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•
Page B8 • The Dally S.ntlne•

Community news and notes, AS
Cats claw Bulls, Eagles preview, B1

Monday, March 5, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Details,

s Scoreboard

•

.l

Trotwood-Madison 98, Spring. Kenton

o H gh

oy1 HketU
S1turd1y'1 A..utta

Toumamtnt
Dlvl1lon I

C~.

.
Zanesville 65, E. Liverpool 52
Dlvlalon II
Akr. Hoban 77, Medina Highland 35
Avon Lake 66, Oberiln Fire!ands 48
Can. Cent Cath. 55, NB:vafle Fairless

37

Chagrin Falls Kenston as, Mogadore
Field 69
Cln. Purcell-Marian 70, Cin . McNicholas

65
Cln, Roger Bacon 78, Goshen 48
Cortland Lakeview 34, Chardon NDCL
33
, Day. Col . White 53, Day. Chaminmde·
Jullenn 49, OT
Elyria Cath. 74, Rocky River 64
Hunting Valley University 91 , Ravenna

47
Kellering Alter 63, Day. Dunbar 54
Perry 80, Conneaut 65
Poland Semianry 51, Canfield 50
Portsmouth sa, Washington C.H. 56
Tallmadge 82. Akr. Kenmore 51
Vincent Warren 61 , Greenfield McClain
Youngs. Wilson 57. StrUthers 55
Division Ill
Akr. SVSM 99, Hanoverian United 42
casstown Miami E. 73 , Broo!MIIe 30
Cia. VASJ 73, Burton Berkshire 6
Cols. Ready 42, London Madison
Plains 32
Hannibal River 53, Beverly Ft. Frye 51
Morral Ridgedale 50, Plain City
Jonathan Alder 41
Oberlin 72, Sullivan Black River 46
Richmond HIS. 57, Gales Mills Hawken
54
w. Salem NW 71, Rittman 61
Waynesville 49, Versailles 38

o

Findlay Llt&gt;erty·Benton

OT

. LaGrange Keystone 46, Brooklyn 42
Lancaster Fairtleld Union "-8, Oak Hill
39
S. EucUd Regina 83, Warrer~ JFK 23
Versailln 59, Jamestown Greeneview
37
.
W, Uberty·SIIem 38, Cln. Marlemont35
Youngs. Ursuline 44, Newton Falls 32
Dlvl1lon IV
Bedford Chane! 83. Windham 49
Bellaire St. John's 42, Shadyside 39
E. Can. 48 , Mogadore 33
Ft. Recovery 55, Maria Stein Marion
Local 52
Holgate 60, Hllnop 51
Jackson Center 53, Cln. Cour~try Day

41
leetonia 45, Southlngton.Chalkar 21
McComb 64, Carey 54
·
Norwalk St . Paul 59, New london 39
Ottoville 51, Convoy Crestview 38
A!.JSSia 57, Union City MISSI&amp;sinawa VII·
ley 41
.
S. Charleston SE 44, New Madison Tri·
Village 37 .
.
Tol. Ottawa Hills 50, Gibsonburg 41
Worthington CMstlan 63, Newark Cath.

The top 25 teams In The Associated PreS$'
11 t
men's college basketball poll, with rs ·
place votes In parentheses, recorda
through Feb. 25, total points based on 25
points lor a first.nlace vote through one

1. Stanford (70)
2. Michigan St.

27·1 1,750
24·3 1.648

Wellington 79, LAGrange Keystone 71
Dlvlolon IV

7.1owa St.

'5
2~ 1,404
25-4 1,31B

Botkins 54, Anna 52
Cedarville 60, Ansonia 53
Cle. Hts. Lutheran East 84, Elyrta FBCS

8. Artzona
9. Kansas
10. Boston College

21-7 1,279
23·5 1,143
23-4 1,119
20..7

20·7
23-s

B78

15. Kentucky
16. Oklahoma

19·9
23-6

896

684

Shadyside 77, S1eubenvllle Cath. Cent.

17. Syracuse
18. Georgetown

22·7
23-E

594
508

llpp City Bethel69, Spring. Cath. Cent.

19. Not,. Dame
20. Texas

19-8
23·7

431
39t

Worthington Christian 69, cardington· 21 . St. Joseph's
Llncoln 59, or
22. Wake Forest
zanesville Rosecrans 61, Beallsville 48 · 23. Wisconsin

24·5
19·9
' 18·9

287
274
212
158

Hudson 64, Wadsworth 50
Mason 37, Centerville 19
Parma Padua 53, Berea 51
Pickerington 56, Reynoldsburg 40
Rocky River Magnificat 65, Elyria 60
Tol. Cent. Cath. 63, Sylvania Nonhview

!
61

Warren Howland 41, Shaw 38
Youngs. Boardman 52. Can. McKinley

41

39

Division II
Avon Lake 61, Cle. His. Baaumont31
Can. Cent. Cath. SB. OrrvKie 40
Canfield 49, Niles McKinley 32
Cin. McNicholas 54, Cin. Roger Bacon

,

Cois. Hanley 59, Cols. Mifflin 55, OT
Conneaut 50, Perry 46
Cuyahoga Falls Walsh Jesuit 53, .Cop·
tey 42
Day. Dunbar 67, Keltering Alter 57
Hamilton Badin 39, Cln. Purcell-Marian
29
'
Lima Bath 39, Defiance 37
Pemberville Eastwood 74, Clyde 61

Canlsius 76, Siena 64
lona 75, Marls! 71

Mld.Con11ri1n1 Conference

Ou1rterftnals

I"'

23-6 1,488
22·5 1,469

Ohio High SChool Glrlt Basketball
Sllurdef!'l fhtulta
Toumarnem
Dlvlllon 1
Beavercreek 50, FairUetd 4 a
C.llr~a 64, Mansfield 49
Cln. Molher ol Mercy 59, Greenville 47
Cln. St. Ursula 49, ern. Colerain 43
Cle. E. Tech 56, Brecksville 49
Cols. Brookhaven 4&lt;4, Newark 32
Day. Chamlnacle-Julianne 57, Cln. Oak
Hills 53
Grove City 70, Westerville N. 45

Somlllnalo

3
2
5

lnd.-Pur..lndpls. 54, UMKC 52
Oral Roberta 73, YoungSiown St. 70
S. Utah 66, W. Illinois 53
Valparaiso 84, Chicago St. 72
Mlctw..lem CoMtal.W Conr.renc.
S.-niiTnele
But~r 66, Wright St. 58 .

6

Detroit 91 , Cleveland St. 81

4

' Mlaoourl Valley COnftrtnca
&amp;tmlflnalo
Bralley 73. lllnoiS Sl 66
Indiana St 87, Creighton 74
NorthHII Conterenc•
Stmlflnalo
Monmouth. N.J. 67. UMBC 54 •

point for a 25tt1-ptace vote and previous
ranking:
W·L Ptl

26·4 1,609

59

George Mason 62. James Madison 36
N.C.·WIImlngton 57, Old Dominion 54
Metro Atlantic Athletic Conferenc.

AP Mon'o Top 25 Poll

20·9

47

Stmlll nala

Stmlllnlll

3. Duke

.
Lorain Cath. 72, Fuchs Mlzrachl32
Mogadore 47, Cortland Maplewood 40

" When he walks into the
15. Kentucky (19-9) beat Aub&lt;Jm 90·78: room, you know it's time to
losl to No. 6 Florida 94-86.
play baseball," said first base16. Maryland {20·9) beat No. 2 Duke
man Jim Thome.
9t.SO: beet No. 7 Vi ~nll 102-67.
17. Ol&lt;latloma (23-6) beat Colorado as.
Burks came down to train67; beat Oklatlc&gt;fN State 68·56.
18. SL Joseph's (24-5) belt MIISIChu• ing camp a few days early so
seru. 84~9; lost to La Salle 91 ·90.
he'd have more time to get to
19. Srracuse (22·7) beat PittSburgh 80know everyone on Cleve69: beat SL JOhn's 93·91 , 20T.
20. Alabama (20·9) lost to ArQnsas 66·
land's roster, and watching
63; losttoNo. 14M!sslsslppi 105-71 . ·
21 . Georgetown (23-6) beat Autgef1
him interact with his new
74: S8; beat No. 13 Notre Dame 7~72 .
teammates, you'd think he'd
22. Wisconsin (18·9) lost to No. 3 Michl·
gan State 51-47; beat Iowa 59·57.
been here for years.
23. Wake Forest (19·9) beat North CarIn the past few weeks, he
olina State 76·58.
2-4 . Texas {23·7) beat Missouri 76-61 ; also has spent time with some
beat Texas Tech 78-55.
of the club's minor league
2!5 . Xa\liar (21 ·6) lOsito Dayton 65-62.
players, giving advice and
Mtn'a College B11kelblll
offering encouragement.
Sunday'• Scor. .
EAST
"He's got quite a presence
Syract~se 93, St. John's 91, 20T
about him," said Indians manSOUTH
Ouke 95, North Carolina 81
ager Charlie Manuel. "Ellis
Florida 94 , Kentucky 86
looks you in the eye, and I just
Wake Forest 76 , N.C. State 58
.
MIDWEST
get a good feeling whenever I
Cayton 65, Xavier 62
talk to him. He's solid."
GeorgetoWfl 79, Notre Dame 72
Illinois 67, Minnesota 59
His knees aren't.
Kansas 75, Missouri 5~
FAR WEST
Burks underwent surgeries
Long Beach St. 82, Pacific 72
.on both knees after the 1998
TOURNAMENT
Amerlea Ealt Conterenc1
season and has long scars as

this season yet, but ~\ sure
he'D benefit fiorn the rest he'D
get as DH. He'D likely bat

24. Ohio St.
25. Freano 51.

993

961
734

....
t

8
9
10
t1
t6
1
t2
t4
15
17
t9
21
t3
24
18
23

St. Francis, NY 72, Wagner El5 •

Patllot LHguo . ·
Stmlflnala
Holy Croso 69, Lehigh 57
Navy 88, BuckneU 64
.Southern COnference

Chlmplonahlp
,
UNC·Greansboro 67, Chaltanooga 66
Sun Belt Confllf'llnCI
Qulrterflnllt

22

Alt&lt;ansa&amp; St. 82, New Orlean&amp; 73

l!o-9
24-5 114
Others receiving voles: Tennessee 101,
Providence 95, Alabama 89, Al1cansas 63,
Clr&lt;innetl 53, Gonzaga 40, Indiana 35,
Georgia St 31, UC INine 23, Creighton 22,
&gt;Caviar 20, Hofstra 12, W. Kentucky 10,
California 4, Southam Cal 3, St. John's 3,
Richmond 2, S. Utah 2, BVU 1, Southem
Miss. 1.

. ,

The AP M1n'1 Top 25
How They Fared

\

t. Stanford (27·1) belt Soutttem Call·
lamia 70·68; beat No. 12 UCLA85·79.
2. Duke (26-4) lost to No. 16 Maryland
91·80; beal No.4 North Carolina, 95-8~ .

3. Michigan State (24-3) beat No. 22
Wisconsin 51·47; beat Michigan 78·57.
4. North Carolina {23·5) beat Nonh Carolina State 78--63: lost to No, 2 Duke 95·81.
5. Illinois (23·8) beat Minnesota El7·59.
e. Aorida (22·5) beat VandeltJilt 72·62;
beat No. 15 Kentucky 94-88,
7. Virginia (20·7) beal Clemson 84-65:
lost to No. 16 Maryland 102--e1.

e. Iowa State (25-4) beat TeKas Tech
80-63: beat Nebraska 86·73.
9. Arizona (21·7) beat Oregon State 65-

54; beat Oregon 104--es.
10. Kansas (23·5) bea1 Kansas Stale
77-65; beat Missouri 75·59.
11. Boston College (23·4) beat Morris
Brown 84·§3; bea1 St. . John's 67-62; beat
West Vlrglnla 9Ei-es.
12. UCLA (20·7} beat California 79·75:
1os110 No . .2 S11nford 85·79.
13. Notre Dame (19-8) lost to ConnecUcut 75·59; lost to No. 21 Georgetown 79·

Loulsia.na-Lifayana 63, louisiana Tech
56
Welt Caatl Conferlnce
Btmlflnall
Gonzaga 76, San Diego 68
Santa Clara 84, Pepperdlne 78

•

E. Michigan at Toledo, 7:301
W. Michigan a1 Bowling Green. 7
N. Illinois at Ball St.. 7
'
At Oiund Arena, CleVeland
Ouartaiflnllll
Thursday
Miami (Ohlo)IA~ron winner vs. Cent.
. Michigan, Noon
Buffalo/Ohto
winner
vs .
E.
Michigan/Toledo winner. 2 p.m.
W. MlchlganiBowling Green w!nner vs.
Kent St.; 7
N. Illinois/Ball St. winner vs. Marshall, 9
Semifinal•
Friday
Miami (Ohlo)/Akron·Cent Michigan
winner vs. Buffalo/Ohio-E. MichlgarVTole·
do winner, 7 p.m.
W. Michigan/Bowling Green-Kent St.
wmn&amp;t' vs. N. Illinois/Ball St.-Marshall win·
ner, 9
Championship

Saturday, March 10
SemHinal winners, 7 p.m.

Melp County's

Water

Topl5

25 points to lead the R~d
Storm (14-14., 8-8), who h.avtt
lost three straight, five of si~
and eight of 1 1 and had their
15-game winning stf(:ak
against Big East opponents at
Madison Square Garden
snapped.
.
No. 18 Georgetown 79,
No. 19 Notre Dame 72
Mike Sweetney scored 19
points and Ruben Boumge
Boumge added 16 as the vis-.
iting f:{oyas (23-6, I 0-6)
clinched a first-round bye for
this .week's Big East tournament.
1roy Murphy had 19 points
for Notre Dame (1 9-8, 11-5),
which was trying to win 20
games in the regular season ·
for the first time in 12 years.
No. 22 Wake Forest 76, N.
Carolina St. 58
Darius Songaila scored' 21
points arid Robert O'Kelley ·
had 15 to lead the visiting
Demon Deacons (19-9, 8-8), ·
who finished . 500 in the ,
ACC for the first time in four
seasons.
Cliff Crawford had 18 •
points for the Wolfpack (1 315, 5-11), who have lost four
of five.
Dayton 65, Xavier 62
Yuanta HoUand ·scored half
of his 16 points in a closing ·
15-4 run for the Flyers (1811,9-7 Atlantic 10).
David West had 18 points
and l1 rebounds for the Musketeers .(21-6; !2-4), who :
have lost six in a row· at Dayton Arena and are 5-25 over- ,
aU against the Flyers on their
home court. The loss knocked
Xavier out of the poD from
25th.

rC!

Hometown Newspaper

50 Ce n t&gt;

cable time

POMEROY

Police
training

line job
moves
forward

course

BY TONY M. LEAcH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

RACINE - An engineering project to improve
Racine's water system has
been approved by ViUage
Council.
Mayor
Scott
Hill
reported to council at a
recent meeting that applications have been filed
·~th the governor's office
for a $10,000 grant and the
Ohio Environmental Protection Agency for a
$7,000 loan.
The requested monies
will go toward a new engineering project that will
improve the water system
in the village.
Council approved the
engineering contract and
agreed that a public meeting on the project will be
held at a later time.
"The village water lines
have been in the ground
for over 50 years," said Hill.
"Regardless of the fact that
we ·receive the grant or
complete any improve. ments, the water rates will
have to be raised because

. ''

Te~~;~nce .Simmons had 19
poinq,tto lead the Gophers
(17-1'2'; 5-1 1) ..
. No. 5 Florida 94, No. 15
fromPageB1
Kentucky 86
Xavier 62.
Teddy Dupay matched his
Joseph Forte, the ACC'; career ihigh with 28 points,
leading scorer, led the Tar and tt1~ Gators (22-5, 12-4)
Heels with 21 points.
earned a share of the SouthDuke led by two at half- eastern Conference title with
time, but gradually pulled the win over the other coaway midway through the champion.
Keith''Hogans had a careersecond hal£ The Blue Devils
went up 72-57 with 11:55 left high 29 ,Points for the visiting
on a layup by Mike Dunleavy. Wildca\j (19-9, 12-4), who
The Tar Heels were shoot- made several runs in the secing for their first outright ond halt but couldn't overACC regular-season title ·in come a 15-point deficit.
eight seasons, but the Smith Because of a better diyision
Center crowd instead exited record, ~ntucky will be the
early on Senior Day as Duke· top seed for the league tourimproved to 19-0 this seaspn nament.
Nj&gt;. 9 Kansas 75,
when scoring 90 or more
,Missouri 59
points.
"They took something
Drew Gooden scored 19
away from us - definitely;' points a\14 sparked a i -7 secNorth Carolina's Jason Capel ond-half run to lead the Jaysaid.
hawks (2~-5, 12-4 Big 12),.
The victory also gave Duke who WOIJ. on Senior Day for
an ACC-record 124 wins in a the 18th ~onsecutive season.
Kareem Rush, the Big 12's
four-year period, breaking the
mark of the Duke teams from . leading scorer, returned after a .
1989-92.
seven-game absence because
No. 4 Illinois 67,
of a thumb injury and was
Minnesota 59
just 1- 9 f-7 for a season-low
Frank WiUiams scored 15 two pomts. Clarence Gilbert
points to lead the visiting IUi- led Missouri (1 8-1 1, 9-7)
ni (23-6, 13-3) to a share of with t9 ,' points.
their second Big Ten1 ConferNil. 17 Syracuse 93,
· Sf; John's 91, 2 OT
ence title in four seasons. Bill
Senfo~ poirit guard Allen
Self becalne the first coach in
22 years to win a title in his Griffiil scored 17 of his
31 points in the
first season in the Big Ten. career2high
' II!
two
overtimes
and the
Because of their win over co'1
champion Michigan State in Orang'emen (22-7, 10-6)
their only meeting, the !Uini went 20-for-22 from the freewill be the top seed in this throw! line in the two extra
. w
,
week's conference tourna- penoos.
FresHman
Willie
Shaw had
ment.
. l'

entine

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 51 , Numbe r 159

a

i

Mld-Amalic:an Co~erence
Men't Tourn~~ment
Fli'lt Round
Monday
· Akron a't Miami (Ohio). 7 p.m.
BuHelo at Ohio, 7:30

•

filth in Cleveland's lineup,
behind Jum Gonzalez and
Jim Thome.
"I'D talk to Ellis every day
and see how he's feeling,"
Manuel said. "I'm going to'
get him 500 at-bats."
The Indians know Burks
can help them in the clubhouse, too. He leads by example and his work ethic and
commitment have rubbed off
on teammates everywhere
he's been.
True to form, Burks, the,
consummate
teammate.
•
downplays his ability to
inspire others.
"I'm not a clubhouse ·
leader," he said. ''I'm just part
of the machine trying to get
to one goal. We've · got guys
who have been around here
for years. Guys know ..lvhat's
his time.
In 122 games last year, he going on, I'm here just to give
hit .&amp;44 with 24 homers and . them little help if I ~:an."
96 RBis in just 393 at-bats.
Bt rks said he and Manuel
haven't formulated a plan for

Pelawara 110, Nonheastern 66
Hofstra 78, MQ[ne 66
Colonial Athletic Aasociallon

4. HUnols
5. Florida
C
6. North orollna

Kirtland 52, Newbury .tl8
Lancaster Fisher Cath. 59, Centerburg

72.
t• . ....iSSipp (23-6) lost Ia LSU 78·n,

39

11. Maryland

43

\

so. Uberty Con·

ter48
Hamler Patrick Henry 66, Archbold 84,

12. VIrginia
t3. UCLA
14 _Mlsslsslpl)l

32

i

Doylestown

Cln. Wyoming 57, Felidty·Frlinldin 34
Cle. VASJ 76 , Klnaman Badger 37

60, 20T

.,'

68,

garetta 67

Hudson 62, Akr. Eliot 40
Lakewood -48, Lorain Admiral King 41
Lakewoocl St. Edward 70, Amherst 53
logan 58, Marlena 49
Masslllon Washington 56, AUStintown
17itch 46
Maumee 66. Tol. Bowsher 53 ,
Reynoldsburg 45, Pk:kertngton 44
Thomas Worthington 55, Galloway
Westland 33
Tol. Scott 64, Tot Start 56
Youngs. Boardman 52, Can. McKinley

i

Manchester

Ct&gt;Wewa 55
Beverly Fl Frye 66. Belmont Ur;on
Bucvrus Wynford 69, Castalia Mar·

C&lt;;llnwood 6t, Mayfield 46
Glenville 62. Maclson 40

49

Akr.

·fnim Pap 11

OT; beat No. 20 Alabami 105-71,

Local61

Brecki.ville 65, Barberton 35
C~ .

Rldge72
WIIIOrd 52, Loidngton 34
Dlvlolon ..

Tribe

j:lroof. A year later, he had
arthroscopic procedures done .
"Since the second ones
~hey've felt better," he sai&lt;\. " I
don't have the aching I had
bc:fon;."
' Burks foUow. a gameday
r!rual for his knees. He applies
ice first thing in the morning,
again when he arrives at the
baUpark for treatment and
again after the game.
"Jc~ is something," he said.
"They say milk is good. Ice is
good. When my knees are
inflamed they're bad. But it
never has affected the way I
go after it. I always feel like
yo~ go hard, and then you go
home."
Bilrks credited the Giants'
traih_ing staff for helping him
stay in the lineup for 242
games over the past two seaSOf\S, And when he's played,
Bu~s has made the most of

.

gets nod
BY TONY M. LEAcll
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

o(~ c,os~;~s~ciated ~th

· ill~: Pl'\lJect. " ·~""

' Council approved a
,request by Dale Hart, park
board represent~tive, to
increase rental charges for
both the large shelter
house and the small shelter
house in Star Mill Park.
· Hart also informed
eouncil that a sewer line
fiom the park building to
the septic tank was backed
up and that recent efforts
to unclog \he , pipe had
(ailed.
Han advised that the line
should be connected to the
district sewer line along
Ohio 338 so that new
restrooms can be built on
the north side of the park
building.
Estimates to begin work
under the road bore so that
the lfues can be connected
have been completed and
construction will be funded with park board money,
said Hart.
Council approved Hart's
request pending approval
of \he Ohio Department of
Transportatio!l and · the
American Legion post.
Racine
Fire Chief
David Neigler said the fire
department had applied to
•

: ,.._ _ . . . .,AJ

March 6, 200

Thi! Blchman Building's clock made for a dramatic background as a crew from O'Connor Cable Construction Co. of Kentuc~ 'f.'Drl&lt;ed on Court Street In Pomeroy Monday. In the midst of a March snow show show·
er, worl&lt;mEin ~re ln,talllng new television cable for Charter Communications Co. (Brian J. Reed photo)

POMEROY -A new law enforcement training course was approved for the Pomeroy Police
Department at Village Council's regular meeting
on Monday.
Police Chief Mark Proffitt.informed council of
the availability of an in-service law enforcement
training program aimed at creating a more professional, efficient law enforcement community.
The Law Enforcement Training Network
(LETN) is one of the most popular su\&gt;scriptionbased computer training networks for police
departments throughout the countty and reaches
more than 150,000 officers on a daily basis.
The LETN can:
• Provide consistent training on updated law
enforcement techniques and basic criteria far:
every member of the department;
• Reduce legal liability with third-party docu~
mentation of the training;
• Reduce travel costs and overtime associated
with other types of training;
• Improve community relations and enhance
public
.mg; image through .conununity relations
. train'
• Stay current wilh law enforcement nCWB and
information from nationally known expertS.
Proffitt said the cost of training is around
$2,200 for the initial year of service, and S1,700
for foUowing years. A computer, video cassette
recorder and all necessary software is included in
the program.
c;ouncil approved the purchase of the training

Pllan 1ft Pollee, Al

•

o·o.ctors 'expect Cheney to return to work after angioplasty
ASHINGTON
(AP) Vice
President Dick
Cheney should
be · able to conthtue in his job unimpeded by his
latest heart problems, doctors say,
shrugging ofF any suggestion \hat he
shdl,l}d cunail travel or his intense
wOrl,loim.
·'~&gt;"
But Cheney also wls given some
tough nCWi alter he lwj. .., angioplasty
to .unclog a coronary
Monday.
:E:ven if he sticks to his
and
rigorous workout
there is a
fait chance he will be
in the hospital facing the same
soon, his
physicians said.
''Well, ;it\ possible for the narrowing
!0 caine back, and I think I quoted
around 40 percent;' Dr. Jonathan Rein-

.

"There is a very high likelihood he can .finish out his term in
hitfully t'lgorou! capacity."
.

er, who petformed the surgery at
George Washington University, told a
crowded news conference. "There are
studies that may show, you k:now,.' a little
bit higher than that. If the narrowing is
going to come back, usuaUy it . comes
back within the first six months."
Cheney, . who has had four heart
attacks, underwent the angioplasty after
he experienced a series of subtle pains
in his chest. Doctors said their best evidence indicated that Cheney, 60, had
not suffered another heart attack.
The artery, which had been opened
du•ing surgery at the same hospital in
November, had partiaUy reclosed, Rein-

er said. The culprit was scar tissue building up in the same channel doctors had
opened previously. .
Monday night Cheney was groggy
and sedated, but Reiner said he should
be back at work this week. When asked
whether Cheney could face travel
restrictions, or any restrictions at all,

Reiner said, "no."
Cheney could be released Tuesday; a
decision was expected Tuesday mornmg.
"There is a very high likelihood he
can finish out his term in his fully vig"
orous capacity," Reiner said. Cheney
quickly resumed a fuU schedule after

the November operation.
President Bush caUed the vice .president to wish him well, White House
·spokesman Ari Fleischer said. "During
their five-minute phone call, the vice
president told the president that he was
feeling fine and looked forwatd to
rerurning to work." .
In · this latest incident, 'Cheney
checked himself into George Washington University Hospital, about six
blocks west of the White House, alter
feeling chest pain briefly on twO occasions Monday. He also had felt chest
discomfort Satuttlay after stepping off
an exercise machine, and on Sunday,
after taking a walk.
He said the episodes were "much
milder and very brief" compared with
the chest pains he experienced in
November. "The symptoms were subtle" this time, Reiner said.

Speak Out:

\,

Toclay"s

What do you think about for~er .President Clinton's pardons? Sentinel
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#I Great OPPortunitY To Tell Your Business StorY
·
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Great
OPPortunitY to SPotliaht Your Employees
.
.
#4 Great OPPortunitY To Generate New Business
#5 It APPears In The GalliPolis DailY Tribune. Point Pleasant Reeister. And .The DailY Sentinel

Sports
weather

I

AS

82-4
85
A4
A3
81,3,6

A3

Lotteries·

I

OHIO
'I ttnt lrylng nat to tona an opinion one

way or the Oilier until}.hMr all or lhe

tacil. I 111111 to NY - l n g II wrong
un- Iteam -vthlng lbout ~. That'o

only fair.'

Miry.:;

'I don1 think he lhould have done H. H
makH H1oo1&lt; like a payoff - you ·
ICI'Itch my biCI&lt; and I'll ICJ&amp;tch youre.
IIMwn Marcinko

Pomeroy

•1 juot want to know Why he'elhe only
p t - thal'a llngled out? Other
ptMidenla have l8eued ~ par·
dona and nothing Wll Ovtll' lllld about It
I underlland that many people In WUh·

lngtoo, D.C. aren1too truiiiWonhy, but
why II Cllnlon getting all the alack 'I"

a.nny 11lla

.

•

•

Ftudand

Pick 3: 6-5-6; Pick 4:

2~
~5: ~21).30

W.VA.
Doily 3:.0·&lt;&gt;-3 Doily 4: 5·1+4
C 2001 Ohio v.n~ Publbhina Co.

'I

�..
Tuead1y, Mlrch tl, 2001

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel
•

Mobile home fire kills :a
CINCINNATI (AP) -1\vo young boys died early Tuesday when fire swept through their mobile home in suburban
Miami Township.
Township Fire Chief Jim Hughes said high winds fed the
fire, giving it a good head start before the alarm was sounded. He said arriving firefighters were greeted by the father of
the boys screaming for help.
"We're only a block from the firehouse, so we had on-dury
personnel," Hughes said. "They were here very quickly and,
still, with the start the fire had with the winds, it was really
feeding it fast ."
Firefighters managed to· get the boys out, but it was too
late.

•

Service worker dies In accident

PageAl
TUeld-,, March t, 2001

Kroger watches as stock prices slip
CINCINNATI (AP) - Kroger Co.,
the nation's largest supermarket operator, watched its stock price slip slightly
Monday after disclosing improper
accounting at its California-based
Ralphs retail grocery unit.
Cincinnati- based Kroger restated
earnings for 1998, 1999 ·and the first half
of 2000 to reflect the accounting dishonesty by former employees.The irregularities involved apparent attempts to
artificially manipulate financial performance reported on Ralphs' books, but
there was no evidence that anyone stole
from the company, Kroger spokesman
Gary Rhodes said.
Kroger's shares closed down 2.5 percent, or 62 cents per share, to S23.70

Monday on the New York Stock
Exchange.
Industry analyst Jack Russo said that
although Kroger promptly investigated
and disclosed the accounting problems
and they occurred before Kroger owned
Ralphs, the company's stock price might
suffer for a few days in light of Wall
Street's displeasure.
"This, too, shall pass at some point;'
said Russo, of A. G. Edwards &amp; Sons Inc.
in St. Louis.
Kroger management said Monday the
accounting irregularities happened
before it acquired the Los Angeles-based
Ralphs Grocery Co., as part of its purchase ofWest Coast grocery chain Fred
Meyer Inc. in 1999.

In fact, the improper accounting
began more than a year before Fred
Meyer acquired Ralphs in 1998, Kroger
officials said. According to management,
the practices were subsequently "concealed from auditors and Kroger senior
management."
Kroger officials last week appointed a
new chief financial officer for the Ralphs
unit. A half dozen financial executives
believed responsible for the accounting
tactics have left the company within the
past year to 18 months, Rhodes said.
Because the problems were the result
of an intentional bookkeeping practice,
Kroger said it was restating its earnings
over 2 1/2 years to reflect accepted
accounting principles.

BEDFORD (AP) -An employee of this Cleveland suburb
died after he was pinned between a car and a wood chipper.
. Tom Tomaselli, 53, was taken to University Hospital's Bedford Medical Center but was dead on arrival Monday, said
Police Chief Rick Borowiak.
Tomaselli and two other Bedford service employees were
pushing logs through a wood chipper when Tomaselli was
struck by' a car about 9:30 a.m . Monday. One of his legs was showed that ·Crosswhite received $5,742 worth of unearned
· amputated in the accident. The other workers were not leave time and $782 for salary overpayments.
injured, Borowiak said.
.
.
The car's driver, a 21-year-old Garfield Heights man, was
CINCINNATI (AP) -Labor union members, who were
questioned by police and released. Borowiak said the driver
charged with trespassing at a suburban Sandusky shopping
told police that because the sun was in his eyes he did not see
ASHLAND (AP) - A highway worker died Monday mall when they passed out leaflets protesting a nonunioll
the men working or the wood chipper parked in the street. when an Ohio Department of Transportation truck backed
employer, failed to show they had a right to violate no-solicover him, according to the State Highway Patrol.
iting rules, a federal appeals court ruled Monday..
Mark Thompson, 39, of Shiloh, who works for Shelly and
The case involved the distribution of handbills at Sandusky
Sands Construction Co. in Zanesville, was working near the Mall in northwest Ohio by members of the Northeast Ohio
MARIETTA (AP) - County officials from around Ohio Interstate 71 Ashland exit when he was run over about 9:30
District Council of the Un.ited Brotherhood of Carpenters &amp;
are complaining that their local governments are payirig more a.m ., the patrol reported.
Joiners of America, AFL-CIO.
than their fair share for attorneys representing indigent
Patrol Sgt. Dave LaRue said Thompson died at "the scene.
The union distributed hanc\bills in 1991 urging mall cusdefendants.
LaRue said Monday night that no one was arrested, and the tomers not to patronize a company that had hired a
"If you're talking about a pure unfunded mandate, this is investigation is ongoing.
nonunion contractor to renovate its mall store. The uriion
the closest thing you 'II ever see," said John Lent~, policy anaConstruction work is under way at that part of 1-71, as it is said the hiring undermined local wage standards.
lyst for the County Commissioners Association of Ohio.
widened into three lanes.
An ·a ttorney for Sandusky Mall Co. notified the union that
The association says that years ago, the state promised to
any union members passing out handbills in the future would
evenly split the cost of representing .indigent defendants.
be considered trespassers.
In 1976, the Legislature passed a law saying the state would
pay for 50 percent of the cost of appointed counsel. But just
COLUMBUS (AP) - . Vandals spray-painted messages on
three years later, the law was .changed to allow the state to pay an Ohio State building over the weekend to protest a cat.
less if money wasn't available:
research project.
.
·
·
CANTON (AP) -A woman who accused public officials
UniversitY officials believe the graffiti refers to a professor's
· r
r li
. o f H IV of corruption because they wouldn't prosecute her daughter's
· h t he .e
p1an to m.ect
about 120 cats wtt
ne vemon
and then inject them with methamphetamines, spokesman ex-boyfriend pleaded guilty Monday to 18 counts of intimiCLEVELAND (AP) -The Cleveland Clirtic Foundation Earle.Holland said. The study, funded by the National Insti- dation.
tutes of Healih, .is to observe the effects of how drug abuse
Sandra Lehman, 45, a former Canton-area resident who
will add a medical school, possibly as soon as 2003.
"It is our intention to broaden our medical student educa- accelerates the effects of HIV.
·
now lives in Akron, entered the plea b~fore visiting Stark
tion activities and to have a medical school on out campus,"
A university employee discovered graffiti early Monday County Common Pleas Court Judge Richard M. Markus,
Dr. Andrew Fishleder, chairman of the clinic's education divi- that included messages such as "Stop The Killing" and "Cats who sent sentencmg for Apnl 23.
sion, said Monday.
+ Merh ,. Bad Science," Holland said.
· She could be sentenced to up to five years on each count,
.The large medical foundation, which operates Cleveland
The graffiti was on Bricker Hall, which includes the office according to Lorain County Prosecutor Gregory White,
whose office was assigned the case. His office will not make
Clinic Hospital, is determining whether to operate the school of university President William Kirwan.
or combine with a university, he said.
.,·."
:, .. , r1
, ·l,.
1. 1 ,~
,
·
a sentetice recQmmendation, he said.
The Cleveland Clinic has been helping with the training of
some Ohio State University medical students in Cleveland
since 1991 as part of a cooperative agreement that -expires in
2003.
. .
.

Court upholds trespass charge

ODOT truck kills worker

Legal costs raise concems

Vandals protest projed

WOman enterS gUI"lty PIea

Cll"ni"C planS neW SChOOl

.

..

'Movlng'day

Susped says he meant no harm
CANTON (AP) - In a taped police interview, a man on
trial for child endangering said he shook his 4-month-old
daughter in an .attempt. to quiet her.
But a doctor who 'treated the baby said there was evidence
of a massive, violent shaking.
Gerard Hawkins, 27, is facing two counts of child endangering as a result of injuries he allegedly inflicted on his
daughter, Sanla, Dec. 14. The trial began on Monday in Stark
County Common Pleas Court.
.
The baby's mother, Tan1my French, told a jury that she
doesn't believe Hawkins injured their daughter, saying the
infant has a history of illness.

.
I

uc drops land swap plans
CINCINNATI (AP) - The University of Ciitcinrtati is
dropping a proposal to build a S2 million-plus residence for
its president near the ~ehool, citing an impasse in negotiations
with area preservationists.
·
The university envisioned an elaborate home with a dining
and entertainment facility. to· hold fund-raising events. Nearby residents said it woula cre,ate too much traffic and not be
appropriate in the classic, Victorian neighborhood.
The university wanted to swap a yellow Victorian home
donated by a prominent family more than two decades ago
for an adjacent parcel owned by the Cincinnati Preservation
Association.
·
The university plans to sell the house and look for a new
site to build a presidential mansion, said· Greg Hand, a university spokesman.

..

POllee uncover ID scam
BEAVERCREEK (AP) -A man who police said combed
obituary notices to find names to use on bogus checks was
being held on suspicion of forgery and possession of criminal
tools.
William S. Smith Jr., 29, of Fort Wayne, Ind., was arrested
Monday after attempting to cash a fraudulent business check
at a grocery store, police said.
"It looks like he was .getting copies of birth certificates of
deceased people" ... for purposes of cashing the fraudulent
checks," said police Sgt. John Turner.
Smith had obtained Indiana and Ohio state identifications·
under the names of dead people to ca~h counterfeit checks
printed from his computer, Turner said.

Charge against ex-chief dropped
XENIA (AP) - A former Jamestown police chief has
agreed to repay the village $5,000 and prosecutors have asked
that a theft-in-office charge against him be dropped.
The request to dismiss the charge against Herbert Crosswhite was filed Monday in Greene County Common Pleas
Court.
"We're happy with the resolution because it vindicates
Herb in the area we've always contested from the get-go and
that is the suggestion he had engaged in criminal conduct,"
Crosswhite's attorney, Titn Merkle, said.
Crosswhite, who retired in I 999 after 26 years with the
p&lt;;&gt;lice department, was indicted in Noven)ber. A special state
audit of the village's books released in November 1999

•'

forJohn ·

Glenn's
boy home
NEW CONCORD (AP)
- The house where John .
Glenn built model airplanes as
a boy traveled to the center of
his hometown Monday, where
it is to become a museum.
Glenn - who became a
Marine fighter pilot, then astronaut and U.S. senator - talked
with students and old.friend$ as
he ~tched a flatbed . truck
crawl along, carrying the twostory · white frame house his
father built in the' 1920s.
"You have a lot of emotion,
when you see the house you
grew up in coming down the
road;' Glenn said.
Glenn becarne the first
American to orbit the Earth, on
Feb. 20, 1962. In 1998, at age ·
77, he returned to spa'e on the
shuttle Discovery, becoming'
the oldest space traveler in his-

•..:_

Deaths

•••

·-

•

Nellie Cooper

(

(

EariHollun

. ANNAMORIAH,W.Va.- Nellie Cooper, 97 ,Annamoriah,
died Sunday, March 4, 2001 at Minnie Hamilton Health Care
~ · Center, Grantsville, W.Va.
·: · Born in Calhoun County, W.Va., she was the daughter of the
· ·late George and Sally Wright Basnett.
: ' Surviving are a sister, Mary Wolverton of Big Bend; and two
grandsons and four great-grandchildren.
·· · She was also preceded in death by her husband, Dexter
Cooper; a son, Clarence Cooper; and six brothers.
:
' : Services will be I p.m. Weedne.day in Stump Funeral Home,
· · :Grantsville. Burial will be in Snider Chapel Cemetery,
Annamoriah. Friends may call at the funeral home from 5-9
.. p.m . today.

deville, Erek A. Daniels of Middleport, and Leah S. Daniels of
Athens.
A memorial service at the Kingdom Hall, 37319 Ohio 124,
Middleport, will be conducted by Randy McDaniel at 4 p.m.
on Sunday. March 11, 2001.
lnurnment will be in the Tufts-Holt cemetery at Wurtland,
Kentucky.
Arnngements were completed by Jerry Spears Funeral
Home with Crematory in Columbus.

