o t ose on oour
Rhonda Davis, registered denKeith
Litde,
RS,
director
of
C&lt;l~rtney Slm, administrative ass.i stant and deputY _registrar;
tal hygienist, offer their services exainined, diagnosed and treat- successfully stopped smoking
environmental health, and Don Tammy Taylor, financial officer; Don Hodge, sanltarlah; Edwina
to th~ dental clients with Craig ed in the free clinics. Referrals for the pregnancy. A total of
Hodge, RS, said 268 food ser- Bell, registrar, and Elizabeth Bearhs, custodian. Keith Llttli:l,
Matthews, DDS assisting when and appointments are necessary. . 129 random urine. sample for
The numbers of clients served nicotine content were per- vice inspections were per- director of environmental services, an'd Mike Cooper;'sanitari·
needed.
formed during -the year, and 95. an 'ln training were not present. (Cha~ene Hoeflich pt\otos)
in each clinic last year were: formed to monitor progress.
The Welcome Home Moth- licenses were issued for food
Women's health programs cardiac, 16; vision, 57; plastics,
Nursing personnel includes HEcEd, Nutritionist, anp
servtce.
O;
hearing,
34;
and
n~urology,
er
and
Baby
Program,
funded
1
Mammography screenings
Sixteen private \\faCer system Margie Skidmore, RN, BSN, Dortha R.ilfle, automated data
by the Ohio Department of
retained a place of importance 21
permits were issued, 45 water nursing director; T. C. Ijrvin, processor.
Another
program
coordinatHealth
and
the
Family
and
in the women's health services
Other program .p~rsonnel
samples were collected and test- R,N, BSN, · assistant nursing
offered through -the health ed by Ervin was the "Sight for Children First Counsel had a
ed, and 247 permits to install director/BCMH and specialty include Tammy Taylor, financial
Students" program that assists very successful year.
department last year.
clinic coordinator; Con!lje Lit- officer; Becki Ball, Child and
The program provides for an private sewagl' disposal syst~rns dc,.B..N, BSN, p.renatal ditector; Fil~y Health.~sistant;.Brenda
Torres reported the agency age and income eligible chi!were issued.
continued coordination of dren to receive a vision exam RN, currendy Leanne ConNancy Blljlderick, RN, Well Curf1112n,.J,.SW. Well.ness Block
Inspections are .regularly con-.
'
t_.,q~
and
glasses.
Two
clients
were
ningham,
to
provide
homsi!smammography
screenings
Chilel director and lAP Nurse; Grant aoordinat~ Annette
ducted
at
all
landfill
areas,
throu~ 12 mobile unit from served through the program in its both prenatally and after tfi'e
mobile home parks, camp- Tracey O'Dell, RN, Tobacco Bare, STNA, ·HLEP assistant
2000.
birth.
A
total
o
f79dprenatal
visGrant/Riverside and Ohio
Prii\oention coordinator; Sherry family ·Health, c.oQ.lidinator;
Ervin also coordinates the its were camp1etc on expect- grounds, swimming pools and Patterson, RN, Head Lice Beth Cremeans', CMA, Oral
State University. A total of 266
schools. Forty-seven rabies conwomen were screened. An Bureau for Children with ing women and 175 visits were
E~cation Program coordina- Health .. Eli~be1h . B~arhs is tjle .
· additional 62 women were Medical Handicaps (BCMH) nude to families after the baby sultations were conducted, nin~ tor,Junie Maynard, RN, BSN, Custodian.
;
~.
lead aba!&lt;ment consultations
screened during the cervical which anises families in the was home. Information is
Wellness Block Grant; and . Torres •aiel several he~th qr
application procell to assure offered concerning 'the pres- were made and 62 nuisance Leanne '"" Cunningham, RN,
(GYN) cancer clinics.
program related P~!entatiops
complaints were addrened..
The Southeastern Ohio children with certain chronic nancy, prenatal care, labor and
w.!come Hoine Mother nnd were made at publi~ service
Mike Cooper, SIT, a third saniBreast and Cervical Cancer health conc~rnt and those in delivery, infant care, i~fant feedorpnization1 in the cpmmuni.tarian joined the health depart- B~Nurte.
Prqgram continues to offer a lind of diagnosis receive need~ ing, common newborn prob'itbe
Vital
StadsticJ
depnrt·
ty last year. In a~li!don tb~
lems, safety, and community ment at the end of the year.
payme.nt source for these ser- ed medical caR.
1rleht consists of Edwina Bell, apncy offered Ohiq l,!!liversity
Home and office vilitl weR re10urces available. Referrals nre
vices for those who are age a11d
Courtney Sin1, ·sse.:The Collep of Osteopathic MeQ.ir
Ptr•onnel ·
made
to moR than 75 chil- made if and when needed.
,
income eliaible.
Environmei1ta1
department cine medical studentl, nurlll)g
Tbe departn1cnt l~ prned
The Ohio Department of
Prenatal services were coor- dren/familiet. BCMH it a state
iitducles Keith Litde, · RS, studentl and othet .. ancilla;y
dinated by Connie Little, RN, funded proiram that covert ser- Health's PRwntive Health and by a five-member Board of Dilector, Don Hodp, RS, and
health . 1ervice ttu.4 entt the
BSN, CI'HS Prenatal Clinic vices by tpecialitts that are Health Services Grant funds are Health with Torres as health Mike Cooper, SIT. The WIC
opportunity
to have s~ort-term
commissioner.
Her
administradirector, and CPHS assistant, providen throughout the state. used to provide our Fun, Food,
lt'lff contittl of Debbie Babbitt,
and Fitness program, coordinat- tive assistant is Courmey Sim, RN, director, Pam Sharp, BS internship! at the heath. departBeclci Ball. Pregnant women
ment.
! I(
'
.
ed by Jackie Starcher, DT, and BSC.
can benefit from social usenlmmunlzadon•
ments, nutritional counseling,
Getting tlu vaccine provided Rebecca Grueser. This program
blood werk, cUltures, height a real challenge last fall, but promotes physical fitness and
and weight measurements and when it finally arrived there has developed walking prophysical exams through this were 1416 injections given. grams throughout the commuclinic.
Ouring the year, ' 2, 740 other nity. Group presentations,
Wilma Mansfield, MD, sees vaccines were administered. meetings, and involvement in
clients during clinics held two Immunization clinics are held community activities are vital
'
The Meigs County .Commissioners will be. applying for the · FY's 2001
times each month. A total of 86 every Tuesday. The Immuniza- parts to their outreach.
The Tobacco Prevention
women were followed, with an tion Action Plan is coordinated
CDBG C,ommtinity l;Iousin~· and Improvement Program grant furlding ai).d' will·
Program
has really began to
average of five visits each and by Nancy Broderick, RN, and·
accept fee proposal~ for .REHABILIT~TION CONSULTING SERVIC~~ ro ·
ultrasound scheduling. Clients Courtney Sim, BSC. Comput- show signs of success. A tobacimplement the program&gt; 1f funded, until March 8, 200 l at 10:00 a.m. at the
are followed through their 26th .erization . of immunization co coalition has been reestaboffices of the Meigs County Commissioners, Courthouse, Second Street,
week, at which time they are records has improved tracking lished with 20 members and
referred to the hospital of of childhood immunizations also has a 12 member peer
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. Fee proposals will then be opened !Qld bonsldered duling
group. Sub-committees were
choice for delivery. In addition, for our clients.
the regular Board of Commissioners meeting at I0:45 a.m. on ihe date abo~t:
formed 'from these members to
pregnaney rests are performed
Speech and he•ring
address specific groups; prenafor a nominal fee with 280
The · pr9gram will require the professional .sen;ices of a rehabilitation
programs
tal, school age, adult, and public
.
completed last year.
specialist to provide .the following scopes of services:
· ·
Susie Heines, speech and ed~cation. Involvement in
The Women, Infants, and
Children (WIC) program con- hearing pathologist, continues conhnunity has seen 3 individPreliminary,inspe~tion ·and prepatation of rehabilitation work specifications··
to
coordinate
the
evening
.
uals
quit
smoking
in
the
Great
tinues to be directed by Debbie
to meet Residential Rehabilitation Standards, of apprq~irjla~ly ,~5·3R ..1Jil8le
Babbitt, RN, who is assisted by speech and hearing clinics with American Smoke Out, gaod
family homes and specifications/cost estimates for such work on each' Ul'lit. The
Pam Sharp, BS, HEcEd, and the assistance of therapists and participation in Smoke Free
Specialist
also assist in the contrac;tor,bid4i~g process ~d review all bids;
Dortha Riflle. The program students fiom Ohio University. Dining Day (April) and Kick
A total of 1,327 contacts Butts Day.
offers nutritional supplementaatt11nda~ce at pre-bidlc'oJistruction, meetings; interim construction inspections;
were
1112de
·
last
year
with
131
The
Health
Department
has
tion, counseling, and referral
oversee compliance with Residential Rehabilitation Standardst.undertak-e 'final
·services for eligible infants, chil- hearing tests performed and 87 also been involved in ·completinspections and payment approo,;als; and provide 'Written reports: · , · ·,,' ' ~ 1
dren and pregnant women. This referrals to other agencies ing 30 tobacco. compliance
'
' 'I I.--.
,. (
' " , '.
,). , '
:;
year 1924 clients were seen in made, One-hundred-twenty- checks in an effort to discourFee proposals must ·1itate qualifications, including .all related completed ' •
WI C for certification and edu- nine people attended the parent age tobacco sales to underage
training for . the HOUSING REHABILJTATION project ac.tivit~t··.previo.us
cational classes. Services provid- educatiol1 classes and 58 clients patrons.
A new program, funded by
experience in CDBG!Hq~e Housing program~; scope of services to. provi~ed .
ed include hemoglobin screen- were in therapy each qu.arter.
Meigs
County
J?epartment
of
ings, height, weight, nutritional
and amount of fixed price compensation required for the above service&amp;,,!lfld
Special service programs Job and Family Services, added
assessment and .counseling
pricing data to support the fixed price (e.g., per hour, diem, unit). All relat~d
The Wellness Block Grant, in 2000 was a school and comalong with the nutritional
qualifications and I or training certifications.must be attached to the proposal.
coupons for foods and formula. funded by the Family and Chil- munity based head lice eradicaI
Other WIC staff include Lee dren First Council, is coordi- tion program (HLEP), coordiFee proposals may be mailed or delivered to the Meigs County
Newberry, lactation consaltant nated by Brenda Curfinan, nated by Sherry Patterson,
and Linda King, family and LSW. assisted by Junie May- RN.In the first six months Commissioners, Courthouse, Second Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. Qu1=stions
'
'
in regard to this request.may be addressed to Jean Trussel, Grants Administrator,
nutrition educator for Ohio nard, RN, BSN. The program 3001 head checks were perState University Meigs County sets a curriculum for personnel formed and 377 of those were
at 740-992-7908.
to enter the counties schools, positive for lice. Patterson and
Extension Office.
JetTThomton, President
usually nuddle and elementary her assistant, Annette Bare,
ages, and reach abstinence edu- STNA, conducted mass screen- 1
Meigs County Commissioners
Men 'a health 1ervicet
ings
at
all
the
county's
elemenFor the men of the county, cation.
The program continues to tary schools and some prethe yearly prostate clinic in
2000 screened 73 men. Local use the "Baby Think It Over" sc)!ools.
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

,

I

'

.. )

.

..

am

•

'

t

I

•

'

,

·'

\

'

1

.,

• 'J • '

\ •• 1 )

.

'

"

1

• 1

will

I

I

~-

9e

.

..

"

~~·~

·

-

If:

camp meeting

Dorollay Gloeckner

•

E:~

r

MIDDLEPoRT - Meigs
, Area Holiness Association will
have an in-door camp meeting
1 at the Middleport Church
of the Nazarene, March 5-11,
~ 7 p.m. every day except Sun1
day, when the service will
begin at 6 p.m. Howard Rickey will be the evangelist and
1there will be music by The
1Sissons.

MlldNCI Riley

' . ..

LOCAL BRIEFS

I I

:POMEROY.- Dorothy Gloeckner, Pomeroy, died Tuesd:!y,
&lt; b. 27, 2001, m Holzer Medical Center.
• ~[Arrangements will be announced by by Fisher-Acree Funer~Home, Pomeroy.
. 1•

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

r Wednesdtly, February 21, 2001

Wedneaday, fabruary21, 20CS1

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

,

~MIDDLEPORT -

Mildred Riley, 84, Middleport, died
resday. Feb. 27, 2001 at Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center,

·=roy.
I

'

I

.

Slpups set

•

Avenue, assisted by Pomeroy,
Dorothy Gloeckner, HMC.
POMEROY
3:35 p.m., Whites Hill
Road, F!nnie Miller, HMC.
RACINE
· 9:42 p.m., Ohio 338, Vera
Nowlin, treated.
SYRACUSE
1:25 p.m., Water Street,
Della Starky. HMC;
7:56 p.m., Holzer Medical
Center Clinic, Robert Ramsbury,HMC.

Gospel Station gears for
first 'Share-A-Than' drive
kick-otffor the Share-A-Than.
The station, which features
southern gospel music 24hours a day, went on the air
Dec. 21,2000.
· "The biggest Wessings I've
received from JOY FM have
been at night when I have
trouble sleeping," said volunteer
Kathy Thonus of Point Pleas-

BY MICHELE CARTER

OVP NEWS STAFF
POINT PLEASANT, WVa .
-:-JOY FM 88.1 is gearing up
for three busy days.
On March 6-8, the station
will conduct its first "Share-AThon," General' Manager
Randy Parsons said.
"The Share-A-Thon is a·
time for the station, which is
non-profit and non-commercial, to raise money for the st.1tion,". Parsons said. "Listeners'
sup port is needed to help us
meet the need to continue the

ant.

" I turn on the radio, start
praising the Lord and I have no
problem sleeping."

She WOIS born on Feb. 9, 19!7. in Langsville, daughter of the
llate Charlie and Mamie Steele Nelson. She was a former clerk
'at Stiffier's Department Store, and the Holiday Supermarket ip.
TUPPERS PLAINS POMEROY - An action
Hilliard, ·
·
.Tuppers Plains, Chester and
She was a homemaker. She was a member of Middlepo~t Reedsville baseball and soft- for dissolu cion of marriage station's operations."
{;burch of Christ.
ball second signups will be has been fil ed in Meigs
"The sole emphasis of the
Common Pleas Share-A-Thon is not only to
., · Surviving are a son, Wesley Sisson of Syracuse; a stepson and h~ld 011 Saturday from 9 a.m. County
'his wifel, Ted Jr. and Clara Belle Riley of Middleport; two siep'- until noon, at Eastern Ele- Court by Tammi R. Kennedy raise mon(!y, but to focus on the
and Robert K. Kennedy, both ministry aspect of the station,"
tlaughth1 and their husba11ds, Pmy ;md Vernon Rousl\ of mentary School.
of
Rutland.
Mason, W.va., and Shirley Lee of c .. Jdwdl; and 14 grandchilParsom said.
dren, 23 great-grandchildren ani;! thrc·e gre•H-great grandchilMore than 40 volunteers
from
the tri-county area wiU be
•~"·
.
'
f: .She \Vas abo preceded in death by her first husband, Paul Sis\..
assisting at the st:1tio11 during
RACINE - Sutton Town- the event, which will run from
~n; her second husband, Theodore Riley Sr.; a broth.er, Carl
TUPPERS PLAINS
ship's a;u1ual finan cial report 6 a.m. until 8 p.m. each of the
~elson; and two kisters, Hilda Carson and Freda McGee.
'
Tuppers
Plains
Athletic
Assois now complete and is avail- three days .
~·Services will be I p.m. Friday in Fisher-Acree Funer~l
ciation
will
meet
on
March
6
able
at the clerk's office at
ome, Middleport, with AI Hartson i&gt;fficiati'}g. Buriai will b~
Parsons said tnany local
at
6:30
p.m
.
in
the
library
at
43410 Dutchtown Road, churches are getting involved
• R-ivezyiew Cemetery, Middleport. Friends may call at the
Eastern Elementary. The pub- · Racine, for public viewing.
wneral home from 2-4 and 7-'9 .p.tn. Thursday.
·
and many food donations luvo..·
.
lic
is
in
vi
ted.
•
., .
'
I
been made for the event.
On March · 5, a Prayer and
Praise Day will serve as . the

Action filed

~

.Associ•tion

.

~

~

' /.

;~.~VA. L. LEY. WEATHERJ
.
~
.

.

..

.

•

f• i'~

.

voh,onteer Phyllis S\vord said
th~ new station has blessed her
and her family.
"When I first heard Randy
(Parsons) talking about the
radio, the Lord gave me a bump
on the head to get involved;'
Sword said.
Special .visitors during the
Share-A-Thon will include
national recording artists The

Report ready

meets

.
~

Breast cancer survivor and

Open hours

RUTLAND - State Sen.
Mike
Shoemaker,
DBourneville, will hold office
hours at the Rudand Civic
Center . from noon until I
p.m. on Friday.

Perry Sisters o n Tuesday afternoon and The Compto ns on
We-dnt'sday morning, a~ well as

employees from JOY's sister
station in South Shore, Ky.
The toU-free number for the
Share-A-Than IS 866-8214726 .

Registration
open

POMEROY- The Comhigh school graduation as May
munity Outreach Team from
20;
Chillicothe Veterans Adminis• approved a service contract
~=
·.·~
tration · Medical Center will
with
SEOVEC for the 2001Page AI
~; BY TH! A$SOCIATED PRESS
Thursday
night ... Pa~y
enroll veterans into the VA
02 school year;
~·Fair ~ather will continue cloudy. Low 23 to 28.
·.
Health Care System of Ohio tions would be the result of
• approved a memorandum
the ni-county area ThursExtend~d forecast: r,
1
at the Pomeroy Field Service the elimination of four secre- of understanding between the
~.forecasters said.
Friday... Pardy cloudy.Jif$h
Center, in front of Veterans tarial positions in the present Southern Local Board of Edu" It will be cold again in the upper 40s.
... . ·
RACINE - A bake sale, Memorial Hospital, on Thurs- buildings, and would become cation and the Southern Local
Saturday... A chance of snpw
Jonight, Wlth lows ,in the teem
day from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
effective with the 2001-02 Education Association on the
.#d 20s..
showers in the morning, th,~n sponsored by the Star ·Mill
Veterans should bring a ·school year.
Park
Board,
will
be
held
on
technology coordinator posi: ,• Sunsl!t tonight will be at a chance of rain showers frQrn
Saturday, beginning at 8 a.m., copy of their discharge, sepation;
Ike
Spencer,
high
school
1§:22, and iunrise on Thursday early afternoon on. Low 21, 'o
ration
pr
DD214,
spouse's
·
• set guidelines for the
custodian, \vas approved to
,i!at 7:0,7- ~.m.
31 and high in the upper .4.Qs. at Home National Bank.
• Social Security number, date attend a boiler operator's Teacher Internship Program by
, ,. We.ather forecast:
Sunday... Partly cloudy. Lpw
of birth and date of marriage; workshop in Columbus. The .. Southern High School stuTonigh~...Mosdy clear and near 30 and high 44 to 50.
the date of birth for depen- registration for the workshop dents. These students will
,cold. Low 18 'to 22. Light and
Monday... Pardy
cloudy.
dent
children and their Social will cost $1,095.
The
POMEROY
receive elective tredit for pro· "V;ariable Wind.
Low 25 to 31 and high in the
Security
numbers;
informaAthens/Meigs Major Crimes
Jeannie Allen was approved viding services to Southern
r·, Thund.ay.•.. Partly
sunny. mid 40s. '
Task Force has received tion on inc o me and assets, and as a reader guide at Carleton Elementary;
High in the mid and upper
Tuesday. .. Partly
cloudy. ·
$155,798.50 through the Medicare and insurance cards. School. Allen w1ll replace
• approved changes in busi140s. West wind around· 10 Low in the upper · 20s .• and
Those enrolled in the past Patricia Baer, who has taken ness technology at the high
Byrne
Memorial
program
for
!mph. ' · I ·
high in the lower·40s.
.
crime prevention.
. who have not used the VA other employment.
school for next year.
, -1 i':J..
, .
, ,.,,
111i!i
I~I) i~1t.~l.,,_ ·.--•&lt;. ;,.~)j(
Health
Care
System
in
the
.
·
Gov.
Bob
Taft
am\ounced
Attending were board memIn dther matters, the board:
&gt;'
past
three
years
must
re"
.,
the award as a part of' more
• approved change·s in the bers Ron Cammarata, Richard
'
~~
strip n].ines," said Freeril~n. !han $18 million In grants to eriroll.
cost of admission at athletic Hill, Da~id Kuscma, Doug LitA
nurse
\viii
be
available
to
"These varied topo.grap~1es help more than 200 crimipal
events effective with the 2001- de, Treasurer Dennie Hill and
provide blood pressure, glu- 02 school year;
"'
·
will accentuate the a~ea's justice projects.acrosi Ohio.
Superintendent
James
cose,
and
cholesterol
screenAI
landscape and will vis\l~)ly · The local program combats
• set the date fol" this year's La\vrence.
I, '
educate those walking fhe drug activity and other major ings.
llpproxlmat'ely ·one' mil~ In trail about the abunrl~nt cnmes in the two-county
length and will incorporate wildlife that live in th9se area.
various· sites for both wildlife regions."
.
..
The local multi-jurisdicPOMEROY- Area teens
'altd botanical viewing.
Other project collabor:Uors ti01ral drugtask force is one of
Rcx:kWel- 45~.
uss-23:,
' Student! who participate in include: Vicki Morrow, e~u- 32 across the state which will are mgl:d and invited to AEP-47~1
Rqcky Bools- 4:0
Arch
Coal24'1
Garv1e1167
\~oodworking classes at Meigs cation coordinator of fhe received more than $4.8 mil- . attend "Friday's .Fun, Food
AD Shel- 59'1
Genetal Electric - 48
Akzo-48'and Fellowship" at God's AmTeciVSBO -so·.
High School will build blue Meigs SWCD; Rusty Boo\&lt;- lion.
Sears-~.
Halley Davidsoli - 45
ShoMy's-1
Kmart-9~
NET in Pomeroy. Nutritional Ashland Inc. -39
bird boxes, bat boxes, squirrel man, principal at Rut1~1~d
Kroger:-' 24~.
Wai·Mart51
AT&amp;T-22'.
meals will be served;and teens
hesting boxes and· assorted Elementary; and Bill Buck\ey,
Werdy's- 24:.
Lands Er&lt;l- 23l.
BankOne-36
can play non-violent video Bob Evans- 1~•
'lvi!dlife ' fe-eders that will Meigs Local superintendeqt.
~ -lt.
Lti. -18
Oak
HiH
F..ancial1
4',
Daly stod&lt; repooto are !he
BorgWamer44\
games,
computer
programs
'e',:entuillly be placed at ilue- All worktd on the trail's spe~­
POMEROY - Units of
4 p.m. dosing q.J01es of
OVB-25
Chalr!&gt;lon
2];
-gral locations along the trail, ification and layout planniqg. the Meigs Emergency Service and board games free of Charming Si1&lt;lp! - 6".
lhe pn!\Aous day's llanS·
BBT -36~
Maht added.
Wildlife diversity grants ~~e answered six calls for assis- charge in· the center'&lt; game City Hddlng- 9
ao::lions, pl1l'o1ded by Srmh
~s-t7\
Par1nenl atAdvest Inc.
1 ji11! Preeman, wildlife spedesigned to encourage dtillfA tai1Ce on · Tuesday. Units room, which is located on Fedeni ~ - 3:1
PrerTierMain Street in Pomeroy.
cialist/w:~tershed coordinator participation in the ODNR responded as foUows:
Pool tables are also available
rj the . .l)llejgs SQil and Water. "Division ofWildlife's ·effort
. CENTRAL DISPATCH
l!lonse·r~tiop Districf, · said proll\ote abundant and vari d
4:56 · a.m., Overbrook for teens to use. God:s NET
!lie trail· &lt;1.~ ·Will encompass a . 111!ildlife species. and in educ ' - Nursing Center, Clara Davis, opens at 6 p.m. and closes at
10:30 p.m. on Friday and Sat-·
Wide amr of .different ter- .·. ing .people about wild!, Holzer Medical Center;
(iins :irld environments .' It' ' conservati1m. .
I
1:10
p.m.,
Mulberry urday nights.
'
.
!Jould 'rrtake for an interest• :· · Project proposals were ca
;jag foray into several diverse . fully reviewed by wildlife
l):abitatl&gt;he added.
· · officials and were cornpeci&gt;H
·
•
wil!ilife rrailwill tively ' judged according
.peandet through meadows, how much they, bene%1
~oodia.n~ .a nd abandoned Ohio's wildlife and citizens . .,

fair.weather
in
area
forecast;
. .
!n

Board

from

Plan sale

Gets funding

...:

1'

lld

.....
.I
.11"81

.,,

'• ' · frOin Plae

God's NET

LOCAL STOCKS

EMS runs

6'·

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

I
d
~~~ Reglona a vocate
t
.
"t
Gallia
Chamber
. ,., 0 VISI

~ "Thc, n~'V·

~

~ORE'LOCAL NEWS, MQRE LOCAL FOLKS..:. GA~~~~~~~REPO~~~

1
t,
!

Subscribe today.
992-2156

·

,.,

.

,•1

&lt;

•J

:,
~

(UIPUIHtO)
.
Olllo Vllloy Pultllllllnt co..

~

rn:.~

Correction Polley

• Our main concem In Ill ator11111
•
at tf
knOW of an
~ to be IICGUr •· ~ou

~~~~ ~~

Pomeroy, 01110. Sacond·ctm
pooU!gt paid ol Pomeroy.
•
MtMblri The Aaocllttd Preu 1nd
lhl on1o Nt-parA...,.Iatlon.

Po-••

~ errorlnaeJOrv.~.lthlneweroom ·
Send tddrttl o:orrtc·
~ al (740))112·21...,.
.
llanololhtDollySonllnet, 111 coun.
·~
Newt ~enta
Sl., ~omeroy. 0111o •s78D.
~
, lubtcr.,ptlon ratet
158
2
11
2
ll)lln n
r "are:' · '
' lr ool'llor or mOtor route '
. ~'• The
Depanmlnl'extenttone
_ -k
s2
0 ·~
"
'• General n'tllllll'
Ext. 12 Ono ~~~·
$8.70
Ono-

••

·~ NIWI
'•

~

~.'
•l

I!xt. 13
E•t. 1 ,

or

•

~

Other aervlHI

•' -~~

~ ,~-.Jnft

i

~~

Cllll•l•f·lld Adl

'

·TO H~ ..mall

milt pann"lld tn aruo wnore homo

e~ 3

Ext. 4
E&gt;l. 5

---et""v-•" .,_, com .

d1 Kr~••••

ThO O.Ny Senllnol. Cre•lll will bo given
caorllr Mch -"·No ~Woc:lipiiOn by

earner 11tvlct 11 avalltble.

• ••·

Clrculltlon

&gt;~

•

$104

Dally
SUbsertotnt nol deolnng ••socents
poy lho
"""''" m.ov romk In odvooce dlroctlo

Mal suMmnllon '
lnlldl Mef;.cot;y

13 WHkl

l!eWooko

52

·

$27 .30

$53.82

5105 ·56
weeki
DU~tldo Mlli• County

13 WHkl

28 Wooko

.

s2g.2s

$56.68
S10g·72

12 WHkl
....

;

,

. .,
l

Padgett said the .
Gor•ernor's Office of
Appalaclli11 also sert,es
as an advocate in
addressing tire re.~iott's
need.~ to state
government.

gett, dire,tor of the Gove:I nor'sOfficeofAppalach1a,wlll .
·I I' be •gilest speaker at the Quarterly.Business Exchange of the
· 1Gallia County Chamber of
li Commerce Thursday at 5:30
_.p.m. in the c:H. McKenzie
. 1 Agricultural Center.
The event will be sponsored
She also, serves 3S the gover1by Gallia Soil a Water Con- nor's alternate
to
the
' servation Dist ct.
Appalachian Regional Com, "We are .a ays happy to mission. This federal-state
1
have Mrs. Padg tt visit Gallia partnership program was
-County and lao fo_rward to designed to address economic
·
~.h~ presentation a he gua:- . and social development needs
terly Busihess Exchange, sa1d in the 13 federally designated
'the chamber's president, Dr. Appalachian states.
·r tyde E·~llS
Twcnry-nino of. Ohio's 88
"-'
•• · ·
:, "The chamber is always counties arc dcsig11Jt~d as
1 1·
I'acl gett "'·d t1c
1
enthusiastic w hen it can sup- A ppaon1.111.
. 'p~rt its a"ricultural communi- Governor's
Ofticc
of
"
ty," he added .
Appalachia .II so servos as an
Padgett was appointed oidvocate in addrcssi1lg the
!•
'
·
'
1
dirl'ctor
of th~ Gove-rnors
regions
ll("ClS to state IT,rovl!rn ...
t'Jfficc of App01lachia on July mcnt by scrvmg as th~ comt, 1999 .
n1uni cation and 1.: oorJin~'tion
Previously, she had· been link among st.1tc agen cies,
state rl.'prcscncative for chc: local gov~ mmcnt ~ and thl·
95th House District ·of Legislature.
Holme s, Cos hocton
and
For infonn.ltion. co ntact tho
Muskingum counties.
chamber at .!4Co-0596.

:J· The'
. Dal·ly Sentl•nel ..
Reader Services
F=.
•.
'
·
S
''

Pad-

..

•

Tax - free retirement dollars.
l.s the Roth IRA riQhl for you? Learn how
you miQhl benefit. Call our a9ency loday
far a free Roth IRA analysis. You'll
receive a free prospectus contalnlnQ
complete lnformallon, charves, fees and
expenses. Read It before you Invest or
send money.
Nationwide Is On Your Sldf!"
Pomeroy

JEFF WARNER
113 W. 2nd Slreet

Nationwide®
Advisory Services

.gg2·5478

Sec uritit11 o"-rtcl ttuouQtl Nlhonwltl• ,-.dvltory S.NICII, InC, Mtlltl&amp;tl, NASO.
• tutllidlary of Nttlcnwldl Pin•ncltl S.rY iCtl
ThrM Nlt•onwlc!t Pltu, FtO BDK 14D2. Co1umb1.11. OH 43218· 1492 , 1·800.141·0820
Nauonw ldt1° 11 1 regiltlrtd ftdtrtt tervi~e mtrk ol Nttlonw•dt Mututlll'llutll'lt l Col'l'lplny

�.

.. . . . . ... .

.. . .

.........

..

•

Page A 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Meigs Co

Health Departmenrs annual report

s

BY CHA•- HoiPucH

physicians, Scott Smith, D. 0.,
James Witherell, M .D., and
POMEROY - The new Doug Hunter, M .D., volunmillennium brought many teered their time to assist in the
changes to the Meigs County screening.
Health Department, but one
thing did not change: its philosChildren's services
.
ophy of providing low-cost
Drs. Witherell and Hunter
health services and screenings continue to provide services
. through a monthly Child and
to all county residents. .
The annual report ISSued Family
Health
Services
recendy by the agency's new (CFHS), Well Child Clinic
health commissioner and (WCC) coordinated since
administrator, Nor1112 Torres, August by Nancy Broderick,
details last year's many advances RN. Torres reported 462 chilin providing access to health dren from birth to 2f received
care, especially to those who are the services including a physical
uninsured or underinsured.
examination, blood lead and
- Keith Little, left, Is direc~or
New programs and expan- blood iron screening, blood
department's
environment
services, .and Mike Cooper Is , a
sion of existing services grew pressure, .height, weight, dental
ABSTINENCE
EDUCATION
Coordinating
an
abstinence
edu·
,:&gt;anitarlan in training. The agency's new ca~d. iovascu]ar edu~!l·
extensively last year and Torres services, developmental screencation
program
in
the
schools
as
a
part
of
the
Health
Departtor
Is B!!tsy Nicodemus, seated cente[, .and Tracey,.• O'Dell •i~ ·
noted that the trend is continu- in g. vision, hearing and speech
l
ment
services
are
Kathl
VanMeter,
L.S.W.
coordinator,
left,
the departm·e nt's new cardiovascular health education.
,
ing this year.
screenings, social and nutritionand
Brenda
Phalin,
health
educator.
·
al assessments and referral serDental program
vices. Funding for the lead dolls to give children a handsServices incl11de horne visits
Funded for three years by the screenings are provided by the on experience of what it would to educate families in the treatSisters of Saint Joseph Charita- Lead Poisoning Prevention be like to become a parent. A ment process, revisits to schools,
ble Fund of Parkersburg, and Program.
total of 1Z schools were visited phone calls, referrals to other
coordinated by Beth Cremeans,
Maureen Hennessy, speech and 3837 student contacts were agencies, vouchers for the
CMA, the Dental Defense and language pathologist, coon- made. An active interest is t.1ken shampoo and licemeister comb
Grant program focuses services sels parents after evaluating the in the county's youth by also dispersal.
on those Without insurance.
children's speech and hearing attending and co-sponsoring
The program includes oral patterns.
community organizations and
Statistici
health presentations at schools
Janet Bolland, registered special events.
Edwina Bell, registrar and
· and in WIC groups where the dietitian, provides nutritional
The year of2000 was, unfor- vital statistician, reported that
emphasis is on the importance education for clients. Carol
1
h 1 f,
h · there were 1'58 deaths recorded
Tannel:illl, RN, RSVP .volun- tunate y, was t e ast or t e
of dental care for a lifetime.
March of Dimes Prenatal in 2000 and 53.2 percent were
Supplemental . monies are teers at the health department Smoking Cessation Program. heart (cm!iovascular system)
proVided by the local clubs, ·as do members of the nursing Pregnant smokers are given related. 329 birth and 672 death
civic organizations, and busi- assistant class of Meigs High
fi
· d
11
School
to
help
in
the
various
support
and
encouragement
to
certi
cates
were
1ssue
,
as
we
nesses to purchase toothbrushstop smoking, as weU as, infor- as, 1075 plain copies for geneal. es, floss, and toothpaste to disprograms.
mation on the harmful effects ogy research. There were no in- ~ARD OF H~LTH .:.... Making up the Board of He!!lth whl•~h
tribute at presentations pro·Out-of-county
physician smoking has on the fetus. A county births during the year,
handles health and environmental services and statistics
moting good oral hygiene specialists provide services for total of 68 enrollees received
the
county are left to rig!it, seated, Norma Torres, Health compractices.
the. specially clinics coordinated
Environmental
monetary incentives to quit
ml~sioner
and ' administrator; Margie Skidmore, nursing diri!C.
Margie Lawson, DDS and by T. C. Ervin, RN, BSN.
ki
d f h
1y c
health
services
to'l, and T. C. ~rvin, assistant nursing director; and bact,
Children from birth to 21 are smo ng an o t ose on oour
Rhonda Davis, registered denKeith
Litde,
RS,
director
of
C&lt;l~rtney Slm, administrative ass.i stant and deputY _registrar;
tal hygienist, offer their services exainined, diagnosed and treat- successfully stopped smoking
environmental health, and Don Tammy Taylor, financial officer; Don Hodge, sanltarlah; Edwina
to th~ dental clients with Craig ed in the free clinics. Referrals for the pregnancy. A total of
Hodge, RS, said 268 food ser- Bell, registrar, and Elizabeth Bearhs, custodian. Keith Llttli:l,
Matthews, DDS assisting when and appointments are necessary. . 129 random urine. sample for
The numbers of clients served nicotine content were per- vice inspections were per- director of environmental services, an'd Mike Cooper;'sanitari·
needed.
formed during -the year, and 95. an 'ln training were not present. (Cha~ene Hoeflich pt\otos)
in each clinic last year were: formed to monitor progress.
The Welcome Home Moth- licenses were issued for food
Women's health programs cardiac, 16; vision, 57; plastics,
Nursing personnel includes HEcEd, Nutritionist, anp
servtce.
O;
hearing,
34;
and
n~urology,
er
and
Baby
Program,
funded
1
Mammography screenings
Sixteen private \\faCer system Margie Skidmore, RN, BSN, Dortha R.ilfle, automated data
by the Ohio Department of
retained a place of importance 21
permits were issued, 45 water nursing director; T. C. Ijrvin, processor.
Another
program
coordinatHealth
and
the
Family
and
in the women's health services
Other program .p~rsonnel
samples were collected and test- R,N, BSN, · assistant nursing
offered through -the health ed by Ervin was the "Sight for Children First Counsel had a
ed, and 247 permits to install director/BCMH and specialty include Tammy Taylor, financial
Students" program that assists very successful year.
department last year.
clinic coordinator; Con!lje Lit- officer; Becki Ball, Child and
The program provides for an private sewagl' disposal syst~rns dc,.B..N, BSN, p.renatal ditector; Fil~y Health.~sistant;.Brenda
Torres reported the agency age and income eligible chi!were issued.
continued coordination of dren to receive a vision exam RN, currendy Leanne ConNancy Blljlderick, RN, Well Curf1112n,.J,.SW. Well.ness Block
Inspections are .regularly con-.
'
t_.,q~
and
glasses.
Two
clients
were
ningham,
to
provide
homsi!smammography
screenings
Chilel director and lAP Nurse; Grant aoordinat~ Annette
ducted
at
all
landfill
areas,
throu~ 12 mobile unit from served through the program in its both prenatally and after tfi'e
mobile home parks, camp- Tracey O'Dell, RN, Tobacco Bare, STNA, ·HLEP assistant
2000.
birth.
A
total
o
f79dprenatal
visGrant/Riverside and Ohio
Prii\oention coordinator; Sherry family ·Health, c.oQ.lidinator;
Ervin also coordinates the its were camp1etc on expect- grounds, swimming pools and Patterson, RN, Head Lice Beth Cremeans', CMA, Oral
State University. A total of 266
schools. Forty-seven rabies conwomen were screened. An Bureau for Children with ing women and 175 visits were
E~cation Program coordina- Health .. Eli~be1h . B~arhs is tjle .
· additional 62 women were Medical Handicaps (BCMH) nude to families after the baby sultations were conducted, nin~ tor,Junie Maynard, RN, BSN, Custodian.
;
~.
lead aba!&lt;ment consultations
screened during the cervical which anises families in the was home. Information is
Wellness Block Grant; and . Torres •aiel several he~th qr
application procell to assure offered concerning 'the pres- were made and 62 nuisance Leanne '"" Cunningham, RN,
(GYN) cancer clinics.
program related P~!entatiops
complaints were addrened..
The Southeastern Ohio children with certain chronic nancy, prenatal care, labor and
w.!come Hoine Mother nnd were made at publi~ service
Mike Cooper, SIT, a third saniBreast and Cervical Cancer health conc~rnt and those in delivery, infant care, i~fant feedorpnization1 in the cpmmuni.tarian joined the health depart- B~Nurte.
Prqgram continues to offer a lind of diagnosis receive need~ ing, common newborn prob'itbe
Vital
StadsticJ
depnrt·
ty last year. In a~li!don tb~
lems, safety, and community ment at the end of the year.
payme.nt source for these ser- ed medical caR.
1rleht consists of Edwina Bell, apncy offered Ohiq l,!!liversity
Home and office vilitl weR re10urces available. Referrals nre
vices for those who are age a11d
Courtney Sin1, ·sse.:The Collep of Osteopathic MeQ.ir
Ptr•onnel ·
made
to moR than 75 chil- made if and when needed.
,
income eliaible.
Environmei1ta1
department cine medical studentl, nurlll)g
Tbe departn1cnt l~ prned
The Ohio Department of
Prenatal services were coor- dren/familiet. BCMH it a state
iitducles Keith Litde, · RS, studentl and othet .. ancilla;y
dinated by Connie Little, RN, funded proiram that covert ser- Health's PRwntive Health and by a five-member Board of Dilector, Don Hodp, RS, and
health . 1ervice ttu.4 entt the
BSN, CI'HS Prenatal Clinic vices by tpecialitts that are Health Services Grant funds are Health with Torres as health Mike Cooper, SIT. The WIC
opportunity
to have s~ort-term
commissioner.
Her
administradirector, and CPHS assistant, providen throughout the state. used to provide our Fun, Food,
lt'lff contittl of Debbie Babbitt,
and Fitness program, coordinat- tive assistant is Courmey Sim, RN, director, Pam Sharp, BS internship! at the heath. departBeclci Ball. Pregnant women
ment.
! I(
'
.
ed by Jackie Starcher, DT, and BSC.
can benefit from social usenlmmunlzadon•
ments, nutritional counseling,
Getting tlu vaccine provided Rebecca Grueser. This program
blood werk, cUltures, height a real challenge last fall, but promotes physical fitness and
and weight measurements and when it finally arrived there has developed walking prophysical exams through this were 1416 injections given. grams throughout the commuclinic.
Ouring the year, ' 2, 740 other nity. Group presentations,
Wilma Mansfield, MD, sees vaccines were administered. meetings, and involvement in
clients during clinics held two Immunization clinics are held community activities are vital
'
The Meigs County .Commissioners will be. applying for the · FY's 2001
times each month. A total of 86 every Tuesday. The Immuniza- parts to their outreach.
The Tobacco Prevention
women were followed, with an tion Action Plan is coordinated
CDBG C,ommtinity l;Iousin~· and Improvement Program grant furlding ai).d' will·
Program
has really began to
average of five visits each and by Nancy Broderick, RN, and·
accept fee proposal~ for .REHABILIT~TION CONSULTING SERVIC~~ ro ·
ultrasound scheduling. Clients Courtney Sim, BSC. Comput- show signs of success. A tobacimplement the program&gt; 1f funded, until March 8, 200 l at 10:00 a.m. at the
are followed through their 26th .erization . of immunization co coalition has been reestaboffices of the Meigs County Commissioners, Courthouse, Second Street,
week, at which time they are records has improved tracking lished with 20 members and
referred to the hospital of of childhood immunizations also has a 12 member peer
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. Fee proposals will then be opened !Qld bonsldered duling
group. Sub-committees were
choice for delivery. In addition, for our clients.
the regular Board of Commissioners meeting at I0:45 a.m. on ihe date abo~t:
formed 'from these members to
pregnaney rests are performed
Speech and he•ring
address specific groups; prenafor a nominal fee with 280
The · pr9gram will require the professional .sen;ices of a rehabilitation
programs
tal, school age, adult, and public
.
completed last year.
specialist to provide .the following scopes of services:
· ·
Susie Heines, speech and ed~cation. Involvement in
The Women, Infants, and
Children (WIC) program con- hearing pathologist, continues conhnunity has seen 3 individPreliminary,inspe~tion ·and prepatation of rehabilitation work specifications··
to
coordinate
the
evening
.
uals
quit
smoking
in
the
Great
tinues to be directed by Debbie
to meet Residential Rehabilitation Standards, of apprq~irjla~ly ,~5·3R ..1Jil8le
Babbitt, RN, who is assisted by speech and hearing clinics with American Smoke Out, gaod
family homes and specifications/cost estimates for such work on each' Ul'lit. The
Pam Sharp, BS, HEcEd, and the assistance of therapists and participation in Smoke Free
Specialist
also assist in the contrac;tor,bid4i~g process ~d review all bids;
Dortha Riflle. The program students fiom Ohio University. Dining Day (April) and Kick
A total of 1,327 contacts Butts Day.
offers nutritional supplementaatt11nda~ce at pre-bidlc'oJistruction, meetings; interim construction inspections;
were
1112de
·
last
year
with
131
The
Health
Department
has
tion, counseling, and referral
oversee compliance with Residential Rehabilitation Standardst.undertak-e 'final
·services for eligible infants, chil- hearing tests performed and 87 also been involved in ·completinspections and payment approo,;als; and provide 'Written reports: · , · ·,,' ' ~ 1
dren and pregnant women. This referrals to other agencies ing 30 tobacco. compliance
'
' 'I I.--.
,. (
' " , '.
,). , '
:;
year 1924 clients were seen in made, One-hundred-twenty- checks in an effort to discourFee proposals must ·1itate qualifications, including .all related completed ' •
WI C for certification and edu- nine people attended the parent age tobacco sales to underage
training for . the HOUSING REHABILJTATION project ac.tivit~t··.previo.us
cational classes. Services provid- educatiol1 classes and 58 clients patrons.
A new program, funded by
experience in CDBG!Hq~e Housing program~; scope of services to. provi~ed .
ed include hemoglobin screen- were in therapy each qu.arter.
Meigs
County
J?epartment
of
ings, height, weight, nutritional
and amount of fixed price compensation required for the above service&amp;,,!lfld
Special service programs Job and Family Services, added
assessment and .counseling
pricing data to support the fixed price (e.g., per hour, diem, unit). All relat~d
The Wellness Block Grant, in 2000 was a school and comalong with the nutritional
qualifications and I or training certifications.must be attached to the proposal.
coupons for foods and formula. funded by the Family and Chil- munity based head lice eradicaI
Other WIC staff include Lee dren First Council, is coordi- tion program (HLEP), coordiFee proposals may be mailed or delivered to the Meigs County
Newberry, lactation consaltant nated by Brenda Curfinan, nated by Sherry Patterson,
and Linda King, family and LSW. assisted by Junie May- RN.In the first six months Commissioners, Courthouse, Second Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. Qu1=stions
'
'
in regard to this request.may be addressed to Jean Trussel, Grants Administrator,
nutrition educator for Ohio nard, RN, BSN. The program 3001 head checks were perState University Meigs County sets a curriculum for personnel formed and 377 of those were
at 740-992-7908.
to enter the counties schools, positive for lice. Patterson and
Extension Office.
JetTThomton, President
usually nuddle and elementary her assistant, Annette Bare,
ages, and reach abstinence edu- STNA, conducted mass screen- 1
Meigs County Commissioners
Men 'a health 1ervicet
ings
at
all
the
county's
elemenFor the men of the county, cation.
The program continues to tary schools and some prethe yearly prostate clinic in
2000 screened 73 men. Local use the "Baby Think It Over" sc)!ools.
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

,

I

'

.. )

.

..

am

•

'

t

I

•

'

,

·'

\

'

1

.,

• 'J • '

\ •• 1 )

.

'

"

1

• 1

will

I

I

~-

9e

.

..

"

~~·~

·

-

If:

camp meeting

Dorollay Gloeckner

•

E:~

r

MIDDLEPoRT - Meigs
, Area Holiness Association will
have an in-door camp meeting
1 at the Middleport Church
of the Nazarene, March 5-11,
~ 7 p.m. every day except Sun1
day, when the service will
begin at 6 p.m. Howard Rickey will be the evangelist and
1there will be music by The
1Sissons.

MlldNCI Riley

' . ..

LOCAL BRIEFS

I I

:POMEROY.- Dorothy Gloeckner, Pomeroy, died Tuesd:!y,
&lt; b. 27, 2001, m Holzer Medical Center.
• ~[Arrangements will be announced by by Fisher-Acree Funer~Home, Pomeroy.
. 1•

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

r Wednesdtly, February 21, 2001

Wedneaday, fabruary21, 20CS1

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

,

~MIDDLEPORT -

Mildred Riley, 84, Middleport, died
resday. Feb. 27, 2001 at Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center,

·=roy.
I

'

I

.

Slpups set

•

Avenue, assisted by Pomeroy,
Dorothy Gloeckner, HMC.
POMEROY
3:35 p.m., Whites Hill
Road, F!nnie Miller, HMC.
RACINE
· 9:42 p.m., Ohio 338, Vera
Nowlin, treated.
SYRACUSE
1:25 p.m., Water Street,
Della Starky. HMC;
7:56 p.m., Holzer Medical
Center Clinic, Robert Ramsbury,HMC.

Gospel Station gears for
first 'Share-A-Than' drive
kick-otffor the Share-A-Than.
The station, which features
southern gospel music 24hours a day, went on the air
Dec. 21,2000.
· "The biggest Wessings I've
received from JOY FM have
been at night when I have
trouble sleeping," said volunteer
Kathy Thonus of Point Pleas-

BY MICHELE CARTER

OVP NEWS STAFF
POINT PLEASANT, WVa .
-:-JOY FM 88.1 is gearing up
for three busy days.
On March 6-8, the station
will conduct its first "Share-AThon," General' Manager
Randy Parsons said.
"The Share-A-Thon is a·
time for the station, which is
non-profit and non-commercial, to raise money for the st.1tion,". Parsons said. "Listeners'
sup port is needed to help us
meet the need to continue the

ant.

" I turn on the radio, start
praising the Lord and I have no
problem sleeping."

She WOIS born on Feb. 9, 19!7. in Langsville, daughter of the
llate Charlie and Mamie Steele Nelson. She was a former clerk
'at Stiffier's Department Store, and the Holiday Supermarket ip.
TUPPERS PLAINS POMEROY - An action
Hilliard, ·
·
.Tuppers Plains, Chester and
She was a homemaker. She was a member of Middlepo~t Reedsville baseball and soft- for dissolu cion of marriage station's operations."
{;burch of Christ.
ball second signups will be has been fil ed in Meigs
"The sole emphasis of the
Common Pleas Share-A-Thon is not only to
., · Surviving are a son, Wesley Sisson of Syracuse; a stepson and h~ld 011 Saturday from 9 a.m. County
'his wifel, Ted Jr. and Clara Belle Riley of Middleport; two siep'- until noon, at Eastern Ele- Court by Tammi R. Kennedy raise mon(!y, but to focus on the
and Robert K. Kennedy, both ministry aspect of the station,"
tlaughth1 and their husba11ds, Pmy ;md Vernon Rousl\ of mentary School.
of
Rutland.
Mason, W.va., and Shirley Lee of c .. Jdwdl; and 14 grandchilParsom said.
dren, 23 great-grandchildren ani;! thrc·e gre•H-great grandchilMore than 40 volunteers
from
the tri-county area wiU be
•~"·
.
'
f: .She \Vas abo preceded in death by her first husband, Paul Sis\..
assisting at the st:1tio11 during
RACINE - Sutton Town- the event, which will run from
~n; her second husband, Theodore Riley Sr.; a broth.er, Carl
TUPPERS PLAINS
ship's a;u1ual finan cial report 6 a.m. until 8 p.m. each of the
~elson; and two kisters, Hilda Carson and Freda McGee.
'
Tuppers
Plains
Athletic
Assois now complete and is avail- three days .
~·Services will be I p.m. Friday in Fisher-Acree Funer~l
ciation
will
meet
on
March
6
able
at the clerk's office at
ome, Middleport, with AI Hartson i&gt;fficiati'}g. Buriai will b~
Parsons said tnany local
at
6:30
p.m
.
in
the
library
at
43410 Dutchtown Road, churches are getting involved
• R-ivezyiew Cemetery, Middleport. Friends may call at the
Eastern Elementary. The pub- · Racine, for public viewing.
wneral home from 2-4 and 7-'9 .p.tn. Thursday.
·
and many food donations luvo..·
.
lic
is
in
vi
ted.
•
., .
'
I
been made for the event.
On March · 5, a Prayer and
Praise Day will serve as . the

Action filed

~

.Associ•tion

.

~

~

' /.

;~.~VA. L. LEY. WEATHERJ
.
~
.

.

..

.

