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•'

Pomeroy • Middleport • !)~lllpolls, Ohio • Point Pleeunt, WV

Briefs
b111PqcD1
of Home Inspectors is very
pleased to award this designation to deserving inspectors
who participate in the program," said Don Crawford,
NAHI president.
"NAHI developed the CRI
program in our efforts to cultivate the professionalism of
home inspectors;· he added.
"Calvin Puker demonstrated
the oecessary experience and
knowledge to earn the CRI
designation."
Parker Safety also conducts
busine•s OSHA-type inspections and commercial property insl'ections. For more
information, log on to the
Internet at www.PARKERSAFETYcom or call 740288-3808 or t.-877 -903SAFE (toll-free).

obtain honey nonrecourse
marketing assistance loans or
LOPs by making application
until the later of March 31 or
30 calendar days after the date
of publication of regulations
in the Federal Regis1er authorizing loans and LOPs to be
disbursed.
Producers !hall request
loans and LOPs at the county
office where the producer's
farm records are located.
The Joan rate will be 65
cents per pound for all loaneligible 2000 crop honey. To
receive an LOP, a producer
must certify the pounds of
honey on hand and may certify the quantity sold by month
on form available available at
the office.
Reminders: The sales closing date for crop insurance on
tobacco, corn and soybeans is
March 15. To gee crop insurance for the first time, you
must contact an agent before
March 15. A list of agents is
available at the Farm Service
Agency office.
Please return your marketing cards as soon as possible,.·
We will not be able to reconcile your marketings until we
have your marketing card
returned. For all sales made
after Jan. 31, .;,e wjlJ need a
copy of your sale bill, along
with your card.
For additional require, ments, contact the GalliaL:iwrence FSA office · at 111
Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, or call
1-800-391-6638 or 4468687.

Sunday, March 11,2001

.-

Reassessing your risk tolerance
The
GALLIPOLIS
potential return from any
investment can generally be
linked to the amount of risk
the investor is willing to
assume. Finding that balance
betweeri the return you desire
and the risk yo.u can handle
has never been easy
What makes this problem
even trickier is that your
financial goals - :lnd thus
your risk tolerance
inevitably change throughout
your life. Therefore, the
investment that was right for
your goals of yesterday may
not be so appropriate today.
It is a good idea to review
your investments periodically
with risk tolerance in niind. If
you heed the advice of Y!"Ur
financial advisor, you probably
already review your account
statements on a regular basis
to monitor performance and

Jay
Caldwell
GUEST

VIEW

HIJit: SO.:

URCi REDMEN IN FINAL FOUR!
live coverage from Missouri, B1

Details, A3

•

you. People participate in the tolerance, you should be able
financial markets because the to find a level of risk that is
rewards have often enough appropriate for meeting your
outweighed the risks.
investment goals.
By carefully assessing all the
(Jay Caldwtll is a cvtifi•~
risks an investment ofFers and financial planntr at R.aymontl:
periodically reviewing the James Financial Servias, 441;
holdings in your portfolio Second Ave., Gallipolis, 446-:
with your financial advisor in 2125
1-800·487-2129, .
consideration with your risk. member NASD and SIPC.)

HometOwn Newspaper

so cenb

!!:!!!!!!!!!!!

SCHOOL
FUNDING

WEET

·Legislators
looking
to '

.

Positions filled
at lnfoCision

Dividend
to be issued

Nephrologist Musa ~Ia
joins 'Holzer Clinic staff

Scl)ool swlngman Matt Simpson cuts dow,,the Eagles beat Partsmouth·Ciay. 6348 to !ldvance to the regional
·::;~n:uroay night at The Convo at Ohio University, wherfl the semifinals In Columbus. (Dim Polcyn photo) Detalle, 81
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~~Meigs

·r hails local students' essay creativity

OAR cha

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IY CHARLINE HOEFLICH
SENTINEL NEWS .STAFf

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su,ggq
va .......... s

Brown &amp; Williamson.
Tobacco

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Export Leaf

eo

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MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS. '-=
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Don Pope ....................... (140) 256-1150
.......................................... (74~) 379-2198 ,.

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.

I!~RY

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Certlftc. ., plna and gifts . of
. 'fllOiley were presented to easay contest winners Daniel e·i!Ok·:tJY, center, and William Michael OWen, by Pat Holter at C"r.:ter Dll)' tun¢heon ,Saturday,
,.
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POMEROY - Recognition of Meigs youth highlighted Saturday's Charter Day
luncheon of Return Jonathan
Meigs Chapter, Daughters of
the American · Revolution,
held at Triruty Congregational
Church.
Top winners in the American History essay contest were
Daniel Allen Buckley, a fifthgrader at Eastern Elementary
School, and William .Michael
Owen, a sixth-grader, also a
student at Eastern Elementary,
Topic o£ the essay ptesented
in 600 words or less was "If
the United St~tes •. Capitol

Walls Could Talk."
Eighty-five 'students took
part in the contest. Pat Holter,
chairman, ,R~es$nted th,~m
with gifts of money, certifi- ·
cates and pins at,the luncheon.
William is the son of Dick
and Jeannie Owen of Skinner
Road; Pomeroy, and Daniel is
the son of Pam and Bryce
Buckley of Wickham Road,
Pomeroy. 1·
Winners of the good citizenship plaques in their
respective schools were Brenna Sisson, daughter ·of Ann
WINNERS - Emma Ashley, OAR chairSisson, Pomeroy, a senior ai GOOD
man
for
the
good
citizenship
contest, presented plaques to
Southern High School; and
Brenna Sisson, center, and Whitney Ashley who was also the
Whitney Ashley, daughter of
county winner at Saturday's Charter Day luncheon.(Charlene
Hoeflich photos)
PIMH 1M DAI. AJ

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,;JMt 11Ju~da~n ·acceptJ

Republicans see p~ssible
Sentinel · 'm1dcourse' tax adJustment
•

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-ppilcatlons for '0·1·

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,Toclay's .