RACINE- Earl Holman, 77, of Racine, died on Monday,
March 5, 2001 at Bennington Glen Health Care Center,
Marengo, Ohio.
He was born on January 14,1924 in Racine, Ohio, son of the
auto fire, one brush fire and
late John Holman and Minnie Donaldson Holman. He worked
three electrical fires.
for Rizer Oil Company for over 27 yean. His many friends in
The department also assuted
Meigs County knew him as "Many Thanks."
fromPipA1
He u survived by sons and daughren-in-law, William and
the Village of Rutland with
Betty Jo Holman of Atlanta, Georgia, Roger and Sally Holman
extinguishing two fires .
of Rutland, and Joseph and Melania Holman &lt;if Cardington, program and informed Proffitt
Snuth also informed council
Ohio; daughter and sons-in-law, Rita and Robert Travis of to begin preparations on get- that four department members
Michigan, 13 grandchildren and 13 great-grandchildren; and ting the course under way.
recently attended a conventi on
Council also approved a
two brothers, William Holman of Michigan, and Wilkie Holin Indianapolis, Ind., to acquire
. request by Proffitt to officially
man of Middleport.
information on new fire fightHe was preceded in death by· his wife, Goldie Snyder Hol- conmtission the police depart.
man; his parents; a brother, Jake Holman; sisters, Virginia Nap- ment's new cruiser, a 1999 ing techniqu es, procedu,res,
. . RACINE - Edna L. Neigler, 73, Racine, died TUfsday, per and Mildred Jewell; a granddaughter, Monica Holritan Crown Victoria, that was pur- equipment, and technology.
In o pen discussion, council
,... March 6, 2001 at St. Joseph's Hospital, Parkersburg, W.Va .
chased last month at a cost of
Wolfe, and a great-grandson, Tyler Wolfe.
: ,.. Arrangements will be announced by the Cremeens Funeral
deliberated on va rious street
Services will be held at 11 a.m. on Thunday, March 8, 2001 $7,450.
Home, Racine.
·
The former cruiser will be repairs located throughout the
at Fisher-Acree Funeral Home in Pomeroy. Burial will follow
· in Letart Falls Cemetery. Friends ntay call on Wednesday, retired from service and put up village.
for bid in the immediate future,
March 7, 2001 from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m . at the funeral home.
Clerk Kathy Hysell distribsaid Proffitt.
uted the February fi nancial
Proffitt
thanked
Stacy
Shank
report. Balances in the van ous
•
and
Clay
Crow
for
assisting
funds
were:
general •
.in Meig&gt; County Common
RACINE
Pronunent
Butler
County
edu.oator
and
civic
with
the
new
cruiser's
develop$91
,049.85;
safety,
$2,927.63;
Pleas Court by National City
'
ment and Chris Shank for street, $(26.277); state highway,
POMEROY - Marriage Bank, Pittsburgh, Pa., against leader D. Russel lee died Sunday, March 4, 2001.
He was born in Racine on June 1, 191S, the third child of allowing the police department $3,055 .55 ; fire, $21,227 .67;
licenses have been issued in James Patterson, Racine, and
the
late Dale and lillian Hobstetter Lee. From the time he was use of one of the fire depart· Meigs County Probate Court others, alleging default on a
cemetery, $7 295.12; water,
to John Lewis Snider, 28, and mortgage agreement m the seven years old until he re.-hed early adulthood, he did farm ment's work bays to prepare the $9,045.60: sewer, $24,663.34;
work, driving a team of horses to deliver milk twice a day to vehicle for service. ·
; Teresa Evelyn Lascar, 41, Port- amount of S53,259. ·
dairy customers.
Council
listened
to guaranty meter, $22,312.55;
.· .]and; and to James Edward
"'
He graduated from Ra cine High School iri 1933.
Pomeroy Fire Department Sec- utility, $2,019.52; cemetery
• Greene, 54, Bidwell, and
The first person in his family to attend college, Lee received ond Capt. Todd Smith give the endowment, $45,268.75; police
Donna Rae Wilson, 56, Midhis baccalaureate degree in agriculture from Ohio· State Uni- February fire report.The report pension, $10 ,192.43; recre.dleport.
RACINE - Racine Youth versity in 1939 and took a teaching job at Union Township indicated that the department ation, $4,371.37; permissive
responded to seven auto acci- tax, $2,721 .07; law enforceLeague will hold ·its organiza- High School that same year.
In 1944, he became district superintendent and managed a de.nts, one structure fire, one . ment, $2,134.31.
tional meeting on Thursday at
series
of consolidations that led to the opening of Lakota High
. . POMEROY - An action 6 p.m. at Southern High
School in 1959. In 1964, he was named Superintendent of But'", for foreclosure has been filed School.
Representatives of Mounler Counry Schools, a position he held until his retirement in
taineer Power Plant in New
1979.
Haven,
W.Va., met with counAs County Superintendent, he was insrrumenral in establishing a vocational high school that bears his name, the D. Russel
fromPipA1
cil to deliver a presentation
Lee Career Center.
explaining the new construc·'·
"I worked hard on it, very hard, for 10-12 years," he once the State Fire Marshal's Office tion currently under way at
said. "I was just obsessed with what it could do for the kids in for a I 00 percent grant for the plant.
eight self-contained breathing
Butler County."
Tlie
construction
1s
In addition to his work as an educator, Lee served for I 0 apparatus. The gear will cost designed to help r~duce atr
'•· '
BY THE ASSOCIAltD PRESS
to 20 mph . Chance· of mow years as a trustee of Fort Hamilton-Hughes Memorial Hospi- $21,600.
pollution associated with acid
., . The intense winter storm 30 perce!J.t.'
tal, including a three year stint as President, as well as chair, of
Neigler informed council rain and should pose no dan, ·that pounded the East Coast
Wednesday... Cloudy. Scat- the Building Committee during a major construction project. that the fire marshal's office is ger to Racine residents.
was having a fringe effect on tered flurries in the .morning.
He also served· on seven other hospital board committees. wanting all fire reports to be
Council discussed recent
: .the tri-county a;ea, the Cold with highs 33 to 38. Lee and his family were among the founding members of Faith filed electronically and that
refuse
collection rates within
: 1 National
Weather Service Northwest wind 10 to 15 Community United Methodist Church in West Chester, where software will be provided
the village and decided that
. -: .said.
mph.
.
he twice served ,as Chair of the Ohio Automobile Club (AAA) . once the !lepartment receives
Jim Harper of~outhern Ohio
The storm system conWednesday mght ... Mostly
Other board memberships include Junior Achievement, Blue a computer.
Disposal would be contacted
:tributed "to cold and snowy cloudy. Lilws .25 to 30. ·
. Cross of Southwest Ohio Advisory Committee, United Way,
Council approved a comfor his !llggestions on how to
'~c&lt;andilions today.
~
Bxte.n d.d' f'iliec!lll: .
the Butler Gouhty Heart 1\ssociation, tht Buder Count"t,~oard puter purchue for .the fire ·
. · ·~ The storm will begin to
Thursday... Mostly cloudy. of Mental Retardation and Develop~ental Dillblli!les, ana the . department, and named develop the rates.
Hill advised that council
%' move out into the Adantic A chance of light 1now or rain Buder County Tuberculosis Association. He was also a 50-ytar Councilman Greg Taylor to
should make the rate increase
Ocean tonight, bringing the from early afternoon on. Any M ason.
.
. assist with the selection and
!!: :area's snow showers to a grad- accumulation expected to be
Looking back on his long years of community service, Lee purchase of the new comput- retroactive to March I
because of "increased fuel
~.ual end.
.light. Highs in the 19.wer 40s. commented, "I like to tend to business. If ynu make a commit- er.
.
~ Skies will be partly to
Friday...Snow likely, possi- ment to do something, you should uphold that conmtittnent."
RACO representatives met costs and landfill rates."
Council adjourned the
·mostly cloudy on Wednesday bly mixed with rain during
He is survived by his wife of 61 years, the former Helen with council !o inquire about
: -t.)vith temperatures rebound- the day. Several inches possi- (Sharp) Lee, formerly of Huntington, WenVir6'nia; by two sis- three Christtnas wreaths that meeting until March 5.
In addition to Hill and
•iing into the 30s and low 40s. ble. Lows aroutld JO•ilnd highs ters, Rose Clarke of El Campo, Texas, and Norma Thssian of the group had purchased. Hill
.. · · The next wintry blast will around 40.
Kenwood; by two sons and a daughter-in-law, Dr. Charles lee told the group that electrical Taylor, council members Bob
l~occur nn Thursday as a low
Saturday... Most111 cloudy' of Cincinnati, and Dr. ·David Lee and laura Harper Lee of outlets had yet to be installed Beegle, Joe Evans, Bobbi~
-t;"Jiressur&lt; systerh moves ac.ross with a chance of
show- Bowing Green, Kentucky; and by a granddaughter, Harper lee, by the power company and Roy, Larry Wolfe, and Clerk
- the Great Lakes, forecasters ers. Lows 25 to 30 ~pd highs also· of Bowling Gree11, Kentucky.
that the wreaths were not put Karen Lyons attended 'the
:N"said. There will be a chance of around 40.
meeting.
•If
Memorial services will be held on Thursday, March 8, 2001 Out.
Sunday.
:.Mosdy
·
cloudy
at
7
p.tp.
at
the
Faith
Community
United
Methodist
Church,
,.. Sllow on Thursday and Friday.
~·*, Sunset tonight will be at with a chatlc~ of rain. Morn- 8210 Cox Road, West Chester, with the Rev. David Bridgman
:::6:29 and sunrise on Wednes- ing lows 25 to 30 and daytime officiating.
Visitation will be on Wednesday, March 7, 2001 from 4-7
highs in the mid 405:--;,.
,.~day is at 6:56 a.m.
Monday... Mostly'" cloudy p.m.·at the Webb Noonan Funeral Home, Ross Avenue at D
....
Weather forecast:
~ Tonight ... Cloudy
with • with a chance of rain. Warmer Street. Comt!littal services will be held at 10 a.m. on Thursday
. ."icattered snow showers. Lows with a lows ·around .. _40 and at the Rose Hill Mausoleum Chapel and entombment will Collow.
. ·
.
' ',22 to 27. Northwest wind 10 highs in the lower 50s, .
Memorial contributions may be directed to the BCJVSD
· '··
Employee Memorial Scholarship Fund, 3603 Hamilton, Mid,..,.
A lesder In solid waste
dletown Road, Hamilton, Ohio 45011 .
·~ ··

Police

Edna L Neigler

LOCAL BRIEFS

D. Russel Lee

. . Licenses issued

1

League to fonn

··-Foredosure filed

Sewer

VALLEY WEATHER

·::storm effects linger in area

U

••..
~

LOCAL S.TOCKS

·n•AEP-47

Gannett-84~

'i:Arcll Coal- 25

Ganeral Electrtc - 45

~· AmTech/SBC- 45~
"Alhland Inc. - 40~

45'•

.

· AleJO-~•

Hartly Davidson

.i•AT&amp;T-23~
· • Bank One- 3!!0
.• ~Bob Evans- 201.

·•BorgWBmer- 44!.

Kmart- 9~
Kroger- 231•
Lands End - 23

Ltd.- 18,,

OVB-25

.• ; City HOlding - 8%
·• Fldoral Mogul .,.. 2!.

Peoplll -

...

Myrtle lnes TUfts

RO Shell-;-,~
Sears - 391. ·'.
Slloney's - 1~-.:
Wai·Mart - 41);
Wendy's - 241

Oak Hill Financial -

,,; Clwnplon - 2t.
.,... Charming Shops - 8'1.
~~ USB-23

·

Rockwell-q~
Rocky BoollJ .4"1o

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MIDDLEPORT - Myrtle lnes Tufts, 79, of Middleport,
died Friday, March 2, 2001 in Grove City, following an extended illness.
She was the daughter of Henry Clay Hicks and Delilah
Hicks of Greenup, Kentucky, and was a member of the Middleport Congregation of Jehovah's Witnesses.
She was preceded in death by a grandson, Jason Kent Ortiz;
and three brothers, Albert, Carl and Russell Hicks.
Survivors include Elmer, her husband of 56 years; her twin
daughters, Lawanria Sue Guan) Ortiz of Grove City, and Donna
Lou (Lane) Daniels of Rutland; two suters, Faye Smith of
Wurtland, Kentucky, Maxine (Ralph) May ofVirginia Beach,
Virginia; and three grandchildren, Juan L. Ortiz Ill of Cir-

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Obituaries

Thl Dilly Sentinel • P1g1 A 3

snqw

tory.

Later that year, the Democrat retired from the U.S. Senate
after representing Ohio for 24
years.
A crowd of about 500 people ' gathered aowntOWI\ on a
sunny, but cold and wiridy
morning to watch the transfer,
which took about two hours.
The. nine-room house,
which the Glenns donated to
Muskingqm College in 1999,
looked like an oversized parade
i1oat as it tm"eled through the
village's tree-lined downtown.
It was moved from Friendship '
Drive - named after Glenn
?rbited Eo!rth in the capsule
Friendship 7:.....: to Main Street.
Its new neighbor js a former
~ar dealership that will be torn
down to make room for an
eventual space exploration
complex.
The house \vill be restored
to the way 'it looked during
Glenn's boyhood in the 1930s
and become a museum that
will tell 20th century American
history through the lives of
Glenn and his wife, Annie,
organizers say.

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

•

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Tuead1y, Mlrch tl, 2001

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel
•

Mobile home fire kills :a
CINCINNATI (AP) -1\vo young boys died early Tuesday when fire swept through their mobile home in suburban
Miami Township.
Township Fire Chief Jim Hughes said high winds fed the
fire, giving it a good head start before the alarm was sounded. He said arriving firefighters were greeted by the father of
the boys screaming for help.
"We're only a block from the firehouse, so we had on-dury
personnel," Hughes said. "They were here very quickly and,
still, with the start the fire had with the winds, it was really
feeding it fast ."
Firefighters managed to· get the boys out, but it was too
late.

•

Service worker dies In accident

PageAl
TUeld-,, March t, 2001

Kroger watches as stock prices slip
CINCINNATI (AP) - Kroger Co.,
the nation's largest supermarket operator, watched its stock price slip slightly
Monday after disclosing improper
accounting at its California-based
Ralphs retail grocery unit.
Cincinnati- based Kroger restated
earnings for 1998, 1999 ·and the first half
of 2000 to reflect the accounting dishonesty by former employees.The irregularities involved apparent attempts to
artificially manipulate financial performance reported on Ralphs' books, but
there was no evidence that anyone stole
from the company, Kroger spokesman
Gary Rhodes said.
Kroger's shares closed down 2.5 percent, or 62 cents per share, to S23.70

Monday on the New York Stock
Exchange.
Industry analyst Jack Russo said that
although Kroger promptly investigated
and disclosed the accounting problems
and they occurred before Kroger owned
Ralphs, the company's stock price might
suffer for a few days in light of Wall
Street's displeasure.
"This, too, shall pass at some point;'
said Russo, of A. G. Edwards &amp; Sons Inc.
in St. Louis.
Kroger management said Monday the
accounting irregularities happened
before it acquired the Los Angeles-based
Ralphs Grocery Co., as part of its purchase ofWest Coast grocery chain Fred
Meyer Inc. in 1999.

In fact, the improper accounting
began more than a year before Fred
Meyer acquired Ralphs in 1998, Kroger
officials said. According to management,
the practices were subsequently "concealed from auditors and Kroger senior
management."
Kroger officials last week appointed a
new chief financial officer for the Ralphs
unit. A half dozen financial executives
believed responsible for the accounting
tactics have left the company within the
past year to 18 months, Rhodes said.
Because the problems were the result
of an intentional bookkeeping practice,
Kroger said it was restating its earnings
over 2 1/2 years to reflect accepted
accounting principles.

BEDFORD (AP) -An employee of this Cleveland suburb
died after he was pinned between a car and a wood chipper.
. Tom Tomaselli, 53, was taken to University Hospital's Bedford Medical Center but was dead on arrival Monday, said
Police Chief Rick Borowiak.
Tomaselli and two other Bedford service employees were
pushing logs through a wood chipper when Tomaselli was
struck by' a car about 9:30 a.m . Monday. One of his legs was showed that ·Crosswhite received $5,742 worth of unearned
· amputated in the accident. The other workers were not leave time and $782 for salary overpayments.
injured, Borowiak said.
.
.
The car's driver, a 21-year-old Garfield Heights man, was
CINCINNATI (AP) -Labor union members, who were
questioned by police and released. Borowiak said the driver
charged with trespassing at a suburban Sandusky shopping
told police that because the sun was in his eyes he did not see
ASHLAND (AP) - A highway worker died Monday mall when they passed out leaflets protesting a nonunioll
the men working or the wood chipper parked in the street. when an Ohio Department of Transportation truck backed
employer, failed to show they had a right to violate no-solicover him, according to the State Highway Patrol.
iting rules, a federal appeals court ruled Monday..
Mark Thompson, 39, of Shiloh, who works for Shelly and
The case involved the distribution of handbills at Sandusky
Sands Construction Co. in Zanesville, was working near the Mall in northwest Ohio by members of the Northeast Ohio
MARIETTA (AP) - County officials from around Ohio Interstate 71 Ashland exit when he was run over about 9:30
District Council of the Un.ited Brotherhood of Carpenters &amp;
are complaining that their local governments are payirig more a.m ., the patrol reported.
Joiners of America, AFL-CIO.
than their fair share for attorneys representing indigent
Patrol Sgt. Dave LaRue said Thompson died at "the scene.
The union distributed hanc\bills in 1991 urging mall cusdefendants.
LaRue said Monday night that no one was arrested, and the tomers not to patronize a company that had hired a
"If you're talking about a pure unfunded mandate, this is investigation is ongoing.
nonunion contractor to renovate its mall store. The uriion
the closest thing you 'II ever see," said John Lent~, policy anaConstruction work is under way at that part of 1-71, as it is said the hiring undermined local wage standards.
lyst for the County Commissioners Association of Ohio.
widened into three lanes.
An ·a ttorney for Sandusky Mall Co. notified the union that
The association says that years ago, the state promised to
any union members passing out handbills in the future would
evenly split the cost of representing .indigent defendants.
be considered trespassers.
In 1976, the Legislature passed a law saying the state would
pay for 50 percent of the cost of appointed counsel. But just
COLUMBUS (AP) - . Vandals spray-painted messages on
three years later, the law was .changed to allow the state to pay an Ohio State building over the weekend to protest a cat.
less if money wasn't available:
research project.
.
·
·
CANTON (AP) -A woman who accused public officials
UniversitY officials believe the graffiti refers to a professor's
· r
r li
. o f H IV of corruption because they wouldn't prosecute her daughter's
· h t he .e
p1an to m.ect
about 120 cats wtt
ne vemon
and then inject them with methamphetamines, spokesman ex-boyfriend pleaded guilty Monday to 18 counts of intimiCLEVELAND (AP) -The Cleveland Clirtic Foundation Earle.Holland said. The study, funded by the National Insti- dation.
tutes of Healih, .is to observe the effects of how drug abuse
Sandra Lehman, 45, a former Canton-area resident who
will add a medical school, possibly as soon as 2003.
"It is our intention to broaden our medical student educa- accelerates the effects of HIV.
·
now lives in Akron, entered the plea b~fore visiting Stark
tion activities and to have a medical school on out campus,"
A university employee discovered graffiti early Monday County Common Pleas Court Judge Richard M. Markus,
Dr. Andrew Fishleder, chairman of the clinic's education divi- that included messages such as "Stop The Killing" and "Cats who sent sentencmg for Apnl 23.
sion, said Monday.
+ Merh ,. Bad Science," Holland said.
· She could be sentenced to up to five years on each count,
.The large medical foundation, which operates Cleveland
The graffiti was on Bricker Hall, which includes the office according to Lorain County Prosecutor Gregory White,
whose office was assigned the case. His office will not make
Clinic Hospital, is determining whether to operate the school of university President William Kirwan.
or combine with a university, he said.
.,·."
:, .. , r1
, ·l,.
1. 1 ,~
,
·
a sentetice recQmmendation, he said.
The Cleveland Clinic has been helping with the training of
some Ohio State University medical students in Cleveland
since 1991 as part of a cooperative agreement that -expires in
2003.
. .
.

Court upholds trespass charge

ODOT truck kills worker

Legal costs raise concems

Vandals protest projed

WOman enterS gUI"lty PIea

Cll"ni"C planS neW SChOOl

.

..

'Movlng'day

Susped says he meant no harm
CANTON (AP) - In a taped police interview, a man on
trial for child endangering said he shook his 4-month-old
daughter in an .attempt. to quiet her.
But a doctor who 'treated the baby said there was evidence
of a massive, violent shaking.
Gerard Hawkins, 27, is facing two counts of child endangering as a result of injuries he allegedly inflicted on his
daughter, Sanla, Dec. 14. The trial began on Monday in Stark
County Common Pleas Court.
.
The baby's mother, Tan1my French, told a jury that she
doesn't believe Hawkins injured their daughter, saying the
infant has a history of illness.

.
I

uc drops land swap plans
CINCINNATI (AP) - The University of Ciitcinrtati is
dropping a proposal to build a S2 million-plus residence for
its president near the ~ehool, citing an impasse in negotiations
with area preservationists.
·
The university envisioned an elaborate home with a dining
and entertainment facility. to· hold fund-raising events. Nearby residents said it woula cre,ate too much traffic and not be
appropriate in the classic, Victorian neighborhood.
The university wanted to swap a yellow Victorian home
donated by a prominent family more than two decades ago
for an adjacent parcel owned by the Cincinnati Preservation
Association.
·
The university plans to sell the house and look for a new
site to build a presidential mansion, said· Greg Hand, a university spokesman.

..

POllee uncover ID scam
BEAVERCREEK (AP) -A man who police said combed
obituary notices to find names to use on bogus checks was
being held on suspicion of forgery and possession of criminal
tools.
William S. Smith Jr., 29, of Fort Wayne, Ind., was arrested
Monday after attempting to cash a fraudulent business check
at a grocery store, police said.
"It looks like he was .getting copies of birth certificates of
deceased people" ... for purposes of cashing the fraudulent
checks," said police Sgt. John Turner.
Smith had obtained Indiana and Ohio state identifications·
under the names of dead people to ca~h counterfeit checks
printed from his computer, Turner said.

Charge against ex-chief dropped
XENIA (AP) - A former Jamestown police chief has
agreed to repay the village $5,000 and prosecutors have asked
that a theft-in-office charge against him be dropped.
The request to dismiss the charge against Herbert Crosswhite was filed Monday in Greene County Common Pleas
Court.
"We're happy with the resolution because it vindicates
Herb in the area we've always contested from the get-go and
that is the suggestion he had engaged in criminal conduct,"
Crosswhite's attorney, Titn Merkle, said.
Crosswhite, who retired in I 999 after 26 years with the
p&lt;;&gt;lice department, was indicted in Noven)ber. A special state
audit of the village's books released in November 1999

•'

forJohn ·

Glenn's
boy home
NEW CONCORD (AP)
- The house where John .
Glenn built model airplanes as
a boy traveled to the center of
his hometown Monday, where
it is to become a museum.
Glenn - who became a
Marine fighter pilot, then astronaut and U.S. senator - talked
with students and old.friend$ as
he ~tched a flatbed . truck
crawl along, carrying the twostory · white frame house his
father built in the' 1920s.
"You have a lot of emotion,
when you see the house you
grew up in coming down the
road;' Glenn said.
Glenn becarne the first
American to orbit the Earth, on
Feb. 20, 1962. In 1998, at age ·
77, he returned to spa'e on the
shuttle Discovery, becoming'
the oldest space traveler in his-

•..:_

Deaths

•••

·-

•

Nellie Cooper

(

(

EariHollun

. ANNAMORIAH,W.Va.- Nellie Cooper, 97 ,Annamoriah,
died Sunday, March 4, 2001 at Minnie Hamilton Health Care
~ · Center, Grantsville, W.Va.
·: · Born in Calhoun County, W.Va., she was the daughter of the
· ·late George and Sally Wright Basnett.
: ' Surviving are a sister, Mary Wolverton of Big Bend; and two
grandsons and four great-grandchildren.
·· · She was also preceded in death by her husband, Dexter
Cooper; a son, Clarence Cooper; and six brothers.
:
' : Services will be I p.m. Weedne.day in Stump Funeral Home,
· · :Grantsville. Burial will be in Snider Chapel Cemetery,
Annamoriah. Friends may call at the funeral home from 5-9
.. p.m . today.

deville, Erek A. Daniels of Middleport, and Leah S. Daniels of
Athens.
A memorial service at the Kingdom Hall, 37319 Ohio 124,
Middleport, will be conducted by Randy McDaniel at 4 p.m.
on Sunday. March 11, 2001.
lnurnment will be in the Tufts-Holt cemetery at Wurtland,
Kentucky.
Arnngements were completed by Jerry Spears Funeral
Home with Crematory in Columbus.

RACINE- Earl Holman, 77, of Racine, died on Monday,
March 5, 2001 at Bennington Glen Health Care Center,
Marengo, Ohio.
He was born on January 14,1924 in Racine, Ohio, son of the
auto fire, one brush fire and
late John Holman and Minnie Donaldson Holman. He worked
three electrical fires.
for Rizer Oil Company for over 27 yean. His many friends in
The department also assuted
Meigs County knew him as "Many Thanks."
fromPipA1
He u survived by sons and daughren-in-law, William and
the Village of Rutland with
Betty Jo Holman of Atlanta, Georgia, Roger and Sally Holman
extinguishing two fires .
of Rutland, and Joseph and Melania Holman &lt;if Cardington, program and informed Proffitt
Snuth also informed council
Ohio; daughter and sons-in-law, Rita and Robert Travis of to begin preparations on get- that four department members
Michigan, 13 grandchildren and 13 great-grandchildren; and ting the course under way.
recently attended a conventi on
Council also approved a
two brothers, William Holman of Michigan, and Wilkie Holin Indianapolis, Ind., to acquire
. request by Proffitt to officially
man of Middleport.
information on new fire fightHe was preceded in death by· his wife, Goldie Snyder Hol- conmtission the police depart.
man; his parents; a brother, Jake Holman; sisters, Virginia Nap- ment's new cruiser, a 1999 ing techniqu es, procedu,res,
. . RACINE - Edna L. Neigler, 73, Racine, died TUfsday, per and Mildred Jewell; a granddaughter, Monica Holritan Crown Victoria, that was pur- equipment, and technology.
In o pen discussion, council
,... March 6, 2001 at St. Joseph's Hospital, Parkersburg, W.Va .
chased last month at a cost of
Wolfe, and a great-grandson, Tyler Wolfe.
: ,.. Arrangements will be announced by the Cremeens Funeral
deliberated on va rious street
Services will be held at 11 a.m. on Thunday, March 8, 2001 $7,450.
Home, Racine.
·
The former cruiser will be repairs located throughout the
at Fisher-Acree Funeral Home in Pomeroy. Burial will follow
· in Letart Falls Cemetery. Friends ntay call on Wednesday, retired from service and put up village.
for bid in the immediate future,
March 7, 2001 from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m . at the funeral home.
Clerk Kathy Hysell distribsaid Proffitt.
uted the February fi nancial
Proffitt
thanked
Stacy
Shank
report. Balances in the van ous
•
and
Clay
Crow
for
assisting
funds
were:
general •
.in Meig&gt; County Common
RACINE
Pronunent
Butler
County
edu.oator
and
civic
with
the
new
cruiser's
develop$91
,049.85;
safety,
$2,927.63;
Pleas Court by National City
'
ment and Chris Shank for street, $(26.277); state highway,
POMEROY - Marriage Bank, Pittsburgh, Pa., against leader D. Russel lee died Sunday, March 4, 2001.
He was born in Racine on June 1, 191S, the third child of allowing the police department $3,055 .55 ; fire, $21,227 .67;
licenses have been issued in James Patterson, Racine, and
the
late Dale and lillian Hobstetter Lee. From the time he was use of one of the fire depart· Meigs County Probate Court others, alleging default on a
cemetery, $7 295.12; water,
to John Lewis Snider, 28, and mortgage agreement m the seven years old until he re.-hed early adulthood, he did farm ment's work bays to prepare the $9,045.60: sewer, $24,663.34;
work, driving a team of horses to deliver milk twice a day to vehicle for service. ·
; Teresa Evelyn Lascar, 41, Port- amount of S53,259. ·
dairy customers.
Council
listened
to guaranty meter, $22,312.55;
.· .]and; and to James Edward
"'
He graduated from Ra cine High School iri 1933.
Pomeroy Fire Department Sec- utility, $2,019.52; cemetery
• Greene, 54, Bidwell, and
The first person in his family to attend college, Lee received ond Capt. Todd Smith give the endowment, $45,268.75; police
Donna Rae Wilson, 56, Midhis baccalaureate degree in agriculture from Ohio· State Uni- February fire report.The report pension, $10 ,192.43; recre.dleport.
RACINE - Racine Youth versity in 1939 and took a teaching job at Union Township indicated that the department ation, $4,371.37; permissive
responded to seven auto acci- tax, $2,721 .07; law enforceLeague will hold ·its organiza- High School that same year.
In 1944, he became district superintendent and managed a de.nts, one structure fire, one . ment, $2,134.31.
tional meeting on Thursday at
series
of consolidations that led to the opening of Lakota High
. . POMEROY - An action 6 p.m. at Southern High
School in 1959. In 1964, he was named Superintendent of But'", for foreclosure has been filed School.
Representatives of Mounler Counry Schools, a position he held until his retirement in
taineer Power Plant in New
1979.
Haven,
W.Va., met with counAs County Superintendent, he was insrrumenral in establishing a vocational high school that bears his name, the D. Russel
fromPipA1
cil to deliver a presentation
Lee Career Center.
explaining the new construc·'·
"I worked hard on it, very hard, for 10-12 years," he once the State Fire Marshal's Office tion currently under way at
said. "I was just obsessed with what it could do for the kids in for a I 00 percent grant for the plant.
eight self-contained breathing
Butler County."
Tlie
construction
1s
In addition to his work as an educator, Lee served for I 0 apparatus. The gear will cost designed to help r~duce atr
'•· '
BY THE ASSOCIAltD PRESS
to 20 mph . Chance· of mow years as a trustee of Fort Hamilton-Hughes Memorial Hospi- $21,600.
pollution associated with acid
., . The intense winter storm 30 perce!J.t.'
tal, including a three year stint as President, as well as chair, of
Neigler informed council rain and should pose no dan, ·that pounded the East Coast
Wednesday... Cloudy. Scat- the Building Committee during a major construction project. that the fire marshal's office is ger to Racine residents.
was having a fringe effect on tered flurries in the .morning.
He also served· on seven other hospital board committees. wanting all fire reports to be
Council discussed recent
: .the tri-county a;ea, the Cold with highs 33 to 38. Lee and his family were among the founding members of Faith filed electronically and that
refuse
collection rates within
: 1 National
Weather Service Northwest wind 10 to 15 Community United Methodist Church in West Chester, where software will be provided
the village and decided that
. -: .said.
mph.
.
he twice served ,as Chair of the Ohio Automobile Club (AAA) . once the !lepartment receives
Jim Harper of~outhern Ohio
The storm system conWednesday mght ... Mostly
Other board memberships include Junior Achievement, Blue a computer.
Disposal would be contacted
:tributed "to cold and snowy cloudy. Lilws .25 to 30. ·
. Cross of Southwest Ohio Advisory Committee, United Way,
Council approved a comfor his !llggestions on how to
'~c&lt;andilions today.
~
Bxte.n d.d' f'iliec!lll: .
the Butler Gouhty Heart 1\ssociation, tht Buder Count"t,~oard puter purchue for .the fire ·
. · ·~ The storm will begin to
Thursday... Mostly cloudy. of Mental Retardation and Develop~ental Dillblli!les, ana the . department, and named develop the rates.
Hill advised that council
%' move out into the Adantic A chance of light 1now or rain Buder County Tuberculosis Association. He was also a 50-ytar Councilman Greg Taylor to
should make the rate increase
Ocean tonight, bringing the from early afternoon on. Any M ason.
.
. assist with the selection and
!!: :area's snow showers to a grad- accumulation expected to be
Looking back on his long years of community service, Lee purchase of the new comput- retroactive to March I
because of "increased fuel
~.ual end.
.light. Highs in the 19.wer 40s. commented, "I like to tend to business. If ynu make a commit- er.
.
~ Skies will be partly to
Friday...Snow likely, possi- ment to do something, you should uphold that conmtittnent."
RACO representatives met costs and landfill rates."
Council adjourned the
·mostly cloudy on Wednesday bly mixed with rain during
He is survived by his wife of 61 years, the former Helen with council !o inquire about
: -t.)vith temperatures rebound- the day. Several inches possi- (Sharp) Lee, formerly of Huntington, WenVir6'nia; by two sis- three Christtnas wreaths that meeting until March 5.
In addition to Hill and
•iing into the 30s and low 40s. ble. Lows aroutld JO•ilnd highs ters, Rose Clarke of El Campo, Texas, and Norma Thssian of the group had purchased. Hill
.. · · The next wintry blast will around 40.
Kenwood; by two sons and a daughter-in-law, Dr. Charles lee told the group that electrical Taylor, council members Bob
l~occur nn Thursday as a low
Saturday... Most111 cloudy' of Cincinnati, and Dr. ·David Lee and laura Harper Lee of outlets had yet to be installed Beegle, Joe Evans, Bobbi~
-t;"Jiressur&lt; systerh moves ac.ross with a chance of
show- Bowing Green, Kentucky; and by a granddaughter, Harper lee, by the power company and Roy, Larry Wolfe, and Clerk
- the Great Lakes, forecasters ers. Lows 25 to 30 ~pd highs also· of Bowling Gree11, Kentucky.
that the wreaths were not put Karen Lyons attended 'the
:N"said. There will be a chance of around 40.
meeting.
•If
Memorial services will be held on Thursday, March 8, 2001 Out.
Sunday.
:.Mosdy
·
cloudy
at
7
p.tp.
at
the
Faith
Community
United
Methodist
Church,
,.. Sllow on Thursday and Friday.
~·*, Sunset tonight will be at with a chatlc~ of rain. Morn- 8210 Cox Road, West Chester, with the Rev. David Bridgman
:::6:29 and sunrise on Wednes- ing lows 25 to 30 and daytime officiating.
Visitation will be on Wednesday, March 7, 2001 from 4-7
highs in the mid 405:--;,.
,.~day is at 6:56 a.m.
Monday... Mostly'" cloudy p.m.·at the Webb Noonan Funeral Home, Ross Avenue at D
....
Weather forecast:
~ Tonight ... Cloudy
with • with a chance of rain. Warmer Street. Comt!littal services will be held at 10 a.m. on Thursday
. ."icattered snow showers. Lows with a lows ·around .. _40 and at the Rose Hill Mausoleum Chapel and entombment will Collow.
. ·
.
' ',22 to 27. Northwest wind 10 highs in the lower 50s, .
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MIDDLEPORT - Myrtle lnes Tufts, 79, of Middleport,
died Friday, March 2, 2001 in Grove City, following an extended illness.
She was the daughter of Henry Clay Hicks and Delilah
Hicks of Greenup, Kentucky, and was a member of the Middleport Congregation of Jehovah's Witnesses.
She was preceded in death by a grandson, Jason Kent Ortiz;
and three brothers, Albert, Carl and Russell Hicks.
Survivors include Elmer, her husband of 56 years; her twin
daughters, Lawanria Sue Guan) Ortiz of Grove City, and Donna
Lou (Lane) Daniels of Rutland; two suters, Faye Smith of
Wurtland, Kentucky, Maxine (Ralph) May ofVirginia Beach,
Virginia; and three grandchildren, Juan L. Ortiz Ill of Cir-

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Obituaries

Thl Dilly Sentinel • P1g1 A 3

snqw

tory.

Later that year, the Democrat retired from the U.S. Senate
after representing Ohio for 24
years.
A crowd of about 500 people ' gathered aowntOWI\ on a
sunny, but cold and wiridy
morning to watch the transfer,
which took about two hours.
The. nine-room house,
which the Glenns donated to
Muskingqm College in 1999,
looked like an oversized parade
i1oat as it tm"eled through the
village's tree-lined downtown.
It was moved from Friendship '
Drive - named after Glenn
?rbited Eo!rth in the capsule
Friendship 7:.....: to Main Street.
Its new neighbor js a former
~ar dealership that will be torn
down to make room for an
eventual space exploration
complex.
The house \vill be restored
to the way 'it looked during
Glenn's boyhood in the 1930s
and become a museum that
will tell 20th century American
history through the lives of
Glenn and his wife, Annie,
organizers say.

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

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Opinion

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

General Manager

·_Th_eo_a_ny_s_ent_m_ei_ _ _.....;B;;;;;;..y

_.,_

Dear Ann 'Landen: I have been
dating a man for three years. I am 31,
an&lt;i "Stanley" is 44. He is wonderful
company, and I enjoy being with him.
: When I fin;t met Stanley. he was
•:already in the process of getting a
,'!divorce, and it is still draggm· g on
. with
1ono end in sight.
"•: The problem is, after three years
' 'together, Stanley has decided he wants
ro date other women. He says he was
married for 20 yean; and needs to see
·what else is "out there" before he
.
!cpmnuts to anyone else. I understand
~ his reluctance, but I am also crushed
'by his decision.
I don't want to give Stanley an ulti~matum and risk losing him, but I have
_to know if I am waiting in vain. Do
you think Stanley just needs more
~ me, or is he trying to break up \vith

•

it Shllwn Lewle

the Bend

Page AS
TuesdiiJ. Mllrch •• 2001

Vf!Oman crnsheii by boyfriends decision to see other people

~~\\\~P~NI

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Charlene Hoeflich

..-....ay. Mllrch •• 2001

StlU, ~'l tN \\\S ~CI;.NC(, ~ ·

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
741)-992-2158 ·Fax: 992-2157

Charles W. Govey
Publleher

PageA4

•

Ann
Landers

,.

Managing Editor
Diana Kay Hill

Controll•

LltUn I() tlu ,duo,. ue ont.c,.~. ThwJ rhrndd IN llutluur 306 IWlrrU, AU l.lterr
DlW rub,;.ctlo cdilinJIUIIi MII.IJ be sifned and indiUic .JJrl11 t~n.l ttltphoM aiUffbtr,
No 11111i&amp;n•d I1U"t will N pubUrl'ld. L#tfn rhould .bf in 1ood 14111, tuldn11in1
ilru11, lUll ,_no1Wllitin.
fhl OlinitHU IXJII'ffiNf i11 th1 COlllmJI!Jtlow Gl'l fhl COitllltrUf ojtltl OhU. V4//#J
Publilhint CD. 'r nlitoriiJl boo.rd, 11.111111 Dlhrrwiu notd.

.

NATIONAL VIEWS

-~DVICE
me? Should l wait for him to settle
down, or should recognize that this
is the end of die relationship and
move on? Please tell me what to do,
Ann. -- Sally in S~~anton, Pa.
Dear Sally: After going with
Stanley for three years, this 44-yearold, still-married man wants to "see
what else is out t~ere"? Tell him to go
ahead and look, &lt;jiaeanwhile, let him
know you expect the same freedom

t

to check out other possibilities. Then
do it. If St:mley decides to return to
you after he "looks around;' don't be
in a hurry to accept him. He sounds
flaky.
Dear Ann Landers: I read the
letter about 'Jeb," who had been
unemployed for months. When he
finally lined up a job interview, he
didn't show up. You said Jeb might be
suffering from depression: I think Jeb
missed the interview bec.Use he didn't want to take a drug test.
Disturbing behavior, , mysterious
disappearances and lame excuses that
make little sense are red flags for substance abuse. Jeb's wife was right to
consider hiring a private investigator.
At least she could protect herself by
having evidence in case she needs to .
get him into treatment. I hope she

will consider this alternative. -- Tom Did you use any of your vacation or
sick days to help take care of her?
irt Chicago
You say you can't take time off of
Dear Tom: That possibility never
work?
WeU, I have a job, too. 1 make
occurred to me. Oh, the things I learn
from my readers! Your letter indicates the time, and you could if you really
that you are very savvy I concur that wanted to. My conscience is clear, ·
Jeb's wife should engage a private and I will rest easy knowing I did all
I could for that dear woman. Can you
investigator to find out what is going
say the same? .
on. Thanks for opening my eyes.
Thanks, Ann, for letting me get
Dear Ann Landen: I am the sole
this of[ my chest. -- Caregiver Anycaregiver for my elderly mother. May
where
I say something to my siblings, aunts,
Dear Caregiver: Your story is
uncles and cousins who like to tell one I've heard many times. In a famme everything I am doing wrong and ily where there are several siblings, it
how it could be done better?
seems there is always one who is carDear Family: I always hear how ing and considerate of a parent and
much you love Mom, but I don't see does the "heavy lifting."You deserve
you here helping me out. When was to feel good about yourself. The oththe last time you took Mom to a doc- ers will have to deal with their guilt
tor's ~ppointment? Have you ever later on. Trust tue.
given her a bath or done her laundry?

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

out of qffice, but
Clinton can grab attention
He~

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•The Albany (N.Y.) Times-Union: It's so telling of former
President Bill Clinton that he 's out of office a month now and
still grabbing more than his share of the national attention,
thanks, again, tb one o(his more questionable acts.
While President Bush can rather succinctly offer why the
United States and Britain needed to bomb Iraq, Mr. Clinton
goes on and on, 1,700 words in all, on the op-ed page ofThe
New York Times in defense of what still may well be indefensible - his pardon of fugitive financier Marc Rich.
Some of what the former president says doesn't constitute
new or enlightening ground in a debate that's most noteworthy because it's taking place at all. It's well-established, for
instance, that the Constitution gives the sitting president what
Mr. Clinton describes as "broad and unreviewable power" to
· issue such pardons.
• Star Tribune of Minneapolis: In exporting capitalism to
nations as diverse as China and Poland, Americans have argued
that they also are exporting democratic ideals such ~s the rule
. oflaw and respect for human rights. What if the United States
itself sets a bad example?
That's the question raised in a new study publnhed by
: Human Rights Watch and written by Cornell University pro~
fessor Lance Compa. In "Unfair Advantage," Compa finds that
American corporations routinely break federal labor law and
violate the legal rights of their employees . .
Since the 1930s, federal law has guaranteed Americans the
right to organize unions and to negotiate working conditions
with their employers. Polls show that most people still support
the concept. Yet Campa finds that thousands of workers are
· fired every year for actions as simple as wearing a union lapel
pin. Drawing on documents from the National Labor Relations Board, Compa finds that the number of workers discharged for union activity has risen from a few hundred annually in the 1950s to more than 20,000 annually in the 1990s.
He interviewed a Florida nursing home. worker who was fired
during a union campaign, won his case before the labor board,
and after five years oflitigation won a grand total of$1,798' in
back pay and interest.

TODAY IN . HISTORY
BY THE' ASSOCIATED PRESS

'

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Today is Tuesday, Ma.rch 6, the 65th day of 2001. There are
300 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On March 6, 1836, the Alamo in San Antonio, Texas, fell to
Mexican forces after a 13-d:iy siege.
On this date:
In 1834, the city 'ofYork in Upper Canada was incorporated
asToronto.
.
In 1853,Verdi's opera "La Traviata" premiered in Venice, Italy.
In 1857, in its "Dred Scott" decision, the U.S. S,upreme Court
held that Scott, a slave, could not sue for his freedom in federal COUrl.
In 1933, a nationwide bank holiday declared by President
Roosevelt went into effect.
In 1935, retired Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell
Holmes Junior died in WashingtOn.
In 1944, U.S. heavy bombers staged the first American raid
on Berlin during World War II. ,
In 1957, the former British African colonies of the Gold
Coast and Togoland became the independent,state of Ghana.
In 198'1, Walter Ct9nkite signed off for the last time as principal anchorman of"The CBS Evening News."
In 1983, in a case that drew much notoriety, a woman in
New Bedford, Mass., reported being gang-raped atop a pool
·table in a tavern called Big Dan's. Four men were later C!&gt;nvicted of the attack.
In 1987,189 people died when the British ferry "Heral.d of
Free Enterprise" capsized off the Belgian port of Zeebrugge.
Ten years ago: Following Iraq's capitulation in the Persian
Gulf conflict, President Bush told a cheering joint session of
Congress that "aggression is defeated. The war is over,"
Five years ago:A federal appealn'ourt struck down Washington state's ban on doctor-assisted suicide. Lamar Alexander and
Dick Lugar announced they were dropping out of the race for
the Republican presidential nomination.
One year ago: Three white New York polite officers were
convicted of a cover-up in a brutal police station attack on
Haitian immigrant Abner Louima. Eric Clapton was inducted
into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame for the third time and
among the newest honorees were James Taylor, Bonnie Raitt
and Earth, Wind and Fire.
Today's Birthdays: TV personality Ed McMahon is 78. Conductor Sarah Caldwell is 77. Former FBI' and CIA director
William Webster is 77. Federal Reserve Chairman Alan
Greenspan is 75. Soviet cosmonaut Valentina Tereshkova is 64.

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

Bush needs some help with African-Americans
What can President Bush possibly do to
improve his standing among AfricanAmericans? Despite high-level appointments, efforts at outreach and programs
aimed at helping the disadvantaged, his
approval ratings continue to lag.
The latest Pew Research Poll reveals that
only 22 percent of African-Americans
approve ofBush'sjob performance, and 40
percent disapprove. In 1989, the numbers
for his father were 53 percent positive and
12 percent negative.
In the election, of coun;e, Bush received
less than 9 percent of the black vote.
Both the Republican National Committee and the White House are trying to
figure out what to do. RNC Chairman
Jim Gilmore is hosting a discussion
Wednesday on how to make GOP ideology appealing to African-Americans, and
the White House has a secret confab
scheduled for early March.
Such meetings should produce a group
of moderate-to-conservati;ve African-

American executives, ministers, academics
and activists, akin to the Independent
Women's Forum, who will challenge the
conventional wisdom of civil rights groups
.
. "
anddfid
e en .. compassionate
conservatism.
The first task of such a group 'YOuld be
to defend Bush against what the White
House righdy regards as the "demonization" that led to the worst election performance ambng blacks for a Republican
since 1%4.
. Most effective was the low-blow ad put
out by the NAACP attacking Bush for
opposing a new Texas "hate crimes" law
after the brutal murder of African-American James Byrd.
In the ad, Byrd's sister compared Bush's
action to the murder itself. In states where
· the ad ran, Bush consistendy received less
than 10 pe~ent of the black vote. In some
states where the ad. didn't run, he topped
15 percent.
Bush answered the ad by saying that
Byrd's murderers were facing the death

'

Morton
Kqhdr.lcke
COLUMNIST
·'

Helping a
grieving friend

r----:-:;~=======!!!!!!!!!!!!J----~ dren who are at high risk for hearing impairment.