•

f• i'~

.

voh,onteer Phyllis S\vord said
th~ new station has blessed her
and her family.
"When I first heard Randy
(Parsons) talking about the
radio, the Lord gave me a bump
on the head to get involved;'
Sword said.
Special .visitors during the
Share-A-Thon will include
national recording artists The

Report ready

meets

.
~

Breast cancer survivor and

Open hours

RUTLAND - State Sen.
Mike
Shoemaker,
DBourneville, will hold office
hours at the Rudand Civic
Center . from noon until I
p.m. on Friday.

Perry Sisters o n Tuesday afternoon and The Compto ns on
We-dnt'sday morning, a~ well as

employees from JOY's sister
station in South Shore, Ky.
The toU-free number for the
Share-A-Than IS 866-8214726 .

Registration
open

POMEROY- The Comhigh school graduation as May
munity Outreach Team from
20;
Chillicothe Veterans Adminis• approved a service contract
~=
·.·~
tration · Medical Center will
with
SEOVEC for the 2001Page AI
~; BY TH! A$SOCIATED PRESS
Thursday
night ... Pa~y
enroll veterans into the VA
02 school year;
~·Fair ~ather will continue cloudy. Low 23 to 28.
·.
Health Care System of Ohio tions would be the result of
• approved a memorandum
the ni-county area ThursExtend~d forecast: r,
1
at the Pomeroy Field Service the elimination of four secre- of understanding between the
~.forecasters said.
Friday... Pardy cloudy.Jif$h
Center, in front of Veterans tarial positions in the present Southern Local Board of Edu" It will be cold again in the upper 40s.
... . ·
RACINE - A bake sale, Memorial Hospital, on Thurs- buildings, and would become cation and the Southern Local
Saturday... A chance of snpw
Jonight, Wlth lows ,in the teem
day from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
effective with the 2001-02 Education Association on the
.#d 20s..
showers in the morning, th,~n sponsored by the Star ·Mill
Veterans should bring a ·school year.
Park
Board,
will
be
held
on
technology coordinator posi: ,• Sunsl!t tonight will be at a chance of rain showers frQrn
Saturday, beginning at 8 a.m., copy of their discharge, sepation;
Ike
Spencer,
high
school
1§:22, and iunrise on Thursday early afternoon on. Low 21, 'o
ration
pr
DD214,
spouse's
·
• set guidelines for the
custodian, \vas approved to
,i!at 7:0,7- ~.m.
31 and high in the upper .4.Qs. at Home National Bank.
• Social Security number, date attend a boiler operator's Teacher Internship Program by
, ,. We.ather forecast:
Sunday... Partly cloudy. Lpw
of birth and date of marriage; workshop in Columbus. The .. Southern High School stuTonigh~...Mosdy clear and near 30 and high 44 to 50.
the date of birth for depen- registration for the workshop dents. These students will
,cold. Low 18 'to 22. Light and
Monday... Pardy
cloudy.
dent
children and their Social will cost $1,095.
The
POMEROY
receive elective tredit for pro· "V;ariable Wind.
Low 25 to 31 and high in the
Security
numbers;
informaAthens/Meigs Major Crimes
Jeannie Allen was approved viding services to Southern
r·, Thund.ay.•.. Partly
sunny. mid 40s. '
Task Force has received tion on inc o me and assets, and as a reader guide at Carleton Elementary;
High in the mid and upper
Tuesday. .. Partly
cloudy. ·
$155,798.50 through the Medicare and insurance cards. School. Allen w1ll replace
• approved changes in busi140s. West wind around· 10 Low in the upper · 20s .• and
Those enrolled in the past Patricia Baer, who has taken ness technology at the high
Byrne
Memorial
program
for
!mph. ' · I ·
high in the lower·40s.
.
crime prevention.
. who have not used the VA other employment.
school for next year.
, -1 i':J..
, .
, ,.,,
111i!i
I~I) i~1t.~l.,,_ ·.--•&lt;. ;,.~)j(
Health
Care
System
in
the
.
·
Gov.
Bob
Taft
am\ounced
Attending were board memIn dther matters, the board:
&gt;'
past
three
years
must
re"
.,
the award as a part of' more
• approved change·s in the bers Ron Cammarata, Richard
'
~~
strip n].ines," said Freeril~n. !han $18 million In grants to eriroll.
cost of admission at athletic Hill, Da~id Kuscma, Doug LitA
nurse
\viii
be
available
to
"These varied topo.grap~1es help more than 200 crimipal
events effective with the 2001- de, Treasurer Dennie Hill and
provide blood pressure, glu- 02 school year;
"'
·
will accentuate the a~ea's justice projects.acrosi Ohio.
Superintendent
James
cose,
and
cholesterol
screenAI
landscape and will vis\l~)ly · The local program combats
• set the date fol" this year's La\vrence.
I, '
educate those walking fhe drug activity and other major ings.
llpproxlmat'ely ·one' mil~ In trail about the abunrl~nt cnmes in the two-county
length and will incorporate wildlife that live in th9se area.
various· sites for both wildlife regions."
.
..
The local multi-jurisdicPOMEROY- Area teens
'altd botanical viewing.
Other project collabor:Uors ti01ral drugtask force is one of
Rcx:kWel- 45~.
uss-23:,
' Student! who participate in include: Vicki Morrow, e~u- 32 across the state which will are mgl:d and invited to AEP-47~1
Rqcky Bools- 4:0
Arch
Coal24'1
Garv1e1167
\~oodworking classes at Meigs cation coordinator of fhe received more than $4.8 mil- . attend "Friday's .Fun, Food
AD Shel- 59'1
Genetal Electric - 48
Akzo-48'and Fellowship" at God's AmTeciVSBO -so·.
High School will build blue Meigs SWCD; Rusty Boo\&lt;- lion.
Sears-~.
Halley Davidsoli - 45
ShoMy's-1
Kmart-9~
NET in Pomeroy. Nutritional Ashland Inc. -39
bird boxes, bat boxes, squirrel man, principal at Rut1~1~d
Kroger:-' 24~.
Wai·Mart51
AT&amp;T-22'.
meals will be served;and teens
hesting boxes and· assorted Elementary; and Bill Buck\ey,
Werdy's- 24:.
Lands Er&lt;l- 23l.
BankOne-36
can play non-violent video Bob Evans- 1~•
'lvi!dlife ' fe-eders that will Meigs Local superintendeqt.
~ -lt.
Lti. -18
Oak
HiH
F..ancial1
4',
Daly stod&lt; repooto are !he
BorgWamer44\
games,
computer
programs
'e',:entuillly be placed at ilue- All worktd on the trail's spe~­
POMEROY - Units of
4 p.m. dosing q.J01es of
OVB-25
Chalr!&gt;lon
2];
-gral locations along the trail, ification and layout planniqg. the Meigs Emergency Service and board games free of Charming Si1&lt;lp! - 6".
lhe pn!\Aous day's llanS·
BBT -36~
Maht added.
Wildlife diversity grants ~~e answered six calls for assis- charge in· the center'&lt; game City Hddlng- 9
ao::lions, pl1l'o1ded by Srmh
~s-t7\
Par1nenl atAdvest Inc.
1 ji11! Preeman, wildlife spedesigned to encourage dtillfA tai1Ce on · Tuesday. Units room, which is located on Fedeni ~ - 3:1
PrerTierMain Street in Pomeroy.
cialist/w:~tershed coordinator participation in the ODNR responded as foUows:
Pool tables are also available
rj the . .l)llejgs SQil and Water. "Division ofWildlife's ·effort
. CENTRAL DISPATCH
l!lonse·r~tiop Districf, · said proll\ote abundant and vari d
4:56 · a.m., Overbrook for teens to use. God:s NET
!lie trail· &lt;1.~ ·Will encompass a . 111!ildlife species. and in educ ' - Nursing Center, Clara Davis, opens at 6 p.m. and closes at
10:30 p.m. on Friday and Sat-·
Wide amr of .different ter- .·. ing .people about wild!, Holzer Medical Center;
(iins :irld environments .' It' ' conservati1m. .
I
1:10
p.m.,
Mulberry urday nights.
'
.
!Jould 'rrtake for an interest• :· · Project proposals were ca
;jag foray into several diverse . fully reviewed by wildlife
l):abitatl&gt;he added.
· · officials and were cornpeci&gt;H
·
•
wil!ilife rrailwill tively ' judged according
.peandet through meadows, how much they, bene%1
~oodia.n~ .a nd abandoned Ohio's wildlife and citizens . .,

fair.weather
in
area
forecast;
. .
!n

Board

from

Plan sale

Gets funding

...:

1'

lld

.....
.I
.11"81

.,,

'• ' · frOin Plae

God's NET

LOCAL STOCKS

EMS runs

6'·

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

I
d
~~~ Reglona a vocate
t
.
"t
Gallia
Chamber
. ,., 0 VISI

~ "Thc, n~'V·

~

~ORE'LOCAL NEWS, MQRE LOCAL FOLKS..:. GA~~~~~~~REPO~~~

1
t,
!

Subscribe today.
992-2156

·

,.,

.

,•1

&lt;

•J

:,
~

(UIPUIHtO)
.
Olllo Vllloy Pultllllllnt co..

~

rn:.~

Correction Polley

• Our main concem In Ill ator11111
•
at tf
knOW of an
~ to be IICGUr •· ~ou

~~~~ ~~

Pomeroy, 01110. Sacond·ctm
pooU!gt paid ol Pomeroy.
•
MtMblri The Aaocllttd Preu 1nd
lhl on1o Nt-parA...,.Iatlon.

Po-••

~ errorlnaeJOrv.~.lthlneweroom ·
Send tddrttl o:orrtc·
~ al (740))112·21...,.
.
llanololhtDollySonllnet, 111 coun.
·~
Newt ~enta
Sl., ~omeroy. 0111o •s78D.
~
, lubtcr.,ptlon ratet
158
2
11
2
ll)lln n
r "are:' · '
' lr ool'llor or mOtor route '
. ~'• The
Depanmlnl'extenttone
_ -k
s2
0 ·~
"
'• General n'tllllll'
Ext. 12 Ono ~~~·
$8.70
Ono-

••

·~ NIWI
'•

~

~.'
•l

I!xt. 13
E•t. 1 ,

or

•

~

Other aervlHI

•' -~~

~ ,~-.Jnft

i

~~

Cllll•l•f·lld Adl

'

·TO H~ ..mall

milt pann"lld tn aruo wnore homo

e~ 3

Ext. 4
E&gt;l. 5

---et""v-•" .,_, com .

d1 Kr~••••

ThO O.Ny Senllnol. Cre•lll will bo given
caorllr Mch -"·No ~Woc:lipiiOn by

earner 11tvlct 11 avalltble.

• ••·

Clrculltlon

&gt;~

•

$104

Dally
SUbsertotnt nol deolnng ••socents
poy lho
"""''" m.ov romk In odvooce dlroctlo

Mal suMmnllon '
lnlldl Mef;.cot;y

13 WHkl

l!eWooko

52

·

$27 .30

$53.82

5105 ·56
weeki
DU~tldo Mlli• County

13 WHkl

28 Wooko

.

s2g.2s

$56.68
S10g·72

12 WHkl
....

;

,

. .,
l

Padgett said the .
Gor•ernor's Office of
Appalaclli11 also sert,es
as an advocate in
addressing tire re.~iott's
need.~ to state
government.

gett, dire,tor of the Gove:I nor'sOfficeofAppalach1a,wlll .
·I I' be •gilest speaker at the Quarterly.Business Exchange of the
· 1Gallia County Chamber of
li Commerce Thursday at 5:30
_.p.m. in the c:H. McKenzie
. 1 Agricultural Center.
The event will be sponsored
She also, serves 3S the gover1by Gallia Soil a Water Con- nor's alternate
to
the
' servation Dist ct.
Appalachian Regional Com, "We are .a ays happy to mission. This federal-state
1
have Mrs. Padg tt visit Gallia partnership program was
-County and lao fo_rward to designed to address economic
·
~.h~ presentation a he gua:- . and social development needs
terly Busihess Exchange, sa1d in the 13 federally designated
'the chamber's president, Dr. Appalachian states.
·r tyde E·~llS
Twcnry-nino of. Ohio's 88
"-'
•• · ·
:, "The chamber is always counties arc dcsig11Jt~d as
1 1·
I'acl gett "'·d t1c
1
enthusiastic w hen it can sup- A ppaon1.111.
. 'p~rt its a"ricultural communi- Governor's
Ofticc
of
"
ty," he added .
Appalachia .II so servos as an
Padgett was appointed oidvocate in addrcssi1lg the
!•
'
·
'
1
dirl'ctor
of th~ Gove-rnors
regions
ll("ClS to state IT,rovl!rn ...
t'Jfficc of App01lachia on July mcnt by scrvmg as th~ comt, 1999 .
n1uni cation and 1.: oorJin~'tion
Previously, she had· been link among st.1tc agen cies,
state rl.'prcscncative for chc: local gov~ mmcnt ~ and thl·
95th House District ·of Legislature.
Holme s, Cos hocton
and
For infonn.ltion. co ntact tho
Muskingum counties.
chamber at .!4Co-0596.

:J· The'
. Dal·ly Sentl•nel ..
Reader Services
F=.
•.
'
·
S
''

Pad-

..

•

Tax - free retirement dollars.
l.s the Roth IRA riQhl for you? Learn how
you miQhl benefit. Call our a9ency loday
far a free Roth IRA analysis. You'll
receive a free prospectus contalnlnQ
complete lnformallon, charves, fees and
expenses. Read It before you Invest or
send money.
Nationwide Is On Your Sldf!"
Pomeroy

JEFF WARNER
113 W. 2nd Slreet

Nationwide®
Advisory Services

.gg2·5478

Sec uritit11 o"-rtcl ttuouQtl Nlhonwltl• ,-.dvltory S.NICII, InC, Mtlltl&amp;tl, NASO.
• tutllidlary of Nttlcnwldl Pin•ncltl S.rY iCtl
ThrM Nlt•onwlc!t Pltu, FtO BDK 14D2. Co1umb1.11. OH 43218· 1492 , 1·800.141·0820
Nauonw ldt1° 11 1 regiltlrtd ftdtrtt tervi~e mtrk ol Nttlonw•dt Mututlll'llutll'lt l Col'l'lplny

�•

Opinion

The Daily Sentinel

..
..

The Daily Sentinel

Wedn•d-.y, Fe..._ry 21, 2001

•'

COhllrlENT.

Ann
Landers

R. Shawn Lewla
Managing Editor

Ch•rlene HOII!IIch
General Men•ger

Dl•n• Key Hill
Controller

·.

t.ttlrr WIM Nilor""' wkolftf, TltiJ thould H 1#11 tlttln J00 'II'Ofds. AU Utt1n
tW t djtct w HitJnr IUIIimlllf ,_ •Wn•tl•rul Utclud•
and t•li,N»w 11111111b.r.
No •msiftud lmnf wjiJ IH lllliiUIIH. Lttt1n thould lH in rood Miff, tlddl'fttU.,

tMJ,dn,,

;,.,,, tWI Pf~l.
Tit• opildor11 frpNtutl in tiN tolulfln IHlow,. th• coru•n.rlll of lh1 Ohio YaUI'y

rublllhinl c,. •, ftliltHWI board, ,,.u, o~h•n~~~il• nol.d.

OUR VIEW

.

Serving

•

Despite more cellular use,
pay phones still needed
The pay telephone. That marvel of modern technology
allowing everyone access to communicatiotJ for the price of (at
one time, anyway) a nickel. Will it, like bottle openers,
Packards, eight tracks and that S-cent charge, go into the ash
C:an of history?
·
Southern Bell seems to think so.
Due to the explosion in use of cellular telephones, the firm
is planning to yank its pay phones .and booths due to unprofitability Closer to home, the price of renting two pay phones
in the Lawrence Counry Courthouse spurred county commis·
sioners to direct them to be removed.
Area Bells assure us they won't Rlllow their southern
brethren's example. Pay phones will not disappear from the tricountyAnd for good reason. Without a pay phone in our rural
communities, some folks would have no phone service at all.
The thought some companies would even consider discontinuing pay phones is almost mind-bl~wing. They've been a
part of the American scene since Alexander Graham Bell asked
Mr. Watson to come into his laboratory.
In urban centers, as in the country, a single pay phone usually found in a store or pharmacy - became the lifeline of
the community. Residential phone service didn't become commonplace until' after World War II. It may have been inconvenient, but until a home phone became affordable, that one pay
ph~ne was all people had.
In some cases, it's still all they've got.
That's another sign that the popularity of cell phones is predominantly limited to some segments of the nation and population. They're to be found in our environs, but not to the
extent as seen in Columbus and Charleston.
Phone companies are wise to not entirely remove the pay
phone from the landscape, as will occur in Southern Bell's territory. Until the day when eYeryone sports a cell phone - not
likely . to happen soon - there will be a need for the pay
phone.
. Clark Kent may rarely transform himself into Superman in a
phone booth anymore, but it's no reason for this particular icon
of technical progress to disappear. We'd like to think that wherever there is a need - either on a busy street corner at midday or a lonely road at night - the pay phone will be there.
We hope.

•

•

•
•

..

TODAY IN HISTORY
,

"

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS'

Today is Ash Wednesday, Feb. 28, the 59th day of 2001. There
are 306 daYS left in the year.
· Today's Highlight in History:
Fifty years ago. on Feb. 28, I 951, the Senate committee headed by Estes Kefauver, D-Tenn., issued a preliminary report saying at least twO major crime syndicates were operating in the
United States.
On this date:
In 1827, the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Co, the first U.S.
nilroad chartered to carry passengets and freigh,t, was !ncorporated.
In 1844, a 12-inch gun aboard t~e USS Princeton exploded,
killing Secretary of State Abel P. Upshur and several others.
In 1849, the ship Calif9rnia arrived at San Francisco, carrying
. the first of the gold-seekers.
In 185{ some 50 slavery opponents met in Ripon, Wis., tq
call for creation of a new political group, which became the
·
Republican Parry.
.
In 1861, the Territory of Colorado was organized.
In 1974, the United States and Egypt re-established diplomatic relations after a seven-year break.
In I 975, more than 40 people were killed in London's Underground when a subway train smashed into the end of a tunnel.
In 1986, Swedish Prime Minister Olof Palme was shot to
death in Stockholm.
In 1993, a gun battle erupted · at a compound near Waco,
Texas, when ager\ts from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and
Firearms tried to serve warrants.on the Branch Davidians. Four
agents and six Davidians were killed as a 51 :day standoff began.
In 1995, Denver International Airport opened alter 16
months of delays and a S3.2 billion budget overrun.
Ten years ago: Allied and Iraqi forces suspended their attacks
as Iraq pledged to accept all United Nations resolutions concerning Kuwait.
Five years ago: President Clinton and the Congress agreed on
a sanctions bill :jimed at driving foreign investors from Cuba.
Britain's Princess Diana agreed to divorce Prince Charles. Alanis Morissette's ':Jagged Little Pill" won best rock album and
album of the year at the Grammy Awards.
One year , ago: Right-wing Austrian leader Joerg Haider
resigned as head of the Freedom Parry in an apparent bid to end
Austria's international ostracism following his parry's rise to
power.

.

'·

•

.·
•

OUR READERS' VIEWS
Buckle up
Dear Editor:
The use of safery belts saves lives every
day. The use of safery belts reduces
injuries every day.
These two irrefutable facts are witnessed every day by Ohio State Hi~hway Patrol troopers, emergency medtcal
workers, and traffic safery experts
throughout the U?tted States, and are ·
supported by statistics and the testimony
of those saved.
Choosing to weat a safery belt is a personal decision, llut it is ~ decision that
~ffects othen. The affected may ?e tho~e
m _the ~ar wtth y~u as you ~re e~ect7d m
a Slde-•mpact colli11on. ~stbly, It will be
other dnvers approach1~g as you are
slung to the passenger Side of the car
when you swerve to mil! a ~eer on the
roadway.
More assuredly, it will be all of us who
must endure higher insurance and medical cost~ 'lis a result of your injuries or
death in a motor vehicle crash. Absolutely it will be those who must live with
your debilitating injuries or the painful
memory of what could have been.
. ' .

.

ety cannot be made in a selfish vacuum.
Ohio's safery belt compliance rate affects
all of us.
Few peopl~ argue that crack cocaine
h 1
possession and use, or taX evasion, s ou d
be legal. These are choices which are
available to be made, but as a sociery we
agree the cosr is too high to allow these
choices to be made.
1 realize those are extreme examples,
but 1 am using them to starkly illustrate
that there are many choices available to
us but we should not have the freedom
to' make all of them. The cost of these
choices far outweighs whatever benefit
some people might think they are getting from making them.
On the opposite side of the coin,
other, more dangerous choices are not
prohibited. Riding a motorcycle is fairly
dangerous and claims many lives. Mountain climbing, parachutil).g and hang
gliding are dangerous and k.i11 quite a
number of p~ople too.
.
So, 'what is the difference between the
freedom to engage in these activities and
not wearing a safery belt? The answer
leads to another question -what benefit is there to not wearing a safery belt?

Is it exciting? Is it an exe~;&lt;ise? Is it an
adventure? Is it a learning experience? Is
it a means to any end? No, there is
absolutely no benefit at all to not wearing a safery belt.
There is a pric~. however, and that
price is not solely p'aid by·the unbuckled
person killed in a crash. To some extent,
we all pay. Some pay dearly - ask someone who has lost a spouse or child. to a
traffic crash. Is it really right that such a
petry freedom bear such a cost? ·
No. The cost far outweighs the benefit.
The motorist who does not buckle up
is not some free spirit exercising his
God-given right to liberry. That person
is simply somebody who does not care
enough to protect himself, his family,
and the rest of us by performing the
,simple task of buckling a safety belt.
Safery belts save lives, reduce injuries,
and save millions of dollars. On top of all
that, safery belu can save the life of
someone you know, or maybe even you.
Make the safe choice and buckle up.
Lt. Dick Grau
Gallia-Meigs Post
Ohio State Highway Patrol

John C. Wolf, D.O.
AHotiate Professor
·of Family Medicine

".

.'

'

-

...'.
" •' I

•.• l

. ..

..

Forgotten victims of affirmative action
William
Rusher
'

will

,DROP US ALINE.

. . Tlllnl .......

=lo,

1t0 .• •

..
Ohio

•

111 Court It, Pomway, Ohio .

.

7~1111

"t••••nt. w.va.
ao447f.1 . .

'•

,r

.

'

•
I'

'

,.....¢'

.....

I

We want your photos!

••

-.
·'

,.
I '

', .'

....

'

The Sentinel welcomes your phOtographs. Here are a fffW '
guidelines for submissions:
.1
• Color photqgraphs are accepted, provided they are In focus
and have good contrast. Negatives also are £1!)Cepted; however,
please Include a print along with the negative.
• Black-and-photographs are accepted. pr011lded they are In
focus and have good contrast. Negatives also ere accepted; howfl\ler please Include a print along with the negative.
'
.. standard-size slides are accepted. provided they are In focus
and have good contrast.
• Submitted photos should be no smaller than standard wa~
let size and no larger than 8 x 10.
• Pollll'lod-type photos are discOuraged since they do not reproduce-well on newsprint..
• When aubmlttln&amp; dl&amp;itll photos, be. sure the Images ·are
aaved aa hlatH'esolutlon, hl&amp;h-qu•ntv JPEG flies.
• Advantlx-type photQiraptls are dlacour~~&amp;ed &lt;!ue to their
unique sizes, which do not translate wen to nf!Wspaper columns .
Advantlx-type negatives ere not aecepted.
. • L.aaerwrtter prlnta of digital lmepa are diiiCouraaed since
they do not reproduce well on newsprint.

200 lllln lt., Point

..

!.L:~

off winter itch next year is to
avoid unnecessary bathing especially the areas where
your skin is the driest. Our
sociery encourages daily
bathing, but this i~ often not
necessary to be clean. Wash
Question: Every winter I your "stinky" parts daily, but
have a problem with dry itch- bathe the rest of your body ing skin, particularly on my ·
less frequently. Use tepid
legs and arms. My doctor has water instead of hot. Use a
told me I have "winter itch." mild moisturizing soap or
This year, it has been worse emollient cleanser and follow
than ever. Even though winter this by patting dry instead of
will be over soon, I'd like to vigorously rubbing with a
have some pointers on how to towel because the rubbing
avoid this problem next year. stimulates the itch sensation.
An1wer: Winter itch, also
Immediately after bathing,
called "xeroderma" in unintel- apply a lotion or cream to
lisib!e doc~or language, is a help smooth and soothe the ·
' common winter affliction of skin while retaining moisture.
many who live in the north· Petroleum jelly is probably
eastern part of our country. It one of the most effective
is particularly common in products for this purpose, but
people who have "atopy"- a ~ts greasy .residue is often
rype of sensitive and easily objectionable. I often recomirritated skin. About 10 per- mend Aveeno cream for this
cent of the general population purpose because my patients
has this condition,
have found it significantly
In winter itch the skin more effective.
becomes excessively dry and
Raising the humidity withrather rough or scaly. This dry- in the home is also beneficial
ing causes itching and the in reducing the amount of
resultant scratching produces a skin drying. A vaporizer or
rash. It's ,the opposite of many humidifier in the bedrqom is a
conditions, such as poison ivy, good method of adding moiswhere the rash is what causes ture to the air in your inside
the itching. Winter itch is environment. It is also helpful
more common in the North· to avoid wool clothing that
east because of the climate and scratches the already irritated
central heating that lowers the skin. There are many. other
relative humidity of the natural and synthetic ft):&gt;ers
indoor air. The low humidity that are attrac'tive and compromotes rhe drying of skin.
fortable
without
being
Winter itch is made wotse scratcpy. In my experience,
by bathing, particularly with however, it seems that .c otton
hot water and ample amounts is often the best fabric to use
o! soap. This treatment until the xero4erma is ·'under
removes dirt, but it also fair control.
And
one
additional
removes the natural skin oils
that help smooth the skin and reminder: Even though the
control water loss through the '"winter itch" itches, don't
top layer of cells. The skin on scratch. S~ratching will only
the lower portions of,the arms make it worse. Rub on anothand legs produce less of the er dab of lotion or cream
natural skin oils and, therefore, instead.
are more susceptible to these
"F~ntily Medicine" i; a uieekly
drying problems. This _is why
you have troubles with your column. To submit question;, write
arms and legs, but others with to john C. Wolf, D. 0 ., Oltio
this conditioh can have the Univer;ity College if O;teopathic
sam~ itching and rash on Medicine, Gro;venor HaU,
Athen;, Ohio 45701. Past
other areas of their bodies.
· One of the· most important columns are ~vailable onlirie at
ways that you can help stave wwwjlu·adio. org !fm.

RUSHER'S VIEW

The debate over "affirmative action"
admitted, then necessarily another
(which is to say; discrimination in favor
must be denied admission. If the Atkinof certain specific ethnic minorities) in
son proposal is adopted, Berkeley will
college admissions has taken some drabe condemning hundreds of bettermatic turns recently.
qualified students every year to colleges
For decades, the admissions directors
that do not fully challenge their abiliof most colleges and universities, both, ,
ties - simply because their skin is
public and private, simply lied themI
whi~e or yellow, rather than black or
selves blue iri the face, encouraging the
brown.
impression that black apd Hispanic ·
That crucial point tends to get overapplicants were being accepted solely
looked
because we don't learn the
COLUMNIST
on the basis of their academic qualifinames, or see in our newspapers the
cations, in equal competition with
faces, of the students who. are discrimwhite and Asian students.
· academic requirements to ensure the inated against. But they are out there,
Wpen leaks of administrative records admission of bl~ck and Hispanic appli- . in the thousands, and they
pay for
at the University of Wisconsin and cants, so be it.
the rest of their lives for their arbitrary
elsewhere proved that this was simply
Now Richard C. Atkinson, president rejection· by liberal social engine~rs
untrue, and it transpired that black of the University of California, has who, for one critical moment, held
applicants to Berkeley (for example) proposed taking the· basic step to bring their futures in their hands.
were being preferred over whites with · this about: Simply end the use of the
And we haven't even considered yet
SAT scores 300 points higher, the !at- SAT (the key test of academic merit) as what the Atkinson proposal would do
ter's regents ' ordered an end to the ,a requirement for admission to the to Berkeley itself. In the past, I am told,
practice. So did the U.S. Court of state university system. In other words, many of the under-qualified students
Appeals when similar 'discrimination admit an undefined but specific quota admitted under tacit racial quotas simwas discovered at the University of of blacks and Hispanics to the system, ply washed out in a year or two, when
Texas.
and let academic merit be damned . .
it became apparent that they couldn't
But nobody who has studied AmeriLet us acknowledge at once that maintain Berkeley's grueling academic
ca's liberals imagined that the dispute Atkinson's proposal has a certain super- pace. But if Berkeley is really deter- .
was over. If the· principle of admission ficial . appeal. No decent American mined to redesign itself as a paragon of
based on academic merit was standing enjoys seeing an applicant for college · div~rsiry rather than academi11 excel- •;
in the way of a form of racial discrim- admission turned away because the lence, it will have no choice but to
inatio~ the liberals approved of, then education he or she received in grade "dumb down" · its academic reqqire-;_.
the prmc1ple would s•mply have to go. · schaol and high school was pitifully ments i11 ordet to maintain the speci-,
And sur~ enough, a bo?k co-authored inadequa~e as preparatio,n for a highly fied racial mix.
The real solution _; the only tru/
by _Dere Bok and W1ll1am Bowen, the competi!JVe college. Why not go the
solution
- is to provide a far better ,
retired prestdent of Harvart:t and the extra mile and give the aspiring black
H'
·
d
h
, education in the years before college.
provost of Prmceton respectively, soon
·
rumbl ed o, ff the presses, argumg
t h at or npan1c
. . . stu enr a c ance anyway. And that's why President Bush has put
the intellectual qualiry of a student
But 1t IS _Just here that the adv~cates suc.h an education at the very ,tofl of his
body is not as important as its !'diversi- of affirmative actton count on thetr fel- agenda.
·
ty." In a pluralistic society like ours, low Americans to miss an important
they insist, rubbing elbows with stu- point. Admiuion to Berkeley (to stick
(William Rusher is ~ Distinguished Feldents of other races is an indispensable to that example) is a zero- sum game. low if the Claremont l~;tilute for the
educational experience, arid (by impli- There are .only so many slots available Study of Statesrnan;hip ~nd Political Phlcation) if it is necessary to lower the in the freshman class. If one applicant is lo;o,phy.)

...

Less bathing} more
moisturizer can
cure winter itch

'

scrunched up into a small ball, and
he had put it in his pocket.
I did not tell his father (my son)
about this incident, What can I do
to get the boy to realize th e seriousness of stealing? Please advise me. .
Rochester, N.Y., Grandma
Dear Grandma: Try to arrange
some private time when you can be
alone with the boy and establish a
friendly one-on-one relationship.
(A visit to the zoo, a ballgame,
something fun for just the two of
you.) Do not remind him of the

lead to deadly and painful bacteri;
infections of the bloodstream.
My beloved brother recent!·
died from an infection that began i1
his mouth . I am so grief-stricken
can barely get my th oughts dow1
on paper. If this letter will help jus
one person pay closer attention rr
his or her teeth, it will ease m
pain. Dental hygiene is SO impor
tant to a person's overall health . I

incident, but let him know you are

so happy that he is growing up to
be an honorable person. Your praise
will make him want to live up to
you• high lbpinion of him .
Dear Ann Landers: Please tell
your readers that an infection in the
mouth or a.n :tbsce-ss in a tooth can

isn't just your te eth and gums, it '

your whole body. -

Sad Si ster i1

Hou sto n

Dear Houston Sister: You hav'
written an extremely important let- ,
ter. and I thank yo u for it. Rare!:
do peo ple realize that neglectin1
their t ~:cth co uld lead
infection, and ~ vc n

a serlou
ck·ath . Ye

to

another exampl e of how my reader .
look aft er o ne another.

Rio Grande to host Kamalay and the Red Hot Peppers

•
••

•
Personal decisions in a civilized soci-

Wednesday, Feb. 28, 2oo·

Dear Ann Landers: I felt a close
Dear Finally Living: Thank
kinship to "Distraught in Gettysyou for providing · an alternative
burg, J'a:· She was the woman who
explanation for why a husband
said her husband was never home
would avoid his wife and family. No
and never helped her with the kids
marriage can be successful under
or the house. It was the story of my
such circumstances .
life as well as hers.
You don't say whether or not you
l, too, struggled with my marare still married to your "good
riage for almost II years, with two
friend." If so, you are depriving
ADVICE
young children to raise. My husband . '-'"'""'.._yourself of a normal married life. Is
worked two jobs, and when he wasthe sacrifice worth it? Rethink this.
His confession was liberating for
n't at work, he found some other
Dear Ann Landers: While on a
reason to be out of the house, away both of us. I finally realized our three-day motor trip with my son
from me and the children. There · failed mariiage was not my fault. and his family, I sat in the rear of the
were countless nights I lay awake, My kids can now enjoy their Dad's car with my 13-year-old grandson.
waiting for him to come home. I company because he is comfortable H e started to rummage through my
ttied · desperately to make him with them and no.longer hiding his purse, and I later discovered that he
happy. I was a good housekeeper, an true self. He is free to be a loving had taken a $20 bill. When we
excellent cook and a devoted wife. I father to ~hem and a good friend to stopped fo r a snack, I confronted
had the shock of my life when he me, and I an\ more than happy to him. At first, he · denied taking the
confessed that he was ~ homosexu- settle for that.- Finally Living My ·money, but then he admitted it, sayLife in New Jersey
al. I never suspected a khing.
ing i t was a "joke." The $20 bill was

NO

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Page A!

_The_oa_ny_se_ntin_ei_ _ __

..
.......

.•

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992-2158 • Fax: 992-2157

Charln W. Govey
Publlaher

~BJ the Bend
lfbman cffirs support to reader that shares her family situation

PageA4 .. ..

•

RIO GRANDE - In the early 1930's
the Western World enj\)yed a. heyday .of
small-band jazz. Stellar artists like Jack Teagarden, Mildred Bailey, Billie Holiday and
Django Reinhardt recorded sides which
remain some of the finest in the history of
the music. Hot jazz, laced with exciting
improvisation. and ballads, melancholy and
blue, were standard fare for dancets of th e
Lindy and the Swing.
Ray Kamalay and his Red Hot Peppers
are reminiscent of this peculiar era, and
they play this music with all the excitement
and sentiment rypic.al of the period. They
will appear at the University of Rio
Grande/Rio Grande College on March 4,
2001, at 3 p.m.
Forgottetl classics like "I Hate A Man
Like You" and "The Joint Is Juri1pin'"
spring back to life, played with great love
and great sk:ill. fl,ay is a composer of me
idiom. and setS are peppered with fine
original compositions like the fiery "Merely True" and "! Wanna Sleep In My Own
Danm Bed" . With some of the finest musi-

cians in the Midwest, Ray Kamalay and his Kamalay and his Red Hot Peppers ·
Red Hot Peppers have imp ressed audi- Speight1s ca.reer is already quitt impressive
ences at some of North ~merica 1 s finest Australian by binh, he di1tinguished himfestivals, including the Detroit and Toron- self soon after his migration here witf
to Jazz Festivals and the Philadelphia Folk awards at the Thelonius Monk Competi·
Festival.
tion in Washington, D.C. as well as witf
In recent years, the band has added Wal- perfornunces v,ith Benny Caner and Jot
ter White, one of the most powerful and Williarru. He has also worked extensive!)
exciting trumpeters in the United States. as lead s.1xophonist with the Lincoln CenWalter's previous associations seem limit- ter Jazz Orchestra.
less. Besides recent stints with the Detroit
The pianist, Phil Kelly, got his start at tht
Symphony and Cincinnati Pops Orchestras tender age of five, and has had extensivt
(as featured soloist) Walter has worked training in classical music. But his swing·
extensively as lead trumpeter with the ing, straight-ahead style of jazz piano ;,
Harry Connick Jr., Orchestra, Maynard self-taught and demonstrates a mud
Furgeson and the Mingus Big Band. All of broader musical sense. He has won numer·
this for good reason. When Walter puts that ous awards in both jazz and classical music,
trumpet to his lips, the sound is nothing and has recorded with many great artist,
shon of astonishing. His massive talent and including Thad Jones. Cecil McBee and
extensive training make Walter an event in Don Cherry.
himself, and he caps everything this band
B-assist Paul Keller is the son of a preachdoes with beaury and excitement.
er. Keller studied bass at the University ol
The newest member of the group is the Michigan. In Ann Arbor he leads the Bird
saxophonist Andrew Speight, yet another of Paradise Orchestra as well as the Paul
stunning jazz soloist in the tanks . of Keller Ensemble.

·lOu Can Take ControL ·
Long store lines. Lost keys. Too much to do in too little rime. You can almost feel it
starting to rise. It's your blood pressure, and when it's too high, it's not healthy. But
medical technology today makes it possible to control high blood pressure. If you haven't
had your blood pressure checked recently, you owe it to youndf. It's fasr, painless and
easy. O'Bieness ~emorial Hospital offers a free blood pressure screening the first
Wednesday of each month from 10:00 a.m. until noon and from 2:00 p.m. until 4 :00 p.m.
Call C
74Pl 59~-9300 for more information.

O'BLENESS
Memorial Hospital
www.obleness.org

Excellence In Community. Healthcare

- - ----.-

.

0 1999TMT

-·

�•

Opinion

The Daily Sentinel

..
..

The Daily Sentinel

Wedn•d-.y, Fe..._ry 21, 2001

•'

COhllrlENT.

Ann
Landers

R. Shawn Lewla
Managing Editor

Ch•rlene HOII!IIch
General Men•ger

Dl•n• Key Hill
Controller

·.

t.ttlrr WIM Nilor""' wkolftf, TltiJ thould H 1#11 tlttln J00 'II'Ofds. AU Utt1n
tW t djtct w HitJnr IUIIimlllf ,_ •Wn•tl•rul Utclud•
and t•li,N»w 11111111b.r.
No •msiftud lmnf wjiJ IH lllliiUIIH. Lttt1n thould lH in rood Miff, tlddl'fttU.,

tMJ,dn,,

;,.,,, tWI Pf~l.
Tit• opildor11 frpNtutl in tiN tolulfln IHlow,. th• coru•n.rlll of lh1 Ohio YaUI'y

rublllhinl c,. •, ftliltHWI board, ,,.u, o~h•n~~~il• nol.d.

OUR VIEW

.

Serving

•

Despite more cellular use,
pay phones still needed
The pay telephone. That marvel of modern technology
allowing everyone access to communicatiotJ for the price of (at
one time, anyway) a nickel. Will it, like bottle openers,
Packards, eight tracks and that S-cent charge, go into the ash
C:an of history?
·
Southern Bell seems to think so.
Due to the explosion in use of cellular telephones, the firm
is planning to yank its pay phones .and booths due to unprofitability Closer to home, the price of renting two pay phones
in the Lawrence Counry Courthouse spurred county commis·
sioners to direct them to be removed.
Area Bells assure us they won't Rlllow their southern
brethren's example. Pay phones will not disappear from the tricountyAnd for good reason. Without a pay phone in our rural
communities, some folks would have no phone service at all.
The thought some companies would even consider discontinuing pay phones is almost mind-bl~wing. They've been a
part of the American scene since Alexander Graham Bell asked
Mr. Watson to come into his laboratory.
In urban centers, as in the country, a single pay phone usually found in a store or pharmacy - became the lifeline of
the community. Residential phone service didn't become commonplace until' after World War II. It may have been inconvenient, but until a home phone became affordable, that one pay
ph~ne was all people had.
In some cases, it's still all they've got.
That's another sign that the popularity of cell phones is predominantly limited to some segments of the nation and population. They're to be found in our environs, but not to the
extent as seen in Columbus and Charleston.
Phone companies are wise to not entirely remove the pay
phone from the landscape, as will occur in Southern Bell's territory. Until the day when eYeryone sports a cell phone - not
likely . to happen soon - there will be a need for the pay
phone.
. Clark Kent may rarely transform himself into Superman in a
phone booth anymore, but it's no reason for this particular icon
of technical progress to disappear. We'd like to think that wherever there is a need - either on a busy street corner at midday or a lonely road at night - the pay phone will be there.
We hope.

•

•

•
•

..

TODAY IN HISTORY
,

"

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS'

Today is Ash Wednesday, Feb. 28, the 59th day of 2001. There
are 306 daYS left in the year.
· Today's Highlight in History:
Fifty years ago. on Feb. 28, I 951, the Senate committee headed by Estes Kefauver, D-Tenn., issued a preliminary report saying at least twO major crime syndicates were operating in the
United States.
On this date:
In 1827, the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Co, the first U.S.
nilroad chartered to carry passengets and freigh,t, was !ncorporated.
In 1844, a 12-inch gun aboard t~e USS Princeton exploded,
killing Secretary of State Abel P. Upshur and several others.
In 1849, the ship Calif9rnia arrived at San Francisco, carrying
. the first of the gold-seekers.
In 185{ some 50 slavery opponents met in Ripon, Wis., tq
call for creation of a new political group, which became the
·
Republican Parry.
.
In 1861, the Territory of Colorado was organized.
In 1974, the United States and Egypt re-established diplomatic relations after a seven-year break.
In I 975, more than 40 people were killed in London's Underground when a subway train smashed into the end of a tunnel.
In 1986, Swedish Prime Minister Olof Palme was shot to
death in Stockholm.
In 1993, a gun battle erupted · at a compound near Waco,
Texas, when ager\ts from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and
Firearms tried to serve warrants.on the Branch Davidians. Four
agents and six Davidians were killed as a 51 :day standoff began.
In 1995, Denver International Airport opened alter 16
months of delays and a S3.2 billion budget overrun.
Ten years ago: Allied and Iraqi forces suspended their attacks
as Iraq pledged to accept all United Nations resolutions concerning Kuwait.
Five years ago: President Clinton and the Congress agreed on
a sanctions bill :jimed at driving foreign investors from Cuba.
Britain's Princess Diana agreed to divorce Prince Charles. Alanis Morissette's ':Jagged Little Pill" won best rock album and
album of the year at the Grammy Awards.
One year , ago: Right-wing Austrian leader Joerg Haider
resigned as head of the Freedom Parry in an apparent bid to end
Austria's international ostracism following his parry's rise to
power.

.

'·

•

.·
•

OUR READERS' VIEWS
Buckle up
Dear Editor:
The use of safery belts saves lives every
day. The use of safery belts reduces
injuries every day.
These two irrefutable facts are witnessed every day by Ohio State Hi~hway Patrol troopers, emergency medtcal
workers, and traffic safery experts
throughout the U?tted States, and are ·
supported by statistics and the testimony
of those saved.
Choosing to weat a safery belt is a personal decision, llut it is ~ decision that
~ffects othen. The affected may ?e tho~e
m _the ~ar wtth y~u as you ~re e~ect7d m
a Slde-•mpact colli11on. ~stbly, It will be
other dnvers approach1~g as you are
slung to the passenger Side of the car
when you swerve to mil! a ~eer on the
roadway.
More assuredly, it will be all of us who
must endure higher insurance and medical cost~ 'lis a result of your injuries or
death in a motor vehicle crash. Absolutely it will be those who must live with
your debilitating injuries or the painful
memory of what could have been.
. ' .

.

ety cannot be made in a selfish vacuum.
Ohio's safery belt compliance rate affects
all of us.
Few peopl~ argue that crack cocaine
h 1
possession and use, or taX evasion, s ou d
be legal. These are choices which are
available to be made, but as a sociery we
agree the cosr is too high to allow these
choices to be made.
1 realize those are extreme examples,
but 1 am using them to starkly illustrate
that there are many choices available to
us but we should not have the freedom
to' make all of them. The cost of these
choices far outweighs whatever benefit
some people might think they are getting from making them.
On the opposite side of the coin,
other, more dangerous choices are not
prohibited. Riding a motorcycle is fairly
dangerous and claims many lives. Mountain climbing, parachutil).g and hang
gliding are dangerous and k.i11 quite a
number of p~ople too.
.
So, 'what is the difference between the
freedom to engage in these activities and
not wearing a safery belt? The answer
leads to another question -what benefit is there to not wearing a safery belt?

Is it exciting? Is it an exe~;&lt;ise? Is it an
adventure? Is it a learning experience? Is
it a means to any end? No, there is
absolutely no benefit at all to not wearing a safery belt.
There is a pric~. however, and that
price is not solely p'aid by·the unbuckled
person killed in a crash. To some extent,
we all pay. Some pay dearly - ask someone who has lost a spouse or child. to a
traffic crash. Is it really right that such a
petry freedom bear such a cost? ·
No. The cost far outweighs the benefit.
The motorist who does not buckle up
is not some free spirit exercising his
God-given right to liberry. That person
is simply somebody who does not care
enough to protect himself, his family,
and the rest of us by performing the
,simple task of buckling a safety belt.
Safery belts save lives, reduce injuries,
and save millions of dollars. On top of all
that, safery belu can save the life of
someone you know, or maybe even you.
Make the safe choice and buckle up.
Lt. Dick Grau
Gallia-Meigs Post
Ohio State Highway Patrol

John C. Wolf, D.O.
AHotiate Professor
·of Family Medicine

".

.'

'

-

...'.
" •' I

•.• l

. ..

..

Forgotten victims of affirmative action
William
Rusher
'

will

,DROP US ALINE.

. . Tlllnl .......

=lo,

1t0 .• •

..
Ohio

•

111 Court It, Pomway, Ohio .

.

7~1111

"t••••nt. w.va.
ao447f.1 . .

'•

,r

.

'

•
I'

'

,.....¢'

.....

I

We want your photos!

••

-.
·'

,.
I '

', .'

....

'

The Sentinel welcomes your phOtographs. Here are a fffW '
guidelines for submissions:
.1
• Color photqgraphs are accepted, provided they are In focus
and have good contrast. Negatives also are £1!)Cepted; however,
please Include a print along with the negative.
• Black-and-photographs are accepted. pr011lded they are In
focus and have good contrast. Negatives also ere accepted; howfl\ler please Include a print along with the negative.
'
.. standard-size slides are accepted. provided they are In focus
and have good contrast.
• Submitted photos should be no smaller than standard wa~
let size and no larger than 8 x 10.
• Pollll'lod-type photos are discOuraged since they do not reproduce-well on newsprint..
• When aubmlttln&amp; dl&amp;itll photos, be. sure the Images ·are
aaved aa hlatH'esolutlon, hl&amp;h-qu•ntv JPEG flies.
• Advantlx-type photQiraptls are dlacour~~&amp;ed &lt;!ue to their
unique sizes, which do not translate wen to nf!Wspaper columns .
Advantlx-type negatives ere not aecepted.
. • L.aaerwrtter prlnta of digital lmepa are diiiCouraaed since
they do not reproduce well on newsprint.

200 lllln lt., Point

..

!.L:~

off winter itch next year is to
avoid unnecessary bathing especially the areas where
your skin is the driest. Our
sociery encourages daily
bathing, but this i~ often not
necessary to be clean. Wash
Question: Every winter I your "stinky" parts daily, but
have a problem with dry itch- bathe the rest of your body ing skin, particularly on my ·
less frequently. Use tepid
legs and arms. My doctor has water instead of hot. Use a
told me I have "winter itch." mild moisturizing soap or
This year, it has been worse emollient cleanser and follow
than ever. Even though winter this by patting dry instead of
will be over soon, I'd like to vigorously rubbing with a
have some pointers on how to towel because the rubbing
avoid this problem next year. stimulates the itch sensation.
An1wer: Winter itch, also
Immediately after bathing,
called "xeroderma" in unintel- apply a lotion or cream to
lisib!e doc~or language, is a help smooth and soothe the ·
' common winter affliction of skin while retaining moisture.
many who live in the north· Petroleum jelly is probably
eastern part of our country. It one of the most effective
is particularly common in products for this purpose, but
people who have "atopy"- a ~ts greasy .residue is often
rype of sensitive and easily objectionable. I often recomirritated skin. About 10 per- mend Aveeno cream for this
cent of the general population purpose because my patients
has this condition,
have found it significantly
In winter itch the skin more effective.
becomes excessively dry and
Raising the humidity withrather rough or scaly. This dry- in the home is also beneficial
ing causes itching and the in reducing the amount of
resultant scratching produces a skin drying. A vaporizer or
rash. It's ,the opposite of many humidifier in the bedrqom is a
conditions, such as poison ivy, good method of adding moiswhere the rash is what causes ture to the air in your inside
the itching. Winter itch is environment. It is also helpful
more common in the North· to avoid wool clothing that
east because of the climate and scratches the already irritated
central heating that lowers the skin. There are many. other
relative humidity of the natural and synthetic ft):&gt;ers
indoor air. The low humidity that are attrac'tive and compromotes rhe drying of skin.
fortable
without
being
Winter itch is made wotse scratcpy. In my experience,
by bathing, particularly with however, it seems that .c otton
hot water and ample amounts is often the best fabric to use
o! soap. This treatment until the xero4erma is ·'under
removes dirt, but it also fair control.
And
one
additional
removes the natural skin oils
that help smooth the skin and reminder: Even though the
control water loss through the '"winter itch" itches, don't
top layer of cells. The skin on scratch. S~ratching will only
the lower portions of,the arms make it worse. Rub on anothand legs produce less of the er dab of lotion or cream
natural skin oils and, therefore, instead.
are more susceptible to these
"F~ntily Medicine" i; a uieekly
drying problems. This _is why
you have troubles with your column. To submit question;, write
arms and legs, but others with to john C. Wolf, D. 0 ., Oltio
this conditioh can have the Univer;ity College if O;teopathic
sam~ itching and rash on Medicine, Gro;venor HaU,
Athen;, Ohio 45701. Past
other areas of their bodies.
· One of the· most important columns are ~vailable onlirie at
ways that you can help stave wwwjlu·adio. org !fm.