Ua •• a-12?;

·'

BY BIIHiml GIIIINIUM
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

FROM STAFF REPORTS
i
POINT PL~.
-Applications
for the Pleasant V~ey ldospital Health Foundapollli Scholars Program. which provides final\~ asiistance to. lbcal sruden~jt preparing for
careers in ~e field of health f:ate, were placed in
MeiiJI .~ GaJlia County high sch6ols recel)tly,
said Mlki! Lieving, foundation chairman.
A~ona are. also 'available by . calling
~ Tilli$ at (304) 674-7234, ~imng
'
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, ~~e !Ounclalion initiated the linandalatd pro-

wva.

Applicajions are also available
by caJRng Georgianna Tillis
at (304) if4-7234, Lieving says.

Mann, Ga)¥r Mei@/1 counties, have gradual•
ed frQm an alcredited high school or possess a
GED certificate, and been iecepted for admission and decllred a 111ajor area of study in a
health care field at
accredited i~tatitution of
higher education in either West Virginia or
Ohio.
'
~ sptiolii ~0~ '6f~ealth Applications must be received by the founda- .
that exls!, thjoughqut ·
cion by April 10. Letters of reference
twO
natioa, indudlna die Upper Ohio Valley'Mld the people familiar with the applicant's academic
swe of'Wac VQginia; as well as the increasing and!or employment history. as well as school
trarucripll must also be sent to the foundation at
coau of higher education.
. . 'Ib be eliaible for fillana.J ,assistance from 2520 v.illey Dri~. Point Pleasant, WVa. 25550
foundation, an individual m~ be a resident of by that date.

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COLUMBUS (AP) - . • A state-ordered boost in
Members of the Ohio .t he minimum per-student
House are putting together a spending in each school disschool funding plan they trict of more than $1,200 per
hope would meet with Ohio year.
·
Supreme Court approval.
• Speci3.!-education spendVideo lottery terminals · at ing hikes of $260 million
racetracks are a key element over the next two years. Stu- .
The plan has the support dents with the severest and
of majority House Republi- most costly disabilities would
cans and some Democrats get the most state money.
following a weekend meet"I believe that the plan
ing.
provides the basis for con7
The Supreme Court has eluding the school-funding
ordered lawmakers to fix litigation," said William
Phillis, who heads the Ohio
school funding by June 15.
Video lottery terminals at Coalition for Equity &amp; Aderacetracks - similar to elec- quacy, which filed a lawsuit ·
tronic slot machines - are challenging the state' school
under consideration as rev- funding system 11 years ago.
enue producers of up to
House Speaker Larry
$930 million for two years.
Householder, R-Glenford,
The plan in the House expects the House Finance
could be added to the state's Committee to vote on it by
two-year education budget. April 1, and he predicted it
The House members are would be approved by the
considering:
• .·. ,
,
99-member He.u&amp;e.
• A cchange in the formula ' "Quite frankly, we're past
for calcula~g how much the1 time when this should
state money individual dis- have been resolved," Housetricts would receive.
holder said. "It's time to do
• No new taxes. Instead, this."
.
the plan would be funded, in
The plan does not include
part, by allowing Ohio's Gov. Bob Taft's proposal to
seven, state-regulated horse have Ohio join a multistate
racing tracks to each install lottery, which possibly could
up to 1,500 video "lottery" generate about $70 million
terminals:
over two years.