In the long run, Bush's ability to appeal
to African-Americans will depend on
whether his economic and education policies help minorities and whether civil
rights laws are vigorously enforced.
There is a clear difference between ihe
Democratic Party's dominant anitude on
race and the Bush-Republican one.
Democrats tend to indulge what
African-American
Professor
john
McWhorter of the Univen;ity of California at Berkeley calls "victimology!' - thF
notion that African-American social prob;lems are overwhelmingly the resnlt of per,sistent white racism that can be correcte~
only by guilt-tripping whites into enacting
preferences that favor b!aclq.
:
McWhorter, in his new book "Losing
the Race: Self-Sabotage in Black America" (Free Press, 2000), argues that while
racism certainly exists, it is being overemphasized in a way that divem blacks from
strategies - academic achievement and
entrepreneurship - that will help them
take . advantage of the· opportunitie5· that
the civil rights movement has won for
them.
• ··
The standard strategy of Democrats and
civil rights leaden; such as the Rev. Jesse
Jackson, MeWhorter said in an interview,
"is to keep fear alive, not keep hope alive."
MeWhorter said he didn't vote for
Bush, but likes what he's doing. 1especi31ly
appointing excellence-oriented Dr. Roderick Paige as Secretary of Education and
linking up with black chUIChes through
· his faith-based initiative.
He also said he doubts that Bush will
ever succeed in even reaching 20 ~ercent
of the black vote. "Victimology is too
ingrained," he explained. Moreover, he
believes that Bush has a permanent "bad
smell" about him among blacks.
Whether or not that's true, fighting back .
is worth the effon - so is fostering an
ethic of achievement in black America.

penalty .;,d that he'd previouil); signed an
expanded state "hate crimes" ~ptute, but
there was no aggressive etfoii to make
those points in the Afric:lii-! American
media, White House aides adrn,it.
Bush needs black advocates because the
demonization drive continues. Democrats
are. making it an article of faith in black
· communities that African-Americans were
massi11ely "disenfranchised" in Florida and
j:lsewhexe and..that ;Bush .was "sele~!!=d;.'
not "elected," president.
· ·. ·
House Democratic leaders have decided
to intensify the anti-Bush campaign by
assigning perhaps the most incendiary single member of the Congressional Black
Caucus, Rep. Maxine Waters, 0-Calif., tb
head a task force studying voter irregularities.
•
1
Although
multiple
Breakdowns
occurred in the ballpting syste!jl in Florida and other states, even the li~eral-domi­
nated U.S. Civil Rights Co~ion hasn't yet produced evidence to support
charges that blacks were deni~,d .the right
to vote, Indeed, Florida's African-American turnout increased by SQ. percent in
2000, over the 1996 showing. ,
And contt4ry to wid~l'y repeated
charges, a national study by academics
Stephen Knack and Martha Knopf shows
that predominantly African-American
counties are no more like!¥ to use old,
error-prone punch-card votmg machines
(1\forton Kondracke is executive editor of Roll
than white-dominated counti~.
Call, the newspaper &lt;f Capitol Hill.)

,. '

RYAN'S VlEW

For contemporary moms, t~ere~ no 'La-Z-Girl"
.
.~

.
BY JoAN RYAN
career. And, by the ~. w.!'re supposed to to pamper themselves by spending' Suiik
Time magazine reports that millions of do all this without havil)g an extended Bowl Sunday in front of the television.
adult women are being tteated fur atten- family around to help out.
·
You don't se~ golf courses running ads
tion-deficit disorder, a condition we have
No wonder we're turqing to pharma- that tell S':IY' to pamper themselves by ,.
long associated With disruptive, can't-sit- ceuticals.
·:
'playing 18' holes. They know m~n don't
in-their-seats boys. But doctors say they ' What we need is a cultural revolution rieed to justify the choice to waich tele-&lt;
face an interesting challenge iit diagnos- like the .one fathers underwent some vision or play golf. Men seem to recoging women with ADD because the dys- years ago. Fathers were, .encouraged nize the importance of relaxation, an
functions of the disorder - feeling over- · and given permission ~ to be more nur- instinct that perhaps dates to prehistoric
whehned, disorganized, distracted, ·scat· turing and involved in their chilc!t'en's days when, if a hunter were weak and
tered - pretty much capture the i;laily lives. In other words, .they became more depleted, he'd be~ome prey.
.experience of your basic American like mothen.
.
.
Of course, if women relaxed more
mother:
.
.
. Now we need ~0 giVe mothers pernus- ' often, the house wouldn't lo~k like
The mcreasmg number of ADD diag- ston to be more like fathers. ·
H
"
'fit! h kids · h 1
·
· ·m great patt, th e
A L--.
"'"'b ~tween men an d thorne
neaun . , t e
noses among
women ts,
......tc UUlCtenCe
.. dail
f mJg tbl ot get
d
.
·
d
kn
·I
dge
·
•
tha
all
i
th
err
y
reqmrement
o
vegeta es an
I
f
h
1
resu t o more sop tsncate
owe
women ts
t rnen ow emse ves to
b h
uldn' be ilk . '
e t ere wo
t
m
m the
about the brain. We can pinpoint a1_1d rest and women don't! ~en insdnctively
treat more neurologtcal and chemJcal dts- build recuperanon nme mtp thetr days. As
ge.
orders than ever before.
.
comic Mark Lundholm: points out, it's no
Yes. And we would all ~nag~ to get
But I can't help wondering if we're also mystecy why there's a Ca-Z-Boy chair but by, pe~aps even Without a httle p1ll every
"pathologwng" a way of ljfe that needS no La-Z-Girl version. ,
mormng. .
simplification, not medication. In short, . Last Saturd:ty, a girlfriend treated me to
I thmk this movement. to get mothers
mothers feel overwhelmed and scattered a spa day. We had massages, sat in the hoi !0 become more like fathers ought to
because we try to do too much. The tub, then had a long lunch. Spas lllllkl! adopt as Its motto those wise words of
expectations - whether our own or their living off women like us, who once our nation's flight attendants: Put your
society's- keep rising.We're supposed to or twice a year might indiJ]ge themselves own oxygen mask on first before helping
make cupcakes for the class part)', arrange in a day of complete relaxation. "Pamper others with theirs. Then everyone would
carpools, exercise, keep a clean and pretry yourself!" ads for bubble bath and special- have a better chance at survival.
house, read stimulating books, produce · ty coffees say, recognizing · that women
Goan Ryan is a columnist for t/Je San Franwell-balanced meals, raise moral and count any personal rejuvenation time as dsco Chronille. Send comments to /Jer in care
competent children, maintain-our youth- "pampering" and a "special occasion."
of this tltWSpaper or send her e-mail at jMnful good loob aud punue a satisfying
You don't see the networks telling men ryan@sfgate.com.)
.

::J

TIME OUT
FOR TIPS

SOCIETY. SCRAPBOOK
Recomm endations of the Ohio Department of H ealth call
Sweetheart contest
for children from birth to 3 years of age to receive a hearing
screening which includes observation for signs, symptoms and
winners named
behaviors suggestive of hearing loss and identification of chil-

After the age of 3 years, children should receive hearing
screening using a pure tone audiometer. All children who fail
an annual hearing screening should be re-screened between
four and six weeks after the original screening. Those who fail
the second screening test would.be referred to an appropriate
professional for an evaluation, audiologist,'ENT speCialist, or
a hearing specialty clinic.
Skidmore said that since it is often difficult to screen young
children so parents are urged to watch their children for signs,
symptoms and behaviors suggestive of hearing loss. Mouth
breathing, discharge from the ear canal, malformation of the
ear, ear wax impaction, constant head tilt toward the source of
a sound, inabiliry to follow verbal directions well, answers
questions inappropriately, inattention, pulls or rubs ears frequently, asks for repetition of words or phrases, misunderstands conversation of others, difficulty in locating sound
source; poor language development, buzzing or ringing in
ears, and soreness or pain in or aboyt the ears, can be signs of
hearing difficulty:
.
She suggests that parents of young children ask themselves
,
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three questions: does your child respond. to your voice at a
SYRACUSE -Victor and Margaret Stewart of Syracuse
normal ··conversation level, does your child babble or talk in
were winners of the Sweetheart Contest held by the U.S. Post
one to two word utterances, and has your child had a histo. Office in Syracuse.
'
·
ry of ear infections.
,, The couple has been married for. 62 years. .. .,.
..
i. Minnie and Marion Rizer, also of Syracuse, were the sec' ond-prize winners.
· ~· ·
, Both couples received a book of "Love;' stamps and "Love"
stationery from the U.S. Postal Service.
.
·
The Stewarts also received flowers from the post office,
, dinn~r for two from Whitney's Restaurant in Syracuse, and a
· gift certificate from Baer's Market of Syracuse.
·
The winners of the drawing also received a 12-pack of soda
from the TNT Pit Stop in Syracuse.
·
'

People find it very difficult
to talk to a person who has
just lost a loved one through
death. They don't know what
to say. They are afraid they will
say something that may upset
the person or bring up
unpleasant 1nemories. However, the survivor may feel compelled to frequently recount
the experience and voice his
or her feelings and thoughts.
What can friends say !0
help the griever?, Grief counselors. have found that it is not
so much what you say that is
important, but more how you
actively listen. This means to
listen so closely that you begin
to understand the survivor's
feelings. It does not mean you
should say, "I know exactly
how you feel" because you
don't, but you can start to
comprehend all the emotions
they are going through·. ·
To be ari active listener,
offer the survivor a quiet,
uninterrupted place to talk.
Provide refreshments to illustrate your concern and help

..

· Rutland Friendly Gardeners meet
, RUTLAND -- Plans for an open meeting to be held at the
Rutland Fire Station were made when the Rutland Friendly
Gardeners met recently at tbe Rutland Church of Christ with
: Rosemary Eskew as hostess.
.
.
The meeting was called to order by pres1derlt Debb1e
' Bullington. Roll call was read with. each member to bring a
· garden rela~ed card to be used by the sunshine committee. The
, collect was recited by all members present. Rosemary Eskew
' read "At Winter's Call" by Catherine Smith MetJiteny for
,devotions. ,
.
Officers' reports were given by Kimberly Willford and
' Margaret Edwards who asked for the names of those to whom
cards should be sent.
•,: The new class for the Meigs County Master Gardeners was
discussed and the Cincinnati flower show was announced for
April 25. A bus will be going there and the cost is $55. Also
·- discussed was the Home and Garden Show m Charleston,
W.Va. March 16-18 as a ttip for the club. Action was tabled
until the next meeting.
·
. ·.
Eskew took the sunshine basket fur the month to Kathy
Stewart and also had charge of decorating the post offick window in February.
'
Money for the flower find and traveling prize was taken up.
J.anet' Bolin won the prize brought by Margaret Edwards and
Judy Snowden.
'
. .
·
Next month's meeting will be held at the home of Kim. berly Willford with Bal Knee~ as the speaker.
.
Willford displayed a right tt~angle arrangement m shades of
green silk for the arrangem_e nt of the month. Pointers were
·then given out by Janet Bolin, OAGC Accredited JUdge.
.
Refreshments \\'ere served to those named a~d Marie
·Birchfield, Debbie Bullington, Judy Snowden, Lorn Barnes.

Speech and he1rlng .
sa eeninp offered
' - POMEROY - . Speech and hearing screeni_ngs are an
&gt;mportant part of services offered by the Me1gs County
·Health Department, according to Margie Skidmore, RN,
director of nursing, who reported that last year 161 speech and
264 hearing screenings \Vere done.
Skidmore said that early assessment of a child's speech and
·hearing skills is crucial for prevention .and that delayed tdenti6cation of communication dtsorders m chtldre11 places them
acadenuc dtfficulttes,
t m· k "'or numerous problems including
,a
bl
. a! - beh av, poor peer relations, behavioral pro ems or emotiOn
·
h '
. ioral problems.
.
Speech and language disorders nu.g ht be present w en ,a
person's speech or language is different from that _of others o~
the same age, sex or ethnic group, expbtned Skidmore. She
listed "signals" of disorder as speech wh1ch IS ha~d to under-.
stand, anxiety about speech pattern, and lack _o f commumcation with othen;.
.
.
h
Speech and language skills d7velop raptdly dunng t e
· · h 1 years said the numng director, who recommended
,
fi
1 'd 'fi · ·
f
presc oo
that screening be an ongoing process or ear y 1 ena 1canon o

Becky
Baer

put them more at ease. Use
body language that demonstrates your compassion. Face
the person and slightly lean
towards them, indicating your
willingness to listen. Have
good eye contact and try to be
relaxed. A handshake or an
occasional touch on the arm
will also show you care.
Let the person tell the story
of how the loved one died. In
the beginning, the survivor ·
may go into great detail. But
as the story is re-told, it will
probably be shortened as the
person starts tp accept the
death.
Don't think you are the
one who has to carry the
majority of the conversation.
Let your friend do the talking.
You only need to be there and
to listen .

CALENDAR
TUESDAY
REEDSVILLE - Olive Township
Truttttl, regYIIr mttllng, 8:30 p.m.
at tht townthlp offlct on Joppa
Road. To get on tho agondo, contact
tho cltrk at 378·8149 prior to tilt
mttllng.

HEARING EVALUATION - Jacob Kennedy had his annual
hearing and speech evaluation completed by Maureen Hennessy MA/CCC-S, during the Child and Family Health Services
Well Child Clinic at the Meigs County Health Department.
(Contributed Photo)

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
Subscribe today. 992-2156

ship Trustees, 7 p.m., at town hill,
regular monlhly mOlting.
POMEROY -Terrific Tuesday at
God's NET; 3 to 5:30p.m. Free meal.
games and craft&amp; lor youth.

POMEROY - Childhood lmmu·
SYRACUSE - Salisbury Town· nlzallon clinic, Mtlgt Counly Health
thlp Trutttn, 8 p.m. town hall.
Dept., 1 tc 7 p.m., 112 E. Momonal
Dr.. Pomtroy. Bring shol recorda.
MIDDLEPORT Middleport Child must be accompanied by par·
Youth L11guo, 6:30 p.m.. Middleport ant or legal guardian.
Village Council chambora.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
MIDDLEPORT Middleport Plains AthletloAssoclatlon , 6:30p.m.,
Masonic Lodge i363, regular moel- Eutam Public Library. Public Invited.
lng, 7:30 p.m. All Master Mesons are
welcome.
ALFRED - Orange Township
Trustees, 7:30 p.m. horns of Oslo
MIODL.EPOAT - l.adies for the
Lord, Bible study, 9 am .. Abundant Follrod. clerk.
Grace Church. Woman of all denom·
WEDNESDAY
lnatlona welcome.
PAGEVILLE - Scipio Township
TUPPERS Pl.AINS - Tupper1 Trustees regular mooting, 6:30 p.m.,
Plains Regional Sewer District Pagevlllo Town Hall.
Board, special meeting, 6 p.m., lo
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Lit·
discuss restructuring of rates and
srary
Club, 2 p.m., home of Gay Pergeneral purposes.
rin. Pet Holter to review Barbara
BURLINGHAM - Bodford Town• Dolinsky's "The Vineyard."

HART'S
KOUNTRY KITCHEN

Disposal
accepting new customers In ·
the Meigs County and
surrounding areas for all your u,:,.l
waste hauling needs:

Raolne, Ohio

if;"l

OUR NEW HOURS WILL BE IN EFFECJ;
BEGINNING MARCH 5, 2001

IESIDENTIAL:

Monday • Friday
6 a.m. • 7 p.m.
Saturday - 7 a.m. - 2. p.m.
Sunday - 8 a.m. • 2 p.m.
Phone:949.:.t009

(Polycarts available)

COMMERCIAL:
(1 .5 yard thru 40 yard containers)

lOLL-OFF SERVICE

DAILY SPECIALS:

For promll. dapandablasarvlca.
call
140·992-9330 or 1·800~809-1121

Monday • Country Fried Steak

1\aesda.y • Chicken 8l. Noodles
Wednesday • Meatloaf
Thursday • Baked Steak
Friday • Spqhetti

Thank You Meigs, Gallla and
Mason County, WV for supporting
your local hauler!

. problems.
-·~· -----

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Opinion

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

General Manager

·_Th_eo_a_ny_s_ent_m_ei_ _ _.....;B;;;;;;..y

_.,_

Dear Ann 'Landen: I have been
dating a man for three years. I am 31,
an&lt;i "Stanley" is 44. He is wonderful
company, and I enjoy being with him.
: When I fin;t met Stanley. he was
•:already in the process of getting a
,'!divorce, and it is still draggm· g on
. with
1ono end in sight.
"•: The problem is, after three years
' 'together, Stanley has decided he wants
ro date other women. He says he was
married for 20 yean; and needs to see
·what else is "out there" before he
.
!cpmnuts to anyone else. I understand
~ his reluctance, but I am also crushed
'by his decision.
I don't want to give Stanley an ulti~matum and risk losing him, but I have
_to know if I am waiting in vain. Do
you think Stanley just needs more
~ me, or is he trying to break up \vith

•

it Shllwn Lewle

the Bend

Page AS
TuesdiiJ. Mllrch •• 2001

Vf!Oman crnsheii by boyfriends decision to see other people

~~\\\~P~NI

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Charlene Hoeflich

..-....ay. Mllrch •• 2001

StlU, ~'l tN \\\S ~CI;.NC(, ~ ·

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
741)-992-2158 ·Fax: 992-2157

Charles W. Govey
Publleher

PageA4

•

Ann
Landers

,.

Managing Editor
Diana Kay Hill

Controll•

LltUn I() tlu ,duo,. ue ont.c,.~. ThwJ rhrndd IN llutluur 306 IWlrrU, AU l.lterr
DlW rub,;.ctlo cdilinJIUIIi MII.IJ be sifned and indiUic .JJrl11 t~n.l ttltphoM aiUffbtr,
No 11111i&amp;n•d I1U"t will N pubUrl'ld. L#tfn rhould .bf in 1ood 14111, tuldn11in1
ilru11, lUll ,_no1Wllitin.
fhl OlinitHU IXJII'ffiNf i11 th1 COlllmJI!Jtlow Gl'l fhl COitllltrUf ojtltl OhU. V4//#J
Publilhint CD. 'r nlitoriiJl boo.rd, 11.111111 Dlhrrwiu notd.

.

NATIONAL VIEWS

-~DVICE
me? Should l wait for him to settle
down, or should recognize that this
is the end of die relationship and
move on? Please tell me what to do,
Ann. -- Sally in S~~anton, Pa.
Dear Sally: After going with
Stanley for three years, this 44-yearold, still-married man wants to "see
what else is out t~ere"? Tell him to go
ahead and look, &lt;jiaeanwhile, let him
know you expect the same freedom

t

to check out other possibilities. Then
do it. If St:mley decides to return to
you after he "looks around;' don't be
in a hurry to accept him. He sounds
flaky.
Dear Ann Landers: I read the
letter about 'Jeb," who had been
unemployed for months. When he
finally lined up a job interview, he
didn't show up. You said Jeb might be
suffering from depression: I think Jeb
missed the interview bec.Use he didn't want to take a drug test.
Disturbing behavior, , mysterious
disappearances and lame excuses that
make little sense are red flags for substance abuse. Jeb's wife was right to
consider hiring a private investigator.
At least she could protect herself by
having evidence in case she needs to .
get him into treatment. I hope she

will consider this alternative. -- Tom Did you use any of your vacation or
sick days to help take care of her?
irt Chicago
You say you can't take time off of
Dear Tom: That possibility never
work?
WeU, I have a job, too. 1 make
occurred to me. Oh, the things I learn
from my readers! Your letter indicates the time, and you could if you really
that you are very savvy I concur that wanted to. My conscience is clear, ·
Jeb's wife should engage a private and I will rest easy knowing I did all
I could for that dear woman. Can you
investigator to find out what is going
say the same? .
on. Thanks for opening my eyes.
Thanks, Ann, for letting me get
Dear Ann Landen: I am the sole
this of[ my chest. -- Caregiver Anycaregiver for my elderly mother. May
where
I say something to my siblings, aunts,
Dear Caregiver: Your story is
uncles and cousins who like to tell one I've heard many times. In a famme everything I am doing wrong and ily where there are several siblings, it
how it could be done better?
seems there is always one who is carDear Family: I always hear how ing and considerate of a parent and
much you love Mom, but I don't see does the "heavy lifting."You deserve
you here helping me out. When was to feel good about yourself. The oththe last time you took Mom to a doc- ers will have to deal with their guilt
tor's ~ppointment? Have you ever later on. Trust tue.
given her a bath or done her laundry?

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

out of qffice, but
Clinton can grab attention
He~

•·'

I

·\
••

•

•The Albany (N.Y.) Times-Union: It's so telling of former
President Bill Clinton that he 's out of office a month now and
still grabbing more than his share of the national attention,
thanks, again, tb one o(his more questionable acts.
While President Bush can rather succinctly offer why the
United States and Britain needed to bomb Iraq, Mr. Clinton
goes on and on, 1,700 words in all, on the op-ed page ofThe
New York Times in defense of what still may well be indefensible - his pardon of fugitive financier Marc Rich.
Some of what the former president says doesn't constitute
new or enlightening ground in a debate that's most noteworthy because it's taking place at all. It's well-established, for
instance, that the Constitution gives the sitting president what
Mr. Clinton describes as "broad and unreviewable power" to
· issue such pardons.
• Star Tribune of Minneapolis: In exporting capitalism to
nations as diverse as China and Poland, Americans have argued
that they also are exporting democratic ideals such ~s the rule
. oflaw and respect for human rights. What if the United States
itself sets a bad example?
That's the question raised in a new study publnhed by
: Human Rights Watch and written by Cornell University pro~
fessor Lance Compa. In "Unfair Advantage," Compa finds that
American corporations routinely break federal labor law and
violate the legal rights of their employees . .
Since the 1930s, federal law has guaranteed Americans the
right to organize unions and to negotiate working conditions
with their employers. Polls show that most people still support
the concept. Yet Campa finds that thousands of workers are
· fired every year for actions as simple as wearing a union lapel
pin. Drawing on documents from the National Labor Relations Board, Compa finds that the number of workers discharged for union activity has risen from a few hundred annually in the 1950s to more than 20,000 annually in the 1990s.
He interviewed a Florida nursing home. worker who was fired
during a union campaign, won his case before the labor board,
and after five years oflitigation won a grand total of$1,798' in
back pay and interest.

TODAY IN . HISTORY
BY THE' ASSOCIATED PRESS

'

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••

Today is Tuesday, Ma.rch 6, the 65th day of 2001. There are
300 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On March 6, 1836, the Alamo in San Antonio, Texas, fell to
Mexican forces after a 13-d:iy siege.
On this date:
In 1834, the city 'ofYork in Upper Canada was incorporated
asToronto.
.
In 1853,Verdi's opera "La Traviata" premiered in Venice, Italy.
In 1857, in its "Dred Scott" decision, the U.S. S,upreme Court
held that Scott, a slave, could not sue for his freedom in federal COUrl.
In 1933, a nationwide bank holiday declared by President
Roosevelt went into effect.
In 1935, retired Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell
Holmes Junior died in WashingtOn.
In 1944, U.S. heavy bombers staged the first American raid
on Berlin during World War II. ,
In 1957, the former British African colonies of the Gold
Coast and Togoland became the independent,state of Ghana.
In 198'1, Walter Ct9nkite signed off for the last time as principal anchorman of"The CBS Evening News."
In 1983, in a case that drew much notoriety, a woman in
New Bedford, Mass., reported being gang-raped atop a pool
·table in a tavern called Big Dan's. Four men were later C!&gt;nvicted of the attack.
In 1987,189 people died when the British ferry "Heral.d of
Free Enterprise" capsized off the Belgian port of Zeebrugge.
Ten years ago: Following Iraq's capitulation in the Persian
Gulf conflict, President Bush told a cheering joint session of
Congress that "aggression is defeated. The war is over,"
Five years ago:A federal appealn'ourt struck down Washington state's ban on doctor-assisted suicide. Lamar Alexander and
Dick Lugar announced they were dropping out of the race for
the Republican presidential nomination.
One year ago: Three white New York polite officers were
convicted of a cover-up in a brutal police station attack on
Haitian immigrant Abner Louima. Eric Clapton was inducted
into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame for the third time and
among the newest honorees were James Taylor, Bonnie Raitt
and Earth, Wind and Fire.
Today's Birthdays: TV personality Ed McMahon is 78. Conductor Sarah Caldwell is 77. Former FBI' and CIA director
William Webster is 77. Federal Reserve Chairman Alan
Greenspan is 75. Soviet cosmonaut Valentina Tereshkova is 64.

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

Bush needs some help with African-Americans
What can President Bush possibly do to
improve his standing among AfricanAmericans? Despite high-level appointments, efforts at outreach and programs
aimed at helping the disadvantaged, his
approval ratings continue to lag.
The latest Pew Research Poll reveals that
only 22 percent of African-Americans
approve ofBush'sjob performance, and 40
percent disapprove. In 1989, the numbers
for his father were 53 percent positive and
12 percent negative.
In the election, of coun;e, Bush received
less than 9 percent of the black vote.
Both the Republican National Committee and the White House are trying to
figure out what to do. RNC Chairman
Jim Gilmore is hosting a discussion
Wednesday on how to make GOP ideology appealing to African-Americans, and
the White House has a secret confab
scheduled for early March.
Such meetings should produce a group
of moderate-to-conservati;ve African-

American executives, ministers, academics
and activists, akin to the Independent
Women's Forum, who will challenge the
conventional wisdom of civil rights groups
.
. "
anddfid
e en .. compassionate
conservatism.
The first task of such a group 'YOuld be
to defend Bush against what the White
House righdy regards as the "demonization" that led to the worst election performance ambng blacks for a Republican
since 1%4.
. Most effective was the low-blow ad put
out by the NAACP attacking Bush for
opposing a new Texas "hate crimes" law
after the brutal murder of African-American James Byrd.
In the ad, Byrd's sister compared Bush's
action to the murder itself. In states where
· the ad ran, Bush consistendy received less
than 10 pe~ent of the black vote. In some
states where the ad. didn't run, he topped
15 percent.
Bush answered the ad by saying that
Byrd's murderers were facing the death

'

Morton
Kqhdr.lcke
COLUMNIST
·'

Helping a
grieving friend

r----:-:;~=======!!!!!!!!!!!!J----~ dren who are at high risk for hearing impairment.

In the long run, Bush's ability to appeal
to African-Americans will depend on
whether his economic and education policies help minorities and whether civil
rights laws are vigorously enforced.
There is a clear difference between ihe
Democratic Party's dominant anitude on
race and the Bush-Republican one.
Democrats tend to indulge what
African-American
Professor
john
McWhorter of the Univen;ity of California at Berkeley calls "victimology!' - thF
notion that African-American social prob;lems are overwhelmingly the resnlt of per,sistent white racism that can be correcte~
only by guilt-tripping whites into enacting
preferences that favor b!aclq.
:
McWhorter, in his new book "Losing
the Race: Self-Sabotage in Black America" (Free Press, 2000), argues that while
racism certainly exists, it is being overemphasized in a way that divem blacks from
strategies - academic achievement and
entrepreneurship - that will help them
take . advantage of the· opportunitie5· that
the civil rights movement has won for
them.
• ··
The standard strategy of Democrats and
civil rights leaden; such as the Rev. Jesse
Jackson, MeWhorter said in an interview,
"is to keep fear alive, not keep hope alive."
MeWhorter said he didn't vote for
Bush, but likes what he's doing. 1especi31ly
appointing excellence-oriented Dr. Roderick Paige as Secretary of Education and
linking up with black chUIChes through
· his faith-based initiative.
He also said he doubts that Bush will
ever succeed in even reaching 20 ~ercent
of the black vote. "Victimology is too
ingrained," he explained. Moreover, he
believes that Bush has a permanent "bad
smell" about him among blacks.
Whether or not that's true, fighting back .
is worth the effon - so is fostering an
ethic of achievement in black America.

penalty .;,d that he'd previouil); signed an
expanded state "hate crimes" ~ptute, but
there was no aggressive etfoii to make
those points in the Afric:lii-! American
media, White House aides adrn,it.
Bush needs black advocates because the
demonization drive continues. Democrats
are. making it an article of faith in black
· communities that African-Americans were
massi11ely "disenfranchised" in Florida and
j:lsewhexe and..that ;Bush .was "sele~!!=d;.'
not "elected," president.
· ·. ·
House Democratic leaders have decided
to intensify the anti-Bush campaign by
assigning perhaps the most incendiary single member of the Congressional Black
Caucus, Rep. Maxine Waters, 0-Calif., tb
head a task force studying voter irregularities.
•
1
Although
multiple
Breakdowns
occurred in the ballpting syste!jl in Florida and other states, even the li~eral-domi­
nated U.S. Civil Rights Co~ion hasn't yet produced evidence to support
charges that blacks were deni~,d .the right
to vote, Indeed, Florida's African-American turnout increased by SQ. percent in
2000, over the 1996 showing. ,
And contt4ry to wid~l'y repeated
charges, a national study by academics
Stephen Knack and Martha Knopf shows
that predominantly African-American
counties are no more like!¥ to use old,
error-prone punch-card votmg machines
(1\forton Kondracke is executive editor of Roll
than white-dominated counti~.
Call, the newspaper &lt;f Capitol Hill.)

,. '

RYAN'S VlEW

For contemporary moms, t~ere~ no 'La-Z-Girl"
.
.~

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BY JoAN RYAN
career. And, by the ~. w.!'re supposed to to pamper themselves by spending' Suiik
Time magazine reports that millions of do all this without havil)g an extended Bowl Sunday in front of the television.
adult women are being tteated fur atten- family around to help out.
·
You don't se~ golf courses running ads
tion-deficit disorder, a condition we have
No wonder we're turqing to pharma- that tell S':IY' to pamper themselves by ,.
long associated With disruptive, can't-sit- ceuticals.
·:
'playing 18' holes. They know m~n don't
in-their-seats boys. But doctors say they ' What we need is a cultural revolution rieed to justify the choice to waich tele-&lt;
face an interesting challenge iit diagnos- like the .one fathers underwent some vision or play golf. Men seem to recoging women with ADD because the dys- years ago. Fathers were, .encouraged nize the importance of relaxation, an
functions of the disorder - feeling over- · and given permission ~ to be more nur- instinct that perhaps dates to prehistoric
whehned, disorganized, distracted, ·scat· turing and involved in their chilc!t'en's days when, if a hunter were weak and
tered - pretty much capture the i;laily lives. In other words, .they became more depleted, he'd be~ome prey.
.experience of your basic American like mothen.
.
.
Of course, if women relaxed more
mother:
.
.
. Now we need ~0 giVe mothers pernus- ' often, the house wouldn't lo~k like
The mcreasmg number of ADD diag- ston to be more like fathers. ·
H
"
'fit! h kids · h 1
·
· ·m great patt, th e
A L--.
"'"'b ~tween men an d thorne
neaun . , t e
noses among
women ts,
......tc UUlCtenCe
.. dail
f mJg tbl ot get
d
.
·
d
kn
·I
dge
·
•
tha
all
i
th
err
y
reqmrement
o
vegeta es an
I
f
h
1
resu t o more sop tsncate
owe
women ts
t rnen ow emse ves to
b h
uldn' be ilk . '
e t ere wo
t
m
m the
about the brain. We can pinpoint a1_1d rest and women don't! ~en insdnctively
treat more neurologtcal and chemJcal dts- build recuperanon nme mtp thetr days. As
ge.
orders than ever before.
.
comic Mark Lundholm: points out, it's no
Yes. And we would all ~nag~ to get
But I can't help wondering if we're also mystecy why there's a Ca-Z-Boy chair but by, pe~aps even Without a httle p1ll every
"pathologwng" a way of ljfe that needS no La-Z-Girl version. ,
mormng. .
simplification, not medication. In short, . Last Saturd:ty, a girlfriend treated me to
I thmk this movement. to get mothers
mothers feel overwhelmed and scattered a spa day. We had massages, sat in the hoi !0 become more like fathers ought to
because we try to do too much. The tub, then had a long lunch. Spas lllllkl! adopt as Its motto those wise words of
expectations - whether our own or their living off women like us, who once our nation's flight attendants: Put your
society's- keep rising.We're supposed to or twice a year might indiJ]ge themselves own oxygen mask on first before helping
make cupcakes for the class part)', arrange in a day of complete relaxation. "Pamper others with theirs. Then everyone would
carpools, exercise, keep a clean and pretry yourself!" ads for bubble bath and special- have a better chance at survival.
house, read stimulating books, produce · ty coffees say, recognizing · that women
Goan Ryan is a columnist for t/Je San Franwell-balanced meals, raise moral and count any personal rejuvenation time as dsco Chronille. Send comments to /Jer in care
competent children, maintain-our youth- "pampering" and a "special occasion."
of this tltWSpaper or send her e-mail at jMnful good loob aud punue a satisfying
You don't see the networks telling men ryan@sfgate.com.)
.

::J

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SOCIETY. SCRAPBOOK
Recomm endations of the Ohio Department of H ealth call
Sweetheart contest
for children from birth to 3 years of age to receive a hearing
screening which includes observation for signs, symptoms and
winners named
behaviors suggestive of hearing loss and identification of chil-

After the age of 3 years, children should receive hearing
screening using a pure tone audiometer. All children who fail
an annual hearing screening should be re-screened between
four and six weeks after the original screening. Those who fail
the second screening test would.be referred to an appropriate
professional for an evaluation, audiologist,'ENT speCialist, or
a hearing specialty clinic.
Skidmore said that since it is often difficult to screen young
children so parents are urged to watch their children for signs,
symptoms and behaviors suggestive of hearing loss. Mouth
breathing, discharge from the ear canal, malformation of the
ear, ear wax impaction, constant head tilt toward the source of
a sound, inabiliry to follow verbal directions well, answers
questions inappropriately, inattention, pulls or rubs ears frequently, asks for repetition of words or phrases, misunderstands conversation of others, difficulty in locating sound
source; poor language development, buzzing or ringing in
ears, and soreness or pain in or aboyt the ears, can be signs of
hearing difficulty:
.
She suggests that parents of young children ask themselves
,
I
'
three questions: does your child respond. to your voice at a
SYRACUSE -Victor and Margaret Stewart of Syracuse
normal ··conversation level, does your child babble or talk in
were winners of the Sweetheart Contest held by the U.S. Post
one to two word utterances, and has your child had a histo. Office in Syracuse.
'
·
ry of ear infections.
,, The couple has been married for. 62 years. .. .,.
..
i. Minnie and Marion Rizer, also of Syracuse, were the sec' ond-prize winners.
· ~· ·
, Both couples received a book of "Love;' stamps and "Love"
stationery from the U.S. Postal Service.
.
·
The Stewarts also received flowers from the post office,
, dinn~r for two from Whitney's Restaurant in Syracuse, and a
· gift certificate from Baer's Market of Syracuse.
·
The winners of the drawing also received a 12-pack of soda
from the TNT Pit Stop in Syracuse.
·
'

People find it very difficult
to talk to a person who has
just lost a loved one through
death. They don't know what
to say. They are afraid they will
say something that may upset
the person or bring up
unpleasant 1nemories. However, the survivor may feel compelled to frequently recount
the experience and voice his
or her feelings and thoughts.
What can friends say !0
help the griever?, Grief counselors. have found that it is not
so much what you say that is
important, but more how you
actively listen. This means to
listen so closely that you begin
to understand the survivor's
feelings. It does not mean you
should say, "I know exactly
how you feel" because you
don't, but you can start to
comprehend all the emotions
they are going through·. ·
To be ari active listener,
offer the survivor a quiet,
uninterrupted place to talk.
Provide refreshments to illustrate your concern and help

..

· Rutland Friendly Gardeners meet
, RUTLAND -- Plans for an open meeting to be held at the
Rutland Fire Station were made when the Rutland Friendly
Gardeners met recently at tbe Rutland Church of Christ with
: Rosemary Eskew as hostess.
.
.
The meeting was called to order by pres1derlt Debb1e
' Bullington. Roll call was read with. each member to bring a
· garden rela~ed card to be used by the sunshine committee. The
, collect was recited by all members present. Rosemary Eskew
' read "At Winter's Call" by Catherine Smith MetJiteny for
,devotions. ,
.
Officers' reports were given by Kimberly Willford and
' Margaret Edwards who asked for the names of those to whom
cards should be sent.
•,: The new class for the Meigs County Master Gardeners was
discussed and the Cincinnati flower show was announced for
April 25. A bus will be going there and the cost is $55. Also
·- discussed was the Home and Garden Show m Charleston,
W.Va. March 16-18 as a ttip for the club. Action was tabled
until the next meeting.
·
. ·.
Eskew took the sunshine basket fur the month to Kathy
Stewart and also had charge of decorating the post offick window in February.
'
Money for the flower find and traveling prize was taken up.
J.anet' Bolin won the prize brought by Margaret Edwards and
Judy Snowden.
'
. .
·
Next month's meeting will be held at the home of Kim. berly Willford with Bal Knee~ as the speaker.
.
Willford displayed a right tt~angle arrangement m shades of
green silk for the arrangem_e nt of the month. Pointers were
·then given out by Janet Bolin, OAGC Accredited JUdge.
.
Refreshments \\'ere served to those named a~d Marie
·Birchfield, Debbie Bullington, Judy Snowden, Lorn Barnes.

Speech and he1rlng .
sa eeninp offered
' - POMEROY - . Speech and hearing screeni_ngs are an
&gt;mportant part of services offered by the Me1gs County
·Health Department, according to Margie Skidmore, RN,
director of nursing, who reported that last year 161 speech and
264 hearing screenings \Vere done.
Skidmore said that early assessment of a child's speech and
·hearing skills is crucial for prevention .and that delayed tdenti6cation of communication dtsorders m chtldre11 places them
acadenuc dtfficulttes,
t m· k "'or numerous problems including
,a
bl
. a! - beh av, poor peer relations, behavioral pro ems or emotiOn
·
h '
. ioral problems.
.
Speech and language disorders nu.g ht be present w en ,a
person's speech or language is different from that _of others o~
the same age, sex or ethnic group, expbtned Skidmore. She
listed "signals" of disorder as speech wh1ch IS ha~d to under-.
stand, anxiety about speech pattern, and lack _o f commumcation with othen;.
.
.
h
Speech and language skills d7velop raptdly dunng t e
· · h 1 years said the numng director, who recommended
,
fi
1 'd 'fi · ·
f
presc oo
that screening be an ongoing process or ear y 1 ena 1canon o

Becky
Baer

put them more at ease. Use
body language that demonstrates your compassion. Face
the person and slightly lean
towards them, indicating your
willingness to listen. Have
good eye contact and try to be
relaxed. A handshake or an
occasional touch on the arm
will also show you care.
Let the person tell the story
of how the loved one died. In
the beginning, the survivor ·
may go into great detail. But
as the story is re-told, it will
probably be shortened as the
person starts tp accept the
death.
Don't think you are the
one who has to carry the
majority of the conversation.
Let your friend do the talking.
You only need to be there and
to listen .

CALENDAR
TUESDAY
REEDSVILLE - Olive Township
Truttttl, regYIIr mttllng, 8:30 p.m.
at tht townthlp offlct on Joppa
Road. To get on tho agondo, contact
tho cltrk at 378·8149 prior to tilt
mttllng.

HEARING EVALUATION - Jacob Kennedy had his annual
hearing and speech evaluation completed by Maureen Hennessy MA/CCC-S, during the Child and Family Health Services
Well Child Clinic at the Meigs County Health Department.
(Contributed Photo)

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
Subscribe today. 992-2156

ship Trustees, 7 p.m., at town hill,
regular monlhly mOlting.
POMEROY -Terrific Tuesday at
God's NET; 3 to 5:30p.m. Free meal.
games and craft&amp; lor youth.

POMEROY - Childhood lmmu·
SYRACUSE - Salisbury Town· nlzallon clinic, Mtlgt Counly Health
thlp Trutttn, 8 p.m. town hall.
Dept., 1 tc 7 p.m., 112 E. Momonal
Dr.. Pomtroy. Bring shol recorda.
MIDDLEPORT Middleport Child must be accompanied by par·
Youth L11guo, 6:30 p.m.. Middleport ant or legal guardian.
Village Council chambora.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
MIDDLEPORT Middleport Plains AthletloAssoclatlon , 6:30p.m.,
Masonic Lodge i363, regular moel- Eutam Public Library. Public Invited.
lng, 7:30 p.m. All Master Mesons are
welcome.
ALFRED - Orange Township
Trustees, 7:30 p.m. horns of Oslo
MIODL.EPOAT - l.adies for the
Lord, Bible study, 9 am .. Abundant Follrod. clerk.
Grace Church. Woman of all denom·
WEDNESDAY
lnatlona welcome.
PAGEVILLE - Scipio Township
TUPPERS Pl.AINS - Tupper1 Trustees regular mooting, 6:30 p.m.,
Plains Regional Sewer District Pagevlllo Town Hall.
Board, special meeting, 6 p.m., lo
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Lit·
discuss restructuring of rates and
srary
Club, 2 p.m., home of Gay Pergeneral purposes.
rin. Pet Holter to review Barbara
BURLINGHAM - Bodford Town• Dolinsky's "The Vineyard."

HART'S
KOUNTRY KITCHEN

Disposal
accepting new customers In ·
the Meigs County and
surrounding areas for all your u,:,.l
waste hauling needs:

Raolne, Ohio

if;"l

OUR NEW HOURS WILL BE IN EFFECJ;
BEGINNING MARCH 5, 2001

IESIDENTIAL:

Monday • Friday
6 a.m. • 7 p.m.
Saturday - 7 a.m. - 2. p.m.
Sunday - 8 a.m. • 2 p.m.
Phone:949.:.t009

(Polycarts available)

COMMERCIAL:
(1 .5 yard thru 40 yard containers)

lOLL-OFF SERVICE

DAILY SPECIALS:

For promll. dapandablasarvlca.
call
140·992-9330 or 1·800~809-1121

Monday • Country Fried Steak

1\aesda.y • Chicken 8l. Noodles
Wednesday • Meatloaf
Thursday • Baked Steak
Friday • Spqhetti

Thank You Meigs, Gallla and
Mason County, WV for supporting
your local hauler!

. problems.
-·~· -----

"
'

.

..

-~

-·~,.