RUSHER'S VIEW

The debate over "affirmative action"
admitted, then necessarily another
(which is to say; discrimination in favor
must be denied admission. If the Atkinof certain specific ethnic minorities) in
son proposal is adopted, Berkeley will
college admissions has taken some drabe condemning hundreds of bettermatic turns recently.
qualified students every year to colleges
For decades, the admissions directors
that do not fully challenge their abiliof most colleges and universities, both, ,
ties - simply because their skin is
public and private, simply lied themI
whi~e or yellow, rather than black or
selves blue iri the face, encouraging the
brown.
impression that black apd Hispanic ·
That crucial point tends to get overapplicants were being accepted solely
looked
because we don't learn the
COLUMNIST
on the basis of their academic qualifinames, or see in our newspapers the
cations, in equal competition with
faces, of the students who. are discrimwhite and Asian students.
· academic requirements to ensure the inated against. But they are out there,
Wpen leaks of administrative records admission of bl~ck and Hispanic appli- . in the thousands, and they
pay for
at the University of Wisconsin and cants, so be it.
the rest of their lives for their arbitrary
elsewhere proved that this was simply
Now Richard C. Atkinson, president rejection· by liberal social engine~rs
untrue, and it transpired that black of the University of California, has who, for one critical moment, held
applicants to Berkeley (for example) proposed taking the· basic step to bring their futures in their hands.
were being preferred over whites with · this about: Simply end the use of the
And we haven't even considered yet
SAT scores 300 points higher, the !at- SAT (the key test of academic merit) as what the Atkinson proposal would do
ter's regents ' ordered an end to the ,a requirement for admission to the to Berkeley itself. In the past, I am told,
practice. So did the U.S. Court of state university system. In other words, many of the under-qualified students
Appeals when similar 'discrimination admit an undefined but specific quota admitted under tacit racial quotas simwas discovered at the University of of blacks and Hispanics to the system, ply washed out in a year or two, when
Texas.
and let academic merit be damned . .
it became apparent that they couldn't
But nobody who has studied AmeriLet us acknowledge at once that maintain Berkeley's grueling academic
ca's liberals imagined that the dispute Atkinson's proposal has a certain super- pace. But if Berkeley is really deter- .
was over. If the· principle of admission ficial . appeal. No decent American mined to redesign itself as a paragon of
based on academic merit was standing enjoys seeing an applicant for college · div~rsiry rather than academi11 excel- •;
in the way of a form of racial discrim- admission turned away because the lence, it will have no choice but to
inatio~ the liberals approved of, then education he or she received in grade "dumb down" · its academic reqqire-;_.
the prmc1ple would s•mply have to go. · schaol and high school was pitifully ments i11 ordet to maintain the speci-,
And sur~ enough, a bo?k co-authored inadequa~e as preparatio,n for a highly fied racial mix.
The real solution _; the only tru/
by _Dere Bok and W1ll1am Bowen, the competi!JVe college. Why not go the
solution
- is to provide a far better ,
retired prestdent of Harvart:t and the extra mile and give the aspiring black
H'
·
d
h
, education in the years before college.
provost of Prmceton respectively, soon
·
rumbl ed o, ff the presses, argumg
t h at or npan1c
. . . stu enr a c ance anyway. And that's why President Bush has put
the intellectual qualiry of a student
But 1t IS _Just here that the adv~cates suc.h an education at the very ,tofl of his
body is not as important as its !'diversi- of affirmative actton count on thetr fel- agenda.
·
ty." In a pluralistic society like ours, low Americans to miss an important
they insist, rubbing elbows with stu- point. Admiuion to Berkeley (to stick
(William Rusher is ~ Distinguished Feldents of other races is an indispensable to that example) is a zero- sum game. low if the Claremont l~;tilute for the
educational experience, arid (by impli- There are .only so many slots available Study of Statesrnan;hip ~nd Political Phlcation) if it is necessary to lower the in the freshman class. If one applicant is lo;o,phy.)

...

Less bathing} more
moisturizer can
cure winter itch

'

scrunched up into a small ball, and
he had put it in his pocket.
I did not tell his father (my son)
about this incident, What can I do
to get the boy to realize th e seriousness of stealing? Please advise me. .
Rochester, N.Y., Grandma
Dear Grandma: Try to arrange
some private time when you can be
alone with the boy and establish a
friendly one-on-one relationship.
(A visit to the zoo, a ballgame,
something fun for just the two of
you.) Do not remind him of the

lead to deadly and painful bacteri;
infections of the bloodstream.
My beloved brother recent!·
died from an infection that began i1
his mouth . I am so grief-stricken
can barely get my th oughts dow1
on paper. If this letter will help jus
one person pay closer attention rr
his or her teeth, it will ease m
pain. Dental hygiene is SO impor
tant to a person's overall health . I

incident, but let him know you are

so happy that he is growing up to
be an honorable person. Your praise
will make him want to live up to
you• high lbpinion of him .
Dear Ann Landers: Please tell
your readers that an infection in the
mouth or a.n :tbsce-ss in a tooth can

isn't just your te eth and gums, it '

your whole body. -

Sad Si ster i1

Hou sto n

Dear Houston Sister: You hav'
written an extremely important let- ,
ter. and I thank yo u for it. Rare!:
do peo ple realize that neglectin1
their t ~:cth co uld lead
infection, and ~ vc n

a serlou
ck·ath . Ye

to

another exampl e of how my reader .
look aft er o ne another.

Rio Grande to host Kamalay and the Red Hot Peppers

•
••

•
Personal decisions in a civilized soci-

Wednesday, Feb. 28, 2oo·

Dear Ann Landers: I felt a close
Dear Finally Living: Thank
kinship to "Distraught in Gettysyou for providing · an alternative
burg, J'a:· She was the woman who
explanation for why a husband
said her husband was never home
would avoid his wife and family. No
and never helped her with the kids
marriage can be successful under
or the house. It was the story of my
such circumstances .
life as well as hers.
You don't say whether or not you
l, too, struggled with my marare still married to your "good
riage for almost II years, with two
friend." If so, you are depriving
ADVICE
young children to raise. My husband . '-'"'""'.._yourself of a normal married life. Is
worked two jobs, and when he wasthe sacrifice worth it? Rethink this.
His confession was liberating for
n't at work, he found some other
Dear Ann Landers: While on a
reason to be out of the house, away both of us. I finally realized our three-day motor trip with my son
from me and the children. There · failed mariiage was not my fault. and his family, I sat in the rear of the
were countless nights I lay awake, My kids can now enjoy their Dad's car with my 13-year-old grandson.
waiting for him to come home. I company because he is comfortable H e started to rummage through my
ttied · desperately to make him with them and no.longer hiding his purse, and I later discovered that he
happy. I was a good housekeeper, an true self. He is free to be a loving had taken a $20 bill. When we
excellent cook and a devoted wife. I father to ~hem and a good friend to stopped fo r a snack, I confronted
had the shock of my life when he me, and I an\ more than happy to him. At first, he · denied taking the
confessed that he was ~ homosexu- settle for that.- Finally Living My ·money, but then he admitted it, sayLife in New Jersey
al. I never suspected a khing.
ing i t was a "joke." The $20 bill was

NO

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Page A!

_The_oa_ny_se_ntin_ei_ _ __

..
.......

.•

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992-2158 • Fax: 992-2157

Charln W. Govey
Publlaher

~BJ the Bend
lfbman cffirs support to reader that shares her family situation

PageA4 .. ..

•

RIO GRANDE - In the early 1930's
the Western World enj\)yed a. heyday .of
small-band jazz. Stellar artists like Jack Teagarden, Mildred Bailey, Billie Holiday and
Django Reinhardt recorded sides which
remain some of the finest in the history of
the music. Hot jazz, laced with exciting
improvisation. and ballads, melancholy and
blue, were standard fare for dancets of th e
Lindy and the Swing.
Ray Kamalay and his Red Hot Peppers
are reminiscent of this peculiar era, and
they play this music with all the excitement
and sentiment rypic.al of the period. They
will appear at the University of Rio
Grande/Rio Grande College on March 4,
2001, at 3 p.m.
Forgottetl classics like "I Hate A Man
Like You" and "The Joint Is Juri1pin'"
spring back to life, played with great love
and great sk:ill. fl,ay is a composer of me
idiom. and setS are peppered with fine
original compositions like the fiery "Merely True" and "! Wanna Sleep In My Own
Danm Bed" . With some of the finest musi-

cians in the Midwest, Ray Kamalay and his Kamalay and his Red Hot Peppers ·
Red Hot Peppers have imp ressed audi- Speight1s ca.reer is already quitt impressive
ences at some of North ~merica 1 s finest Australian by binh, he di1tinguished himfestivals, including the Detroit and Toron- self soon after his migration here witf
to Jazz Festivals and the Philadelphia Folk awards at the Thelonius Monk Competi·
Festival.
tion in Washington, D.C. as well as witf
In recent years, the band has added Wal- perfornunces v,ith Benny Caner and Jot
ter White, one of the most powerful and Williarru. He has also worked extensive!)
exciting trumpeters in the United States. as lead s.1xophonist with the Lincoln CenWalter's previous associations seem limit- ter Jazz Orchestra.
less. Besides recent stints with the Detroit
The pianist, Phil Kelly, got his start at tht
Symphony and Cincinnati Pops Orchestras tender age of five, and has had extensivt
(as featured soloist) Walter has worked training in classical music. But his swing·
extensively as lead trumpeter with the ing, straight-ahead style of jazz piano ;,
Harry Connick Jr., Orchestra, Maynard self-taught and demonstrates a mud
Furgeson and the Mingus Big Band. All of broader musical sense. He has won numer·
this for good reason. When Walter puts that ous awards in both jazz and classical music,
trumpet to his lips, the sound is nothing and has recorded with many great artist,
shon of astonishing. His massive talent and including Thad Jones. Cecil McBee and
extensive training make Walter an event in Don Cherry.
himself, and he caps everything this band
B-assist Paul Keller is the son of a preachdoes with beaury and excitement.
er. Keller studied bass at the University ol
The newest member of the group is the Michigan. In Ann Arbor he leads the Bird
saxophonist Andrew Speight, yet another of Paradise Orchestra as well as the Paul
stunning jazz soloist in the tanks . of Keller Ensemble.

·lOu Can Take ControL ·
Long store lines. Lost keys. Too much to do in too little rime. You can almost feel it
starting to rise. It's your blood pressure, and when it's too high, it's not healthy. But
medical technology today makes it possible to control high blood pressure. If you haven't
had your blood pressure checked recently, you owe it to youndf. It's fasr, painless and
easy. O'Bieness ~emorial Hospital offers a free blood pressure screening the first
Wednesday of each month from 10:00 a.m. until noon and from 2:00 p.m. until 4 :00 p.m.
Call C
74Pl 59~-9300 for more information.

O'BLENESS
Memorial Hospital
www.obleness.org

Excellence In Community. Healthcare

- - ----.-

.

0 1999TMT

-·

�.

.

·~

.... .- . .

'

'

!
Page A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, February,28, 2001

Barbershop quartet enterta sat DAR
•

POMEROY -A history of
barbershop quartet singing
and a performance by the local
group, Timeline, highlighted a
recent meeting of Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter,
Daughters of the American
Revolution.
Timeline, which originated
from the French City Treble
Makers of Gallipolis, is com. posed of Richard Eubanks,
lead; Stacy Stacy Wehrle, baritone; Gerald Powell, tenor and
Wilbur McCormick, bass. The
group . is affiliated with the
Society for the Preservation
and En couragement of Barbers hop quartet Singii1g in
Ameri ca, a group with 33,000
members in 809 chapters in
the United States and Canada.
Founded in 1938, It is recognized as the world's largest .111malc singing society. Its motto
is "Keep The Whole World
Singing. 11
Members of the Timdine
group ta lked abom the Society's activities which in clude
education of members and tlw
general public in music 'education, particularly barbershop
singing, charitable projects,
public performances, programs
to help seniors realize th eir full
potential through singing and
contests in quartet and chorus
singing at local, regi onal and
international levels.
Barbershop
harmon y,
Eubanks said, was actuaiJy
started in barbershops, on
Street corners, at social func-

tions and in parlors. Its roots
are not just the white, MiddleAmerica of Norman RockweiJ's famous painting. Rather,
he said, barbershop is a "melting pot" product of AfricanAmerican musical devices.
European hymn-singing, culture and an American tradition
of recreational music. The tradition of the Barbershop Soci- ,
ety continues today, Eubanks
noted.
The first written use of the
word 11 harbershop 11 when
referring to harmonizin g
came in 1910, with the publicatio n of the song. "Play That
Barbershop Chord - evidence
that the term was in common
parlance by that time, accordo
ing to the Timeline. si ngers.
Then came the Tim Pan
Alley era, Eubanks slid, and
Edison's talking machine.:
spreads harmony nationwide.
Thr song writers of the Tin
Pan AIJey era made thelf livin g
by appealing to the needs and
t&lt;lstcs of the recrl·ation~d nmsiCIJn.

Sheer music was popular
;md then c.u ne the phono.:..
grapH which made it possibl e
to actual ly he:tr the new songs
coming from the Tin Pan
AIJcy. · Professio nal quartets
recorded hundreds of so ngs
for the Victor, Edison and
Columbia
labels,
which
sp urred sheet music sa les.
"You' re The Flowe r of My
Heart, Sweet Adeline" captured the hearts of harmony

Big print books

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Annual
Lenten Breakfast and Quiet
Hours, 7:45 p.m. Wedne&amp;·
clay, Trinity Congregational
Church.

TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern Local Board of Education, Wednesday at 8 p.m.
at the administrative office in
Tuppers Plains, for the pur·
pose of discussing personnel.
.

THURSDAY ·
POMEROY Meigs
County Tuberculosis Board,
Thursday, 7 p.m. at the
office.

ENTERTAINING QUARTET - Performing some of the old songs at a recent DAR meeting was
the Timeline Barbershop Quartet, I to r, Richard Eubanks, lead; Stacy Wehrle, baritone; Wilbur
McCormick, bass, and Gerald Powell, tenor. Members also presented the history of barbershop
singing, (Contributed photo)
·
·
Jm·c•rs.
Gang of Mine", "Sweet AdeThe coming of radio, line", "My Wild Irish Rose,
Eubanks continued, prompted uShlne ou M~ 11 , " Heart of My
11
11
:1 shtft in American popubr Hcart ,
Wait 'Til ~ht:. Sun
music. Radio qu artets kept Shine• Nellie" cmd "Precious
close harm o ny singi ng popu- Lord Take My Hand."
For their final selection,
lar with manY amateur singers
:md these singers were re:J.dy the quartet sa ng J love song,
for the revival of barbershop · "Let ·Me Call You Swcethormony that took place in heart", to M ary Powell in
1938 .
·
commemoration ofValentine's
The Tim eline Barbershop Day.
qu:uter entertJined members
The business meeting was
of Retmn Jonathan Meigs' opened with the DAR ritual
DAR with so me of the old and
conducted ·by the
songs, includin g "That Old Regent, Mary Kathryn Rose.

She announced that the DAR
State Conference will be held
on March 9, 10, 11 at the
Marriott Hotel North in
Columbus. Rose and Anna
C leland will represent Return
Jonathan Meib'S at the Conference.
The next meeting was
announce for March 10 at
Trinity Church. The chapter's
Charter Day will be observed
and winners of the American
History Award and the Good
Citizenship Award will be
presented.

UMW to make food .

,,

6 11

RACINE
Racine
Grange, 7 p.m. Thursday at
the hall. Baking conlest to
be held.

FRIDAY
RUTLAND - State Sen·
ator Mike Shoemaker conducts office hours at Rutland
Civic Center, council chambers, 12 noon to 1 p.m.
SATURDAY
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville Lodge 411 ,
Saturday, 7:30 p.m., Masonic Temple, ·stated meeting,
work degree, and refrashmants.
SALEM CENTER- Star
Grange 778 and Star Junior
Grange 878,. regular session, Saturday, potluck sup•
per at 6:30 p.m. followed by
meeting at 7:30 p.m.

Gallia • Meigs • Mason
Sianificance

·

.

·

·

Card shower .planned

SYRACUSE- Edith Cogar will celebrate her 90th birthday Sunday. Friends have planned a card shower. Car.ds may
POMEROY - p].,., for giving food donations to God's
be sent to P. 0. b ox 744, Syracuse. Mrs. Cogar is "out and
N.E.T. each month in addition to a regular commitment for
about" , according to relatives. Her daughter, Sharon,. resides
operation of the y9uth center were made w hen the Rock
with h er.
Springs United Methodist Women met recently at . the
church.
· '
:.o "''
It ' was the first meeti~g of the year due to incle.ment
. weather and the flu epidemic. Dorothy Jeffers, vice president,
ALFRED - The Alfred United Methodist Church will
. conducted the meting with scripture bein g read from Matt.
16. The purpose was given in unison and th e group sand hold its annual after-church soup dinner Sunday. On Wednesday there will be a breakfast with serving to star~ at 6 'a .ni. at
"Blessed Assurance: and "Love Lifted Me."
Reports were given by Pandora Collins, secretary; Leah the church. The event is a fu nd raiser for Noah's Ark.
Debbie Barber was in Miami, Fla . Feb. 16-19 ' for a
Ord, treasurer; and Hazel Ball, cards . Dee Rader had prayer
gymanasti c's meet, Stars ofTomorrow competi!i&lt;&gt;n. She took
for the sick and shu tins of the church and co mmunity.
seve11
o f the aihlet:J!s she coaches. Five of the seven got first
The spring retreat was ;n no un ced for March 24 and plans
for future a~tivities were discussed. C inda Starcher was wel- places in their level. The gro up represented Will Power Tumbling of Gallipolis.
comed as ;~ new mt:mbt:r. O rd gave the closi ng pray~:r.
· Robert and Kiterina Brooks held a birthday p;arty for
their daughter, Rachel, on her third birthday at their home.
'
Atte\Jding besides her parents were her b roth, Andrew; grandp.aretlts, Ll oyd and Ruth B rooks and Bill and Linda Specht;
COOLVILLE - A benefit for Harold Nutter at the great"grandmother, Mildred Brooks; Carrie Specht of
For those who are visually challenged, big print books are
. '
invaluable. Such books are available at Meigs County Public Coolville Lions Club will be held Saturday from 4 to 11 p.m. At~ens, Ri c k Specht of. Pittsburgh, pa ., Kevin and Tonya
Libraries and additional ones are being purchased with $500 T here will be live b!Yegrass music and donations will be ac~.ept­ Brooks and children;'Hallie ond Aaron; Jim and Pam Brooks
contributed by the Ladies Auxiliary of the Fraternal Order of the ed at the door. Food \Vill be served, games w ill be played, there and children , Zack and Adam ofVeta;Jeremy Barber and chilEagles, Pomeroy. Here Barbara Dugan , Au xiliary president, pre- will be a C hinese auction and pie and cake walks will be held. dreq, Tyler al).d Kathryn.
sents a check tor the purchase to Kristi Eblin, library director. The public Is ·invited to participate in the ev!'nt with all proNellie Parker was a recent visitor of Sarah · and Homer
•li
ceeds to go to Mr. Nutter.
Parker near Stiversville .
'

Benefit planned ·

...

Countie~

··

The 'liict that a boy Is an Eagle Scout has always carried with It a special significance, not only In
Scouting, but also as he enters higher education, business or Industry, and community service. The
·award Is ·a performance-based achievement whose standards have been well-maintained over the
years. Not every boy who joins a Boy Scout Troop ·earns the Eagle Scout rank; only about 4% of all
Boy Scouts do so. This represents more than 1 million Boy Scouts who have earned the rank since
1911. Nevertheless, the goals of Scouting • citizenship training, character development, and
personal fitness· remain Important for all Scouts, whether or not they attain the Eagle Sc.o ut rank.

Progression

·

·

.
Jeffrey Brown

. .

To earn thi Eagle Scout rank, the highest advancement In Scouting, a Boy Scout must fulfill Matthew Boyles
requirements In the areas of leadership, service, and outdoor skills. Although many options are Troop 235. Expanolon ol parking Troop 249. Conotructlon of the
benches lor Overbrook Center,
available to demonstrate proficiency In these areas; a number of specific skills are required to lot at the communlly baseball
field,
Cheater,
OH
.
Middleport, OH.
advance through the ranks • Tenderfoot, Second Class, Star, Life, and Eagle. To advance, a Boy
667-8370:----11---,.
992-3780
Scout must pass specific tests that are organized by requirements and merit badges.
1--

MeritBadgeS

Alfred community news

•'

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 7

POMEROY- Wildwood
Garden Club, Wednesday, 1
p.m atthe Racine Library.

donation to center

.

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

COMMUNITY
CALENDAR

SOCIETY SCRAPBOOK
..

Wa~naaday, February 28, 2001

·

Merit badges slgnlfj the mastery of certain Scoutcraft skills, as well as helping boys Increase their
skill In an area of personal Interest. Of the more than 100 merit badges avallable, '21 must be earned
to qualify for Eagle Scout. Of the group, 12 badges are required, Including First Aid, Citizenship In
. the Community, Citizenship In the Nation, Citizenship In the World, Communications, Environmental
Science, Personal Fitness, Personal Management, Camping, and Family Life. In Addition, a Scout has
a choice between Emergency Preparedness and Lifesaving and a choice among Cycling, Hiking, and
Swimming.

,

Scoutmaster Conferences
Servi

and Responsibility

·

·

·

8eglnnlng with the Star rank, and continuing through Life and Eagle, a Scout must demonstrate
participation In Increasingly more responsible service projects. At these levela, he also muat
demonstrate leadership aklll• blf holding one or more specific youth positions of responsibility In his
patrol and or troop.

Matthew
Loren
McClaskey

four Ill/ell high for tha
Kyger Creak lall
AIIOCIItlon,
Pint, the loout learns. Muoh of hl1 learning oome1 from oth.e r bop In hla patrol or troop and by
aotlve partlolpatlon In troop program. Hla. patrol aotlvltlea are dlraoted toward the akllla he neada. River Valley High lohool,
lveey troop hike, oamplng trip, or othar aotlvltr offara potential learning experlenoea. ~ loout learn• Middleport/Pomeroy, OH.
to pltoh a tent by pltohlng one, to uae a oompau lty finding dlraotlona, and to oook a meal by having
(740) 317·7114
to prepare aild aet lt.

992-3345

Middleport

... ,·~,)1

I

Sugar
Run Mills
Pomeroy

992-211 5

'

Ch1rl11 McOr1w, Jr.
Troop 101. llnlortd lha
Chlldrtn P.ark,
OH.

112 East Main Street ·

Pomeroy

Pomeroy, Ohio

992-3785

Pomeroy

992-2955

Fisher/Acree 'tHOE PLACE
Funeral Home
State Route 248, Chester, OH

985-3308

Middleport
Pomeroy

'

992-5141
992-5444

AMt
Middle ort

.

'

DowNING ,CHtLos
MuLLEN MussER ·
INsuRANCE
Pomeroy

CROW'S

992-3381

992-5627

CROW &amp; CROW

Brogan-Warne
Insurance

AITORNEYS
AT LAW
110W.2nd

Pomero

PQmero

992-6682

992-6059

&amp; Supplf

Co.

FAMILY

t

RESTAURANT

t , • t

Pomeroy

•

Pomeroy G92-5432

'~·

Kenneth McCullouoh, R. Ph.
Charles Riffle, R. Ph.

992-2635

M ER

StRte248
Chester 985-3301

'

PHAR~ACY

8 Lay·A·Waya

BAD

.

SWISHER "' LOHSE

Q_ua(it! . ~
Furniture &amp; Jewelry, Inc.
SPrint Sftop
rt

·#2 Great OPPortunit~ To Hif!hlis.ht Your Business' AccomPlishments
#3 Great OPPortunitY to SPotlisht Your EmPio~ees
#4 GreQt OPPortunitY To Generate New Business •
#5 It APPears In The GalliPolis Dail~ Tribune, Point Pleasant Resister, And The Dail~ Sentinel

.,

through uoh eward level.

212 E. Main Street

# l Great OPPortunit~ To Tell Your Business StorY

case lor River Valley High,
llllddloport/Pomeroy, OH.
(7401367-7114

Troop 259. Pt. Ploaunt, WV.
875-3324

- · W M: ·www.-I,HOt't'aeApplllnelet.OOIII

•

Troop 245. ConlltrUctod a trophy

Troop 1148. lullt bleacher•

Ill' Credit Tarma

•

Joey Cornelius

Dustin Shane
Cochrane

At eactvof his rank advancements, .a Boy Scout takes part In a Scoutmaster conference. These
conferences help the Scout to set goals for himself In line with his Individual talents and abilities. At
each .conference," the Scoutmaster helps him evaluate how -11 he accomplished his Rresent goal
and then ~;; with him In setting new goals.
·

Middle

rt

992-6611

RACINE

SYRACUSE

949-2210

992-6533

992-2136

Gallipolis

446-2265

Tuppers Plains

985-3161

.

�.

.

·~

.... .- . .

'

'

!
Page A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, February,28, 2001

Barbershop quartet enterta sat DAR
•

POMEROY -A history of
barbershop quartet singing
and a performance by the local
group, Timeline, highlighted a
recent meeting of Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter,
Daughters of the American
Revolution.
Timeline, which originated
from the French City Treble
Makers of Gallipolis, is com. posed of Richard Eubanks,
lead; Stacy Stacy Wehrle, baritone; Gerald Powell, tenor and
Wilbur McCormick, bass. The
group . is affiliated with the
Society for the Preservation
and En couragement of Barbers hop quartet Singii1g in
Ameri ca, a group with 33,000
members in 809 chapters in
the United States and Canada.
Founded in 1938, It is recognized as the world's largest .111malc singing society. Its motto
is "Keep The Whole World
Singing. 11
Members of the Timdine
group ta lked abom the Society's activities which in clude
education of members and tlw
general public in music 'education, particularly barbershop
singing, charitable projects,
public performances, programs
to help seniors realize th eir full
potential through singing and
contests in quartet and chorus
singing at local, regi onal and
international levels.
Barbershop
harmon y,
Eubanks said, was actuaiJy
started in barbershops, on
Street corners, at social func-

tions and in parlors. Its roots
are not just the white, MiddleAmerica of Norman RockweiJ's famous painting. Rather,
he said, barbershop is a "melting pot" product of AfricanAmerican musical devices.
European hymn-singing, culture and an American tradition
of recreational music. The tradition of the Barbershop Soci- ,
ety continues today, Eubanks
noted.
The first written use of the
word 11 harbershop 11 when
referring to harmonizin g
came in 1910, with the publicatio n of the song. "Play That
Barbershop Chord - evidence
that the term was in common
parlance by that time, accordo
ing to the Timeline. si ngers.
Then came the Tim Pan
Alley era, Eubanks slid, and
Edison's talking machine.:
spreads harmony nationwide.
Thr song writers of the Tin
Pan AIJey era made thelf livin g
by appealing to the needs and
t&lt;lstcs of the recrl·ation~d nmsiCIJn.

Sheer music was popular
;md then c.u ne the phono.:..
grapH which made it possibl e
to actual ly he:tr the new songs
coming from the Tin Pan
AIJcy. · Professio nal quartets
recorded hundreds of so ngs
for the Victor, Edison and
Columbia
labels,
which
sp urred sheet music sa les.
"You' re The Flowe r of My
Heart, Sweet Adeline" captured the hearts of harmony

Big print books

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Annual
Lenten Breakfast and Quiet
Hours, 7:45 p.m. Wedne&amp;·
clay, Trinity Congregational
Church.

TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern Local Board of Education, Wednesday at 8 p.m.
at the administrative office in
Tuppers Plains, for the pur·
pose of discussing personnel.
.

THURSDAY ·
POMEROY Meigs
County Tuberculosis Board,
Thursday, 7 p.m. at the
office.

ENTERTAINING QUARTET - Performing some of the old songs at a recent DAR meeting was
the Timeline Barbershop Quartet, I to r, Richard Eubanks, lead; Stacy Wehrle, baritone; Wilbur
McCormick, bass, and Gerald Powell, tenor. Members also presented the history of barbershop
singing, (Contributed photo)
·
·
Jm·c•rs.
Gang of Mine", "Sweet AdeThe coming of radio, line", "My Wild Irish Rose,
Eubanks continued, prompted uShlne ou M~ 11 , " Heart of My
11
11
:1 shtft in American popubr Hcart ,
Wait 'Til ~ht:. Sun
music. Radio qu artets kept Shine• Nellie" cmd "Precious
close harm o ny singi ng popu- Lord Take My Hand."
For their final selection,
lar with manY amateur singers
:md these singers were re:J.dy the quartet sa ng J love song,
for the revival of barbershop · "Let ·Me Call You Swcethormony that took place in heart", to M ary Powell in
1938 .
·
commemoration ofValentine's
The Tim eline Barbershop Day.
qu:uter entertJined members
The business meeting was
of Retmn Jonathan Meigs' opened with the DAR ritual
DAR with so me of the old and
conducted ·by the
songs, includin g "That Old Regent, Mary Kathryn Rose.

She announced that the DAR
State Conference will be held
on March 9, 10, 11 at the
Marriott Hotel North in
Columbus. Rose and Anna
C leland will represent Return
Jonathan Meib'S at the Conference.
The next meeting was
announce for March 10 at
Trinity Church. The chapter's
Charter Day will be observed
and winners of the American
History Award and the Good
Citizenship Award will be
presented.

UMW to make food .

,,

6 11

RACINE
Racine
Grange, 7 p.m. Thursday at
the hall. Baking conlest to
be held.

FRIDAY
RUTLAND - State Sen·
ator Mike Shoemaker conducts office hours at Rutland
Civic Center, council chambers, 12 noon to 1 p.m.
SATURDAY
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville Lodge 411 ,
Saturday, 7:30 p.m., Masonic Temple, ·stated meeting,
work degree, and refrashmants.
SALEM CENTER- Star
Grange 778 and Star Junior
Grange 878,. regular session, Saturday, potluck sup•
per at 6:30 p.m. followed by
meeting at 7:30 p.m.

Gallia • Meigs • Mason
Sianificance

·

.

·

·

Card shower .planned

SYRACUSE- Edith Cogar will celebrate her 90th birthday Sunday. Friends have planned a card shower. Car.ds may
POMEROY - p].,., for giving food donations to God's
be sent to P. 0. b ox 744, Syracuse. Mrs. Cogar is "out and
N.E.T. each month in addition to a regular commitment for
about" , according to relatives. Her daughter, Sharon,. resides
operation of the y9uth center were made w hen the Rock
with h er.
Springs United Methodist Women met recently at . the
church.
· '
:.o "''
It ' was the first meeti~g of the year due to incle.ment
. weather and the flu epidemic. Dorothy Jeffers, vice president,
ALFRED - The Alfred United Methodist Church will
. conducted the meting with scripture bein g read from Matt.
16. The purpose was given in unison and th e group sand hold its annual after-church soup dinner Sunday. On Wednesday there will be a breakfast with serving to star~ at 6 'a .ni. at
"Blessed Assurance: and "Love Lifted Me."
Reports were given by Pandora Collins, secretary; Leah the church. The event is a fu nd raiser for Noah's Ark.
Debbie Barber was in Miami, Fla . Feb. 16-19 ' for a
Ord, treasurer; and Hazel Ball, cards . Dee Rader had prayer
gymanasti c's meet, Stars ofTomorrow competi!i&lt;&gt;n. She took
for the sick and shu tins of the church and co mmunity.
seve11
o f the aihlet:J!s she coaches. Five of the seven got first
The spring retreat was ;n no un ced for March 24 and plans
for future a~tivities were discussed. C inda Starcher was wel- places in their level. The gro up represented Will Power Tumbling of Gallipolis.
comed as ;~ new mt:mbt:r. O rd gave the closi ng pray~:r.
· Robert and Kiterina Brooks held a birthday p;arty for
their daughter, Rachel, on her third birthday at their home.
'
Atte\Jding besides her parents were her b roth, Andrew; grandp.aretlts, Ll oyd and Ruth B rooks and Bill and Linda Specht;
COOLVILLE - A benefit for Harold Nutter at the great"grandmother, Mildred Brooks; Carrie Specht of
For those who are visually challenged, big print books are
. '
invaluable. Such books are available at Meigs County Public Coolville Lions Club will be held Saturday from 4 to 11 p.m. At~ens, Ri c k Specht of. Pittsburgh, pa ., Kevin and Tonya
Libraries and additional ones are being purchased with $500 T here will be live b!Yegrass music and donations will be ac~.ept­ Brooks and children;'Hallie ond Aaron; Jim and Pam Brooks
contributed by the Ladies Auxiliary of the Fraternal Order of the ed at the door. Food \Vill be served, games w ill be played, there and children , Zack and Adam ofVeta;Jeremy Barber and chilEagles, Pomeroy. Here Barbara Dugan , Au xiliary president, pre- will be a C hinese auction and pie and cake walks will be held. dreq, Tyler al).d Kathryn.
sents a check tor the purchase to Kristi Eblin, library director. The public Is ·invited to participate in the ev!'nt with all proNellie Parker was a recent visitor of Sarah · and Homer
•li
ceeds to go to Mr. Nutter.
Parker near Stiversville .
'

Benefit planned ·

...

Countie~

··

The 'liict that a boy Is an Eagle Scout has always carried with It a special significance, not only In
Scouting, but also as he enters higher education, business or Industry, and community service. The
·award Is ·a performance-based achievement whose standards have been well-maintained over the
years. Not every boy who joins a Boy Scout Troop ·earns the Eagle Scout rank; only about 4% of all
Boy Scouts do so. This represents more than 1 million Boy Scouts who have earned the rank since
1911. Nevertheless, the goals of Scouting • citizenship training, character development, and
personal fitness· remain Important for all Scouts, whether or not they attain the Eagle Sc.o ut rank.

Progression

·

·

.
Jeffrey Brown

. .

To earn thi Eagle Scout rank, the highest advancement In Scouting, a Boy Scout must fulfill Matthew Boyles
requirements In the areas of leadership, service, and outdoor skills. Although many options are Troop 235. Expanolon ol parking Troop 249. Conotructlon of the
benches lor Overbrook Center,
available to demonstrate proficiency In these areas; a number of specific skills are required to lot at the communlly baseball
field,
Cheater,
OH
.
Middleport, OH.
advance through the ranks • Tenderfoot, Second Class, Star, Life, and Eagle. To advance, a Boy
667-8370:----11---,.
992-3780
Scout must pass specific tests that are organized by requirements and merit badges.
1--

MeritBadgeS

Alfred community news

•'

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 7

POMEROY- Wildwood
Garden Club, Wednesday, 1
p.m atthe Racine Library.

donation to center

.

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

COMMUNITY
CALENDAR

SOCIETY SCRAPBOOK
..

Wa~naaday, February 28, 2001

·

Merit badges slgnlfj the mastery of certain Scoutcraft skills, as well as helping boys Increase their
skill In an area of personal Interest. Of the more than 100 merit badges avallable, '21 must be earned
to qualify for Eagle Scout. Of the group, 12 badges are required, Including First Aid, Citizenship In
. the Community, Citizenship In the Nation, Citizenship In the World, Communications, Environmental
Science, Personal Fitness, Personal Management, Camping, and Family Life. In Addition, a Scout has
a choice between Emergency Preparedness and Lifesaving and a choice among Cycling, Hiking, and
Swimming.

,

Scoutmaster Conferences
Servi

and Responsibility

·

·

·

8eglnnlng with the Star rank, and continuing through Life and Eagle, a Scout must demonstrate
participation In Increasingly more responsible service projects. At these levela, he also muat
demonstrate leadership aklll• blf holding one or more specific youth positions of responsibility In his
patrol and or troop.

Matthew
Loren
McClaskey

four Ill/ell high for tha
Kyger Creak lall
AIIOCIItlon,
Pint, the loout learns. Muoh of hl1 learning oome1 from oth.e r bop In hla patrol or troop and by
aotlve partlolpatlon In troop program. Hla. patrol aotlvltlea are dlraoted toward the akllla he neada. River Valley High lohool,
lveey troop hike, oamplng trip, or othar aotlvltr offara potential learning experlenoea. ~ loout learn• Middleport/Pomeroy, OH.
to pltoh a tent by pltohlng one, to uae a oompau lty finding dlraotlona, and to oook a meal by having
(740) 317·7114
to prepare aild aet lt.

992-3345

Middleport

... ,·~,)1

I

Sugar
Run Mills
Pomeroy

992-211 5

'

Ch1rl11 McOr1w, Jr.
Troop 101. llnlortd lha
Chlldrtn P.ark,
OH.

112 East Main Street ·

Pomeroy

Pomeroy, Ohio

992-3785

Pomeroy

992-2955

Fisher/Acree 'tHOE PLACE
Funeral Home
State Route 248, Chester, OH

985-3308

Middleport
Pomeroy

'

992-5141
992-5444

AMt
Middle ort

.

'

DowNING ,CHtLos
MuLLEN MussER ·
INsuRANCE
Pomeroy

CROW'S

992-3381

992-5627

CROW &amp; CROW

Brogan-Warne
Insurance

AITORNEYS
AT LAW
110W.2nd

Pomero

PQmero

992-6682

992-6059

&amp; Supplf

Co.

FAMILY

t

RESTAURANT

t , • t

Pomeroy

•

Pomeroy G92-5432

'~·

Kenneth McCullouoh, R. Ph.
Charles Riffle, R. Ph.

992-2635

M ER

StRte248
Chester 985-3301

'

PHAR~ACY

8 Lay·A·Waya

BAD

.

SWISHER "' LOHSE

Q_ua(it! . ~
Furniture &amp; Jewelry, Inc.
SPrint Sftop
rt

·#2 Great OPPortunit~ To Hif!hlis.ht Your Business' AccomPlishments
#3 Great OPPortunitY to SPotlisht Your EmPio~ees
#4 GreQt OPPortunitY To Generate New Business •
#5 It APPears In The GalliPolis Dail~ Tribune, Point Pleasant Resister, And The Dail~ Sentinel

.,

through uoh eward level.

212 E. Main Street

# l Great OPPortunit~ To Tell Your Business StorY

case lor River Valley High,
llllddloport/Pomeroy, OH.
(7401367-7114

Troop 259. Pt. Ploaunt, WV.
875-3324

- · W M: ·www.-I,HOt't'aeApplllnelet.OOIII

•

Troop 245. ConlltrUctod a trophy

Troop 1148. lullt bleacher•

Ill' Credit Tarma

•

Joey Cornelius

Dustin Shane
Cochrane

At eactvof his rank advancements, .a Boy Scout takes part In a Scoutmaster conference. These
conferences help the Scout to set goals for himself In line with his Individual talents and abilities. At
each .conference," the Scoutmaster helps him evaluate how -11 he accomplished his Rresent goal
and then ~;; with him In setting new goals.
·

Middle

rt

992-6611

RACINE

SYRACUSE

949-2210

992-6533

992-2136

Gallipolis

446-2265

Tuppers Plains

985-3161

.

�Page AI

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Plane's nose
Museum buys
b1sln use:nent ..., collapses

Wednesday, Febna•ry 21. 2001

Riot leader wants·conviction overturned·

COLUMBUS {AP) -The
Bv ANDREW Wfll'l HUGGINS
nose gear of a small airplane
AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT
collapsed Tuesday night durCOLUMBUS -An inmate identified
ing a landing at Port Columas a ringleader in the 1993 Lucasville
bus International Airport. No
prison riot asked the Ohio Supreme
one was injured. Investigaton
Court on Tuesday to overturn the verdicts
are unsure why the collapse
of guilt' against him in connection with
occurred.
the disturbance.
•
The pilot of the twinThe inniate, Carlos Sanders, said his
engine Cessna 31 0 was flying
lawyers lacked the time and money to
alone,' said airport spokesproperly defend him.
·
woman Angie Neal. The
Sanders, who changedfhis name to Sidpilot's name was not immedidique Abdullah Hasan in prison, was conately available.
victed in 1996 on 15 charges including
Before the landing, a warnthe murden of a prisoner and a guard, as
ing light in the plane indicatwell as several assault and kidnapping
ed a problem with the nose
charges. He was sentenced to death.
gear, Neal said. The plane susFrom the time Hasan was charged in
tained moderate damage
1994 until his trial, he had three sets of
when the nose gear didn't
attorneys, Kelly Culshaw of the Ohio
lock into place and collapsed
Public Defender Office told the court.
upon landing.
One of the lawyers said he would have to
The airplane came to a rest
mortgage his house to continue representon the north runway, which
was closed temporarily while
the Cessna was moved. The
county
conuuissions
to
airport
remained open, with
itage."
approve
most
requests
by
cities
The museum started to pro- planes using the south runway.
and villages to extend their
tect Singer Lake aboltl three
borders into unincorporated
years ago. The museum has
areas ..All they need is approval
preserved 152 acres, and hopes
from a majority of property
to add up to 200 adjacent
ownen in an area adjacent to
acres.
the municipality that is not
WASHINGTON (AP) Ohio political leaden asked "unreasonably large."
The bill, the first overhaul of
the Energy Department on
annexation
law in 35 yean,
Tuesday for the funds needed
to avoid large-scale layoffs at would require commissioners
the Piketon uranium enrich- to consider the impact of
CINCINNATI {AP) annexation on property outProsecutors have obtained ment plant.
About 500 layoffs at the side the township and to reimconvictions against 44 of the
50 protestors arrested in facility, officially known as the burse townships for lost tax
November
during
the Portsmouth Gaseous Diffu- revenue for as long as 15 years.
TransAtlantic .Business Dia- sion Plant, are expected after
logue, a meeting of interna- production ends in June.
Hundreds more layoffs
tional business. leaders held in
appear to be inevitable if the
Cincinnati.
federal
government fails co
Twenty-two of the convic"
MONROE {PiP) - The
tions were for disorderly con- make good on a Clinton
future of Americana Amuseadministration promise to put
duct.
ment Park, a landmark for 77
Some protestors faced mul- the plant in a standby condiyears
in southwest Ohio
tiple charges. Eight cases have tion. The company that runs
before it closed in 1999,
been dismissed, and four oth- the plant has said it needs to
remains uncertain.
ers ended in acquittal. Eight know by March 1 what the
Owner Jerry Couch said
plant's future will be.
more are pending. .
Gov." Bob Taft, Sens. Mike that he will issue a statement
Protestors; lik.'e at the a simand
George .o n the park's status Wednesday,
ilar . but bigger meeting in DeWine
1999 in Seattle where there Voinoivch, R-Ohio, and Rep. but he declined additional
were · hundreds of arrests, Ted Strickland, D-Ohio, ~omment Tuesday.'
Couch purchased the Buder
opposed the globalization of whose congressional district
County
park in 2000 from
business and the harm they includes the plant, met Thesbelieve it will do to workers day with Energy Secretary Park River Corp. and said that
he planned to reopen the park
and the environment.
Spencer Abraham.
as a family oriented attraction
in the spring of 2001.
Park ltiver Corp., .which
owns Coney Island park in
Cincinnati, bought Americana
LIMA (AP) Jurors
COLUMBUS (AP) -The in 1996 from Leisure Systems
planned to resume their delib- city school superintendent's Inc. and spent about $4 milerations Wednesday over the announcement Tuesday that lion on ·improvements, but
penalty for a man found guilty she would leave the district sold it when the park's attenof planning a firebombing that came as a surprise to at least dance tailed to meet expected
·
killed a woman and four chil- one school board member, but levels.
dren.
based on the average tenure of
· Samuel Williams, 24, . of leaders at large districts it
Lima, was found guilty Feb. 13 shouldn't have.
on all counts, including com~
Rosa Smith, 57, said she will
plicity to comn1it aggravated step down in July, after almost
COLUMBUS. (AP) ..,.- The
murder, and now could be four years in the job to
sentenced to death.
become president of an edu- state this week will begin to
At the sentencing phase of cation and public P.olicy foun- pay back more than $1.3 million in overdue child support
Williams' trial Tuesday, jurors dation in Cambridge, Mass.
deliberated about five hours
The average tenure of payments incorrectly withheld
before recessing for the day. superintendents at big city since October, an official said
·
Williams faces a possible death school' districts is two yean Thesday.
An additional $5 million
sentence or life in prison. and four months, according to
will
be returned once the state
Jurors will make a recommen- a 1999 study by the Council
dation to Judge Richard War- of the Great City Schools in determines which families are
ren ofAllen County Common Washington. For female super- .owed money from an earlier,
Pleas Court.
intendents, the average tenure three-year period, said Jacqueline Romer-Sensky, director
Eulier Tuesday, the jury is 1 112 years.
heard fiom a forensic psychol"Obviously, Rosa is not of the Ohio Department of
ogist as the last witness of the leaving because she's being Job and Family Services.
Her announcement came
forced, but because she's found
trial.
"
an attractive offer i:lsewhere," four days after an advocacy
said Michael Casserly, execu- group sued the state, demand. tive director of the council, ing that Ohio immediately fix
which represents 58 school the Support Enforcement
districts across the country, Tracking System and reim·
ZANESVILLE (AP) -The including Columbus, Cleve- .burse families,
driver of a van that flipped land, Toledo and Dayton.
The Association for Chilover on Interstate 70, killing a
dren for Enforcement of Support, based in Toledo, says the
passenger, has been charg~d
with vehicular homicide,
department's efforts don't even · ·
come close to satisfying the
authorities said.
.
GftAS
Gerald Goodstein, 58, of
e-:lawsuit's demands.
New York City, was charged . COLUMBUS (AP) -The
Tuesday
in
Muskingum Senate on Thesday passed a
County Court, where he long-debated bill designed to
pleaded innocent, the State make it more difficult for
Highway Patrol said. A March cities to annex land from
XENIA (AP) - A 5-year27 trial date was set.
townships. The bill now goes
old
boy died after colbpsing
Goodstein was driving the to the House, where a comvan when it slid partially off mittee last year recommended during gym class at an elementary school Tuesday,
the road Monday, ca1ne back passage.
on to the highway and overThe bill died at the time authorities said.
turned twice, the patrol said.
because then-Speaker Jo A111: · William McCarthy, an
A passenger, Cathryn Pisars- Davidson, R-Reynoldsburg, investigator with the Greene
ki, 44, of Seattle, Wash., died in opposed it and would not County coroner's office, said
the crash. Six others in the van allow the full House to vote th~ boy collapsed inside .
were injured. joanna Klein, 52, on it. The new lea&lt;,lership Tecumseh Elementary School.
"They were playing some
of Seattle, remained hoJpital- behin&lt;,l Speaker Larry Houseized in Zanesville on Thesday. holder, R-Glenfi,rd, is consid- type of game of tag,"
Her condition was not, avail- ered more friendly toward McCarthy said. "He was runacross the court and sudable.
township concerns.
Ohio's currently compels u«nll! collapsed."
CANTON {AP) - The
Cleveland Museum of Natural
History has acted to preserve
another part of Singer Lake, a
glacial-era basin in Jackson
Township that contains rare
plants and insects.
The museum has paid the
Homeowners
Willowdale
Association $67,000 for an
easement to 23.5 acres in
northern Stark County, the
southern end of the prehistoric lake basin. The easement,
a legal right regarding use of
property, stops any future
development on the land and
guoranrees it will stay in its
natural state.
"These kinds of places need
to be protected for the future,"
said Jim Bissell, the museum's
curator of bot.1ny and coordinator of natural areas. "If you
don't save the diversity, you are
losing part of our natural her-

ing Hasan, she said.
Timothy A. Smith, who was appointed
as Hasan's lead attorney two months
before the trial, was not prepared for the
huge volume of work. Culshaw said.
"He told the trial court that over and
over, He even moved to withdraw bequse
he knew' he couldn't do an effective job in
this case. But his protests and requests feU
on deaf ean;• she said.
·
Cuishaw said underpaid defense attarneys were overwhelmed by a case involving 407 potential witnesses, 65,000 hours
of investigation and several videotapes and
audio tapes.
She also said the prosecution wouldn't
provide certain pieces of evidence, i11cluding complete tapes of negotiations
between police and prisoners.
Justice Alice Robie' Resnick questioned
why low attorneys' fees should constitute
a trial error that would cause Hasan's convictim1S to be ovcri;Urned. She said lawyers

in death penalty cases traditio.nally don't
receive much money.
"Because some attorneys are becoming ,
more mercenary, I cannot see where a low
fee in any way is involved in reversible ,
error," Resnick said.
Culshaw said the lawyers weren't mercenaries but instead were concerned that
they we~e "being asked basically to subsidize the prosecution of their client."
William Breyer, an assistant Hamilton
County prosecutor, said defense lawyers
had been working on the ca!e for months
before, Smith became Sanden' attorney. .
"This is not a case where we've got
some people stumbling into the case two
months before the trial;' Breyer said. He
also said prosecuton provided a consider- '
able amount of material to the defense.
Smith said he believed he could have
prepared for the case if he had been given
more resources that he thought he'd been
promised.

Piketon fundins
deadline nean

Elpt protesten
facebial

Park's future
uncertain

s.;.year-old
collapses, dies

~

HIGHLIGHTS

· ~ ·
i

price .
"t

·'· ~ ~

Financial terms of the deal
were not. immediately available, but Fassel reportedly will
earn $11 ,tnjllioq ·o~r the
length ol' the contract. He
earned $1.1 million last season, when Giants turned from
an also-ran into the NFC
champions.
The. long-anticipated deal
came about a month after the
Giants were beaten 34-7 by
. the Baltimore Ravens in the
Super Bowl in Tampa, Fla.

....
t

111o:nas to retire
Bills

~LL APPAREL, STATI~NARY,

.,. PAINT, &amp;WATCHES

.

THE CHEAP SEATS

Auld lang
synefor
Redmen

HUNTINGTON, W.Va.The West Virginia Sports
Spectacular ,~nting and
Fishing Show will be held
March 9-11 at the Huntington Civic Arena.
The three-day event will
feature educational seminars
by hunting and fishing professionals as well as displays relating to outdoors recreation.
The show's main attraction
has been "The
Hawg
Trough.; ' a a 5,500-gallon
aquarium which gives visitors
.the chance to fish for live
trout and keep what they
catch. Other attractions
include a video archery range,
live deer and wildcat display,
world record deer exhibit and
paintbaU range.
The show is open March 9
.from 3 p.m. to 9 p.m., March
· .10 fiom 10 a.m. to 9 p.m, and
March 11 from 11 a.m. to 6
p.m.
· For information, call Bill
:Picozzi at 304-984-2412.

co~tractt -.: '

·off _,.

Andrew
Carter

W.Va. outdoon
expo set for
March 9·11

i?;

system works .

to House

WEDNFSDAY's

EAST RUTHERFORD,
N.J. (AP) -Jim Fassel, whose
guarantee ·of a playoff berth
ignite!1,Jhe New York Gian~·
.run· ~~!Ul~f ~.o~l~app~ar· ·
ance('ri~~d a new .four-y\!ar

._,'
.%o,

· Page 81
WednesdiiJ. February 21. 2011

Fassel .·

State says

AnnexatJon bill

NBA: Blazers clip Spurs, Page BJ
Spring Training roundup, Page BJ
Trout stocking to begin, Page B6

Giants reward

Ringleader
Superintendent
awaits penalty ·1eavin1 post

Driver charpcl
In fatal

The Daily Sentinel ·

Inside:

ORCHARD PARK, N.Y.
(AP) - Running back Thurman Thomas will get his
:Chance co retire as a member
··of the Buffalo Bills.
Thomas, ·the Bills' aU-rime •
Jeadinl!; rushe-r, will sign a
one-day contract and then
announce his retirement, Bills
)pokesman Mark Dalton said.
: The Bills scheduled a news
conftrence with Thomas for
later in the day.
• Thomas, who will rurn 35
in May, spent 12 seasons with
.she lJills before he was
)'elt:aSel:l for salary cap reasons
a year ago. He was used pri. marily as a third-down back
by the Miami Dolphins last
'season before sustaining a season-ending knee injury
·against San Diego Qn Nov. 12.
' Thomas will finish his
·career with 12,074 yards
·rushing, ninth on the all-time
list .
jUSt' 49 yards behind
l'ranco Harris. Thomas also is
.'sixth in all-purpose yards.
~ He is tied with .Andre Reed
•f or most touchdowns in Bills
: history with 8\7.

PI•••• -Rio, 85

PleaH ... C.rter. 85

FINALLY, THE NETS HAVE COME DOWN AT RIO - Rio Grande head coach Earl Thomas cuts down the last bit
of the 1'\et after the Redmen defeated Point Park In the AMC championship game. (Bryan Long photo)

Park
..