~~·

Kneen

I

March 11, 2001

Middleport • Pomeroy. Ohio

Volume Sl. Number l&amp;l

OHIO VALLE
BEST USED CAR
SELECTION

Monday

entine

Melp County's

or

There are many other types of
risk as well, which apply to
different securities. The fol·
lowing are some of the types ·
of investment risk you should
keep in mind.
• Market risk - the possibility that an investment may
lose its value when traded in
the financial markets.
• Credit risk - the possibility that the issuer of an
2000 SUNFIRES Choose fro~ "5" .................. $1 0,900
investment (a corporate bond,
for example) may not live up
2000 CAVALIER Red 4 Dr ................................$9;900
to its financial obligations and
2000 GRAND AM .c In stock........................... $1l,900
change
any
investments cause you to lose your investwhose time has passed.
ed capital or not receive
2000 CENTURY ............................................ $13,900
Take
some
extra
time
when
expected interest payments.
GALLIPOLIS . Amy
2000 REGAL Leather lnterlor.............4 READY TO GO
doing
thiS·
to
screen
your
• Interest rate risk - the
Bowman-Moore, the Edward
investments for ·inappropriate risk that if interest rates rise,
2000 GRAND PRIX31n stock................From $15,900
Jones investment representalevels
of
risk.
of
an
the
price
(value)
tive in Gallipolis, will ho•t a
2000 BONNEVILLE SSEI Blua Sunroof, 6500 mll11
Most people identify risk investo·r's bond holdings and
"Financial Workshop for the
management with safety of certain stocks will decline.
2000 BONNEVILLESEWhlle, 12,000mlles.. $18,900
Individual Investor."
principal. This is true to an
• Reinvestment risk - the
2000 LESABRE CUSTOM &amp;In stock ...... from $16,900
The five-week workshop
extent - a dollar locked in a possibility that interest rates .
begins March 20 and contin~000 PARKAVENUEsnver ........,.......:......... $24,900
safety deposit box for 10 years will fall as a fixed income
ues every Tuesday through
will most likely be worth a investment matures and cause
2000 CADILLAC DEVILLESllver.................. $32,900
April 17 from 1-2:30 p.m. at
dollar
when
it
is
taken
out.
yoiJ
to
be
unable
to
reinvest
the Gallia County Senior
2000 MONTANA VANS &amp;In stock .........from $19, 99Q
Of course, that dollar is not matured assets at an attractive
Resource Center, 1167 Ohio
likely to have as much pur- rate of return.
1999 SUNFIRES .............................................. $9, 900
160, Gallipolis.
chasing power in 10 years as it
•
Liquidity
risk
the
risk
Enrollment is .free, but a
1999 FORD TAURUS Red, extra clean ............ $12,$00.
does today. In other words, that you will be unable to liqtextbook can be purchased for
locking your money away uidate , an asset (such as real
1999 LUMINA Gray, Foctoryworronty........... $12, 900
$8.
exposes
it
to
inflation
ri•k.
estate,
collectibles
or
thinly
For more information or to.
19~9 CENTURY, Green, FoctoryWarranty..... $12,900
What you gained in stability, traded stocks) when you want
reserve a seat, contact Debbie
'
lost
in
buying
power.
you
at
the
price
you
want.
19.
@
9
MONTECARLO~S,OOOmlles,
red
.......
$13,$00
.
and
GALLIPOLIS
-Two
posiBartels at 446-7000.
Like that dollar in the box,
While the variety of risks i•
tions have been filled at Info1999 BONNEVILLE 2s,ooo miles, belqe ....... $15,900
some
investments
are
also
mbstantial, you should not let
Cision Management Corp.'s
exposed to inflation risk. risk management intimidate
1999 LESABRE White, 24k ............................$15,900
Gallipolis office.
Vickie Spires is the new
1999 LESABRE Sliver- Leother Interior;........ $15,900
program supervisor in the
1999 MONTANA2Tone, F&amp;RA/C ................. $16,900
RAVENSWOOD, WVa.- opeutions department. She
Ceotury Aluminum Co. has recently served as a ·crew
1999,S10 EXT CAB Automatic -loaded.........$14,9,90
declared a regular quarterly leader for the U.S. Bureau of
1998 GRAND AM4 DR- Black'..........................$9,900
dividend of 5 cents a share the Census.
payable March 30 to shareAs program superv1Sor,
1998 SATURN SL2 29k,automotlc ................ $10,900
holders of record on March Spires specializes in running
1998 CIRRUS LXI, Whlle .............................. $12,900
16,
telephone marketing pro- . GALLIPOLIS Holzer
Century, based in Monterey, grams ' and works with an Clinic-announces the addition
1998 CENTURY LTD, Leather, 35K ............... $12,900,,
Calif., operates 168,000 met- assigned team of communica-. of a nephrology physician,
1998 CENTURY,
White, 23k, ......................... $12;900 .
ric tons per year (mtpy) of tors.
Musa A. Ajala, MD. ·
•
primary aluminum capacity at
Her responsibilities also' . Ajala joins Holzer Clinic
1998 REGAL 33k, sandstone, 3800 V6 .•,........ $13, 9q«)
Ravenswood.
include reaching established from the Kidney and Hyper1998 BONNEVILLE, White ........................... $11,900
performance goals for the tension Center in Houma, La.
company's client programs.
Ajala received his doctor of
1998 PARK AVENUE, White, Taupe,lealher•• $17,90P
Christin Temple has joined medicine and completed his
.1998 JIMMY 4 DR 4x4, White, 33K, sunroof, su
the operations department as urology residency from the
1998 JIMMY 2 DR Pewter 4x4, Sunroof...... :..$14,980 .
GALLtl&gt;OLIS -The Agri- a receptiorust. Prior to joining School of M~dicine of
InfoCision,
she
served
as
a
Timisoara
in
Romania.
His
culture Appropriations Act of
1998 JIMMY SLT 4 DR, Dk blue, 28k, sunroof, leather
2001 provided for the avail~ hair stylist and . receptionist at internship was achieved from
heated seats
baility of nonrecourse mar- Alcove Hair Styling in Mount. Vernon Hospital,
1998 JIMMY SLT 4 DR Pewter, Sunroof, leather, 33k
keting assistance loans and Athalia. She resides in Crown Mount Vernon, N.Y. After his
Dr. Mu1a 'Ajliia
•
City.
internship,
his
internal
medi.
Loan Defi'ciency Payments
1998
SONOMA SPORT, Block, 4.30V6, 1port becl, 28k
Her responsibilities include cine residency was completed
(LOP) to producers of 2000
' .
He
earned
his
bo:ird
certifiPresbyterian/United
Hasanswering
phones,
filing
and
at
1998
SONOMA
SLE
23
k.
automatic,
White
crop honey
pita!
Medical
Center, cation in nephrblogy in 1998
Eligible producers may updating books.
1998 S10 LS 35Kmaroon, .oleyl, lilt, crulse ....... $7,~~
and internal medicine · in
Newark, N.J.
' '
His nephrology fellowship 1996.
1.998 S-1 0 SPORT, Green, Auto, 4 Cyt ..............,. SHAitP
He plans to relocate to the
was completed . at Lankenau
1~8 S10 L$ 16kWhlte,sportstrtpes.................$8995
piles of leaves and trash as Hospital (affiliated with Gallipolis area with his wife, '
overwintering sites. Leaves Thomas Jefferson Medical Charmaine, and their son,
]p98 S10 LS 20K Black, extra sharp! ................. $899? ·
and other organic n'latter College) in Wynnewood, Pa. Rasheed.
. ,
Ajala is accepting .new ·.f~8 CHEV I 500 EXT, VB, 3rd door,
should be gathered and placed He is a member of the Amerf1omPapDI
in compost piles. If you have ican Medical Association, patients at Holzer Clinic in §'lverado............... :......................................... S17,900
,
•
f
I
p.m. ~n March 16, 10:00 a.m. ornamental grasses planted in American College of Physi- Gallipolis for nephrology and 1998CHEVEXTZ71 Blut,350V8, 3rddoor.$19,~
.,.
.
,- ,,
to 9 p.m. on March 17 and your yard, make sure to cians and the American Soci- hypertension. To schedule an
appointment call 446-5131.
;1998GMCSIERRA,Biack,2tK, extraclean .. $14,900
noon to 5 p.m. on March 18. remove last year's grovith ety of In\ernal Medicine.
Admission is $4 for adults, before this year's growth
'1997GRAND AM 4 DR._IItl9e, 42K ..~ ............... $7995
$3.50 for Seniors (55 and begins. The extension office
1997' DODGE INTREPID.c3K, Dkrecl, .
over) and children 12 and has several plans on how to
.
.
construct
compost
bins.
· under are admitted free.
A-1 .................................................................$10,900
'.
should
be
reFirewood
ad
1997 Oli)SDELTA88SIIver,32K.............:... $11,8c]9
Sed.4ing o . pev.r1. me ows, stacked away from the house
pastulei' o'r lawn~· ili~~id be and if possible placed on stone
1997 LESABRE .caWhll•, Blutctoth ............
~ompleted within the next or cement blocks to prevent
19971CHEVSILVERADO PIUAuto,
12,900
month. If the ground was pre- rotting or insect infestation of
pared last fall, a light disking the logs in contact with the
1~ 6RANDMARCj)UIS, V8rearwhHtdr111t, •
or raking is all that is needed ground.
1
r ...... ~,~~ ......................................~........... $11,~ ·,
Wear gloves when cleaning
for the seed bed. Remember
the keys to a good stand of · up. Few people can identify
1996M
05.CK..............................$7,995'
Crain's Tobacco Warehouse in Maysville,
grass, clover or alfalfa are: pur- poison ivy
Kentucky is pleased to announce they will be
l995 PAAKAVENUEWhltt, btutcloth ............ $$9,900 1~
after it has lost its familiar
chase quality seed with a high
the contracting agent and. receiving station for
germination test guarantee, a three lobed leaves. However,
1995 TRANS SPORT,' Whlltwllh btut...............
'
. 8995
Brown &amp; Williamson I Export Leaf
properly prepared seed bed, you ·can still get a poison ivy
1995 JEEP CHEROKEE "CountrY' 4x4, k.••. SI O,IJOO .
(B&amp;W/ELT).
.
make sure the seed comes in rash by having the stem sap
good contact with the soil and contact your skin.·Remember
B&amp;W, ELT will be introducing a direct
1995 ASTRO All wheel drlvt ............................;$8895
keep ,1the seed bed moist. do not burn poison ivy plants
purchasing program for the .2001 Burley
1995 CHEV G20 RaiHd roof, TV, lltuteel
OSU's Agronomy Guide is or their branches as the oily
Season.
available to assist you in sap can be transported in
-"........:......... ;................................................ $9,100
If you. choose.to sell your tobacco at auction,
smoke.
If
breathed
in,
an
selecting the crop that meets
199"' GRAND PRIX 4 DR Dk.ladt ...................... $399$
the auction system is still available with the
your needs, seeding rates, fer- internal rash can occur.
~
.·
.
Brown Warehouses. You may contact any of
tilization needs arid how to Speaking of burning, remem1994 Re9al.2Dr, S~lte ........................ $"'~9JS •)t
our personnel/ employees for information.
maximize your yields. It may ber to contact the local fire
1994PARKAVEULTRAWhltt,lunroof.......... $7,99S
chief
to
make
sure
there
is
not
For more information about B&amp;W/ELt .
be one of your best invest•
a
ban
on
open
burrung
due
to
1991
TOYOTA
PREVIA,
All
whllhlr1111
van
.•
I.Qadid
l
ments.
Direct call:
the risk of grass and forest
Eugene Crain at ............ (606) 564-5858
1991 BLAZER"' DR4wheetclrlve.,.................. $.CH5 i
Have you started your fires.
......................................... (606) 782-2485
spring cleaning up of the
Gary Moran ................. (937)392-1424
(Hal K11cw is lire · Mcils
flower beds, house and fence
........................................ (513) 646-1424
rows? Keep in mind that C.llllll)' alriwlturc a11rl rw111ml
Ray Campbell .............. (937)-392-1479
many imects, diseases and rc.q1wtcs O.J!CIIt, Ohi,, State U11i..
........... " "' ........................ (5 13) 218-3742
wildlife utilize stacks of wood, 11crsity Exterrshm .)