-

...._

____ _

�•

Page A 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Tueldey, March 8, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Inside:

The Daily Sentinel

-Today Scoreboard, Pllge B6

Page 11
'IUMUy, Mllrch •• 1001

1'ufsn\y's

HIGHLIGHTS
Free hunter
classes
scheduled

*10th

; POMEROY - A free
Ohio Hunter Education Class
will be held March 26-28, 6
p.m. to 9 p.m. and March 31,
9 a.m. to noon, · at the
Pomeroy Gun Club on
Ppmeroy Pike.
StUdentS must attend all sessions. Class si:ze is limited to
40 students. ·
To pre-register, call the
Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District at 992-4282.

IN
DIVISION IV
STATEI

*SECTIONAL

c

I

Marlins edge
Tribe

*18WINS
3LOSSES
I!ASTI!RN VARSITY BOYS BAIKETIIALL 21J00.01 - Front row, left to rl&amp;ht. Austin Cross, Natlhan
Grubb, Bred Brannon, Josh Kehl, Jason Kimes and Garrett Karr. Back row, left to right, Chris Lyons,
Joe Brown, Brent Buckley, Matt Simpson, Chad Nelson and Jeremy Sllanks. (Scott Wolfe phQto)

GOOD lUG I THE .;:
SION · IISTRICTSI

.

'

at OHIO
...
•"

&gt;

•

CONVOCAIION CENTER.
,

EASTER V&amp;R

'

~

.....

TH:

. I

'

I

.

.I

Gas

\\'es111i1
·~··••a~11···~i••••
State Route 7 • Pomeroy

·Chester

...
-

.'.

'

985-3307

StRte248
Chester 985-3301

992-2121

CROW'S
FAMILY
RESTAURANT

State Route 248, Chester, OH

985-3308

DowNING CHILDS
MuLLEN MussER
INsURANcE
-Pomeroy

992-3381

Valley

•

1,.- " I I ~·

GOOD WCK EAGI.U!
., .Lamar fl lblrter

and
QUALITY

Heuse

Tuppers Plains
740-667-7388

992-7696

Kenneth McCulloUCJh, R. Ph.
Charles Riffle, R. Ph.

112 East Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

VITAL
- Senior Matt Simpson (right) watches
as coach Horle Caldwell give~ direction. (Bryan Long) '-

•
10 .u

MAC
tourney
heads ,
for Gund

Hunter, jones
each net a
double-double ·

'

BY ANDREW CARTER
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

OVP SPORTS EDIWR

ATHENS - It's on to
Three teams, including
Marshall, were already in the
Gund Arena for Ohio UniMid-American Conference's
versity after the Bobcats
quarteriin,.Is, thanks to first..'
disposed of Buffalo in the
round byes.
first round of the MidThere were no surprises
American
Conference
Monday night as five more
tournament by a 101-78
teams rounded out the field
count.
for the next round at Cleve"I thought it was a game .
land's
Gund Arena on Thurswith really a lot of-competday.
ing in it from both' teams;•
Bowling Green and Miami
0 hio head coac)l Larry
(Ohio) recovered just in time
Hunter said. "I thought
to salvage spots in the MAC's
Buffalo really came in here
elite eight.
.
•and played · h.atf!... and · I
Keith Mcleod scored 14'tlf
,. admil'!! ~h~t. Om~ were;
·
his
IS points in the secorld
r· iil pretty ·good 'focus, to;,:•·
half - including six free
Five BobcatS scored in
throws
in the final 67 seconds
double digits, led by
- as Bowling Green oversophomore
Brandon
came a 14-point deficit to
Hunter, who recorded his
beat
Western Michigan 7413th double-9oublf of the
68. Meanwhile, Jason Grunkseason with 29 pomts and
emeyer scored all of his 14
11 rebounds.
•
IUipSS
. points in the second half as
"We kept goin , inside
Miami awakenec! to beat
with Brandon ind I
Akron 69-56.
thought we· had some real
"It seems like I've been
advantages with
him
all year," Grunkestruggling
inside," Hunter said.
. meyer said. "I didn't want to
CLEVELAND (AP) Hunter hit 8-of:fo field
lose my last game on this
Marshall's Joda ~urgess and
goal attempts was f3-forcourt. When I finally made a
Terry Reynolds of Toledo
15 at the foul line. The 13
shot, it was like, 'Than)&lt;
have been selected the players
made free throws was' a
G
dl"'
,
of the week in the Midpersonal best for the 6-7,
0 .
. .\'
In other games, Pa'f'nc'k
American Conference.
260-po_u nder.
Jackson
scored 26 points· to
Burgess, a 6-foot-6 senior
Sophomore
Steve
lead Ball State past Northern
from Kenova, WVa., won the
Esterkamp gave the BobIllinois, 89-57; Brandon
East Division award by aver- ·
cats a much needed 18
Hunter scored 29 points and
aging 18.0 points as the
TO THE HOOP- Ohio sophomore Brandon Hunter (34) drives to the basket against BuffaPINH-Ohlo,BJ
added 11 rebounds as Ohio
Thundering Herd won twice
lo. Hunter had 29 points and 11 rebounds
. In the Bobcats 101-78 win. (Bryan Long)
rolled over .Buffalo 101-78; '
last week. He scored 27 points
and Greg Stempin had 16
~nd hit 8-of-10 3-point shots
points and 12 rebounds and
in a victory over Buffalo that
Toledo used a 15-0 second'gaye Marshall the No. 3 seed
half run to beat Eastern
and a first-round bye in the
Michigan 67-43.
MAC tournament.
The pairings are now set for
: Reynolds, a 5-8 freshman
Larson,
the
Reds'
first-round
draft
after
two
separate
surgeries
on
his
right
SARASOTA,
Fla.
(AP)
-Osvaldo
the quarterfinals Thursday
from Nashville, Tenn., took
is
batting
.462
(6choice
in
June
1997,
Fernandez
retired
the,
first
nine
batters
elbow.
.
with Miami taking on Central
West Divjsion honors by
of-13)
with
three
RBis.
Dmitri
Young
had
a
three-run
home
he
faced
before
giving
up
a
hit
and
a
Michigan
at noon, Ohio tack:~Veraging 18.5 points, 5.5
Aaron
Boone
stayed
in
Cincinnati
all
run
in
·the
third
and
Brandon
'Larson,
walk'
in
the
fourth
inning
Mo~day
as
ling Toledo at 2 p.m., Bowling
rebounds and ·5.0 assists as the
winter
to
rehab
a
knee
following
who
is
pushing
for
playing
time
at
third
the
Cincinnati
Reds
beat
the
MinnesoGreen meeting Kent State at
I_l..ockets won road games at
reconstructive
surgery
and
expects
to
base,
homered
twice.
All
three
homers
ta
1\vins
7-6
.
7 p.m. and Ball State and
.Bowling Green and Ball State.
be
ready
by
opening
day.
were
off
Minnesota
starter
Brad
Radke.
has
not
been
scored
on
in
Fernandez
Marshall
squaring off at 9
He had 29 points in a 70-64
Brian Buchanan homered for the
"This
is
a
good
opportunity
for
Lartwa
outings
spanning
seven
innings,
p.m.
victory over the Cardinals.
allowing just two hits and three walks. son," said Boone, whose son, Aaron, is '!Wins and Denny Hocking drove in
Western Michigan (7 -21)
"I'm very excited about him," said the Reds' regular third baseman. "He's two runs with a single and a sacrifice
led Bowling Green 47-33 at
Reds manager Bob Boone. "He's getting a chance to play on the front fly.
the break after a 29~6 spurt to
Notes: Ken Griffey Jr. missed the
throwing super. We know he can pitch. end to face top-of-the-line pitchers. He
finish the first half. They still
can see that they aren't that much bet- game with a tight )eft hamstring. "He
Its a matter of him stayiftg healthy."
were ahead 50-36 after Jon
Fernandez missed twa months of the ter than who he's seen before. His said he was OK to play;· said manager
CLEVEL/&gt;.ND (AP)
2000 season with a sore right elbow, mechanics are good imd he really
Fullback Tarek Saleh, primariPIHMIHMAC.BI
Plelse-Rida.BI
and all of the 1998 and· 1999 seasons smoked the ball today."
ly a special teams player the
past two seasons with the
Cleveland Browns, signed a
0 ne-year deal with the
Browns on Monday.
· The 26-year-old Saleh, 6
feet and 240 pounds, was a
Browns expansion draft pick
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
him than against him. He is ington, but was benched for deal with Detroit and will Miami for Oakland.
from Carolina in 1999. He has
A 12-year veteran defensive
Passen arid sackers were on one tough hombre" All-Pro Jeff George last season.
back up injury-plagued Charled the Browns in special
end
who has spent the last six
the move on another busy day · defensive tackle Wa~ren Sapp
The Bucs also claimed for- lie Batch.
teams tackles the past twa seaThe 14-year veteran also years with the Dolphins,
in NFL free agency.
.
said. "I told him: 'Let's go win mer San Diego quarterback
sons.
Tampa Bay, no longer will- a championship.' He is some- Ryan Leaf off waivers last Fri- has been troubled by injuries Armstrong signed a six-year
The Browns, meanwhile,
to let Shaun King mature body I will go to war with day, but do not consider him a recently. He completed 123 of deal for $18:6 million, with a
ing
confirmed they have brought
solution to their offensive 202 passes for 1,416 yards,14 $5 million signing bonus.
as its starter, s~ent $28 rnillioq &lt;:Very Sunday.''
in three more NFL free agents
Armstrong, 35, led the AFC
to
Sign
Brad
JohnThe
Bucs
outbid
Super
Monday
touchdowns and 16 intercepwoes.
for talks. 'They are running
so~. The five-year deal for the· Bowl champion Baltimore,
Another
. quarterback tions last season for San and was second in the league
back Priest Holmes from Ballast season with a career-high
top quarterback on the mar- which is coached by Brian changing addresses is Jim Diego.
timore; linebacker James
Trace Armstrong, who 16 112 sacks. For his career,
ket aJ_so _includes a $6.5 mil- Billick, who helped Johnson Harbaugh, a teammate ·of
Logan from Seattle, and
. lion Mgnmg bonus.
develop at Minnesota. John- Leaf's in San Diego. Har- makes his living knocking
defensive tackle Christian
PIHH ... NFL.M
"! would rather play with son, 32, then moved to Wash- baugh, 37, signed a twa-year down quarterbacks, left
Peter from the Giants.

Best

_
;,

,

.....
,

t

Pomeroy

RACINE

SYRACUSE

949-2210

992-6533

shines in second outing

Bucs, Raiders make big free agent pickups

992-6682

'

....... _bpis.Bl

. Saleh '

I

992-6611

since then, it's been pretty good."
As the Eagles have built themselves back up
mentally and physically, an air of confidence
has also been built up within the ranks of the
TVC Hocking Division co-champs( who
enter the district tournament .riding I a 15game winning streak and with hopes of erasing the disappointment of losing in the district finals last year.
"If somebody beats us this year, it's g~ing to
be because they earned it, not the fact that we
gave it to them," Caldwell said. "I feel a sense

Browns sip

Co.

Middle ort

EAST MEIGS - Despite a long layoff
between games, it appears that Eastern is
peaking at the right time heading into its
Division IV district contest against
Portsmouth East tomorrow night.
·
"When we found out that we were going
to have 10 days without a game, we were
kind of worried about that," said Eagles head
coach Howie Caldwell. "We gave them
Monday off (after the sectional championship) and came into-practice on Tuesday, it
wasn't good. Then every practice we've had

Ferna~dez

992-5141
992-!$444

Brogan-Warne
· ..
Insurance
Pomero

OVP SPORTS EDITOR ,

..

FVRNITVRE PLUS

100 E. Main Street a·'

Middleport
Pomeroy

BY ANDREW CARTER

naltted player
of the week

'

&amp; Supply

·'

Pomeroy 992-5432

, " :I

Ea les ready for showdown
wit Portsmouth East
.

MU's

Hartwell .~
Pomeroy

I

r
7ie
.
. h fA
FIS
er n.cr~ SHOE PLAC
Funeral Home
A-ut

ll BER

Pomeroy

'

992-6466

BAD

Funeral Dome

~

Middleport

T

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Ridenour

.,

.'

WEDNESDAY MARCH JTH 6:15
FINAlS
10TH 9

I

'

...

.
·I

'

MELBOURNE, Fla. (AP)
-.. Andy Fox tripled home
!he winning run in the ninth
inning Monday, leading the
Florida Marlins over the
Cleveland Indians 5-4.
Roberto Alomar and Juan
Gonzalez hit solo homers,
their first this spring, to help
the Indians take a 3-1 lead.
· Florida went ahead 4-3 in
the eighth on Lyle Mouton's
RBI single and Mike Gulan's
run-scoring double.
· Cleveland tied the game in
the ninth on a pinch-hit
infield single by Jason
Hardtke with the bases
ioaded. The Marlins then
turned their fourth double
play.
·
/ · Josue Espada singled to start
the bottom of the ninth, and
Fox. tripled off the centerfj.ef3, wall against loser Jerry
Spradlin.
Benito Baez got the win.
Indians starter Steve Woodard
and Marlins starter Chuck
Smith each gave up one run
in two innings.

•

992-2136

Galllpplls

·446-2265

Tuppers Plains

985-3161

•

••

-- ----- ~-·--- ..! - - -

- - - - -------.J- -- -------.J.I,L.._,.

'

�•

Page A 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Tueldey, March 8, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Inside:

The Daily Sentinel

-Today Scoreboard, Pllge B6

Page 11
'IUMUy, Mllrch •• 1001

1'ufsn\y's

HIGHLIGHTS
Free hunter
classes
scheduled

*10th

; POMEROY - A free
Ohio Hunter Education Class
will be held March 26-28, 6
p.m. to 9 p.m. and March 31,
9 a.m. to noon, · at the
Pomeroy Gun Club on
Ppmeroy Pike.
StUdentS must attend all sessions. Class si:ze is limited to
40 students. ·
To pre-register, call the
Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District at 992-4282.

IN
DIVISION IV
STATEI

*SECTIONAL

c

I

Marlins edge
Tribe

*18WINS
3LOSSES
I!ASTI!RN VARSITY BOYS BAIKETIIALL 21J00.01 - Front row, left to rl&amp;ht. Austin Cross, Natlhan
Grubb, Bred Brannon, Josh Kehl, Jason Kimes and Garrett Karr. Back row, left to right, Chris Lyons,
Joe Brown, Brent Buckley, Matt Simpson, Chad Nelson and Jeremy Sllanks. (Scott Wolfe phQto)

GOOD lUG I THE .;:
SION · IISTRICTSI

.

'

at OHIO
...
•"

&gt;

•

CONVOCAIION CENTER.
,

EASTER V&amp;R

'

~

.....

TH:

. I

'

I

.

.I

Gas

\\'es111i1
·~··••a~11···~i••••
State Route 7 • Pomeroy

·Chester

...
-

.'.

'

985-3307

StRte248
Chester 985-3301

992-2121

CROW'S
FAMILY
RESTAURANT

State Route 248, Chester, OH

985-3308

DowNING CHILDS
MuLLEN MussER
INsURANcE
-Pomeroy

992-3381

Valley

•

1,.- " I I ~·

GOOD WCK EAGI.U!
., .Lamar fl lblrter

and
QUALITY

Heuse

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740-667-7388

992-7696

Kenneth McCulloUCJh, R. Ph.
Charles Riffle, R. Ph.

112 East Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

VITAL
- Senior Matt Simpson (right) watches
as coach Horle Caldwell give~ direction. (Bryan Long) '-

•
10 .u

MAC
tourney
heads ,
for Gund

Hunter, jones
each net a
double-double ·

'

BY ANDREW CARTER
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

OVP SPORTS EDIWR

ATHENS - It's on to
Three teams, including
Marshall, were already in the
Gund Arena for Ohio UniMid-American Conference's
versity after the Bobcats
quarteriin,.Is, thanks to first..'
disposed of Buffalo in the
round byes.
first round of the MidThere were no surprises
American
Conference
Monday night as five more
tournament by a 101-78
teams rounded out the field
count.
for the next round at Cleve"I thought it was a game .
land's
Gund Arena on Thurswith really a lot of-competday.
ing in it from both' teams;•
Bowling Green and Miami
0 hio head coac)l Larry
(Ohio) recovered just in time
Hunter said. "I thought
to salvage spots in the MAC's
Buffalo really came in here
elite eight.
.
•and played · h.atf!... and · I
Keith Mcleod scored 14'tlf
,. admil'!! ~h~t. Om~ were;
·
his
IS points in the secorld
r· iil pretty ·good 'focus, to;,:•·
half - including six free
Five BobcatS scored in
throws
in the final 67 seconds
double digits, led by
- as Bowling Green oversophomore
Brandon
came a 14-point deficit to
Hunter, who recorded his
beat
Western Michigan 7413th double-9oublf of the
68. Meanwhile, Jason Grunkseason with 29 pomts and
emeyer scored all of his 14
11 rebounds.
•
IUipSS
. points in the second half as
"We kept goin , inside
Miami awakenec! to beat
with Brandon ind I
Akron 69-56.
thought we· had some real
"It seems like I've been
advantages with
him
all year," Grunkestruggling
inside," Hunter said.
. meyer said. "I didn't want to
CLEVELAND (AP) Hunter hit 8-of:fo field
lose my last game on this
Marshall's Joda ~urgess and
goal attempts was f3-forcourt. When I finally made a
Terry Reynolds of Toledo
15 at the foul line. The 13
shot, it was like, 'Than)&lt;
have been selected the players
made free throws was' a
G
dl"'
,
of the week in the Midpersonal best for the 6-7,
0 .
. .\'
In other games, Pa'f'nc'k
American Conference.
260-po_u nder.
Jackson
scored 26 points· to
Burgess, a 6-foot-6 senior
Sophomore
Steve
lead Ball State past Northern
from Kenova, WVa., won the
Esterkamp gave the BobIllinois, 89-57; Brandon
East Division award by aver- ·
cats a much needed 18
Hunter scored 29 points and
aging 18.0 points as the
TO THE HOOP- Ohio sophomore Brandon Hunter (34) drives to the basket against BuffaPINH-Ohlo,BJ
added 11 rebounds as Ohio
Thundering Herd won twice
lo. Hunter had 29 points and 11 rebounds
. In the Bobcats 101-78 win. (Bryan Long)
rolled over .Buffalo 101-78; '
last week. He scored 27 points
and Greg Stempin had 16
~nd hit 8-of-10 3-point shots
points and 12 rebounds and
in a victory over Buffalo that
Toledo used a 15-0 second'gaye Marshall the No. 3 seed
half run to beat Eastern
and a first-round bye in the
Michigan 67-43.
MAC tournament.
The pairings are now set for
: Reynolds, a 5-8 freshman
Larson,
the
Reds'
first-round
draft
after
two
separate
surgeries
on
his
right
SARASOTA,
Fla.
(AP)
-Osvaldo
the quarterfinals Thursday
from Nashville, Tenn., took
is
batting
.462
(6choice
in
June
1997,
Fernandez
retired
the,
first
nine
batters
elbow.
.
with Miami taking on Central
West Divjsion honors by
of-13)
with
three
RBis.
Dmitri
Young
had
a
three-run
home
he
faced
before
giving
up
a
hit
and
a
Michigan
at noon, Ohio tack:~Veraging 18.5 points, 5.5
Aaron
Boone
stayed
in
Cincinnati
all
run
in
·the
third
and
Brandon
'Larson,
walk'
in
the
fourth
inning
Mo~day
as
ling Toledo at 2 p.m., Bowling
rebounds and ·5.0 assists as the
winter
to
rehab
a
knee
following
who
is
pushing
for
playing
time
at
third
the
Cincinnati
Reds
beat
the
MinnesoGreen meeting Kent State at
I_l..ockets won road games at
reconstructive
surgery
and
expects
to
base,
homered
twice.
All
three
homers
ta
1\vins
7-6
.
7 p.m. and Ball State and
.Bowling Green and Ball State.
be
ready
by
opening
day.
were
off
Minnesota
starter
Brad
Radke.
has
not
been
scored
on
in
Fernandez
Marshall
squaring off at 9
He had 29 points in a 70-64
Brian Buchanan homered for the
"This
is
a
good
opportunity
for
Lartwa
outings
spanning
seven
innings,
p.m.
victory over the Cardinals.
allowing just two hits and three walks. son," said Boone, whose son, Aaron, is '!Wins and Denny Hocking drove in
Western Michigan (7 -21)
"I'm very excited about him," said the Reds' regular third baseman. "He's two runs with a single and a sacrifice
led Bowling Green 47-33 at
Reds manager Bob Boone. "He's getting a chance to play on the front fly.
the break after a 29~6 spurt to
Notes: Ken Griffey Jr. missed the
throwing super. We know he can pitch. end to face top-of-the-line pitchers. He
finish the first half. They still
can see that they aren't that much bet- game with a tight )eft hamstring. "He
Its a matter of him stayiftg healthy."
were ahead 50-36 after Jon
Fernandez missed twa months of the ter than who he's seen before. His said he was OK to play;· said manager
CLEVEL/&gt;.ND (AP)
2000 season with a sore right elbow, mechanics are good imd he really
Fullback Tarek Saleh, primariPIHMIHMAC.BI
Plelse-Rida.BI
and all of the 1998 and· 1999 seasons smoked the ball today."
ly a special teams player the
past two seasons with the
Cleveland Browns, signed a
0 ne-year deal with the
Browns on Monday.
· The 26-year-old Saleh, 6
feet and 240 pounds, was a
Browns expansion draft pick
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
him than against him. He is ington, but was benched for deal with Detroit and will Miami for Oakland.
from Carolina in 1999. He has
A 12-year veteran defensive
Passen arid sackers were on one tough hombre" All-Pro Jeff George last season.
back up injury-plagued Charled the Browns in special
end
who has spent the last six
the move on another busy day · defensive tackle Wa~ren Sapp
The Bucs also claimed for- lie Batch.
teams tackles the past twa seaThe 14-year veteran also years with the Dolphins,
in NFL free agency.
.
said. "I told him: 'Let's go win mer San Diego quarterback
sons.
Tampa Bay, no longer will- a championship.' He is some- Ryan Leaf off waivers last Fri- has been troubled by injuries Armstrong signed a six-year
The Browns, meanwhile,
to let Shaun King mature body I will go to war with day, but do not consider him a recently. He completed 123 of deal for $18:6 million, with a
ing
confirmed they have brought
solution to their offensive 202 passes for 1,416 yards,14 $5 million signing bonus.
as its starter, s~ent $28 rnillioq &lt;:Very Sunday.''
in three more NFL free agents
Armstrong, 35, led the AFC
to
Sign
Brad
JohnThe
Bucs
outbid
Super
Monday
touchdowns and 16 intercepwoes.
for talks. 'They are running
so~. The five-year deal for the· Bowl champion Baltimore,
Another
. quarterback tions last season for San and was second in the league
back Priest Holmes from Ballast season with a career-high
top quarterback on the mar- which is coached by Brian changing addresses is Jim Diego.
timore; linebacker James
Trace Armstrong, who 16 112 sacks. For his career,
ket aJ_so _includes a $6.5 mil- Billick, who helped Johnson Harbaugh, a teammate ·of
Logan from Seattle, and
. lion Mgnmg bonus.
develop at Minnesota. John- Leaf's in San Diego. Har- makes his living knocking
defensive tackle Christian
PIHH ... NFL.M
"! would rather play with son, 32, then moved to Wash- baugh, 37, signed a twa-year down quarterbacks, left
Peter from the Giants.

Best

_
;,

,

.....
,

t

Pomeroy

RACINE

SYRACUSE

949-2210

992-6533

shines in second outing

Bucs, Raiders make big free agent pickups

992-6682

'

....... _bpis.Bl

. Saleh '

I

992-6611

since then, it's been pretty good."
As the Eagles have built themselves back up
mentally and physically, an air of confidence
has also been built up within the ranks of the
TVC Hocking Division co-champs( who
enter the district tournament .riding I a 15game winning streak and with hopes of erasing the disappointment of losing in the district finals last year.
"If somebody beats us this year, it's g~ing to
be because they earned it, not the fact that we
gave it to them," Caldwell said. "I feel a sense

Browns sip

Co.

Middle ort

EAST MEIGS - Despite a long layoff
between games, it appears that Eastern is
peaking at the right time heading into its
Division IV district contest against
Portsmouth East tomorrow night.
·
"When we found out that we were going
to have 10 days without a game, we were
kind of worried about that," said Eagles head
coach Howie Caldwell. "We gave them
Monday off (after the sectional championship) and came into-practice on Tuesday, it
wasn't good. Then every practice we've had

Ferna~dez

992-5141
992-!$444

Brogan-Warne
· ..
Insurance
Pomero

OVP SPORTS EDITOR ,

..

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100 E. Main Street a·'

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BY ANDREW CARTER

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WEDNESDAY MARCH JTH 6:15
FINAlS
10TH 9

I

'

...

.
·I

'

MELBOURNE, Fla. (AP)
-.. Andy Fox tripled home
!he winning run in the ninth
inning Monday, leading the
Florida Marlins over the
Cleveland Indians 5-4.
Roberto Alomar and Juan
Gonzalez hit solo homers,
their first this spring, to help
the Indians take a 3-1 lead.
· Florida went ahead 4-3 in
the eighth on Lyle Mouton's
RBI single and Mike Gulan's
run-scoring double.
· Cleveland tied the game in
the ninth on a pinch-hit
infield single by Jason
Hardtke with the bases
ioaded. The Marlins then
turned their fourth double
play.
·
/ · Josue Espada singled to start
the bottom of the ninth, and
Fox. tripled off the centerfj.ef3, wall against loser Jerry
Spradlin.
Benito Baez got the win.
Indians starter Steve Woodard
and Marlins starter Chuck
Smith each gave up one run
in two innings.

•

992-2136

Galllpplls

·446-2265

Tuppers Plains

985-3161

•

••

-- ----- ~-·--- ..! - - -

- - - - -------.J- -- -------.J.I,L.._,.

'

�Tuuctay,

March Sr

2001

Pep 8 2 • The Dlilly Sentinel

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Shifts EJCCtllent Pay And Bane
1111 Contact Human Reaourcea
At Pl111ant VI ley Hosp tal 2!i20
Valle~ Drive Point Pleasant WV
25e80 Or Fax To (304)87~ 8975

MIEOE
Pottal JOI:II $-48 323 00 yr Now
hiring No u:perience paid train
lng gttat benefits call 7 days
1IOO-I2fi.38IO Old J 365
S1l11 person building material•
end related Items exper ence
nttdld in tit mating customer
Nrvlce and computer Btnellfa
Salary bllld on experience
Send rtaume to The Dally Sent
nel P: 0 Box 729 99 Pomeroy
Oh 45789

Emerptnt;v prp!ICtiyt Sttmta
Y/ICkaniiUI II Recruiting For A
Shorl Term Pmjoct In C ndnna!l
Officers Muat Be Available To
Work I 2 Hours/ Ooy 7 Day&amp;'
Wnk Wo Wll Prcvlcll LOdging
And S26l Day Food Allowance
PitoN Apply M F 9lm 4pm At
Tho Jomoo M Gavin Power Pllm
Statalloutt 7 Cnoollfro OhiO

EOEINFIIW

SECURITY
$880 HR
The Wld&lt;lnh.. Corp II Recruit
lng ForSovoro!Pooltiona Mull
HM G E D Or HS llfploma.
Pltlu Apply At Jamoo M Gavin
l'llWor Plant Stall Route 7 Of Call
COt&gt;1 Evena At (7.!0)92S 3010

EOEMIFIIW

Shur Fantasy Bar Needs Dane
ers No Experience Nacenary
Will Train
(304)786 7828
(304)273-0!520 .... lor Bolh
STAY HOME/WORK ONLINE
$500 $7000 monlh PTIFT COm
p eta Training Free Informal on
www crest me cam Tot Free 1
888 873-3693

Help Wanted

STNA train ng class being
scheduled lor tOO bed skilled
tac llty Stek ng candldttll who
are caring compaaslanatt and
wsnt to be a member of 1 g eat
team tnt1re1ttd cand datu
should apply to Rocksprings Fie
hab Centtr 38759 Rocksprings
Road Pomeroy Ohio 45769
Equa Opponuntty Emptoyor

gotpcworttoom

17 An hour +loniiNI

•Pikllllllntng

370111'311

l

Top

110

Bualne11
Training

ClatHpollt Co- Colltgt
(ca...,. c- To Homo)
Ca TOday '74()-446...4367
1 8Q0-214-l)452
Reg 190-05 1270B

150

Schoola
Instruction

BLACKSTONE
PARALEGAL
STUDIES Compret'ltnslvl af
fordable Home Study lega train
ng Since 1890 Free catalog 1
800 828 9228 PO Bo• 701449
Oallaa TX 75370 or http 11
www bAaCkstonelaw.com

210

ONoroa Sl50
Bank. upiCy 1195

-$22!
Not do It yoursell k~l

IF YOU MUST WORK WORK
AT HOME! Bu lei your own sue
cesafu bualnesa Mall order/E
Commt ca $1000 $7000 PT/FT
F ae nformal on www FocusOn
FreedOm com 800-738 2~

CASH LOANS $2000 $5000
Conao dalton to $200 000 Bad/
No Cred t Credit Cards Mort
gag11 FtS Inc Tol FrH 1 888
_ , .... Ext 3622

EARN 'lOUR COLLEGE DEGREE
QUICKLY l:lachtlora MilletS
Doctorttt by correspondence
baaed upon prior education and
aho 1 study caurae For FREE In
formation booklet phone CAM
BRIDGE STATE UNIVERS TY 1
8()0.984 8316
High School Dlplome at Home
Stall L steel Private Schoo New
Unique Faat Program Fal ure
Proof lowesl Tu 1 on College
Guarantee Ca I Frae Nowt Free
srocnure 1 aoo-ss9 3997

160

Wanted To

Do

8&amp;8 Counttructlon Roofing
Sid ng f Concrete lpterlor &amp;!
Exterior Pa nt n~ All Pl\1..1 ot
Home Aepal a For A Free
Eat mate Call (304)87S 7738
After 5 pm
Georgee Portable Sawm I don I
haul your k&gt;QS to thl mill juat cal
304-875 1957

Will Powerwash Houses Trailers
And RV 1 Contact Ron At
(740)448-0151 or 339 09'0 11
No Answer l.llve Mllllgt
WI Flepalr Automobiles Farm
Tractors And Equlpmet11 In My
Garage Lowest Flatea In Town
Cal(7~)441-o199

Bualna11
Opportunity

$1 000 WEEKLY POSSIBLE
FROM Home Free web site No
ex per ence required Deta a
www waubmlt walworXalhome
$30 00 weekly MAlll NO 400
b achurea AT HOME! Guar
enlttd Free Supplee 1 aoo
283-3810 OlC1 1388 (24 hrJ)
1!05 par pari time wor"ng
with tfle Oo~ nment No experl
ence 1 BOD 1-'8 5'1'18 12-' hours}
•153
S750 $2000 WIOkly poll blo Un
mittel opportun ty FREE details
SASE NMG I 900 W Unlvorolty,
Sullo 6 PMB 23C Edinburg TK
78539-2865
INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommend&amp; that you cto bust
neat with people you know and
NOT to tend money througn tno
mall unt you have nvestigattd
tnaollerlng

ADVERTISING SPECIALITIES a
boom Industry! And one lhat can
STAY HOME/WORK ONLINE make you "0 000 $30 000 evtn
1500 $7000/month PTIFT Com 150 000 up from sa 11 of promo
plete Tra n ng Fret tnlormation t ona products to local business
www cre&amp;tlme com Toll Free 1 community plua Sl 000 up
monthly In overr des Top com
1188-873 3693
m 11lons advanced daly No col
lections no Inventory no dellve
Its No buslnesa investment A
WORK FROM HOME
rlak en opportun ly Full or part
time You CJIII the shola and set
$21 00. 115.0Giho: PTIFT
your own hours Ask far 1 ee
MoH0prospectus and 218 page com
1.-220-1813
petition 111 catalog Toll t ee
pnone support Our credtntlala
107 your&amp; con tl nuaua operat on
The Athant Melgt Educatlontl
O&amp;B rated 3A 1 For lnalant act on
Service Center it lfltking qui I
phone Linda Burbrlnk 1 800 B-42
tied cand dates for thl QOtitton of
0790 or wItt Kaesar &amp; Bla r Inc
Treature Appl ca11t• mutt poa
1111 a Treuurer 1 lictnll Oopl Pl01 4236 CrttaOm Or Oh
4SI03
IIIUtd by the Onlo Dept Of Ed\.1
cat on or tvldtnct that tucfl II
AI Sn ckors/York lltobl onod
o•nM can ba ODialned Experi
vend ng route W II " " In 3
onoo In ochool dlolrtot unlvorall)'
weeks Under I9K lnvtttment "
or govert1mtntalaccounUng de
quired
Great profit potential
III'IG bporlonoo 01 I chill lllcll
offloor profori'IG Appltconll muol Finance wth good ortdlt 881
.... 1ho obfllly to bt bondotl 488-4200
BEEA ORINKER•BEER tNVEB
lnd to I)!OOI1dt tnolr own lrlnopor
dttlon iluDmllllllor or lmoroat ro TORB PriVIII I lOCk 11111 NAI
sumt 3 reltrtncll ancs copy of OAO lotlng 100111 No minimum In
current Notl'lll 10 Jot'ln Conttan
ao. lutllrlrlltn&lt;lenl 801 AICI1tond Vlllmont WWWwtfbOOroom
Avonut 8u1t1 101 Atnono Onto EARN 1500 10 uoo per wook In
48701 Applloot on dud Ina to your b11hro bI I I 11PPirt 0 root
April e 11001 Tno AMEIC II lnd opporlunlly to uouro your Mutt
Opporlunl~ Employor/Pro
Low nvtolmont 1 100·272 0113
ow•-~• oom

=:''

\

Lot model c ea ance save up to
$8 625 w th anv nome check ua
out wer1 dealing Cots Mob le
Homes US 50 Eaat Altlens Oh
Must SaHI16•80
Maki 2 Poymont&amp; &amp; Move In!
1-8Q0-691-87n
New 14 ft wide $499 down only
$199 pa mon call now 1 BOO
891 6777

New double w de 3 br 2 ba
$998 oo dawn only $295 per
mon cal now 1 800-691-6n7
Now F Mtwood 14•70 $16 999 00
3 Bedroom 2 Bath 1 877 771
4170
New
F eetwood
16x80
$19,999 00 3 Bedroom 2 Batn 1
8n777-4170

330

NEED AN EARLY PAYDAY?? No
office vialt necessary Up to $500
ln&amp;tantly by phona 1 877 EAR
LYPAY L c t750005 1st AO
VANCE FRE£
No Faea/Se viet Cha ges In
Need ol Finane al Assistance?
P •••~Cal Uf Tplt ~"'' 1 888
813-8811 2olh
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unllas We Win
..--t-88tliill-ii58l!iiiloiii334iiii5

Afl,... _ _lngln
thla ne~'lpaper IIIUb)ecl to
tho F - Fair Houotng Act
or 111811 witten mllku ~ Illegal
to.ctYM~M•qp•fellfiCI
lfmltltlon Of dllcrlmlr1111on

baed 011 -

color religion
ooxllmlllat otatuoornottional
or1g1n or a n y - 10
mai&lt;l any IUCit prwlatwnoo
lmltltlon or dltortmfnotlon

Farm• for Sale

138 Acres In Harrison Township
(740)44H583
Farm House Beautlfulty Remo d
ad 2983 Square Feet 17 Acrtl
Pond In ground Pool Se\feral
Barna Garage Fru t Trlee C ose
To Hofztr $215000 (74Q~
4230

340

-••:I

l

Bualneaa and
BuildingS

310

~50 Loti

&amp; Acraage

1 &amp; 2 acre building ota sur
ytytd water &amp; t ectric available
sept c Pre approved doublewlde
acoopted S8 995 &amp; up 740-742
3114
3 Acre a Bottom of hill On right on
Rodman Ridge Ad (304)87S
6958

thll MWipaper

Homaa

for Sala

$0 DOWN HOMES! GOV T ~
BANK FORECLOSURES! LOI'j
OR NO MONEY DOWN! OK
CREDIT! FOR LISTINGS! CALL
1 B00-33B-oo20 ext san
I

L.ook ng To Buy A New Home?
Oont Haveltnd? We Colli Hurry
Only 10 LOla LOft 30ol 738-7295

360

1n4 Chaatnut By Owner Built In
1997 3 Bad oom Tax Abatement
Till 2013 $89 SOO 00 (740)4462914
2 Story Bilek Approxlmatttt 3400
Squa e Feet 1 112 Acres Full
Basement Saaulllul v fW Of Rlv
e Was $88 500 Reduced To
$89 500 By Appo ntment OlliY
(740)256-6172
3 Bedroom In Ga llpo Is Ferry
larQ~ lot Aaking $85 000 OBO
(»&gt;tf!175-5332 Or (304}e75-2899
Ene gy elf cent home 1 1/2 year
Old 3 BR w th wa k In c oael, Atl
rooms are large 1500 sq ~~~~ wnh
attached garaoe Central heat
and ar B exter or walla Thermospare doors and wlndowt t 114
teres proJ)erty Approx 1s miiH
south of Gall pols off SR 1-41
..
112 000 (740)37 9-2587
FORECLOSED GOV THOMES!
$0 OR LOW DOWN! TAX
REPO S &amp; BANKRUPTCI~II OK
CREDITI FOR LISTING CALL 1

I . ~800~50:-1_1777--:-""-118-1_3~:-Mt ve non Avenue 4 Bedroom
Hou11 New 1111 Furnace Ctntrl
A 1 lnttrior lilfawty Painted Nice
K tchen Ap&amp;JIIanott 8a1tment
Covtrod ~1110 Prloll 501
(30o1)882 2«1 (304)882 :MOe
MUll Booll fltlu®l 3 lldiOOIII 1
loin CA ~~ W/ flroiiiOI I
Lola Now ~ool ~11rfgora1or
Blovo OW Iorge a Cl! Giro~
llg Ylird Lorge ~ooml LOll 01
btru Roloootlng CM 01 11111
187 ODO Cofl (304)773 8484 or
(30oi)77W311

RaaiEatate
Wantacl

Rtal tlratt wanttd I am lorced
out or my houae for h ghway im
provement Lool&lt;lng for otd farm
Muse n Meigs County w lh
ICrtlgl Cl/1 740 797 8303 740
992 9132

$73 000 3 Badroom 1 1/2 Botn
Wood Floors Gas F replace
Garage 1 47 ~cru Muat Se•
(7~)388-9151

3 BA TraUt 1 81th On Route 1
North 1300/mo P u1 Deposit No
l'wl&amp; (740)367-(1811
Beaul fu A ver VIew Ideal For 1
Or 2 People References Deposit
No Ptta Foater Trailer Park ?40
441.0181
HouH
Tra ler
For
Rent
Below Gallpolia lackl On State
Route 7 South (740)441-D81&amp;

Mob 11 home in M nersv I e two
bedroom $300 + depos t a ull
lor 53000 &amp; $120 ot ent 814
87&amp;-1661
Apartment•
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apanmenll fur
nlahtd and unfurn shed aecurlty
depoe t requ red no J)eta 7-40
992 2218
1 Sed oom Efficiency Apartment
Porter Ottlo 1275 Plus Deposit
(740)367 7015
t Bedroom Near Holzer Econom
cat Gaa hill ng WID Hookup
$279 00 Plus Ut lltlla l.tne Oa
poatRoq~rtd(7~)441 1SI9
1 Bedroom Up1tairs Apartment
Cion Ta Wal Mart Utllitlea In
eluded 1375/mo Plus DIJIO&amp;It
(7.0)245-l!iSS
2 Apartments For Rent In Rio
Granda Walking 0 stance To
Co lege All Utilities Paid
(740)245-S100
720 Second Avenue 1 Bedroom
Upstairs Apartment $300 .oe
postt Waler Sewer T ash Paid
(740)441 5216 {Day) (740)4480101 (Evenings)
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDOET PRICES AT JACK
SON ESTATES 52 Westwood
Driva lrom 1297 lo $383 Walk to
sho~ &amp; moves Call 740 4-48
2588 Equal HOuetng Opponunlly
Chr ~~~ s Faml y Llv ng, 33140
Now Uma Rd Rutland OhiO 740742 7403 Apartment home and
trailer renta a Commercial atore
fronta avatlable lor 11111 Vacan
clesnow
For rent on• bedroom furnished
apartment In Middleport cal 7-40

982 S231

4839

OUr--

11EI\L [SlAlf

2 Bedroom AI G anwood Haa
Stove &amp; Refr gerator Section 8
ApprOYtCI (30oi)S7!-9991

Gallla Mano Apartments Now
Acctpttng App lcaUona For 1 BA
HUO Sub&amp; dlttd Aponmema For
E de ly And Handicapped Equal
Housing Oppo tunl!y (140)448

which lltn vfola1fon or tho

~~-...11111111111111111111111111111111111

,_II

Downtown Olnce And Or Apart
rpent Bu ding Off Street Partdng
A Good Investment Prope ty Thai
WI I Pay Fo !tao I Dey {740)..8INIS5 Evening {7~)24S 5252

taw
heroby
tnrormocllltolall-ngt
opportu11ty bull

14x7D 2 Bedroom 2 Bath So400I
mo 1400 Depo1lt 1 Year Con
tract F nanc el And Ptnonal Rtl
t anCIII No
(7o40)38$-137fi

Furnlthed 2 &amp; 3 Room Apart
manls Clean No Peta No Smok
ng References a Depot I Fie
qulrad
Ut llllt1 Furn thld
(740)44HS19

--.-ror...,_
art avdlblt on an.~

1••70 2 Ba&lt;troom 2 Balli
In Crown City; 13001 mo PIUI
Dopo.. (7~)258-111811

Church Building with Pa aonage
far sala located n Pont Pleasant
Good Neighborttood Reduced
$65 000 (30ol)675-1616

Thill niWIP'pef wtH not
kuawtngly accop1

~In

(7~)258-1()14

440

Creel I Problems? CALl THE
CREDIT EKPERTS LICENSED/
BONDED CORRECT/REMOVE
BAD CREDIT BANKRUPTCY
LAWSU TS
JUDGEMENTS
AAA RAT NG 1 888-811.o902

f INANCIAI

210

Factory Goof 32x80 $10 000 Dis
count only 11000 00 Down De
livery and setup paid by Facto y
1 BOQ.69H7n

CONSOLIDATE YOUR WAY
OUT OF DEBTI Reduce montl'lly
payments Pay ona b 1month
EASY to get started F nancia
Freedom Ch s1 an Counseling
800 84 t 9757
ext
CC3
www clebtccs org (Non-Prof t)

Opening In My Country Homo For
Senior Malt Or Female Need ng
Autllld Uv ng (7~)388-011 a
Ouallty houae cleanings The
Best BOnded Profeulona At 1
able call even nga (740)256
1131 or 1 898 781 2412 email
doublldeeurtkanat com