Riothumns.

··if;,
..'&lt;.'..
'•,;

~

,, •
·.. ,, ,k.

''1&gt;
,

~\;;i'i ..'•i.' "'·' ,,. •. .•:,. ,,, •...,~-r;,:.-

''f.;~.

•'

I,-.·, -\. .

-·-~ . ' ·BY BuTcH ~ .

.'

~"!""&lt;

OVP SPORTS STAFF

RIO GRANDE - They had
already accomplished many things
this season.
A' current 12-game winning
streak, a regular season conference
title and an automatic berth into the
national tournament, the Rio
Grande men's basketball team had
nothing else to prove.
Even so, the Redmen decided an
AMC conference tournament
championship would be nice to put
in their trophy case.
Rio Grande pulled
fiom ·a
two point
·, midway
through the secqnd
defeat
No.2 AMC seed Point
89-81.

. ) . •'

'~·

;..

'

,:;,&lt;, ·• • ~L

Rio Gr;n~! . adva~ces to the
NAIA Division II National Tournameni at ,Point Lookout, Mo., with
first. round play on March 7-8.
Point Park, which will be joining
the 32 team field in Missouri, had
also clinched a spot in the national
tournament' before the AMC tide
contest.
"Unbelievable run, the last 13
games," said Rio Grande head coach
Earl Thomas. "You couldn't have
gotten any kind of odds in Las Vegas
after our Central State loss here Qan.
20)."
The Redmen fell to Central State
after the Marauders rallied· in the
second half after a 12 point deficit at
halftime. At that point, Rio Grande

'

'•

· " I'

I •

I

•,

·'

'I'' I·

'

the team to beat for Cup berth?

Is Mex
I

COLUMBUS,
. (AP)
M~ybe the question is not · whether
the United States can beat Mexico in
the opener ofWorld Cup qualifying.
The more pertinent question might
be whether Mexico is the soccer team
to beat in the region.
,
While the Mexicahs generally have
dominated the North American, Central American and Caribbean region
for yean, they've hardly )oQked formidable lately. Mexico has not wori in its
last five exhibition games, genlng only
one tie vs. Canada, and coach Enrique
Me~'s team has been heavily criti-

cized at home.
To which Meza responds: "I'm so
confident {of qualifying) that I'm
putting my job on the line."
The United States won both meetings with its archrival in 2000, blanking Mexico 3-0 and then. 2-0. In
Mexico's only exhibition game this
year, it lost to Colombia 3-2.
Injuries to Cuauhtemoc Blanco
(torn knee ligament) and Ramon
Ramirez {car accident) also have sidetracked the Mexicans.
Despite all of the negatives, the U.S .
team expects nothing but the best

from its southern neighbors in
Wednesday night's game at Crew Stadium.
"If you make one little mistake
against a team like Mexico, they will
punish you," U.S. captain Claudio
Reyna said. "We also have to be
aggressive and create more chances. I
think we have the team and the players to do just that."
The Mexicans, whose offense disappeared before getting the two goals
against Colombia, won't exactly be
comfortable in the cold of Columbus,
either.

"Putting them on their heels from
the opening whistle will be important," veteran defender Jeff Agoos said.
Midfielder Clint Mathis added,
"They are definitely not used to "this
climate, so there will be a little bit of
an adjustment for them. It could be a
factor Wednesday night, but both
teams have to play in it and it jwt
comes down to dealing with adversity."
Since experiencing nothing but
adversity at the 1998 World Cup,
where they went 0-3 and finished last

PluHSHUSA.B6

'.,

No. 16 Maryland upsets
No. 2 .Duke at Cameron

auii

I

DURHAM, N.C. {AP)
Mike
Krzyzewski tried to look convincing when
he said. No. 2 Duke had to regroup following
its worst loss of the season.
But the coach of the Blue Devils knew he
had lose more than a game to No. 16 Maryland on Tuesday night.
Center Carlos Boozer went down in the
second half with what Krzy2ewski said was a
broken pone in his right foot, meaning
Duke's run at a national championship is in
jeopardy;
"We've just got to circle the wagons and
get tougher," Krzyzewski said.
The 6-foot-9 Boozer, .Duke's main inside
threat.' ·~urt his foot early in the second half,

·VIzquel
.. iUda
CIMI'
rtr
·t

wrNfl.~p_

HAVEN, Pia.
....,'t~ Omar Vizquel,
·CJ,cvcj· ~~l:s ,p-erennial Gold
)las
to
two•
·~year
~lt: ~~li(!li witll
'the ·
'told
on
'•the ~,ondition he not be identifiell.

was at a low point of the season.
"We had lost three out of four at
the buzzer," said Thomas. "We were
4-4 in the league, 13-4 overall.
Emotionally, we were ree4ng. We
had some guys who were starting to
question themselves, me and the system. And they just dug down deep
and we went back to work and got
probably a litde tougher in practice,
and they responded to it. We picked
up a couple of wins, and it kind of
developed a life of it's own.
"We probably won a couple of
games' in this stretch that we shouldn't have, but we lost a couple early
on we shouldn't have either."

It was about this time six years ago
when the University of Rio Grande last
cut down the nets in its own gym to
e~rn a trip to the · NAlA national tournament.
The 1994-95 edition of the Redmen,
led by confident seniors Matt Powell
and Brett Coreno, swept its way to the
Great Lakes Region crown by winning
· three games on its honie floor, including
a heart-stopping victory against archrival Cedarville in the region semifinal
and a convincing win against a solid
Transylvania club in the final.
Fast forward co 2001.
It was a Tuesday night not unlike that
Tuesday back in 1995, and Rio Grande
faced an opponent not unlike that Transylvania club in a powerful and athletic
Point Park side.
And, in like fashion, the Redmen
defended the home floor, defeating the
Pioneers last night to win the American
Mideast Conference tournament championship.
However, unlike · those Redmen of
1995, the Redmen who dbfeated Point
Park last night were not aJveteran ballclub; just two seniors on this team:
AMC Player of. the Year ~·~\wp, ,Copas
· and 3-point sniper Scott Davts. Davis
has been with the Redmen for five seasons, working his way into the first team
after beginning his career with the
junior varsity squad.
Additionally, this team was chosen to
do any better than fifth in the AMC. In
answer to that, they went out and won
the league tide outright.
It's been a team of destiny for head
coach Earl Thomas, an old Kyger Creek
boy who never got the chance to play
college ball after suffering an injury in
his freshman year at Rio Grande, but
has given his life to the game for about
a quarter century. For Thomas, who has
been apart of several Rio Grande
entrees into the NAIA's big dance, this

SPIIDY~­

aaatnst Duke.

(APf

- --

-~

. --

---

--·~·-

--~-

...

·-··-- - - · -- ·- ~ -

----

-····~.

-- - ----

tried to return, then left for good with more
than 10 minutes left in the 91-80 loss.
The Blue Devils {25-4, 12-3 Atlantic Coast
Conference) shot 24 percent in the second
half without Boozer, who averages 13.9
points and 6.5 rebounds.
Krzyzewski said Boozer would be X-rayed
again Wednesday, bnt probably will miss Sunday's rematch with No. 4 North Carolina, the
ACC tournament in Atlanta next week and maybe beyond.
"He may not be back unless we got deep
into the (NCAA) tournament," Krzyzewski
said. "It depends on how big the fracture is." ·

.,.... ... Top 25, 113

�Page AI

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Plane's nose
Museum buys
b1sln use:nent ..., collapses

Wednesday, Febna•ry 21. 2001

Riot leader wants·conviction overturned·

COLUMBUS {AP) -The
Bv ANDREW Wfll'l HUGGINS
nose gear of a small airplane
AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT
collapsed Tuesday night durCOLUMBUS -An inmate identified
ing a landing at Port Columas a ringleader in the 1993 Lucasville
bus International Airport. No
prison riot asked the Ohio Supreme
one was injured. Investigaton
Court on Tuesday to overturn the verdicts
are unsure why the collapse
of guilt' against him in connection with
occurred.
the disturbance.
•
The pilot of the twinThe inniate, Carlos Sanders, said his
engine Cessna 31 0 was flying
lawyers lacked the time and money to
alone,' said airport spokesproperly defend him.
·
woman Angie Neal. The
Sanders, who changedfhis name to Sidpilot's name was not immedidique Abdullah Hasan in prison, was conately available.
victed in 1996 on 15 charges including
Before the landing, a warnthe murden of a prisoner and a guard, as
ing light in the plane indicatwell as several assault and kidnapping
ed a problem with the nose
charges. He was sentenced to death.
gear, Neal said. The plane susFrom the time Hasan was charged in
tained moderate damage
1994 until his trial, he had three sets of
when the nose gear didn't
attorneys, Kelly Culshaw of the Ohio
lock into place and collapsed
Public Defender Office told the court.
upon landing.
One of the lawyers said he would have to
The airplane came to a rest
mortgage his house to continue representon the north runway, which
was closed temporarily while
the Cessna was moved. The
county
conuuissions
to
airport
remained open, with
itage."
approve
most
requests
by
cities
The museum started to pro- planes using the south runway.
and villages to extend their
tect Singer Lake aboltl three
borders into unincorporated
years ago. The museum has
areas ..All they need is approval
preserved 152 acres, and hopes
from a majority of property
to add up to 200 adjacent
ownen in an area adjacent to
acres.
the municipality that is not
WASHINGTON (AP) Ohio political leaden asked "unreasonably large."
The bill, the first overhaul of
the Energy Department on
annexation
law in 35 yean,
Tuesday for the funds needed
to avoid large-scale layoffs at would require commissioners
the Piketon uranium enrich- to consider the impact of
CINCINNATI {AP) annexation on property outProsecutors have obtained ment plant.
About 500 layoffs at the side the township and to reimconvictions against 44 of the
50 protestors arrested in facility, officially known as the burse townships for lost tax
November
during
the Portsmouth Gaseous Diffu- revenue for as long as 15 years.
TransAtlantic .Business Dia- sion Plant, are expected after
logue, a meeting of interna- production ends in June.
Hundreds more layoffs
tional business. leaders held in
appear to be inevitable if the
Cincinnati.
federal
government fails co
Twenty-two of the convic"
MONROE {PiP) - The
tions were for disorderly con- make good on a Clinton
future of Americana Amuseadministration promise to put
duct.
ment Park, a landmark for 77
Some protestors faced mul- the plant in a standby condiyears
in southwest Ohio
tiple charges. Eight cases have tion. The company that runs
before it closed in 1999,
been dismissed, and four oth- the plant has said it needs to
remains uncertain.
ers ended in acquittal. Eight know by March 1 what the
Owner Jerry Couch said
plant's future will be.
more are pending. .
Gov." Bob Taft, Sens. Mike that he will issue a statement
Protestors; lik.'e at the a simand
George .o n the park's status Wednesday,
ilar . but bigger meeting in DeWine
1999 in Seattle where there Voinoivch, R-Ohio, and Rep. but he declined additional
were · hundreds of arrests, Ted Strickland, D-Ohio, ~omment Tuesday.'
Couch purchased the Buder
opposed the globalization of whose congressional district
County
park in 2000 from
business and the harm they includes the plant, met Thesbelieve it will do to workers day with Energy Secretary Park River Corp. and said that
he planned to reopen the park
and the environment.
Spencer Abraham.
as a family oriented attraction
in the spring of 2001.
Park ltiver Corp., .which
owns Coney Island park in
Cincinnati, bought Americana
LIMA (AP) Jurors
COLUMBUS (AP) -The in 1996 from Leisure Systems
planned to resume their delib- city school superintendent's Inc. and spent about $4 milerations Wednesday over the announcement Tuesday that lion on ·improvements, but
penalty for a man found guilty she would leave the district sold it when the park's attenof planning a firebombing that came as a surprise to at least dance tailed to meet expected
·
killed a woman and four chil- one school board member, but levels.
dren.
based on the average tenure of
· Samuel Williams, 24, . of leaders at large districts it
Lima, was found guilty Feb. 13 shouldn't have.
on all counts, including com~
Rosa Smith, 57, said she will
plicity to comn1it aggravated step down in July, after almost
COLUMBUS. (AP) ..,.- The
murder, and now could be four years in the job to
sentenced to death.
become president of an edu- state this week will begin to
At the sentencing phase of cation and public P.olicy foun- pay back more than $1.3 million in overdue child support
Williams' trial Tuesday, jurors dation in Cambridge, Mass.
deliberated about five hours
The average tenure of payments incorrectly withheld
before recessing for the day. superintendents at big city since October, an official said
·
Williams faces a possible death school' districts is two yean Thesday.
An additional $5 million
sentence or life in prison. and four months, according to
will
be returned once the state
Jurors will make a recommen- a 1999 study by the Council
dation to Judge Richard War- of the Great City Schools in determines which families are
ren ofAllen County Common Washington. For female super- .owed money from an earlier,
Pleas Court.
intendents, the average tenure three-year period, said Jacqueline Romer-Sensky, director
Eulier Tuesday, the jury is 1 112 years.
heard fiom a forensic psychol"Obviously, Rosa is not of the Ohio Department of
ogist as the last witness of the leaving because she's being Job and Family Services.
Her announcement came
forced, but because she's found
trial.
"
an attractive offer i:lsewhere," four days after an advocacy
said Michael Casserly, execu- group sued the state, demand. tive director of the council, ing that Ohio immediately fix
which represents 58 school the Support Enforcement
districts across the country, Tracking System and reim·
ZANESVILLE (AP) -The including Columbus, Cleve- .burse families,
driver of a van that flipped land, Toledo and Dayton.
The Association for Chilover on Interstate 70, killing a
dren for Enforcement of Support, based in Toledo, says the
passenger, has been charg~d
with vehicular homicide,
department's efforts don't even · ·
come close to satisfying the
authorities said.
.
GftAS
Gerald Goodstein, 58, of
e-:lawsuit's demands.
New York City, was charged . COLUMBUS (AP) -The
Tuesday
in
Muskingum Senate on Thesday passed a
County Court, where he long-debated bill designed to
pleaded innocent, the State make it more difficult for
Highway Patrol said. A March cities to annex land from
XENIA (AP) - A 5-year27 trial date was set.
townships. The bill now goes
old
boy died after colbpsing
Goodstein was driving the to the House, where a comvan when it slid partially off mittee last year recommended during gym class at an elementary school Tuesday,
the road Monday, ca1ne back passage.
on to the highway and overThe bill died at the time authorities said.
turned twice, the patrol said.
because then-Speaker Jo A111: · William McCarthy, an
A passenger, Cathryn Pisars- Davidson, R-Reynoldsburg, investigator with the Greene
ki, 44, of Seattle, Wash., died in opposed it and would not County coroner's office, said
the crash. Six others in the van allow the full House to vote th~ boy collapsed inside .
were injured. joanna Klein, 52, on it. The new lea&lt;,lership Tecumseh Elementary School.
"They were playing some
of Seattle, remained hoJpital- behin&lt;,l Speaker Larry Houseized in Zanesville on Thesday. holder, R-Glenfi,rd, is consid- type of game of tag,"
Her condition was not, avail- ered more friendly toward McCarthy said. "He was runacross the court and sudable.
township concerns.
Ohio's currently compels u«nll! collapsed."
CANTON {AP) - The
Cleveland Museum of Natural
History has acted to preserve
another part of Singer Lake, a
glacial-era basin in Jackson
Township that contains rare
plants and insects.
The museum has paid the
Homeowners
Willowdale
Association $67,000 for an
easement to 23.5 acres in
northern Stark County, the
southern end of the prehistoric lake basin. The easement,
a legal right regarding use of
property, stops any future
development on the land and
guoranrees it will stay in its
natural state.
"These kinds of places need
to be protected for the future,"
said Jim Bissell, the museum's
curator of bot.1ny and coordinator of natural areas. "If you
don't save the diversity, you are
losing part of our natural her-

ing Hasan, she said.
Timothy A. Smith, who was appointed
as Hasan's lead attorney two months
before the trial, was not prepared for the
huge volume of work. Culshaw said.
"He told the trial court that over and
over, He even moved to withdraw bequse
he knew' he couldn't do an effective job in
this case. But his protests and requests feU
on deaf ean;• she said.
·
Cuishaw said underpaid defense attarneys were overwhelmed by a case involving 407 potential witnesses, 65,000 hours
of investigation and several videotapes and
audio tapes.
She also said the prosecution wouldn't
provide certain pieces of evidence, i11cluding complete tapes of negotiations
between police and prisoners.
Justice Alice Robie' Resnick questioned
why low attorneys' fees should constitute
a trial error that would cause Hasan's convictim1S to be ovcri;Urned. She said lawyers

in death penalty cases traditio.nally don't
receive much money.
"Because some attorneys are becoming ,
more mercenary, I cannot see where a low
fee in any way is involved in reversible ,
error," Resnick said.
Culshaw said the lawyers weren't mercenaries but instead were concerned that
they we~e "being asked basically to subsidize the prosecution of their client."
William Breyer, an assistant Hamilton
County prosecutor, said defense lawyers
had been working on the ca!e for months
before, Smith became Sanden' attorney. .
"This is not a case where we've got
some people stumbling into the case two
months before the trial;' Breyer said. He
also said prosecuton provided a consider- '
able amount of material to the defense.
Smith said he believed he could have
prepared for the case if he had been given
more resources that he thought he'd been
promised.

Piketon fundins
deadline nean

Elpt protesten
facebial

Park's future
uncertain

s.;.year-old
collapses, dies

~

HIGHLIGHTS

· ~ ·
i

price .
"t

·'· ~ ~

Financial terms of the deal
were not. immediately available, but Fassel reportedly will
earn $11 ,tnjllioq ·o~r the
length ol' the contract. He
earned $1.1 million last season, when Giants turned from
an also-ran into the NFC
champions.
The. long-anticipated deal
came about a month after the
Giants were beaten 34-7 by
. the Baltimore Ravens in the
Super Bowl in Tampa, Fla.

....
t

111o:nas to retire
Bills

~LL APPAREL, STATI~NARY,

.,. PAINT, &amp;WATCHES

.

THE CHEAP SEATS

Auld lang
synefor
Redmen

HUNTINGTON, W.Va.The West Virginia Sports
Spectacular ,~nting and
Fishing Show will be held
March 9-11 at the Huntington Civic Arena.
The three-day event will
feature educational seminars
by hunting and fishing professionals as well as displays relating to outdoors recreation.
The show's main attraction
has been "The
Hawg
Trough.; ' a a 5,500-gallon
aquarium which gives visitors
.the chance to fish for live
trout and keep what they
catch. Other attractions
include a video archery range,
live deer and wildcat display,
world record deer exhibit and
paintbaU range.
The show is open March 9
.from 3 p.m. to 9 p.m., March
· .10 fiom 10 a.m. to 9 p.m, and
March 11 from 11 a.m. to 6
p.m.
· For information, call Bill
:Picozzi at 304-984-2412.

co~tractt -.: '

·off _,.

Andrew
Carter

W.Va. outdoon
expo set for
March 9·11

i?;

system works .

to House

WEDNFSDAY's

EAST RUTHERFORD,
N.J. (AP) -Jim Fassel, whose
guarantee ·of a playoff berth
ignite!1,Jhe New York Gian~·
.run· ~~!Ul~f ~.o~l~app~ar· ·
ance('ri~~d a new .four-y\!ar

._,'
.%o,

· Page 81
WednesdiiJ. February 21. 2011

Fassel .·

State says

AnnexatJon bill

NBA: Blazers clip Spurs, Page BJ
Spring Training roundup, Page BJ
Trout stocking to begin, Page B6

Giants reward

Ringleader
Superintendent
awaits penalty ·1eavin1 post

Driver charpcl
In fatal

The Daily Sentinel ·

Inside:

ORCHARD PARK, N.Y.
(AP) - Running back Thurman Thomas will get his
:Chance co retire as a member
··of the Buffalo Bills.
Thomas, ·the Bills' aU-rime •
Jeadinl!; rushe-r, will sign a
one-day contract and then
announce his retirement, Bills
)pokesman Mark Dalton said.
: The Bills scheduled a news
conftrence with Thomas for
later in the day.
• Thomas, who will rurn 35
in May, spent 12 seasons with
.she lJills before he was
)'elt:aSel:l for salary cap reasons
a year ago. He was used pri. marily as a third-down back
by the Miami Dolphins last
'season before sustaining a season-ending knee injury
·against San Diego Qn Nov. 12.
' Thomas will finish his
·career with 12,074 yards
·rushing, ninth on the all-time
list .
jUSt' 49 yards behind
l'ranco Harris. Thomas also is
.'sixth in all-purpose yards.
~ He is tied with .Andre Reed
•f or most touchdowns in Bills
: history with 8\7.

PI•••• -Rio, 85

PleaH ... C.rter. 85

FINALLY, THE NETS HAVE COME DOWN AT RIO - Rio Grande head coach Earl Thomas cuts down the last bit
of the 1'\et after the Redmen defeated Point Park In the AMC championship game. (Bryan Long photo)

Park
..

Riothumns.

··if;,
..'&lt;.'..
'•,;

~

,, •
·.. ,, ,k.

''1&gt;
,

~\;;i'i ..'•i.' "'·' ,,. •. .•:,. ,,, •...,~-r;,:.-

''f.;~.

•'

I,-.·, -\. .

-·-~ . ' ·BY BuTcH ~ .

.'

~"!""&lt;

OVP SPORTS STAFF

RIO GRANDE - They had
already accomplished many things
this season.
A' current 12-game winning
streak, a regular season conference
title and an automatic berth into the
national tournament, the Rio
Grande men's basketball team had
nothing else to prove.
Even so, the Redmen decided an
AMC conference tournament
championship would be nice to put
in their trophy case.
Rio Grande pulled
fiom ·a
two point
·, midway
through the secqnd
defeat
No.2 AMC seed Point
89-81.

. ) . •'

'~·

;..

'

,:;,&lt;, ·• • ~L

Rio Gr;n~! . adva~ces to the
NAIA Division II National Tournameni at ,Point Lookout, Mo., with
first. round play on March 7-8.
Point Park, which will be joining
the 32 team field in Missouri, had
also clinched a spot in the national
tournament' before the AMC tide
contest.
"Unbelievable run, the last 13
games," said Rio Grande head coach
Earl Thomas. "You couldn't have
gotten any kind of odds in Las Vegas
after our Central State loss here Qan.
20)."
The Redmen fell to Central State
after the Marauders rallied· in the
second half after a 12 point deficit at
halftime. At that point, Rio Grande

'

'•

· " I'

I •

I

•,

·'

'I'' I·

'

the team to beat for Cup berth?

Is Mex
I

COLUMBUS,
. (AP)
M~ybe the question is not · whether
the United States can beat Mexico in
the opener ofWorld Cup qualifying.
The more pertinent question might
be whether Mexico is the soccer team
to beat in the region.
,
While the Mexicahs generally have
dominated the North American, Central American and Caribbean region
for yean, they've hardly )oQked formidable lately. Mexico has not wori in its
last five exhibition games, genlng only
one tie vs. Canada, and coach Enrique
Me~'s team has been heavily criti-

cized at home.
To which Meza responds: "I'm so
confident {of qualifying) that I'm
putting my job on the line."
The United States won both meetings with its archrival in 2000, blanking Mexico 3-0 and then. 2-0. In
Mexico's only exhibition game this
year, it lost to Colombia 3-2.
Injuries to Cuauhtemoc Blanco
(torn knee ligament) and Ramon
Ramirez {car accident) also have sidetracked the Mexicans.
Despite all of the negatives, the U.S .
team expects nothing but the best

from its southern neighbors in
Wednesday night's game at Crew Stadium.
"If you make one little mistake
against a team like Mexico, they will
punish you," U.S. captain Claudio
Reyna said. "We also have to be
aggressive and create more chances. I
think we have the team and the players to do just that."
The Mexicans, whose offense disappeared before getting the two goals
against Colombia, won't exactly be
comfortable in the cold of Columbus,
either.

"Putting them on their heels from
the opening whistle will be important," veteran defender Jeff Agoos said.
Midfielder Clint Mathis added,
"They are definitely not used to "this
climate, so there will be a little bit of
an adjustment for them. It could be a
factor Wednesday night, but both
teams have to play in it and it jwt
comes down to dealing with adversity."
Since experiencing nothing but
adversity at the 1998 World Cup,
where they went 0-3 and finished last

PluHSHUSA.B6

'.,

No. 16 Maryland upsets
No. 2 .Duke at Cameron

auii

I

DURHAM, N.C. {AP)
Mike
Krzyzewski tried to look convincing when
he said. No. 2 Duke had to regroup following
its worst loss of the season.
But the coach of the Blue Devils knew he
had lose more than a game to No. 16 Maryland on Tuesday night.
Center Carlos Boozer went down in the
second half with what Krzy2ewski said was a
broken pone in his right foot, meaning
Duke's run at a national championship is in
jeopardy;
"We've just got to circle the wagons and
get tougher," Krzyzewski said.
The 6-foot-9 Boozer, .Duke's main inside
threat.' ·~urt his foot early in the second half,

·VIzquel
.. iUda
CIMI'
rtr
·t

wrNfl.~p_

HAVEN, Pia.
....,'t~ Omar Vizquel,
·CJ,cvcj· ~~l:s ,p-erennial Gold
)las
to
two•
·~year
~lt: ~~li(!li witll
'the ·
'told
on
'•the ~,ondition he not be identifiell.

was at a low point of the season.
"We had lost three out of four at
the buzzer," said Thomas. "We were
4-4 in the league, 13-4 overall.
Emotionally, we were ree4ng. We
had some guys who were starting to
question themselves, me and the system. And they just dug down deep
and we went back to work and got
probably a litde tougher in practice,
and they responded to it. We picked
up a couple of wins, and it kind of
developed a life of it's own.
"We probably won a couple of
games' in this stretch that we shouldn't have, but we lost a couple early
on we shouldn't have either."

It was about this time six years ago
when the University of Rio Grande last
cut down the nets in its own gym to
e~rn a trip to the · NAlA national tournament.
The 1994-95 edition of the Redmen,
led by confident seniors Matt Powell
and Brett Coreno, swept its way to the
Great Lakes Region crown by winning
· three games on its honie floor, including
a heart-stopping victory against archrival Cedarville in the region semifinal
and a convincing win against a solid
Transylvania club in the final.
Fast forward co 2001.
It was a Tuesday night not unlike that
Tuesday back in 1995, and Rio Grande
faced an opponent not unlike that Transylvania club in a powerful and athletic
Point Park side.
And, in like fashion, the Redmen
defended the home floor, defeating the
Pioneers last night to win the American
Mideast Conference tournament championship.
However, unlike · those Redmen of
1995, the Redmen who dbfeated Point
Park last night were not aJveteran ballclub; just two seniors on this team:
AMC Player of. the Year ~·~\wp, ,Copas
· and 3-point sniper Scott Davts. Davis
has been with the Redmen for five seasons, working his way into the first team
after beginning his career with the
junior varsity squad.
Additionally, this team was chosen to
do any better than fifth in the AMC. In
answer to that, they went out and won
the league tide outright.
It's been a team of destiny for head
coach Earl Thomas, an old Kyger Creek
boy who never got the chance to play
college ball after suffering an injury in
his freshman year at Rio Grande, but
has given his life to the game for about
a quarter century. For Thomas, who has
been apart of several Rio Grande
entrees into the NAIA's big dance, this

SPIIDY~­

aaatnst Duke.

(APf

- --

-~

. --

---

--·~·-

--~-

...

·-··-- - - · -- ·- ~ -

----

-····~.

-- - ----

tried to return, then left for good with more
than 10 minutes left in the 91-80 loss.
The Blue Devils {25-4, 12-3 Atlantic Coast
Conference) shot 24 percent in the second
half without Boozer, who averages 13.9
points and 6.5 rebounds.
Krzyzewski said Boozer would be X-rayed
again Wednesday, bnt probably will miss Sunday's rematch with No. 4 North Carolina, the
ACC tournament in Atlanta next week and maybe beyond.
"He may not be back unless we got deep
into the (NCAA) tournament," Krzyzewski
said. "It depends on how big the fracture is." ·

.,.... ... Top 25, 113

�Page B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Wedneaday, Febru1ry 21, 2001

Wednesday, February 28, 2001

. ,.

•

•

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

.,._ . _,
tMftlplrrtMullr

.... ,....... i -

.,. ....
--·

....

ll Clpltolltll'o

.'

Southern

•

WINTER•WEARY 130LFERII HEAD SOUTH TO THE ROBERT TRENT ..IONEB GOLF TRAIL

B y

J• r r y

Z • o d' •
''

atigued by my daily
whining about Seaaonal Affective Dis·
order and workplace
str:ess, a colleague

· poked her head over
an office partition
one day J..t winter and asked if I
finally had chosen the destination
for a vacation getaway. ,

Yes, I had.
"Where?" she asked.
Alabama,
"Where?"
You heard me.
"Why would you go there?"

f

Devout sun worahipera visit

Mexico and the Caribbean. Ski
bums prefer Colorado and Utah.
Lexus-driving, plaid-wearing golf
snobs frequent Palm Springs,
Calif., and West
Palm

Beach,
Fla. But the more
democratic, dimpled ballchasing rabble, ind_uding thousands of ~nnesotana, have dis·
covered the late winter/early
spring calling of Alabama and the
Robert Trent Jones Golf Trail: a
collection of eight public complexes that stretch from the foothills
of the Appalachian Mountains to
the edge of the Gulf Coast. It w.,;
envisioned a decade ago by a
transplanted Minnesotan deter. mined to change the South's

•I
I.

I

employeea retirement program
and deaigned to attract tourists,
'retirees and induatry.
I~ Alabama, you can viait a
apace·and~rocket . center, tour
muaeuma that commemorate the
civil-rights movement and celebrate Hank W~liama, attend a
year-round Shakeapeare Festival
and atop at Civil War sites. But
it's the golf courses, which
esteemed architect Robert Trent
Jones Sr. came out of semi retirement at age 84 to create, that ·
attract travelers every fall and
spnng.
All 2 I trail courses rated at
least four stars- ",Outstanding.
Plan your next vacation around

it"-on a five-star scale by Golf
Dige.Jt magazine readers. All 2 I
courses were .inspired by the 1990
Professional Golfers Association
(PGA) championship held at
posh, private Shoal Creek Golf
Club near Birmingham.
Almost nobody remembers
that a fellow named Wayne Grady
won that tournament. Many golf
fans only remember the controversy caused by holding the prestigious event at an all~white club
in the South. It reignited a
flecadea-old civil-rights debate in
A:labama, changed PGA Tour
policies forever and caused yet
another bruise on the state's reputation, a bruiae that Da~id
Bronner, CEO of Retirement
Systems of Alabama, vowed to
heal in his adopted home state by
making affordable public golf better than any private club in the
South.
"Bad news travels and good
news stays at home,' said
Bronner, who learned to play golf
as a child with his mother at

image.

Ramsey golf course in Austin,

In those I 0 years, the traveling northern golfer has watched
$I 00 and $200 daily greens fees
become com~onplace from the
deserts of Arizona to the swamps
of Florida, sometimes even for an
average co~rse.
The affordable answer for the
dedicated golfer is a distinctively

Minn. •Every place has its
tragedies. Ours Was a continua·
tion not of a few days or a few
months. Civil rights was a long,
long 11truggle, sending out a constant heartbeat of bad news to the
rest ·Of the world. We have used
golf as the vehicle. to give people a

different kind of vacation: a trip

along rural roads and urban interstates that can begin by·smacking
a ball through a former ooybean
field and past an old mule barn
near Huntsville in the north and
end, 378 holeo and 342 mileo later,
in the marshland• north of
Mobile.
In between, golfero play
through foteota and canyono, over
ravine• and crHko and onto lake·
oide promontorieo on a $1 ~6 mil·
lion project funded by tho otate

different impression of Alaba.ma.·
Bronner, who in 27 years has
overseen the state 'a retirement

funds' growth from $500 million
to $26 billion, calls the trail's $2.5
million annual profit ''a lousy
investment," but an invaluable
effort that has helped 4ouble state
touriom in the past aix yean($2.6
billion to $6.6 billion). Never
mind that okeptico called him oilly,
or wone, when he lint au~reoted
the world'a larpot IJOif coune
project ever attempted.
He oenr out )etten to noted

'·

golf-course architects Pete Dye,
Jack Nicklaus and a few others,
and selected Jones becauae he
was the only one who called him
back.
"Ninety-nine percent of the
people thought I was nuts," said
Bronner, who manages other such
investments ai .36 television ata·
tion.s, 300-some newspapers, a
massive Manhattan office building
and the usual assortment of stocks
and bonds.
He's no longer considered
inaane. At least not by golfers.
Tennessee hired Nicklaus and
started a trail of its own;
L!&gt;uisiana is considering t~e idea. .

semiretired. "~e're not good, bur
we like to pla~-1!-~d we have fun. I
hate to tell ynu #&gt;is, but we spent
two monthe in • ~ona one year
and we were •pending $I ,000 a

Each AJ~bama complex:,
maybe even each course, has its
own topography and character.

week just to play.golf. And that
was not being outlandish and it
wasn't playing every day."
The biggest price to pay for
moat golfers on' the trail is the
devilish work of Jones' designs.
Each of the 21 oourses has as
many as five te~ 1boxes, which,
theoretically, allowa both experts
and duffers to play a course fitting
their skill. One' hole at the 36-hole
Highland Oaki1complex in
Dothan - "the Peanut Capital of
the World" in ~~~~ far southeastern

But most have the same familiar
feel as you travel up a long drive·
. way to a· massive clubhouse that

provides country-dub amenities
and service.
Some golfers-including
thouSands from northern states

such as Minnesota, Michigan and
Ohio- get an early start on their
golf season by visiting on fly-anddrive weekend packages that
include chartered flights and

Nine montho later, after Jon~a
'
had died, Tom Gearhart was
aaked if his wife 'a opinion of
Jones had changed following his
deat~.

"Probably not," he aaid. "But
f e.lled him worse thinga than
that."
The trail's layout-each com·
plex but one is within 15 minutes
of an interstate highway and each,.
ia within a two-hour drive ,of the
next-allows for several traveling
strateJies.
You can base yourself in
Montgomery, as 1 did, and be
within an hour's drive of 144

1

,__ ,,0........

LPU TDur CHao ;I illllp _ . tile NIKI
' I 0

~

I:~!!

I

·;

I I -, '

three days of winter~golf rates in

late February. I paid $34 to walk
18 holes-plus another $10 or so
for an ~xtra nine or 18 each day..:.
~t. th'ree of the trail's eight com~
. plexes. The 2001 prices are slightly higher and vary by month.
The first people I met were,
of course, fellow Minnesotans: the
Gearharts, who booked a moteland-golf package from I-iu~tsville
to Mobile through th~ trail's central reservatiori service. The top
daily S'reens fee during the pesk
spring months of March and April
is $70 withou! taX, including a
cart.

Jones designed 3J9 courses
before he died in June at the age
of 93. The 21 on the trail vary
from sprawling 7,000-yard championohip coursea to elaborate parthree 'ohort' oourae1 i.t uvan of ·
the trail'o ei&amp;ht oiteo.
"We've playad ,.,If in
Arizona, in NoMh Carolina, aU
over," uid Tom Gearhart, who'•

..

-., · I
Montgomery, Cambrian J,Udge.. ,i . . , d ,
near (;reenville 40 minutes south
and Grand National near Auburn .
an hour east. You can stay in
either Dothan or Mobile, as
Hobbit Travel's i1y-and-d~~e
10lfers do, and spend three days ..
playing all 54 holeo at. Magnolia .. , .
Grove near Mobile or 36 h'll'li ~l '1
Highland Oaks near Dothan. ,. ·' ·
.
Or you can .make.youl- w.,Y.!!
up or down the trail, stopping at
barbecue jointa and $60 motels
along the way. The Gearharta'

..

''
•

•'t

corner- has I I tee boxes and
plays as far as 70 I yard a from the
championship teeo and as short as
435 yards from the front teeo.
Every golfer muot face numerous aand bunker., lakea, ~hea, :
undulating faitwaya and mauive
· greens that have aa many aa five
levels or compartments. The ease
or severit,Y of your putt del"'nda
on your ahqt-making skill aitd
where thi;;pin is placed that particular day. ,,·
.
During my day wi.th the
Gearha.rts, I bit a. ball from the
fairway u well as I pouibly can:
a ooarin~ 220-ylU'&lt;i ahot directly
toward tll~ pin on a ;reen shaped
like a mii'tant pear. The ball .
bounced within a few feet of the
hole, then trickled alowly back
down an unnoticed alope and
otopped i56 feet from ita deatina· . ,
lion, prlWlllf, in 11ty mind, what
J11111ne Gearhart had told me a

few holtearlier.
· '
" rt TNnt Jonea is a
"Ro
aadiat, ". 1ht Mid.

experiences in Huntsville,
j
Birmingham and Montgomery · ·
heIROd me decide where to play 'r'
.
.
'
the following daya.
.
'
' ,J•;
.I aaked Tom yearhart aboul .:
the Scottish-linka style Senator ,.
course at Capitol Hill~the
:-

••'

neweat of tho trail'i complexea '''"
and the first with a luxury resort '
(the Legends at Capitol Hill) on '
oite -he liad played the day .'
be~re.
·
. "It's h~rd. butthey're all , " .
,hard," he aaid. ":We're not gOQI! .
· er/ough golfera·to. play here on a ,
regular basis. It destroys my ep'
iight quick, but ir'a ao be,a~'tiful :.
that you really don't m.ind."

"

I

In other ,games involving
ranked teams on Tuesday, it
~vas No.3 Michigan State 51,
l'/o. 22 Wisconsin 47; No. 18
::;t. Joseph's 84, Massachus~tts
1)9; and No. 19 Syracuse 80,
Pittsburgh 69.
; A win by North Carolina·
~er N.C. State'on Wednesday
~ight would 'c)inch the No. I
~eed in the ACC tourney for
~he Tar Heels and snap Duke's
!fun of outright regular-season
~ties at four.
·
"We pretty much sav: this,
!game as a must-win, an&lt;! we
!didn't .get it," Duke forward
~lte Dunleavy u,id,
1 While the Terrapins (19-9,
-6) gained confiden'e from
he win, the mood in. the
uke lock~r room was one of
!concern.
~ Casey Sanden, a 6-11
:SophOit\OR who has been a
fm~or dioappointment so far
~n his career, will take over
~tnost of the inlide load with
)Boozer out.
.
• That's because Matt Chris:tensen, Duke's top fronrcourt
=r.serve all season, hill been
~idelined with sore knees.
: "Matt's thing kind · of
!depends on .the day, but he's
.. ltad a series of bad days. That
ltas been disheartening,"
:Krsyzewski said.
; Duke's depth also rook a hit
):arly in the season when 6-10
Nick Horvat~ injure_d ~is foot
~nd has missed ' 21 stn~ight
~ames. His return . is still
~ncertain.
. .
! Sanders was in tears after
the Maryland loss.
~ "If my team needs nie, chan
~·n be there for them," said
~at1ders, who picked up four
fouls in four minutes Thesd.1y
1ight and has averaged just
:fight minutes in 15 ACC
~am~s. "If that tak~s extra
:runmng, extra reps 111 prac~ice, whatever.
S 1tt

~

~fl , j

"

i: ·

ALABAMA'S

'

'I.

t· t,

.1.100.MI.4444
IJJIJJIJA I'IJiolf.tolfl

.'

'

' (j .'
'I

··

·i

'

.
.

Topl5
fram.PIIJe81

1

·'•

•

.

,,J&gt;?l•• MC&amp;pit&lt;:&gt;l H\ll.iHsl o~~id~i

•

\t

: More than 1,500 miles from
li'atrick Ewing's return to
t-lew York, Portland and San
~ntonio squared off in the
~lose race for supremacy in
the
• West.
·
~ In the first of four games
~etween the teams the rest of
the way, Rasheed Wallace
si:ored 22 points as the Trail
Blozers overcame a IS-point
4eficit to beat the Spurs 95-87
Tuesday night.
: Scottie Pippen, in his fourth
game back after elbow
s~trgery, had 20 points, nine
!'!'bounds and four assim as the
6lozers won for the second
straight night and opened a I
!12-game lead in the Pacific
Division. San Antonio fell I
1/2 games behind Utah in the
Midwest Division.
: In other NBA games, New
York defeated Seattle 101-92,
toronto beat Cleveland 10189, Miami downed Washington 103-95, Dallas edgedVanl:ouver 116-112 and Sacral,uento beat the Clippers 10693 in overtime.
; Wallace held Spurs leading
tcorerTim Duncan to 5-of- 18
$hooting.
) "I just couldn't knoc)&lt;. anyjhing down," said Duncan,
who finished below his 21.3f,oint average with 16.
,'Rasheed played some 'g ood
~efense, though. That's when
up to me to make a good
. pass."
~ Wallace was 'held to sevet1
~olnts in the fitst half by the
?-foot Duncan, who scored
lix.
' But with Portland trailing
~y 11 to start the third, Wallace
fank two free th~ws and hit
two turnaround JUmpets in
fhe fitst " three minutes to
~hi.trle the leail' to 119-41.' "
t He went on· to nail a 3j&gt;oiilter and another jumper as
J'ortland outscored the Spurs
~3-16 in the third.
: After the Blazers widened

It's

rental minivans.

Qthers, such as Tom and
Jeanne Gearhart of Grand
Rapids, Minn., hit the trail from
north to south on their way to
spend a· few weeks of winter on
the Gulf Coast or in !'lorida.
_ I booked a really low cyberfare from Minneapolis to Montgomery, Ala., on a national airline ·
to play in spring weather (75
degrees and sunny) for the final

NBA

SPRING TRAINING

Wallace leads Blazers past Big Hurt'$ back in the
$purs in key contest .. drawer with ChiSox

.. .
... "'

I

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

•

the margin to 81-73 on Steve points, and Vince Carter
Smith's 3-poimer with nine scored 32 for the Raptors. :
minutes to play, the Spurs
Peterson
made
seven
scored eight in a row to tie it. straight 3-poimers during the
The spurt included Derek ·second and third quarters. His
Anderson's free throw after · dunk gave Toronto, which has
W:""·
.... ce was dealt his NBA- won eight straight over Cleveleading 31st technical foul, land, a 16-pointlead early in
called when he argued after the fourth.
Arvydas Sabonis got called for . The Cavs closed within five
traveling.
with 2:32 remaining on Andre
But Wallace responded with Miller's 3-point play and two
two jump shots, and Pippen free throws, but Peterson
hit two 3-pointers to make it assisted on Carter's layup, and
91-83 with a minute left. .
Alvin_Williams' 3-pointer gave
Knic;k1 101, Sanies 92
Toronto a 10-point lead with
Ewing received a th ree- I: 19 left.
minut¢ standing ovation in his
Heat 103, Wizards 95
return to Madison Squar&lt;
Brian Grant scored· 26
darden.
.
points and Tim Hardaway
"I thought it was great what broke out of a scoring slump
the fans did," Ewing said. with 22 Tuesday night as
"We've had a love-hate reb;.~ Miami overcame an injury to
tionship.throughout the year{,~ Eddie Jorles.
but I think they . were appr~&lt;' The Heat, who won for the
dative of what I brought t1l' ' 12th time in 14 home gam.es,
the tabk every night. I shot a season-best 56.2 perthought they did a great job of cent.
..
showing their appreciation."
Jones left in the first quarter
Ewing made his first three with a strained left hamstring
shots and gn~bbed four early and didn't return. Jones doesrebounds, but didn't play well n't thittk the injury is serious
the rest of the way, exhibiting and expects to play against
many of the tnlits bad Philadelphia on Wednesday
hands, an increasingly incone night.
sistent jump shot, a couple of
Maveric;ks 116,
dribbles off his feet - that
Grizzlies 112
frustn~ted Knicks fans.
Dirk Nowitzki scored 31
· Allan Houston led New points as Dallas (36- 22) won at
York with 24 points, Man:us Vancouver to "move 14 games
Camby had 21 points and ~7 above .500 for the first time
. rebounds, and Latrell Sprewell since the 1987-88 season.
adcjed 21 points. Mark Jackson
Shareef
Abdur-Rahim
had nine points, 12 assists and scored 36 points a1 the Griz11 rebounds, while Glen Rice zlies lost their fourth straight.
scored 20.
·
Kings 106,
Ewing finished with ••12
Clippers 93, OT
points and five rebounds in ~2 · At Sacramento, Peja Stominutes for Seattle, which lest jakovic had 25 points and
its third stn~ight to · dropn to Vlade Divac added 24 points
. 500' (29-29) for the fitst time and 12 rebounds as the Kings
in more than a month . . scored the first 14 points in
' Rasha~ tewi~ 'led Se~ttle '' overti~e.
with 20 ~oints.
I:',
Jeff Mcinnis scored a careerRaptoro 101, Cavs 8·9
high 33 points for the ClipAt Toronto, Morris Peterson pers, who have lost five
!)lade seven 3-pointers ,l!!n straight games to the Kings.
route to a career-high , t9

l
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

any way I can," White said Posada was limited to desigEven frank Thomas admit- after his first workout with his naced hitter duties Tuesday
ted he aidn't come off well new team.
with the same problem.
during his six-day hiatus from
In Vero Beach, Fla., Grissom
Neither is expected to play
arrived at Dodgertown with a until ot least the Yankees' third
Chicago White Sox camp.
"I did look like a poster boy smile, somewhat unusual for exhibition game, Saturday
for greed over the weekend, Los Angeles outfielders these against the K.nsas City Roybut that is not the case," d ays.
a]s.
Thomas said Tuesday after
'Tm very happy to be here,"
"I really don't want to push
returning to camp in Tucson, Grissom said. " I remember it yet," Posada said.
Ariz. "I've never been greedy." how awesome it was for me to
Jeter took groundballs TucsThomas acknowledged that come to Dodger Stadium day, but did not throw or take
fans, w hose favor he regained when I first came up. There's a patting practice. He expects to
by hitting _318 last year with lot of history here, an out- resume throwing and hitting
43 homers and 143 RBis, &lt;tanding organization respect- late this weekprobably would turn on him: ed throughout baseball."
In Peoria, Ariz_, Tony •
" I extend my apologies to
Gary Sheffield, upset the Gwynn hit against a pitcher
those who were affected by Dodgers refused to extend his for the first time in eight
my absence," he said. "It was a co.ntract beyond 200~, n:'Inains months and one knee upetclbig distr:tction. I do want to in camp but also wants out, tion.
apologize ro my teammates preferably to the New York
Gwynn, who plared in a
and all Chicago White Sox Yankees, the Mets or Atlanta. career-low 36 games last seafans."
"We've been friends for a so n, went t-for-2 in San
Thomas. who returned on long time," Gr'issOm said. Diego's intrasquad game. Even
the mandatory reporting date "What he's got going on, I though he had trouble breakspecified by baseball's collec- have no idea."
ing out of the box his first attive bargaining agreem ent, is
At Fort Lauderdale, Fla., the bat and later got doubled off
due $9,927,000 in each of tl!e Baltimore Orioles said Albert second, he said it was a good
next six seasons; but only this Belle won't be m their lineup day.
.
year is really guaranteed.
for their spring opener against
"It feels good b ing out
"Frank Thomas has apolo- St. Louis because of a sore hip there again, a mce feeling
gized publicly for his remarks that has put his future with the when you go up there to the
about renegotiating his con- team in doubt.
plate, kind of settle in and try
tract, his delayed arrival in
While Belle will miss the to find it again," said Gwynn,
camp and the effect his words road trip to Jupiter, he is who's entering his 20th season
and actions may have had on scheduled to 'start in right field ' with the Padres.
our team and fans," White Sox the next day against the MinIn Fort Myers, Fla., 36-yearowner Jerry Reinsdorf said.
nesota Twins at Fort Laud- old Bret Saber hagen took
In Phoenix, Devon White erdale.
another step in his latest
says his days as an unhappy
Belle has been used in right comeback, throwing off a
camper are over following his field for all three intrasquad mound for the first time in six
trade fn;om Los Angeles to games, with mixed results. He months.
Milwaukee, which sent Mar- has hit the ball with authority,
"He WAS outstanding from
quis Grissom the Dodgers.
but continues to move poorly the first pitch to the last,"
White. was upset about a in the outfield and on the pitching coach Joe Kerrigan
lack of playing time with the basepa ths and hasn't attempted said. "Out of the 25 pitches he
Dodgers after he returned to slide, even in drills..
threw, he probably hit his spots
from a shoulder injury last seac
" I didn 't come here with dead on 20 times."
son. He didn't Want to play any preconceived nottons
Shoulder problems forced
behind Gary Sheffield, Tom about where Albert should be Saberhagen to sit oui the
Goodwin and Shawn Green with his hip. I think that's fair- entire 1996 season with Col·this ·year.
· 1
' •
' ly unte'sted waters for all- of ·orado· and , ~he 2000 · major
But if Milwaukee doesn't us," Ortoles manager Mike league season with B6ston.
make a trade, White figures to Hargrove said.
. But in 1998, he was 15-8 with
become a backup to Jeromy
At Tampa, Fla., the Yankees a 3.96 ERA, and in 1999 he
Burnitz, Jeffrey Hammonds said they'll open the spring was 10-6 with a 2.95 ERA,
and Geoff Jenkins_
seaso n without shortstop both with .t he Red Sox.
"1 understand we 'have three Derek Jeter or catcher Jorge
Last year, he was 0-1 in
young good players, superstars Posada .
seven minor league rehabilitaas £,.as I'm concerned, and I
One day after Jeter was tion starts, but n&lt;'yer pitched
don't
have
a
beef
in
backing
scratc
hed from an intrasquad for Boston. ·
"Every player on this tearti ing 3-for-19 front 3-point
them up and helping them with a stiff right shoulder,
comes to this school to play.! I ronge.
know it ·kills certain playlir~
Maryland lost four of five
on the team not to be able ,1o after the Duke loss pnjan. 27,
play. I just didn't want it ,tp but. have rebounded to win
happen like this."
..1
four in a row, including over
Point guard Jason Willian)s ranked teams Wake Forest,
also reinjured' his sore calfat\'d Oklahoma and the Blue Dcvwas limping by the end 9fthe ils.
.
game.
No.3 Michigan St. 51,
The Terrapins blew a 10:\
No. 22 Wisconsin 47
point lead a~Pi~st Duke in~~
Andre Hntson scored 13
The Daily Sentinel
' fiQal minute a month ago a[' points, and the Spartans (23Subscribe today • 992-2156
home, but got revenge in 3, 12-3) moved into a fimC:::ameton Indoor Stadium. ·•~' place tie with No. S.lllinois in
"We wanied to go out ther6~.· the Big Ten.
and be positive and play the
Kirk Penney had 13 points
way we know how and do all for .Wi"onsin (17 -9, 8-7),
. the right things and not which was looking for its first
worry about what happened unbeaten conference season
last ilriie,''' Maryland point,._ at home since 1950.The Badgu.ard Steve Blake said.
1 gers fought back from a 13·
Juan Dixon was the offen- point deficit midway through
sive and defensive hero for the- the second half to nuke it 47Terrapins, scoring 28· points 45 with just under five min'
·with 6w steals,
·:•. utes remaining, but they went
Lonny Baxter added 15 ' ·scoreless for more than four
points and 10 rebounds, while··' minutes.
Teren'e Morris had 13 points ·:!· No.18 St.Jo•eph'a 84,
and '12 rebounds as the Ter- . ·
Maa1achu1etts· 69
rapins dominated the boards "" Marvin O'Connor had 21
in wi11ning a1 .Duke for the , points and the Hawks (24-4,
second stn~ighr season. Dixon :· ~4-1) won their 10th straight
.had 31 here last year.
·
·· and clinched the Atlantic 10
Shane Battier led Duke ' :conference · regular-season
with 31 points in · his last title by rallying from·· a 16game in. Cameron, getting 19 'J!Oint halftime deficit.
in the fint half, but watched . Monty Mack had 15 points
Duke crumble in the second for the visiting Minutemen
half.
(13-13, 11-4), who were 6Duke led 60-51 "&lt;ith 15:20 for-30 from the field in the
left, but missed 25 of its first second half.
3! shou of the ·final half,
No. 19 Syracuse 80,
e
going more than eight minPittoburgh 69
.utes ·without a basket as
Allen Griffin had 14 points,
e
Maryland took over.
11 alsists and 10 rebounds in
e
Dixon's floater in the lane his final home game, and
wiih six minutes left gave the D~mone Brown had 2 1
e
Terrapin$ the (ead fo~good at points and 10 rebounds for
70-69,and he followe~vith a the . Orangemen (2 1-7, 9-6),
steal and ~up on Duke's wh'o took over sqle.possessinn
next trip down the floor.
of second place ·m the Htg
The Terrapins, who shot 53 East West Division with one·
percent in the second half, ga!ne left in the regular sea- ·
seale&lt;\ it from the foul . line, son.
tl!aking 10 of 11 in the final
Ricardo Grcc•r had 14
1:34.
points for Pittsburgh (14-11,
Duke's second half was its 6-9).
wotst of the seasut\, going 9Hmm IMPROWIE~T
Ill~;
l'MI•II
QHili j,)
Hlllll: I"I'RO\'HIE~T
for-37 from the field , includ~
1i

l

American League, National League.... .
Reds &amp;Indians.... we've got y9u covered!