lnvesbnent
workshop set

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...

art

from

calendar
Oassified$

AS
82-4
BS

WASHINGTON - 1\vo
key GOP lawmakers are sug.
gesting
an alternative to a plan
Comics
by moderate Democrats and
Editorials
M
Objtyaries
A3 1 Republicans for a "trigger"
B!. 3~4. 6 I that would tie tax cuts to surSports
pluses.
'Weatller
A3
Senate Majority Leader
'Iient La«, R~Miss., and Sen.
Phil Gramm, R-Texas, raised
the possibility Sunday that
QiK)
Congress could make a "midPitk 3: 4-3-3; Pitk 4: ~3-3-6
coQrse" adjustment to PresiSupert.otlxi: 3-21-23-27-2&amp;40
dent Bush's tO-year, $1.6 tril1&lt;&amp;:4-1-1-2-6() .
lion tax cut if the projected
WNA.
.
su·rpluses don't materialize.
Dlitf 3: 0+2 tletf 4: 7-fo.8-7
The shift in thinking is
apparently intended to win
support from reluctant ce?-

lotte m·ies.

trists of both parties. The suggestion came two days after
Bush indicated he might be
willing to compromise and
followed a poll that found
Americans would
overwhelmingly support a tax cut
if it were automatically scaled
back in the absence of a surplus.
Bush has opposed automatIc triggers, which would make
tax cuts contingent on reaching goals in paying down the
debt or having a certain level
of surplus .money available
each year.
Tax relief passed the
Republican-controlled House
last week with little support

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Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Hanger sets off alarm

CLEVELAND (AP) -The state's plan
to dose its 56 walk-in unemployment
offices has raised concerns from business
and labor leaden who fear the state won't
be able to adequately handle all claims by
telephone.
"When I called (in January),! didn't get
put on hold. I got a busy signal;' Bill Hornung, a 50-year-old engineer from
Willoughby Hills, told The Plain Dealer
for a story Sunday. "It's not even high
unemployment now. What is it going to
be like if we have a major recession?"
Gov. Bob Taft has proposed closing the
offices over the next 15 months as part of
a reorganization expected to save the state
SI0 million.
Concerns have led Taft to appoint a
team to review the plan that will be

Habitat to build house at fair
COLUMBUS (AP) -Visitors to this year's Ohio State Fair

will be able to watch a house being built.
The fair has reached an agreement with the Greater Columbus
Habitat for Humanity to construct a 1,200-square-foot, twostory, wood-frame house on the north end of the fairgrounds . .
The house will be built during the first two weeks of the fair,
which begins Aug. 3, and will be open for tours the last three days, ·
said Susi Havens-Bezaire, resource development chairman of the
local Habitat chapter. .
After the fair ends, the house will be moved to a permanent site
in a nearby residential area, she said.