Double Wktel Only $28 900 001
28K52 Free De Ivery &amp; Set
HISB-928 9898

$$$ NEED CASH?? WE pay
cash to rema nlng payments on
Property ~ldl Mortgages! Annul
Ileal San emental Immediate
Ouotesl!l NoboQy beata our p ic
es Na lonal Contract Buyers
{800) 490 0731 ut 101 www na
Honalcrmlractbuytrs com

BLACKSTONE
PARALEGAL
STUDIES Home Study Ap
proved Aflordabfe comp ehtn
a.lve legal Ira ning 1 nee 1890
FREE Catalog 800 828 9228
Wrilt PO Box 701449 Dills TX
75370 NA or http 1/www blackalo
netawcom

14x60 Electric Heat AC 2 Bedroom WfD Stove Reflreraa no
Pets Fleferenctl $900/mo

Brand new Qakwood hOme three
be&lt;room two bath includes sl'ttd
closed n porch Take ova pay
mentl 1353/mo. Must be moved
Must se 7-40.985-4112 anyllme

$1 NEED A LOAN? 1i y debt con
10 ldatlonl Cut paymen1s up to
SO% Same day approva I 1 877
769-8168

IFREE CASH NOW$ from
wealthy lam es un oad ng milliona
of dollars to hi p m nlmize tt~elr
ttxea Write Immediately Wind
fat I 3010 W LSHIRE BLVD
088 LOS ANGELS CALIFOR
NIA 90010

888 928 3428

(7~)446-11862

Proleaalonal
sarvlcea

Mobile Homes
lor Rant

1/4 Mile Out 218 3 Bedroom 2
Bath (7~)-M6-7322

1995 scnult 16x80 13 Bedroom
2 Bam
Snorp Homo $21 !00
Kanuaga Mob Ia Home Salts

Start You Bualness Today
Pr me Shopping Center Space
Ava tab t At Alforctablt Rate
Spr ng va ley P aza ca 17.w 44&amp;0tOt

420

14x70 SotJtntrn Dleam free Oe
Ivery fre1 Setup only $9995 1

1994 F eetwood Mobile Home
llk.e New Some Appliances And
Moe Ext as Included $13 000
Of 080 (700)388-0369

MEDICAL B lUNG Un m ted In
come potential No expa anct
neceuary Free tnformalion &amp;
CD-ROM lnvastmanl from $2495
F nancing ava lab 1 (800) 322
1139 EXT 050 www buslnus
startup com

230

Mobile Homea
for &amp;ale

t99t Mob 1e Home 2 Bed oom 1
Bath Stove Relrlge ator Back
Porcn 8x12toot Very GoOd Can
dHIOn Moko Oflor {700)4411-.4809
Ask ForJ m

CALL 1-8()0.263-0503
FREE lnlol'ma.tiOn
Bonkr\.I)!Cy 11/a TI!.I&lt;Y

BLACKSTONE
PARALEGAL
STUDIES Comprehenaln af
fordable Home Study legal Ira n
ng Since 18~0 FrH catalog 1
800 826 11228 P0 Bo• 701.49
Dallao TX 7S370 or nnp II

wwwbfockltonollw.com

320

Bualnaaa
Opportunity

RENTALS

410

HOUIIS tor Rant

1 3 Bedrooms Foreclosed
Homes From StiMUMo 4% Down
30 Vtara at 8 5% APR For l st
lng~ SQ0-319-3323 ExL 1709
2 br house WI full basement
$385 00 a monlh + $280 00 dl
posit In Po nt Pleasant 304 875
44e9
4 Bedroom House In Rio G111ncle
(7~)2.5-6858

House For Rent B elwell Ohio 3
Bed ooma 2 Bath&amp; SSSOimo
Pius All Utilltlts Stcu Hy Otpoalt
$550 (513)704 9703 Allor
530pm
Golllpolla 7SO 3rd Ava $180
Month 1 BR 1 Bath Frame
HouH Gaa Heat No Pall Wee
kondo/ Nighta. (7~)oM6-8814
Gallpola 752 3rd Avenue $375
Manltl 3 Bedroom 1 Bath Frame
Hou" Gas Heat No Pets WH
kondl Nlghta (7~)44e-8814
Hou11 for rent In Rut 1nd cell
740 742 2811
Newly Carpeted 2 Bedroom un
turnlthtd Home Wllh Garage
Golltpo 1 Aroo Dopooll And Rtl
· - No 1'111 (7~)oM6-8114
II at Program l'lenttrl NHdtd
{304)731-71H
,!lot 'ro&amp;em Rontero Noodld
304711lmofl 1 lldroom 1410 Lowlo
lirtt1 f'olnt ''tlllnt UeO/mo
teO I&gt;IPOIII Clll Allar 5pm
(3041111 3a11

Gracloua lYing 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at Vii agl Manor and
R vera ~ Apartments In Middle
port From $278 $3-48 Call 740
992 508• Equal Housing Oppor

For Sale Recond t onect wuh
1 1 drytra and tfrlgeretors
Thompaona App lanca 340?
-.on Avonuo (304)675-7388
OOOD USED APP.LIANCES
Washt a d yera rt l Qeratora
ranges Skaggs Appliances 78
VIne Street Ca I 740 448 7398
1 886 818.0128
Moliohln Ca pets &amp; Fu nlture
New 2 piece l vlng oom Suite
1299 Recline $189 Se 1 On
Corpot In StOCk 200 car'&lt; Cnope
Rood Ponor OhiO {7~)388.0173
Me n St 111 Furf11tuf1
(300)675
S16 Main Strool Pont Ptoaunt

,.22

New 6 Ulld Furnilu 1
New 2 P tCI Living oom Su t11
$399 Buy So lllldo
One Comp ate Bedroom Suite
$200 Wooden Wardrobe S!O
Be S25 Storoo UO Tab 1 UO
EIICU C Typewriter 125 Wh te
Cablnot S2~ (7~)441-D853

Whirlpool waa~er S9~ Elect lc
Range Si&amp; Ffottfret Ratr gerator
S1150 Freezer .150 N ce W11tt
tr &amp; Orver Set 1300 A I Ap
pllancea Guarantlld Skaggs
Appllanctl 7e Vine Strttl
(7~)-7398

520

Sporting
Good

a

Buy or 11 I R ver ne Antiques
112-4 East Man on SFI124 E Po
moroy 740-992 2528 or 740 992
1539 Fluu Moore owner

540

Mlacallanaoue
Merchandlae

1 Wh te Ia and W th P um
ColOred Top 1150 1 Sma B own
Desk $25 1 Super 5 ngle Wa
terbed $50 1 K ng Size Wa
1erbtd Needs Mattress $50 2
Cei ng Fans $20 A P tee
(304)882 314t
1999 Plymouth Van CKC Rack
Russell Terre Call (30.. )675
3727
3 STEEL BU LDINGS 24&gt;30
was S7 900 •• t $3 400 40x48
was $10 900 atll ss 200 50•120
was $21 900 sal $11 900 Never
PUI Up! Can Deliver Tom 1 {800)
392-7803

COMPUTERS WE FINANCE
DELL COMPUTERS! Evon wlln
lSI than perfect creel t 1 800
477 9018 Code AC7 www ame
solutions com
DIFIECTV free nsta iltlon $200
.... boCk SQ0-283-2840
EKerciae 8 ke $100 Zenith 18
8 ack &amp; White Telev s on
{304)892 2702

Now Taking Applications- 35
West 2 Bedroom Tawnnouee
Apartmentt lncludet Water
Sowago Truh S3501Mo 740

(7~}441-1982

3 Room Upsta rs Apt One Bed
room At est Second Avenu•
Gall J)OUa Oapoalt Required Sl•
Months Leaae Ut 111111 Not In
eluded e~~:cept Water Call Oebblt
or Judy AI (?40)448-7323 (L
brary) To Set Up An Appoint
ment

460

Space for Rant

Downtown Second Avenue Nta
Courthau11 And C ty Building
Nicely Decorated AIC 3 Roome
lulldlno By ltulf 448 2nd Ave
(7~)4141 11!138

470

Wantacl to Rant

Chr 1111n couple looking for
rtauae to rent no pttl no IlliCit
Jim 740-IH-3111

Block b ck ttwer pipes wind
awe llnttll etc Claude W nters
A o Grandt OH Call 740 245
5121

(7~)388-

560

Pets lor Sale

MOBILE HOME OWNERS
Hu~ Inventory D acount P ICtl
On VInyl Skirting, Door&amp; Wind
owe ~ncttore Water Heater•
Pltlmblng &amp; E ootr cof Porto Fur
nacta &amp; Hilt Pumpt Benn1t11
Molltfo Homo Supply, 740 44e
11411- orvti

-noll

Now I Ulld eltctrlo And Gu
Furnoooo For 8111 Clll For Stz
II
lnttllllllon
AVIIIIbll
1_,_
(7~)oM6-8308

NIW AND USID ITIIL 81011
&amp;ooml ,lpt lle"'r tlor Conorolo
Angle cnannor Fill lor 11111
Qrotrno For Drolno.. Orlvowoyo &amp;
Wlliworo LAL oorop Mot111

1740~7100

NIW IA~ND NAMI OOM,U~
IAI Almoot ovoryono opprovod
wllh 10 tlownl Low monthly lilY
monto11100-et7ll47111d iliiO
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NMrll-'11

u

Green Sundanot Duster
85 ooo Mi es ve A r Auto
$2700 080 (7~)258-1233

live vs Auto Sales 1988 Ford
Esco t s w ssoo 1988 o ds
Cut an Cie a $1200 1982 Me
cu y Lynx SW $o450 1986 Me
cu y Cougar $1400 1994 Me
cury Topaz S1800 1989 Ponllac
G and Am 11 tOO 1~90 Oldl Cut
l08 Ctea S1200 1986 Ocls Do
Ia 88 $900 1993 Mercury Topaz
$1800 Call Monday Th u Fr day
'ooam s OOpm (740)388-9003

720

Trucke for &amp;ala

1977 Foret 3/4 Ton 380 Motor
Runs Good Needa Tranam as an
(100)olo46-451S

s

1991 cnovy
to pick up 2
wnoal drtvo 97 000 m •• 4 r:y 5
sp t rea &amp; shocks 1 yr o d fiber
01111 toppar new pi nt $3500
740-992-7789
1995 GMC Sonoma 88 000
AM FM Caaaatte 5
Spoad $3200 OBO 1740)258
894S
M 11

Ford Explorer 2 Door Sport
83000 M •• $11900
(740)379-2797

mo
aa t

4

old CKC rtglttered mate\
&amp; pt.J!ptr
min ature
Scltnauzor $300 304 n:l-5842

1999 Ford F 150 Suparcab 2WO
V 8 4 door bod cop tO 000
miles vory n~e 740-992 2679

AKC German Shepherd Pupplea:
Solid Whitt And Sllve I Sables~
Exeat ant
Temperment AnT
Slrucluro 1?~)245-5408

89 F ISO KLT Lar ...t P U Lotd
ed H gh M lea Body E~~:cal ent
Shape Must See To Apprec ate

1.

Aeg attrtd Duttoundt a W••
Old Pupa Sho~ And Long Hal
(30ol)773-5788

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVE';TQCK

610

Farm Equipment'

John Deere Model 331!1 Baler
W re Tie Fltld Ready $2!500
(30ol)875 ~724
New Holland 489 9ft Hayblna
new Holland 320 Square Ba er
A C 14fl Fold ng Dlak A In E:1
cenent Cond 110n (740)245-581 !5

630

5 Year 010 Appa aosa Gulltlng
Good Trai Horae 5 Year Oltj Pa
1 otino Gu lllng 3 Year Old "P~re
Ha" Pa nt &amp; Ha f Arabian 8rown
Whita (740)3811-8358

Hay

$2000

(7~)4-741

93 Chevy s 10 Standard l ; ; ;
Good Runs Good Must See To
Appraclato $4000 (740)245
9S95
94 GMC Extencsed Cab 2 wntt
Or ve loaded 305 Auto Over
d i¥e Short Bed $8895 92 S
.... erada Short Bed V6 Auto
Overctr ~ loaded $6600 Daya
{740)24!5 5080
Evtnlngt
(7~)882 7S12

730

Vans

&amp; 4-WDs

1989 Chevy Astr' Van $2500
ca 1740)448-3-437 Or (740)4481837
1989 Fa cl Conversion van TVI
VCR rear a back seat fo da nlo
bed lOw ng package 73 100 orlg'
nat miles very c ean $5795 740
742 8200

Eastem

1997 red Tacke 4K4 automat c
a r CD 25 000 m es excellent
cond lion ca 740 992 esoo ana

from PlpBl

Spm

Livestock

1998 Chevy Z 71 4x4 Si verado
Complete y loaded 60 000 Mi es
$19 900 (740)388 8375 Alto
7pm

of confidence 111 the kids
that they feel the same way
Our first year here we made
to the sectional finals Last
year we made 11 to the distrtct
finals Maybe we broke JUSt a
little bit of tee those two years
and we know what s gmng to
happen now
I beheve expenence IS the
best teacher and we ve got

85 Jeep Cherokee Wagon Good
Condn on (300)875 5162

740

Motorcycles

1981 Har ay Davidson Super
G Ide 1340 cc Law Miles
( 16 009) fled/ ·" Black Loll 01
Eicuas S7500 (74U)4'4fl'.79'12

&amp; GralnJ-;:,

Ear corn for sa e $2 50 bu&amp;ht
985-3347

7~

F r&amp;t &amp; Second Cut Orchard
Grass Round Bau $1200
(7~)448-7787

Hay for aa e square balaa $1 25
1 mila on Fit 2 N 304 675-4869r-:
Hay For Sale -45 Round B~~~~
And 250 Square Sa 11 "'all
(740)446-0115 or (740)446
7843 Allor 8 OOpm
Hay Far Sale Round And Sq&lt;81 t
Balas Alfa fa &amp; Orchard Grass
{7~)245-581 s
Hoy Fo Salo LOrge Round
S11 Par Ba e You

~~~
H~u~

{7~)-M6-9185

Square ba 11 go~d mixed ha
atcred In Letart Fa Ia need t
movo 740-992-7288
I
Hoy &amp; Br gnt Wtro To Slraw ~
Flound Deliva 'I &amp; Volume 0 •
count Aval able Her tage Far
(30ol)675 5724

expenencc now
1999 400EX Great Shape New
Tires $3750 (740)448-1827

750

Boats &amp; Motors
for Sal11

97 Kawasak STX1100 Jet Sk
with traltr for sa e $4000 cal
740-992 5011
18 Sea Nymph Baas Boat 70HP
Johnson Motor Exce lent Cond
uon $2900 (740)245 9430 Aile;
800pm
1989 SyWan Bass Boal 17 Foot
Alum num Wl1h 88 Horsepowe
Evln Rude Motor Wo ka We I n
R \ftr Or Lakes For Bass 0
c"""" 1740) 388-1358

790

Campara &amp;
Motor Home•

1999 Bantan Tra ghl Sleeps e
Loaded (30ol)675-6393

Ful~

SEI!VICES

taU

Independent Herbal le Distributor
Call For Product Or Opportun ty

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Rapalrld New &amp; Rebu H tn Stock
Cal Ron Evans. 1-8()0.537 9S28

pomu off th.e bench all m
the first hal£
Steve Esterkamp gave us a
b1g b•g lift offenSively m the
first halt: Hunter md He
got hot and we fed off h1m a
little b1t
Esterkamp hit 2-of-3 3pmnters and was 7-for-10
overall from the field
Senior Anthony Jones also
netted a double-double hu
second of the season sconng
16 pomts and grabbmg I 0
rebounds
Fellow sen11Jr
Duson Ford fimshed wnh 11
pomts on 4-of-5 shootmg
from the field
Our two semor guards
really
were
very sohd
tomght Hunter md Both
had good stat hnes and both
played well at both ends of
the floor
Jumor Patnck Flomo had
I 0 pomts five rebounds and
five blocked shots Flomo
now has 95 blocked shou thiS
season
The Bobcats (18-1 0) led
49 39 at the half as Hunter
Jones and Esterkamp combined for 38 pomts The Bobcats established ownershtp of
the patnt With Hunter scoring
down low and Jones breaking
down the Buffalo defense off
the dnbble
Jones htt a short Jumper
wtth 2 58 left m the half to
spark an 8-4 run for Oh10
Etserkamp also scored on a
Jumper and hit two foul shots
wtth 35 seconds left Jones

~Speed

640

Grubb 1 P ana- Tuning &amp; Repairs
Probtomo? Need Tuned? Coli Tho
P ano Dr 7&lt;10-«8-1525

8879

Building
Supplies

Big 1cretn TV T•k• on email
monthly ptyment1 Good eric!
II required Phone 1 800 718
1167

North Third Middleport one bod
room tum st'lld apartment &amp; ~•
bedroom unfurnished apanment
depot 1 &amp; references no pets
7&lt;10-992.0185

1Win RtvarTowora nowiCOif)lfng
oppllcationolor I BR
HUO sublldlztd 11111 ror akltrfy
and dllabled EOH (300)875-

550

Potomlno Stolffan
Reg AQHA 1998
t S'3' H H World Champion '"l
presalvo Blood! no NIN Wasle[n
Plntura Hatter Barrels. Starii;t~Stud Fee SileO 1*')8f.S

GIVE THE BEAUTY of ovor twin
tv vartettes of Oregon Oah 11 to
your fr ancft ram ly yourall VlsM
us onnpi{Www orogonctanllo corn

Tara Townhouae Apa tmenta
Very Spacious 2 Bedrooms 2
FlOors CA 1 112 Batn Fuly Cor
paled Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool
Pal o Sta 1 S36S1Mo No P111
Lease Plu• Saourfly Deposit Re
qu rod OoYf 740 44e 348l
Evanlngs 740 Je7 0502 740
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AUTOS FROM ISS 00
Po Ice Impounds &amp; Rep oal
Toyotas Chevy s Jeapsl Pleaae
Ca For l stings 1 800 451 0500
Exl C9817

Nice F rat Floor Downtown Apart
mant W th Otf Sti'HI Park ng Day
{740)448-0865
Evontng
(740)245-5252

One Bedroom Apartment On 111
AvenUe Gallipolis Washer/ Dry
er Hook up $270/mo Plut Ot
posl Water Pilei {740)448-4043
Aftare 00pm

WHITE 8 METAL DETECTOR 8
Ron AI iaon 588 Watton Road
Btdw1 I Oh o 05814 (700)448-

Large Co tection of Antique Poclt
et Watchea Good Cond tion 422
2nd Avo pnono (740)4o18-t8t5

FireWOOd For Sae
8927 (7~)388-9284

IH!IISS

Waterline Special 314 200 PSI
$21 86 Per 100 1 200 PSI
$37 oo Per 100 All Brau Com
preuk&gt;n Fitting&amp; In Stock
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
J-.n 0!110 1 8QO-S37 9528

Poodle puppiea black femala&amp;J,
t ny toy teacups AKC 8 weakst
shcta &amp; wormed 740-667 3404

Antiques

Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment
Phone (7~)448-0380

Ona bedroom opartrnont &amp; 3 bodroom moblo homo no 7&lt;10-

Sawm $3 791!1 New Super Lum
bermale 2000 arger capac Ilea
mort opt ons manufacturer of
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AKC German Sheppard Pup~
Top Bloodl nea La ge Breadl
$175 (304)875-~724
r

1un111oa

On Bad com Apartment In
Gallipolis $250 Per Month Plus
Oepaoit Call{7~)448-2~

Tappan HI Efficiency ~0% Qaa
Furnaces Oil Fu nac.a 12 Stir
Heat Pump a Air Cond tlonlng
Syattms Free 1 Year w•rr•nty
Bennetts Heal ng I Cooling f
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nets Cal Danny Oewhurs
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11811

Home
lmprovamanta

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional I fetime guarantee
Local references furnished Ea
tab &amp;nod 1975 Col 24 Hrl (740)
448 0870 1 800 287 0578 Roo
era Waterproof rtQ

1til Aod Ford Tempo Good
Conti liOn (7~!«HH10

~·· donllol or commtrolol w ring
K*w 11rv cs br rt~a ra Matter Ll
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~llctrloll WVOOD30e 304 178

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WITH THE

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110 Help Wanted

111111 Ponl oo Bonnlovtllo SSE
sunroof Auto Loodod 14800
(304)175 2el3
Allor 4pm
(304)671-332•
11198 Ford lB rd LX OldOd Ill
option&amp; V 8 28 MPG 51 000
MIIOI uklng poyoll HO 1411

:1221
CARS S2tiMONTHI
POUNDS &amp; REPO
CHEVY 24 MO S I
LI~~G~ CALL
17
981•

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Llvlnoaton 1 aaumtnt Wster
Proonng al baument repalre
done free 111 m1tt1 ltet m1
'QIUirtnttl 14yra on Job upe
once (30oi)He :IH7

840

8811

17481
12·2155

The Eagles (18 3) opened
the season wtth a 3-3 mark
droppmg games to Hocking
D1vmon foes 1hmble Waterford and Federal Hocking
However smce a 57-531oss
to the Lancers Eastern has
turned up the heat a notch or
two and along the way
avenged all three early season
defeats mcluding a 62 47 diS
manthng ofTnmble 111 the last
game of the: season to earn a
p1ece of the Hocking D1v1
s1on crown
Thmgs dtdn t really go our
way early m the year but boy
they have really progressed
from where they were In the
beg~nnmg Caldwell satd
In Portsmouth Em Caldwell sees a team similar to
Tnmble or Southern Wlth
very qu1ck guards and good
all around athletes Three of
the Tartans top four scorers

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11 Dodge 8101111 ES 280H~
5 BPIICf Clolion CO ~toyer T m
Auno Grool 141115 (U0)245e7t7

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ended the sco rmg wt th
another JUmper as nme ran
out
I thought we fimshed the
La,t th'l;• mmutes of the half
wry well and gave ourselves a
double-digit lead at the half
Huntermd
Ohto held off a charge by
Buffalo early m the second
half wh1ch saw the Bulls cut
the gap to 53-47 wtth 17 40
left to play However the
Bobcats r:1n the~r lead to 16
pomts over the next SIX nunutes With a 15 5 run
The Bulls never got any
closer than 15 pomts for the
remamder of the game as the
Bobcats upped the defenSive
pressure and continued to
pound the ball mstde
Buffalo (4 24) hu JUSt 3 of
8 3 pmnt shots m the second
half after htmng 6 of. 10 m
the first 20 nunutes Addti!On
all}l the Bobcat! outrebound
ed the Bulls 24 11 m the second half and fi111Shed W&gt;th a
44-25 advantage on the
boards overall
In the second hal( we hm
!ted thcrr 3s Hunter sard
(Gabt) Cagwm got two 3s
late but the game was pretty
well over by then
Lou1s Campbell scored 22
poum to lead Buffalo He was
6-for-14 from the field
mcludtng 3 for 5 from 3
pmnt range
Jason Robmson added 19
and Danuen Foster and and
Robert Brown had 11 each
for the Bulls who haven t
won a postseason game smce
the 1997-98 season when
they were members of the
Mtd Contment Conference

Oerry Jordan Lennon Brown
John Parker) transferred from
Portsmouth H1gh School m
the offseason and the mflux of
new talent has defimtely been
a plus for East
Portsmouth East IS a very
talented club Caldwell sa1d
Theyve got some rremen
dous athletes and we know
11 s gomg to be a tremendous
game
Our ki&lt;l•
looking for
ward to It Caldwell added
They ve spent a lot of ttme
m the gym all summer and
played a lot of basketball thrs
summer and had a great con
dit10mng 111 the fall
Portsmouth East (13 8) has
made ItS hv1ng from the
penmeter thiS season w1th
Jordan Ryan McGraw and
Brown all shootmg 40 per
cent or better from 3 potnt
range Jordan who averages
18 potnts per game has lut 4?
percent from the field
McGraw and Brown are nght
at 40 percent
Eastern hopes to cotltam
the Tartan shooters while
estabhshmg ItS presence •ns1de
With the hkes of semors Matt
Stmpson Joe Brown and
Chad Nelson and sophomore
Brent Buckley
That s one thmg we ve
really stressed Caldwell said
The game of basketball IS a
game of miSmatches And
what were trymg to do IS
work that to our advantage

=

B3

The Bobcats will face Tole
do Ill the MAC quarterfinals
at 2 p m Thursday tn Cleve
land The Rockets (21 9)
defeated Eastern Mtchigan
67-43
In rherr only meeong th•s
season the Bobcats lost to the
Rockets 66 53 m Toledo
They ve got some good
overall srze Hunter md of
Toledo
They re
well
coached They play great
defense and they re good
offenSively
Were gomg to cake a vote
tomorrow (Tuesday) and see
1f our guys want to go up
there Hunter JOked
Notes Dusun Ford made
hiS 1OOth career start for Oh10
Monday and moved to No 8
on the Bobcats all Orne asmt
hst With three assms aga t 1St
Buffalo Ford now has 308
career ass1sts one less tha 1 h1s
brother Geno who rs an ass s
tant coach for the Bobcats
Patnck Flomo needs Jl st four
blocked shots to become
Oh10 s and the MAC s all
tune leader m blocks He has
95 thiS season lncludmg last
mght Flomo has blocked five
or more shots m I 0 games
thiS season
The Bobcats
unproved to II I at home
With the wm thetr best home
rtcord smce the 1994 95 sea
son when Ohio went 14 I at
the Convo
The Bobcats
scored 100 pomts m a game
for the first t1me smce Nov
28 1998 a span of 88 games
when Ohro netted 100
agamst W•lmmgto n m the
season opener that year

Matts a pretty btg kid Joe s a
pretty b1g kid and Chad Nel
sons a pretty b1g ktd and
Brent Buckley IS a b1g kid
One of thmgs were trymg to
do IS stress m11de then go
outside
Caldwell also hopes to take
advantage of hiS clubs depth
One of the thmgs that we
thmk that we nught be able
to do 1s uttbze our bench over
the!t lJench becau•e they
only hke to play SIX or seven
kids Caldwell !aid We II
run seven to etght k1ds tn
agamst them
Common opponents for
the Eagles and Tartans mclude
South Galha and Ironton St
Joe Both dubs own convmc
mg wms over the Rebds and
Flyers
Eastern defeated South
Gallia 82 41 a 1d had 10 trou
ble with the Flyers 111 the sec
uonal champ1onslup vtn
mng 76-37
Portsmouth East defeated
the Rebels and Flyers twiCe
dunng the regular season
Including 1ts 68 6S over
tune w1n 10 the sec tional
tournament over North
Adams Portsmouth East has
won three stmght and srx of
1ts last seven
Game nme " set for 6 15
p m Wednesday at the Convo
m Athens

110 Help W.nted

Unlveralty of Rio Grande/Rio Grande
Community College Cro11roada
Program Ia accepting appllcatlona for
Ita' Youth Employment Servlcll (YES)
Program. Participating youth, ag11
11-21 y11ra, will receive •8.15 per
hour for up to 120 houre of paid work
experience at public and/or private
work11t11 In Melga County.
VII jllriiOifllnll Will I'IOIIVI oompnhlntiVt 11-lmtnl
employmtnt rtiCilntll training, and aHIIIInotiO nnd
fullotlmt ptrmlntnl lmploynttnt, t1 part oltht overall
work Ufllrl•noe progrtm

High IOhoolltudtnll oolfttt atlllltnll tnd our of work
yau111 .,. -llgiCIIO apply Applloanta muot btl
111111 County rtlldtnll 1111 1•21 YHII tncl m111
WOI1ttofo1 lnveetment Aot tllglblllty requirement•
To apply, vltlt lilt Unfvtralty ol Rio Grando/Crouroodo
Olltat 11110 IIIH ltrttt Mlddltport Ohio (olllct Uflllalrt)
oroel tol00oall·7201,txt71M ortn-142018827004
'1'1111 W1A ltrvlot It fundiC! by lht UBOOL through th1
Ohio DJ,. end lht Mtltl County DtPirlmtnt ol Job ond
l'tmllr llt'VICII

Thafamfly
or
Donna VanMeter
would
like
to
thank frlanda and
fllmfly and her
ol•eamat•• tor all
the praytl'l, food,

oarda

tlowera,

wife,

C•lvery

and
aur,port
during h•r II n•••
and her d11th A
epeofaf thank• tor
Aev
Charfea
MoKanala
lnd

Pilgrim
Churoh
Cheater
Method tat
Church
Dorothy
Karr organlat anet
Opal
Etohenger,
Inez Nevell •na
Cleo Smfth tor
helping with •II
th• food •tt•r the
aervloe
a big
th•nt&lt;el

'

�Tuuctay,

March Sr

2001

Pep 8 2 • The Dlilly Sentinel

140

510

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Have fun meet ng el 1;1 b e singles
In your area Ca for mo e lntor
mat on 1 800 ROMANCE Ill
1736

30

Announcement•

Looking For Romance Or Juat
A Frtond? 1-I00-32N220 Ed.
8282 S2 99 Per m nute Must Be
18 Yea a Old Se v U (819)845
8434
New To You Thrift Shoppe
9 West Stimson Athens

740 592 1842
Oualty c oth ng and household
Items $1 00 bag sala every
Thursday Monday th u Saturday

9 Q0-800

40

Giveaway

Free Mixed Bread Pupp es
(30oi)895-~S

Free gray &amp; wh te ong haired

cat 70-992-8882

60

Lost and Found

FOUND Young Mo a Bobtail
Weimaraner Dog Sandy/ Grey
Mix Beaut ful Fr endly Starv ng
Wanla tnolclo (7~)-M6-2317

70

Yard Slla

80

Auction
and Flaa Market

AUCTION Every Saturdoy 8pm
Truckloads or New &amp; Used ltema
From Severa Stattl Se lng To
The Pub c &amp; Dealer• One P ece
Dozens &amp; Call L.ols Gary
Bowen Aucllan11r Proctorv tie
Oh o Flea Market Ju11 Acran
Huntln~ton
WV 311t Strttt
Brldgo (7~)1188-22e8
Rick Pear•on Auct on Company
full I me auctioneer complete
aucllon
atrvlce
licensed
tee Ohio &amp; West Vlrg nla 304
n:~-~ns OJ n:l-!1447
Alveralde Auction Barn Sale
Every Saturday Night at l!lp m
Auct oneer Raymond Johnson
(7.0)2!!8-41919

90

Wanted to Buy

Abto ute Top Dollar U S Silver
Oolcl Colno Proolloto Dtamondo,
Gold Ring&amp; U S Currency
M T S Coin Shop 151 Second
Gaflipofll 7o40-+48-2842

'I

Pint Potta Wanted 11 30 To
12 30 For More Information Call
(7.0)441.-G

EI,1PI OY1.1UH
'&gt;FRVICES

I

110

Help Wanted

Dotter (304)675-

DATA ENTRY 545 000/yr poten
t a Need Sell starters wno re
quirt no auperv sion Fu Tra n
Set Own Hours Computer wf
mOdem requ reel Ca To I FrH 1
888 523-4417 IX1 864

no

Or vers YOUR SEARCH IS
OVEFII Need a stable luture and
hOme time w th your family? Join
our w nn ng regional flalbecl tuml
Tandem Tranaport Cor,~ 800
l!i19057Eid 1~wwwtandcom
D Ivers P A M Trantport No ••
PI ence needed 2 week COL
tra nlng $34 OOOiyr year p ua full
benefits a paid train ng OrNer&amp;
based In Midwest 1 877 230
8002 Sunday &amp;am 4pm MondAy'
7am-Bpm l\Je-Frl7am-4pm
EARN $25 000 TO SeO 000/yr
Medkal tn1urance Bill ng Nnd
ect lmmtd..telyl Home computer
needed FREE Internet 1 800
291-4883 OtpU 109
EASY WORK! Oreal Pay! Earn

$500 Plul a Week Atllmbllng
PrOdUCII It Home No Experience
Necessary Cal Toll Free 1 800
267 3944 x138
EXAM INFORMATION
lor
Poltal Jal:ls 118 35+1 hr Bene
f to/Penolon 1 888 728 9083
x1701 7am-7pmCST
Exper enced Automotive Counter
Sale&amp; Perton Sind Resumes To
PC2o4 200 Ma n 51 eet Point
Pleasant wv 25ei50
FINALLY A LEGITIMATE HOME
BUSINESS! Become o n~n~ pokl
egal or medical 1ranscrlblr cod
ar or b Iter In as liltle as 10
weeks F nanclng billable medl
tee com 1477 33S-o4072
Full Time Logistics Clerk Dullea
Include Ordering Fltctlvlng
Stocking Pocking And Shipping
Suppl H Coord noting fD Bodgoo
And Unllorm Vouct'ltrl And
General Office Dutil&amp; General
Computer Knowledge R1qulred
EMT A Certification Preferred
Send Reaume To SEOEMS PO
Box 527 Ker Ohio 45e43 By
Mlrch 1. 2001
FULLER BRUSH CO It lOOking lor
peop 1 who would I kt to 1t1rt
the r own bua&amp;nlll working from
homo NO INVESTMENT notdtd
Limited t me on!~ Call 800 882
7270 emallfullerrtnOaol com
Government Jobt 111 00
$33 oo per tlour potential Paid
Tra ning/Full Benellta For more
lnformat on csl call 1 a.. e7-4
9150 Old 3234
GROWING BUSINESS NEEDS
HELPI 1 Work from home/ mall
oreder/E Commerce 1522+/wuk
PT SIOQ0-54000/wk FT 800 1121

8S38wwwdroom2bfroocorn

Ho p wonlld In odu• fi'OilP homo
day ond nlgnt ohll~ coli 7•0 1192
!023
lnfoCIIIon bpondlng
fn Golllpoll1

We Alw Lool! ng For Elfoctlvo
Communicators To Mokt Colli
For Major Nallonal CMotlon
Organfzat ono P eoervlng
Fom&lt;tyvatuot
We Offer:
•Modlcollnd Dental
0401K
•Pilei Voi:ltlon/ Polcl Holldoyo
tWIOktyPoy
oFtllld SdttdiNI
•Profnaianal EI'Mronmtnl
Mike A Otlltrenco In Our world!

SIOI WEEKLY GUARANTEED
WORKING WITH THE GOV
ERNMENT FROM HOME PART
TIME NO EKPERIENCE RE
QUIRED I 800 748 5718 EKT
K101
lt21 WEEKLY! Make Monty
Helping Plople Rece ve GoverrJto
ment Refunds Frn Details! (24
nra l 1-8Q0-449-'82S E•l 5700
$987 85 WEEKLY! Procell ng
HUD/FHA Mortgage Rotundo No
Experience Requ reef For FREE
Informal on Call 1 800S01 8832
old 1300
ACCESS TO A COMPUTER?
Put 11 to world US/11r S7i!/nr FT/
PT FREE nlo 800 871 11045 "'1
601 www lahorntblz.com

WORK FROM HCME
$500-11!00 permo PfT
$2DO&lt;J.$8000 par mo FfT
No 'lf*"I'ICI ntlded
lllltnrog pnMdod
ISQ0-880.-

II
I

3-43 DRIVERS NEEDEDII No .,
per ence nttcled Ou ck COL
tra nlng program avellab 1 Ea~n
$38 000 + 111 yoor 5 STAR 1
800 448 8869 Exportoncod drtv
or• holding C 111 A cal 800-i58

2353
A880t.UTELY FREE INFO
Internet UMrt Wlllttcl
$20()0.$11000/mo
www e-con'lf'nblz net
AIIIMILY AT HOMIII Cr1111
Toy• Jewe rv Wood Sewing
'1\iplng ... Grut Poy CALL 1 100
715-0310 E•t liCI (24nrJ)
AnontiOn

WOrk F!om HOmo
11 200- 18 000/mo
1 177 882 f Ollol

Help wanted

Local Homo Hollth Agency Hlr ng
full Time Or Part Time PCA I
CNA I No Eaptrlenct NtCH
ury Will Train Health In
turance
85~
Third Ave
(7~)441-13n

McCiur1 a Reataurant now h r ng

all 3 local ona lull or part 1 me
pick UJI appl cat an at ocat on &amp;
bring l:lack between 9 30am &amp;
tOOO.m Monday ttw Saturday
Own a P:C 1 Put t to Work! lor a
free booklet caN 10()429 5853 or
villi us online

-

Cal TOday FOr An lntorvtewl
1-237M47
Elll 1127
Janitorial Help Needed $!5 !50
S7 ~0 per hour dependent upon
experience Benet ta after 80
day&amp; Send Reaume to CLA 515
c/o Gall polls Dell~ Tribune 825
Th rd AVI Gol...,lo 0H &lt;IS831
National Bankca d proc:tltOr IK
perlenced repa and agenclll
wanted for excellent territory
Same dey tpprova s 1 -48/2 20
veattd esidua btntf Ia car/allow
OVII 8oo-!187 31~
NOW HIRI'IG
EARN UPTO 110.00 AN HOUR
1110 An -rTolllort
(Guoron- SO!ary)
Min and Women Needed To Do
T•phona ()peralor Work Fo
RADIO STATION PROMOTIONS
Homemaker work while
ct'IHdren n school
'DAY AND EVENING SHIFT
AVAILABLE
'FULL AND PAI!f. TIME
OPENI'IGS
NO EKPERIENCE NEEDED
TRA NING PROGRAM
COLLEGE &amp; H S STUDENTS
WElCOME
App~ In Poroon At
303 Main Street
Pont Plllunt WV
Monday Moroh lth

Tuotday, llon:h ...
-nooday Mnh nh
3 00pm Until I OOpm ONLY
A1k For Ma Wll o
OWN A COMPUTER? Put It to
work 125 175/hour Frtt Dotelll
W 1l'lln wwwl111ucctlt.com
Own A Computor?
Put Hlb World
U1-I7S/11r PTIFT
1M4-88e432e

www II-NIP oom

110

PARENTS DREAMt Stay Homo
Earn Maney S.t your own hOurs
Tr1lning
Provided
VIs t
www homawlthkldl com
Part limo cloonfng )ob In Pomeroy
need lawn care wol1ltr
Send reaume to B W Janllo Ia
StrviOa 145 Liming Farm Rd M1
Orob OH 4S154

,,.. 1110

URGENTLY NEEDED plasma
donorS earn $45 to $60 br 2 or 3
haura weekly Ca I SMa Tee 740
592-6651
Work from home
$25 00 &lt;4&gt; 10 S7S 00/hr pi ft
Internet/Mall order

1188-805-0585
WORK FROM HOME Earn
S150p pit to $5000 fit
mon!IIIIICALL TODAY 1 800 895
0219 or www workfromho
me2,.7com

140

Partllr!1e
Hyou Havo A Btg Hoan 'rbu May
Want To Join our Team Of Car ng

People Who Want To Make A
Oilferlnco In Worklo&gt;;~ Willi Poo
pte wnn DtiObiltill 'rt&gt;ur Coring
A-WIIfBoAPuoWnon
'lbu Apply Fo Ono Of Our 01 oct
Support Slaff Po&amp;ltlons Don 1
Mlu OU1 On The Noldlllllntng
Clul Apply TOday In """""
At 8204 Carta Drtvo Of can
{7~)oM6-481• And Alk lor Robono OJ Mary An Equot Oppor
tunily Employer
Part Time LPN S
A leading Provide To lndlvldtr
al&amp; WHh Menta Retardation And
Ceutlopmeut 0 Ubllitiea: 11 LOok
lng For Part tkne LPN I In goJNpo1&amp; Bentfitllnclude Plld Trainng Health lnllM'II'ICe 1\Jitlorl Relmbu.....,m And Pilei VICI
t ona H'You Woo lei Ulre To Join
OUrToom 1b nolp fndtvldulll
AchN Their Fo&gt;ltlt - 1
Conlact Dorothy Horpor At
(7~}oM6-4814 An Eqllal Oppor
tun I)' Emptoyor

l'rliiTTIIIE OPPORTUNITY
Peop 11 Banlla Mtige County of

I ctl lllk qualifttd lndtvldua 1 for
part I me position of Customer
Serv ce Rep (teller) E111n1 a
lkillt Include excellent communi
cation cuatomer service and
croaa aelilng abllitlet Mull be
able to effective v manage cash
drawar and proceaa and ba ance
variaut typu of transactlona 25
30 houra per week Monday Sat
urday 11 nqulred II you are a
flex bit 111m player who likes a
cltallongo oubmll your resume to
Human Fleaourcea
Ooportmonl MCSR
PO Box 738
Marietta OH 45750
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY
EMPLOYER
Pertan to tear down houie for
motarllta 7&lt;10-992 IIMI
Phytic ant Office Looking For
Part Time X Ray Teonn clan
Br ng Reeume To 3009 Jackson
Avenue Point Pltoaont
Pleasant Val ey Nuralng And At
hab laHon Center Currentty Haa
Openings For LPN a Twe ve Hour
Shifts EJCCtllent Pay And Bane
1111 Contact Human Reaourcea
At Pl111ant VI ley Hosp tal 2!i20
Valle~ Drive Point Pleasant WV
25e80 Or Fax To (304)87~ 8975

MIEOE
Pottal JOI:II $-48 323 00 yr Now
hiring No u:perience paid train
lng gttat benefits call 7 days
1IOO-I2fi.38IO Old J 365
S1l11 person building material•
end related Items exper ence
nttdld in tit mating customer
Nrvlce and computer Btnellfa
Salary bllld on experience
Send rtaume to The Dally Sent
nel P: 0 Box 729 99 Pomeroy
Oh 45789

Emerptnt;v prp!ICtiyt Sttmta
Y/ICkaniiUI II Recruiting For A
Shorl Term Pmjoct In C ndnna!l
Officers Muat Be Available To
Work I 2 Hours/ Ooy 7 Day&amp;'
Wnk Wo Wll Prcvlcll LOdging
And S26l Day Food Allowance
PitoN Apply M F 9lm 4pm At
Tho Jomoo M Gavin Power Pllm
Statalloutt 7 Cnoollfro OhiO

EOEINFIIW

SECURITY
$880 HR
The Wld&lt;lnh.. Corp II Recruit
lng ForSovoro!Pooltiona Mull
HM G E D Or HS llfploma.
Pltlu Apply At Jamoo M Gavin
l'llWor Plant Stall Route 7 Of Call
COt&gt;1 Evena At (7.!0)92S 3010

EOEMIFIIW

Shur Fantasy Bar Needs Dane
ers No Experience Nacenary
Will Train
(304)786 7828
(304)273-0!520 .... lor Bolh
STAY HOME/WORK ONLINE
$500 $7000 monlh PTIFT COm
p eta Training Free Informal on
www crest me cam Tot Free 1
888 873-3693

Help Wanted

STNA train ng class being
scheduled lor tOO bed skilled
tac llty Stek ng candldttll who
are caring compaaslanatt and
wsnt to be a member of 1 g eat
team tnt1re1ttd cand datu
should apply to Rocksprings Fie
hab Centtr 38759 Rocksprings
Road Pomeroy Ohio 45769
Equa Opponuntty Emptoyor

gotpcworttoom

17 An hour +loniiNI

•Pikllllllntng

370111'311

l

Top

110

Bualne11
Training

ClatHpollt Co- Colltgt
(ca...,. c- To Homo)
Ca TOday '74()-446...4367
1 8Q0-214-l)452
Reg 190-05 1270B

150

Schoola
Instruction

BLACKSTONE
PARALEGAL
STUDIES Compret'ltnslvl af
fordable Home Study lega train
ng Since 1890 Free catalog 1
800 828 9228 PO Bo• 701449
Oallaa TX 75370 or http 11
www bAaCkstonelaw.com

210

ONoroa Sl50
Bank. upiCy 1195

-$22!
Not do It yoursell k~l

IF YOU MUST WORK WORK
AT HOME! Bu lei your own sue
cesafu bualnesa Mall order/E
Commt ca $1000 $7000 PT/FT
F ae nformal on www FocusOn
FreedOm com 800-738 2~

CASH LOANS $2000 $5000
Conao dalton to $200 000 Bad/
No Cred t Credit Cards Mort
gag11 FtS Inc Tol FrH 1 888
_ , .... Ext 3622

EARN 'lOUR COLLEGE DEGREE
QUICKLY l:lachtlora MilletS
Doctorttt by correspondence
baaed upon prior education and
aho 1 study caurae For FREE In
formation booklet phone CAM
BRIDGE STATE UNIVERS TY 1
8()0.984 8316
High School Dlplome at Home
Stall L steel Private Schoo New
Unique Faat Program Fal ure
Proof lowesl Tu 1 on College
Guarantee Ca I Frae Nowt Free
srocnure 1 aoo-ss9 3997

160

Wanted To

Do

8&amp;8 Counttructlon Roofing
Sid ng f Concrete lpterlor &amp;!
Exterior Pa nt n~ All Pl\1..1 ot
Home Aepal a For A Free
Eat mate Call (304)87S 7738
After 5 pm
Georgee Portable Sawm I don I
haul your k&gt;QS to thl mill juat cal
304-875 1957

Will Powerwash Houses Trailers
And RV 1 Contact Ron At
(740)448-0151 or 339 09'0 11
No Answer l.llve Mllllgt
WI Flepalr Automobiles Farm
Tractors And Equlpmet11 In My
Garage Lowest Flatea In Town
Cal(7~)441-o199

Bualna11
Opportunity

$1 000 WEEKLY POSSIBLE
FROM Home Free web site No
ex per ence required Deta a
www waubmlt walworXalhome
$30 00 weekly MAlll NO 400
b achurea AT HOME! Guar
enlttd Free Supplee 1 aoo
283-3810 OlC1 1388 (24 hrJ)
1!05 par pari time wor"ng
with tfle Oo~ nment No experl
ence 1 BOD 1-'8 5'1'18 12-' hours}
•153
S750 $2000 WIOkly poll blo Un
mittel opportun ty FREE details
SASE NMG I 900 W Unlvorolty,
Sullo 6 PMB 23C Edinburg TK
78539-2865
INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommend&amp; that you cto bust
neat with people you know and
NOT to tend money througn tno
mall unt you have nvestigattd
tnaollerlng

ADVERTISING SPECIALITIES a
boom Industry! And one lhat can
STAY HOME/WORK ONLINE make you "0 000 $30 000 evtn
1500 $7000/month PTIFT Com 150 000 up from sa 11 of promo
plete Tra n ng Fret tnlormation t ona products to local business
www cre&amp;tlme com Toll Free 1 community plua Sl 000 up
monthly In overr des Top com
1188-873 3693
m 11lons advanced daly No col
lections no Inventory no dellve
Its No buslnesa investment A
WORK FROM HOME
rlak en opportun ly Full or part
time You CJIII the shola and set
$21 00. 115.0Giho: PTIFT
your own hours Ask far 1 ee
MoH0prospectus and 218 page com
1.-220-1813
petition 111 catalog Toll t ee
pnone support Our credtntlala
107 your&amp; con tl nuaua operat on
The Athant Melgt Educatlontl
O&amp;B rated 3A 1 For lnalant act on
Service Center it lfltking qui I
phone Linda Burbrlnk 1 800 B-42
tied cand dates for thl QOtitton of
0790 or wItt Kaesar &amp; Bla r Inc
Treature Appl ca11t• mutt poa
1111 a Treuurer 1 lictnll Oopl Pl01 4236 CrttaOm Or Oh
4SI03
IIIUtd by the Onlo Dept Of Ed\.1
cat on or tvldtnct that tucfl II
AI Sn ckors/York lltobl onod
o•nM can ba ODialned Experi
vend ng route W II " " In 3
onoo In ochool dlolrtot unlvorall)'
weeks Under I9K lnvtttment "
or govert1mtntalaccounUng de
quired
Great profit potential
III'IG bporlonoo 01 I chill lllcll
offloor profori'IG Appltconll muol Finance wth good ortdlt 881
.... 1ho obfllly to bt bondotl 488-4200
BEEA ORINKER•BEER tNVEB
lnd to I)!OOI1dt tnolr own lrlnopor
dttlon iluDmllllllor or lmoroat ro TORB PriVIII I lOCk 11111 NAI
sumt 3 reltrtncll ancs copy of OAO lotlng 100111 No minimum In
current Notl'lll 10 Jot'ln Conttan
ao. lutllrlrlltn&lt;lenl 801 AICI1tond Vlllmont WWWwtfbOOroom
Avonut 8u1t1 101 Atnono Onto EARN 1500 10 uoo per wook In
48701 Applloot on dud Ina to your b11hro bI I I 11PPirt 0 root
April e 11001 Tno AMEIC II lnd opporlunlly to uouro your Mutt
Opporlunl~ Employor/Pro
Low nvtolmont 1 100·272 0113
ow•-~• oom

=:''

\

Lot model c ea ance save up to
$8 625 w th anv nome check ua
out wer1 dealing Cots Mob le
Homes US 50 Eaat Altlens Oh
Must SaHI16•80
Maki 2 Poymont&amp; &amp; Move In!
1-8Q0-691-87n
New 14 ft wide $499 down only
$199 pa mon call now 1 BOO
891 6777

New double w de 3 br 2 ba
$998 oo dawn only $295 per
mon cal now 1 800-691-6n7
Now F Mtwood 14•70 $16 999 00
3 Bedroom 2 Bath 1 877 771
4170
New
F eetwood
16x80
$19,999 00 3 Bedroom 2 Batn 1
8n777-4170

330

NEED AN EARLY PAYDAY?? No
office vialt necessary Up to $500
ln&amp;tantly by phona 1 877 EAR
LYPAY L c t750005 1st AO
VANCE FRE£
No Faea/Se viet Cha ges In
Need ol Finane al Assistance?
P •••~Cal Uf Tplt ~"'' 1 888
813-8811 2olh
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unllas We Win
..--t-88tliill-ii58l!iiiloiii334iiii5

Afl,... _ _lngln
thla ne~'lpaper IIIUb)ecl to
tho F - Fair Houotng Act
or 111811 witten mllku ~ Illegal
to.ctYM~M•qp•fellfiCI
lfmltltlon Of dllcrlmlr1111on

baed 011 -

color religion
ooxllmlllat otatuoornottional
or1g1n or a n y - 10
mai&lt;l any IUCit prwlatwnoo
lmltltlon or dltortmfnotlon

Farm• for Sale

138 Acres In Harrison Township
(740)44H583
Farm House Beautlfulty Remo d
ad 2983 Square Feet 17 Acrtl
Pond In ground Pool Se\feral
Barna Garage Fru t Trlee C ose
To Hofztr $215000 (74Q~
4230

340

-••:I

l

Bualneaa and
BuildingS

310

~50 Loti

&amp; Acraage

1 &amp; 2 acre building ota sur
ytytd water &amp; t ectric available
sept c Pre approved doublewlde
acoopted S8 995 &amp; up 740-742
3114
3 Acre a Bottom of hill On right on
Rodman Ridge Ad (304)87S
6958

thll MWipaper

Homaa

for Sala

$0 DOWN HOMES! GOV T ~
BANK FORECLOSURES! LOI'j
OR NO MONEY DOWN! OK
CREDIT! FOR LISTINGS! CALL
1 B00-33B-oo20 ext san
I

L.ook ng To Buy A New Home?
Oont Haveltnd? We Colli Hurry
Only 10 LOla LOft 30ol 738-7295

360

1n4 Chaatnut By Owner Built In
1997 3 Bad oom Tax Abatement
Till 2013 $89 SOO 00 (740)4462914
2 Story Bilek Approxlmatttt 3400
Squa e Feet 1 112 Acres Full
Basement Saaulllul v fW Of Rlv
e Was $88 500 Reduced To
$89 500 By Appo ntment OlliY
(740)256-6172
3 Bedroom In Ga llpo Is Ferry
larQ~ lot Aaking $85 000 OBO
(»&gt;tf!175-5332 Or (304}e75-2899
Ene gy elf cent home 1 1/2 year
Old 3 BR w th wa k In c oael, Atl
rooms are large 1500 sq ~~~~ wnh
attached garaoe Central heat
and ar B exter or walla Thermospare doors and wlndowt t 114
teres proJ)erty Approx 1s miiH
south of Gall pols off SR 1-41
..
112 000 (740)37 9-2587
FORECLOSED GOV THOMES!
$0 OR LOW DOWN! TAX
REPO S &amp; BANKRUPTCI~II OK
CREDITI FOR LISTING CALL 1

I . ~800~50:-1_1777--:-""-118-1_3~:-Mt ve non Avenue 4 Bedroom
Hou11 New 1111 Furnace Ctntrl
A 1 lnttrior lilfawty Painted Nice
K tchen Ap&amp;JIIanott 8a1tment
Covtrod ~1110 Prloll 501
(30o1)882 2«1 (304)882 :MOe
MUll Booll fltlu®l 3 lldiOOIII 1
loin CA ~~ W/ flroiiiOI I
Lola Now ~ool ~11rfgora1or
Blovo OW Iorge a Cl! Giro~
llg Ylird Lorge ~ooml LOll 01
btru Roloootlng CM 01 11111
187 ODO Cofl (304)773 8484 or
(30oi)77W311

RaaiEatate
Wantacl

Rtal tlratt wanttd I am lorced
out or my houae for h ghway im
provement Lool&lt;lng for otd farm
Muse n Meigs County w lh
ICrtlgl Cl/1 740 797 8303 740
992 9132

$73 000 3 Badroom 1 1/2 Botn
Wood Floors Gas F replace
Garage 1 47 ~cru Muat Se•
(7~)388-9151

3 BA TraUt 1 81th On Route 1
North 1300/mo P u1 Deposit No
l'wl&amp; (740)367-(1811
Beaul fu A ver VIew Ideal For 1
Or 2 People References Deposit
No Ptta Foater Trailer Park ?40
441.0181
HouH
Tra ler
For
Rent
Below Gallpolia lackl On State
Route 7 South (740)441-D81&amp;

Mob 11 home in M nersv I e two
bedroom $300 + depos t a ull
lor 53000 &amp; $120 ot ent 814
87&amp;-1661
Apartment•
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apanmenll fur
nlahtd and unfurn shed aecurlty
depoe t requ red no J)eta 7-40
992 2218
1 Sed oom Efficiency Apartment
Porter Ottlo 1275 Plus Deposit
(740)367 7015
t Bedroom Near Holzer Econom
cat Gaa hill ng WID Hookup
$279 00 Plus Ut lltlla l.tne Oa
poatRoq~rtd(7~)441 1SI9
1 Bedroom Up1tairs Apartment
Cion Ta Wal Mart Utllitlea In
eluded 1375/mo Plus DIJIO&amp;It
(7.0)245-l!iSS
2 Apartments For Rent In Rio
Granda Walking 0 stance To
Co lege All Utilities Paid
(740)245-S100
720 Second Avenue 1 Bedroom
Upstairs Apartment $300 .oe
postt Waler Sewer T ash Paid
(740)441 5216 {Day) (740)4480101 (Evenings)
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDOET PRICES AT JACK
SON ESTATES 52 Westwood
Driva lrom 1297 lo $383 Walk to
sho~ &amp; moves Call 740 4-48
2588 Equal HOuetng Opponunlly
Chr ~~~ s Faml y Llv ng, 33140
Now Uma Rd Rutland OhiO 740742 7403 Apartment home and
trailer renta a Commercial atore
fronta avatlable lor 11111 Vacan
clesnow
For rent on• bedroom furnished
apartment In Middleport cal 7-40

982 S231

4839

OUr--

11EI\L [SlAlf

2 Bedroom AI G anwood Haa
Stove &amp; Refr gerator Section 8
ApprOYtCI (30oi)S7!-9991

Gallla Mano Apartments Now
Acctpttng App lcaUona For 1 BA
HUO Sub&amp; dlttd Aponmema For
E de ly And Handicapped Equal
Housing Oppo tunl!y (140)448

which lltn vfola1fon or tho

~~-...11111111111111111111111111111111111

,_II

Downtown Olnce And Or Apart
rpent Bu ding Off Street Partdng
A Good Investment Prope ty Thai
WI I Pay Fo !tao I Dey {740)..8INIS5 Evening {7~)24S 5252

taw
heroby
tnrormocllltolall-ngt
opportu11ty bull

14x7D 2 Bedroom 2 Bath So400I
mo 1400 Depo1lt 1 Year Con
tract F nanc el And Ptnonal Rtl
t anCIII No
(7o40)38$-137fi

Furnlthed 2 &amp; 3 Room Apart
manls Clean No Peta No Smok
ng References a Depot I Fie
qulrad
Ut llllt1 Furn thld
(740)44HS19

--.-ror...,_
art avdlblt on an.~

1••70 2 Ba&lt;troom 2 Balli
In Crown City; 13001 mo PIUI
Dopo.. (7~)258-111811

Church Building with Pa aonage
far sala located n Pont Pleasant
Good Neighborttood Reduced
$65 000 (30ol)675-1616

Thill niWIP'pef wtH not
kuawtngly accop1

~In

(7~)258-1()14

440

Creel I Problems? CALl THE
CREDIT EKPERTS LICENSED/
BONDED CORRECT/REMOVE
BAD CREDIT BANKRUPTCY
LAWSU TS
JUDGEMENTS
AAA RAT NG 1 888-811.o902

f INANCIAI

210

Factory Goof 32x80 $10 000 Dis
count only 11000 00 Down De
livery and setup paid by Facto y
1 BOQ.69H7n

CONSOLIDATE YOUR WAY
OUT OF DEBTI Reduce montl'lly
payments Pay ona b 1month
EASY to get started F nancia
Freedom Ch s1 an Counseling
800 84 t 9757
ext
CC3
www clebtccs org (Non-Prof t)

Opening In My Country Homo For
Senior Malt Or Female Need ng
Autllld Uv ng (7~)388-011 a
Ouallty houae cleanings The
Best BOnded Profeulona At 1
able call even nga (740)256
1131 or 1 898 781 2412 email
doublldeeurtkanat com

Double Wktel Only $28 900 001
28K52 Free De Ivery &amp; Set
HISB-928 9898

$$$ NEED CASH?? WE pay
cash to rema nlng payments on
Property ~ldl Mortgages! Annul
Ileal San emental Immediate
Ouotesl!l NoboQy beata our p ic
es Na lonal Contract Buyers
{800) 490 0731 ut 101 www na
Honalcrmlractbuytrs com

BLACKSTONE
PARALEGAL
STUDIES Home Study Ap
proved Aflordabfe comp ehtn
a.lve legal Ira ning 1 nee 1890
FREE Catalog 800 828 9228
Wrilt PO Box 701449 Dills TX
75370 NA or http 1/www blackalo
netawcom

14x60 Electric Heat AC 2 Bedroom WfD Stove Reflreraa no
Pets Fleferenctl $900/mo

Brand new Qakwood hOme three
be&lt;room two bath includes sl'ttd
closed n porch Take ova pay
mentl 1353/mo. Must be moved
Must se 7-40.985-4112 anyllme

$1 NEED A LOAN? 1i y debt con
10 ldatlonl Cut paymen1s up to
SO% Same day approva I 1 877
769-8168

IFREE CASH NOW$ from
wealthy lam es un oad ng milliona
of dollars to hi p m nlmize tt~elr
ttxea Write Immediately Wind
fat I 3010 W LSHIRE BLVD
088 LOS ANGELS CALIFOR
NIA 90010

888 928 3428

(7~)446-11862

Proleaalonal
sarvlcea

Mobile Homes
lor Rant

1/4 Mile Out 218 3 Bedroom 2
Bath (7~)-M6-7322

1995 scnult 16x80 13 Bedroom
2 Bam
Snorp Homo $21 !00
Kanuaga Mob Ia Home Salts

Start You Bualness Today
Pr me Shopping Center Space
Ava tab t At Alforctablt Rate
Spr ng va ley P aza ca 17.w 44&amp;0tOt

420

14x70 SotJtntrn Dleam free Oe
Ivery fre1 Setup only $9995 1

1994 F eetwood Mobile Home
llk.e New Some Appliances And
Moe Ext as Included $13 000
Of 080 (700)388-0369

MEDICAL B lUNG Un m ted In
come potential No expa anct
neceuary Free tnformalion &amp;
CD-ROM lnvastmanl from $2495
F nancing ava lab 1 (800) 322
1139 EXT 050 www buslnus
startup com

230

Mobile Homea
for &amp;ale

t99t Mob 1e Home 2 Bed oom 1
Bath Stove Relrlge ator Back
Porcn 8x12toot Very GoOd Can
dHIOn Moko Oflor {700)4411-.4809
Ask ForJ m

CALL 1-8()0.263-0503
FREE lnlol'ma.tiOn
Bonkr\.I)!Cy 11/a TI!.I&lt;Y

BLACKSTONE
PARALEGAL
STUDIES Comprehenaln af
fordable Home Study legal Ira n
ng Since 18~0 FrH catalog 1
800 826 11228 P0 Bo• 701.49
Dallao TX 7S370 or nnp II

wwwbfockltonollw.com

320

Bualnaaa
Opportunity

RENTALS

410

HOUIIS tor Rant

1 3 Bedrooms Foreclosed
Homes From StiMUMo 4% Down
30 Vtara at 8 5% APR For l st
lng~ SQ0-319-3323 ExL 1709
2 br house WI full basement
$385 00 a monlh + $280 00 dl
posit In Po nt Pleasant 304 875
44e9
4 Bedroom House In Rio G111ncle
(7~)2.5-6858

House For Rent B elwell Ohio 3
Bed ooma 2 Bath&amp; SSSOimo
Pius All Utilltlts Stcu Hy Otpoalt
$550 (513)704 9703 Allor
530pm
Golllpolla 7SO 3rd Ava $180
Month 1 BR 1 Bath Frame
HouH Gaa Heat No Pall Wee
kondo/ Nighta. (7~)oM6-8814
Gallpola 752 3rd Avenue $375
Manltl 3 Bedroom 1 Bath Frame
Hou" Gas Heat No Pets WH
kondl Nlghta (7~)44e-8814
Hou11 for rent In Rut 1nd cell
740 742 2811
Newly Carpeted 2 Bedroom un
turnlthtd Home Wllh Garage
Golltpo 1 Aroo Dopooll And Rtl
· - No 1'111 (7~)oM6-8114
II at Program l'lenttrl NHdtd
{304)731-71H
,!lot 'ro&amp;em Rontero Noodld
304711lmofl 1 lldroom 1410 Lowlo
lirtt1 f'olnt ''tlllnt UeO/mo
teO I&gt;IPOIII Clll Allar 5pm
(3041111 3a11

Gracloua lYing 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at Vii agl Manor and
R vera ~ Apartments In Middle
port From $278 $3-48 Call 740
992 508• Equal Housing Oppor

For Sale Recond t onect wuh
1 1 drytra and tfrlgeretors
Thompaona App lanca 340?
-.on Avonuo (304)675-7388
OOOD USED APP.LIANCES
Washt a d yera rt l Qeratora
ranges Skaggs Appliances 78
VIne Street Ca I 740 448 7398
1 886 818.0128
Moliohln Ca pets &amp; Fu nlture
New 2 piece l vlng oom Suite
1299 Recline $189 Se 1 On
Corpot In StOCk 200 car'&lt; Cnope
Rood Ponor OhiO {7~)388.0173
Me n St 111 Furf11tuf1
(300)675
S16 Main Strool Pont Ptoaunt

,.22

New 6 Ulld Furnilu 1
New 2 P tCI Living oom Su t11
$399 Buy So lllldo
One Comp ate Bedroom Suite
$200 Wooden Wardrobe S!O
Be S25 Storoo UO Tab 1 UO
EIICU C Typewriter 125 Wh te
Cablnot S2~ (7~)441-D853

Whirlpool waa~er S9~ Elect lc
Range Si&amp; Ffottfret Ratr gerator
S1150 Freezer .150 N ce W11tt
tr &amp; Orver Set 1300 A I Ap
pllancea Guarantlld Skaggs
Appllanctl 7e Vine Strttl
(7~)-7398

520

Sporting
Good

a

Buy or 11 I R ver ne Antiques
112-4 East Man on SFI124 E Po
moroy 740-992 2528 or 740 992
1539 Fluu Moore owner

540

Mlacallanaoue
Merchandlae

1 Wh te Ia and W th P um
ColOred Top 1150 1 Sma B own
Desk $25 1 Super 5 ngle Wa
terbed $50 1 K ng Size Wa
1erbtd Needs Mattress $50 2
Cei ng Fans $20 A P tee
(304)882 314t
1999 Plymouth Van CKC Rack
Russell Terre Call (30.. )675
3727
3 STEEL BU LDINGS 24&gt;30
was S7 900 •• t $3 400 40x48
was $10 900 atll ss 200 50•120
was $21 900 sal $11 900 Never
PUI Up! Can Deliver Tom 1 {800)
392-7803

COMPUTERS WE FINANCE
DELL COMPUTERS! Evon wlln
lSI than perfect creel t 1 800
477 9018 Code AC7 www ame
solutions com
DIFIECTV free nsta iltlon $200
.... boCk SQ0-283-2840
EKerciae 8 ke $100 Zenith 18
8 ack &amp; White Telev s on
{304)892 2702

Now Taking Applications- 35
West 2 Bedroom Tawnnouee
Apartmentt lncludet Water
Sowago Truh S3501Mo 740

(7~}441-1982

3 Room Upsta rs Apt One Bed
room At est Second Avenu•
Gall J)OUa Oapoalt Required Sl•
Months Leaae Ut 111111 Not In
eluded e~~:cept Water Call Oebblt
or Judy AI (?40)448-7323 (L
brary) To Set Up An Appoint
ment

460

Space for Rant

Downtown Second Avenue Nta
Courthau11 And C ty Building
Nicely Decorated AIC 3 Roome
lulldlno By ltulf 448 2nd Ave
(7~)4141 11!138

470

Wantacl to Rant

Chr 1111n couple looking for
rtauae to rent no pttl no IlliCit
Jim 740-IH-3111

Block b ck ttwer pipes wind
awe llnttll etc Claude W nters
A o Grandt OH Call 740 245
5121

(7~)388-

560

Pets lor Sale

MOBILE HOME OWNERS
Hu~ Inventory D acount P ICtl
On VInyl Skirting, Door&amp; Wind
owe ~ncttore Water Heater•
Pltlmblng &amp; E ootr cof Porto Fur
nacta &amp; Hilt Pumpt Benn1t11
Molltfo Homo Supply, 740 44e
11411- orvti

-noll

Now I Ulld eltctrlo And Gu
Furnoooo For 8111 Clll For Stz
II
lnttllllllon
AVIIIIbll
1_,_
(7~)oM6-8308

NIW AND USID ITIIL 81011
&amp;ooml ,lpt lle"'r tlor Conorolo
Angle cnannor Fill lor 11111
Qrotrno For Drolno.. Orlvowoyo &amp;
Wlliworo LAL oorop Mot111

1740~7100

NIW IA~ND NAMI OOM,U~
IAI Almoot ovoryono opprovod
wllh 10 tlownl Low monthly lilY
monto11100-et7ll47111d iliiO
PIUoburgh Pllntl 8t1t Whltl
Oalfna Pllnl II 1ft QoiiOn 01111"9
Po nii'IUI (104 )1111-4014
Prom gowno r woro 10 out of
11111 prom IUnlor I t priCtl
ltOfl 740-lfta-1120
SmiH CIIICkln oggo IOC I dOIIft
or o11t 1e Gory M cnut 740
ff85-3958
STEEL BUILDINGS NEW MUST
SELL o\Od()xl2 Wll 117 !00 110 t71 eox100x18 w11 $31 500
now •n tiiO 70•150118 wu
tiO now 541110 80•100•1 e
.,.1 1fo1 ~oo now 1ettto I
*e121

•lit

soo-

SUN SAND SURF Wh 11 11ndy
btiChtl fabuloul aun11t1l Dl
lu• roomoi1!11Chonoltll &amp; bltconltl ovortooklng lho QuI ot Mill
co ltilnd . Inn Beach Ae1ort
Troo 1 ur~ lotond FLA 100 24t
tiiO www latlnellnnr••ort com
NMrll-'11

u

Green Sundanot Duster
85 ooo Mi es ve A r Auto
$2700 080 (7~)258-1233

live vs Auto Sales 1988 Ford
Esco t s w ssoo 1988 o ds
Cut an Cie a $1200 1982 Me
cu y Lynx SW $o450 1986 Me
cu y Cougar $1400 1994 Me
cury Topaz S1800 1989 Ponllac
G and Am 11 tOO 1~90 Oldl Cut
l08 Ctea S1200 1986 Ocls Do
Ia 88 $900 1993 Mercury Topaz
$1800 Call Monday Th u Fr day
'ooam s OOpm (740)388-9003

720

Trucke for &amp;ala

1977 Foret 3/4 Ton 380 Motor
Runs Good Needa Tranam as an
(100)olo46-451S

s

1991 cnovy
to pick up 2
wnoal drtvo 97 000 m •• 4 r:y 5
sp t rea &amp; shocks 1 yr o d fiber
01111 toppar new pi nt $3500
740-992-7789
1995 GMC Sonoma 88 000
AM FM Caaaatte 5
Spoad $3200 OBO 1740)258
894S
M 11

Ford Explorer 2 Door Sport
83000 M •• $11900
(740)379-2797

mo
aa t

4

old CKC rtglttered mate\
&amp; pt.J!ptr
min ature
Scltnauzor $300 304 n:l-5842

1999 Ford F 150 Suparcab 2WO
V 8 4 door bod cop tO 000
miles vory n~e 740-992 2679

AKC German Shepherd Pupplea:
Solid Whitt And Sllve I Sables~
Exeat ant
Temperment AnT
Slrucluro 1?~)245-5408

89 F ISO KLT Lar ...t P U Lotd
ed H gh M lea Body E~~:cal ent
Shape Must See To Apprec ate

1.

Aeg attrtd Duttoundt a W••
Old Pupa Sho~ And Long Hal
(30ol)773-5788

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVE';TQCK

610

Farm Equipment'

John Deere Model 331!1 Baler
W re Tie Fltld Ready $2!500
(30ol)875 ~724
New Holland 489 9ft Hayblna
new Holland 320 Square Ba er
A C 14fl Fold ng Dlak A In E:1
cenent Cond 110n (740)245-581 !5

630

5 Year 010 Appa aosa Gulltlng
Good Trai Horae 5 Year Oltj Pa
1 otino Gu lllng 3 Year Old "P~re
Ha" Pa nt &amp; Ha f Arabian 8rown
Whita (740)3811-8358

Hay

$2000

(7~)4-741

93 Chevy s 10 Standard l ; ; ;
Good Runs Good Must See To
Appraclato $4000 (740)245
9S95
94 GMC Extencsed Cab 2 wntt
Or ve loaded 305 Auto Over
d i¥e Short Bed $8895 92 S
.... erada Short Bed V6 Auto
Overctr ~ loaded $6600 Daya
{740)24!5 5080
Evtnlngt
(7~)882 7S12

730

Vans

&amp; 4-WDs

1989 Chevy Astr' Van $2500
ca 1740)448-3-437 Or (740)4481837
1989 Fa cl Conversion van TVI
VCR rear a back seat fo da nlo
bed lOw ng package 73 100 orlg'
nat miles very c ean $5795 740
742 8200

Eastem

1997 red Tacke 4K4 automat c
a r CD 25 000 m es excellent
cond lion ca 740 992 esoo ana

from PlpBl

Spm

Livestock

1998 Chevy Z 71 4x4 Si verado
Complete y loaded 60 000 Mi es
$19 900 (740)388 8375 Alto
7pm

of confidence 111 the kids
that they feel the same way
Our first year here we made
to the sectional finals Last
year we made 11 to the distrtct
finals Maybe we broke JUSt a
little bit of tee those two years
and we know what s gmng to
happen now
I beheve expenence IS the
best teacher and we ve got

85 Jeep Cherokee Wagon Good
Condn on (300)875 5162

740

Motorcycles

1981 Har ay Davidson Super
G Ide 1340 cc Law Miles
( 16 009) fled/ ·" Black Loll 01
Eicuas S7500 (74U)4'4fl'.79'12

&amp; GralnJ-;:,

Ear corn for sa e $2 50 bu&amp;ht
985-3347

7~

F r&amp;t &amp; Second Cut Orchard
Grass Round Bau $1200
(7~)448-7787

Hay for aa e square balaa $1 25
1 mila on Fit 2 N 304 675-4869r-:
Hay For Sale -45 Round B~~~~
And 250 Square Sa 11 "'all
(740)446-0115 or (740)446
7843 Allor 8 OOpm
Hay Far Sale Round And Sq&lt;81 t
Balas Alfa fa &amp; Orchard Grass
{7~)245-581 s
Hoy Fo Salo LOrge Round
S11 Par Ba e You