2001 HOME IMPROVEMENT EDITION
will be here Thursday, March 15th

Supplement to:
The Daily Sentinel
Point Pleasant Register
Gallipolis Daily Tribune

.Don't Miss Out On This....

• Hardware
• Paint

• Construction

,,

·II ll£

Furniture
Carpet
Wallpaper
Insurance

IU:Hli9J I

tl£ lllj I

•

•
•

I*iii•

�Page B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Wedneaday, Febru1ry 21, 2001

Wednesday, February 28, 2001

. ,.

•

•

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

.,._ . _,
tMftlplrrtMullr

.... ,....... i -

.,. ....
--·

....

ll Clpltolltll'o

.'

Southern

•

WINTER•WEARY 130LFERII HEAD SOUTH TO THE ROBERT TRENT ..IONEB GOLF TRAIL

B y

J• r r y

Z • o d' •
''

atigued by my daily
whining about Seaaonal Affective Dis·
order and workplace
str:ess, a colleague

· poked her head over
an office partition
one day J..t winter and asked if I
finally had chosen the destination
for a vacation getaway. ,

Yes, I had.
"Where?" she asked.
Alabama,
"Where?"
You heard me.
"Why would you go there?"

f

Devout sun worahipera visit

Mexico and the Caribbean. Ski
bums prefer Colorado and Utah.
Lexus-driving, plaid-wearing golf
snobs frequent Palm Springs,
Calif., and West
Palm

Beach,
Fla. But the more
democratic, dimpled ballchasing rabble, ind_uding thousands of ~nnesotana, have dis·
covered the late winter/early
spring calling of Alabama and the
Robert Trent Jones Golf Trail: a
collection of eight public complexes that stretch from the foothills
of the Appalachian Mountains to
the edge of the Gulf Coast. It w.,;
envisioned a decade ago by a
transplanted Minnesotan deter. mined to change the South's

•I
I.

I

employeea retirement program
and deaigned to attract tourists,
'retirees and induatry.
I~ Alabama, you can viait a
apace·and~rocket . center, tour
muaeuma that commemorate the
civil-rights movement and celebrate Hank W~liama, attend a
year-round Shakeapeare Festival
and atop at Civil War sites. But
it's the golf courses, which
esteemed architect Robert Trent
Jones Sr. came out of semi retirement at age 84 to create, that ·
attract travelers every fall and
spnng.
All 2 I trail courses rated at
least four stars- ",Outstanding.
Plan your next vacation around

it"-on a five-star scale by Golf
Dige.Jt magazine readers. All 2 I
courses were .inspired by the 1990
Professional Golfers Association
(PGA) championship held at
posh, private Shoal Creek Golf
Club near Birmingham.
Almost nobody remembers
that a fellow named Wayne Grady
won that tournament. Many golf
fans only remember the controversy caused by holding the prestigious event at an all~white club
in the South. It reignited a
flecadea-old civil-rights debate in
A:labama, changed PGA Tour
policies forever and caused yet
another bruise on the state's reputation, a bruiae that Da~id
Bronner, CEO of Retirement
Systems of Alabama, vowed to
heal in his adopted home state by
making affordable public golf better than any private club in the
South.
"Bad news travels and good
news stays at home,' said
Bronner, who learned to play golf
as a child with his mother at

image.

Ramsey golf course in Austin,

In those I 0 years, the traveling northern golfer has watched
$I 00 and $200 daily greens fees
become com~onplace from the
deserts of Arizona to the swamps
of Florida, sometimes even for an
average co~rse.
The affordable answer for the
dedicated golfer is a distinctively

Minn. •Every place has its
tragedies. Ours Was a continua·
tion not of a few days or a few
months. Civil rights was a long,
long 11truggle, sending out a constant heartbeat of bad news to the
rest ·Of the world. We have used
golf as the vehicle. to give people a

different kind of vacation: a trip

along rural roads and urban interstates that can begin by·smacking
a ball through a former ooybean
field and past an old mule barn
near Huntsville in the north and
end, 378 holeo and 342 mileo later,
in the marshland• north of
Mobile.
In between, golfero play
through foteota and canyono, over
ravine• and crHko and onto lake·
oide promontorieo on a $1 ~6 mil·
lion project funded by tho otate

different impression of Alaba.ma.·
Bronner, who in 27 years has
overseen the state 'a retirement

funds' growth from $500 million
to $26 billion, calls the trail's $2.5
million annual profit ''a lousy
investment," but an invaluable
effort that has helped 4ouble state
touriom in the past aix yean($2.6
billion to $6.6 billion). Never
mind that okeptico called him oilly,
or wone, when he lint au~reoted
the world'a larpot IJOif coune
project ever attempted.
He oenr out )etten to noted

'·

golf-course architects Pete Dye,
Jack Nicklaus and a few others,
and selected Jones becauae he
was the only one who called him
back.
"Ninety-nine percent of the
people thought I was nuts," said
Bronner, who manages other such
investments ai .36 television ata·
tion.s, 300-some newspapers, a
massive Manhattan office building
and the usual assortment of stocks
and bonds.
He's no longer considered
inaane. At least not by golfers.
Tennessee hired Nicklaus and
started a trail of its own;
L!&gt;uisiana is considering t~e idea. .

semiretired. "~e're not good, bur
we like to pla~-1!-~d we have fun. I
hate to tell ynu #&gt;is, but we spent
two monthe in • ~ona one year
and we were •pending $I ,000 a

Each AJ~bama complex:,
maybe even each course, has its
own topography and character.

week just to play.golf. And that
was not being outlandish and it
wasn't playing every day."
The biggest price to pay for
moat golfers on' the trail is the
devilish work of Jones' designs.
Each of the 21 oourses has as
many as five te~ 1boxes, which,
theoretically, allowa both experts
and duffers to play a course fitting
their skill. One' hole at the 36-hole
Highland Oaki1complex in
Dothan - "the Peanut Capital of
the World" in ~~~~ far southeastern

But most have the same familiar
feel as you travel up a long drive·
. way to a· massive clubhouse that

provides country-dub amenities
and service.
Some golfers-including
thouSands from northern states

such as Minnesota, Michigan and
Ohio- get an early start on their
golf season by visiting on fly-anddrive weekend packages that
include chartered flights and

Nine montho later, after Jon~a
'
had died, Tom Gearhart was
aaked if his wife 'a opinion of
Jones had changed following his
deat~.

"Probably not," he aaid. "But
f e.lled him worse thinga than
that."
The trail's layout-each com·
plex but one is within 15 minutes
of an interstate highway and each,.
ia within a two-hour drive ,of the
next-allows for several traveling
strateJies.
You can base yourself in
Montgomery, as 1 did, and be
within an hour's drive of 144

1

,__ ,,0........

LPU TDur CHao ;I illllp _ . tile NIKI
' I 0

~

I:~!!

I

·;

I I -, '

three days of winter~golf rates in

late February. I paid $34 to walk
18 holes-plus another $10 or so
for an ~xtra nine or 18 each day..:.
~t. th'ree of the trail's eight com~
. plexes. The 2001 prices are slightly higher and vary by month.
The first people I met were,
of course, fellow Minnesotans: the
Gearharts, who booked a moteland-golf package from I-iu~tsville
to Mobile through th~ trail's central reservatiori service. The top
daily S'reens fee during the pesk
spring months of March and April
is $70 withou! taX, including a
cart.

Jones designed 3J9 courses
before he died in June at the age
of 93. The 21 on the trail vary
from sprawling 7,000-yard championohip coursea to elaborate parthree 'ohort' oourae1 i.t uvan of ·
the trail'o ei&amp;ht oiteo.
"We've playad ,.,If in
Arizona, in NoMh Carolina, aU
over," uid Tom Gearhart, who'•

..

-., · I
Montgomery, Cambrian J,Udge.. ,i . . , d ,
near (;reenville 40 minutes south
and Grand National near Auburn .
an hour east. You can stay in
either Dothan or Mobile, as
Hobbit Travel's i1y-and-d~~e
10lfers do, and spend three days ..
playing all 54 holeo at. Magnolia .. , .
Grove near Mobile or 36 h'll'li ~l '1
Highland Oaks near Dothan. ,. ·' ·
.
Or you can .make.youl- w.,Y.!!
up or down the trail, stopping at
barbecue jointa and $60 motels
along the way. The Gearharta'

..

''
•

•'t

corner- has I I tee boxes and
plays as far as 70 I yard a from the
championship teeo and as short as
435 yards from the front teeo.
Every golfer muot face numerous aand bunker., lakea, ~hea, :
undulating faitwaya and mauive
· greens that have aa many aa five
levels or compartments. The ease
or severit,Y of your putt del"'nda
on your ahqt-making skill aitd
where thi;;pin is placed that particular day. ,,·
.
During my day wi.th the
Gearha.rts, I bit a. ball from the
fairway u well as I pouibly can:
a ooarin~ 220-ylU'&lt;i ahot directly
toward tll~ pin on a ;reen shaped
like a mii'tant pear. The ball .
bounced within a few feet of the
hole, then trickled alowly back
down an unnoticed alope and
otopped i56 feet from ita deatina· . ,
lion, prlWlllf, in 11ty mind, what
J11111ne Gearhart had told me a

few holtearlier.
· '
" rt TNnt Jonea is a
"Ro
aadiat, ". 1ht Mid.

experiences in Huntsville,
j
Birmingham and Montgomery · ·
heIROd me decide where to play 'r'
.
.
'
the following daya.
.
'
' ,J•;
.I aaked Tom yearhart aboul .:
the Scottish-linka style Senator ,.
course at Capitol Hill~the
:-

••'

neweat of tho trail'i complexea '''"
and the first with a luxury resort '
(the Legends at Capitol Hill) on '
oite -he liad played the day .'
be~re.
·
. "It's h~rd. butthey're all , " .
,hard," he aaid. ":We're not gOQI! .
· er/ough golfera·to. play here on a ,
regular basis. It destroys my ep'
iight quick, but ir'a ao be,a~'tiful :.
that you really don't m.ind."

"

I

In other ,games involving
ranked teams on Tuesday, it
~vas No.3 Michigan State 51,
l'/o. 22 Wisconsin 47; No. 18
::;t. Joseph's 84, Massachus~tts
1)9; and No. 19 Syracuse 80,
Pittsburgh 69.
; A win by North Carolina·
~er N.C. State'on Wednesday
~ight would 'c)inch the No. I
~eed in the ACC tourney for
~he Tar Heels and snap Duke's
!fun of outright regular-season
~ties at four.
·
"We pretty much sav: this,
!game as a must-win, an&lt;! we
!didn't .get it," Duke forward
~lte Dunleavy u,id,
1 While the Terrapins (19-9,
-6) gained confiden'e from
he win, the mood in. the
uke lock~r room was one of
!concern.
~ Casey Sanden, a 6-11
:SophOit\OR who has been a
fm~or dioappointment so far
~n his career, will take over
~tnost of the inlide load with
)Boozer out.
.
• That's because Matt Chris:tensen, Duke's top fronrcourt
=r.serve all season, hill been
~idelined with sore knees.
: "Matt's thing kind · of
!depends on .the day, but he's
.. ltad a series of bad days. That
ltas been disheartening,"
:Krsyzewski said.
; Duke's depth also rook a hit
):arly in the season when 6-10
Nick Horvat~ injure_d ~is foot
~nd has missed ' 21 stn~ight
~ames. His return . is still
~ncertain.
. .
! Sanders was in tears after
the Maryland loss.
~ "If my team needs nie, chan
~·n be there for them," said
~at1ders, who picked up four
fouls in four minutes Thesd.1y
1ight and has averaged just
:fight minutes in 15 ACC
~am~s. "If that tak~s extra
:runmng, extra reps 111 prac~ice, whatever.
S 1tt

~

~fl , j

"

i: ·

ALABAMA'S

'

'I.

t· t,

.1.100.MI.4444
IJJIJJIJA I'IJiolf.tolfl

.'

'

' (j .'
'I

··

·i

'

.
.

Topl5
fram.PIIJe81

1

·'•

•

.

,,J&gt;?l•• MC&amp;pit&lt;:&gt;l H\ll.iHsl o~~id~i

•

\t

: More than 1,500 miles from
li'atrick Ewing's return to
t-lew York, Portland and San
~ntonio squared off in the
~lose race for supremacy in
the
• West.
·
~ In the first of four games
~etween the teams the rest of
the way, Rasheed Wallace
si:ored 22 points as the Trail
Blozers overcame a IS-point
4eficit to beat the Spurs 95-87
Tuesday night.
: Scottie Pippen, in his fourth
game back after elbow
s~trgery, had 20 points, nine
!'!'bounds and four assim as the
6lozers won for the second
straight night and opened a I
!12-game lead in the Pacific
Division. San Antonio fell I
1/2 games behind Utah in the
Midwest Division.
: In other NBA games, New
York defeated Seattle 101-92,
toronto beat Cleveland 10189, Miami downed Washington 103-95, Dallas edgedVanl:ouver 116-112 and Sacral,uento beat the Clippers 10693 in overtime.
; Wallace held Spurs leading
tcorerTim Duncan to 5-of- 18
$hooting.
) "I just couldn't knoc)&lt;. anyjhing down," said Duncan,
who finished below his 21.3f,oint average with 16.
,'Rasheed played some 'g ood
~efense, though. That's when
up to me to make a good
. pass."
~ Wallace was 'held to sevet1
~olnts in the fitst half by the
?-foot Duncan, who scored
lix.
' But with Portland trailing
~y 11 to start the third, Wallace
fank two free th~ws and hit
two turnaround JUmpets in
fhe fitst " three minutes to
~hi.trle the leail' to 119-41.' "
t He went on· to nail a 3j&gt;oiilter and another jumper as
J'ortland outscored the Spurs
~3-16 in the third.
: After the Blazers widened

It's

rental minivans.

Qthers, such as Tom and
Jeanne Gearhart of Grand
Rapids, Minn., hit the trail from
north to south on their way to
spend a· few weeks of winter on
the Gulf Coast or in !'lorida.
_ I booked a really low cyberfare from Minneapolis to Montgomery, Ala., on a national airline ·
to play in spring weather (75
degrees and sunny) for the final

NBA

SPRING TRAINING

Wallace leads Blazers past Big Hurt'$ back in the
$purs in key contest .. drawer with ChiSox

.. .
... "'

I

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

•

the margin to 81-73 on Steve points, and Vince Carter
Smith's 3-poimer with nine scored 32 for the Raptors. :
minutes to play, the Spurs
Peterson
made
seven
scored eight in a row to tie it. straight 3-poimers during the
The spurt included Derek ·second and third quarters. His
Anderson's free throw after · dunk gave Toronto, which has
W:""·
.... ce was dealt his NBA- won eight straight over Cleveleading 31st technical foul, land, a 16-pointlead early in
called when he argued after the fourth.
Arvydas Sabonis got called for . The Cavs closed within five
traveling.
with 2:32 remaining on Andre
But Wallace responded with Miller's 3-point play and two
two jump shots, and Pippen free throws, but Peterson
hit two 3-pointers to make it assisted on Carter's layup, and
91-83 with a minute left. .
Alvin_Williams' 3-pointer gave
Knic;k1 101, Sanies 92
Toronto a 10-point lead with
Ewing received a th ree- I: 19 left.
minut¢ standing ovation in his
Heat 103, Wizards 95
return to Madison Squar&lt;
Brian Grant scored· 26
darden.
.
points and Tim Hardaway
"I thought it was great what broke out of a scoring slump
the fans did," Ewing said. with 22 Tuesday night as
"We've had a love-hate reb;.~ Miami overcame an injury to
tionship.throughout the year{,~ Eddie Jorles.
but I think they . were appr~&lt;' The Heat, who won for the
dative of what I brought t1l' ' 12th time in 14 home gam.es,
the tabk every night. I shot a season-best 56.2 perthought they did a great job of cent.
..
showing their appreciation."
Jones left in the first quarter
Ewing made his first three with a strained left hamstring
shots and gn~bbed four early and didn't return. Jones doesrebounds, but didn't play well n't thittk the injury is serious
the rest of the way, exhibiting and expects to play against
many of the tnlits bad Philadelphia on Wednesday
hands, an increasingly incone night.
sistent jump shot, a couple of
Maveric;ks 116,
dribbles off his feet - that
Grizzlies 112
frustn~ted Knicks fans.
Dirk Nowitzki scored 31
· Allan Houston led New points as Dallas (36- 22) won at
York with 24 points, Man:us Vancouver to "move 14 games
Camby had 21 points and ~7 above .500 for the first time
. rebounds, and Latrell Sprewell since the 1987-88 season.
adcjed 21 points. Mark Jackson
Shareef
Abdur-Rahim
had nine points, 12 assists and scored 36 points a1 the Griz11 rebounds, while Glen Rice zlies lost their fourth straight.
scored 20.
·
Kings 106,
Ewing finished with ••12
Clippers 93, OT
points and five rebounds in ~2 · At Sacramento, Peja Stominutes for Seattle, which lest jakovic had 25 points and
its third stn~ight to · dropn to Vlade Divac added 24 points
. 500' (29-29) for the fitst time and 12 rebounds as the Kings
in more than a month . . scored the first 14 points in
' Rasha~ tewi~ 'led Se~ttle '' overti~e.
with 20 ~oints.
I:',
Jeff Mcinnis scored a careerRaptoro 101, Cavs 8·9
high 33 points for the ClipAt Toronto, Morris Peterson pers, who have lost five
!)lade seven 3-pointers ,l!!n straight games to the Kings.
route to a career-high , t9

l
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

any way I can," White said Posada was limited to desigEven frank Thomas admit- after his first workout with his naced hitter duties Tuesday
ted he aidn't come off well new team.
with the same problem.
during his six-day hiatus from
In Vero Beach, Fla., Grissom
Neither is expected to play
arrived at Dodgertown with a until ot least the Yankees' third
Chicago White Sox camp.
"I did look like a poster boy smile, somewhat unusual for exhibition game, Saturday
for greed over the weekend, Los Angeles outfielders these against the K.nsas City Roybut that is not the case," d ays.
a]s.
Thomas said Tuesday after
'Tm very happy to be here,"
"I really don't want to push
returning to camp in Tucson, Grissom said. " I remember it yet," Posada said.
Ariz. "I've never been greedy." how awesome it was for me to
Jeter took groundballs TucsThomas acknowledged that come to Dodger Stadium day, but did not throw or take
fans, w hose favor he regained when I first came up. There's a patting practice. He expects to
by hitting _318 last year with lot of history here, an out- resume throwing and hitting
43 homers and 143 RBis, &lt;tanding organization respect- late this weekprobably would turn on him: ed throughout baseball."
In Peoria, Ariz_, Tony •
" I extend my apologies to
Gary Sheffield, upset the Gwynn hit against a pitcher
those who were affected by Dodgers refused to extend his for the first time in eight
my absence," he said. "It was a co.ntract beyond 200~, n:'Inains months and one knee upetclbig distr:tction. I do want to in camp but also wants out, tion.
apologize ro my teammates preferably to the New York
Gwynn, who plared in a
and all Chicago White Sox Yankees, the Mets or Atlanta. career-low 36 games last seafans."
"We've been friends for a so n, went t-for-2 in San
Thomas. who returned on long time," Gr'issOm said. Diego's intrasquad game. Even
the mandatory reporting date "What he's got going on, I though he had trouble breakspecified by baseball's collec- have no idea."
ing out of the box his first attive bargaining agreem ent, is
At Fort Lauderdale, Fla., the bat and later got doubled off
due $9,927,000 in each of tl!e Baltimore Orioles said Albert second, he said it was a good
next six seasons; but only this Belle won't be m their lineup day.
.
year is really guaranteed.
for their spring opener against
"It feels good b ing out
"Frank Thomas has apolo- St. Louis because of a sore hip there again, a mce feeling
gized publicly for his remarks that has put his future with the when you go up there to the
about renegotiating his con- team in doubt.
plate, kind of settle in and try
tract, his delayed arrival in
While Belle will miss the to find it again," said Gwynn,
camp and the effect his words road trip to Jupiter, he is who's entering his 20th season
and actions may have had on scheduled to 'start in right field ' with the Padres.
our team and fans," White Sox the next day against the MinIn Fort Myers, Fla., 36-yearowner Jerry Reinsdorf said.
nesota Twins at Fort Laud- old Bret Saber hagen took
In Phoenix, Devon White erdale.
another step in his latest
says his days as an unhappy
Belle has been used in right comeback, throwing off a
camper are over following his field for all three intrasquad mound for the first time in six
trade fn;om Los Angeles to games, with mixed results. He months.
Milwaukee, which sent Mar- has hit the ball with authority,
"He WAS outstanding from
quis Grissom the Dodgers.
but continues to move poorly the first pitch to the last,"
White. was upset about a in the outfield and on the pitching coach Joe Kerrigan
lack of playing time with the basepa ths and hasn't attempted said. "Out of the 25 pitches he
Dodgers after he returned to slide, even in drills..
threw, he probably hit his spots
from a shoulder injury last seac
" I didn 't come here with dead on 20 times."
son. He didn't Want to play any preconceived nottons
Shoulder problems forced
behind Gary Sheffield, Tom about where Albert should be Saberhagen to sit oui the
Goodwin and Shawn Green with his hip. I think that's fair- entire 1996 season with Col·this ·year.
· 1
' •
' ly unte'sted waters for all- of ·orado· and , ~he 2000 · major
But if Milwaukee doesn't us," Ortoles manager Mike league season with B6ston.
make a trade, White figures to Hargrove said.
. But in 1998, he was 15-8 with
become a backup to Jeromy
At Tampa, Fla., the Yankees a 3.96 ERA, and in 1999 he
Burnitz, Jeffrey Hammonds said they'll open the spring was 10-6 with a 2.95 ERA,
and Geoff Jenkins_
seaso n without shortstop both with .t he Red Sox.
"1 understand we 'have three Derek Jeter or catcher Jorge
Last year, he was 0-1 in
young good players, superstars Posada .
seven minor league rehabilitaas £,.as I'm concerned, and I
One day after Jeter was tion starts, but n&lt;'yer pitched
don't
have
a
beef
in
backing
scratc
hed from an intrasquad for Boston. ·
"Every player on this tearti ing 3-for-19 front 3-point
them up and helping them with a stiff right shoulder,
comes to this school to play.! I ronge.
know it ·kills certain playlir~
Maryland lost four of five
on the team not to be able ,1o after the Duke loss pnjan. 27,
play. I just didn't want it ,tp but. have rebounded to win
happen like this."
..1
four in a row, including over
Point guard Jason Willian)s ranked teams Wake Forest,
also reinjured' his sore calfat\'d Oklahoma and the Blue Dcvwas limping by the end 9fthe ils.
.
game.
No.3 Michigan St. 51,
The Terrapins blew a 10:\
No. 22 Wisconsin 47
point lead a~Pi~st Duke in~~
Andre Hntson scored 13
The Daily Sentinel
' fiQal minute a month ago a[' points, and the Spartans (23Subscribe today • 992-2156
home, but got revenge in 3, 12-3) moved into a fimC:::ameton Indoor Stadium. ·•~' place tie with No. S.lllinois in
"We wanied to go out ther6~.· the Big Ten.
and be positive and play the
Kirk Penney had 13 points
way we know how and do all for .Wi"onsin (17 -9, 8-7),
. the right things and not which was looking for its first
worry about what happened unbeaten conference season
last ilriie,''' Maryland point,._ at home since 1950.The Badgu.ard Steve Blake said.
1 gers fought back from a 13·
Juan Dixon was the offen- point deficit midway through
sive and defensive hero for the- the second half to nuke it 47Terrapins, scoring 28· points 45 with just under five min'
·with 6w steals,
·:•. utes remaining, but they went
Lonny Baxter added 15 ' ·scoreless for more than four
points and 10 rebounds, while··' minutes.
Teren'e Morris had 13 points ·:!· No.18 St.Jo•eph'a 84,
and '12 rebounds as the Ter- . ·
Maa1achu1etts· 69
rapins dominated the boards "" Marvin O'Connor had 21
in wi11ning a1 .Duke for the , points and the Hawks (24-4,
second stn~ighr season. Dixon :· ~4-1) won their 10th straight
.had 31 here last year.
·
·· and clinched the Atlantic 10
Shane Battier led Duke ' :conference · regular-season
with 31 points in · his last title by rallying from·· a 16game in. Cameron, getting 19 'J!Oint halftime deficit.
in the fint half, but watched . Monty Mack had 15 points
Duke crumble in the second for the visiting Minutemen
half.
(13-13, 11-4), who were 6Duke led 60-51 "&lt;ith 15:20 for-30 from the field in the
left, but missed 25 of its first second half.
3! shou of the ·final half,
No. 19 Syracuse 80,
e
going more than eight minPittoburgh 69
.utes ·without a basket as
Allen Griffin had 14 points,
e
Maryland took over.
11 alsists and 10 rebounds in
e
Dixon's floater in the lane his final home game, and
wiih six minutes left gave the D~mone Brown had 2 1
e
Terrapin$ the (ead fo~good at points and 10 rebounds for
70-69,and he followe~vith a the . Orangemen (2 1-7, 9-6),
steal and ~up on Duke's wh'o took over sqle.possessinn
next trip down the floor.
of second place ·m the Htg
The Terrapins, who shot 53 East West Division with one·
percent in the second half, ga!ne left in the regular sea- ·
seale&lt;\ it from the foul . line, son.
tl!aking 10 of 11 in the final
Ricardo Grcc•r had 14
1:34.
points for Pittsburgh (14-11,
Duke's second half was its 6-9).
wotst of the seasut\, going 9Hmm IMPROWIE~T
Ill~;
l'MI•II
QHili j,)
Hlllll: I"I'RO\'HIE~T
for-37 from the field , includ~
1i

l

American League, National League.... .
Reds &amp;Indians.... we've got y9u covered!

2001 HOME IMPROVEMENT EDITION
will be here Thursday, March 15th

Supplement to:
The Daily Sentinel
Point Pleasant Register
Gallipolis Daily Tribune

.Don't Miss Out On This....

• Hardware
• Paint

• Construction

,,

·II ll£

Furniture
Carpet
Wallpaper
Insurance

IU:Hli9J I

tl£ lllj I

•

•
•

I*iii•

�Wednesday, February 28, 2001

Plla• a 4 ·The oany Sentinel

Apartment•
for Rent

440

3 Room Upatelrs Apt Ont Bed
room At 851 Stcona Avenue

Glltlpollo Dopoalt Rtqul od S •

Montht Lilli Ull t 11 Not In
eluc»d I.Ctpl Wa1tr CIIH Otbblt

or Judy At (7•01446 7323 [LI

Yl To Stt Up An Appo nt
mont.

bra

480 Space for Rent

350 Lots 6 Acreage

All.._.,.l
Announcement. GW.Way
L.oet a Found V.rct S.lee
and Wanl8d To Do Adt
Mull 88 Paid In AdWince

Ga a

TBIBUNE OEAQUNE

2 00 p m thl day belor.
the ed lito run Sunday a
Monday edniOn aoo p m
Friday
IENTINEt; QftAQUNE.

1

oo p m the day belor.

UO!

WEEKL~ GUARANTEED

WORK NG FOR THE GOVERN
MENT FROM HOME PART
TIME NO EXPERIENCE RE
OUIRED 1 800 7•8 57 6 E•t
X101

lha ad Ia to run

$1 HR FT+ BONUS
2pm ttpm

Sunday a Monclay edmon

100pmFrlday

BJQ"!IB DfAQUNI

a

daya beloN the ed 11 to
run by 4 30 p m s.turctay
a Monday edition- 4 30

Make A DIFFERENCE
Work Fo Conservative
Christ an 0 gan za iOns

Tfturedly
cha

• due to holldl •

ANNOUNCEMENTS

005

Peraonell

40

Giveaway

New Zealand abbls home
ralttc:t very gent e 740 9•9
7004

'

wo

k Schedu

es Fo

pllcanll Mull Bt Ga a County
Agta 1-1 21

And

Moot WIA E glb\ ty Rtqulra

menta
To App y Vlolt Our Ona Stop At
322 Second Avenue In Gall polls
o ca (7401446 10 a

GALLIPOLIS
AREA

Wo klo ca nveatment Act Se v
Ices Ga a County A 1 Funded

We offer you

(5011 Co. Match)
1 Week Paid vacation
E'ftry 8 t.llos
1 Pa~ Hoi days

green

A ea
(740)44114393

P east

eat

Losr en ld s per Pomeroy a ea
Solid black m nature schnauzer
ve y I endly ed colla It found
contact B en o Tamml Ze kle

740-992 5151 0 740-992 2136
STOLEN Olde Slack Male And
Young Female Chocolate La
bradors F Otrl U arl WV A ea

Duty (A I Posltlono Raqulro 1
Year minimum Exper ence) locel
lnttrv tw8 Ava able Contact

Lloa At [614)846 8388 Pit tnt
Ca

e MediCI:t-seMce&amp;

SECURITY
aeeo HR
Tho Wac:kenhut Corp to Racruit
ng For SovtriiPoalttons Mull
.Ha,.GED OrHS ~
Please App~ At James M Gavin
Powe Plant Stoll Ro ... 7 0 Call
Capt Evano At (740)925-3010
EOE MIFIHN
Shea:r Fan IIY Bar Nttdl Dane
No Exper tnce Ntceuary

era

WIt Train
(304)785 7828
(304)273-0520 Uk tar 81111
Spr ng I• just a ound the corner
Spring Into action w tl'l T1ndtm
T anspo t Corp OTR •a on11

flatbed M en gon C ty IN Call to
doyt 800 551 9057 ext t•o
www tanc:l com
STAY HOilE/WORK ONLINE
$500 $7000 month PT FT Com
p eta tralnln!i F tt lntormallon
www c e8tlme com To f 11 1
866 B73 3683

laaued by tho Onto DaRt ol Edu

e red E•porlorteo ao a cnltl ttsca
GIRLS EARN S90+ hour anytime
on your compute Adull lnlt net
video chat h tp /cams voyeu

bus com 1 888-1157 9944 o free
Government Jobs $1 00
$33 00 per hour potentia Pad
T a n ng Fu Benet ts For mo t
inlo matlon ca ca I 888 674
9 50 oxt 3234

GROW NG BUSINESS NEEDS
HELP! ? Work from home/ mal
orade E Commerce $522~/week
PT $1000 $4000/wk FT 800 921
8538 www dream2bl ee com

off ca prater td Appllcanla mual
a so have the ab llty to bl bonded
and to prov dt their 'OWn transpor
tat on SubmitiiHe of lnlerHt re
aume 3 era ence&amp; and copy of
curren cense to John Conatan
10 Super ntendent eo7 Alchland
Avenue Suite 108 Athena Qnlo
45701 Appllcat on dead nt Is

Apr 5 2001 Tho AMESC 1 and
Equa Opportun ty Employor/Pro
vide

per ence needed au ck COL
t aln ng p og am available Ea n
$38 000 -+ s year 5 STAR
800 260 0294 expe anced d v
e a hold ng C as A ca 1 800

ABSOLUTELY FREE INFO
Internet users wanted
$2000-15000/mo
www e-commb z net

6/0 I Equal

Mil C eek 1 Mile Past
Course 8am-olpm

Jobs

Toys Jewe y wood Sewing

'JW&gt;Ing Great Payl CALL 1 800
795-o380 Ext 20 (24hn;J
AttentiOn
Work From Home

Go t

$1 20(). $5 000/mo.
1 877 552 1054
ATTENTION I
WORK FROM HOME
ea n 1.1' to $25 QO-S75 00/llr PT/

FT
MAL ORDER
Call tol"lree
1 B77 965-6739
ATTENTION
Ea. n On ne Income

SBOO- $7500/montn
1 800-784-8558

www pcpays com

AVON! All Arua To Buy or Se
Shirley Spears 304-675-1429

Pt Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

v

Mason Coun SpeC al Olymp ca
Yard Sa e March 2 3 Fort Randolpll ,_,.... Community Cent"

80

Auction
and Flee Market

Babysitte needed n my home
refef'ences rtqu red call 740-992

9197 uk 1o&lt; Denise
Bates B 01 Amusement Co 1

look ng tor lnd~ dua 1 to Uavel tor
the 2001 aaaaon Must bt at
eaat 18 Yfl Contact ua at 740-

ZM-2950
CAREER OPPORTUNITY! Earn
excellent ncome Eaay elalma
proctsaing Full training Homt

Ca Us Today Fo An nterv~ewl

v sa

a mow ng c ew Expe ence
work ng n he fie d of dave op
menta d sab lilies helpfu
00
$1 25 hr depancl ng upon e)(pe I
ence Submit resume or appl ca
lion by Ma ch 6 2001 to Meigs
lndust res Bo)( 307 Syracuse

se

NEEDED 31 people to

~~

wo k $25 S751hour Free Oeta s
W~ITraln www91tsuccesscom

PARENTS DREAM! Stoy Homt
Ea n Money Sel yaur own houra
Train ng
Prov dtd
Visit

www homewithlds com
Pa~

t me daenlng job In Pomeroy
area alto need lawn Cll'l worker
Stnd resume to B W J1n tor a

Servtct 145 Lkn ng Farm Ad Mt
Oral&gt; OH 4518ol

Person to tllr down hou&amp;t ror
mallftl~

740-112 !5851

185 On o I Woot Virgin 1 30'
77:1-5785 Or 304-77:1-&amp;.1&lt;17
Rlvtrtldt Auct on Barn

Sill

Evory Satu day Night at Sp m
Auctlonee

Raymond Johnaon

(740)2~989

90

Wanted to Buy

Gellpol~

7--

E.MPl.OYMf fJ f
SffWICFS

110

D I1VIn wanted tlpllrltr'ICI pre
t.rred drug tcreen rt(lu red ctll

740-456-5363 or 1 1100-118&amp;-9556

Dr voro FRANKLIN COLLEGE
NOW TRA NINGIII NO EXPERI
ENCE •38k tot yur of'u I btnotlll
•Mod cal •01 K •14 day COL
Ita n ng

Abooluto Top Do lor U S Sllvor
Gold Colno ProoiHII D amondo
Gold Ringo
u S Currancy
M TS Coln Shop 151 Sooond
-

-

Help Wanted

11500 WEEKLY! Work F om
Home P oceaalng VISAJMAS

TERCARD lnv Ill 01111 $2 Per lnv tat on! No Experience Nttelldl
Malt iala Supplied! Friday Pay

- · t 1100-280-6609
S2 000 WIEKLYI

Ma

b achuresl Satlafact on
ar
anteldl Poe age &amp; Supp 11 p o

vldad Ruoh Se 1 Mdreued
Siamped Envelopal G CO DEPT
! Bo1 t•38 ANTIOCH TN
370 11 1438 Stott mmtd lteiy

•Tu on relmbu 11men If

qualllod Co

t 888 545 8505

E•perlenctCI dr

vera call 800

856-2353
D lvo 1 ONLINE APPLICA
TIONS Find tho boat drlv ng )obi
o stan a high pay "'l ClrHr now
Our plactmant p otesa ana 1 will
make and ng your job easy 877
&amp;93 2086 www hookup eom dn

150

Poatal JODI l4e 323 00 yr Now

$15-Soi!!IH 'I Eatlbllollod c o ltlkl ptop e Training IDrov dtd

Muot own PC 1 800 t35 1311 x
206
Proloto,_ Poalllona
Ge llpotlo Dovolopmont C.ntar an
ICFIMR II rocru•ng P&lt;QVIdorl
lorprolloalonaldtnll tor lito porlod 07/01/2001

0013012003

School•
lnatructlon

BLACKSTONE
PARALEGAL
STUDIES Homo study app ovod
allordable comp ehena 111 egat

t aln ng a nee 1890 FREE Cata
lOg 1100-826 &amp;228 ~"· ~0 Bo•
70 449 Da 11 TX 78370 NA o
httpJiwww btaclcot.-w com
BLACKSTONE
PARALEGAL
STUDIES Home Study Ap
proved Allordab t comprehtn

olvt legal training llnco litO
FREE C:ota og eoo 121 922e
wrltt PO SO• 701.Wt Dalla. TX
7&amp;370 NA or http //www bllcklto-

nallwcom

Proctulna Cf1 m1 from home

Dollar (304)e7S.

Bualneaa
Training

Galtlpoll ca- Cottogo
[Ca eers Close To Homo)
Cat TOdayl740-448 4367
1 800 214-M52
Reg 190-05-12748

OWN A COMPUTER? Put It to

CLAIMS PROCESSOR Procell
ell rna from 1tomo $20.$40/h po
tontllt Fu !raining Comp,..r w/
modom roqu rod CALL NOW 1
IJ88.5SH 187 oxt. &amp;42

Top

140

30 ba

by Apr 15th I B and new rust
patented I ost 23 bs n 1 monlhl
800 570 9528 o www bsl m4
lfecom

Tlte Put&gt; k: &amp; Dultro 0,. Pltco

Dancers

t-88&amp;-237-6342 E1L 2211

OhiO 45779

B00-4»-35e0at J.illll

Rick Ptarton Auct on Company
full 1 mt auctlonet complttt
auction
11rv ct
Llcenlld

\

diploma or GED Abl ty to supe

""1-800-772 59330&gt;1 2070

8rtclgo (740)888-22e6

1

WI 810 offtr
•Medica Blnafits
•Pa d Holidays/ Vaca lana

Htl thea 1 Developmtnll tol

LOti Glry
P octorvllt
JUII Aero ..
3111 Strttt

You can ea n up 10 $711lour and
week y bc:lnuseal

Flex ble schedu e depend ng
upon awn care needs Exper
ence w lh ope anon care and e
pal of wnoua mowing equipment
Val d dr va s license high school

AUCTION Every Satu day Spm
1\'uckloado 01 Now &amp; Ulld ltemo
Ooztnl I Caat
Bow1n Auct onttr
Oh o Fill Ma kit
Huntington WV

J

PC roqulrtd Call Phyllc an 6

LAWN CREW SUPERV SOR
MARCH OCTOBER

h ring No txperitnc ...pald lraln
1ng· gr111 benefits 0111 7 daya

Frt~m Severa St1111 St ling To

Employe&lt;

lnloCialon s plaastd to
announce tha we have lddtd a
new ca can e a.t our ocatton In
Gal polis Oh o

$18 35+ h
888 726 9083
•1701 7am 7pm CST

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Oppo~unlty

WE HAVE EXAANDEDI

APPL CAT ON AND EXAM N

An (lue/ Mov ng Sale Kay Betz
Has MoOJed She I&amp; Sal 011 AI
Fu n lura And Antiques House
hod Goods Lawn And Ga den
March 2 3 4 Ins de Salt At 1S52

Ful t mt
Apply In
At The Holiday Inn

ers 1cense and th ee vea s goOd
d OJ ng requ red Hours 7am 3pm
M TH 12 6pm Fr day Sa ary
S10 OO!hr E)(Ctllant Bene t Pack
age Sand Resume To Cat:: a
Baker Buckeye Community Serv
ces PO Bo)( R04 Jackaon OH
45640 Dead n\1 ror IPI:II eanta 31

95B 2353

ASSEMBLY AT HOIIEII Cralts

to-

EARN YOUR OOI;LEII! DEGREE
QUICKLY bochotora Muttra
Doctorate by ccrrtspondenc•
baud upon prior education and
ahort atudy courte For FAEE In

!ormation booklot phono CAM
BR DGE STATE UNIVERSITY 1
1100-MI-8311

GID

Gat ycu1 H&amp; oquiVItncy dlptome
wth our uty hOrnl study couru
1-800-588-2183 axt 310

COL

~alnlng

Great pay $34 0001

yr year plus fu I benelitl &amp; pad
trainlniJ Orlvt 1 balld n Mid
weal 1 177 230 6002 Sunday
8am 4pm Monday 7am 6pm

1\lt-Fri7........
EARN $25 000 TO 150 000 y
Medica Insurance B I ng Need
ecJ lmmtd a 11yl Home compute
needed FREE lnle net 1 BOO

29 4683 Doptf 109
Experienced ~utomot OJt Counte
Salta Pt son Send Reaum11 To
PC2• 200 Main St ttt Po nt

Ptelllnt. wv 25550

INOT1CEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
tcommtndl that you do bul
n11a w th people you know and
NOT to nnd money though the
mall unt you have lnv11 gateQ

lito otltrlng

The .,.., of P"Qflnlonll NrVIc
t1 are Phlrmedl~ Pryclllatrtot
Guarclllnohlp Pll)rllelan Spacial
11 (On Col) Language eo.otop.
mont SpoelaH1t (Speech And Au
dlology)

Houseclean ng Honllt And De
pen dab 1 Rtasonab 1 Ratti

Allaervlcea equlred 1 1 part
t mt/ln ermltent In eraattd per

Mount I

oon .. partlto onould outlmlt a Itt

Serv ce Tor, Trim Aemova
S ump Grind ng Free E1tlmatt1
Fu y lnaurtd Worktrt Comp

tt ot 1nttnt togot11or with appropriate llcen11 c.rtlflcatlon 01 oth
1 crwdentlal lnformadon and IB
ary requ reman s or fee acnt&lt;~ull

to

Frtt Eat matH Have Rtltront:tl
[740)256--1227

Tr•• Strv ce Thl rr..
P or,,. ont 1 Bucket Truck

Bldwot On~ Cal &amp; SIVI t 80().
1138 9588 (740)3118-9841 Ow,.,
Rk:lc Mount

ab t/ GoOd
21-

Crt~

t -(88B) 270

2500 0~ o Avtnuo
Gal pols OH 45631
PllonoNo (7•0)4•8-1&amp;42
Fax No (740)«&amp;- 341
TDD (740)446-2958
Sk lied Nun ng Fee llty &amp;liking
an LPN or AN Jo part I mt pOll
tlon Wt have an: a11cel ent Sur
vey h s1ory and a very stable staff
Th a 1 an exct ent opportun IY
lor the rlghl cand dale for peraon
al cmd p ole11 onal growth Submit uume o Aockap ngs Raha
b ta on Center 38 "!9 Rock
sp lngs Road Pomeroy Ohio
~5789 8 tn ca a G eenno AN
D re~tor of Nu aing. EQUAL OP

HR PT FT

www BeBossFree com

Attan ton WORK FROM HCME
up to $25 Cl0-$75 OOJ!I PT FT
MAIL ORDER eel toll f ae 1 877
965 6739
Earn $500 o $900 per week n
your bathrobe I 1 ppers Great
oppo tunlty to secure you lulu 1
Low nves ment 1 800 272 0193
aweaomea nlng com
Earn $90 000 VEARLV epair ng
NOT replac ng Long cracks In
ndsh eldt Free v deo t 800

w

B28-8523 US/Can4da wwwgluo
mechanix com
come potential No e~~:pe renee
necessa y Free nformatlon &amp;

startup com
Start Your Sus neu Today
Prime Shopp ng Cente Space
Ava lab t At Affordable Rate

Spr ng Valloy P aza Call 740-4450101
WORK FROM HOME
Ea n
$1500 p t to $5000 lit month II
CALL TOOAY 1 800 895 0219 or

www world omhome247 com

230

Profeaalonal
Servlcea

SS$ NEED CASH?? WE pay
cash fa reman ng payments on
Property So d Mo lgages .Annul
t as! St tlementst mmtd ate
Quotes!! Nobody beats ou p ic
es Na onal Cant act Buye s
(BOO) 4BO 0731 eM! 01 www na
t onalcon a.ctbuye s com

$$$NEED A LOAN? Try debt
conaol dat on I Cut pay menta Lip
o 60% Same day app ova I 1

Mlnutu From HMC
Call
(740)4.1 0270 Plflll LtiVI

Mollllgo
W II POMIIWIIh HOUIII lta era
And AV 1 Contact Ron AI

(740).WI 0151 o 339 08&amp;0 II
NoA_L_M_

•

S550
(513)704- 9703
530t&gt;m

Afltr

COl'; In Town 2 BR HouM large
LR DR Ut ty Room Perfect for
sma 1 family $400 month $300
depas t
Rete ence Check

(740)446 4782 For Salt 0

Trade
Mt Vernon Avtnut 4 Bed oom
Houu New gaa Furnace cent al
A I nit or Ntw y Pain ad N ce
K tchtn Appllancea Baaement
Ccwe ed Pat o Prieta 50 s

13041882 2447 (304)882 2405

(740)448 9313 co between 5
and spm lor March 3 d appoint
ment
Gal po 1 750 3rd Ave $180
Month 1 BR t Bath F amo
Mouse Gsa Heat No Ptta Wtt

kendo/ N ghll (740)446-«114
Gal polio 752 3rd Avenue $375
Month 3 Bed oom
Bath Frame
Hou&amp;e Gas Heal No Pet&amp; Wee

konde N ghts (740)448-661•
Newl~

Newly ramodtltd country homo w
4 bedrooms 1 bathroom tltct ic
hea pump 2 ca ga age big yard

on approximately 1 acre lot oca
ad n Easte n 0 at let Must 111
to app ec ate! $72 000 Call to

Ca peted 2 Bed oom un
fu n shed Home With Oa age

320 Moblla Homea
lor Sale
14)(70 Southe n 0 eam f H D~
very free Se up only $9995 1

868 92B 3426
1968 12165 Buddy ""!lent

1774 Chlatnut By Ow,.r lltJIIt In
1117 3 llldroom Tax Abltomont
Till 2013 lit 100 00 [740)448
2t14

cond tion pease ca I 740 247
4700 W n erws ed
1975 Nashua 12x65 2 Bedroom
1 Bath Furnished Excellent

etOtl

2 8 Acru Mtnutu From Town
on Paved Rood Water And

tfflcltnt hOmo t 112 year
old 3 SA with Wltk In ctoaoto All
_... .,, large 1&amp;00 oq toot wttli
EM~GY

•ttachtd gar1ge Central neat

e---

II!OiirdOOf&amp; and wtndowl 1 11,.
apare
acrts proporty Appro• 15 mllto
lOUth ot Ge ttpolll Oil SA 141
mooo (740)37t-al7

d yers el ige a ora
anges Skaggs App ances 78

V no Stoat Call 7•o 446 7398
1 881-&amp;IB 0128
Kanmo e Washer 70 Se Its
Heavy Duty E)(ctllen Cond 1on

SHJO DBO (740 44114515
Ktnmo e WP May ag Wuhtr&amp;

SIS each Lote M9dt

dgoa re
D yo $75 Otne D ors $80
each AI white (740)448-'80156
Mollohan Ca pels &amp; Fu n tu 1
New 2 p ece llv ngroom Su It

$299 Rtc lntr St99 Sale on
Ca pat In Stoct&lt; 200 C a k Chape
Road Portar Ohio (740)3&amp;8 0173

Tappan HI E! c ency 90% Gas
Fu naces 0 Fu nacas 2 Seer
Hea Pump &amp; A r Cond on ng
Syattma Free 8 Yur Wa an
Benne ta Heating &amp; Cool ng

v

800 872 5967 wwwoiVb com/ban
nett

SAVEl

SAVEl

SAVEl

Hoe

Pumps l P I Natu a1 Gat Fur
naces I You Oon 1 Cal Us We

Both Loael (740)448 6308 &amp;
BOil-29 t 0098
Sawm II $3 795 New Supe Lum
be mate 2000 a ger capac as
ma a options Manufactu e of
sawm I a edge a and sk ddt s

NORWOOD INDUSTR ES 252
Sonw I Dr ve Buffalo NV 1422S

FREE tnlo mat on 1 800 578
1363 EXT 200 U

95 Redman 14x52: for aa eo

ont 740.949-3344

Cond on S7 ooo Call (7&lt;10)256
1156

1991 Mob e Home 2 Bed oom t

(304)675 5477

8B5 3956

992 14•80 3 BR 2 Bath 6 6
•cres 01 Land Pond Barn And

440

1996 14lt70 3 Bedroom 2 Bath
C a.yton Legend V nyl Sid ng
Sh ng e Roar The mo Pane
W ndows Excellent Condit on
$20 000 (304)675 612

200
14 W de Fee Setup &amp;
Delve y Maytag Appliances

At

2001 Doublew de F 11 Setup &amp;
Del very Maytag Appliances In
eluded $31 900 At F aetwood

two bat11 Includes shed
Takt over pay
be moved

anytme

Down De

I ve y and setup paid by Factory

Mull Sel 15•80
Make 2 Peymento &amp; Movo tnl
1 1100-e&amp;t-11777
Now 14 It !'Ida Sol9t down on y
Stlfl ptr mon cal now 1 800

$150 F eeze $150 Nco Wash
ar &amp; 0 ye Set $300 All Ap
pllances Gua anteed Skaggs
Appl ances 76 V ne S reel

992 2218

Building
Supplies

Rive ne Ant ques

(740)446-2602

on SA

124 E Po-

AKC Black Female Lab 12 wka
o d Had ahots and wormed call

La ge Col act on of Antique Pock

AKC German Shepherd Pupp es
So d White And S lver Sab es
Excellent
Tempe menl A.nd

2nd Ave phone (740)448- 815

540 Mlacellaneous
Merchandlae
720 Second Avenue 1 Bed oom
Upsta ra Apartment S300 +De
pos Wata Sewe li ash Pad

(740)44 5216 (Day) (740)446
0101 (Even ngs)
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK
SON ESTATES 52 Wes wood

dKioo $100 23Ch Cobra Cam 89
ease E)(Cittent Condl on Ex X

Tala $50 4 IROC Camaro
Whee s $100 (740)24IHI774

ALL STEEL BUILD NG New up

2568 EQua Hous ng Oppo~unity

$9 9BO 50x100X14 was $35 BOO

Furnlslltd 2 &amp; 3 Room Apart
man 1 C tan No Pets No Smok

now $17 990 80)(125)(14 was
$51 500 now $34 990 1 800 241!