.implemented by the Ohio Department of
Job and Family Services. The recommendations are due May 1, though some
details could be released as soon as this
week.
The newspaper said internal memos
and calls to the department's seven phone
centen the past two weeks show the
phone system is regularly overwhelmed.
Computer problems in November and
December disconnected many callers and
blocked access for othen.
Union leaders are concerned about
workers not being able to file for benefits
and possibly losing union jobs in the reorganization.
Business leaders are concerned that the
slowing economy will make it harder for
laid-off worken to find jobs. That means

tax.

"It doesn't make sense to give you tax money on one hand to
pay for transportation costs and take it away with the other in the
form of a tax," said Warren Russell, director of the Ohio School
Boards Association.
Efforts are beginning to make some changes that would reimburse schools for cost of state fuel tax.

CINCINNATI (AP) -A man 'Yho claimed to have rescued
. his girlfriend from a fire in her apartment Feb. 15 has been
charged with setting the blaze.
Daniel James Campbell, 34, of Cincinnati, has been charged
with aggravated anon to a person and aggravated arson to prop·erty.
Stacey Porter, 25, sufFered second- and third-degree burns over
the top half of her body in a fire that did an estimated $20,000
damage to the building where she lived.
Cincinnati police say Campbell sprayed lighter fluid on the victim and ignited it, and the fire spread throughout the apartment.

Tift, senators win approval
1

CINCINNATI (AP) -A rm,jority of Ohioans surveyed for a
statewide poll a~p~d of the ,Performa.nce of Gov. Bob Taft and
Sent. GoorpVOinOVtch and Mtke DeWme, the Ohio Poll report- .

od.

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•' .

•' ·

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The poll Saturday showed 68 percent of those su~d
apprQYed of Taft's performance, IS percent disapproved and 18
pin:tnt were un\leQidod.
.
.
Por cha, Mnaton, 58 portent approvod ofVoinovich1 porfor·
mance ~ 56 pm:cnr appl!OIIed, of OeWine'1 perfotmance.
miMin percent dbapproved, ofVoinovich't performance and 31
percent were undecided while 10 percent dlsappl!OIIed of
DeWine's performance and 34 percent were undecided.
.
The poll W:Js conducted Feb. 13 through Feb. 25 by the University of Cincinnati's Institute for Policy Research. It was a random telephone survey of811 adulia, and it had a margln of sampling error of plus or mi!l!IS 3 percentage points.

.••••• Hamsten help ·couple conceive
'.
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r'

CINCINNATI (AP) -A couple who struggled to conceive
• · are expectingth~r first child .in]une- all with the help o(hamster eggs.
.
Kevin and Cheryl Weidenweber used a rare technique offered
at Bethesda Center for Reproductive Health and Fertility. It is the ·

CLEVELAND (AP) - Like many senior citizens; Richard
Page likes being independent and doesn't want to go into a nursing home.
That's why two years ago the 84-year-old started participating
in the Ohio Department ofAging's PASSPORT p~. which
pays to help people live on their own while savirig the state
money on more cosdy nursing home caie.
Page almost got booted from the program last summer when he
waa declared too feeble because he fell three times. It turns out
that he was simply malnourish~d
- eveq though the state had
paid someone to make sure h e - - - - - - - - . -....
.IS
had .three meals a day. Page's famSubscribl today.
COLUMBUS (AP) -Students from a Cincinnati-area school · Uy sayt ho~e care aides weren't
. 992-2/S~
have won a statewide mathematics competition for the fourth alway.~ showmg up.
straight year.
·
·
"These kids are extremely bright, but they also work very hard,"
YOWl
said Oa~ Mi~s, the coach of the Sycamore Junior Hlgh School
tcam.Mlrus will coach the Ohi·o squad at the 17th annual nation1 ' -a! Mathcounts competition in Washington.
ARCHBOLD (AP) - U.S.
Team mcm'tlcrs typically spend two houn a night on practice
El)vironmental
Protection
questions. Mirus said the key is knowing the shortcuts to take.
Apney director Christie Whitman e&amp;Yf the will mab sure oil
drillifll in the Arctic National
· sn
· tts
· ·90-year history, Wildlife
COLUMBUS (Ap) - I'or the fi nt nme
th.
· Refuge doct not harm
· ·
c o11ege wont• b e run by a nun fro m the e•i[fellVli'Onment.
Ohio D onurucan
th d · · · -·-'- to ·
·
·
li
·
c ecmon 11 ... _ go
D onurucan re g.ous ord er.
· r.
rd · h ANWR
·d
· · · w ill announce Mon..A~, tha
k
ala
,orwa
Wit
an
The mstltutlon
t Jac C reso, pres- that · b' 1· b
·
•.
1
'd
fB nar
. Cliffeo11ege m
. toux tty, Iowa,
. will succ eed u- h IS a tg'thcapt ecausc It wont
1 ent o
f th
M
And
M
· h
.. th'
ft 22
appcn wt ou support o
e
ter aEY . re~ at~Slc , rennng ts summer a er ,years as Congress _ then the responsithe Ohio schools prestdent.
'
bili
.·
f th D
. o f a searc h cornnuttee
·
o
ca! p epartmcnt
Calareso was t he ch otce
that co!lSI'dere d E ty
.
. · .
.
.
llVlronment
rotecllon ts to
th
more an 20 candidates for the JOb, none of whom was a nun or make
th t th · d · ·
· Calareso sat·d cornnuttee
·
. his stapnest.
memb ers didn't mention
thsure a atthu one· m a
·
1
d · hi ·
·
way at protects e eiiVIrontus as a ayman . urmg
s mtemew.
·t and preserves t h~~ eiJVIron·
.
·
·
.
Co11 ege offi ctals satd they had knowo for some time that the men
.
d t ha'ttsw
· h at we will
.
.
. .
ment,an
change·was unmment because of a wtdespread shortage of nuns. d
d.
ill d · ·
.
·
o, an we w
o tt VIgorously,~ she said.