~~~
H~u~

{7~)-M6-9185

Square ba 11 go~d mixed ha
atcred In Letart Fa Ia need t
movo 740-992-7288
I
Hoy &amp; Br gnt Wtro To Slraw ~
Flound Deliva 'I &amp; Volume 0 •
count Aval able Her tage Far
(30ol)675 5724

expenencc now
1999 400EX Great Shape New
Tires $3750 (740)448-1827

750

Boats &amp; Motors
for Sal11

97 Kawasak STX1100 Jet Sk
with traltr for sa e $4000 cal
740-992 5011
18 Sea Nymph Baas Boat 70HP
Johnson Motor Exce lent Cond
uon $2900 (740)245 9430 Aile;
800pm
1989 SyWan Bass Boal 17 Foot
Alum num Wl1h 88 Horsepowe
Evln Rude Motor Wo ka We I n
R \ftr Or Lakes For Bass 0
c"""" 1740) 388-1358

790

Campara &amp;
Motor Home•

1999 Bantan Tra ghl Sleeps e
Loaded (30ol)675-6393

Ful~

SEI!VICES

taU

Independent Herbal le Distributor
Call For Product Or Opportun ty

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Rapalrld New &amp; Rebu H tn Stock
Cal Ron Evans. 1-8()0.537 9S28

pomu off th.e bench all m
the first hal£
Steve Esterkamp gave us a
b1g b•g lift offenSively m the
first halt: Hunter md He
got hot and we fed off h1m a
little b1t
Esterkamp hit 2-of-3 3pmnters and was 7-for-10
overall from the field
Senior Anthony Jones also
netted a double-double hu
second of the season sconng
16 pomts and grabbmg I 0
rebounds
Fellow sen11Jr
Duson Ford fimshed wnh 11
pomts on 4-of-5 shootmg
from the field
Our two semor guards
really
were
very sohd
tomght Hunter md Both
had good stat hnes and both
played well at both ends of
the floor
Jumor Patnck Flomo had
I 0 pomts five rebounds and
five blocked shots Flomo
now has 95 blocked shou thiS
season
The Bobcats (18-1 0) led
49 39 at the half as Hunter
Jones and Esterkamp combined for 38 pomts The Bobcats established ownershtp of
the patnt With Hunter scoring
down low and Jones breaking
down the Buffalo defense off
the dnbble
Jones htt a short Jumper
wtth 2 58 left m the half to
spark an 8-4 run for Oh10
Etserkamp also scored on a
Jumper and hit two foul shots
wtth 35 seconds left Jones

~Speed

640

Grubb 1 P ana- Tuning &amp; Repairs
Probtomo? Need Tuned? Coli Tho
P ano Dr 7&lt;10-«8-1525

8879

Building
Supplies

Big 1cretn TV T•k• on email
monthly ptyment1 Good eric!
II required Phone 1 800 718
1167

North Third Middleport one bod
room tum st'lld apartment &amp; ~•
bedroom unfurnished apanment
depot 1 &amp; references no pets
7&lt;10-992.0185

1Win RtvarTowora nowiCOif)lfng
oppllcationolor I BR
HUO sublldlztd 11111 ror akltrfy
and dllabled EOH (300)875-

550

Potomlno Stolffan
Reg AQHA 1998
t S'3' H H World Champion '"l
presalvo Blood! no NIN Wasle[n
Plntura Hatter Barrels. Starii;t~Stud Fee SileO 1*')8f.S

GIVE THE BEAUTY of ovor twin
tv vartettes of Oregon Oah 11 to
your fr ancft ram ly yourall VlsM
us onnpi{Www orogonctanllo corn

Tara Townhouae Apa tmenta
Very Spacious 2 Bedrooms 2
FlOors CA 1 112 Batn Fuly Cor
paled Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool
Pal o Sta 1 S36S1Mo No P111
Lease Plu• Saourfly Deposit Re
qu rod OoYf 740 44e 348l
Evanlngs 740 Je7 0502 740
44&amp;-0101

4338

AUTOS FROM ISS 00
Po Ice Impounds &amp; Rep oal
Toyotas Chevy s Jeapsl Pleaae
Ca For l stings 1 800 451 0500
Exl C9817

Nice F rat Floor Downtown Apart
mant W th Otf Sti'HI Park ng Day
{740)448-0865
Evontng
(740)245-5252

One Bedroom Apartment On 111
AvenUe Gallipolis Washer/ Dry
er Hook up $270/mo Plut Ot
posl Water Pilei {740)448-4043
Aftare 00pm

WHITE 8 METAL DETECTOR 8
Ron AI iaon 588 Watton Road
Btdw1 I Oh o 05814 (700)448-

Large Co tection of Antique Poclt
et Watchea Good Cond tion 422
2nd Avo pnono (740)4o18-t8t5

FireWOOd For Sae
8927 (7~)388-9284

IH!IISS

Waterline Special 314 200 PSI
$21 86 Per 100 1 200 PSI
$37 oo Per 100 All Brau Com
preuk&gt;n Fitting&amp; In Stock
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
J-.n 0!110 1 8QO-S37 9528

Poodle puppiea black femala&amp;J,
t ny toy teacups AKC 8 weakst
shcta &amp; wormed 740-667 3404

Antiques

Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment
Phone (7~)448-0380

Ona bedroom opartrnont &amp; 3 bodroom moblo homo no 7&lt;10-

Sawm $3 791!1 New Super Lum
bermale 2000 arger capac Ilea
mort opt ons manufacturer of
aewmllla edoers end aklddarl
NORWOOD INDUSTRIES 2S2
Sonw I Orivl Buffa o NY 1422!5
FREE Informal an 1 800 578
1383 Ext 200-U

530

(7~)245-574?

fnNn,..l1

non

AKC German Sheppard Pup~
Top Bloodl nea La ge Breadl
$175 (304)875-~724
r

1un111oa

On Bad com Apartment In
Gallipolis $250 Per Month Plus
Oepaoit Call{7~)448-2~

Tappan HI Efficiency ~0% Qaa
Furnaces Oil Fu nac.a 12 Stir
Heat Pump a Air Cond tlonlng
Syattms Free 1 Year w•rr•nty
Bennetts Heal ng I Cooling f
800 872 51187 www.or'Jb com.11tnSAVEl SAVEl SAVEl Hoot
Pumps L P &amp; Natural Gas Fu
ntcts If You Don t Cull Ua We
Botn Lo60 (700)446 6308 &amp;
1 SQ0-291 &lt;l096

810
Tobacco P ants For Sale Ca I
(7«l)olo46-7843
Tobacco Ptantt Order NoW Ti
Guarantee Early Spring Planlfn
lncreas~ Allotments Mean l:xtr~
Plante Thank You For Your Bua
nets Cal Danny Oewhurs
LIIVI M1110g1 (304)885 374
Or (30ol)891-3789

1 HANSPOHIM ION

710

Auto• tor Sale

10 OOWN CARS! POLICE IM
POUNDS &amp; REPOSI HONDA S
CHEVY 8 JEEP 8 LOW AS 1211
M08 l i t ll'!to ,OR LISTINGS
CALL 1 100 •UI ooeo o•t C
11811

Home
lmprovamanta

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional I fetime guarantee
Local references furnished Ea
tab &amp;nod 1975 Col 24 Hrl (740)
448 0870 1 800 287 0578 Roo
era Waterproof rtQ

1til Aod Ford Tempo Good
Conti liOn (7~!«HH10

~·· donllol or commtrolol w ring
K*w 11rv cs br rt~a ra Matter Ll
~tnud tltctrlc 1n Ridenour
~llctrloll WVOOD30e 304 178

1111 Orlnd Am lt411e lttl
Clvollor 111115 1117 Lu!TIIno
54tH 111t4 S.tD 1381e llfte S
10 l4211e Othon In SIOOk Wt
'lllko Trodn COOK MOTOAI

446·2342

llaotrloal and
Refrigeration

17"
1111c111
L,Ej~4IIINHI.'!OII!'!IUB!'IIII!I"'l

WITH THE

CLASSIFIEDSI

(7~)ol48-0103

110 Help Wanted

111111 Ponl oo Bonnlovtllo SSE
sunroof Auto Loodod 14800
(304)175 2el3
Allor 4pm
(304)671-332•
11198 Ford lB rd LX OldOd Ill
option&amp; V 8 28 MPG 51 000
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Llvlnoaton 1 aaumtnt Wster
Proonng al baument repalre
done free 111 m1tt1 ltet m1
'QIUirtnttl 14yra on Job upe
once (30oi)He :IH7

840

8811

17481
12·2155

The Eagles (18 3) opened
the season wtth a 3-3 mark
droppmg games to Hocking
D1vmon foes 1hmble Waterford and Federal Hocking
However smce a 57-531oss
to the Lancers Eastern has
turned up the heat a notch or
two and along the way
avenged all three early season
defeats mcluding a 62 47 diS
manthng ofTnmble 111 the last
game of the: season to earn a
p1ece of the Hocking D1v1
s1on crown
Thmgs dtdn t really go our
way early m the year but boy
they have really progressed
from where they were In the
beg~nnmg Caldwell satd
In Portsmouth Em Caldwell sees a team similar to
Tnmble or Southern Wlth
very qu1ck guards and good
all around athletes Three of
the Tartans top four scorers

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c

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ended the sco rmg wt th
another JUmper as nme ran
out
I thought we fimshed the
La,t th'l;• mmutes of the half
wry well and gave ourselves a
double-digit lead at the half
Huntermd
Ohto held off a charge by
Buffalo early m the second
half wh1ch saw the Bulls cut
the gap to 53-47 wtth 17 40
left to play However the
Bobcats r:1n the~r lead to 16
pomts over the next SIX nunutes With a 15 5 run
The Bulls never got any
closer than 15 pomts for the
remamder of the game as the
Bobcats upped the defenSive
pressure and continued to
pound the ball mstde
Buffalo (4 24) hu JUSt 3 of
8 3 pmnt shots m the second
half after htmng 6 of. 10 m
the first 20 nunutes Addti!On
all}l the Bobcat! outrebound
ed the Bulls 24 11 m the second half and fi111Shed W&gt;th a
44-25 advantage on the
boards overall
In the second hal( we hm
!ted thcrr 3s Hunter sard
(Gabt) Cagwm got two 3s
late but the game was pretty
well over by then
Lou1s Campbell scored 22
poum to lead Buffalo He was
6-for-14 from the field
mcludtng 3 for 5 from 3
pmnt range
Jason Robmson added 19
and Danuen Foster and and
Robert Brown had 11 each
for the Bulls who haven t
won a postseason game smce
the 1997-98 season when
they were members of the
Mtd Contment Conference

Oerry Jordan Lennon Brown
John Parker) transferred from
Portsmouth H1gh School m
the offseason and the mflux of
new talent has defimtely been
a plus for East
Portsmouth East IS a very
talented club Caldwell sa1d
Theyve got some rremen
dous athletes and we know
11 s gomg to be a tremendous
game
Our ki&lt;l•
looking for
ward to It Caldwell added
They ve spent a lot of ttme
m the gym all summer and
played a lot of basketball thrs
summer and had a great con
dit10mng 111 the fall
Portsmouth East (13 8) has
made ItS hv1ng from the
penmeter thiS season w1th
Jordan Ryan McGraw and
Brown all shootmg 40 per
cent or better from 3 potnt
range Jordan who averages
18 potnts per game has lut 4?
percent from the field
McGraw and Brown are nght
at 40 percent
Eastern hopes to cotltam
the Tartan shooters while
estabhshmg ItS presence •ns1de
With the hkes of semors Matt
Stmpson Joe Brown and
Chad Nelson and sophomore
Brent Buckley
That s one thmg we ve
really stressed Caldwell said
The game of basketball IS a
game of miSmatches And
what were trymg to do IS
work that to our advantage

=

B3

The Bobcats will face Tole
do Ill the MAC quarterfinals
at 2 p m Thursday tn Cleve
land The Rockets (21 9)
defeated Eastern Mtchigan
67-43
In rherr only meeong th•s
season the Bobcats lost to the
Rockets 66 53 m Toledo
They ve got some good
overall srze Hunter md of
Toledo
They re
well
coached They play great
defense and they re good
offenSively
Were gomg to cake a vote
tomorrow (Tuesday) and see
1f our guys want to go up
there Hunter JOked
Notes Dusun Ford made
hiS 1OOth career start for Oh10
Monday and moved to No 8
on the Bobcats all Orne asmt
hst With three assms aga t 1St
Buffalo Ford now has 308
career ass1sts one less tha 1 h1s
brother Geno who rs an ass s
tant coach for the Bobcats
Patnck Flomo needs Jl st four
blocked shots to become
Oh10 s and the MAC s all
tune leader m blocks He has
95 thiS season lncludmg last
mght Flomo has blocked five
or more shots m I 0 games
thiS season
The Bobcats
unproved to II I at home
With the wm thetr best home
rtcord smce the 1994 95 sea
son when Ohio went 14 I at
the Convo
The Bobcats
scored 100 pomts m a game
for the first t1me smce Nov
28 1998 a span of 88 games
when Ohro netted 100
agamst W•lmmgto n m the
season opener that year

Matts a pretty btg kid Joe s a
pretty b1g kid and Chad Nel
sons a pretty b1g ktd and
Brent Buckley IS a b1g kid
One of thmgs were trymg to
do IS stress m11de then go
outside
Caldwell also hopes to take
advantage of hiS clubs depth
One of the thmgs that we
thmk that we nught be able
to do 1s uttbze our bench over
the!t lJench becau•e they
only hke to play SIX or seven
kids Caldwell !aid We II
run seven to etght k1ds tn
agamst them
Common opponents for
the Eagles and Tartans mclude
South Galha and Ironton St
Joe Both dubs own convmc
mg wms over the Rebds and
Flyers
Eastern defeated South
Gallia 82 41 a 1d had 10 trou
ble with the Flyers 111 the sec
uonal champ1onslup vtn
mng 76-37
Portsmouth East defeated
the Rebels and Flyers twiCe
dunng the regular season
Including 1ts 68 6S over
tune w1n 10 the sec tional
tournament over North
Adams Portsmouth East has
won three stmght and srx of
1ts last seven
Game nme " set for 6 15
p m Wednesday at the Convo
m Athens

110 Help W.nted

Unlveralty of Rio Grande/Rio Grande
Community College Cro11roada
Program Ia accepting appllcatlona for
Ita' Youth Employment Servlcll (YES)
Program. Participating youth, ag11
11-21 y11ra, will receive •8.15 per
hour for up to 120 houre of paid work
experience at public and/or private
work11t11 In Melga County.
VII jllriiOifllnll Will I'IOIIVI oompnhlntiVt 11-lmtnl
employmtnt rtiCilntll training, and aHIIIInotiO nnd
fullotlmt ptrmlntnl lmploynttnt, t1 part oltht overall
work Ufllrl•noe progrtm

High IOhoolltudtnll oolfttt atlllltnll tnd our of work
yau111 .,. -llgiCIIO apply Applloanta muot btl
111111 County rtlldtnll 1111 1•21 YHII tncl m111
WOI1ttofo1 lnveetment Aot tllglblllty requirement•
To apply, vltlt lilt Unfvtralty ol Rio Grando/Crouroodo
Olltat 11110 IIIH ltrttt Mlddltport Ohio (olllct Uflllalrt)
oroel tol00oall·7201,txt71M ortn-142018827004
'1'1111 W1A ltrvlot It fundiC! by lht UBOOL through th1
Ohio DJ,. end lht Mtltl County DtPirlmtnt ol Job ond
l'tmllr llt'VICII

Thafamfly
or
Donna VanMeter
would
like
to
thank frlanda and
fllmfly and her
ol•eamat•• tor all
the praytl'l, food,

oarda

tlowera,

wife,

C•lvery

and
aur,port
during h•r II n•••
and her d11th A
epeofaf thank• tor
Aev
Charfea
MoKanala
lnd

Pilgrim
Churoh
Cheater
Method tat
Church
Dorothy
Karr organlat anet
Opal
Etohenger,
Inez Nevell •na
Cleo Smfth tor
helping with •II
th• food •tt•r the
aervloe
a big
th•nt&lt;el

'

�Page B4 • The Dally Sentinel
: Tueaclay, March 8, 2001

PUBLIC
NOTICE

Pul;tli" Notica in Nc:wtpapen.
Your Ris;hl1u Kaow. Dcli~t~cred RiJht 10 Your Docw.