Furnished

Ge 1a Manor Apartmtnta Now
Accept ng Application&amp; Fo 1 BA
HUD Subtld zed Ape tmenta Fo

Full B ooded Oobermans 5 Fe
mae 3 Males and 1 Rtd Mae 5

wks o d (740)446-3576

570

Musical
Instruments

Plano Fo Sa e $100 (304)882
2558

www np etsans com
COMPUTERS WE FINANCE
DELL COMPUTERS! Even with
leas than pe reel c ld II 1 800
477 9016 Codo ACe www orne
IOiutlonl com

630

White [740)386-8358

Polled Htrtford Mondey March

5th 8 30pm At Tht Now Oak

11tg AQHA1e88
153' H H World Champion lin
p tnlvt Btoodlne NIN Wclollrn
P tiiUrt Halter lllrrola Stond
"'l Stud FH 1250 [304)875
6440

N ct 1 Bedroom APflrtmtntl For

$181188 00 3 Bedn&gt;o•1, 2 lilt~ 1
e11m_.170

Rent [740)44e-98t1

Utility Billa Getting Moot Of Your
Paychockt con (,.0)44e-3093
For 'rbUf NIW Homo 1bday

bedroom unturnlollld apartment

330 Farm• for Sale
Form !'!Quae Bllutltu ly Romotcl
Od 2883 SQUill Felt t 7 Acrao
Pond In gtound Poor Several
Barn• Gai'IIQI Fru t TrHa C 011

$215 000 [740)445-

4230

340 Bualne11 end
Build InaChurch Building with Parsonage
tor salt loollld In Point Plll..,t
Good Neighborhood Roductd
$65 000 (304)875 lite

Lot. II AcrNge

t 6 2 acrt building lots 1ur

veyld water I tltctt c l\llillab e
septic P e approved doublewlde
- t , c l $8 liS 6 up 7•0 742

311.

No th Thlrtl Mlddloport o,. bod
raom fu nlahtd ll'lrtmen1

J

on1

depot t I rtftrencea no !Pill

740-Uli.OIU

Now Taking App lcattono
Wttl

a

35

ledroom TownhOUII

Aportmtnto lnc)uooa Wattr
:::~ Tilth $3&amp;0/Mo 740

Ono bedroom apanmont &amp; a btd
room motMit nome no poll 740
1182 58S8
One Bedroom Apa tmtnt On 1,1
AOJtnut Ga 1:10 1 W11her/ O,y

e Hook up $270/mo P uo Dt
post Watt Paid (7&lt;10)448-4043
Aita&lt;e oopm
Ta a Towl]houae Apartments
v.,~ SpaciOUI 2 Bedrooms 2'

F oors CA 1 112 Bath Fully

car

PIIA• c0m t BOO-tJoWot&lt;l27

l'hwoOd For

IIIIo (740)38&amp;82t7[740)38&amp;-8264

FLORIDA MARCO IS~AND En
Joy tnt 1\'op cat Paradlll of
beach" and relaxation Beach
front condol or home• FOf rent/

ollto Ctrltu y 21 tot Soutnarn
1\'uot
1 100 255 &amp;487
or
wwwcatmarco COil'
FIIEE DIAECTV SYSTEM nc ud
ng prort,tlon nalallat on Ca If
dttallt over 225 c~onnto Loool
nttworko available 886 575
1)00
FREE Grant Mo,.y &amp; AHI natlvo
Federal Fund ng Education
Houa ng
Purchut/Rtpal 1
Oebta
Bu11n111
nvento a

Wrl1ero Art 111 Guarontttd t
Bee 51 277~ or VfWW grants dOt

e

comoom

Grub!&gt; 1 Plono Tun "'l &amp; Rtpalre
Problema? Nood Tuned? Co I Tnt
p ... 01 740-44e.4525

peted Adult Poo &amp; 81by Poo

Independent Harballfe Dlatr bUtor

Pat o Start $385 Mo No Pttl
lease Plus Secu ty Oepoall At
nutred Doya 740 44e 3•8
Even ngs 740 367 0502 740
448.0101

Call For Product Or Opportunity
('140)441-1982

3 Acrtl Bottom ol hI on lght on
Rodman A dge Rd (30•)675

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Rtpolred Ntw &amp; Rtllullt n Stock
Cel Ron Evano t 1100-537 9526

lWin A verTowe s now accepft1'11
Crown City A •a

app !cottons lOr 1 BR
HUD oublldiltd opt to oldor!y
end d llbllc1 EOH (:la.)e756679
Upstalra Ap11r menr 3 Rooms No
Pets Wa1er Paid
GaHipolls

VICinity (740)38a 1100

Eng nt $300 F be G aan uck
Tappe

to

a Dodge yea s 77 92

Yea Old S200 (740)446-2647

750 Boats &amp; Motors
lor Sale

New &amp; Used Eltctr c And Gil
Furnacea Fo Salt Ca Fo S z
11
lnatallatlon
AOJa lab a

(740) ••, e3fMI 1 1100-291 0098

790

Pealed B\J Sale 50 Angus 10

UPETRX COM Save up to 50'!1
on All pet mtdlcatlona and aup
plltl tnoludlng Htartgard ntor
ctptor Front lno mo til FREE
SHIPPIIo(G Order on nt www !1

New

450 Fo eman 4)(4 Electric Sh fl 4
wtlae er 1300 m es Exce lent
Cond on $4900 6 2 L er Diesel

) o ur k1ds :u

Boyd Beef Cattle Ptrlormance

port From $27:1-1335 Call 740
e82 5084 EQUII Houolng Oppor
Modorn 1 Bod oom Aportmtnt
Pho,. (740)448-0310

parade of cl an p10 1
1

ou

K

at th
d I ve
t lh e

ba1quet The1c s go1 g to be
lot of spec• I fecli1 g
A 1d also takmg tc m out
that you s g01 •g to go to
war Tliomas satd N oth 1 g
th1s ballclub wtll do \Ill sur
pme me If were back t he1e
m two weeks wah a nattonal
champ10 1Sh p
ba er
t
wouldn t surpr se 11e
Tuesdays wm was also v n

d1catton for Thomas h1s staff
and h1s team Smce he took
over the rems of the program
Rm Grande has been under
the watchful eye of the NAIA
spendmg three seasons on pro
banon foe vwlat ons that
occurred pr or to Thon1as
bemg named head coach
Dur ng that span the R ed
n en have had some close calls
m the poscseaso 1 but have
co 1 e t p short of reach 1 g the
natloBal tot rnamcnt
For student

s

a lt M r

Kr~1scher tt IS also VII

a ttl b lte

I

to h1

dc t

&lt;1

sp t t a I

tc 1 1 uno 1 Ktt'Isch r

o

1e

to R1o G an de m t of Lex1 •g
to 1 H1gh School as
top
ecru t vtth loads of p tel ual
o I~ to be sdd 1 J v th
healt con !tnon char took h 1
fro 1 the g ne he love I Ho
ever Kretschcr has stayed the
comse "'d the look o 1 I s
f.1ce os he cut dow1 h s sha~
of the let last mght vas pr ce
less
The guys respect M rc as a
coach Thomas sa1d And
there ;'lren t very many stt deJ t
asSistants m the country that

been m It He knows the
game He s been stable at that
posmo 1
Thonus also praJsed ass1sta 1t
coach Ken French who JOI Jed
the staff last seaso1 and helped
nf se enthus asm and a fresh
outlook Ito the program
Kel I y and I I ve gelled so
vel! together that almost at
t1 nes we re th1 1k 1 g the SJ I 1e
thoughts
Tl o as
sa d
Ke 11y has b e1
1bel ev ble
all )e r It be&lt;
u b c
ble tea
tC t t o 1 tl '
co ch 1 g staff
tl o t;h the
pla)ets
Be fmc Tl 01 left he g) 1
I cl b to
Ia ) " ht h
e U ) th
\I
to a or tl
v cto )

r told then
sa~cl

IJO) It I c
t k t 'o
d Tit rs I ) th n g

I told th

0

~

lays oiT
con 1 1g
;t 1 i
' re
g ty
go g to ge t
e
ed fo
11gs b1 t dm t tl mk al out
the at o I tu r 1 e t oak
t n at d enJoy e ch o th er
A1 d
he 1 ve get out
there I 1 go mg to enJ OY t
be ause you do 1 t k o v vhen
you re go 1g to get back

you can say that about He s

1 oflno Qu It ng 3 Yea 0 d Mare
He f Paint &amp; Ha f A ablan 8 own

Ntw doublt wldl 3 br 2 ba
uae 00 down only $285 po
mon call now t -800-ltt em
Naw FIHtwOOd t•l70 SIS 999 00
3 Bedroom 2 Bath 1 877 777
.,70

It

$5000 (740)256-1329

5 Yaar Old Appa oooa Gu lng
Good Tra Horae 5 Ytar 0 ~ Pa

(eoB)7113-e418

tunltlts

n L ch as at 1) uti
to lend ) o r tcan

Llvaatock

DIRECTV t 11 Installation 5200
Cllh bock 600 263-28ol0

apartment&amp; 11 V rage ManOJ end
A Vlflldt Apartmtntl In M dd 1

999 Honda 450 ForemanS 4x4
Lass Than 400 M les B gh Red
E11cellent Cond ton Ha d y Used

E~~:celent Service

Fie- F na"""'l Available
Homt ICommere a Unlrs
FREE Color Catalog
Call TOday 1 801H142-1310

pee al

740.949 3061 call IIIIer 3pm

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

AMAZINGLY LOW PRICES
WOLFF TANNING BEDS
Buy Factory D tot

t

at your alma n ate1 rl at ) Ot ve
sl ve I for fo '1 yc
11 etc 01e all k 1 ds f c 1 o
tloJSgotlg 1 leI( I It
ptobably gm1g to l1 t

994 Honda 200 Four Trax $800

9640

lng Rolorences &amp; Deposit Re
(740)448-1518

take your te m out

suucture (740)245-5&lt;108

48 Inch Big Screen TV RCA
$800 (740)«8-2095
to 50% om P a engineered with
pans 40IC601110 was$ 6500 now

For rent one bed oom furnished
apa trnent n Middleport ca 740

(740)448-4759

1976 Slltronlx Comancht 0 104
Mlc 0 lg Manual Excellent Con

0 ive !rom $297 o $383 Wa k to
shop &amp; mo\1 es ..call 7~0 ~46

742 7403 Apa tment home and
tra e enta s Commarc a store
trontl ava ab e tor lease vaca.n
etas now

PatriOt OH 1 mile off Patriot Ad

me oy 740 992 2526 or 740 992
539 Russ Moore owner
at Watches Good Cond lion 422

from PageBl

s finally h s cit b th It w1ll
head to Po nt Lookout Mo
for the national tourna 1 e 1t
It mea 1s a lot T ho 11'\S
sa1d after Tuesdays ga me
Gomg to a 1at o a! tm r a
nent as part of any ballclub ts
a spec al feel g Be• g ble to

4 loK Tar le Pupp as 11 weeks
old Had f rat shots $50 each
Monroe Yoder 1 47 Burnena Ad
Buy or sal

Carter

(740)662 7512

Peta for Sale

G ICIOUI V ng 1 In~ 2 bedroom

111180

ve ado ShO Bed V6 Aulo
Ova d ve Loaded $6600 Cays
(740 245 !050
EOJen ngs

992 Chevy 4114 Clean &amp; EJCce
ant Cond 110n $8500 740)256

B00-59t-em

NIW 18 It Wdt 549t Ptr mon
only 1270 par mon call now 1

d ve Sho t Bed $6895 92 S

730 Vans &amp; 4·WDs

Sporting
Goods

1124 East Man

Bedroom Furn shed Apartment
Centra Haa &amp; A Cond ton ng
Carpe Throughout Ott Street
Pa king Quiet &amp; Close To Gro
eery
Sto e
Adults
Only

Ut 1 till

550

94 GMC E• ended Cab 2 Wheel
Drive Loaded 305 Au o OOJe

329

1 and 2 bedroom apartments lu
n shed and unfu n shtd secur ty
deposit requ red no pe1s 740

qu rtd

S21 95 Per 100 1 200 PS
$37 00 Pe 100 All Brass Com
press~n F n nga n StoCk
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson Ohio 1 BOO 537 952B

Cava L vtatock Auction AA
Highway May.avllla KV For Mo e
nfo matlon Conlact Charla Boyd

148000 (740)258-1009

(740)448-080S

free 1 888

Couch and Chair Good Condl
tlon phona (304)e7&amp;-3132

52 Acres

994 Dodge Daka a 4)(4 E)(ttnd
eel Cab 3 Inch L ft Loaded New
Pa nt Whee s And T as

CONSULTATION Benet Team

~ derly And Hand ooppod EQual
HOUIIng Opportunity (7 40)44B
4639

691 6777

-

720 Trucks for Sale

c aim den ad? We spec allzt n
appeals and hear nga FREE

560

Homes 1 868 565-0167
new Oakwood home three

Wh pool Wastte $95 E ec r c
Range $95 Froslfrae Refrigerator

Apartments
for Rent

GaraiJ8 (740)44t-o302

350

$1600 Call Monday Th u F day
9 ooam 5 aopm (740)366-9303

se aa

Se v cas Inc To

520

d on Make Offer (740).WB4809
Ask For Jim

To Hol•r

cury Couga $1400 1994 Me
cury Topaz $ 800 1989 Pontac
Grand Am $1100 I 990 OldS Cut
ISS C e 8 $1200 t986 OldS De
a 88 $900 1993 Me cu y Topaz

Sma I ch cken eggs 20¢ a dozen
or caae
y Michael 740

(740)446-7398

Bath Stove Ref lge ator Back
Po ch 811121oot Very Good Con

Fleetwood

lively 1 Auto Salas 1988 Fo d

Eoco S W $500 1988 Olds
Cu ass Co a $1200 1982 Me
cury Lyn• SW S450 9B6 Me

Wa e line Sl)te a

14x70 W th 24 Foot E)(pando
$325 month + Oepo&amp; t &amp; Refer
ence In The Camp Con ey A ea

2 Story House In Town 3 8.d

room 1 112 Ba111. Attad&gt;t(l 1 Car
Gorago Call
Aftor tlpm
(740J4•e-4005 Or (7•0)-we.

RESIDENTIAL HOME OWNERS

CARS $29 MONTH! POL CE M
POUNDS &amp; REPO S HONDA
CHEVY 24 MO S 0 9 911 FOR
LIST NGS CALL
600 941
8777 e•l c 98 4

APPLIANCES

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

992 5231

SO DOWN HOME&amp; I IIOV T &amp;
BANK FORECLOSURES! LOW
OR NO MONEY DOWN! OK
CREDIT! FOR LISTINGS CALL
1-ICl0-338-0020 •t 8811

wu ht s

P om Gown Dusk Color 2 P eca
S ze 8 W lh Ma ch ng Shoes
S u 8 1 2 Pad $350 Asking
$ 50 (304)773 5079

836-4052

Lot mode c earance sawa up to
$8 625 W th any ho"fne check US'
out ware dtallng Co 1 1 Mob e
Horneo US 50 East Atltona Oh

310 Homulor Sale

GOOD USED

es

Christy s Fam y L vlng 33140
New Lma Rd Rut and Oho 740.

HI/II I ',1/\i l

Thompson• App lance 3407
JaCk!On AvoniJI (304 675 7388

740)446-0074

1 1100-1191 1777
Flnctl Ooys Nattonw de Inventory
Rlducllont (304)738-3409
Limited Or NQ Credit? Govern
mont Bank F nance On y At Olk
wood tn Barbourav o WV 304
735-3409

TUIINID DOWN ON
IOCIAL IICUIUTY /Ill?
No FH Unloll Wt liilnl
1-888-5123345

Fo Sa e Aecondit a ned wash
era d ye s and ret igera or•

New And Used Furnllu e Stort
Be ow Ho day nn Kanauga We
SeH Grave Monum8nls And Vas

800 B41 9757

Ltot7!SOOOII

e

740-oW8-7795

Small House $250 Month And
oepoa t Stove Refr gtra or
Was he
D yer
Furn ahed

count on

NEED AN EARLY PAYDAY?? No
oftlct v ~~ ntctlllry Up to $500
ntllantly Ca I toll lroo 1 177 EAR
LYPAY tst AOVANCE FREEl

379-2910

Appl ancas
Racond 1 onad
Wasl'la a 0 vers Ranges Re 1

New&amp; UaedFu ntu e
N!fW 2 P eca L v ng oom Suites
$399 Buy Sel Trade

paymenls Pay one bill month
EASY to gat stan•d F nanela
Fr.aedom Chr atlan counsel ng

Crodlt P..-? Crodlltloludonol Low coat Money bock
""'""-' t 502 5Se-&amp;7tO or
S A S E C L SltorTttt
PMB 321
620-h Eaatorn Bypasa
RcM1orld KY404752667

86 P ymou h Sundance Runs
$800 88 Chrys e LeBa on Runs
&amp; Looks Good $1300 OBO 740)

SOCIAL SECURITY DISAB LITY

CONSOLIDATE YOUR WAY
OUT OF DEBT! Reduce monthly I·F::-a-ct_o_ry_G::-oot-:-::32:-,::80::-::5:-0:-oo=o-=o::-1,"'
CC3
www dtf&gt;ICCI.org (Non-Prof )
CREDIT PROBLEMS? CALL THE
CREDIT EXPERTS LICENSED/
BONDED CORRECT/REMOVE
BAD CREDIT BANKRUPTCY
LAWSUITS JUDGMENTS AAA
RATING t 888-811-0902

Household
Goods

Gall poll Arta Daposlt And Rtl
arence No Pels [740)446-6114

appc&gt;n mont 740-885 3917

y s1ooo 00

510

ERS Almas everyone app OOJed
w h SO down Low monthly pay
manta 1 81)0..817 3475 ext 330

gr,tors Up To 90 Days Gua

House For Ren Bldwt Oh o 3
Bedroom• 2 Bath1 $550 mo
Plul A Ud Its Secur y Depos 1

Hall Ao • 3 Bed oom Houll 1
Bedroom Apa tment Beneath
Two POll Barna C oae To Town

Ia Is 3010 WILSH RE BLVD
188 LOS ANGELS CALIFOR
NIA 90010

NEW BRAND NAME COMPUT

anteed We Se New Maytag Ap
pliances F anch
y Maytag

art avalllblo on anoqUII
opportunity bUll

ofdoaatotlepmnmzethtlr
taxes W lte lmmed ately Wind

FORECLOSED GOV T HOMES!
$0 OR LOW DOWN! TAX
REPO 8 I SANKRUPTCIESI OK
CAEDtTI FOR LISTING! CALL 1
I00-50ttmut 88t3

PORTUNITY EMPLOYER

44&amp;9

877 769-8168

HHI Pump Deck Above GrOtlfld
Poot Prtood eo 1 Homutead
Bond (304)112-240&amp;

W I Babysit In My Home Jutt 5

hou11 w luI baument
5385 00 a month + $250 00 de
poall In Porn P taunt 304 875

-IHd In th!l newopoper

$FREE CASH NOW$ t om
wea thy fam es unload ng m "10na

Beams P PI Reba Fa COne e e
Ang e Channel Flat Bill Slee
G a ng Fo D ains D vewaya &amp;
Wa kwaya l&amp;L Sc ap Meta a

MERCHANDISE

2 b

Thll newopoper will not
know ng~ acctpt
-Hmonto tor 1111 eetata
wl1tch lain violation of tht
laW OtJr lrt horeb\'
Informed t1t1t 111 dWiitlngo

Inc uded On y $17 900
FlaetwoOd 1 B88-565 0167

MOBILE HCIIE OWNERS

(740)446-7300

3 Bedroom• Fo aclosed
Home&amp; From S1991Mo. -4'% Down
30 Yta I at 8 5'"-. APR For L B
"'l' 800-319-3323 E• 1709

ment rt(IU &amp;d F-xce en Monthly
Prof t Pottnl al F nance Ava

Fence For Stock 3 ltdroom
Hou11 2 Batha Family Room

Human Re10urces Department

to-

homPapBl

$19 951 CODa accepted 1 BOO
268-0989 CredH ca da

NEW ANO USED STEEL Stea

Jm740992 3 87

410 HOUIIS for Rent

tcommended con ro crav nga
ftel great 2 montha supply only

470 Wanted to Rent

v

the mght for both teams com
pic of times took a bad shot or
bmed
two
&lt;atd Thomas
They
Ftve Pwneers scored tn dou
scored a 1d got thelt momen
ble dtgm as Khaltd Loda tun go 1 g If you look at col
scored 14 pomts Marco Saun
lege basketball games betwee 1
Rm Gra •de has played one dcrs scored II and Shaun t vo good tea ns that are even
of the toughest schedu les u
Peters and Gerald King added ly natched there are always a
the NAIA With the !tkes of 10 pomcs each
couple of u u We nake a r m
Ohto Hawa1 H1lo No I
For the Redmen sopho
early a 1d they come back and
Embry 'R1ddle and Ptkevtlle more forward Chm Ballenger make J ru 1 We take the run
on roa&lt;l, not ncludmg their led the way off the bench w1th to go up by P at the hal£
ngorou! conference schedule
13 pomts wh1le Joe Marnn an
Po nt Park ma aged to
I guarantee you there s Jot Scott Dav1s eac h ch pped n kn &gt;ck t th ree stratght baskets
a other NAIA D VtSion II
v1th P pomts
to open the seem d I alf to
team m the country that s
Randar Luts added II help bu ld on that momen
pbyed that tough a schedule
po nts for R10 Grande and (ll11
sa d Thomas [cs JUSt 01 unbe
Jerry Barlow and ]»on Beller
Tl e Red nen rega ned thetr
hevable credit to those k ds
each scored 10
co 1 posure and bounced back
how they ve bonded togetl r
L ts also had a double dot!
to 01 I l pot 1t lead on four
and ho v they ve brought t Ito ble w th I 0 rebounds
d1ftc
cc SIO lS before
the system 01 d learned ho \ to
We had n 1 e d1fferenc peo
steel 1g 1 fo r the e1ght po nt
run the systc n ThiS IS a pretty ple who led us m scor ng th s
good ball club 11ght 1o v
}CO&lt; md te 1 people
vho
fh '
ade their ru1 ea ly
The Redmen Jllnp I o t to ~cored 18 or more pomcs
(1 1 h
o I I a!Q
1d
1 11 4 lead Tuesda) before g I nc sa d Tho I as I dm t Tl 1
We called a cot pie
the l'toncc s can e b ck to k 10 v 1f there are na I) college o f t t
ts to tr} to break
take a 14 13 lead v1tl P 48 basketball tea ns n the cou 1 th
tt 1 a d c got
I ft t the b sc half
tl) that COl p tt thos
tats 01 1 t c b1e k We t Jade so ne
Po t Park took 1ts b ggest t&lt; gether Not only do we have 111 stake Ia \1 tl e st etch but
lead of the ga nc
1 time so 11c bab 1ce but
ve n
th bon
It 1c ts ve JUst exe
straight baskets by sc 1 01 gt a I u !Selfish The k ds dm t care n ted bet
do v th e st etch
Dexter Yom g 1 1clud t g a l
vho scores
th
th ) d d We lm some
pomt goal that pt t the P o
Nathan Copas co 1tr b red cl1tch fre throws We got a
1eers up 26 20 at the R 18
vttl s x asmts for the Red
co 1ple of layups nd scor d
mark of the openmg half
111Cll
• s de a 1d got some key
You &gt;g who led the AMC t
Rw Gra 1de took a 40 36 reboUI ds " the t n e
scormg thiS season with 22 9 lead late m the first half before
A b g key to the Red ne 1s
po nts per ga 1 e fi 1 shed v1th gm&gt;g on a 10 0 run mcludmg eventual success n the seco 1d
23 pomts 01 d xx 3 pouucrs
a G for 6 free throw run by I alf vas the offe lS ve boards as
Dexter got away fro n us a Luts
R o Grande kept Po t t Park
httle bit but Dexter s gotten
That helped the Red ne 1 to fa r offe t Sl\ e boorJs 11 the
away from people all year sa d take a 50 38 advantage gomg second
Thomas We held h1m to 23 mto halftime
We told them (at halftime)
(pmnts) but he has to get up
In the second half the Pto
that was go ng to be a key stat
29 shots to do 1t Its tough to neers !lowly took control of at the e 1d of the game md
say you d1d a pretty gob defen
the contest and managed co Thomas We ve got to keep
stvely on a guy that ht you up take a brmg the game to wtth
them off the offensiVe glass
for 23 but we d d a pretty m two 63 61 with I 0 20 left They re a b1g st ong phyStcal
good JOb on htm He s a heck 111 the game
athleuc team They JUSt flew co
of a scorer
We were a htcle soft ofTen
the offens ve glass 11 the first
Young was one of 11 players s1vely (early m the second half and ve d1dn t do a good
to score n double figures on halQ and tt rned 1t over a cou
JOb putttng bodes 01 the11

Rio

LOSE 3 5 LBS WEEKLY GUAR
ANTEED Bu n lat qulcfc~ dOOto

(740)446-9539

Downtown Second Avenue Near
Courthouse And C ty Su d ng
N ce Oecora ed AIC 3 Rooms
Bu d ng By lise I 448 2nd Ave

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5

540 Mltcellaneoua
PHrchandlse

Huge lnven ory 0 scount P cas
On V ny Sk ling Door&amp; W nd
ows .Ancho s Water Hea 8 s
Pumbng &amp; Eect ~talPa ts Fu
naces &amp; Haa Pumps Bennel a
Mob e Home Supply 740 446
94 s www orvb com/bennett

Ch stlan couple look ng lor
house to rent no PI s no kids

All real eetata ttdvertlo ng In
ltil neuBpaJ*Is IUbftd to
tho F - Fair Houling ~
o11816 wl1tch malcll k lllegol
"any piOIOIOnort
tlmNotlon 0( diiCflmlnltton
buod on rtct cotot roflgton
-tomlllalotalut ornattonal
origin or any Intention 10
mektany 1uoh ,...,.,..,.,.
lmtlltton Ot dltcrfmlnallon

A+ M&amp;M MARS NESTLE Eatab
1hed Vtnd ng Routt W II se by
3112 Undt S9K minimum nvttt

$73 QOO 3 lodroom 1 t/2 Bat~
wood Flooro Gu F rtptaco
Garagt, t 47 Acru Mutt &amp;o•
(7&lt;10)318-t151

1!1

Orlvert PA M T anapo 1 No tlt
pa 11nce needed 2 week pad

283-3880 axt 1368 !2• hro 1

CD-ROM Investment lrom $2495
Finane ng available (800) 322
1139 E)(T 050 www bus ness

OOPNES o NAPNES va d dr v

ThieVes

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

$3000 wook 'YI MAILING •oo

b ochu 11 AT HOME Guar
anteed Free Suppllu 1 800

59215651

hou a week y Call Sa a Tee 740.

Wanted
Licensed Practical
Nurse to a eommunily home fo
peop a wlln mental retardat on n
B dwe Cu ant LPN Licente

343 DRIVERS NEEDED No e•

Pas al

www wtubmit wiiWorkalhoml

MEO CAL BILLING Un m ted n

Gallpo s

FORMATION

$1 000 WEEKLY POSSIBLE
FROM Home Free web 11t1 No
•uparlence equlrtd Ceta 11

URGENTLY NEEDED plumo
doClOffl eam $35 to SolS to&lt; 2 or 3

Wa a 1
Pe son

Rewa d For The F st n o mat on
Result ng
n Convict on Of

Yard Sale

Bualneaa
Opportunity

cation or evidence that aucl'l II
cenae can be obta ned Experl
ence n schoo district unlvera ty
or govarnmenta account ng de

Reward (304)634 0885 $1000

70

210

Serv1ces
Galli• Mllgo Community

The Athans Me ga Educational
Serv ce Cenle 1 steldng qua I

RENTALS

FINANCIAL

ARE YOU CONNECTED? INTER
NET USERS WANTED! $25 $751

60 Lost and Found
Lost Pet La ge Brown Dog
Wh te on Cheat Bldwe Eve

&amp; Lo-

t ed cand dettl tor till pooiUon of

ough Tnt OhiO

FOR MORE NFORMATION

ACCESS TO A COMPUTER?
Put t to wo k $25 n $75 nr FT
PT FREE nlo BOO 971 8045 e&lt;t
601 www ahomeb z com

I

T aasu tr Aflll cants must pot
aess a T aasurar a Ice nat

T~

Of Labo

EQua Oppo tunlty Employer

S987 85 WEEKLY P ocesalng
HUO FHA Mo tgage Aafund&amp; No
Experence Ra(lu red Fo FREE
Informal on Cal 1 800 50 6832
alii 1300

$22 oa Choo.. 'tOur Hou

callonl Holpltal Nur~lng Horne
Correctional C n c An&lt;l Pr vatt

Depa tment 01 Job &amp; Family
Sa vlees And The Ga a County
Oepa tment Of Job &amp; Fami y

Action Agency

$U5 WEEKLY Make Money
He p ng Peep e Rece OJI Govern
man Relunds F ee Data sl (24
nrs ) 800 449 4625 Ext 5700

Look ng To Buy A New Home?
Don t Have Land? We Do Ill. Hu ry
On~ to Lots Laft 304 736-l':t95

AN s Start S34 00 LPN Start

ABSOLUTE GOLD MINE SO
down I Candy VEND NG route
Ntls $48 000+ FREE Info Toll
Frn 1 877 494 669S

By The Un ted States Department

CALL 888 237 5647
EXT 1827

Thu sday Monday thru Satu day
9 Cl0-530

Youth A t Encouraged To Apply

Residents

START DATING TONIGHT!
Have fun met ng e IQ b t singles

Oual t)' c oth ng and houaeho d
temt Sl oo bag 11 t every

Local on

CAREER POTENTIAL
1500 EMPLOYEE COMPANY
IN BUSINESS 1BYEARS

Full Maalth Bene! 1
401 KPanAfe Mo

Now To 'tOu Thrift Snoppe
9 West S meon Athens
740-592 1842

Base

Studentt
Employed WII Be A f&amp;nged Ar
ound Their Schoo Schldu t Ap

Waek y Pay &amp; waek y SOnuo

30 Announcement•

Tit 1

Worke
Wea ht zatlon
Ct'leahi •
0 f ce All atant
Cheshl I
011 Cl Au ttant
Galpo a

Fbced WOrk seneou e
You wont Be sent Home For
Low Resu ts

Dlvorco $150
lllnkf"'llcy s195
Adoptloo $22&amp;
Not dO Kyou111W kK
CALL 1 800 263 0503 tor FREE
nformallon Bankruptcy nla n TN
KY

In your a ea Call or more nlor
ma ion 1 800 AOMANC E ut
1736

Week And May R1 ctlve Wo k
Aela ed T a n ng The Follow ng
Pos bans A 1 Currently Ava able

H gh Schoo Students College
5 udenta And Out Of School

EXPANDING N THE

FREE SEARCH!
www SINGLES com

YEP WO kers W II Be Pad $6 25
Pe hou Fo Up To 32 Hours PI

Job

H ng Ca Can e Communicators
No Cold Call "'l

"Deldllnaa aubjact to

Commun ty Action
Agency Is Accepllng App ca
Ions Fo Tempo a y Employees
Fo The Youth Employment P o
ec Appl can a Se ectad To Pa
1clpate W 11 Work At Agency
S tes And other LocaUons n Ga
Ia County
Me~gs

Pomeroy, Middleport Ohio

Wednesday, FebruafY 28, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

1990 Wir,nabago Moto Hoine
Low M eagt 38 000 M ea Se f
Contelntd Sups 6 Exct ant

Hay a Grain

10001 round bus ot hay tor 111
740 992 7.56
First &amp; SICOnd Cut Orchard
G 111 Round Balta S 2 00
(740)445-77e7
Hay fo 11 1 aque t bal11 S 25
m 1 on RI2N 304 875 480

Hay &amp; Brlgh W ro no Straw Yea
Round Dallvt y &amp; vo ume 0 1
coun .Av'- lablt Mar tagt Fa m

(304)675 5724

850 Stell &amp; Fertilizer
Tobacco P anla 0 der Now To
Gua anltt Eerly Spr ng P an nga
lncrea&amp;t Allotment• Mean E~et 1
p anta Thank You For Your Bull
nen Call Danny Dtwhu 11

LOIVO MUIIgl (304)895 3740
0 (304)895 3789

Tf1ANSPOIHI\TION

SO DOWN CARS POLICE M
POUNDS l REPOSI HONDA S
CHEVY S JEEPS LOW AS $281
MO S 11 Ull FOR LISTINGS
CALL
800 451 0050 e• C
9812

11 0 Help Wanted

Cond lion $14 800 (740)4489256

SEF!VICE.S

Pttomlno llltllon

840

Campara &amp;
Motor Homes

810

110 Help Wanted

Home
Improvement•
IAIIMINT
WATERPROOfiNG

Unc:ond tlonal feUme guarantee
Local r.!erencas rurnlahtd E1

tab !shed 197&amp; Ca 24 H 1 (7&lt;10)
448 0870 1 BOO 287 0578 Rog
.,, wotarproottng
C&amp;C Gtnt al Home Ma n
11nenct Pein ng v ny s d ng
ca pentry doors w ndowt bltht
mob 1 nome epa and mo t Fa
fret est matt ea Cht 740 992

6323
Livingston 1 Basemen
P ooflng a baaemtnl
done tree 111 matta
guarantee 14y con job

Wate
epalrs
lfe ma
upe I

once (304 895 3887
Super or Home Ma nttnanet And
Plumbing We Do A I Rel)ai B On
Hom11 Inside And Ou Ca

pentry
Paint ng
(740)441-Q113

P mb ng

840 Electrical and
Refrigeration

EARN $$$
NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED
Full and part ttmo potltlono available
Completatralnlng provided with flexible hour•

fULL- TimE
O'BLENBII nURSinG SUPERUISOR
AnD
ASSISTAnT nURSE mAnAGER- mED/SURG
0 Bleness

Memorial Hospttal has 2
Immediate full time openings In their Nursing
Department We offef a very compet1bve
salary range as well as excellent education
and other health related benefits
NURSING SUPERVISOR Rotating Shift
Mimmum 3 5 years hospltal expenence
requ1red
BSN preferred
Management
experience preferred
ASSISTANT NURSE MANAGER Evenmg
Sh1ft (3 11) Minimum 2 years hospital
experience
reqwred
BSN
preferred
Management expenence preferred
Applications can be picked up 1n the
Human Resources Department
O'Bieness Memorial Hospital
55 Hospital Dr , Athens Ohio, 45701
(740) 592·9227
E

Earn up to $15/hour
Full time poeltlone ollar bane111 package which
lnoludn MedloaVOeniiV401 K/Pd Yocatlona
CALL TODAY START TOMO~ROWI

1-800-929-5753
Tolteo,.,lcto

440

'

Apartmsnls
for Rent

CROSS POINTE
APARTMENTS
Acceptmg ApplicatiOns
1 bedroom apartments
Elderly (62 or older) or D1sabled
or Handtcapped
Ehg1bthty Based on Income
Handicapped Accesstb1hty
Please Call (740) 992 3055
TDD# (800) 855 2880

Gl

~qual

Housing
Opportunity

•

�Wednesday, February 28, 2001

Plla• a 4 ·The oany Sentinel

Apartment•
for Rent

440

3 Room Upatelrs Apt Ont Bed
room At 851 Stcona Avenue

Glltlpollo Dopoalt Rtqul od S •

Montht Lilli Ull t 11 Not In
eluc»d I.Ctpl Wa1tr CIIH Otbblt

or Judy At (7•01446 7323 [LI

Yl To Stt Up An Appo nt
mont.

bra

480 Space for Rent

350 Lots 6 Acreage

All.._.,.l
Announcement. GW.Way
L.oet a Found V.rct S.lee
and Wanl8d To Do Adt
Mull 88 Paid In AdWince

Ga a

TBIBUNE OEAQUNE

2 00 p m thl day belor.
the ed lito run Sunday a
Monday edniOn aoo p m
Friday
IENTINEt; QftAQUNE.

1

oo p m the day belor.

UO!

WEEKL~ GUARANTEED

WORK NG FOR THE GOVERN
MENT FROM HOME PART
TIME NO EXPERIENCE RE
OUIRED 1 800 7•8 57 6 E•t
X101

lha ad Ia to run

$1 HR FT+ BONUS
2pm ttpm

Sunday a Monclay edmon

100pmFrlday

BJQ"!IB DfAQUNI

a

daya beloN the ed 11 to
run by 4 30 p m s.turctay
a Monday edition- 4 30

Make A DIFFERENCE
Work Fo Conservative
Christ an 0 gan za iOns

Tfturedly
cha

• due to holldl •

ANNOUNCEMENTS

005

Peraonell

40

Giveaway

New Zealand abbls home
ralttc:t very gent e 740 9•9
7004

'

wo

k Schedu

es Fo

pllcanll Mull Bt Ga a County
Agta 1-1 21

And

Moot WIA E glb\ ty Rtqulra

menta
To App y Vlolt Our Ona Stop At
322 Second Avenue In Gall polls
o ca (7401446 10 a

GALLIPOLIS
AREA

Wo klo ca nveatment Act Se v
Ices Ga a County A 1 Funded

We offer you

(5011 Co. Match)
1 Week Paid vacation
E'ftry 8 t.llos
1 Pa~ Hoi days

green

A ea
(740)44114393

P east

eat

Losr en ld s per Pomeroy a ea
Solid black m nature schnauzer
ve y I endly ed colla It found
contact B en o Tamml Ze kle

740-992 5151 0 740-992 2136
STOLEN Olde Slack Male And
Young Female Chocolate La
bradors F Otrl U arl WV A ea

Duty (A I Posltlono Raqulro 1
Year minimum Exper ence) locel
lnttrv tw8 Ava able Contact

Lloa At [614)846 8388 Pit tnt
Ca

e MediCI:t-seMce&amp;

SECURITY
aeeo HR
Tho Wac:kenhut Corp to Racruit
ng For SovtriiPoalttons Mull
.Ha,.GED OrHS ~
Please App~ At James M Gavin
Powe Plant Stoll Ro ... 7 0 Call
Capt Evano At (740)925-3010
EOE MIFIHN
Shea:r Fan IIY Bar Nttdl Dane
No Exper tnce Ntceuary

era

WIt Train
(304)785 7828
(304)273-0520 Uk tar 81111
Spr ng I• just a ound the corner
Spring Into action w tl'l T1ndtm
T anspo t Corp OTR •a on11

flatbed M en gon C ty IN Call to
doyt 800 551 9057 ext t•o
www tanc:l com
STAY HOilE/WORK ONLINE
$500 $7000 month PT FT Com
p eta tralnln!i F tt lntormallon
www c e8tlme com To f 11 1
866 B73 3683

laaued by tho Onto DaRt ol Edu

e red E•porlorteo ao a cnltl ttsca
GIRLS EARN S90+ hour anytime
on your compute Adull lnlt net
video chat h tp /cams voyeu

bus com 1 888-1157 9944 o free
Government Jobs $1 00
$33 00 per hour potentia Pad
T a n ng Fu Benet ts For mo t
inlo matlon ca ca I 888 674
9 50 oxt 3234

GROW NG BUSINESS NEEDS
HELP! ? Work from home/ mal
orade E Commerce $522~/week
PT $1000 $4000/wk FT 800 921
8538 www dream2bl ee com

off ca prater td Appllcanla mual
a so have the ab llty to bl bonded
and to prov dt their 'OWn transpor
tat on SubmitiiHe of lnlerHt re
aume 3 era ence&amp; and copy of
curren cense to John Conatan
10 Super ntendent eo7 Alchland
Avenue Suite 108 Athena Qnlo
45701 Appllcat on dead nt Is

Apr 5 2001 Tho AMESC 1 and
Equa Opportun ty Employor/Pro
vide

per ence needed au ck COL
t aln ng p og am available Ea n
$38 000 -+ s year 5 STAR
800 260 0294 expe anced d v
e a hold ng C as A ca 1 800

ABSOLUTELY FREE INFO
Internet users wanted
$2000-15000/mo
www e-commb z net

6/0 I Equal

Mil C eek 1 Mile Past
Course 8am-olpm

Jobs

Toys Jewe y wood Sewing

'JW&gt;Ing Great Payl CALL 1 800
795-o380 Ext 20 (24hn;J
AttentiOn
Work From Home

Go t

$1 20(). $5 000/mo.
1 877 552 1054
ATTENTION I
WORK FROM HOME
ea n 1.1' to $25 QO-S75 00/llr PT/

FT
MAL ORDER
Call tol"lree
1 B77 965-6739
ATTENTION
Ea. n On ne Income

SBOO- $7500/montn
1 800-784-8558

www pcpays com

AVON! All Arua To Buy or Se
Shirley Spears 304-675-1429

Pt Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

v

Mason Coun SpeC al Olymp ca
Yard Sa e March 2 3 Fort Randolpll ,_,.... Community Cent"

80

Auction
and Flee Market

Babysitte needed n my home
refef'ences rtqu red call 740-992

9197 uk 1o&lt; Denise
Bates B 01 Amusement Co 1

look ng tor lnd~ dua 1 to Uavel tor
the 2001 aaaaon Must bt at
eaat 18 Yfl Contact ua at 740-

ZM-2950
CAREER OPPORTUNITY! Earn
excellent ncome Eaay elalma
proctsaing Full training Homt

Ca Us Today Fo An nterv~ewl

v sa

a mow ng c ew Expe ence
work ng n he fie d of dave op
menta d sab lilies helpfu
00
$1 25 hr depancl ng upon e)(pe I
ence Submit resume or appl ca
lion by Ma ch 6 2001 to Meigs
lndust res Bo)( 307 Syracuse

se

NEEDED 31 people to

~~

wo k $25 S751hour Free Oeta s
W~ITraln www91tsuccesscom

PARENTS DREAM! Stoy Homt
Ea n Money Sel yaur own houra
Train ng
Prov dtd
Visit

www homewithlds com
Pa~

t me daenlng job In Pomeroy
area alto need lawn Cll'l worker
Stnd resume to B W J1n tor a

Servtct 145 Lkn ng Farm Ad Mt
Oral&gt; OH 4518ol

Person to tllr down hou&amp;t ror
mallftl~

740-112 !5851

185 On o I Woot Virgin 1 30'
77:1-5785 Or 304-77:1-&amp;.1&lt;17
Rlvtrtldt Auct on Barn

Sill

Evory Satu day Night at Sp m
Auctlonee

Raymond Johnaon

(740)2~989

90

Wanted to Buy

Gellpol~

7--

E.MPl.OYMf fJ f
SffWICFS

110

D I1VIn wanted tlpllrltr'ICI pre
t.rred drug tcreen rt(lu red ctll

740-456-5363 or 1 1100-118&amp;-9556

Dr voro FRANKLIN COLLEGE
NOW TRA NINGIII NO EXPERI
ENCE •38k tot yur of'u I btnotlll
•Mod cal •01 K •14 day COL
Ita n ng

Abooluto Top Do lor U S Sllvor
Gold Colno ProoiHII D amondo
Gold Ringo
u S Currancy
M TS Coln Shop 151 Sooond
-

-

Help Wanted

11500 WEEKLY! Work F om
Home P oceaalng VISAJMAS

TERCARD lnv Ill 01111 $2 Per lnv tat on! No Experience Nttelldl
Malt iala Supplied! Friday Pay

- · t 1100-280-6609
S2 000 WIEKLYI

Ma

b achuresl Satlafact on
ar
anteldl Poe age &amp; Supp 11 p o

vldad Ruoh Se 1 Mdreued
Siamped Envelopal G CO DEPT
! Bo1 t•38 ANTIOCH TN
370 11 1438 Stott mmtd lteiy

•Tu on relmbu 11men If

qualllod Co

t 888 545 8505

E•perlenctCI dr

vera call 800

856-2353
D lvo 1 ONLINE APPLICA
TIONS Find tho boat drlv ng )obi
o stan a high pay "'l ClrHr now
Our plactmant p otesa ana 1 will
make and ng your job easy 877
&amp;93 2086 www hookup eom dn

150

Poatal JODI l4e 323 00 yr Now

$15-Soi!!IH 'I Eatlbllollod c o ltlkl ptop e Training IDrov dtd

Muot own PC 1 800 t35 1311 x
206
Proloto,_ Poalllona
Ge llpotlo Dovolopmont C.ntar an
ICFIMR II rocru•ng P&lt;QVIdorl
lorprolloalonaldtnll tor lito porlod 07/01/2001

0013012003

School•
lnatructlon

BLACKSTONE
PARALEGAL
STUDIES Homo study app ovod
allordable comp ehena 111 egat

t aln ng a nee 1890 FREE Cata
lOg 1100-826 &amp;228 ~"· ~0 Bo•
70 449 Da 11 TX 78370 NA o
httpJiwww btaclcot.-w com
BLACKSTONE
PARALEGAL
STUDIES Home Study Ap
proved Allordab t comprehtn

olvt legal training llnco litO
FREE C:ota og eoo 121 922e
wrltt PO SO• 701.Wt Dalla. TX
7&amp;370 NA or http //www bllcklto-

nallwcom

Proctulna Cf1 m1 from home

Dollar (304)e7S.