Hazel Van Cooney

.

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p•otlctiOn

Laym1n to IIId ODC
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the talk of Morrow County
MOUNT GILEAD (AP) - A discovery
under the floor of the Morrow County Courthouse has people interested in a crime that
occurred more than 100 years ago.
County jail inmates working on a renovation
project unearthed a well-preserved, handwrit-·
ten coroner's inquest from March 25, 1892, a
jug and two fragments of human arm bones.
The items don't appear to be connected. But
since the coroner's report was uncovered two
weeks ago, curious county employees have
been going through death certificates and
newspaper archives to find out more about
. . Alonso Lorenzo "Ren" Gano, the subject of the
inquest.
Gano fatally shot his wife in what was then
the Hotel Fulton and now is the home just outside this city 40 miles north of Columbus
where Sandt;. Lanum and her husband raised
their 12 children.
"It's kind of exciting to hear about this," said
Lanum, 65, who first learned sketchy details of

the murder about 25 years ago.
"I didn't know about it w~en we bought the
house tiom my parents - not that it would
have made any difference;• she said. "I started
finding out after talking' to one of the oldsten
in town, someone who's been gone for years;"
Newspaper reports at the ti'me said Gal\o,
who lived at the hotel, came home drunk and
found his wife, Lillian, with another man. Mter
he failed to choke her to death in her bedroom,
he grabbed a gun and shot her at dole range.
Gano was convicted and was expected to be
hanged, but took a fatal dose of poison on
March 25, 1892, the day he was to be sentenced.
Lanum said locals suspected Gano's sister
took him a lethal potion in a bouquet of flow.
ers.
Coroner C. C. Dunham conducted his investigation the day Gano died.An autopsy revealed
traces of arsenic and mercury· in his stomach
and liver.

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LOCAL STOCKS

•·.

..•-·,.

Gamolt-61~

AEP-46~

IW1 Coal- 25~

Rod&lt;y BooiB- 5l.
RDSMII-60

Genetal Elec1rlc - 43!.

Sea!s-40~

OKNLY-11

Akzo - .ol6l.

-

AmTecMlBC- 45

HarteyD--42~
Kn11rt-9~

.·-··- ··

AT&amp;T-Zl\

BMI&lt;One-36
Bob Evans -10.

...

01MlJial- 2\

Kroger- 25
Lands End- 28
Ud.-17
Oek HI F1nlrocial-14'
OVB-25
.

......

Asl'llnllnc.- 41~

BorgWanw- 45~

6'-

01arml'1g Shopoaty Holctng- ~
Facletal MogU - 3!.

..
-~.,,..

Shoney's-n
Wai-MII1- SOl.

BBT-35~

Peoples -17\

Pranier- 8lo

Wendy's-25~

Wol1tlngb1-10

Daiy stock I'SflOI1S 81111he
4 p.m. c:lo6lng ~ of
the previous day's lransacllons, pnMded b&gt;( Sn1lh
Pattnel8 atM-. Inc. of

ae.lpals.

Rockwell- 47~

The Daily Sentinel

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•

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Reader Services
Correction Polley

Our main concem In all ato~es Is
to be accurate. If you know of an
error 111 a story, call the newsroom

a1 (740) 992·2156 .

Newe Departments

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

.
·..
.,•

Pleasant Valley Outpatient ·
Diabetes Self-Management
Education Program

Tho main number Is 992·2156.
Dapanment extentions .are: .

General monoger

Ext. I 2

New a

Ext. 13

or

Ext. 14

Other aervlcea

Ext. 2004
•

Advartlolng

Ext. 3

Circulation

Exl. 4

Claaollled Ado

Ext. 5

To aend e-mail

...

(USPS 213-NO)
Ohio Valley Publllhlng Ca.
Published avery afternoon, Monday

through Fndly, 111 Couil 'SI.,
Pomeroy,

Ohio.

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postage paid at Pomeroy.
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Po1trrtMt:tr: Send address corrections to Ttle Dally SentineL 111 Court.

St .. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

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dallysentineiOyahoo.com

••
•

rain 70 percent.
Tuesday
night ... Mostly
Rain is likely across the tri'c ounty area tonight with some cloudy with a chance of rain or
snow showers. Low in the
thunderstorms possible.
There will continue to be a lower 30s.
Extended forecast:
chance of rain across the area
Wednesday... A chance of
Tuesday, the National Weather
Service said. Highs will be in flurries in the morning, otherwise partly cloudy. High in the
the 50s.
Sunset will be at 6:35, and lower 40s.
Thursday. .. lncreasing clouds
sunrise on Thesday is at 6:47
\vith
a chance of showen at
a.m.
Weather forecast:
night. Low in the lower 30s
Tonight ... Variable cloudiness and high in the upper 40s.
with a chance of showers. Low
Friday. .. Mostly cloudy with
in the upper 40s. Southwest a chance of showers. Low in
wind 5 to 15 mph. Chance of the upper 30s and high in the
mid 50s.
rain .40 percent.
Saturday. .. Partly cloudy with
Tuesday... Showers
likely.
Morning high in the mid 50s, a chance of showers until midthen temperatures slowly night, then a chance of rain or
falling into the upper 40s. West snow showers. Low in the
wind I 0 to 15 mph. Chance of lower 40s.

" • I

Members of the Pleasant Valley Hospital
Outpatient Diabetes Self-Management Education
Program wlll be conducting a general public
organlzatlo~ meeting to assess Interest In a
diabetes support group. ·

•••••nllllll'lll £7!11£

' ./

USB-Zl

Druanbldonalllldag

(304).675-4340,

• I ~

......

•....