NEA Cro ..word Puzzle

0·

PHil.LIP
AI.DJR

RotERT IISSEU
CONSTRUCl'ION

Truckina

NewHomu

Benefit Gun Shoot
for John Williams
March 1oth
12 noon
lS~lOnlSOrl!d by Racine Gun
1/2 shot I 1/2 slug

FURTHER
EXCEPTING tho coal
and mining rlghto
oold to Mortln
Eboroboch by dead
doted April 17, 1811
which provldto thll
any aurlace land

required or uoed for
mining provldta tho!
any ourloco lond ;
roqulred or Ultd for
mining

Unltocl Swtoo of
Amerlce, v.. Brenda

Jonoo,otol.

''

Melgo County
Common Ploao Cuo
No. OQ.CV-108.
In purouance of an
order loouod from
Common
Pltao
Court, within ond lor
IIMI County of Molgo,
S'-to of Ohio, on tho
20th ' doy
of
Dacamblr, 2000, and
to mo dlroctad, I will
offer lor oalt at
Public Auction In the
Margo
County
Courthouoo, 100 e:

••

2nd Street, Pomeroy,

Ohio, on TUooday,
April 24, 2001 at
10:30 e.m. of said
doy, tho tollowlng
Flool Eatoto, to-wit:
Sltuata In S•ctfon

13, Town 3·N, Range
12-W,
Sutton
Townohlp, Melga
County, Slota of Ohio
and

being

more

ponlcularly described
ooli&gt;llowo:
PARCEL NO. 1:
Commencing ol tho'
Southon! corner or
Section 13 and tho!
Grantor'• Southaaat
corneri thence S. 88

dtg. 16'28" W. along
the South Uno of
Section 13 and tho
Grantor'o South Uno,
1,759.89 loot to an
Iron plpo ut In tho
centerline or Sutton
Townahlp Road 28,
(SIIaor Flood); thence
N.

oo deg . 54' 40 e.
11

along

tho

uld

centerline of Sutton

Townohlp Road 28
(Saloer Rood), 137.62
feet to a railroad
oplke aat; thence s.
89 deg. 05'20" E.
along a random llnl,
20.00 loti to an Iron
plpa oat In tho Eott
Rlght..OI-Way line or
oold Sutton Townohlp
Rood (Saloor Flood),
aald Iron pipe sot
oloo bolng the roal
point of beginning of
tho porcol horaln
doecrlbod; thtnce N.
00 dog. 54' 40" E.
along the oald E11t
Rlght·Of·Way line or
aold Sutton Townlhlp
Ro•d 28 (Saloor .
Road), 114.00 loot to
an Iron plpo oot !hot
baaro 8. 89 dog.
. 05'20" E., 20.00 loot
!rom o railroad oplko
ott In tho oald
conttrllnt of oald.
Sutton Townohlp
Rood
28 (SIIHr
Road); thonco s. 88
dog. 05'20" E. along 1
random nne, 377.38
lett to an Iron pipe
HI; thonco s. 07 dog ..
52'32" E. along 1
random Uno, 115.35
lett to an Iron plpo
at! that booro N. 07
dog. 52'32" w.,103.90
fill from on Iron plpt
aot In tht aold South
line of Section 13 and
the Grantor'• South
lint; thtnot N. 88

I
·l

'
•

....

purpoaea

,....;..------ oholl bo pold to tho
Public Notice
' Grontooo or their
-~=..,.;.=;.:_- heirs ·at the rate of
dog. 05'20" W., olong $200.00 per acre ond
1 random Uno, 395.00 lhll no oholle to be
feet to tho point. of ounk within 300 loti
beginning
end of tho lhon preoont
containing 1.0108 raoldence.
ocr...
PERMANENT
Subloct to alllogol PARCEL No: 18·
hlghwoyo
and 00051 .000
tlllmtnto of record.
Localod ot 30880
The
above Mitchell
Road,
deocrlptlon lo bond Racine, OH 4Sn1.
on o ourvoy by
Sold proporty hu
Gerold w. Boyha, bean opprolotd at
Floglotertd
$30,000.00 and
Prof..olonal
connot oell lor 1111
Surveyor No. 5·8139 than two·lhlrdo of
(Job No. 879·02), appraloomont. . Thlo
complotad on Auguot approlul lo booed
upon 1 vlouol
30,1979.
PARCEL NO. 2: lnopectlon of that
Commencing at tho part of tho promlool
Southooot corner of to which acc111 wao
Section 13 and tho roodlly ovalloblo. Tho
Grantor's Southeast appral11r1 111ume

l'
I

:I

---·'

Mercury
SPEIGIALRNANCE DFJ&gt;ARTMENT
Bankruptcy? credit Problems?
'We Call Help'll

R-Ing

._,'Plumbing
-~

&amp;Oottlfl

Call Ua flnt Or We Botb Losel

Ask For Mike Hindle

Ill

or446-9800
•

PJ EXCAVATING
"'•

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llomts,
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Road

28

(Salaer

HOME CREEK
ENT., INC.
992·7943

Road), 138.00 laotto
.an Iron pipe aotthat
baaro S. 89 dog.
05'20" E., 20.00 loot
!rom a rallr9ad oplka
aot In tho said
centerline of uld
Sutton Townohlp
Road 28 (Salser
Road); !honea S. 89
dtg. 05'20" E. along a
random line, 395.00
,foal to an Iron plpa
.oot; lhonco S. 07 deg.
.52'32" E. olong a
rondom llno, 103.90
lett to the point of
beginning
and
containing 1.1089
acral.
SubJoct to all legal
hlghwayo·
and
Hnmonto of record.
The
above
deocrlptlon 11 baood
on a ourvey by
Gerold W. Bayha,
Roglollrod
Prolaoolonol
Surveyor ·No. S-8139
(Job No. 879·02),
compltlad on Auguat
30,1979.
SUBJECT to toxoo

Judgo: crow

. Ellzabtth Banoa, tl
al. -·

STATE OF OHIO
DEPAIITMENT OF .
INSURANCE

Otlendan'-.

County Compliance

NOTICE IN SUIT
FOR FORECLOSURE
OF MORTGAGE

Tho undortlgnod,
SUPIRINTENOENT
OF INSURANCE OF
THE STATE OP
OHIO,
h.reby
oertllloo
tha.t
CI!NTRAL BI!NertTS
MUTUAL UFE ·
INSURANCE ' '
COIIMNV
of
WAIHINOTOrto Stolt
of DIIIJIOI ol

whOat laat known

devfae••· ltgateea,

and ••••••ment• executora,
which are now or admlnlotri!Ort,

.uJLDIIt81NC.

Mon-Frl 8:30 • 5:00
Over 40 yra experience
(740) 742 BB88
1-888-521-()918

DYIAI
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CONCREif/BLOCKIBRICX
• Pooten, Willi, Stepoo
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and Drives • Stendl
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..

THE BORN LOSER
....

WIL&amp;.RfOIZC£,

"&lt;OUR~IP

'I WAAT 'I'OU t O

::ro\D '\1\t: l~fSI'
Of'l'l\( Ofo..'(
W~lt-IG:o (){IT !

It:rr..

WrHesel

u~ ,To

1441'1ii ''" Olll1i•

44H995

j

"fe~ke

FfH Ell/'"""

9*1405
591·5011

.AIUDL

Cellular·

· Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

(2 well.)

....

27 llomovocl
32 Arrow

loland
24 ThiN!ore
25 Hoolory

21 City

47 Nurury

·--ry· lhoclllIn
Ruulo
(t:'!c,
28 North
Corollno
8 "Thl

8

.,....,

7 Gloolo

33=out

aoundr
34 Jono Fondo
film, ·-of

lion

42 Not !hoi
43 Jakyll'l
oppooltt
44 Plnn11c1t
45 Bongkok
nltiVI

po-

... Curvocl
molding
49 Shorl

Yesterday, I menOrtallet"
collage
tioned three booklets
bird
2a Incline
9 Actor
God"
50 Actual
Domon
30 Onby Englishmen David
35 Runion
being
10 Hoovy
Ill-)
rlvor
Bird and Marc Smith:
31 txpanolvt 52 Parlo
38 AdiMirtnll
IIIIOft
11 Pltlnllfl
37 Nlttltr
" Dece ptive
Card
oflalam
54
Roman
31
Nohoor
12Withartd
38
Sligo
Play," " Eliminations
1,002
ohaap
dlrtellan 11 Furlouo
and Throw-Ins," and .
WAS AN &amp;•POUNDER AN'
" Planning . in Suit
NAMED HER BESSIE SUE
Contracts" (Master
Point Press) . They
supply good instruction ; however, I think
the books would have
been so much better if
they had been expanded from 60 pages to 80
or 96. Then, each
problem could have
first been set with just
two hands visible. The
· YOU 60T IN
reader would see the
T~e
OF
full layout only after
BMIN fOOP1•
he has had a chance to
work out the answer.
Immediately seeing all
52 cards is un satisfac$0Mt NOOPL.f
tory. (In the quizzes
IOUP1
CELEBRITY CIPHER
you usually see only
by Lull Campo•
26 cards, never 52,
Celebrity Cipher cryptogram&amp; are created !rom quolatlona by famous
people, pest and preeent. Each letter in the cipher standi tor another.
which al so irritates .
Today's clue: X equals F
me.)
In this deal from
BOOPVDSBLV
PVBTTZ
'8
I"'
"'I
the
suit-contract
bookf\0\o.l Nil t ~:£0 iO 11'\I'IDJE.
INNCASTT . LFIBL
LRV
BTT
1'\Y ~t-Ill' Wf\ffi N.1. TI\E.Y let, you are in four
spades. . Obligingly,
GillE. II£ TO W~ Wl"l\\ IS "'
OPVLLZ
X P N J
DNJSYI
West leads a diamond
S K
~'l"UI'lD POIC.lL "?
to your queen. How
VMVPZNYV . ' - INTCVY
JWDR
would you continue?
There is no auction
IT N E V ASYYVP . PNEVPL
in the book. If South, I
.i
would open two noF P •
!I"
CNAYVZ
~
trump, and North
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: ' II was kind ol like walling lor Santa
would raise to three
Claua.' - Dave Winfield. ol being chosan Into ballb1'11'1 Hall
of Fame.
no-trump, reaching an
:;::::====::---"'1 easy contract to make.
Although disastrous
Ullo4 lly CU.Y L POUAII _;;__ _ __
TH...T'!. WAAT
here, West's lead i~
MADE IT
SO AWFUL .
reasonable after this
Reorro~~go ltotoro of lhe
lovr ecromblod wordo ba- .
sequence (but Jess so if
South opened two no- low 1o form four ~mplo -do. ;'
trump).
NI RE E P
With one club loser,
: 2
you can afford two
heart losers, but not
three. Here, if you
S0 J 1T
cross to dummy with a
1
trump and play a heart
. .
. .
to your king , West
should return his sec-,
p L I ME ~
ond trump. And when 5
Along life's highway the pessiI ~ATE IT
East
wins
the
next
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
mist
may often be right. I have noW~EN M'f CAPPIE
heart
trick,
he
will
ticed,
however, that the trip is enSAVS." I T~INK
denude dummy of
T0 NKYT
joyed more by the-----·--.
I'LL 5TANI7 WAV
0\IER ~ERE IN
trumps, killing both
;;,.1~1,..;,,~,
c-~e~. tho chudlo ........
the ruff and your con- . . .
.
. .
. by tilllnt In tile ......,. - •
CASE 'f'OU
tract.
you dovolop " - *P Ha. I ........
SHANK IT!''

i

.

..
•••

I
I I I: I

PEANUTS

I' .1 I I :

I1-.P.,-.

Interior

FREE ISTIMATES

~Mts~itge

Alter 6 pin
7&lt;CQ-985-4180

I
•.;. . . .1---1 e

I' I' I.
1: I' I
I I I I I I I I

rU. it for you •

,,...,,

·

r: r r

tiN pain ou&amp;

ofpainllz'fl- I..r ,..

...

2 -mater
3--11
4 Cowgirl
Evono
5 Stcroo-

I I' '1 I I

LINDA'S
PAINTING

7

ITUESDAY

•

MARCH61

'

Simply lead a low • PRINT Nt.MERED
heart from your hand · ;;=;;l~ET~T~~·;s;I;N~SG;;U~AR::E::S~=*·=~-::::;-~~-=*-=~·::;-~~­
at trick two. This puts j i UNSCIAMII.E FOR
you one step ahead, ~
...;..::A:;:N;:SWE~I:.,_-;;;;;;tti;r;·-;;·~-~~--.&amp;..-.1.
. ...J.L.....J.
and the defenders canSCIAMoliTS ANIWIIS ·
not stop the critical
· Obtuse • Llama • Hilly· Frisky· FAILS
.. .
heart .ruff.
As a community volunteer I received 11 needlepoint
that read: '!Sittdness Is 11n investment that never FAILS.'

fi~---

'
laleelt Service
204-Condor Sl
Pomeroy

992·2975
IIUTE MECHANICAL C~ACTORS

·...

Rooting • Home
MalntenanceGuttera- Down
Spout

23~

conotell•

0

New lfomes, Room
Additions, Garages,
Pole Buildings,
Siding, Decks,
Kitchens, Drywall &amp;
. More
W.. Can Make Your
DrtamA Reality/
740-742-3411
FREE BSnMATESi

Every Spring
a
. FREE Blade Sharpening. ' .
New equlpm.nt arriving delly
See Manning, Wayne or Jim
for.a REAL DEAl on a new lawn
traCtor, lawn mower or weed

clothing

22 Football
11om
23 Agono'o

'::~~~, SC£:~4\\lA-~t.~s·

Coll',truc t1o11

lt1ng ltlgulljlllr wll
lle'll fllpu ...... ,.. IPI'Ina

ruldent

!L_~--~====~~

79% on;

• Vertleab • WoOd
• Mlnll • Etc

youa
CONC!JEJE
CONNECTION
Pdoe, 8idlwllkl.

J. LH Covington, II,
DlrtOtor
8uptrlnttndant of
lnouranca ol OhiO
March a
ftc

I

made to order at our
location

QUI!~~ ·

valid
without
tlgnaturt or INI. ,

_
. I.____
..

•

21 Ukloomt 41 Hunt.r

1' G'"-w

21 Cammon

'- tJOw ltiOUT

~~ llll 'li't HOilll'

62-2772

HowardL.

Pill

DOWN

20 Mapla, o.g.

IJ/AY

BLIND SPOT

Scllh 0• IOf United
' india .
Sl ~.00 Installed

7:00 AM • 8:00 PM

''•
•

The CRAFTY,

Box 188
Middleport, Ohio 45780
Loeal*5284

Slzeu• x 10' .
to 10'x30'
Hours

WE

FOOl&gt;
STOltE

l~ PITifUL!

Rocky R. 1-fupp, Agent

740-949-2217

SHE

ttEAL.Tt4

hant,.

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.

41nt

· ~D-0-C------~----WAS PA5·51N'

••
•

;::;:;;;;;:;;~~~:;:;:;;;:::::;::::

21870 ....,.n Road
FIIOint, Ohio

: BARNEY

· (FiciOIY OUtlet)
All vertleal blinds are

WANTED

....

,..

55 - Creed

11 Actreu
Ttw11111n

-.. ......

••

5711ote
lfotlc

weight

•t-

, a;...._

L.!Pnel, MTH, K·Line, .
Athearn,
Atlas, Bachmann
,.
-· &amp; Accessories
0, HO, &amp; .N Guage
Estes Rockets

9tz;7943

•..,.•.

,.

IMI

-

17~

V't llllk:. N....

. . . . . . . . N-*

hocflay
tum

. 11 Ont or lhe

wQIUII
• 11 I I
• Q II

• A. It I

Chuter, Ohio

Homi Crttk Ent..lnc

Hill'• Stlf

•
'•

51E-

15 E111 dllh

•111

(740) 118!5-3301

351137111. 'Itt. 7 North

pan

• KJIIIJ

BAUM LUMBER CO.
J

-•••

!!Coo......

14S.aoK:I

• I I t

•••••

'·

-46~84 St. Rt. 248

lion marie
lnllrumonl 53 Plctunla

BY PHILLIP ALDER

. (117) 144-1111

1000 St. Rt. T 11ou111

CooMI/e, OH 41723

lhalp

• ITt '

• .I • ••

ltoPtH/11-~
PW lmMm
,......, .
.
(7ol0)311tM4

~IHP.arla

....

• 7I I I

"A It

All Home Improvements

~

.

••
'
•••
••
•

7 --fool 47 rl..,
lMgt Illig
13 Sjlllt wtllla 51 Punctua-

Good to bad

'&amp;:!.

lnMII'I"ftOt,

........

40 An liN
42 Nol11118

,._

I

· '-"""~

~durlng!ht

•
••

I&amp;I

.
' Authorized
FICIOry

... ....
• A. Q'

.......

ACROSS

Opooloflood".

llloto'•no ~ ~J',:,

304-882·2220

•'•

· ~~

•IIrllleWort

ourr1nt y1er to
Ira-In lhlaIll 1ppropr1111
bualnno
ol

Duambtr 31, 1111.
AI-:

Wlaclowo•Room
AJWIIioel• Roollq

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

•lttllll Ill
• EIIIIIIIWI!t .• Tnnsmln• Rhlrl

hal

r.':::

• RepiiCtR CRt

740-992-7599

•IHIIIM•IIll FreltEIIIIelllr

oomplied with tile ·
rewa ol thlo Swlo
IJIIIIIoable to It and 11

Thl1 . o•rllfloate
muM be pullllllhld In
·• nowopepar of
olrOultUon In
lit ,.,~~~r.,
condition 11 lihqwn
by Ito annual
1t1ttm1n1 to hav•
bean •• lollowa on

Sfdi11•NewG.......

FFIEE ESTIMATES

~

MaU. 'lmtor &amp;
E(,.JIIINUI Parla

Ill

'""'~ • Vlloyl

(!M!M!I(W . . l1liOIIIllll

.~

All

Aaclnt, Ohio 41771

LARRY SCHEY

·=

oddro.. 11 52302
Mount Olivo Flood,
Long Bottom, OH
45743, and tht
unknown helra,

Rulllnd, Ohio
trudl: seets. car aeall, lleldllnen, ind tarps,

SHADERNERAG.SE~CE

or thoy might bo
dtnlod a nearing In
Tho Chooo Manhlllon· · lhlo 0111.
Bank, AI TruiiH ot
IM~ Homo Equity
LERNER, SAMPSON
LoanTrull1198-5
&amp; ROTHFUSS
under the Pooling
Attornayalor Plolnllll
and Servicing
Agreement dated 11
~~C:=~~" 411201·
of September 1,1898
c/o CIIIFinanclll
241-3100
Mong1g1 CoiT!pany
Morch e,t3, 20, 27&amp;
Aprll3,10, 2001 .
· Plaintiff,
. Public Notlc.
•VI•

Elizabeth Bartoo,

BISSELL

conatcutfve weeka,

To the Big City.

)

LINCOLN

11-~

From the
Backyard ..
•'

URNPIKE

corner; thanco s. 88 no rtoponolblllty for,
dog. 18' 28" w. along and glvo no weight
tho South line of to, unknown logol
Section 13 and tho matiere, Including,
Grentor'o south olno, but not limited to,
1,327.81 foot to an concoolod or lottnt
Iron plpo oot, oald dofocto, ond/or tho
H!Qb&amp; Dry
Iron plpo oot aloo praoonco ol harmtul
being tho ·real point . or toxic chomlcalo,
Self-StoraQe
of beginning of tho pollutanto, or gao11.
parcel doocrlbad:
Term• of Solo: Ton
Thence continuing Parcent (10%) doy of
113195 Hiland Rd.
s. 86 dog. 16'28" w. oalo, balance within
Po,...roy, Ohio
along the prevloualy 30 dlyo.
doocrlbed Uno, 412.22
foal to a point In the Ralph E. Truoull,
Eaol Rlghi·Of-Woy Sheriff of Molgo • 740-992-5232
line of Sutton County, Ohio
Towniohlp Road 28
(Sailor Road), oald Sltphon D. Mlloa,
point baorlng N. 88 Attorney
Public Notice
dog. 18'28" E., 20.08 18 Well Monument
laetlrom an Iron pipe Avenue
recorded In Mortgage
nt In tho centerline Dayton, Ohio 45402
Book 88, page 171, of
of oald Sutton March8,13,20,27&amp; thla
· County
Townohlp Flood 28 April 3,10, 2001
Rocordtr'l Office.
(Salser
Road),
All of tho above
passing through an . Public NOlle•
nomad delondontt
Iron plpo oot lor I.,.....,.;.:;;.;;.:.;.:;;:.;:::_.J 111 requited to
relioronco at 410.87
.. COURT OF
a'n owar • within
loot; lhonco N. 00
COMMON P~EAS
twonty-olghl· (28)
dog. 54'40" E. along
MEIGS COUNTY,
dayo alter )Ill
tho oald Eoot Right·
OHIO
publication, which
01-Woy llno of oald
ahall ba publlohod
Sutton Townahlp Cue No: oci-cV-148 '· once o weok lor olx

may
hor.tafter IPDUIII lncl llligno
bocomo Ilona on oald ond tho unknown
guardlono ol minor
and/or lncompettnl
halrl of Elizabeth
Bartoo, on of who••
rnldtncn oro.
unknown and oannot
br
rononoble
d IIQII\01
be
IIOtrllinad, wlflllkl '
notloo that on lhllth
day ·of Dooambor,
2000, the C"••e
Monhatton B•nk,' AI
TrutiH of IMC Home
Equity Loan Trull
1198·6 under · lhl
Pooling · , ond
Strvlclng Agrtament
delod
11
of
Soptembor 1, 1888
c/o CIIIFinanolol
Mortgage Compony
flltd "" Complaint ln .
the Common Ploao
court of Molgo
County, Ohio In Ca•
No. OO.CV·141,m on
tho docket of the
Courl, and tho obJect
... and everywhere in between, the
and demand lor rtllef
· newspaper is THE place to find the
of which pleading 11
to
fortolou tiMI lien
stories that are important to you and
of
plolntlfl't
your community.
mortgogo recorded
upon tht lollowlng
doocrlbod real ootllo
tow":
You ' ll always be in the know wilh a
Property addraoo:
52302 Mount Olive
newspaper subscription . We've got the
Road, Long Bottom,
goods ro keep you Inrormed,
OH 45743 lnd being
enlightened and enrertained every day.
mort particularly
dtocrlbod
In
Call today ror a subscription,
plalntlll'o mortgogt

I

I

Ia 11'1Mle.

A&amp;D Alto Upholstery· PillS, lac.
cionvenible &amp; vioyliOpl, Four wlleeler oeots,
motorcycle seell, boot oovcrs, carpelS, c1c.

Clten baernentl,
attics, 91111111 &amp;
berne. Free
estimate Light
Haull Jobl

uld
prtmlo .. ,
oubJoct to oil of
which
thlo
conveyan~

$Dollar
Daves
740-992.()459

dHdr ot record tor

SHERIFF'S SALE

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5

[ AAiLiL~E~Y~OOfO~P~~~--------------------------_:::::~::~~~;;~.~uo~a~&amp;~~--~========~;;~~~~~~;;

preml- oncl except
condlllono,
rootrlctlono and
••••men11, If any,
con'-lnad In Iormor

Public NoUc•

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

2S ytlll experltnca
''" EatlfltiiiM .

740-742.fl01$ or

. 1-877-353-7o22

Wednesday, March 7, 2001
Enterprises or endeavors you
conduct on your own will have
greater chances for success in the
year ahead than those you share
with others. Be your own person
as much as possible.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Your precious time is likely to be
wasted today, because you could
choose to panicipare in a frivolous
activity rather than keeping your
nose to the grindstone. Pisces,
treat yourselHo a binhday gift.
Send for your Astra-Graph predictions for tbc year ahead by
mailing $2 and SASE to Astro·
Graph, c/o this newspaper. P.O.
Box 1758, Murray Hill Station,
New York, NY 10156. Be sure to
state your Zodiac sign.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
It's a waste of time to set people
all stirred up today over somethins about which tbcy can do
nothina. All It'll produce II frustrotlon that could be taken out on
the Innocent.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Maklna Impulsive chanaeR today
where a criticalaoal is concerned
bcc1use thlnas aren't aolna fa•t
enouah to pleale you could derail

your entire project. Usc ihat
patience you're so famous f~.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
One careless remark today could
ignite someone whose views and
position on politics or religion are
diametrically opposed to yours.'
Keep all such subjects under
wraps.
CANCER (June 21 -luly 22)
Even though you're known for.
being a careful thinker who nev·
er makes any snap decisions on
imponont matters, today you
could violate this stance and do
something quite costly.
LBO (July 23-Aug. 22) Beforl!
re81T811ging your schedule t&lt;iday .
that involved others 10 make
things'morc comfonable for yourself, consider the inconvenience
to tbcm. They won't tako kindly
to you.
VIRGO (Aua. 23-Sept. 22)
You could be uldna
IIIICCi·
dent to happen today If you
lltempt to do on your own a jail

for

lhll Cilia for experience In Jtan.

....
. LIBRA (Sept. :1.3-0ct.

dllna unflllllllllr tool• or mllerl·

23) Why
would you .,ven
to have a
aood time Joday •pendlna your

••peel

day with people who enjoy activities you dislllce7 Be more selective when choosi111 recreational
companions.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Be pn:pared, consistent and tenacious wllen taekling a difficult
IISSignmcnttoday. If you approach
il in an adlib fashion. the results
will be problematical to achieve.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Don't try to take advantage of ·
having a captlve audience today ·
to foist your views or opinions on
them. You won'l win lhem over,
mcroly anger them.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan.
19) Usually you're a give-and·
take person. Today, however. you
may· be inclined to self-serving
ways, but what makes it worse is ·
you mi&amp;ht have to deal with
someone who also wants his/her
way.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 191
If you do not think for yourself
.today, I aumntee It that someone
will come Ilona who will be mon
than wlllilll to think for you.
Unfor1unlholy, you'll n01 like the
re~ults.

�Page B4 • The Dally Sentinel
: Tueaclay, March 8, 2001

PUBLIC
NOTICE

Pul;tli" Notica in Nc:wtpapen.
Your Ris;hl1u Kaow. Dcli~t~cred RiJht 10 Your Docw.

NEA Cro ..word Puzzle

0·

PHil.LIP
AI.DJR

RotERT IISSEU
CONSTRUCl'ION

Truckina

NewHomu

Benefit Gun Shoot
for John Williams
March 1oth
12 noon
lS~lOnlSOrl!d by Racine Gun
1/2 shot I 1/2 slug

FURTHER
EXCEPTING tho coal
and mining rlghto
oold to Mortln
Eboroboch by dead
doted April 17, 1811
which provldto thll
any aurlace land

required or uoed for
mining provldta tho!
any ourloco lond ;
roqulred or Ultd for
mining

Unltocl Swtoo of
Amerlce, v.. Brenda

Jonoo,otol.

''

Melgo County
Common Ploao Cuo
No. OQ.CV-108.
In purouance of an
order loouod from
Common
Pltao
Court, within ond lor
IIMI County of Molgo,
S'-to of Ohio, on tho
20th ' doy
of
Dacamblr, 2000, and
to mo dlroctad, I will
offer lor oalt at
Public Auction In the
Margo
County
Courthouoo, 100 e:

••

2nd Street, Pomeroy,

Ohio, on TUooday,
April 24, 2001 at
10:30 e.m. of said
doy, tho tollowlng
Flool Eatoto, to-wit:
Sltuata In S•ctfon

13, Town 3·N, Range
12-W,
Sutton
Townohlp, Melga
County, Slota of Ohio
and

being

more

ponlcularly described
ooli&gt;llowo:
PARCEL NO. 1:
Commencing ol tho'
Southon! corner or
Section 13 and tho!
Grantor'• Southaaat
corneri thence S. 88

dtg. 16'28" W. along
the South Uno of
Section 13 and tho
Grantor'o South Uno,
1,759.89 loot to an
Iron plpo ut In tho
centerline or Sutton
Townahlp Road 28,
(SIIaor Flood); thence
N.

oo deg . 54' 40 e.
11

along

tho

uld

centerline of Sutton

Townohlp Road 28
(Saloer Rood), 137.62
feet to a railroad
oplke aat; thence s.
89 deg. 05'20" E.
along a random llnl,
20.00 loti to an Iron
plpa oat In tho Eott
Rlght..OI-Way line or
oold Sutton Townohlp
Rood (Saloor Flood),
aald Iron pipe sot
oloo bolng the roal
point of beginning of
tho porcol horaln
doecrlbod; thtnce N.
00 dog. 54' 40" E.
along the oald E11t
Rlght·Of·Way line or
aold Sutton Townlhlp
Ro•d 28 (Saloor .
Road), 114.00 loot to
an Iron plpo oot !hot
baaro 8. 89 dog.
. 05'20" E., 20.00 loot
!rom o railroad oplko
ott In tho oald
conttrllnt of oald.
Sutton Townohlp
Rood
28 (SIIHr
Road); thonco s. 88
dog. 05'20" E. along 1
random nne, 377.38
lett to an Iron pipe
HI; thonco s. 07 dog ..
52'32" E. along 1
random Uno, 115.35
lett to an Iron plpo
at! that booro N. 07
dog. 52'32" w.,103.90
fill from on Iron plpt
aot In tht aold South
line of Section 13 and
the Grantor'• South
lint; thtnot N. 88

I
·l

'
•

....

purpoaea

,....;..------ oholl bo pold to tho
Public Notice
' Grontooo or their
-~=..,.;.=;.:_- heirs ·at the rate of
dog. 05'20" W., olong $200.00 per acre ond
1 random Uno, 395.00 lhll no oholle to be
feet to tho point. of ounk within 300 loti
beginning
end of tho lhon preoont
containing 1.0108 raoldence.
ocr...
PERMANENT
Subloct to alllogol PARCEL No: 18·
hlghwoyo
and 00051 .000
tlllmtnto of record.
Localod ot 30880
The
above Mitchell
Road,
deocrlptlon lo bond Racine, OH 4Sn1.
on o ourvoy by
Sold proporty hu
Gerold w. Boyha, bean opprolotd at
Floglotertd
$30,000.00 and
Prof..olonal
connot oell lor 1111
Surveyor No. 5·8139 than two·lhlrdo of
(Job No. 879·02), appraloomont. . Thlo
complotad on Auguot approlul lo booed
upon 1 vlouol
30,1979.
PARCEL NO. 2: lnopectlon of that
Commencing at tho part of tho promlool
Southooot corner of to which acc111 wao
Section 13 and tho roodlly ovalloblo. Tho
Grantor's Southeast appral11r1 111ume

l'
I

:I

---·'

Mercury
SPEIGIALRNANCE DFJ&gt;ARTMENT
Bankruptcy? credit Problems?
'We Call Help'll

R-Ing

._,'Plumbing
-~

&amp;Oottlfl

Call Ua flnt Or We Botb Losel

Ask For Mike Hindle

Ill

or446-9800
•

PJ EXCAVATING
"'•

General Contradl119
PJB
llomts,
Renovotlons, Rat CONTRACTORS, INC

· Trcncht'r '

740-985-3948

ROC iOC',

·Dozer·

OhiO

• Uo ckhoc ..

L,.-.: o1.

roof spectoUsls
ExcovoU119
Septic systtmt,
water, QOSIInes

'L ·Ghl Houl1nQ'

for all cuslom
WOrk SCfVICl")

FREE ESTIMATES
740·949·1045
Toll t'rec
1-877-PJE-1055

Road

28

(Salaer

HOME CREEK
ENT., INC.
992·7943

Road), 138.00 laotto
.an Iron pipe aotthat
baaro S. 89 dog.
05'20" E., 20.00 loot
!rom a rallr9ad oplka
aot In tho said
centerline of uld
Sutton Townohlp
Road 28 (Salser
Road); !honea S. 89
dtg. 05'20" E. along a
random line, 395.00
,foal to an Iron plpa
.oot; lhonco S. 07 deg.
.52'32" E. olong a
rondom llno, 103.90
lett to the point of
beginning
and
containing 1.1089
acral.
SubJoct to all legal
hlghwayo·
and
Hnmonto of record.
The
above
deocrlptlon 11 baood
on a ourvey by
Gerold W. Bayha,
Roglollrod
Prolaoolonol
Surveyor ·No. S-8139
(Job No. 879·02),
compltlad on Auguat
30,1979.
SUBJECT to toxoo

Judgo: crow

. Ellzabtth Banoa, tl
al. -·

STATE OF OHIO
DEPAIITMENT OF .
INSURANCE

Otlendan'-.

County Compliance

NOTICE IN SUIT
FOR FORECLOSURE
OF MORTGAGE

Tho undortlgnod,
SUPIRINTENOENT
OF INSURANCE OF
THE STATE OP
OHIO,
h.reby
oertllloo
tha.t
CI!NTRAL BI!NertTS
MUTUAL UFE ·
INSURANCE ' '
COIIMNV
of
WAIHINOTOrto Stolt
of DIIIJIOI ol

whOat laat known

devfae••· ltgateea,

and ••••••ment• executora,
which are now or admlnlotri!Ort,

.uJLDIIt81NC.

Mon-Frl 8:30 • 5:00
Over 40 yra experience
(740) 742 BB88
1-888-521-()918

DYIAI
PAift

CONCREif/BLOCKIBRICX
• Pooten, Willi, Stepoo
•FiotWorlo, ·
RepiOOCtmmts, • Wolkl
and Drives • Stendl
Crote Free Eodmotes
Se,..lna Ohio and W. y,
WVIOJ~m

Columbia,

fivRopu

East State Street Phone (740)593-66~711
A1hens, Ohio

.~ Dealers

,•..,....

111,on,oee.oo
Llllllllllll:

...._ ,

Belt QullltJ

For,. Lolllnt Pllce,

CJU.WNT!I!DI

.Advertise

Old llldloa, oill radio
lultH, &amp; Pl't*
C811 Chuck

Jn thl8 apace
for $25 per
month

"Aheed In """oe"
·11.6Wtltt Uvwlldr/lllllo Fwd 56.25/100
·21~ Hllfllln l'rWe 0oo Food SUS/50 .
·12$ Wtslwn ptlill
$5.60/50
$1.00 oll Caupon IICibs noott pwdoQst S4 .60/50
:::: llyor Cnrmblos SS.2S
T.M. Salt Blo!b $415/50 lo.

SHADE RIVER AG. SERVICE
Ohio 417et .

Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; College,
Retirement, ·
Emergency Funds; Mortgage;
Major Medical • Nursihg Home

IIJ/

~

"

QUifoUfT i.l'l OCIIII'IUft"

Double Hunt

Replac:emeot
Wlnclowi
w.tcllld Frame•

J&amp;L
155N2nd
Middleport
1

•

Call Now To
Reserve Your
(740) 949·7039
or
(740) 992-3203

,•..t'
·

..

THE BORN LOSER
....

WIL&amp;.RfOIZC£,

"&lt;OUR~IP

'I WAAT 'I'OU t O

::ro\D '\1\t: l~fSI'
Of'l'l\( Ofo..'(
W~lt-IG:o (){IT !

It:rr..

WrHesel

u~ ,To

1441'1ii ''" Olll1i•

44H995

j

"fe~ke

FfH Ell/'"""

9*1405
591·5011

.AIUDL

Cellular·

· Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

(2 well.)

....

27 llomovocl
32 Arrow

loland
24 ThiN!ore
25 Hoolory

21 City

47 Nurury

·--ry· lhoclllIn
Ruulo
(t:'!c,
28 North
Corollno
8 "Thl

8

.,....,

7 Gloolo

33=out

aoundr
34 Jono Fondo
film, ·-of

lion

42 Not !hoi
43 Jakyll'l
oppooltt
44 Plnn11c1t
45 Bongkok
nltiVI

po-

... Curvocl
molding
49 Shorl

Yesterday, I menOrtallet"
collage
tioned three booklets
bird
2a Incline
9 Actor
God"
50 Actual
Domon
30 Onby Englishmen David
35 Runion
being
10 Hoovy
Ill-)
rlvor
Bird and Marc Smith:
31 txpanolvt 52 Parlo
38 AdiMirtnll
IIIIOft
11 Pltlnllfl
37 Nlttltr
" Dece ptive
Card
oflalam
54
Roman
31
Nohoor
12Withartd
38
Sligo
Play," " Eliminations
1,002
ohaap
dlrtellan 11 Furlouo
and Throw-Ins," and .
WAS AN &amp;•POUNDER AN'
" Planning . in Suit
NAMED HER BESSIE SUE
Contracts" (Master
Point Press) . They
supply good instruction ; however, I think
the books would have
been so much better if
they had been expanded from 60 pages to 80
or 96. Then, each
problem could have
first been set with just
two hands visible. The
· YOU 60T IN
reader would see the
T~e
OF
full layout only after
BMIN fOOP1•
he has had a chance to
work out the answer.
Immediately seeing all
52 cards is un satisfac$0Mt NOOPL.f
tory. (In the quizzes
IOUP1
CELEBRITY CIPHER
you usually see only
by Lull Campo•
26 cards, never 52,
Celebrity Cipher cryptogram&amp; are created !rom quolatlona by famous
people, pest and preeent. Each letter in the cipher standi tor another.
which al so irritates .
Today's clue: X equals F
me.)
In this deal from
BOOPVDSBLV
PVBTTZ
'8
I"'
"'I
the
suit-contract
bookf\0\o.l Nil t ~:£0 iO 11'\I'IDJE.
INNCASTT . LFIBL
LRV
BTT
1'\Y ~t-Ill' Wf\ffi N.1. TI\E.Y let, you are in four
spades. . Obligingly,
GillE. II£ TO W~ Wl"l\\ IS "'
OPVLLZ
X P N J
DNJSYI
West leads a diamond
S K
~'l"UI'lD POIC.lL "?
to your queen. How
VMVPZNYV . ' - INTCVY
JWDR
would you continue?
There is no auction
IT N E V ASYYVP . PNEVPL
in the book. If South, I
.i
would open two noF P •
!I"
CNAYVZ
~
trump, and North
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: ' II was kind ol like walling lor Santa
would raise to three
Claua.' - Dave Winfield. ol being chosan Into ballb1'11'1 Hall
of Fame.
no-trump, reaching an
:;::::====::---"'1 easy contract to make.
Although disastrous
Ullo4 lly CU.Y L POUAII _;;__ _ __
TH...T'!. WAAT
here, West's lead i~
MADE IT
SO AWFUL .
reasonable after this
Reorro~~go ltotoro of lhe
lovr ecromblod wordo ba- .
sequence (but Jess so if
South opened two no- low 1o form four ~mplo -do. ;'
trump).
NI RE E P
With one club loser,
: 2
you can afford two
heart losers, but not
three. Here, if you
S0 J 1T
cross to dummy with a
1
trump and play a heart
. .
. .
to your king , West
should return his sec-,
p L I ME ~
ond trump. And when 5
Along life's highway the pessiI ~ATE IT
East
wins
the
next
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
mist
may often be right. I have noW~EN M'f CAPPIE
heart
trick,
he
will
ticed,
however, that the trip is enSAVS." I T~INK
denude dummy of
T0 NKYT
joyed more by the-----·--.
I'LL 5TANI7 WAV
0\IER ~ERE IN
trumps, killing both
;;,.1~1,..;,,~,
c-~e~. tho chudlo ........
the ruff and your con- . . .
.
. .
. by tilllnt In tile ......,. - •
CASE 'f'OU
tract.
you dovolop " - *P Ha. I ........
SHANK IT!''

i

.

..
•••

I
I I I: I

PEANUTS

I' .1 I I :

I1-.P.,-.

Interior

FREE ISTIMATES

~Mts~itge

Alter 6 pin
7&lt;CQ-985-4180

I
•.;. . . .1---1 e

I' I' I.
1: I' I
I I I I I I I I

rU. it for you •

,,...,,

·

r: r r

tiN pain ou&amp;

ofpainllz'fl- I..r ,..

...