Bualneaa
Training

Galtlpoll ca- Cottogo
[Ca eers Close To Homo)
Cat TOdayl740-448 4367
1 800 214-M52
Reg 190-05-12748

OWN A COMPUTER? Put It to

CLAIMS PROCESSOR Procell
ell rna from 1tomo $20.$40/h po
tontllt Fu !raining Comp,..r w/
modom roqu rod CALL NOW 1
IJ88.5SH 187 oxt. &amp;42

Top

140

30 ba

by Apr 15th I B and new rust
patented I ost 23 bs n 1 monlhl
800 570 9528 o www bsl m4
lfecom

Tlte Put&gt; k: &amp; Dultro 0,. Pltco

Dancers

t-88&amp;-237-6342 E1L 2211

OhiO 45779

B00-4»-35e0at J.illll

Rick Ptarton Auct on Company
full 1 mt auctlonet complttt
auction
11rv ct
Llcenlld

\

diploma or GED Abl ty to supe

""1-800-772 59330&gt;1 2070

8rtclgo (740)888-22e6

1

WI 810 offtr
•Medica Blnafits
•Pa d Holidays/ Vaca lana

Htl thea 1 Developmtnll tol

LOti Glry
P octorvllt
JUII Aero ..
3111 Strttt

You can ea n up 10 $711lour and
week y bc:lnuseal

Flex ble schedu e depend ng
upon awn care needs Exper
ence w lh ope anon care and e
pal of wnoua mowing equipment
Val d dr va s license high school

AUCTION Every Satu day Spm
1\'uckloado 01 Now &amp; Ulld ltemo
Ooztnl I Caat
Bow1n Auct onttr
Oh o Fill Ma kit
Huntington WV

J

PC roqulrtd Call Phyllc an 6

LAWN CREW SUPERV SOR
MARCH OCTOBER

h ring No txperitnc ...pald lraln
1ng· gr111 benefits 0111 7 daya

Frt~m Severa St1111 St ling To

Employe&lt;

lnloCialon s plaastd to
announce tha we have lddtd a
new ca can e a.t our ocatton In
Gal polis Oh o

$18 35+ h
888 726 9083
•1701 7am 7pm CST

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Oppo~unlty

WE HAVE EXAANDEDI

APPL CAT ON AND EXAM N

An (lue/ Mov ng Sale Kay Betz
Has MoOJed She I&amp; Sal 011 AI
Fu n lura And Antiques House
hod Goods Lawn And Ga den
March 2 3 4 Ins de Salt At 1S52

Ful t mt
Apply In
At The Holiday Inn

ers 1cense and th ee vea s goOd
d OJ ng requ red Hours 7am 3pm
M TH 12 6pm Fr day Sa ary
S10 OO!hr E)(Ctllant Bene t Pack
age Sand Resume To Cat:: a
Baker Buckeye Community Serv
ces PO Bo)( R04 Jackaon OH
45640 Dead n\1 ror IPI:II eanta 31

95B 2353

ASSEMBLY AT HOIIEII Cralts

to-

EARN YOUR OOI;LEII! DEGREE
QUICKLY bochotora Muttra
Doctorate by ccrrtspondenc•
baud upon prior education and
ahort atudy courte For FAEE In

!ormation booklot phono CAM
BR DGE STATE UNIVERSITY 1
1100-MI-8311

GID

Gat ycu1 H&amp; oquiVItncy dlptome
wth our uty hOrnl study couru
1-800-588-2183 axt 310

COL

~alnlng

Great pay $34 0001

yr year plus fu I benelitl &amp; pad
trainlniJ Orlvt 1 balld n Mid
weal 1 177 230 6002 Sunday
8am 4pm Monday 7am 6pm

1\lt-Fri7........
EARN $25 000 TO 150 000 y
Medica Insurance B I ng Need
ecJ lmmtd a 11yl Home compute
needed FREE lnle net 1 BOO

29 4683 Doptf 109
Experienced ~utomot OJt Counte
Salta Pt son Send Reaum11 To
PC2• 200 Main St ttt Po nt

Ptelllnt. wv 25550

INOT1CEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
tcommtndl that you do bul
n11a w th people you know and
NOT to nnd money though the
mall unt you have lnv11 gateQ

lito otltrlng

The .,.., of P"Qflnlonll NrVIc
t1 are Phlrmedl~ Pryclllatrtot
Guarclllnohlp Pll)rllelan Spacial
11 (On Col) Language eo.otop.
mont SpoelaH1t (Speech And Au
dlology)

Houseclean ng Honllt And De
pen dab 1 Rtasonab 1 Ratti

Allaervlcea equlred 1 1 part
t mt/ln ermltent In eraattd per

Mount I

oon .. partlto onould outlmlt a Itt

Serv ce Tor, Trim Aemova
S ump Grind ng Free E1tlmatt1
Fu y lnaurtd Worktrt Comp

tt ot 1nttnt togot11or with appropriate llcen11 c.rtlflcatlon 01 oth
1 crwdentlal lnformadon and IB
ary requ reman s or fee acnt&lt;~ull

to

Frtt Eat matH Have Rtltront:tl
[740)256--1227

Tr•• Strv ce Thl rr..
P or,,. ont 1 Bucket Truck

Bldwot On~ Cal &amp; SIVI t 80().
1138 9588 (740)3118-9841 Ow,.,
Rk:lc Mount

ab t/ GoOd
21-

Crt~

t -(88B) 270

2500 0~ o Avtnuo
Gal pols OH 45631
PllonoNo (7•0)4•8-1&amp;42
Fax No (740)«&amp;- 341
TDD (740)446-2958
Sk lied Nun ng Fee llty &amp;liking
an LPN or AN Jo part I mt pOll
tlon Wt have an: a11cel ent Sur
vey h s1ory and a very stable staff
Th a 1 an exct ent opportun IY
lor the rlghl cand dale for peraon
al cmd p ole11 onal growth Submit uume o Aockap ngs Raha
b ta on Center 38 "!9 Rock
sp lngs Road Pomeroy Ohio
~5789 8 tn ca a G eenno AN
D re~tor of Nu aing. EQUAL OP

HR PT FT

www BeBossFree com

Attan ton WORK FROM HCME
up to $25 Cl0-$75 OOJ!I PT FT
MAIL ORDER eel toll f ae 1 877
965 6739
Earn $500 o $900 per week n
your bathrobe I 1 ppers Great
oppo tunlty to secure you lulu 1
Low nves ment 1 800 272 0193
aweaomea nlng com
Earn $90 000 VEARLV epair ng
NOT replac ng Long cracks In
ndsh eldt Free v deo t 800

w

B28-8523 US/Can4da wwwgluo
mechanix com
come potential No e~~:pe renee
necessa y Free nformatlon &amp;

startup com
Start Your Sus neu Today
Prime Shopp ng Cente Space
Ava lab t At Affordable Rate

Spr ng Valloy P aza Call 740-4450101
WORK FROM HOME
Ea n
$1500 p t to $5000 lit month II
CALL TOOAY 1 800 895 0219 or

www world omhome247 com

230

Profeaalonal
Servlcea

SS$ NEED CASH?? WE pay
cash fa reman ng payments on
Property So d Mo lgages .Annul
t as! St tlementst mmtd ate
Quotes!! Nobody beats ou p ic
es Na onal Cant act Buye s
(BOO) 4BO 0731 eM! 01 www na
t onalcon a.ctbuye s com

$$$NEED A LOAN? Try debt
conaol dat on I Cut pay menta Lip
o 60% Same day app ova I 1

Mlnutu From HMC
Call
(740)4.1 0270 Plflll LtiVI

Mollllgo
W II POMIIWIIh HOUIII lta era
And AV 1 Contact Ron AI

(740).WI 0151 o 339 08&amp;0 II
NoA_L_M_

•

S550
(513)704- 9703
530t&gt;m

Afltr

COl'; In Town 2 BR HouM large
LR DR Ut ty Room Perfect for
sma 1 family $400 month $300
depas t
Rete ence Check

(740)446 4782 For Salt 0

Trade
Mt Vernon Avtnut 4 Bed oom
Houu New gaa Furnace cent al
A I nit or Ntw y Pain ad N ce
K tchtn Appllancea Baaement
Ccwe ed Pat o Prieta 50 s

13041882 2447 (304)882 2405

(740)448 9313 co between 5
and spm lor March 3 d appoint
ment
Gal po 1 750 3rd Ave $180
Month 1 BR t Bath F amo
Mouse Gsa Heat No Ptta Wtt

kendo/ N ghll (740)446-«114
Gal polio 752 3rd Avenue $375
Month 3 Bed oom
Bath Frame
Hou&amp;e Gas Heal No Pet&amp; Wee

konde N ghts (740)448-661•
Newl~

Newly ramodtltd country homo w
4 bedrooms 1 bathroom tltct ic
hea pump 2 ca ga age big yard

on approximately 1 acre lot oca
ad n Easte n 0 at let Must 111
to app ec ate! $72 000 Call to

Ca peted 2 Bed oom un
fu n shed Home With Oa age

320 Moblla Homea
lor Sale
14)(70 Southe n 0 eam f H D~
very free Se up only $9995 1

868 92B 3426
1968 12165 Buddy ""!lent

1774 Chlatnut By Ow,.r lltJIIt In
1117 3 llldroom Tax Abltomont
Till 2013 lit 100 00 [740)448
2t14

cond tion pease ca I 740 247
4700 W n erws ed
1975 Nashua 12x65 2 Bedroom
1 Bath Furnished Excellent

etOtl

2 8 Acru Mtnutu From Town
on Paved Rood Water And

tfflcltnt hOmo t 112 year
old 3 SA with Wltk In ctoaoto All
_... .,, large 1&amp;00 oq toot wttli
EM~GY

•ttachtd gar1ge Central neat

e---

II!OiirdOOf&amp; and wtndowl 1 11,.
apare
acrts proporty Appro• 15 mllto
lOUth ot Ge ttpolll Oil SA 141
mooo (740)37t-al7

d yers el ige a ora
anges Skaggs App ances 78

V no Stoat Call 7•o 446 7398
1 881-&amp;IB 0128
Kanmo e Washer 70 Se Its
Heavy Duty E)(ctllen Cond 1on

SHJO DBO (740 44114515
Ktnmo e WP May ag Wuhtr&amp;

SIS each Lote M9dt

dgoa re
D yo $75 Otne D ors $80
each AI white (740)448-'80156
Mollohan Ca pels &amp; Fu n tu 1
New 2 p ece llv ngroom Su It

$299 Rtc lntr St99 Sale on
Ca pat In Stoct&lt; 200 C a k Chape
Road Portar Ohio (740)3&amp;8 0173

Tappan HI E! c ency 90% Gas
Fu naces 0 Fu nacas 2 Seer
Hea Pump &amp; A r Cond on ng
Syattma Free 8 Yur Wa an
Benne ta Heating &amp; Cool ng

v

800 872 5967 wwwoiVb com/ban
nett

SAVEl

SAVEl

SAVEl

Hoe

Pumps l P I Natu a1 Gat Fur
naces I You Oon 1 Cal Us We

Both Loael (740)448 6308 &amp;
BOil-29 t 0098
Sawm II $3 795 New Supe Lum
be mate 2000 a ger capac as
ma a options Manufactu e of
sawm I a edge a and sk ddt s

NORWOOD INDUSTR ES 252
Sonw I Dr ve Buffalo NV 1422S

FREE tnlo mat on 1 800 578
1363 EXT 200 U

95 Redman 14x52: for aa eo

ont 740.949-3344

Cond on S7 ooo Call (7&lt;10)256
1156

1991 Mob e Home 2 Bed oom t

(304)675 5477

8B5 3956

992 14•80 3 BR 2 Bath 6 6
•cres 01 Land Pond Barn And

440

1996 14lt70 3 Bedroom 2 Bath
C a.yton Legend V nyl Sid ng
Sh ng e Roar The mo Pane
W ndows Excellent Condit on
$20 000 (304)675 612

200
14 W de Fee Setup &amp;
Delve y Maytag Appliances

At

2001 Doublew de F 11 Setup &amp;
Del very Maytag Appliances In
eluded $31 900 At F aetwood

two bat11 Includes shed
Takt over pay
be moved

anytme

Down De

I ve y and setup paid by Factory

Mull Sel 15•80
Make 2 Peymento &amp; Movo tnl
1 1100-e&amp;t-11777
Now 14 It !'Ida Sol9t down on y
Stlfl ptr mon cal now 1 800

$150 F eeze $150 Nco Wash
ar &amp; 0 ye Set $300 All Ap
pllances Gua anteed Skaggs
Appl ances 76 V ne S reel

992 2218

Building
Supplies

Rive ne Ant ques

(740)446-2602

on SA

124 E Po-

AKC Black Female Lab 12 wka
o d Had ahots and wormed call

La ge Col act on of Antique Pock

AKC German Shepherd Pupp es
So d White And S lver Sab es
Excellent
Tempe menl A.nd

2nd Ave phone (740)448- 815

540 Mlacellaneous
Merchandlae
720 Second Avenue 1 Bed oom
Upsta ra Apartment S300 +De
pos Wata Sewe li ash Pad

(740)44 5216 (Day) (740)446
0101 (Even ngs)
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK
SON ESTATES 52 Wes wood

dKioo $100 23Ch Cobra Cam 89
ease E)(Cittent Condl on Ex X

Tala $50 4 IROC Camaro
Whee s $100 (740)24IHI774

ALL STEEL BUILD NG New up

2568 EQua Hous ng Oppo~unity

$9 9BO 50x100X14 was $35 BOO

Furnlslltd 2 &amp; 3 Room Apart
man 1 C tan No Pets No Smok

now $17 990 80)(125)(14 was
$51 500 now $34 990 1 800 241!

Furnished

Ge 1a Manor Apartmtnta Now
Accept ng Application&amp; Fo 1 BA
HUD Subtld zed Ape tmenta Fo

Full B ooded Oobermans 5 Fe
mae 3 Males and 1 Rtd Mae 5

wks o d (740)446-3576

570

Musical
Instruments

Plano Fo Sa e $100 (304)882
2558

www np etsans com
COMPUTERS WE FINANCE
DELL COMPUTERS! Even with
leas than pe reel c ld II 1 800
477 9016 Codo ACe www orne
IOiutlonl com

630

White [740)386-8358

Polled Htrtford Mondey March

5th 8 30pm At Tht Now Oak

11tg AQHA1e88
153' H H World Champion lin
p tnlvt Btoodlne NIN Wclollrn
P tiiUrt Halter lllrrola Stond
"'l Stud FH 1250 [304)875
6440

N ct 1 Bedroom APflrtmtntl For

$181188 00 3 Bedn&gt;o•1, 2 lilt~ 1
e11m_.170

Rent [740)44e-98t1

Utility Billa Getting Moot Of Your
Paychockt con (,.0)44e-3093
For 'rbUf NIW Homo 1bday

bedroom unturnlollld apartment

330 Farm• for Sale
Form !'!Quae Bllutltu ly Romotcl
Od 2883 SQUill Felt t 7 Acrao
Pond In gtound Poor Several
Barn• Gai'IIQI Fru t TrHa C 011

$215 000 [740)445-

4230

340 Bualne11 end
Build InaChurch Building with Parsonage
tor salt loollld In Point Plll..,t
Good Neighborhood Roductd
$65 000 (304)875 lite

Lot. II AcrNge

t 6 2 acrt building lots 1ur

veyld water I tltctt c l\llillab e
septic P e approved doublewlde
- t , c l $8 liS 6 up 7•0 742

311.

No th Thlrtl Mlddloport o,. bod
raom fu nlahtd ll'lrtmen1

J

on1

depot t I rtftrencea no !Pill

740-Uli.OIU

Now Taking App lcattono
Wttl

a

35

ledroom TownhOUII

Aportmtnto lnc)uooa Wattr
:::~ Tilth $3&amp;0/Mo 740

Ono bedroom apanmont &amp; a btd
room motMit nome no poll 740
1182 58S8
One Bedroom Apa tmtnt On 1,1
AOJtnut Ga 1:10 1 W11her/ O,y

e Hook up $270/mo P uo Dt
post Watt Paid (7&lt;10)448-4043
Aita&lt;e oopm
Ta a Towl]houae Apartments
v.,~ SpaciOUI 2 Bedrooms 2'

F oors CA 1 112 Bath Fully

car

PIIA• c0m t BOO-tJoWot&lt;l27

l'hwoOd For

IIIIo (740)38&amp;82t7[740)38&amp;-8264

FLORIDA MARCO IS~AND En
Joy tnt 1\'op cat Paradlll of
beach" and relaxation Beach
front condol or home• FOf rent/

ollto Ctrltu y 21 tot Soutnarn
1\'uot
1 100 255 &amp;487
or
wwwcatmarco COil'
FIIEE DIAECTV SYSTEM nc ud
ng prort,tlon nalallat on Ca If
dttallt over 225 c~onnto Loool
nttworko available 886 575
1)00
FREE Grant Mo,.y &amp; AHI natlvo
Federal Fund ng Education
Houa ng
Purchut/Rtpal 1
Oebta
Bu11n111
nvento a

Wrl1ero Art 111 Guarontttd t
Bee 51 277~ or VfWW grants dOt

e

comoom

Grub!&gt; 1 Plono Tun "'l &amp; Rtpalre
Problema? Nood Tuned? Co I Tnt
p ... 01 740-44e.4525

peted Adult Poo &amp; 81by Poo

Independent Harballfe Dlatr bUtor

Pat o Start $385 Mo No Pttl
lease Plus Secu ty Oepoall At
nutred Doya 740 44e 3•8
Even ngs 740 367 0502 740
448.0101

Call For Product Or Opportunity
('140)441-1982

3 Acrtl Bottom ol hI on lght on
Rodman A dge Rd (30•)675

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Rtpolred Ntw &amp; Rtllullt n Stock
Cel Ron Evano t 1100-537 9526

lWin A verTowe s now accepft1'11
Crown City A •a

app !cottons lOr 1 BR
HUD oublldiltd opt to oldor!y
end d llbllc1 EOH (:la.)e756679
Upstalra Ap11r menr 3 Rooms No
Pets Wa1er Paid
GaHipolls

VICinity (740)38a 1100

Eng nt $300 F be G aan uck
Tappe

to

a Dodge yea s 77 92

Yea Old S200 (740)446-2647

750 Boats &amp; Motors
lor Sale

New &amp; Used Eltctr c And Gil
Furnacea Fo Salt Ca Fo S z
11
lnatallatlon
AOJa lab a

(740) ••, e3fMI 1 1100-291 0098

790

Pealed B\J Sale 50 Angus 10

UPETRX COM Save up to 50'!1
on All pet mtdlcatlona and aup
plltl tnoludlng Htartgard ntor
ctptor Front lno mo til FREE
SHIPPIIo(G Order on nt www !1

New

450 Fo eman 4)(4 Electric Sh fl 4
wtlae er 1300 m es Exce lent
Cond on $4900 6 2 L er Diesel

) o ur k1ds :u

Boyd Beef Cattle Ptrlormance

port From $27:1-1335 Call 740
e82 5084 EQUII Houolng Oppor
Modorn 1 Bod oom Aportmtnt
Pho,. (740)448-0310

parade of cl an p10 1
1

ou

K

at th
d I ve
t lh e

ba1quet The1c s go1 g to be
lot of spec• I fecli1 g
A 1d also takmg tc m out
that you s g01 •g to go to
war Tliomas satd N oth 1 g
th1s ballclub wtll do \Ill sur
pme me If were back t he1e
m two weeks wah a nattonal
champ10 1Sh p
ba er
t
wouldn t surpr se 11e
Tuesdays wm was also v n

d1catton for Thomas h1s staff
and h1s team Smce he took
over the rems of the program
Rm Grande has been under
the watchful eye of the NAIA
spendmg three seasons on pro
banon foe vwlat ons that
occurred pr or to Thon1as
bemg named head coach
Dur ng that span the R ed
n en have had some close calls
m the poscseaso 1 but have
co 1 e t p short of reach 1 g the
natloBal tot rnamcnt
For student

s

a lt M r

Kr~1scher tt IS also VII

a ttl b lte

I

to h1

dc t

&lt;1

sp t t a I

tc 1 1 uno 1 Ktt'Isch r

o

1e

to R1o G an de m t of Lex1 •g
to 1 H1gh School as
top
ecru t vtth loads of p tel ual
o I~ to be sdd 1 J v th
healt con !tnon char took h 1
fro 1 the g ne he love I Ho
ever Kretschcr has stayed the
comse "'d the look o 1 I s
f.1ce os he cut dow1 h s sha~
of the let last mght vas pr ce
less
The guys respect M rc as a
coach Thomas sa1d And
there ;'lren t very many stt deJ t
asSistants m the country that

been m It He knows the
game He s been stable at that
posmo 1
Thonus also praJsed ass1sta 1t
coach Ken French who JOI Jed
the staff last seaso1 and helped
nf se enthus asm and a fresh
outlook Ito the program
Kel I y and I I ve gelled so
vel! together that almost at
t1 nes we re th1 1k 1 g the SJ I 1e
thoughts
Tl o as
sa d
Ke 11y has b e1
1bel ev ble
all )e r It be&lt;
u b c
ble tea
tC t t o 1 tl '
co ch 1 g staff
tl o t;h the
pla)ets
Be fmc Tl 01 left he g) 1
I cl b to
Ia ) " ht h
e U ) th
\I
to a or tl
v cto )

r told then
sa~cl

IJO) It I c
t k t 'o
d Tit rs I ) th n g

I told th

0

~

lays oiT
con 1 1g
;t 1 i
' re
g ty
go g to ge t
e
ed fo
11gs b1 t dm t tl mk al out
the at o I tu r 1 e t oak
t n at d enJoy e ch o th er
A1 d
he 1 ve get out
there I 1 go mg to enJ OY t
be ause you do 1 t k o v vhen
you re go 1g to get back

you can say that about He s

1 oflno Qu It ng 3 Yea 0 d Mare
He f Paint &amp; Ha f A ablan 8 own

Ntw doublt wldl 3 br 2 ba
uae 00 down only $285 po
mon call now t -800-ltt em
Naw FIHtwOOd t•l70 SIS 999 00
3 Bedroom 2 Bath 1 877 777
.,70

It

$5000 (740)256-1329

5 Yaar Old Appa oooa Gu lng
Good Tra Horae 5 Ytar 0 ~ Pa

(eoB)7113-e418

tunltlts

n L ch as at 1) uti
to lend ) o r tcan

Llvaatock

DIRECTV t 11 Installation 5200
Cllh bock 600 263-28ol0

apartment&amp; 11 V rage ManOJ end
A Vlflldt Apartmtntl In M dd 1

999 Honda 450 ForemanS 4x4
Lass Than 400 M les B gh Red
E11cellent Cond ton Ha d y Used

E~~:celent Service

Fie- F na"""'l Available
Homt ICommere a Unlrs
FREE Color Catalog
Call TOday 1 801H142-1310

pee al

740.949 3061 call IIIIer 3pm

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

AMAZINGLY LOW PRICES
WOLFF TANNING BEDS
Buy Factory D tot

t

at your alma n ate1 rl at ) Ot ve
sl ve I for fo '1 yc
11 etc 01e all k 1 ds f c 1 o
tloJSgotlg 1 leI( I It
ptobably gm1g to l1 t

994 Honda 200 Four Trax $800

9640

lng Rolorences &amp; Deposit Re
(740)448-1518

take your te m out

suucture (740)245-5&lt;108

48 Inch Big Screen TV RCA
$800 (740)«8-2095
to 50% om P a engineered with
pans 40IC601110 was$ 6500 now

For rent one bed oom furnished
apa trnent n Middleport ca 740

(740)448-4759

1976 Slltronlx Comancht 0 104
Mlc 0 lg Manual Excellent Con

0 ive !rom $297 o $383 Wa k to
shop &amp; mo\1 es ..call 7~0 ~46

742 7403 Apa tment home and
tra e enta s Commarc a store
trontl ava ab e tor lease vaca.n
etas now

PatriOt OH 1 mile off Patriot Ad

me oy 740 992 2526 or 740 992
539 Russ Moore owner
at Watches Good Cond lion 422

from PageBl

s finally h s cit b th It w1ll
head to Po nt Lookout Mo
for the national tourna 1 e 1t
It mea 1s a lot T ho 11'\S
sa1d after Tuesdays ga me
Gomg to a 1at o a! tm r a
nent as part of any ballclub ts
a spec al feel g Be• g ble to

4 loK Tar le Pupp as 11 weeks
old Had f rat shots $50 each
Monroe Yoder 1 47 Burnena Ad
Buy or sal

Carter

(740)662 7512

Peta for Sale

G ICIOUI V ng 1 In~ 2 bedroom

111180

ve ado ShO Bed V6 Aulo
Ova d ve Loaded $6600 Cays
(740 245 !050
EOJen ngs

992 Chevy 4114 Clean &amp; EJCce
ant Cond 110n $8500 740)256

B00-59t-em

NIW 18 It Wdt 549t Ptr mon
only 1270 par mon call now 1

d ve Sho t Bed $6895 92 S

730 Vans &amp; 4·WDs

Sporting
Goods

1124 East Man

Bedroom Furn shed Apartment
Centra Haa &amp; A Cond ton ng
Carpe Throughout Ott Street
Pa king Quiet &amp; Close To Gro
eery
Sto e
Adults
Only

Ut 1 till

550

94 GMC E• ended Cab 2 Wheel
Drive Loaded 305 Au o OOJe

329

1 and 2 bedroom apartments lu
n shed and unfu n shtd secur ty
deposit requ red no pe1s 740

qu rtd

S21 95 Per 100 1 200 PS
$37 00 Pe 100 All Brass Com
press~n F n nga n StoCk
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson Ohio 1 BOO 537 952B

Cava L vtatock Auction AA
Highway May.avllla KV For Mo e
nfo matlon Conlact Charla Boyd

148000 (740)258-1009

(740)448-080S

free 1 888

Couch and Chair Good Condl
tlon phona (304)e7&amp;-3132

52 Acres

994 Dodge Daka a 4)(4 E)(ttnd
eel Cab 3 Inch L ft Loaded New
Pa nt Whee s And T as

CONSULTATION Benet Team

~ derly And Hand ooppod EQual
HOUIIng Opportunity (7 40)44B
4639

691 6777

-

720 Trucks for Sale

c aim den ad? We spec allzt n
appeals and hear nga FREE

560

Homes 1 868 565-0167
new Oakwood home three

Wh pool Wastte $95 E ec r c
Range $95 Froslfrae Refrigerator

Apartments
for Rent

GaraiJ8 (740)44t-o302

350

$1600 Call Monday Th u F day
9 ooam 5 aopm (740)366-9303

se aa

Se v cas Inc To

520

d on Make Offer (740).WB4809
Ask For Jim

To Hol•r

cury Couga $1400 1994 Me
cury Topaz $ 800 1989 Pontac
Grand Am $1100 I 990 OldS Cut
ISS C e 8 $1200 t986 OldS De
a 88 $900 1993 Me cu y Topaz

Sma I ch cken eggs 20¢ a dozen
or caae
y Michael 740

(740)446-7398

Bath Stove Ref lge ator Back
Po ch 811121oot Very Good Con

Fleetwood

lively 1 Auto Salas 1988 Fo d

Eoco S W $500 1988 Olds
Cu ass Co a $1200 1982 Me
cury Lyn• SW S450 9B6 Me

Wa e line Sl)te a

14x70 W th 24 Foot E)(pando
$325 month + Oepo&amp; t &amp; Refer
ence In The Camp Con ey A ea

2 Story House In Town 3 8.d

room 1 112 Ba111. Attad&gt;t(l 1 Car
Gorago Call
Aftor tlpm
(740J4•e-4005 Or (7•0)-we.

RESIDENTIAL HOME OWNERS

CARS $29 MONTH! POL CE M
POUNDS &amp; REPO S HONDA
CHEVY 24 MO S 0 9 911 FOR
LIST NGS CALL
600 941
8777 e•l c 98 4

APPLIANCES

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

992 5231

SO DOWN HOME&amp; I IIOV T &amp;
BANK FORECLOSURES! LOW
OR NO MONEY DOWN! OK
CREDIT! FOR LISTINGS CALL
1-ICl0-338-0020 •t 8811

wu ht s

P om Gown Dusk Color 2 P eca
S ze 8 W lh Ma ch ng Shoes
S u 8 1 2 Pad $350 Asking
$ 50 (304)773 5079

836-4052

Lot mode c earance sawa up to
$8 625 W th any ho"fne check US'
out ware dtallng Co 1 1 Mob e
Horneo US 50 East Atltona Oh

310 Homulor Sale

GOOD USED

es

Christy s Fam y L vlng 33140
New Lma Rd Rut and Oho 740.

HI/II I ',1/\i l

Thompson• App lance 3407
JaCk!On AvoniJI (304 675 7388

740)446-0074

1 1100-1191 1777
Flnctl Ooys Nattonw de Inventory
Rlducllont (304)738-3409
Limited Or NQ Credit? Govern
mont Bank F nance On y At Olk
wood tn Barbourav o WV 304
735-3409

TUIINID DOWN ON
IOCIAL IICUIUTY /Ill?
No FH Unloll Wt liilnl
1-888-5123345

Fo Sa e Aecondit a ned wash
era d ye s and ret igera or•

New And Used Furnllu e Stort
Be ow Ho day nn Kanauga We
SeH Grave Monum8nls And Vas

800 B41 9757

Ltot7!SOOOII

e

740-oW8-7795

Small House $250 Month And
oepoa t Stove Refr gtra or
Was he
D yer
Furn ahed

count on

NEED AN EARLY PAYDAY?? No
oftlct v ~~ ntctlllry Up to $500
ntllantly Ca I toll lroo 1 177 EAR
LYPAY tst AOVANCE FREEl

379-2910

Appl ancas
Racond 1 onad
Wasl'la a 0 vers Ranges Re 1

New&amp; UaedFu ntu e
N!fW 2 P eca L v ng oom Suites
$399 Buy Sel Trade

paymenls Pay one bill month
EASY to gat stan•d F nanela
Fr.aedom Chr atlan counsel ng

Crodlt P..-? Crodlltloludonol Low coat Money bock
""'""-' t 502 5Se-&amp;7tO or
S A S E C L SltorTttt
PMB 321
620-h Eaatorn Bypasa
RcM1orld KY404752667

86 P ymou h Sundance Runs
$800 88 Chrys e LeBa on Runs
&amp; Looks Good $1300 OBO 740)

SOCIAL SECURITY DISAB LITY

CONSOLIDATE YOUR WAY
OUT OF DEBT! Reduce monthly I·F::-a-ct_o_ry_G::-oot-:-::32:-,::80::-::5:-0:-oo=o-=o::-1,"'
CC3
www dtf&gt;ICCI.org (Non-Prof )
CREDIT PROBLEMS? CALL THE
CREDIT EXPERTS LICENSED/
BONDED CORRECT/REMOVE
BAD CREDIT BANKRUPTCY
LAWSUITS JUDGMENTS AAA
RATING t 888-811-0902

Household
Goods

Gall poll Arta Daposlt And Rtl
arence No Pels [740)446-6114

appc&gt;n mont 740-885 3917

y s1ooo 00

510

ERS Almas everyone app OOJed
w h SO down Low monthly pay
manta 1 81)0..817 3475 ext 330

gr,tors Up To 90 Days Gua

House For Ren Bldwt Oh o 3
Bedroom• 2 Bath1 $550 mo
Plul A Ud Its Secur y Depos 1

Hall Ao • 3 Bed oom Houll 1
Bedroom Apa tment Beneath
Two POll Barna C oae To Town

Ia Is 3010 WILSH RE BLVD
188 LOS ANGELS CALIFOR
NIA 90010

NEW BRAND NAME COMPUT

anteed We Se New Maytag Ap
pliances F anch
y Maytag

art avalllblo on anoqUII
opportunity bUll

ofdoaatotlepmnmzethtlr
taxes W lte lmmed ately Wind

FORECLOSED GOV T HOMES!
$0 OR LOW DOWN! TAX
REPO 8 I SANKRUPTCIESI OK
CAEDtTI FOR LISTING! CALL 1
I00-50ttmut 88t3

PORTUNITY EMPLOYER

44&amp;9

877 769-8168

HHI Pump Deck Above GrOtlfld
Poot Prtood eo 1 Homutead
Bond (304)112-240&amp;

W I Babysit In My Home Jutt 5

hou11 w luI baument
5385 00 a month + $250 00 de
poall In Porn P taunt 304 875

-IHd In th!l newopoper

$FREE CASH NOW$ t om
wea thy fam es unload ng m "10na

Beams P PI Reba Fa COne e e
Ang e Channel Flat Bill Slee
G a ng Fo D ains D vewaya &amp;
Wa kwaya l&amp;L Sc ap Meta a

MERCHANDISE

2 b

Thll newopoper will not
know ng~ acctpt
-Hmonto tor 1111 eetata
wl1tch lain violation of tht
laW OtJr lrt horeb\'
Informed t1t1t 111 dWiitlngo

Inc uded On y $17 900
FlaetwoOd 1 B88-565 0167

MOBILE HCIIE OWNERS

(740)446-7300

3 Bedroom• Fo aclosed
Home&amp; From S1991Mo. -4'% Down
30 Yta I at 8 5'"-. APR For L B
"'l' 800-319-3323 E• 1709

ment rt(IU &amp;d F-xce en Monthly
Prof t Pottnl al F nance Ava

Fence For Stock 3 ltdroom
Hou11 2 Batha Family Room

Human Re10urces Department

to-

homPapBl

$19 951 CODa accepted 1 BOO
268-0989 CredH ca da

NEW ANO USED STEEL Stea

Jm740992 3 87

410 HOUIIS for Rent

tcommended con ro crav nga
ftel great 2 montha supply only

470 Wanted to Rent

v

the mght for both teams com
pic of times took a bad shot or
bmed
two
&lt;atd Thomas
They
Ftve Pwneers scored tn dou
scored a 1d got thelt momen
ble dtgm as Khaltd Loda tun go 1 g If you look at col
scored 14 pomts Marco Saun
lege basketball games betwee 1
Rm Gra •de has played one dcrs scored II and Shaun t vo good tea ns that are even
of the toughest schedu les u
Peters and Gerald King added ly natched there are always a
the NAIA With the !tkes of 10 pomcs each
couple of u u We nake a r m
Ohto Hawa1 H1lo No I
For the Redmen sopho
early a 1d they come back and
Embry 'R1ddle and Ptkevtlle more forward Chm Ballenger make J ru 1 We take the run
on roa&lt;l, not ncludmg their led the way off the bench w1th to go up by P at the hal£
ngorou! conference schedule
13 pomts wh1le Joe Marnn an
Po nt Park ma aged to
I guarantee you there s Jot Scott Dav1s eac h ch pped n kn &gt;ck t th ree stratght baskets
a other NAIA D VtSion II
v1th P pomts
to open the seem d I alf to
team m the country that s
Randar Luts added II help bu ld on that momen
pbyed that tough a schedule
po nts for R10 Grande and (ll11
sa d Thomas [cs JUSt 01 unbe
Jerry Barlow and ]»on Beller
Tl e Red nen rega ned thetr
hevable credit to those k ds
each scored 10
co 1 posure and bounced back
how they ve bonded togetl r
L ts also had a double dot!
to 01 I l pot 1t lead on four
and ho v they ve brought t Ito ble w th I 0 rebounds
d1ftc
cc SIO lS before
the system 01 d learned ho \ to
We had n 1 e d1fferenc peo
steel 1g 1 fo r the e1ght po nt
run the systc n ThiS IS a pretty ple who led us m scor ng th s
good ball club 11ght 1o v
}CO&lt; md te 1 people
vho
fh '
ade their ru1 ea ly
The Redmen Jllnp I o t to ~cored 18 or more pomcs
(1 1 h
o I I a!Q
1d
1 11 4 lead Tuesda) before g I nc sa d Tho I as I dm t Tl 1
We called a cot pie
the l'toncc s can e b ck to k 10 v 1f there are na I) college o f t t
ts to tr} to break
take a 14 13 lead v1tl P 48 basketball tea ns n the cou 1 th
tt 1 a d c got
I ft t the b sc half
tl) that COl p tt thos
tats 01 1 t c b1e k We t Jade so ne
Po t Park took 1ts b ggest t&lt; gether Not only do we have 111 stake Ia \1 tl e st etch but
lead of the ga nc
1 time so 11c bab 1ce but
ve n
th bon
It 1c ts ve JUst exe
straight baskets by sc 1 01 gt a I u !Selfish The k ds dm t care n ted bet
do v th e st etch
Dexter Yom g 1 1clud t g a l
vho scores
th
th ) d d We lm some
pomt goal that pt t the P o
Nathan Copas co 1tr b red cl1tch fre throws We got a
1eers up 26 20 at the R 18
vttl s x asmts for the Red
co 1ple of layups nd scor d
mark of the openmg half
111Cll
• s de a 1d got some key
You &gt;g who led the AMC t
Rw Gra 1de took a 40 36 reboUI ds " the t n e
scormg thiS season with 22 9 lead late m the first half before
A b g key to the Red ne 1s
po nts per ga 1 e fi 1 shed v1th gm&gt;g on a 10 0 run mcludmg eventual success n the seco 1d
23 pomts 01 d xx 3 pouucrs
a G for 6 free throw run by I alf vas the offe lS ve boards as
Dexter got away fro n us a Luts
R o Grande kept Po t t Park
httle bit but Dexter s gotten
That helped the Red ne 1 to fa r offe t Sl\ e boorJs 11 the
away from people all year sa d take a 50 38 advantage gomg second
Thomas We held h1m to 23 mto halftime
We told them (at halftime)
(pmnts) but he has to get up
In the second half the Pto
that was go ng to be a key stat
29 shots to do 1t Its tough to neers !lowly took control of at the e 1d of the game md
say you d1d a pretty gob defen
the contest and managed co Thomas We ve got to keep
stvely on a guy that ht you up take a brmg the game to wtth
them off the offensiVe glass
for 23 but we d d a pretty m two 63 61 with I 0 20 left They re a b1g st ong phyStcal
good JOb on htm He s a heck 111 the game
athleuc team They JUSt flew co
of a scorer
We were a htcle soft ofTen
the offens ve glass 11 the first
Young was one of 11 players s1vely (early m the second half and ve d1dn t do a good
to score n double figures on halQ and tt rned 1t over a cou
JOb putttng bodes 01 the11

Rio

LOSE 3 5 LBS WEEKLY GUAR
ANTEED Bu n lat qulcfc~ dOOto

(740)446-9539

Downtown Second Avenue Near
Courthouse And C ty Su d ng
N ce Oecora ed AIC 3 Rooms
Bu d ng By lise I 448 2nd Ave

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5

540 Mltcellaneoua
PHrchandlse

Huge lnven ory 0 scount P cas
On V ny Sk ling Door&amp; W nd
ows .Ancho s Water Hea 8 s
Pumbng &amp; Eect ~talPa ts Fu
naces &amp; Haa Pumps Bennel a
Mob e Home Supply 740 446
94 s www orvb com/bennett

Ch stlan couple look ng lor
house to rent no PI s no kids

All real eetata ttdvertlo ng In
ltil neuBpaJ*Is IUbftd to
tho F - Fair Houling ~
o11816 wl1tch malcll k lllegol
"any piOIOIOnort
tlmNotlon 0( diiCflmlnltton
buod on rtct cotot roflgton
-tomlllalotalut ornattonal
origin or any Intention 10
mektany 1uoh ,...,.,..,.,.
lmtlltton Ot dltcrfmlnallon

A+ M&amp;M MARS NESTLE Eatab
1hed Vtnd ng Routt W II se by
3112 Undt S9K minimum nvttt

$73 QOO 3 lodroom 1 t/2 Bat~
wood Flooro Gu F rtptaco
Garagt, t 47 Acru Mutt &amp;o•
(7&lt;10)318-t151

1!1

Orlvert PA M T anapo 1 No tlt
pa 11nce needed 2 week pad

283-3880 axt 1368 !2• hro 1

CD-ROM Investment lrom $2495
Finane ng available (800) 322
1139 E)(T 050 www bus ness

OOPNES o NAPNES va d dr v

ThieVes

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

$3000 wook 'YI MAILING •oo

b ochu 11 AT HOME Guar
anteed Free Suppllu 1 800

59215651

hou a week y Call Sa a Tee 740.

Wanted
Licensed Practical
Nurse to a eommunily home fo
peop a wlln mental retardat on n
B dwe Cu ant LPN Licente

343 DRIVERS NEEDED No e•

Pas al

www wtubmit wiiWorkalhoml

MEO CAL BILLING Un m ted n

Gallpo s

FORMATION

$1 000 WEEKLY POSSIBLE
FROM Home Free web 11t1 No
•uparlence equlrtd Ceta 11

URGENTLY NEEDED plumo
doClOffl eam $35 to SolS to&lt; 2 or 3

Wa a 1
Pe son

Rewa d For The F st n o mat on
Result ng
n Convict on Of

Yard Sale

Bualneaa
Opportunity

cation or evidence that aucl'l II
cenae can be obta ned Experl
ence n schoo district unlvera ty
or govarnmenta account ng de

Reward (304)634 0885 $1000

70

210

Serv1ces
Galli• Mllgo Community

The Athans Me ga Educational
Serv ce Cenle 1 steldng qua I

RENTALS

FINANCIAL

ARE YOU CONNECTED? INTER
NET USERS WANTED! $25 $751

60 Lost and Found
Lost Pet La ge Brown Dog
Wh te on Cheat Bldwe Eve

&amp; Lo-

t ed cand dettl tor till pooiUon of

ough Tnt OhiO

FOR MORE NFORMATION

ACCESS TO A COMPUTER?
Put t to wo k $25 n $75 nr FT
PT FREE nlo BOO 971 8045 e&lt;t
601 www ahomeb z com

I

T aasu tr Aflll cants must pot
aess a T aasurar a Ice nat

T~

Of Labo

EQua Oppo tunlty Employer

S987 85 WEEKLY P ocesalng
HUO FHA Mo tgage Aafund&amp; No
Experence Ra(lu red Fo FREE
Informal on Cal 1 800 50 6832
alii 1300

$22 oa Choo.. 'tOur Hou

callonl Holpltal Nur~lng Horne
Correctional C n c An&lt;l Pr vatt

Depa tment 01 Job &amp; Family
Sa vlees And The Ga a County
Oepa tment Of Job &amp; Fami y

Action Agency

$U5 WEEKLY Make Money
He p ng Peep e Rece OJI Govern
man Relunds F ee Data sl (24
nrs ) 800 449 4625 Ext 5700

Look ng To Buy A New Home?
Don t Have Land? We Do Ill. Hu ry
On~ to Lots Laft 304 736-l':t95

AN s Start S34 00 LPN Start

ABSOLUTE GOLD MINE SO
down I Candy VEND NG route
Ntls $48 000+ FREE Info Toll
Frn 1 877 494 669S

By The Un ted States Department

CALL 888 237 5647
EXT 1827

Thu sday Monday thru Satu day
9 Cl0-530

Youth A t Encouraged To Apply

Residents

START DATING TONIGHT!
Have fun met ng e IQ b t singles

Oual t)' c oth ng and houaeho d
temt Sl oo bag 11 t every

Local on

CAREER POTENTIAL
1500 EMPLOYEE COMPANY
IN BUSINESS 1BYEARS

Full Maalth Bene! 1
401 KPanAfe Mo

Now To 'tOu Thrift Snoppe
9 West S meon Athens
740-592 1842

Base

Studentt
Employed WII Be A f&amp;nged Ar
ound Their Schoo Schldu t Ap

Waek y Pay &amp; waek y SOnuo

30 Announcement•

Tit 1

Worke
Wea ht zatlon
Ct'leahi •
0 f ce All atant
Cheshl I
011 Cl Au ttant
Galpo a

Fbced WOrk seneou e
You wont Be sent Home For
Low Resu ts

Dlvorco $150
lllnkf"'llcy s195
Adoptloo $22&amp;
Not dO Kyou111W kK
CALL 1 800 263 0503 tor FREE
nformallon Bankruptcy nla n TN
KY

In your a ea Call or more nlor
ma ion 1 800 AOMANC E ut
1736

Week And May R1 ctlve Wo k
Aela ed T a n ng The Follow ng
Pos bans A 1 Currently Ava able

H gh Schoo Students College
5 udenta And Out Of School

EXPANDING N THE

FREE SEARCH!
www SINGLES com

YEP WO kers W II Be Pad $6 25
Pe hou Fo Up To 32 Hours PI

Job

H ng Ca Can e Communicators
No Cold Call "'l

"Deldllnaa aubjact to

Commun ty Action
Agency Is Accepllng App ca
Ions Fo Tempo a y Employees
Fo The Youth Employment P o
ec Appl can a Se ectad To Pa
1clpate W 11 Work At Agency
S tes And other LocaUons n Ga
Ia County
Me~gs

Pomeroy, Middleport Ohio

Wednesday, FebruafY 28, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

1990 Wir,nabago Moto Hoine
Low M eagt 38 000 M ea Se f
Contelntd Sups 6 Exct ant

Hay a Grain

10001 round bus ot hay tor 111
740 992 7.56
First &amp; SICOnd Cut Orchard
G 111 Round Balta S 2 00
(740)445-77e7
Hay fo 11 1 aque t bal11 S 25
m 1 on RI2N 304 875 480

Hay &amp; Brlgh W ro no Straw Yea
Round Dallvt y &amp; vo ume 0 1
coun .Av'- lablt Mar tagt Fa m

(304)675 5724

850 Stell &amp; Fertilizer
Tobacco P anla 0 der Now To
Gua anltt Eerly Spr ng P an nga
lncrea&amp;t Allotment• Mean E~et 1
p anta Thank You For Your Bull
nen Call Danny Dtwhu 11

LOIVO MUIIgl (304)895 3740
0 (304)895 3789

Tf1ANSPOIHI\TION

SO DOWN CARS POLICE M
POUNDS l REPOSI HONDA S
CHEVY S JEEPS LOW AS $281
MO S 11 Ull FOR LISTINGS
CALL
800 451 0050 e• C
9812

11 0 Help Wanted

Cond lion $14 800 (740)4489256

SEF!VICE.S

Pttomlno llltllon

840

Campara &amp;
Motor Homes

810

110 Help Wanted

Home
Improvement•
IAIIMINT
WATERPROOfiNG

Unc:ond tlonal feUme guarantee
Local r.!erencas rurnlahtd E1

tab !shed 197&amp; Ca 24 H 1 (7&lt;10)
448 0870 1 BOO 287 0578 Rog
.,, wotarproottng
C&amp;C Gtnt al Home Ma n
11nenct Pein ng v ny s d ng
ca pentry doors w ndowt bltht
mob 1 nome epa and mo t Fa
fret est matt ea Cht 740 992

6323
Livingston 1 Basemen
P ooflng a baaemtnl
done tree 111 matta
guarantee 14y con job

Wate
epalrs
lfe ma
upe I

once (304 895 3887
Super or Home Ma nttnanet And
Plumbing We Do A I Rel)ai B On
Hom11 Inside And Ou Ca

pentry
Paint ng
(740)441-Q113

P mb ng

840 Electrical and
Refrigeration

EARN $$$
NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED
Full and part ttmo potltlono available
Completatralnlng provided with flexible hour•

fULL- TimE
O'BLENBII nURSinG SUPERUISOR
AnD
ASSISTAnT nURSE mAnAGER- mED/SURG
0 Bleness

Memorial Hospttal has 2
Immediate full time openings In their Nursing
Department We offef a very compet1bve
salary range as well as excellent education
and other health related benefits
NURSING SUPERVISOR Rotating Shift
Mimmum 3 5 years hospltal expenence
requ1red
BSN preferred
Management
experience preferred
ASSISTANT NURSE MANAGER Evenmg
Sh1ft (3 11) Minimum 2 years hospital
experience
reqwred
BSN
preferred
Management expenence preferred
Applications can be picked up 1n the
Human Resources Department
O'Bieness Memorial Hospital
55 Hospital Dr , Athens Ohio, 45701
(740) 592·9227
E

Earn up to $15/hour
Full time poeltlone ollar bane111 package which
lnoludn MedloaVOeniiV401 K/Pd Yocatlona
CALL TODAY START TOMO~ROWI

1-800-929-5753
Tolteo,.,lcto

440

'

Apartmsnls
for Rent

CROSS POINTE
APARTMENTS
Acceptmg ApplicatiOns
1 bedroom apartments
Elderly (62 or older) or D1sabled
or Handtcapped
Ehg1bthty Based on Income
Handicapped Accesstb1hty
Please Call (740) 992 3055
TDD# (800) 855 2880

Gl

~qual

Housing
Opportunity

•

�Wednesday, February 28, 2001

Page B 6 • The Daily Sentinel

Wedneac:lay, February 28, 2001

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 7

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

ALLEYOOP

Public Notice
Public Notice ·

PmLLJP
ALDER

ROIERT BISSELL
CONSTRUcnON
• New Homes

$Dollar
Daves
740-992-0459

· G~r•u••
• Complete
Remocltllng
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

74().992-1671

Clean buem•nta,
attics, garagea &amp;

Rutland, Ohio
Truck seats, car seals, headliners, truck tarps,
convertible &amp; vinyl tops, Four wheeler seats,
motorcycle seats, boat covers, carpets, etc.
. Mon-Frl

8:30 • 5:00

40 yrs experience
(74()) 742-8888
1·888·521..()916

Over

barns. FrH
eatlmate Ugh! .
Hauling Jobl

Adverti~e

URNPIKE L~:~~

$8.00 column inch weekdays
$1 0.00 column inch Sundays

.SPE481AL FINANCE DEPARTMENJ'
Bankruptcy? Credit Problems?

"We Can Help"ll
Call Us first Or We Both Lose!

Ask For Mike Hindle

PUBLIC NOTICE

1·800-272-6179 or 446-9800

The
Annual
Financial Report for
Letart Townahlp Ia
complete
and
.available for review,
at tho home of tht
Clerk by appointment
only.

YOUNG'S
General Conlractl119
CARPENTER
Homes,
Renovations, Rat
SERVICE
•
Room
Addltlono &amp;
roofspeclallsls
Remodeling
ExcovoHnv
• New G•r•a••
• Eloctrlcat &amp; Plumbing
Sepllc systems,
• Roofing &amp; Quttora
• VInyl Siding l Pointing
waler, vas lines
• Petlo and Porch O.Cke
HOME CREEK
Free Estimates
V.
C. YOUNG Ill
ENT., INC.
992-6215

Joyce White, Clerk
(740) 247-3125
(2) 28, lie

992-7943

BUILDIIIIIJNC,
Skllaa• New G...,..

~.::r.c;:

DDUDII
Pllft
All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equlpmenl Parts
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Parts
Dealers

~
~
1&amp;1All Home
CONSTRUCnON
Improvements
IHIINIIItiiNI~
PUI hTIU111
fLOOUI
ij (7..1H ..tt84
(1171 ....SU1

UIOIILINI

1000 Sl. Rt. 7 Soulll
Coolville, OH 45723

Bat Quality For The Lowelt Pllet,

GUARANTEED!

740117-11111

BAUM LUMBER CO. ·
'46384 St. Rt. 248 Chester, Ohio
(740) 98!5-3301
Lionel~ MTH, K-Line,
Athearn, Atlas, Bachmann

&amp; Accessories
~. HO, &amp; N Guage

.'

Estes Rockets

11-~, ·

HiQh&amp; Dry
Self-Storqe

(2) 28

lie

111179$ Hiland Rd.

Public Notice

Pomeroy,

IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO

0/oto

740-992-5232

CASE NO. 00-CV-151

"The World's Best Roof"
Puts an end to leaks
.

Bank One, National
Auoctotlon fka The
Firat Nattonol Bank ol
Chicago, •• Truatn
By llealct.ntlet

For flat or ktw·slope (new or retrofit) rools, the
'
Duro-Last slngla-ply tf1errno!jastk: rooflng
system ptJ18 an end \0 • ·
. •""""""-

•TO&lt;ql• Energy ellk:lont. l iiiifaoncaled 10 1""' IUOfo ...t.' '
apociicolklns. •loak·proof and Wtuolly maillonarce-he.
•ln11111od by autl'&lt;lriztd dee,./COnlradora on~. • Proltclld by a t5·
voar llmllod wlrlW!Iy.
~ - · -roofs. The&lt;o ono noorl tor yoo to put up Mill a
leoky roclltlat MOdi continual~· COl your 1oc11 0\Jo.Last
deo;er/C&lt;l&lt;iradOrlor e rooftop &lt;Wai&lt;Jitioolodey.

B1

· among 32. teams, the Ameripns have played decently.
Under coach Bruce Arena,
they are 23- 14-11, although
Arena was suspended ~ but,
unofficially, on hand - for
the final two games of the
CONCACAF semifinals.
This hasn't been a divided
squad, as it was in France
·three years ago. And the
~m e r ic an s

se em.

to

h avt:

found some offense built
aro und
forward
Brian
McBride, wh o has fol&gt;r goals
in the b st four in te rnational
g.un es.

"What he brings to the•
tc·:un· is that he is a real fo rward," Arena said of McBride,
:1 fo r m~r member of th t•
C rc·w who now plays in Engl.md. "When he stcpl on th e

'

'8

field , you know he is going to
give you 90 minutes , and he
scores goals. ·I don't know
what more you can ask from
him.
"Obviously, he is very good
in the air. He's a very good
player ':it holding the ball and
pressuring the opponent, and
he is able to keep enough
balls alive to. n10ve fonvard
into the attacking end of the
field.
" He ts invalltable."
Per haps prticulo rly so
:1gain st M exico, w hich at
times bas . trouble defemlii1g
, high balls. And on what co uli!
be a fiu zen field , b.1lls in the
ail' could be a dec iding fa ctor.
Si ~ tt•ams :m.· in ·th e ro un dmbin regiona l fit\al. ll'i th the
top thrt'l' advancing to th!.'
20112 Wo rld Cup in South
Kore.l and Japan. Also playi ng
Wcdn~s d ~y nrc- H n ndur.1s at

CmtJ R ica, ;md Trinitbd and
'IC, bago .lt j at11.1ica.

f

.

Advertise

In this

·spice

for$50
.per
month·
SIHlSPt H01110

Cons t ru c 11 o 11

New Homes, Room
Additions, Garqes,
Pole Buildings,
Siding, Decks,
Kitchens, 'Drywall &amp;
More
We Can Make Y1111r

Dream A RMUty!
740-74l-34U
FREE ESTIMATES!

Irina In your repair worll .
we'll get you galng fir spring
Every Spring Tune-Up
a
FREE Blade Sharpening.

N,ew equipment arriving dally ·
ubleHun9
Replacemenl
Windows ·
Welded frame._

•Hauling ·U~one
I•Ore·VII· Send •Topton
•Fill Dirt •Mulch

•B&amp;;

...

155N2nd
Middleport

•..,.•.

28170 Iathan R01d
Racine, Ohio
48771

740-949-2217
SlzeeS' x 10'
to 10'x30'
Hours
7:00AM • 8:00PM

Howardl.

space for

$50 p4,.r

-

• Kl I

992·2975
ELITE MECHANICAL CONTRACTORS

Roofing • Home

Spout
FI'H EIIIIIIIIH

949-1405
591·5011

l-JOU75·7U4 .

l-10t-J50-f077

Relldeatt.l Conubttdol New CoNiructloll
Stlltt . Senlct lnolallallcut
Spodalla,. In Sl..t MDI Ductworlc

· ":l'rono"llolll A Senlce For
Glllla, Muon, ond Mlip Co11nd11
Ll&lt;eiltted ond lltiiUnd
WV 01!176

voua ·
· CONCRETE
CONNECDON
Quellty Drlliew1p,

ellula1
Jeff Warner Ins.

992-5479

Advertise
in this
space for
$100 per
month~
•

.....

...