IIPDDrl

Rain likely tonight, Tuesday
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

.. '

1891 slaying once again i.~

MIDDLEPORT - Hazel Van Cooney, 94, passed away on
Saturday, March 10, 2001 at Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis.
She was born on May 30, 1906 in Middleport, daughter of
the late Frank Van Cooney and Nannie Lee Van Cooney. ·
She was a graduate of Middleport High School, and a member of the American Legion and the Meigs County Senior Citizens in Pomeroy. She was a member of the Church of Christ
in Pomeroy. She was formerly employed as a clerk at the Middleport Post Office.
Surviving are a brother and sister-in-law, Clyde and Lelia Van
Cooney of Cottonwood, Arizona; and several nieces and
nephews, including a special niece and her husband, Sharon
and Clifford Saltz of McArthur, and a special nephew, Ralph
Van Cooney of Pomeroy.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by two .
sisters, Edith Mumford and Mary Kauff; and five brothers,:
Albert, Wilbur, Roy, Pearl and Ira Van Cooney.
Services will be held on Tuesday, March 13, 2001 at 11 a.m.
at Fisher-Acree Funeral Home in Middleport, with the Rev.
James Keessee officiating. Burial .will follow at Riverview
Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral home on Monday, March 12,
2001 from 4-8 p.m.

VALLEY WEATHER

math w1 nnen .

lam repeIts

'Ji

Trustees
to meet

Obituaries

..Sloppy' care irks citizens

first ~uccessful procedure of its kind at BetheSda, The Cincinnati
Post reported Saturday
KeviriWeidenweber's sperm was individually injected into the
shells of eggs taken tiom hamsters. The sperm wa1 then taken from
the hamster eggs illld combined with Cheryl Weidenweber's eggs
in a.n in vi~ fertilization proc~dure. ·
_.Kevin Weidemyeber, 29, had undergone radiation and
• chemotherapy nearly 10 years ago to treat a.cancerous tumor. A
semen sample had been preserved before he began chemotherapy·
because doctors anticipated the treatments would leave him with
a low sperm count.

SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange 778 and Star Junior
Grange 878 will hold fun night
and poduck supper Saturday.
The potluck will be at 6:30
p.m. Final plans will be made
for a soup supper on March 23,
4 to 7 p.m.

M•ll . subscriDtlon
lnolde Molgo i:Olinty-

13 Weeks
26 Weeks
52 Weeks .

127.30

$53.82
$105.56 ,,

Ratto outoldo Mtlgo County
13 Weeks

$29.25

28 Weeks
52 Weeks

$58.88
$109.72

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Guitar lesson

Breakfast set

TOLEDO (AP) -A former fugitive financier accused of bilking $200 million from insurance companies got his start in his
hometown by luring workers, business executives and retire,:s to
invest thousands of dollars in a local venture, a newspaper reported.
Martin Frankel got the money from Jeep workers, Owens Illinois executives and retirees, The Blade reported Sunday, based on ·
documents in U.S. District Court in Connecticut.
"I had no idea my money wa1 going for that;' said one investor,
Officers of the' Meigs Chapter of the National Honor Society
conducted the recent Induction ceremony for new members Dan Cole. "I was always happy with the returns we were getting."
Prosecutors say Frankel, 46, tapped into his clients' funds when
tapped during an assembly. They are left to right, Derrick Bolin,
he
ran a Toledo venture known as Creative Partners startirig 'in
president; Cara Ash, vice president; Andrew Krawsczyn, secre1990, records state.
tary, and Carrie Lightfoot, treasurer.

DAYTON (AP) - Police are trying to sort out a series of
shootings that left five people, including an !!-month-old baby
wounded. But some witnesses and victims have not been helpful,
police said.
There was a gun battle between people in two cars early Saturday. followed by shots fired into two houses, and another vehicleto-vehicle shooting in the afternoon, police said.
"The scenarios are the same, the locations are similar,:' said Sgt.
Gary White. "Even now, we don't have any motive. We're just not
getting that much cooperation from the people involved."
Police did not release the names of any of the wounded or anyone being questioned. There were no arrests.

Grange meeting

LETART, W.Va. - RosaleeThomu Eubanks, 69, Letart, died
Sunday, March II, 2001 at her residence.
Born April 24, 1931 in Mason, W.Va., daughter of the late
Harold Thomas and Lucy Sayre White, she was a caregivN for
the elderly.
Surviving are a daughter, Sandra K. Satterfield of Letart; a
son, Stanley E. Satterfield of Cheshire; II grandchildren and 13
.great-grandchildren; and three brothers, Richard Thomas of
Illinois, and Delbert Thomas and James Marshall, both of
Akron.
ALFRED - A breakfast
She was also preceded in death by a son, Troy H . Satterfield; will be served at Alfred United
and a brother, Charles Thomas.
Methodist Church on Ohio
Services will be I p.m. Wednesday in Foglesong Funeral 681 on Saturday from 6-11
Home, Mason, with the Rev. Charles Hargraves officiating. a.m. Donations will be acceptBurial will be in Evergreen Cemetery, Letart. Friends may call ed, with proceeds going to the
at the funeral home from 6~8 p.m. Tuesday.
· Noah's Ark Project ministry.

· Suspect's trail began in Ohio

Wounded baby's recovering

The Dally Sentinel • Pii!• A3

LOCAL BRIEFS

Rosalee thomas Eubanks

they will collect benefits longer and cost
busineues more in unemployment taxes.
Unemployed worken are eligible for up
to 26 weeks of benefits.The average duration is about half that time..
"Couple the economic slowdown, and
the changes they are nuking at the ~n­
ters, and tlut may have a devastating efl'~ct
for businesses;• said Scott F-hafer, director of the Ohio Employer Council, a
group representing 3,5q&lt;l companies.
But the state's phone system would be'
improved to handle far more calls, backup
systems would be put in place to guard
a~t computer crashes and a mail cen- .
ter will be opened in northwest Ohio to
handle ma.il claims, said Melissa DeLisio,
deputy director of the office of unemployment compensation.

GRANVILLE (AP)- Residents of this Licking County community are upset by the school board's decision to turn doy.rn a
developer's offer to donate land for new schools. ·
The board says that it needed more land than was offered and
that the plot to be donated isn't yet owned by the people who
proposed the gift.
The site in question is a 90-acre area on the village's east side.
Developen Larke and Joe Recchie said they wanted to develop
senior citizen housing on part of it and give 20 to 25 acres to the
school board.