2 -mater
3--11
4 Cowgirl
Evono
5 Stcroo-

I I' '1 I I

LINDA'S
PAINTING

7

ITUESDAY

•

MARCH61

'

Simply lead a low • PRINT Nt.MERED
heart from your hand · ;;=;;l~ET~T~~·;s;I;N~SG;;U~AR::E::S~=*·=~-::::;-~~-=*-=~·::;-~~­
at trick two. This puts j i UNSCIAMII.E FOR
you one step ahead, ~
...;..::A:;:N;:SWE~I:.,_-;;;;;;tti;r;·-;;·~-~~--.&amp;..-.1.
. ...J.L.....J.
and the defenders canSCIAMoliTS ANIWIIS ·
not stop the critical
· Obtuse • Llama • Hilly· Frisky· FAILS
.. .
heart .ruff.
As a community volunteer I received 11 needlepoint
that read: '!Sittdness Is 11n investment that never FAILS.'

fi~---

'
laleelt Service
204-Condor Sl
Pomeroy

992·2975
IIUTE MECHANICAL C~ACTORS

·...

Rooting • Home
MalntenanceGuttera- Down
Spout

23~

conotell•

0

New lfomes, Room
Additions, Garages,
Pole Buildings,
Siding, Decks,
Kitchens, Drywall &amp;
. More
W.. Can Make Your
DrtamA Reality/
740-742-3411
FREE BSnMATESi

Every Spring
a
. FREE Blade Sharpening. ' .
New equlpm.nt arriving delly
See Manning, Wayne or Jim
for.a REAL DEAl on a new lawn
traCtor, lawn mower or weed

clothing

22 Football
11om
23 Agono'o

'::~~~, SC£:~4\\lA-~t.~s·

Coll',truc t1o11

lt1ng ltlgulljlllr wll
lle'll fllpu ...... ,.. IPI'Ina

ruldent

!L_~--~====~~

79% on;

• Vertleab • WoOd
• Mlnll • Etc

youa
CONC!JEJE
CONNECTION
Pdoe, 8idlwllkl.

J. LH Covington, II,
DlrtOtor
8uptrlnttndant of
lnouranca ol OhiO
March a
ftc

I

made to order at our
location

QUI!~~ ·

valid
without
tlgnaturt or INI. ,

_
. I.____
..

•

21 Ukloomt 41 Hunt.r

1' G'"-w

21 Cammon

'- tJOw ltiOUT

~~ llll 'li't HOilll'

62-2772

HowardL.

Pill

DOWN

20 Mapla, o.g.

IJ/AY

BLIND SPOT

Scllh 0• IOf United
' india .
Sl ~.00 Installed

7:00 AM • 8:00 PM

''•
•

The CRAFTY,

Box 188
Middleport, Ohio 45780
Loeal*5284

Slzeu• x 10' .
to 10'x30'
Hours

WE

FOOl&gt;
STOltE

l~ PITifUL!

Rocky R. 1-fupp, Agent

740-949-2217

SHE

ttEAL.Tt4

hant,.

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.

41nt

· ~D-0-C------~----WAS PA5·51N'

••
•

;::;:;;;;;:;;~~~:;:;:;;;:::::;::::

21870 ....,.n Road
FIIOint, Ohio

: BARNEY

· (FiciOIY OUtlet)
All vertleal blinds are

WANTED

....

,..

55 - Creed

11 Actreu
Ttw11111n

-.. ......

••

5711ote
lfotlc

weight

•t-

, a;...._

L.!Pnel, MTH, K·Line, .
Athearn,
Atlas, Bachmann
,.
-· &amp; Accessories
0, HO, &amp; .N Guage
Estes Rockets

9tz;7943

•..,.•.

,.

IMI

-

17~

V't llllk:. N....

. . . . . . . . N-*

hocflay
tum

. 11 Ont or lhe

wQIUII
• 11 I I
• Q II

• A. It I

Chuter, Ohio

Homi Crttk Ent..lnc

Hill'• Stlf

•
'•

51E-

15 E111 dllh

•111

(740) 118!5-3301

351137111. 'Itt. 7 North

pan

• KJIIIJ

BAUM LUMBER CO.
J

-•••

!!Coo......

14S.aoK:I

• I I t

•••••

'·

-46~84 St. Rt. 248

lion marie
lnllrumonl 53 Plctunla

BY PHILLIP ALDER

. (117) 144-1111

1000 St. Rt. T 11ou111

CooMI/e, OH 41723

lhalp

• ITt '

• .I • ••

ltoPtH/11-~
PW lmMm
,......, .
.
(7ol0)311tM4

~IHP.arla

....

• 7I I I

"A It

All Home Improvements

~

.

••
'
•••
••
•

7 --fool 47 rl..,
lMgt Illig
13 Sjlllt wtllla 51 Punctua-

Good to bad

'&amp;:!.

lnMII'I"ftOt,

........

40 An liN
42 Nol11118

,._

I

· '-"""~

~durlng!ht

•
••

I&amp;I

.
' Authorized
FICIOry

... ....
• A. Q'

.......

ACROSS

Opooloflood".

llloto'•no ~ ~J',:,

304-882·2220

•'•

· ~~

•IIrllleWort

ourr1nt y1er to
Ira-In lhlaIll 1ppropr1111
bualnno
ol

Duambtr 31, 1111.
AI-:

Wlaclowo•Room
AJWIIioel• Roollq

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

•lttllll Ill
• EIIIIIIIWI!t .• Tnnsmln• Rhlrl

hal

r.':::

• RepiiCtR CRt

740-992-7599

•IHIIIM•IIll FreltEIIIIelllr

oomplied with tile ·
rewa ol thlo Swlo
IJIIIIIoable to It and 11

Thl1 . o•rllfloate
muM be pullllllhld In
·• nowopepar of
olrOultUon In
lit ,.,~~~r.,
condition 11 lihqwn
by Ito annual
1t1ttm1n1 to hav•
bean •• lollowa on

Sfdi11•NewG.......

FFIEE ESTIMATES

~

MaU. 'lmtor &amp;
E(,.JIIINUI Parla

Ill

'""'~ • Vlloyl

(!M!M!I(W . . l1liOIIIllll

.~

All

Aaclnt, Ohio 41771

LARRY SCHEY

·=

oddro.. 11 52302
Mount Olivo Flood,
Long Bottom, OH
45743, and tht
unknown helra,

Rulllnd, Ohio
trudl: seets. car aeall, lleldllnen, ind tarps,

SHADERNERAG.SE~CE

or thoy might bo
dtnlod a nearing In
Tho Chooo Manhlllon· · lhlo 0111.
Bank, AI TruiiH ot
IM~ Homo Equity
LERNER, SAMPSON
LoanTrull1198-5
&amp; ROTHFUSS
under the Pooling
Attornayalor Plolnllll
and Servicing
Agreement dated 11
~~C:=~~" 411201·
of September 1,1898
c/o CIIIFinanclll
241-3100
Mong1g1 CoiT!pany
Morch e,t3, 20, 27&amp;
Aprll3,10, 2001 .
· Plaintiff,
. Public Notlc.
•VI•

Elizabeth Bartoo,

BISSELL

conatcutfve weeka,

To the Big City.

)

LINCOLN

11-~

From the
Backyard ..
•'

URNPIKE

corner; thanco s. 88 no rtoponolblllty for,
dog. 18' 28" w. along and glvo no weight
tho South line of to, unknown logol
Section 13 and tho matiere, Including,
Grentor'o south olno, but not limited to,
1,327.81 foot to an concoolod or lottnt
Iron plpo oot, oald dofocto, ond/or tho
H!Qb&amp; Dry
Iron plpo oot aloo praoonco ol harmtul
being tho ·real point . or toxic chomlcalo,
Self-StoraQe
of beginning of tho pollutanto, or gao11.
parcel doocrlbad:
Term• of Solo: Ton
Thence continuing Parcent (10%) doy of
113195 Hiland Rd.
s. 86 dog. 16'28" w. oalo, balance within
Po,...roy, Ohio
along the prevloualy 30 dlyo.
doocrlbed Uno, 412.22
foal to a point In the Ralph E. Truoull,
Eaol Rlghi·Of-Woy Sheriff of Molgo • 740-992-5232
line of Sutton County, Ohio
Towniohlp Road 28
(Sailor Road), oald Sltphon D. Mlloa,
point baorlng N. 88 Attorney
Public Notice
dog. 18'28" E., 20.08 18 Well Monument
laetlrom an Iron pipe Avenue
recorded In Mortgage
nt In tho centerline Dayton, Ohio 45402
Book 88, page 171, of
of oald Sutton March8,13,20,27&amp; thla
· County
Townohlp Flood 28 April 3,10, 2001
Rocordtr'l Office.
(Salser
Road),
All of tho above
passing through an . Public NOlle•
nomad delondontt
Iron plpo oot lor I.,.....,.;.:;;.;;.:.;.:;;:.;:::_.J 111 requited to
relioronco at 410.87
.. COURT OF
a'n owar • within
loot; lhonco N. 00
COMMON P~EAS
twonty-olghl· (28)
dog. 54'40" E. along
MEIGS COUNTY,
dayo alter )Ill
tho oald Eoot Right·
OHIO
publication, which
01-Woy llno of oald
ahall ba publlohod
Sutton Townahlp Cue No: oci-cV-148 '· once o weok lor olx

may
hor.tafter IPDUIII lncl llligno
bocomo Ilona on oald ond tho unknown
guardlono ol minor
and/or lncompettnl
halrl of Elizabeth
Bartoo, on of who••
rnldtncn oro.
unknown and oannot
br
rononoble
d IIQII\01
be
IIOtrllinad, wlflllkl '
notloo that on lhllth
day ·of Dooambor,
2000, the C"••e
Monhatton B•nk,' AI
TrutiH of IMC Home
Equity Loan Trull
1198·6 under · lhl
Pooling · , ond
Strvlclng Agrtament
delod
11
of
Soptembor 1, 1888
c/o CIIIFinanolol
Mortgage Compony
flltd "" Complaint ln .
the Common Ploao
court of Molgo
County, Ohio In Ca•
No. OO.CV·141,m on
tho docket of the
Courl, and tho obJect
... and everywhere in between, the
and demand lor rtllef
· newspaper is THE place to find the
of which pleading 11
to
fortolou tiMI lien
stories that are important to you and
of
plolntlfl't
your community.
mortgogo recorded
upon tht lollowlng
doocrlbod real ootllo
tow":
You ' ll always be in the know wilh a
Property addraoo:
52302 Mount Olive
newspaper subscription . We've got the
Road, Long Bottom,
goods ro keep you Inrormed,
OH 45743 lnd being
enlightened and enrertained every day.
mort particularly
dtocrlbod
In
Call today ror a subscription,
plalntlll'o mortgogt

I

I

Ia 11'1Mle.

A&amp;D Alto Upholstery· PillS, lac.
cionvenible &amp; vioyliOpl, Four wlleeler oeots,
motorcycle seell, boot oovcrs, carpelS, c1c.

Clten baernentl,
attics, 91111111 &amp;
berne. Free
estimate Light
Haull Jobl

uld
prtmlo .. ,
oubJoct to oil of
which
thlo
conveyan~

$Dollar
Daves
740-992.()459

dHdr ot record tor

SHERIFF'S SALE

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5

[ AAiLiL~E~Y~OOfO~P~~~--------------------------_:::::~::~~~;;~.~uo~a~&amp;~~--~========~;;~~~~~~;;

preml- oncl except
condlllono,
rootrlctlono and
••••men11, If any,
con'-lnad In Iormor

Public NoUc•

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

2S ytlll experltnca
''" EatlfltiiiM .

740-742.fl01$ or

. 1-877-353-7o22

Wednesday, March 7, 2001
Enterprises or endeavors you
conduct on your own will have
greater chances for success in the
year ahead than those you share
with others. Be your own person
as much as possible.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Your precious time is likely to be
wasted today, because you could
choose to panicipare in a frivolous
activity rather than keeping your
nose to the grindstone. Pisces,
treat yourselHo a binhday gift.
Send for your Astra-Graph predictions for tbc year ahead by
mailing $2 and SASE to Astro·
Graph, c/o this newspaper. P.O.
Box 1758, Murray Hill Station,
New York, NY 10156. Be sure to
state your Zodiac sign.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
It's a waste of time to set people
all stirred up today over somethins about which tbcy can do
nothina. All It'll produce II frustrotlon that could be taken out on
the Innocent.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Maklna Impulsive chanaeR today
where a criticalaoal is concerned
bcc1use thlnas aren't aolna fa•t
enouah to pleale you could derail

your entire project. Usc ihat
patience you're so famous f~.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
One careless remark today could
ignite someone whose views and
position on politics or religion are
diametrically opposed to yours.'
Keep all such subjects under
wraps.
CANCER (June 21 -luly 22)
Even though you're known for.
being a careful thinker who nev·
er makes any snap decisions on
imponont matters, today you
could violate this stance and do
something quite costly.
LBO (July 23-Aug. 22) Beforl!
re81T811ging your schedule t&lt;iday .
that involved others 10 make
things'morc comfonable for yourself, consider the inconvenience
to tbcm. They won't tako kindly
to you.
VIRGO (Aua. 23-Sept. 22)
You could be uldna
IIIICCi·
dent to happen today If you
lltempt to do on your own a jail

for

lhll Cilia for experience In Jtan.

....
. LIBRA (Sept. :1.3-0ct.

dllna unflllllllllr tool• or mllerl·

23) Why
would you .,ven
to have a
aood time Joday •pendlna your

••peel

day with people who enjoy activities you dislllce7 Be more selective when choosi111 recreational
companions.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Be pn:pared, consistent and tenacious wllen taekling a difficult
IISSignmcnttoday. If you approach
il in an adlib fashion. the results
will be problematical to achieve.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Don't try to take advantage of ·
having a captlve audience today ·
to foist your views or opinions on
them. You won'l win lhem over,
mcroly anger them.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan.
19) Usually you're a give-and·
take person. Today, however. you
may· be inclined to self-serving
ways, but what makes it worse is ·
you mi&amp;ht have to deal with
someone who also wants his/her
way.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 191
If you do not think for yourself
.today, I aumntee It that someone
will come Ilona who will be mon
than wlllilll to think for you.
Unfor1unlholy, you'll n01 like the
re~ults.

�I

Clo. VASJ (21-3) vs. S. Euclid Regina
(21-3), Wednesday, 8
C~llip; YOIIngt. Ursu!lne-Akr.
Mol1cholter winner vs. C1o. VASJ·S. Euclid

56

Dublin Sdo1o 64, Cola. Independence
57

Regina wlooer, Saturdly, 1:30 p.m.

AI Vondollo Butlo&lt; H.S.
Versall1os (24-Q) va. W. Llberty-SIItm.
Wodnfsday. 6:15 p.m.
Sparta Highland (21 -3) vs. Cin.
Wyoming (20·3). We4nesday. 8 p.m.
Championship: Versallle!-W. Uberty·
Salem wtnner vs. Spar11 Hlghiand-Cin.
Wyoming winner, Saturday, 1:30 p.m.

DIVISION IV
At Plc..rlngton H.S.

Bellaire St. John's (23·1) vs. Crooksville
Spring. South 79, Lebanon 47
Sylvania Nortnvlew 69, Tot. Whitmer 56 · (16-7), Thursday, 6:15p.m .
Frankfort Adena (19-4) vs. WOrthington
Tot St. John's 64, Sylvania Southview
Christian (21·3), Thursday, 8 p.m.
45
Championship: Bellaire St John'sVandalia-Butler 67, Troy 61, OT
Crooksville winner vs. Frankfort AdenaDlvlafan II
Akron St Vincent-St. Mary 94. Usbon Wonhlngton Chrisllan winner, Sa1urday,
7:30p.m.
David Anderson 58
At Elida H.S.
CSeve. Cent. Cath. 57, Wickliffe 53

McComb (17·6) va. OttoviHe (20·3),

Girls 811ketbaU R~glon11 Pairing•
DIVtsiOtf 1

Thursday, 6:15p.m.

Holgate (21 -2) vs. Tol. Ottawa Hills (1 9·

At Wright ~t. Unlv•ralty. Dayton
4), Thursday, 8 p.m.
·
Cln. Mother of Mar~ (19-4) vs. Mason
Championship: McComb-Ottoville win(17-5), Wednesday. 6:15p.m.
ner vs. Holgate·Tol. Onawa Hills winner,
Cln. St. Ursula {12·11) vs. Beavercreek Saturday, 7:30p.m.
(24-0), Wednesday. 8 p.m.
At MIIOitton Perry H.$.
Championship: Cin. Mother of Mercy·
E. Can. (21 -3) vs. Bed!ord.ChBnel (20·
Mason winner vs. Cln. $1. Ursula-Beaver- 3), Thursday, 6:15p.m.
creek winner, Saturday, Noon
leetonia (18·5) vs . Norwalk St. Paul
At Canton Civic C.nltr
(19-4), Thursday, 8 p.m.
Hudson (23·-o) vs. Cle. E. Tech {21·2),
Championship: E. Can.-Bedford Chanel
r:uesday, 6:15p.m.
w1nner vs. Leetonia-Norwalk St. Paul .winYoungs. Boardman (18·5) vs. warren ner, Saturday, 7:30 p.m.
Howland (22·2). Tuesday, 8 p.m.
A1 Vandalia Butllf' H.S.
Championship: Hudson-Cia. E. Tech
Russia (18-5) vs. Ft. Recovery (17-6),
winner vs. Youngs. Boardman -Warren Wednesday, 6:15p.m.
Howland winner, Friday, 7:30
Jackson Center-(23-1) \IS. S. Char1eston
AI Athlond Unlvorolty
SE (20·4), Wednesday. 8 p.m.
Rocky River Magnllteat (20-4) vs Tor
Championship: Russia-Ft. Recovery
Cent Cath. (22·2), Wednesday, 6:15p.m
winner IJS. JackSon Center-S. Char1eston
Parma Padua (17-6) vs Celina (21·2), ,. SE(20-4), Saturday, 7:30p.m.

~:s:~~?~1~i&gt;r:.~:~:~v~~~~2~:il~~ I~!\JG' ,JIOG,PS I
aturday, 1
At Ohio Stolt Folrgroundo,

Columbul

, ·

Cols. Brookhaven (24.0) vs. Pickerington {21-2), Wednesday, 6:15p.m.
Cay. Chamlnade-Julienne (22·2) vs.
Grove Clly (21-2). 8 p.m.
Championship: Cols. Brookhaven-Pick·
erington winner vs. Day. Chaminade.Julienne-Grove City winner, Saturday, 1:1 5
p.m.
DIVISION II
At Vandalia Butltr H.S.
Hamihon Badin (15·9) vs. Cay. Dunbar
(21-3), Tuesday, 6:15p.m.
Trotwood-Ma~lson (18·51 vs. Cln. McNIcholas (18-6), Tuesday, 8 p.m.
Championship: Hamrnon Bactln-Day.
Dunbar winner vs. Trotwood·Madlson-cln.
McNichOlas winner, Friday, 7:30p.m.
At Zan10vlllo H.S.
· Millersburg W. Holmes (22·1) vs.
Greenflel~ McClain (22-2), Tuesday, 6:15

p.m.

Warsaw River VIew (1 7·6) vs. Cola.
HUiey (17-7), Tuesday, 8 p.m.
Championship: Millersburg W. Holmes·
Greenfield MCClain winner vs.• Warsaw
River Vlew-Cols. Hartley winner, Saturday,
7:30p.m.
At Bucyrua High School
Pembarvllle Eastwood (22-2) vs. Willard
(24-Q), Tuesday, 6:15p.m.
·
Cen. Cent. Cath. (20-3) vs. Lima Bath
(19-4), Tuesday, 8 p.m.
Championship: Pemberville Ea$twood·
Willard winner vs. Can. Cent. Cath.-Lima
Bath winner, Friday, 7:30p.m.
At Borbonon H.S.
Canlleld {18-6) vs. Cuyahoga Falls
Walsh Jesuit (15·9), Tuasday, e:15 p.m.
Avon lake (20·4) vs. Conneaut (21-2),
·Tuesday, 8 p.m.
Championship:
Canfield-Cuyahoga
Falls Walsh Jesuit winner vs. Avon LakeConneaut winner, Friday, 7:30p.m.
DIVISION Ill
At Lanc1at•r H.S.
Beverly FL Frye (23-1) vs. Heath (14-9) .
Wednesday, 6:15p.m.
Sardinia Eastern Brown (23-o) vs. Lancaster Fairfield Union (20-3), Wednesday,
a p.m.
Championship: Beverly Ft. Frye-Heath
winner vs. Sardinia Eastern Brown-Lancaster Fairfield Union winner, Saturday,
1:30 p.m.

I

.,

AI Lexington H.S.

Patrick . Henry (1 8-4) vs.
Bucyrus Wyn!ord (19-3), Wednesday, 6:15
p.m.
Findlay liberty-Benton (22-1) vS.
LaGrange Keystone (:W-3), WedneSday, 8
p.m.
Championship: Hamler Patrick HenryBucyrus Wynford winner vs. Findlay Liberty-Benton-LaGrange Keystone winner,
- Saturday, 1:30 p.m.
At MI. Union Collegt, AUiance
Y011ngs. ursuline (19-5) vs. Akr. Man·
chester (18-S), Wednesday, 8:15
Hamler

•

· HIJh: 401; Law: lOS

Men'a Coll!9e Basketball
Monday • Scor..

•

Tournament•
Colonial Athllll:l~ Aaaaclatlon
Championship
George MaSon 35, N.C.-WIImlngton 33
Mttro Atlantic Athlllle Conftrance
Chanlplonahlp
lana 74, Canlslus 67
Mld-Amerlc111 Confarenct
Flral Rot.1nd
Ball St. 89, N. Illinois 57
Bowling Green 74, W. Michigan 68
Miami (Ohio) 69, Akron 56
Ohio 101. BuHalo 78
Toledo 67, E. Michigan 43
Mid-COntinent Conferenct

Semifinal a

s. Utah 73, Oral Robe~s 62

Valparaiso 65, lnd.-Pur.·lndpls. s4
Mld.£111em Athletic COnference

Firat Round

Morgan St 76, Md.-Eastem Shore 64
N. Carolina A&amp;T 68. Flonde A&amp;M 70
Mleeourl Valley Conference
Chomplonohlp
Indiana St. 69, Bnldley 63
Northttat Conference
Chomplonahlp
Monmouth, N.J. 67, St. Francis. NY 64
Sun Btlt Conf.rence

Stmlflnalt
SOIIth Alabame 76, Arl&lt;ansas St. 53
W. Kentl.leky 82, louisiana-Lafayette 75

Wt1t Cout COnftrtnc•
,
Championthlp
Gonzaga 80, Slnta Claro 77
Womtn'l Colltga B11kltball
Monday'• &amp;cor..

Toumamenll
Atlll"'tlc 10 Conftrtnct
Champlonahip
Xavier 81, George Washington 56
Atlantic Coaat Conference
Chomplonohlp
Duke 57, N.C. State 45
Big E111 Conference

Seminnalt
Connecticut 94, Rutget's 66
Notre Came 67, VIrginia Tech 49
COnference ·usA
Championship
Tulane 63, Cincinnall 50
Mid-Continent Conferance
.
Semifinals
Oral Roberts 54, Chicago St. 35
Mld·EIItern Attlletlc Conference
Firat Round
N. Carolina A&amp; T 63, Mor!Jan St. 59
Norfolk St. 68, M&lt;i.·Eastem Shore 42
North. .t Conlerence
Chomplonohlp
Long Island U, 70, Mount St. Mary's
Md.61
'
Sun Beh Conference
Semltlnala
Denver 78, Fla. lntematlonal67

'

MAC
flomPipl1

louisiana Tech 7•. North Teus 57

Powell's 3-pointer with
16:491eft.
Bowling Green {15-13}
took its• first lead since midway through the first half
when Brandon Pardon hit a
3-pointer with 5:28 left for a
61-60 lead.
,
Western's Taylor Bro hit a
pair of free throws with I :26
left to tie it at 66 before
McLeod hit two foul shots
with I :07 left to give Bowling
Green the lead for good.
McLeod added two more
foul shots with 29 seconds
left, Trent Jackson hit • pair

;hots and hit 13.
Alex Shorts and Doug
Davis each scored 17 noints
fQr Mun\i (15-15) in its win
over Akron (12-16}.
Akron led most of the first
half until the RedHawks took
the lead briefly at 2:27 and
then for good when a jumper
by Davis made it 31-30 at the
break.
After scoring 16 points in
the first half, Akron 's Nate
Schindewolf was held to two
in the second half, when
Akron got just four rebounds.
The Zips opened the second half by going more than
nine minutes without scoring. Meanwhile, Miami staged
a 1()-0 run, during which
Grunkemeyer hit two 3pointers and a pair of free
throws as the RedHawks built
an insurniountable 17-point
lead.

BASEBAll
Amertean LMgut
CLEVELAND INDIAN5-Signed tNF
John McDonald to a one~year contract.
NEW YORK YANKEES-Reassigned
RHP TOdd Noel. RHP Brandon Ree4, RHP
Brian Rogers, RHP John Ambrose and
LHP Mike Ber1ottl to their minor teague
camp.
OAKLAND ATHLETICS-Agreed to
terms with RF Jeremy Glambl on a oneyear contract.
·
National League
CINCINNATI REDS- Reassigned C
Dana Sardinha to their minor league camp.
COLORADO
AOCKIES-Oplloned
LHP Josh KaUnowskl to Colorado Springs
ol the PCL Assigned LHP David Moraga,
AHP Tsao Chin-hui, AHP Jason Young, C
Josh Bard, C Jason Dewey and OF Mlka
Peeples.
NEW YORK METS- Announced the
with 9 sec.:onds r\!m.'li ning :md
retirement ol INF Kevin Stocker. ._
McLeod hit two more with 6
PITTSBURGH PIRATES-Agreed to
terms with LHP Scott Sauarbeck on a
secOitds on the clock to push
three-year contract.
the lead to ·74-66.
BASKETBALL
11
Miami was just the better
McLeod hit I 4-of-16 free
National Basketball Anoclatlon
DETROIT .PISTON$-Activated F Jud
throws as the Falcons made · team," Akron coach Dan HipBuechler from the injured list. Placed F
32-of-41 at the line. Western sher said. "We hit a stretch
Brtan Cardinal on the Injured list.
PORTLAND TRAIL BLAZER5-Signed
Michigan took just 21 foul where we couldn't score."
G Rod Strickland lor the remainder ol the
season.
SAN ANTONIO SPURS-Placed G
Jeren Jackson on Injured llst. Activated C
becau!e of a sideline shou.ting
Shawneue Scott
match with Redskins assistant
VANCOUVER GRIZZLIES- Placed G
Brent Price on Injured list Activated G
coach Terry Robiskie' during
Kevin Edwards.
the R,i:dskins' 17-14 victory
FODTBALL
against Philadelphia on Oct.
National Football Ltlgut
ATLANTA FALCONS-Nama~ Gary '
·Armstrong has 98 1/2 sacks 8. Connell was fined.
St~ens wide receivers coach, James
The incident did not disin 183 games,' sixth among
Daniel dght ends co11ch and Rennie Slm·
mons assistant offensive line coach.
suade Saints coach Jim Haslett
active players.
CAROLINA PANTHERS- Agreed to
"I had a great situation in from pursuing Connell.
terms with LB Jason Kyle. Released TE
Brian Kinchen.
"This is a guy who wants to
Miami and I loved it there, so
CLEVELAND BROWN5-Agree~ lo
there were only a couple of win," Haslett said. "I think
terms with L8 Tarek Saleh on a one-year
contract.
places I was interested in he's got a chip on his shoulder
DETROIT LIONS- Agreed to terms
going," Armstrong said. "And and he's ready to win."
with OB Jim Harbaugh on a two'·year conAlso, fullback Tarek Saleh,
tract.
Oakland was at the top of that
NEW ORLEAN'S SAINTS-Agreed to
used
primarily on special
.list."
terms wit~ WR Albert Connell on a five·
New Orleans topped the teams the past two seasons, reyear contract.
OAKLAND RAIDER5-Agreed to lenns
list for wide receiver Albert signed with the Cleveland
with DE Trace Armstrong to a si)(-year con·
Connell, who left the Red- Browns for one year.
tract.
·
TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS- Agreed
The ·carolina Panthers
skins for five-year contract
tO terms with OB B.-ad Johnson on a five·
agreed
to terms with free ·
worth $14 million, including
year contract.
HOCKEY
a $2.5 million signing bonus. agent linebacker Jason Kyle,
National Hockey Ltagut
He . is expected to comple- who was primarily used .as a
ANAHEIM MIGHTY DUCK5-Traded
ment the Saints' top receiver, long snapper last season with
RW Teemu Selanne to the San Jose
Sharks for G Steve Shields , LW Jeff Joe Horn.
·
· the San Francisco 49er&gt;.
Friesen and draft picks.
One deal close to fruition
"It's a fresh start for me;·
CAROLINA HURRICANEs-Placed D
Glen Wesley on Injured reserve. Recalled
said Connell, who had a trou- ' would net running back Tiki
0 Nlclas Wallin from Clnclnnatt of the IHL
bled season in Washington. "I Barber a six-year, $24 million
COLORADO AVI\LANCHE- Asslgned
0 erent Thompson to Hersey ol the AHL
want to show that I can play. contract to stay with the
EDMONTON OILERS-Assigned G
Giants. Barber rushed for a
It's a good fit ."
Eric Hettler to Hamilton of the AHL
FL:ORIOA PANTHERS-Recalled 0
Connell drew attention career-high 1,006 yards and
Mike Wilson from Louisville ol the AHL.
Assigned 0 Brad Ference to Louisville. ·
MINNESeTA WILD-Recalled G Zec
Bierk from Cleveland of the IHL.
overly. cautious." Larkin has
MONTREAL CANADIENS- Rocalled C
missed four games with a
Xavier Delisle from Quebec ol the AHL.
strained right groin .... Catch, NEW YORK RANGERS-Traded D
Ale~~:ei Gusarov to the St. Louis Blues tor 0
er Dane Sardinha, the Reds'
Peter Smrek. Recalled F Tony Tuzzolino
second-round draft pick in
and 0 Mike Monau from Hartford of the
AHL. Assigned D Jason Ooig to HQrtlord.
Bob Boone. "If he comes in June 2000, was reassigned to
PHILADELPHIA FlYEAS-Assigned
says he's OK tomorrow, the minor league camp.
and
AW Mark Greig and C Steve Washbum to
Philadelphia of the AHL, Recalled LW
he won't play. He'll take some Sardinh~ signed a six-year
Michel Picard and RW Kirby Law from
·batting practice. We are major league contract Sept. I
extra
Philadelphia .
PHOENIX COYOTES-Traded G Nikogoing to approach this like we and mmt be kept on Cincinlai' Khabibu!ln artd D Stan Neckar lor 0
do (Barry) larkin and be nati's 4d~man roster..·.. Three
Paul Mara, F Mike Johnson, F Ruslan
Zarnullin and a 20m second-round draft
pick.
SAN JOSE SHAAKS-Racalied G Mllkka Kiprusofl from Kentucky of the AHL.
WASHINGTON CAPITALS-Assigned
C David Emma to Portland at the AHL.

•

NFL

from Page 11

a

Reds

from Page 11

Northern !Uinois ,(5-23i
never led again after scoring
the fir&gt;t basket at Ball S~t~
(17-11).
After the Huskies cut a 38J
28 halftime deficit to five
points on a layup by Stephen
Jones and a 3-pointer by
Steve Determan, the Cardinals ran off the ·next eight ·
points . The lead never
dropped to single digits.
Theron Smith had 17
points and 10 rebounds for
the Cardinals.
Toledo (21-9} held Eastern
Michigan (3-25) scoreless for
more than 6 minutes while
increasing a 32-31 lead to 47;
31 lead with 9:35 to play.
Stempin scored five pointi
during the surge.
•
Ryan Prillman scored
points and C.). Grantham
added 12 for Eastern Michi;
ga~, which had more tha~

It

twrce ·as many turnovers as

assists and shot just 31 percen~
from the field in the secon&lt;t
half.
helped the ·Giants reach the
'
Super Bowl.
Ethan Lock, Barber's agent 1
.said Monday the deaf wa~
close to being finalized, bu{ .
he didn't expect it to happe.~
until Thesday or Wednesday •!
the earliest.
t
Other quarterbacks looking
around this week are Doug
Flutie and Gus Frerotte.
Flutie plans to meet with
Chargers officials on TuesdaY,
New Chargers general manager John Butler brought Flutie back to the NFL when he
was GM of the Buffalo Bills.
The Dolphins ·talked with
Frerotte on Monday, but h~
was not offered a contract:
Frerotte underwent a physical
and discussed his chances of
competing with Jay Fiedler
for playing time.
Frerotte was a backup for
Denver last season and v'isitecl
the Cincinnati Bengals on
Satu'rday.

ailing
pitchers,
Elme~
Dessens, Seth Etherton and
Leo Estrella, worked on che:
side. "Dessens was the best; ~
said Boone. "Etherton didn't
have ·c ommand and Estrell:l:
needs more work. We need t~
get them some work iri:
'
g&gt;rnes.
C

-•
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I:

Melp County's

l

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 51, Numl,..r 160

Honey
Bear ··
festival.
expands

Assl
police
chief ·
demoted

REED .

BRIAN J.
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport's Honey Bear Festival
will become a two-day event
when it returns for its third
year in August.
Middleport Community
Association voted to expand
tile event during its regular
IOeeting on Tuesday morning.
, The meeting was held at
the Peoples Banking and Trust
Co.
The Honey Bear Festival is
scheduled for Aug. 10 and 11,
the weekend just prior to the
siart of . the Meigs County
· fair.
Paul Gerard, association .
president, suggested that the
fl:stival's time be expanded so
that provisions c.an be made in
the event of bad weather, and
so that craften, · concessionaires and other vendors can
operate for a longer period of
time.
: A tWo-day festival .might ·
also --.ttract more entertainers,
he said.
~ ' .'The membership also dis- ..
cuSSed . moVing a iiortion of
the ·~~ .,~~V~Fs,,..onto,
Second Avenue· in · •order to·
increase · retail tr;~ffic, but
decided that the problems
experienced with past street
fes.tivals would outweigh any
benefit of moving the events.
Susan Baker suggested,
instead, that merchants consider sidewalk sales or other
promotions to ~ke advan~ge
of the festival's attendance.
· Baker, Donna Tillis, Steve
t&gt;unfee, and Allen and Jane ·
Harris reported on an informal meeting of Middleport
merchants, held last weekend,
to discuss marketing and
other merchant concerns.
. Tillis said the group discussed retail market conditions, the origin of shoppers
who' ttamact business Middlepblt and ways that' the .
merchants might increase
traffic in the downtown shopping area.
Tillis and others said that
merchants do not plan to
form a merchants association
apart the community association, but believe some issues
involving merchants exclusively should not be discussed
in regular association meet. bigs.
: Dunfee was appointed to

In

Bv ·ToNv M. LEAcH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY - Pomeroy's assistant police
chief was demoted to the position of captain
by action of Pomeroy Village Cquncil fol lowing an executive session during council's
regular Monday night meeting.
Mayor John Blaettn&gt;r said Joe Kirby Sr.'s
demotion was a result of "inappropriate
action taken by a police officer" after Kirby
had allegedly made several unauthorized
purchases within the police department.
After a lengthy
Mayor john
debate on the matter in executive ses-

Charlene Hoeflich photo
.,

POMEROY - It's hard enough for adults,
but wheri sensitive children lose their hair
due to cancer or some other debilitating
medical condition, it's especially traumatic.
So when Tammy and Marty Cline decided
it was time for their 5-year-old daughter,
Pai~e. to have her waist-length hair cut, they
dectded to send it to the Locks of Love.
The Locks of Love is an organization
formed to coll!lfi hair which' can oe used to
~ake _tfairpieces for ,&lt;;hil,dren~ The.h~irpi~ces
ar~ gwen to chtldfen 11\/hose parents are
unable to purchase them.
About 10 inches of Paise's hair was cut off
at Vera's Natural Images 1n Mason, bound in
a ponytail, put in a plastic bag and mailed to
the Palm Springs, Aa., organization.
Before it was mailed, however, Paige took
it to her Jenart Pre-school . class to show to
her classmates, Taylor McNickle, David Warner, James Walters, Joshua Parker, Jason Warner, Daschle Facemyerr Hunter Trent, Trenton
Cook, Valerie Wolfe, Meredith Gaul, Samantha Cline, Haley Kennedy, Ashley Coon,
Celestia Hendrix, and Halley Wilson.

COLUMBUS (AP) -, The state
would delay the creation of a 1Oth
grade proficiency test by two years
and 'create a fifth academic performance category for school districts
under the latest version of a bill overhauling the way Ohio tests school. children.
.
The bill incorporates several recommendations made by Gov. Bob Taft's
Commission for Student . Success last
year.
The recommendations include
replacing Ohio's current proficiency
test with a new series of ~ests.
The bill's sponsor, Sena~ Education
.

'

Chairman Robert Gardner, a Madison Republican, introduced the new
ver&gt;ion Tuesday.
Current law divides districts into
four categories based on their perfdrmance on Ohio's. proficiency tests and
attendance and gtaduation rates. The
categories are effective, continuous
improvement, academic watch and
academic emergency.
The proposal adds a fifth category
of excellent, for districts meeting 94
percent of academic standards and
above.
The bill also delays the implementation of the new 1Oth grade proficien-

COLUMBUS - A bill designed to give
relief to low-income Ohioans on their soar, ing .energy bills this winter got more deeply
mired Thesday in a dispute over whether to
spread savings to larger groups of customer&gt;.
A five-hour hearing in the Senate Ways &amp;
Means Committee focused on jnst one bill,
which started Dnt as a way to appropriate $20
million for Gov. Bob Taft's Project THAW
(Temporary Heating Assistance for Warmth}.
Project THAW would provide one-time
payments up to S250 that qualifying lowincome customers could apply toward their
energy bills. The House Public Utilities
Committee expanded the bill to allow groups
of customers, such as cities and villages, to

#I Great OPPortunit)l To Tell Your Business StorY
#2 Great OPPortunitY To Hishlisht Your Business· AccomPlishments
· #3 Great OPPortunitY to SPotlisht Your EmPloYees
#4 Great OPPortunitY To Generate New Business
#5 It APPears In The GalliPolis DailY Tribune, Point Pleasant Resister, And The DailY Sentinel
p:~~=:·, adviser for the New Hoi1ZOna 4H Clltl, puts the fin-

band together buy natural gas in bulk, thus
ill
On a 4H promotional display at the RIYBibend Craft · getting a lower price.
Antique Mall in MiddiBPOrt. In honor rl4fi AY(InnBs8 Week. ·
However, the local distribution companies
Jlleece will conduct an open 4H regiBtratlon at the Pomerat Ubrary - .L •• deliver natural ga~ questioned who
on Saturday. fi'orn 10 a.m. until noon. (Contrtbuted photo)
would pay for theit long-term gas and

-

"It's
a
very
regrettable situation," said Blaettnar.
"However,

the

decision has been
made, the punishment has been
accepted and the
incident is over and done with."
"lt ·is now time to move forward and focus
on more important issues," he added.
Besides being demoted, Kirby was given a
three-day suspension and will have a permanent letter of reprimand placed in his personal file.
"I feel that council was fair with Joe and
that their decision was unbiased and just,"
said Police Chief Mark Proffitt. "Penalties

Pl..s• see Demoted, Al

ir

------------- - -

cy test by two years, to students grad- where we end putting the cart before
uating in 2007. Current law would
make it effective for students graduat~
ing in 2005.
Gardner said lawmakers want to
delay the 1Oth grade test to give the
Department of Education time to
define new academic standards and
curriculum .
Lawmakers also want to "give the
teachers in the classroom plenty of
time to learn that particular knowledge as well as share that knowledge
with students," Gardner said. "It's
more important to make sure all that
took place than to have a timeline

the horse as we've done before."
The bill also makes changes to testing procedures to meet federal regulations for testing children·. Ohio could
lose $310 million in Title I funding if
the changes aren't made.
The Title 1 funding helps poor children and those at risk of failing.
Under the changes, Ohio would
have to administer some type of
achievement test to all students,
including those with disabilities and
those whose first language is not English . Current law provides some
exemptions.

;: .. Opponents slam state gas plan

..

-· -----.._ . ................... . .

votes.

~

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Il

sion, Kirby was
demoted following
a vote of 4-2, with
Councilmen Brian
Shank and Larry
Wehrung casting
the two dissenting

8111ettnar ~aid
Joe Kirby Sr.'s
demlltion was a
ruult of "irJap~
proprlate action
taken by 'a ppllce
officer" after
Kirby h11d
allegedly made
seJJeral unautho~
rized purcbam .
within tl1e pollee
department.

State may delay 1oth grade profidency test

Bv JoHN McCARTHY
.I

so Cenh

POMEROY

.4-H awarenes, ."

.I

March 7, 2001

r

. PIMH ... FwtlwaLAI

'.

Wednesday

•

BY

..

Society news and notes, AS
URG bound for national tourney, 81

lhu~

·

•

s Scoreboard
-y·oRttutto
ToumarMnt
Dlvlolon I
Beavercreek 60, Middletown 52, 20T
Cln. Eldar ec. Cln. Coleroln 35
Cln. St. Xavier !9, Cln. Withrow 43
ClaytOn Nonhmont 48, CenterviMe 43
Cols. Brookhaven 68, Westerville South

Tuesday, March ' . 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

,1

pipeline contracts, should large chunks of
customers switch suppliers. Some of those
contracts do not expire until 2004. .
The gas companies reached a compromise
with the Public Utilities Commission of
Ohio, the Ohio Consumers' Counsel and
other parties.
The House agreed to limit such bulk buying, or "aggregation;' to 50,000 customers for
the largest utilities' service areas for the first
two years and a 75,000-customer limit in the
third year of a pilot project. The PUCO
would then study bulk buying before pro·
ceeding further.
During testimony before the Senate committee, which must recommend passage for
the full Senate to consider it, consumer
groups and mayors objected that they weren't
consulted on the compromise.
They asked the Senate to either lift the cus.
tamer limits or scrap hulk buying altogether
and place it in a separate bill.

Today's

Sentinel
1 Sadlons - 11 Ptlps

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

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B I. 3. 6

A3

Lotteries
OHIO

Pick 3: 3-5-5; Pick 4: 6-5-2-1
BuckeyeS: 1-11-15;1~30

'MIA.

Daily 3: 4-3-3 Dati 4: l-6-9-4
0 2(X11 Ohio Va.Uqo Publishing Co.

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    <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="23939">
            <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="23938">
              <text>March 6, 2001</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="376">
      <name>cooper</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2041">
      <name>hicks</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1559">
      <name>holman</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1481">
      <name>lee</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2386">
      <name>neigler</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="4349">
      <name>tufts</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