• Q J t

" 1 I 4

v...........,.....
Put

"

IHT

Openint lead: • 7

lilt

Alpu1

to
BY PHILLIP ALDER
Who said this, on
2,
1988?
March
"When a man opens
the car door for his
wife. it's either a new
BARNEY
car or a new wife."
DID YOU TRIP
NO
Bridge players need
YOU PUT
WHO'S YORe NEW
open doors: entries to
MARY BETH IN MA'AM
A FRO&amp; IN
SWEETIE?
one
hand or the other.
HOOL TODAYr---,....,..-1
HER LAP
?
Here is an example of
•
maintaining an entry
to ensure winning vital
tricks.
How would you
plan the play in three
no-trump after West
has led his fourth highest spade?
South wasn't keen
to make a bid with six
such soft points. However, he had only two
diamonds, and he held
a decent five-card suit.
So, he was right to
respond one no-trump.
Yqu have five top
tricks: two spades
(given trick one), two
hearts and one diamond. The other four
tricks are clearly availTHE BORN LOSER .
. able ·from clubs. So,
~"'INJ\1-\.Eit~l~;., DROP...,. South ran trick one to
~ffffi.£
Of R.NN I
his spade queen and
~';!£ ~ ~"''(
promptly broached
OF 5U~~lt-IE
those clubs. However,
W~DIIf-IC&lt;
West
played high-low
ENit:ll. t...
to show a doubleton,
ROO!'\ ...
and East held up his
ace until the third
, round Then, a spade
'
through declarer established West's suit.
With no entry, declar==-=,..., r------"""TI r-:::o-------.;:--1 .,....,-,~.,.....--.,.=-c:==---.
· er had slammed the car
;-·.,:.:.;_-,
... WHIC!-1, .. . AIID Haf:o
I!.Y
INSTEAD OF
door on his own hand.
~~~. "A.~To~.fT'c:
South should have
HAS
".JEF!:K'!'"' '
anticipated an oppo~J
nent's holding up the
"T."
club ace until the third
round. And if that happens, where is South's
entry? The only candidate is . in spades.
Therefore, declarer
must call for dummy's
spade ace at trick one.
PEANUTS
Then, after winning
.
with his club ace, what
WJ.IEN WE WEKE WALKING
I(ES, M~AM. IT WAS
can East do? Nothing.
TO SCI-IOOL, !.EAVES. AND
'IERV WINPV TillS MORNIN6..
A spade return immePAPER ANt' 8RANCIIES WERE
diately
establishes
5l,OWIN6 ALL OVER ...
South's entry. And if
East switches to a diamond, declarer calls
for a spade after winning the trick in the
dummy.
That cynical comment was made _by
Prince Philip, Duke of
Edinburgh.

I

IWEDNESDAY

FEBRUARY 28 I

"

-

..

Common

.UCie

4e Batlnger or
Novalc

48 Twlat In
51 ~tlan
bird
54 Groupo!
nine
55 Untilled
56 Whirlpool
57 Tldll wave
DOWN
1 Compuo

18 Fall mo.
38 Ulllmall
20 Clly In Ulah
(deg'")
IIUI
21 Back oul 40 Carried
2 C.ntor of 1
oft
41 Dlnlth
lhletd
prom!H
loland
3 --on the 22 Se~tah
42 IAmb'•

23 Popar

win

Way

kin

12 Puua-r
14'M•Md
15 Chalk
ramo16 Speck
17 In no way
111 Wrltor
Janowitz
20 They know

45

tile--.

6 Q J 11 t I

.Dealer: North
1M1tk Wtst Hri

10ReletM'I

......_

42 Flnnllh flrot

meiiUfl

2G Chltd'a
ma
27 tnnla

r.

person

bock

pleyor

SMver .
Prtoolng
Rounded
lump
Certoln
compound
lnfont'o
,...,

(prtiH)
4 Cn11
alandlng
5 Wreth
8 LAX Info
7 Liver ond

23 Jaat
30
24 C.leallal
boar
32
25 Compooer
Strovlnaky
34
27 Prt-lduH
lnHCt
35
beef
8 Grnkpaak 28 "Shako 36 On 1 -w1t1t 8 Flower part
-1" (move
(oquotlol 11 Wrf1or
hj
29 S mpto
37 Weapon
Ferber
31 Had folth In
38 ThMter
12 Swompy
33 Soclol
HOllon
om
eppotnt40 Hoving
13 Mia. In
ment
made a will
Mldrtd

mom

43 Set eagle
44 ChieM
coaung
48 Martin
Luther47 Roman
road

48 Ancient
Peralan't
neighbor
50 lt't for
hOJHII
52 Copy
53 Eorf G,.y,
e.g.

CELEBRITY CIPHER
_
by Luis Campos
CtlobriiY Clphor cryptogram• are crute&lt;l from quotatlona by tamouo

people, put 1nd p~t. Each leHer In lhe clphtr stands for another.

Today's c/u.: E equals L

'LZGMG

UX

CJFZ
CKIIG

LV

OVMEH

UO · LZG
JX

LZGMG

KAMKUH .

UX

CVMG

UD

YJM

AKULZ

CKRG

JX

JOKAMKUH.'

CJF. Z
LV

A.O.
FMVTT
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'Sunset Boulevard's last light at night
could come from actual sunaats.•- L.A. Times' Mike Downey
on Calli.' a anergy crunch.

DDDDDDD

cg cg QJ cg @1 ~ ~~"""'

DDDDDDD

...

~~~~~~~~

DDDDDDD
~~~~~[!]~

DDDDDDD

RACK 1

RA0&lt;3

~~~[!j QJ ~DJ~-=PAR SCORE 105-115
by JUDD

D
D
"""'.
D
D
'""'".

FOUR RACK TOTAL -

TIME LIMIT: 20 MIN -

DIRECTIONS: Make • 2 to 7 letter WIIOJd lfom tM"e.n.. in NCh row. Add
points 01' each word, uti'lO ICOflng dlfectiOnl at riglll. 7-letter won:ts gel 5().
point bonut;. "'lanM" UMd u any 1ttter hllve no point YIIUI. AI Judd's WOfdt
. . "' The Qttlclal Sctaimle Pia~ Dlc1loniJY ~-~ and osw
Oft!QII Scfabble WOfdl. (CtWnbers). JUDO'S SOLlmON TOMORROW

54iV..•

ANSWIIS TO jl,\_:-/ii.~
SCRAM-LETS
As E1 youngster granny taught me
EMBLEM
how to manage my monev . She believed
STATUS
that if I learned how t'o take care of pen REVOKE
nies. that I would find that the dollars
DOUBlE
would t~kB care of THEMSElVES.
WHEEZE

LACTIC .

-

.

THEMSELVES

'Your

Sal11 &amp; Service
204 Condor St.
Pomeroy

Wrltesel
MllntenanceGuttera· Down

"Q I t l
• Q It I
• Af I

• U II

month.

·~
$1 89.00
lnstailed

J&amp;L

In this .

....
...

6&amp;10111

.'

Saih0-101 United

ggl-277.2

Hill'• Self

. See Manning, Wayne or Jim
for a REAL DEAl on a new lawn
·tractor, lawn mower or weed

Advertise

.....

•A.UI1
• K 14

...

•Rtplacenmt

WIDdGWI. lloola
Additions • Roollaa
COMMIItiAI. .. IEliOOIIW.
FREE ESTIMATES
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

Syracuse VIllage Ia
complete and can be
seen at the Clarka
office In VIllage Hall.

USA
from Pap

••AKJ
4.'

Now Ho- • Vllyl

740-992-7599

Tha
Annual
Financial Report for

COLUMBUS -The Ohio one scheduled for March 23.
of . Natural The ODNR will release
Department
Resources · Division
of 1,725 trou t o n the second
Wildlife will stock some 47 stockin g da te.
w aterways in Ohio with over
Yocta ngct· Re st:rvoir iri
100,000 rainbow trout this . Ross County will be stocked
spring.
with I, 100 fish on March 25.
Nine lakes and r~servo irs in
Perry County's C louse Lake
southern Ohio will receive an will be stocked with 2,425
influx of over 22,000 trout in trout on March 2X .
March and April.
DOW Lake in Athem
Targeting inland waters, the County will receive 3,825 fi sh
annu al spring trout releases on Ap ril 14.
hav.e _been expanded in recent
Jackson C ity Reservoir in
years to include local commu- Ja ckson County will receive
nity park ponds in addition to its stock of 4,750 fish on Ap ril
various lakes. The daily catch 71 :
limit for inland lakes is five
Turkey Creek Lake 111
trout per angler.
Scioto County is scheduled to
Timber · Ridge Lake in re ceive a stock of 2,5~0 rainLawrence County will receive bow trout on April 28 .
a stock of 4,000 trout from the
The 2001 fishing license
Division ofWildlife March 7. costs $15 and is valid through
Forked Run Lake in Meigs Feb. 28, 2002 . A one-day fishCounty. will receive 2,675 ing license may be purchased
trout. ·with delivery set for for S7 by Ohio residents and
March 9.
non-residents. The one-day
Rose Lake in Hocking license may also be redemmed
County will receive two for credit toward the purchase
deliveries of rainbow trout. of an annual state license.
The first stocking, with a
' release of 1,500 fish, is set for
March 16, with the second

1~

caald•

BISSELL

lNT

your
message

ACROSS
l"fllllfOUI"

A&amp;D Auto Upholstery· Plus, IIIC.

__ _

NEA Crouword Puzzle

Pltloe, ildewllb.
21 Y'II'J experllnot
Frtt Elllmllll
740-74N015 Ill'

1-Bn-353-7022

Thursday, March 1, 2001
Don't look for lhings to be
. handed to you on a silver plalter in the year ahead, but if
you're prepared to work hard
for what you want, you will be
capable of remarkable achievements.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
A testy development won't
overw.helm you today, much to
your ability to see the brighter
side of the matter. It'll demonstrate that you can place your
destiny in your own bonds.
Know where to look for
romance and you'll find it. The
Astro-Graph Malchmaker
instantly reveals which aisns
are romantically perfect for
you. Mail S2.7S to Matchmaker, c/o this newspaper, ,P.O. Box
· 1758, Murray Hill Station,
New York, NY 10156.
ARIES (March 21-Aprlll9)
Don't arind for more than you
deterve, but It mlaht prave 10
· your odven1a1e to be 1 bltatubbom reaardlna bualneu mar·
tera today. If you think you
merll ~omethlna, 11ick to your
IURR,

TAURUS (April 20·May
20) Furtherlna a self-lnlertll
mlail) be con~iderably lmpor·

Should someone whom yoti
'Birthday· helped
in the pasl make an

!ant 10 yoo today. Much to your
credit, however. you'll do so
without having others .believe

you're selfish.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Additional responsibilities
could be thrown at you today
and make you feel squeezed
into a come'r. Don't fret. You'll

get everything done in record
time.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Temporarily set aside any new
interest today and take care of
an old endeavor that's vyins
for attention. Oeuins lhat out
of the way will make It easier
to accomplilh anythin1 new.
LEO (1uly 23-Aua. 22)
Conditions are favorable today
for feellna rhe bon out ror that
rain pr pramotion to which
you believe you're enlilled.
The d11ervln1 can be reward·
ed at lh!• tfme.
VIROO (AUJ, 23·Sept. 221
Blpreu your creativity today
u the mood hlta. If you apply
the necenoey time and eft'ort,
you're quire capable of produclnalhlnaalhll will alve you
lutlna pride.
LIBRA (Sepl. 23·0cl. 2~)

effort tnday lo do something
ror you, don'l reject his or her
efforts. Everyone needs to feel
· appreciated.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) An associate's tempo migh!
not leave much room for small
lalk today, but once you aet in
step with him or; her, you'll
actually take pride in accomplishing your aims so succinctly.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) Personal gain is not ali
evil motivator. ln fact, without
it, little would he accomplished
in this world. You'll prove this
today by functioning at your
best for a material reward.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) You should be able to read
complex people more euily
lhan uautltadty and lrut lhem
In a manner they'll .reapect.
Thert could be 1 materlll
reward involved.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 2o-Feb.
19) Thrau1h your daa,ed ·
effons, a condition you ve
been anlloua ta chanp could
bec:ome 1 (act today. Once you
make your lnltlalmQve, you'll
be IU!prilltd II how lilY It II to
chanae.
,

�Wednesday, February 28, 2001

Page B 6 • The Daily Sentinel

Wedneac:lay, February 28, 2001

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 7

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

ALLEYOOP

Public Notice
Public Notice ·

PmLLJP
ALDER

ROIERT BISSELL
CONSTRUcnON
• New Homes

$Dollar
Daves
740-992-0459

· G~r•u••
• Complete
Remocltllng
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

74().992-1671

Clean buem•nta,
attics, garagea &amp;

Rutland, Ohio
Truck seats, car seals, headliners, truck tarps,
convertible &amp; vinyl tops, Four wheeler seats,
motorcycle seats, boat covers, carpets, etc.
. Mon-Frl

8:30 • 5:00

40 yrs experience
(74()) 742-8888
1·888·521..()916

Over

barns. FrH
eatlmate Ugh! .
Hauling Jobl

Adverti~e

URNPIKE L~:~~

$8.00 column inch weekdays
$1 0.00 column inch Sundays

.SPE481AL FINANCE DEPARTMENJ'
Bankruptcy? Credit Problems?

"We Can Help"ll
Call Us first Or We Both Lose!

Ask For Mike Hindle

PUBLIC NOTICE

1·800-272-6179 or 446-9800

The
Annual
Financial Report for
Letart Townahlp Ia
complete
and
.available for review,
at tho home of tht
Clerk by appointment
only.

YOUNG'S
General Conlractl119
CARPENTER
Homes,
Renovations, Rat
SERVICE
•
Room
Addltlono &amp;
roofspeclallsls
Remodeling
ExcovoHnv
• New G•r•a••
• Eloctrlcat &amp; Plumbing
Sepllc systems,
• Roofing &amp; Quttora
• VInyl Siding l Pointing
waler, vas lines
• Petlo and Porch O.Cke
HOME CREEK
Free Estimates
V.
C. YOUNG Ill
ENT., INC.
992-6215

Joyce White, Clerk
(740) 247-3125
(2) 28, lie

992-7943

BUILDIIIIIJNC,
Skllaa• New G...,..

~.::r.c;:

DDUDII
Pllft
All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equlpmenl Parts
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Parts
Dealers

~
~
1&amp;1All Home
CONSTRUCnON
Improvements
IHIINIIItiiNI~
PUI hTIU111
fLOOUI
ij (7..1H ..tt84
(1171 ....SU1

UIOIILINI

1000 Sl. Rt. 7 Soulll
Coolville, OH 45723

Bat Quality For The Lowelt Pllet,

GUARANTEED!

740117-11111

BAUM LUMBER CO. ·
'46384 St. Rt. 248 Chester, Ohio
(740) 98!5-3301
Lionel~ MTH, K-Line,
Athearn, Atlas, Bachmann

&amp; Accessories
~. HO, &amp; N Guage

.'

Estes Rockets

11-~, ·

HiQh&amp; Dry
Self-Storqe

(2) 28

lie

111179$ Hiland Rd.

Public Notice

Pomeroy,

IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO

0/oto

740-992-5232

CASE NO. 00-CV-151

"The World's Best Roof"
Puts an end to leaks
.

Bank One, National
Auoctotlon fka The
Firat Nattonol Bank ol
Chicago, •• Truatn
By llealct.ntlet

For flat or ktw·slope (new or retrofit) rools, the
'
Duro-Last slngla-ply tf1errno!jastk: rooflng
system ptJ18 an end \0 • ·
. •""""""-

•TO&lt;ql• Energy ellk:lont. l iiiifaoncaled 10 1""' IUOfo ...t.' '
apociicolklns. •loak·proof and Wtuolly maillonarce-he.
•ln11111od by autl'&lt;lriztd dee,./COnlradora on~. • Proltclld by a t5·
voar llmllod wlrlW!Iy.
~ - · -roofs. The&lt;o ono noorl tor yoo to put up Mill a
leoky roclltlat MOdi continual~· COl your 1oc11 0\Jo.Last
deo;er/C&lt;l&lt;iradOrlor e rooftop &lt;Wai&lt;Jitioolodey.

B1

· among 32. teams, the Ameripns have played decently.
Under coach Bruce Arena,
they are 23- 14-11, although
Arena was suspended ~ but,
unofficially, on hand - for
the final two games of the
CONCACAF semifinals.
This hasn't been a divided
squad, as it was in France
·three years ago. And the
~m e r ic an s

se em.

to

h avt:

found some offense built
aro und
forward
Brian
McBride, wh o has fol&gt;r goals
in the b st four in te rnational
g.un es.

"What he brings to the•
tc·:un· is that he is a real fo rward," Arena said of McBride,
:1 fo r m~r member of th t•
C rc·w who now plays in Engl.md. "When he stcpl on th e

'

'8

field , you know he is going to
give you 90 minutes , and he
scores goals. ·I don't know
what more you can ask from
him.
"Obviously, he is very good
in the air. He's a very good
player ':it holding the ball and
pressuring the opponent, and
he is able to keep enough
balls alive to. n10ve fonvard
into the attacking end of the
field.
" He ts invalltable."
Per haps prticulo rly so
:1gain st M exico, w hich at
times bas . trouble defemlii1g
, high balls. And on what co uli!
be a fiu zen field , b.1lls in the
ail' could be a dec iding fa ctor.
Si ~ tt•ams :m.· in ·th e ro un dmbin regiona l fit\al. ll'i th the
top thrt'l' advancing to th!.'
20112 Wo rld Cup in South
Kore.l and Japan. Also playi ng
Wcdn~s d ~y nrc- H n ndur.1s at

CmtJ R ica, ;md Trinitbd and
'IC, bago .lt j at11.1ica.

f

.

Advertise

In this

·spice

for$50
.per
month·
SIHlSPt H01110

Cons t ru c 11 o 11

New Homes, Room
Additions, Garqes,
Pole Buildings,
Siding, Decks,
Kitchens, 'Drywall &amp;
More
We Can Make Y1111r

Dream A RMUty!
740-74l-34U
FREE ESTIMATES!

Irina In your repair worll .
we'll get you galng fir spring
Every Spring Tune-Up
a
FREE Blade Sharpening.

N,ew equipment arriving dally ·
ubleHun9
Replacemenl
Windows ·
Welded frame._

•Hauling ·U~one
I•Ore·VII· Send •Topton
•Fill Dirt •Mulch

•B&amp;;

...

155N2nd
Middleport

•..,.•.

28170 Iathan R01d
Racine, Ohio
48771

740-949-2217
SlzeeS' x 10'
to 10'x30'
Hours
7:00AM • 8:00PM

Howardl.

space for

$50 p4,.r

-

• Kl I

992·2975
ELITE MECHANICAL CONTRACTORS

Roofing • Home

Spout
FI'H EIIIIIIIIH

949-1405
591·5011

l-JOU75·7U4 .

l-10t-J50-f077

Relldeatt.l Conubttdol New CoNiructloll
Stlltt . Senlct lnolallallcut
Spodalla,. In Sl..t MDI Ductworlc

· ":l'rono"llolll A Senlce For
Glllla, Muon, ond Mlip Co11nd11
Ll&lt;eiltted ond lltiiUnd
WV 01!176

voua ·
· CONCRETE
CONNECDON
Quellty Drlliew1p,

ellula1
Jeff Warner Ins.

992-5479

Advertise
in this
space for
$100 per
month~
•

.....

...

• Q J t

" 1 I 4

v...........,.....
Put

"

IHT

Openint lead: • 7

lilt

Alpu1

to
BY PHILLIP ALDER
Who said this, on
2,
1988?
March
"When a man opens
the car door for his
wife. it's either a new
BARNEY
car or a new wife."
DID YOU TRIP
NO
Bridge players need
YOU PUT
WHO'S YORe NEW
open doors: entries to
MARY BETH IN MA'AM
A FRO&amp; IN
SWEETIE?
one
hand or the other.
HOOL TODAYr---,....,..-1
HER LAP
?
Here is an example of
•
maintaining an entry
to ensure winning vital
tricks.
How would you
plan the play in three
no-trump after West
has led his fourth highest spade?
South wasn't keen
to make a bid with six
such soft points. However, he had only two
diamonds, and he held
a decent five-card suit.
So, he was right to
respond one no-trump.
Yqu have five top
tricks: two spades
(given trick one), two
hearts and one diamond. The other four
tricks are clearly availTHE BORN LOSER .
. able ·from clubs. So,
~"'INJ\1-\.Eit~l~;., DROP...,. South ran trick one to
~ffffi.£
Of R.NN I
his spade queen and
~';!£ ~ ~"''(
promptly broached
OF 5U~~lt-IE
those clubs. However,
W~DIIf-IC&lt;
West
played high-low
ENit:ll. t...
to show a doubleton,
ROO!'\ ...
and East held up his
ace until the third
, round Then, a spade
'
through declarer established West's suit.
With no entry, declar==-=,..., r------"""TI r-:::o-------.;:--1 .,....,-,~.,.....--.,.=-c:==---.
· er had slammed the car
;-·.,:.:.;_-,
... WHIC!-1, .. . AIID Haf:o
I!.Y
INSTEAD OF
door on his own hand.
~~~. "A.~To~.fT'c:
South should have
HAS
".JEF!:K'!'"' '
anticipated an oppo~J
nent's holding up the
"T."
club ace until the third
round. And if that happens, where is South's
entry? The only candidate is . in spades.
Therefore, declarer
must call for dummy's
spade ace at trick one.
PEANUTS
Then, after winning
.
with his club ace, what
WJ.IEN WE WEKE WALKING
I(ES, M~AM. IT WAS
can East do? Nothing.
TO SCI-IOOL, !.EAVES. AND
'IERV WINPV TillS MORNIN6..
A spade return immePAPER ANt' 8RANCIIES WERE
diately
establishes
5l,OWIN6 ALL OVER ...
South's entry. And if
East switches to a diamond, declarer calls
for a spade after winning the trick in the
dummy.
That cynical comment was made _by
Prince Philip, Duke of
Edinburgh.

I

IWEDNESDAY

FEBRUARY 28 I

"

-

..

Common

.UCie

4e Batlnger or
Novalc

48 Twlat In
51 ~tlan
bird
54 Groupo!
nine
55 Untilled
56 Whirlpool
57 Tldll wave
DOWN
1 Compuo

18 Fall mo.
38 Ulllmall
20 Clly In Ulah
(deg'")
IIUI
21 Back oul 40 Carried
2 C.ntor of 1
oft
41 Dlnlth
lhletd
prom!H
loland
3 --on the 22 Se~tah
42 IAmb'•

23 Popar

win

Way

kin

12 Puua-r
14'M•Md
15 Chalk
ramo16 Speck
17 In no way
111 Wrltor
Janowitz
20 They know

45

tile--.

6 Q J 11 t I

.Dealer: North
1M1tk Wtst Hri

10ReletM'I

......_

42 Flnnllh flrot

meiiUfl

2G Chltd'a
ma
27 tnnla

r.

person

bock

pleyor

SMver .
Prtoolng
Rounded
lump
Certoln
compound
lnfont'o
,...,

(prtiH)
4 Cn11
alandlng
5 Wreth
8 LAX Info
7 Liver ond

23 Jaat
30
24 C.leallal
boar
32
25 Compooer
Strovlnaky
34
27 Prt-lduH
lnHCt
35
beef
8 Grnkpaak 28 "Shako 36 On 1 -w1t1t 8 Flower part
-1" (move
(oquotlol 11 Wrf1or
hj
29 S mpto
37 Weapon
Ferber
31 Had folth In
38 ThMter
12 Swompy
33 Soclol
HOllon
om
eppotnt40 Hoving
13 Mia. In
ment
made a will
Mldrtd

mom

43 Set eagle
44 ChieM
coaung
48 Martin
Luther47 Roman
road

48 Ancient
Peralan't
neighbor
50 lt't for
hOJHII
52 Copy
53 Eorf G,.y,
e.g.

CELEBRITY CIPHER
_
by Luis Campos
CtlobriiY Clphor cryptogram• are crute&lt;l from quotatlona by tamouo

people, put 1nd p~t. Each leHer In lhe clphtr stands for another.

Today's c/u.: E equals L

'LZGMG

UX

CJFZ
CKIIG

LV

OVMEH

UO · LZG
JX

LZGMG

KAMKUH .

UX

CVMG

UD

YJM

AKULZ

CKRG

JX

JOKAMKUH.'

CJF. Z
LV

A.O.
FMVTT
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'Sunset Boulevard's last light at night
could come from actual sunaats.•- L.A. Times' Mike Downey
on Calli.' a anergy crunch.

DDDDDDD

cg cg QJ cg @1 ~ ~~"""'

DDDDDDD

...

~~~~~~~~

DDDDDDD
~~~~~[!]~

DDDDDDD

RACK 1

RA0&lt;3

~~~[!j QJ ~DJ~-=PAR SCORE 105-115
by JUDD

D
D
"""'.
D
D
'""'".

FOUR RACK TOTAL -

TIME LIMIT: 20 MIN -

DIRECTIONS: Make • 2 to 7 letter WIIOJd lfom tM"e.n.. in NCh row. Add
points 01' each word, uti'lO ICOflng dlfectiOnl at riglll. 7-letter won:ts gel 5().
point bonut;. "'lanM" UMd u any 1ttter hllve no point YIIUI. AI Judd's WOfdt
. . "' The Qttlclal Sctaimle Pia~ Dlc1loniJY ~-~ and osw
Oft!QII Scfabble WOfdl. (CtWnbers). JUDO'S SOLlmON TOMORROW

54iV..•

ANSWIIS TO jl,\_:-/ii.~
SCRAM-LETS
As E1 youngster granny taught me
EMBLEM
how to manage my monev . She believed
STATUS
that if I learned how t'o take care of pen REVOKE
nies. that I would find that the dollars
DOUBlE
would t~kB care of THEMSElVES.
WHEEZE

LACTIC .

-

.

THEMSELVES

'Your

Sal11 &amp; Service
204 Condor St.
Pomeroy

Wrltesel
MllntenanceGuttera· Down

"Q I t l
• Q It I
• Af I

• U II

month.

·~
$1 89.00
lnstailed

J&amp;L

In this .

....
...

6&amp;10111

.'

Saih0-101 United

ggl-277.2

Hill'• Self

. See Manning, Wayne or Jim
for a REAL DEAl on a new lawn
·tractor, lawn mower or weed

Advertise

.....

•A.UI1
• K 14

...

•Rtplacenmt

WIDdGWI. lloola
Additions • Roollaa
COMMIItiAI. .. IEliOOIIW.
FREE ESTIMATES
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

Syracuse VIllage Ia
complete and can be
seen at the Clarka
office In VIllage Hall.

USA
from Pap

••AKJ
4.'

Now Ho- • Vllyl

740-992-7599

Tha
Annual
Financial Report for

COLUMBUS -The Ohio one scheduled for March 23.
of . Natural The ODNR will release
Department
Resources · Division
of 1,725 trou t o n the second
Wildlife will stock some 47 stockin g da te.
w aterways in Ohio with over
Yocta ngct· Re st:rvoir iri
100,000 rainbow trout this . Ross County will be stocked
spring.
with I, 100 fish on March 25.
Nine lakes and r~servo irs in
Perry County's C louse Lake
southern Ohio will receive an will be stocked with 2,425
influx of over 22,000 trout in trout on March 2X .
March and April.
DOW Lake in Athem
Targeting inland waters, the County will receive 3,825 fi sh
annu al spring trout releases on Ap ril 14.
hav.e _been expanded in recent
Jackson C ity Reservoir in
years to include local commu- Ja ckson County will receive
nity park ponds in addition to its stock of 4,750 fish on Ap ril
various lakes. The daily catch 71 :
limit for inland lakes is five
Turkey Creek Lake 111
trout per angler.
Scioto County is scheduled to
Timber · Ridge Lake in re ceive a stock of 2,5~0 rainLawrence County will receive bow trout on April 28 .
a stock of 4,000 trout from the
The 2001 fishing license
Division ofWildlife March 7. costs $15 and is valid through
Forked Run Lake in Meigs Feb. 28, 2002 . A one-day fishCounty. will receive 2,675 ing license may be purchased
trout. ·with delivery set for for S7 by Ohio residents and
March 9.
non-residents. The one-day
Rose Lake in Hocking license may also be redemmed
County will receive two for credit toward the purchase
deliveries of rainbow trout. of an annual state license.
The first stocking, with a
' release of 1,500 fish, is set for
March 16, with the second

1~

caald•

BISSELL

lNT

your
message

ACROSS
l"fllllfOUI"

A&amp;D Auto Upholstery· Plus, IIIC.

__ _

NEA Crouword Puzzle

Pltloe, ildewllb.
21 Y'II'J experllnot
Frtt Elllmllll
740-74N015 Ill'

1-Bn-353-7022

Thursday, March 1, 2001
Don't look for lhings to be
. handed to you on a silver plalter in the year ahead, but if
you're prepared to work hard
for what you want, you will be
capable of remarkable achievements.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
A testy development won't
overw.helm you today, much to
your ability to see the brighter
side of the matter. It'll demonstrate that you can place your
destiny in your own bonds.
Know where to look for
romance and you'll find it. The
Astro-Graph Malchmaker
instantly reveals which aisns
are romantically perfect for
you. Mail S2.7S to Matchmaker, c/o this newspaper, ,P.O. Box
· 1758, Murray Hill Station,
New York, NY 10156.
ARIES (March 21-Aprlll9)
Don't arind for more than you
deterve, but It mlaht prave 10
· your odven1a1e to be 1 bltatubbom reaardlna bualneu mar·
tera today. If you think you
merll ~omethlna, 11ick to your
IURR,

TAURUS (April 20·May
20) Furtherlna a self-lnlertll
mlail) be con~iderably lmpor·

Should someone whom yoti
'Birthday· helped
in the pasl make an

!ant 10 yoo today. Much to your
credit, however. you'll do so
without having others .believe

you're selfish.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Additional responsibilities
could be thrown at you today
and make you feel squeezed
into a come'r. Don't fret. You'll

get everything done in record
time.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Temporarily set aside any new
interest today and take care of
an old endeavor that's vyins
for attention. Oeuins lhat out
of the way will make It easier
to accomplilh anythin1 new.
LEO (1uly 23-Aua. 22)
Conditions are favorable today
for feellna rhe bon out ror that
rain pr pramotion to which
you believe you're enlilled.
The d11ervln1 can be reward·
ed at lh!• tfme.
VIROO (AUJ, 23·Sept. 221
Blpreu your creativity today
u the mood hlta. If you apply
the necenoey time and eft'ort,
you're quire capable of produclnalhlnaalhll will alve you
lutlna pride.
LIBRA (Sepl. 23·0cl. 2~)

effort tnday lo do something
ror you, don'l reject his or her
efforts. Everyone needs to feel
· appreciated.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) An associate's tempo migh!
not leave much room for small
lalk today, but once you aet in
step with him or; her, you'll
actually take pride in accomplishing your aims so succinctly.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) Personal gain is not ali
evil motivator. ln fact, without
it, little would he accomplished
in this world. You'll prove this
today by functioning at your
best for a material reward.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) You should be able to read
complex people more euily
lhan uautltadty and lrut lhem
In a manner they'll .reapect.
Thert could be 1 materlll
reward involved.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 2o-Feb.
19) Thrau1h your daa,ed ·
effons, a condition you ve
been anlloua ta chanp could
bec:ome 1 (act today. Once you
make your lnltlalmQve, you'll
be IU!prilltd II how lilY It II to
chanae.
,

�The Dail
. y Sentinel

Nation ·• WOrl

Govec ilots bllck Bush stance

Page B8
WeclnesdiiJ, Febn~•ry 21, 2001

Editorial: Save GDC!,

Thursday

U.S. beats Mexico,

March 1. 2001

Clinton to let ex-aiaes testify in House

WASHINGTON (AP) -The nation's governors b&gt;cked the
Bush administration's school accountability plans, asked for
freedom to expand Medicaid covera~ by offering trimmed
benefits to some new enrollees and kept dis&gt;greements about
the president's tax cuts in the background.
They wrapped up their winter meeting Tuesday after an
upbeat meeting with P~sident Bush and a tax cut warning
from Senate Democratic leader Tom Daschle.
They renewed their usual request for the federal government .
to cover any costs required by federal rules, singling out the
high costs of programs like special education, an area where the
federal government contributes less than origin:illy promised.
The governors avoided taking a position on the president's
S1.6 trillion tax cut, which caused a constant backstairs debate
at the meeting, breaking along party lines.

BY DE8
ASSOCIATED

RIECHMANN
~RESS

WRITER

WASHINGTON To convince
Congress he has nothing to hlde, former
President Clinton says three of his closest ex-aides are free to tell a House
comntittee whatever they wish about
the clemencies he granted in his last
hours in the White House.
Clinton has waived his claim to executive privilege, which could have kept
his former aides from telling lawmakers
everything they know about the pardon
of billionaire Marc Rich, who has lived
in Switzerland since just before he was ·
indicted in 1983 on charges of tax evasion, fraud and making illegal oil deals.
But while Clinton decided Tuesday to
let his aides testify freely, Rich declined

Chainnan: Shuffle spy catchen
WASHINGTON (AP) Sununohing the nation's top
intelligence and law enforcement officials to explain a grave spy
scandal, the Senate Intelligence Committee chairman is suggesting that U.S. spy catchers be rotated out of their jobs every
few years.
Sen. Richard Shelby, R-AJa., said he'uvorried th&gt;t compbcency ntigh.t have played a· role in the case of Robert Philip
Hanssen. The FBI counterintelligence agent was charged with
espionage for allegedly handing Russia information on the
nation's most secret programs for IS years.
FBI Director Louis Frech, CIA Director George Tenet and
Attorney General John Ashcroft were testifYing Wednesday at a
private committee meeting 10 days after Hanssen's arrest.
Federal prosecutors released new details Tuesday of Hanssen's
activities, including a letter dated the day of his arrest in which
Hanssen warned his alleged Russian hancllers that "something
has aroused the sleeping tiger."
·

to be a witness before the House Government Reform Committee, which is
trying to deterp1ine whether money
played a role in the presidential pardons
of R ich and others.
Rich also refused to release his lawyers
from attorney-client privilege. If he did,
his lawyer said it could be later argued in
crintinal or civil proceedings that the
privilege no longer exists. The Rich pardon is the subject of a criminal investigation by U.S. Attorney Mary Jo White.
"Mr. Rich has asked me to inform the
committee that he must continue to rely
on the advice of his lawyers and, therefore, is unable to comply with the committee's requests at this timet his attorney, Laurence Urgenson, said in a letter
to the committee.

of their anticipated refund. But the financial institutions can
charge fees or interest.
U.S. District Judge Raymond Jackson in · Norfolk accused
H&amp;R Block of deliberately and maliciously using deceptive
advertising to draw customers in the Hampton Roads area just
as .a competing tax preparation service, was lcnmching its business there.
··
"We feel that this is a victory not only for Liberty Tax Service, but also for taxpayers who didn't fully understand the
terms of this loan product because they weren't properly disclosed," said Lenny Holt, Liberty's chief operating officer.

Greenspan speaks; people listen

Schools to offer choice

WASHINGTON (AP) - Federal Reserve Chairman Alan
Greenspan, whose words can move markets, seems to be enjoying even more power during these uncertain economic times.
Even on days when he doesn't ~peale, the markets can move in
a big wayon mere speculation about what he ntight say.
That was the case on Monday as investors' hopes that the Fed
might be preparing another surprise cut in interest rates gave
the Dow Jones industrial average its biggest point gain since
·Jan. 3 when the Fed did cut rates be\Ween regularly scheduled
meetings.
All that was in anticipation of testimony Greenspan was
scheduled to give before the House Financial Services Committee on Wednesday, where he'll deliver the Fed's latest economic outlook. r
Two weeks ago';- Greenspan painted a cautiously optimistic
view of the economy's short-term p.rospects when he gave his
twice-a-year economic outlook report to the Senate Banking
Committee.

NEW YORK (AP) - Parents of students in the city's bilingual education program will get to choose how quickly their
children face English immersion under a plan approved by the
New York City Board of Education.
.
The ~ew polic~ ends the automatic assignmenr of ·c hildren
who fail an English competency exam to the bilingual program, in which enrollees are taught core subjects, such a~ math
and science, in their native tongue.
·
Parents will be allowed to choose from four programs for
their children: the bilingual education program; English as a
second language, )n which core subjects are taught in English; a
new program that would provide after-school and weekend
instruction to move students ' rapiclly into an English langu~ge
program; or a dual language program.
The board's unanimous approval Tuesday of Schools Chancell?r. Harold 0. Levy's $7 5 million proposal follows years of
cnttcam that parents had little say on whether to place their
children in bilingual classes.
.

Court .hea.rs salary case
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Supreme Court took these
·
·
actions Tuesday:.
• Heard arguments in a 1980s labor dispute ovet baseball
salaries in which the justices will decide how taxes should be
paid on back wages. The case arose from the 1994 cash settlement won by the major league players' union for collusion
among 26 baseball teams to stop the steep escalation of salaries
for free agent players.
• Ruled that a Maryland court should have heard a legal fight
between defense contractor Lockheed Martin .Corp. and a
smaller rival, even though the lawsuit had already been thrown
out of court in California. The unanimous ruling revives claims
made by Semtek In'ternational Inc. that were first raised in a
California state court in I 997 and traveled through five other
·
courts before coming to the Supreme Court.

candy-tossing teen beaten
HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) - A teen-ager who was throwinll':ca!ldY ~t paosing ·Cars was beaten unconscious by _three p1en,
police said.
·
An~! "Shaggy" Rodriguez, 14, and a friend were walking
ho":Je frat~ an after-school pr:ogram Monday when they began
·
tossmg Skittles at passmg veh1cles, police said.
The men punched Rodriguez in the face until he fell, then
stomped and kicked him in the head, police said.
Ro*iguez's friend ran for help, and when he returned,
Rodriguez was on a street corner unconscious.

elay plans monitoring
· NEW YORK (AP) - eBay has begun monitoring items for
sale on its site for poosible copyright infringement, a move in
response to pressure from software makers and intellectual
property interests.
The new p~gram has removed about 12 listings per day for
software, mov1es, musiC and other copyright content since it
be~n in December, The Wall Street Journal reported Wednesday.
.
.
The software industry's antipiracy trade .gwup and manufacturers of copyrighted products, such as Microsoft Corp, pushed
.
.1
for the chan~.
"We recognize they have some issues and so we wanted to do
everything we could," eBay lawyer Jay Monahan said.

Youth .faces wiretap charge
NAVARRE, Fla. (AP) - A high school student has been
charge~ With vi~lating Florida's 'wiretapping Jaw after tape
recording a chtm1stry class lecture.
Asher Zaslaw, 17, ,pleaded not gUilty to the third-degree
felony In juvenile court Tuesday. She faces a variety of penalties,
including community service and probation.
Zaslaw said she record~d the October lecture at Navnrro
High School because she was having difficulty in the elm and
wanted to maintain good grades.
She was asked about the tape by school administrators and
told the action was against school policy. Zaslaw, who said she
was unaware of the rule, was never disciplined.
'

JIICige hits Block with penalty
RICHM&lt;;JND, Va. (AP) - A federal judge barred H&amp;R
Block, the nation's largest income tax preparer, from using mis- ·
leading phrases to advertise its "Rapid Refund" loan program
and ordered to pay more than SSOO,OOO to ;m upstart rival.
Block has been sued before over its advertising for "Rapid
" Refund," in which tax filers rcrcil.te bank loans for the amount

The Washington Post, in Wednesday's
editions, said an e-mail suggests a Justice
Department official told Rich's pardon
attorney, Jack Quinn, to take his pardon
request directly to the White House.
According to the e-mail, Quinn told
associates in November 2000 that Eric
Holder,, then-deputy attorney ~neral,
advised him to "go straight to" the
White House · to seek clemency for
Rich. The mes.&lt;age also said: "timing is
good. we shd (should) get in soon."
Holder told the newspaper that he
strongly disagreed with Quinn's e-mail
message. He testified to Congress that he
wished he had asked more questions
about the Rich case, and would have
been opposed to it if he had obtained
more informatfon at the time.

Froz:en toddler rescued
EAU CLAIRE, Wis. (AP) -A 2-year-old boy was hospitalized in critical condition Tuesday after being found unconscious
and not breathing outside his home in frigid cold, authorities
sat'd.
·.•
Les Hynek wandered outside hi' home on a dairy farm eariy
Thesday and his father found hi in about three hours later . in
Sitow about 50 feet .from the house, sheriff's Sgt. John Volger
sajp. Temperatures were about zero.
. ')'he boy was taken to St. Marys Hospital and the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., where spokesman John Murphy confirmed the boy's condition. ·
Volger said Les and two brothers had been with their father
in a barn until about 2:30a.m. while milking chores were done.

At least 13 die in crash
LONDON (AP) - A high-speed passenger train collided
wilh an oncoming freight train in northern England at daybreak Wednesday, killing at least 13 people and injuring !)lOre
th~t! 70.
:
British Transport Police confirmed the casualties as rescue
workers struggled hours later to free passengers trapped in the
mangled wreckage.
·
Preliminary reports indicated a Land Rover pulling a tl'ailer
veered off a highway onto the tracks, derailing the Londonbo~nd passenger train and causing it to smash into the freight
tram.
"It's like a scene from a bomb explosion. Thd c~rna~ is
app~ing," said Nigel Metcalfe, spokesman for North Yorkshire
An1bulance Service. He said rescuers reported hearing .mobile
phones ringing inside the cars.
·
'· •

Tech stocks
plunge on
consumer
numbers
NEW YORK (1\P) - A
report showing consumer
confidence at a more than
four-year low sent the Nasdaq composite index to its
weakest finish in 26 momhs
Tuesday.
Analysts
said
investors were·. -growing
increasingly anxious about
the economy and the Federal Reserve's ability to
reverse its decline.
The selloff reflected Wall
Street's disappointment that
the Fed did not cut interest
ratesThesday- a move that
would have been an extraordinary step, coming three
weeks before the central
bank's next meeting.
"I think the expectation
was building that we would
get an intra-meeting cut,
but when nothing happened today, the market sold
off," said Jon Brorson, director of equities at Northern
Thust. "People are waiting
for a catalyst, like a Fed rate
cut, before jumping back in
and buying tech stocks."
The Nasdaq closed down
100.68 at 2,207.82,its worst
finish since Dec. 31, ·1998,
when the technologyfocused gauge closed at
2,192.69.
The Dow Jones industrial
average fell
5.65
to
10,636.88, keeping most of
the 200-point gaih it racked
up Monday on speculation
that an interest rate cut was
inuuinent.
The Standard &amp; Poor's
500 index dropped 9.71 to
1,257.94.
Tech stocks remained
under pressure Tuesday as
inwstors ptmished stocks
thc'Y feared would perform
.poorly in a weal( economy.
Some of the biggest
loscrs:JDS Uniphase, which
tumbled $4.81 to $27.81,
and Cisco Syste111S, which
fell S2.06 to $24.J

$5 0

Name•---------------.------------Address___________________________
~..... City/State/Zip _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ .---.

entine

Melp County's

1.8% R. .l.lariO mlllhl 11

......, ..... &amp;an•

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 51. Number 156

50 Cents

Meigs High renovation bids open March 14
BY CHARl£NE HOEfliCH
SENTINEL NEWS STAff

POMEROY - · Bids for the renoVl!tion of Meigs_High School, the first
pl,lase in the Meigs Local School Distrjct's $33 million building project, Will
be opened March 14 and the contracts
awarded March 27.
·Jeff Engram of Quandrel, the district's construction management firm,
gave Meigs Local school board members a project update Wednesday. par-

ticularly as it relates to Meigs High's
renovation.
He said 34 prospective bidders on
the project toured the building Tuesday and obtained bidding packages.
The group included six general con~
tractors. Engram said several other bidout
ding pac~ are expected to
yet. Both Superintendent William
Bucldey and Mark Rhonemus, treasurer, !trended Tuesday's meeting.
Bucldey said the actual work on the

lio

to be the first priority. ,
Engram displayed the site logistics
plan which showed areas behind the
school to be designated as contractor's
space and the area where the modular
units will be placed for use as classroolllS while the construction is under
way.
He also gave an update on the elementary school to be constructed
high school building is expected to get
along Ohio 124 near Rutland, adding
under way May 21, With new roofing the architectural plans are in the fin-

During the meeting the board
approved the bid package
and sitework construction
documents and authorized
advertising for bids on that
phase of the elementary
school construction.

IJlOVIng
quickly
on tax cut

WASHINGTON (AP)
..:.. Eager to act, House
Republicans are moving
with extraordinary speed
to advance the income tax
cuts at the heart of President Bush's economic program, overriding vehement
Democratic protests as they
go.
' "We believe that the
p~esident's plan is not oilly
dght but responsible," Rep.
Bill Thomas, chairman of
the House Ways and Means
Gomdlittee,&gt;· said Wednesday as he announced · the
panel ,would convene
Tliursday to give. its
approval, A vote in the full
House would follow ,by a
week.
· "We
are
spending
money We don't have. And
Etemocrats will not · be·
P.arty to it," Democratic
leader Dick Gephard!
countered liS key lawmakets )~bored ·to complete
work on a less costly alternative they said was more
prudent for the economy.
• • Thomas unveiled a bill
that sweetened the rate
cuts proposed by Bush on
Thesday night in his
~tionally televised speech.
The California lawmaker
sitd the GOP measure
woul4 accelerate a cut in
tlle lowest tax rate ahead of
llush •s· timetable, and make
it,te!roactive to Jan. 1.
1
Jie put the cost of the .
measure at $960 billion
o\rer the next decade, about
$65 billion more than the
equivalent portion of
Bush's plan. Thomas said
. other elements of the presiqent'i recommended cuts,
including repeal of the
estate tax, would be acted
on later in the year.

Pluse-~lp.Al

Allege public
records
violations
•
FROM STAFF REPORTS

Bird's eye view
iddleport Mayor Sandy Iannarelli had
a clear view of Midlfieport's rooftops
Tuesday, from · high atop the village's
ladder fire truck. Iannarelli, pictured
With Fire Department mentber Jay
Buskirk,. was inspecting what is left of the roof of the
former Mark V building at the corner of North Second
Avenue and Mill Street. The building, now abandoned,
is owned by Bennett Roush of Appalachian Wood Products, but has collapsed due to a deteriorating roof.
Iarmarelli, with Councilmen Roger Manley and Bob
Pooler and Police Chief Bruce SWift,'spoke with Roush ·
about the possibility of restoring, or at least repairing, the
historic building tp prevent further damage. The build- .
ing has been deemed a safety hazard, and condemned by
the village. Roush said he is secuting financing for a renovation of the building, which he hopes to divide into
retail spaces. Constructed in the mid-19th century, the
building originally housed Coe's Dry Goods, and, on the
second floor, Coe's Opera House. The building's historical significance has prompted Iannarelli and com.niunity members ~o consider a full restoration, possibly as a
centerpiece for a downtown revitalization program.

. ---

-·

--·

WELLSTON - The South Central Ohio
District Council of Carpenters has filed suit
with the Ohio Supreme Court against the Gallia-Jackson-Meigs-Vinton Solid Waste District
and its director.
~The suii· ·alleges the district failed to provide
public records in a timely manner, after the
Carpenters union sought to review records p.e rtaining to a dock project at the district's recycling facility to determine whether the job was
large enough to warrant the payment of the
prevailing wage. ·
"The suit, seeking to a Writ of Mandamus,
alleges · that the request by the Carpenters to
view public records was received with refusals,
harassment, cursing, and, ultimately th e intervention oflaw enforcement officers to interfere
with the lawful right o( the union to inspect
public records," the union said in a W~dnesday
news release.
"The suit alleges that at one point, the district's director, Lance Wilson, had Wellston
Police Chief Mark Jacobs assure Carpenters
representatives that· it would be 'years' before
they received the requested records, and
ordered the representatives off of public property."

David Mills, who is a plaintiff in the case
along With the union, said Wilson's actions are
"outrageous.''
"Citizens of our state have the right to review
public records free from intimidation," Mills
said. "One has to wonder if the Solid Waste District has something to hide.
"The suit requests that the Supreme Court .
order Wilson and the Solid Waste District to
make ;ill public records available, to charge only
the actual cost of making copies, to stop telling
citizens that they need a lawyer in order to
make a public records request, and to pay the
union's attorney's fees."
Mills and the union are represented by the

Brian J. Reed photos

Pl...e IH Suit. AJ

~I repair man drives to his

COMPLETE
MOilLE

•' REPAIR. 'l'erry Beechler
'of Terry's Com, ,. pltte Mobile
.·Rep•lr Service
. ·. pre11er'es to
work on a
··· . '
. ot'llln sew
Wednesday
..morning Inside
.his ·White panel
: .truck he uses
. as a mobile
"111palr station.
Unlike conven. tiona! repair
shops, Beechler performs
enalne repairs
on site, which
: ·he said saves
· ' the customer
• both time and
• : money. (Tony
~,
M.-Leach
photo)
j

ishing stage. He said that next week
the site preparation packages will be
ready to go to bid. Groundbreaking
was tentatively set. for sometime during the first week of May.
During the meeting the board
·approved the bid package and sitework
construction documents and authorized advertising for bids on that phase
of the elementary school construction.
As for the ntidclle school to be erect-

Carpenters
file suit
aJainst
d1strid

GOP•

.

flnt-1 dllll on Nit IIW Vllllcllllllllct
Just chlell out some otlhlll I,. •1111:

A4
B1

\

BY TONY M. WCH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY

' . will travel.
m;ench,

Have

Terry B-eechler, owner and
operator of Terry's . Complete
Mobile Repair Service in
Pomeroy, is a local small
engine repairman who spe"
cializes in assisting those•who
are mechanically inept with
yard work equipment.
How~ver, unlike conventional repair shops, Beechler
prefers to drive his workshop
to the customer.
Beechler's interest in sm:ill
engine repair began more than
12 years ago while living in
florida. A neighbor of Beechler, who · happened to be a·
small engine specialist, often
let Beechler tinker with ·sever-

••

~

•.

in the business, followed by
the death of his partner,
Beechler decided to pack up
his belongings and move back
to the place where he had
grown up .
"Basic:illy, I just wanted to
come back home to Meigs
County;' Beechler said. ·~It has
a rtice atmosphere and is filled
with' such frienclly people."
· In 1998, Beechler set up
shop in the back of his pickup and' began tooling around
the communi.ty looking for
customers.
"Most of the business I had
in Florida dealt with commercial trade contractors," he said.
"Since there wasn't too many
commercial contractors in the

What first began as
a part-time hobby
turned into a full-time
profession as Beechler
discovered he had a
knack for repairing
small engines.

al assorted motors that were
lying around in his garage.
What first began as a parttime hobby turned into a full'
time profe!Sion as Beechler
discovered he had a knack for
repairing ' small engines. After
completing the necessary
classes· to become certified,
Beechler and a friend started
their own mobile repair business.
After several successful years .
.j

I

'

. Today's

Sentinel
lSidiDIII- 11,....

Calendar
Classifjeds

Comics
Sports

Weather

AS
84-6

87
BJ-2.6.8

A3

Lotteries
OHIO

Pidc 3: 1-11-4; Pidc 4: 9-3-3-5
Sllpell.cliD: 3-7; 20-2l-30-43

l&lt;ido!r. 1-5-~

W.VA.
Daily 3: 4-6-8 Daily 4: 7+ 1-1
0 2001 Ohio Valley 11 ublishing Co, ·

PI- 1H Rep~lr, .U

•

,.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="449">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9891">
                <text>02. February</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="23924">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="23923">
              <text>February 28, 2001</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="3479">
      <name>gloeckner</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="35">
      <name>nelson</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="849">
      <name>riley</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