MARIETTA (AP) - Schools don't pay' sales tax when they
buy items such as books, desks or food.
But when it's time to fill the gas tanks for thousands of buses,
sehools can't get out of paying the state's 22-cent per gallon fuel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Deaths

•

••

Land·donation draws fire.

NHS ·officers

Gas·tax proves costly

Monday, March 12, 2001

Monct.y, ~rda 1::1, ::1001

Jobless plan has state leaders concerned

NELSONVILLE (AP) - A Hocking College student wa~ in
hot water and a lot of his fellow dormitory residents were wet
after he accidentally set ofF the building's sprinkler system.
Nelsonville firefighters said the student had hung a shirt tiom a
sprinkler valve on the ceiling of his room in Summit Hall while
steaming a shirt. They said he set ofF the sprinkler while trying to
remove the clothes hanger.
Firefighter Dean Russell said about 1,500 gallons of water was
released About 100 people had to be evacuated from the -building, and 13 rooms had about 1-1/2 inches of water on the floors.
Damage was estimated at $20,000. No one W2S injured.

·Hero• faces accusation

•••

REEDSVILLE Olive
Township Trustees wiU have a
special meeting, Tuesday, 6:30
p.m. at the township office on
Joppa Road. FEMA 1227
paperwork will be the purpose.

•••

CHESTER Chester
Township Trustees' monthly
meeting Thursday at 7 p.m. at
the town hall. Appropriations
will be approved.

EMS runs
POMEROY - Units of the
Meigs Emergency Service
answered 12 calls for assistance
over the weekend. Units
responded as follows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Saturday, 1:39 p.m., Romine
Road, assisted by Rutland,
Patricia Beary, Holzer Medical
Center;
6:23 p.m., East . Main, Angie

Taxes
fromPageA1
from Democrats, whose help
will be crucial if Bush's plan is
to pass in a Senate that is
evenly split between Republicans and Democrats.
Lott said a trigger would
inevitably undo the tax cuts.
But he suggested an alternative.
"I think that if you put a
waiver in there for the presi- ·
dent or if you had some sort
of a midcourse adjustment
opportunity where you sort
of look at what's happening
and set up a process - buta ·
trigger, which is automatic, it's
sort of like, now you see it,
now you don't," Lott said on
"Fox News Sunday."
He did not elaborate on
how such an adjustment
would work .
The trigger idea was proposed by Sens. Olympia
Snowe, R-Maine, and Evan
Bayh, D-Ind., and several
moderate Republican senators have joined the effort,
including ·Arlen Specter of
Pennsylvania, Lincoln Chafee
of Rhode Island and Susan
Collins of Mai'ne. Among the
Democrats supporting it are
Dianne Feinstein of California and Mary Landrieu of
Louisiana .
An NHC-Wall Street Journal poll released last week
found that 73 percent of
American• would support a
tax cut if tied to surpluses.
Gramm, who sits on · the
Senate Budget and Finance
committees, said a trigger
would risk putting a financial
straitiacket on the country:
But like Lott, he appeared
open to compromise .
"I think we can come up
with a way of giving Congress an expedited consideration of something like a midcourse correction, but we
can't lock the country into a
straitjacket," he told NBC's
"Meet the Press." "It is a
workable, responsibk alternative. I think it's something
we're going to look at, but in
the end the president is going
to get this tax cut."
The talk of a midcoursc

Albert "The Kid' Castiglia, current guitarist for Sandra Hall and
former band member for legendary blues harmonica master,
Junior Wells, took time from his busy touring schedule to give
a special blues guitar lesson to Meigs Band Director Toney
Dingess' guitar class at Meigs High Schoc:&gt;l Friday afternoon.
Castiglia, who was in Pomeroy for a concert at ttie Court
Street Grill, is pictured here instructing Reese Wyatt on the
proper etiquette of blues guitar. (Charlene Hoeflich photo)

Carter, refused treatment;
Sund1y, 3:22 a.m., County
8:53 p.m., Water Street, Ruad9, Steven Shaffer, St.
misted by Syracuse, Robert Joseph Memorial Hospital .
Cunningham, HMC;
RUTLAND
S(lnday, 1:10 a.m., Water
Sunday, II a.m., County
Edge Apartments, Geraldine Road No. 20, PhiUip D. Radford, HMC.
Spencer, HMC;
10:30 a.m., Ohio 692, assistSYRACUSE
ed by Rudand, Joseph Young,
6:49 p.m.,Welch Town , auto
HMC;
fire, Jason Cline owner, no
3:55 p.m., Mulberry, Lisa injuries.
Haggy,HMC;
11:34 p.m., Ohio 143, Reva
Musser, HMC.
POMEROY -A local man
MIDDLEPORT
Sunday, II :40 p.m., Beech was recently arrested for dri- ·
Street, smoke odor, James ving under the influence by
Hollman residence, no injuries. the Meigs County Sheriff's
POMEROY
Department.
Saturday, 4:51 p.m., Rock- · Sheriff Ralph E. Trussell said
springs Rehabilitation Center, that a Pomeroy man was issued
several citations after the
HMC.
department received numerous
REEDSVllLE
complaints of a reckless driver
in the Ball Run/Peach Fork
Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass.,
Area.
said that would not work in
the Senate and that Bush and
his Republican allies must
heal wounds caused by the
House effort. if they expect to
win support.
'
"I think what hap})ened in
from PapAl
the House, in fact, will be
interpreted by many Democ- Keith and Emma Ashley, a
rats in the Senate as almost an senior at Meigs High School.
insult, a slap in the face to a
They
were
presented
real democratic process," plaques by Emma Ashley,
Kerry said on ABC's "This chairman. Whitney was also
Week."
recognized as the county
Senate Democrats, who winner.
generally favor a smaller tax
Students for the good citicut, will . not be ignored, said zenship awards are selected on
Sen. John Edwards, D-N.C. the basis of their activity,
"The president's going to grade point average and
have to deal with us in the
Senate, and I think he recognizes that," he told NBC.
Over the past two weeks,
Bush traveled to nine states to
promote his tax cut and to
pressure those states' Democ~
ratic senators to support it. He
was continuing the effort
Monday in Florida.
. Bush also floated conciliatory language, saying in interviews published Saturday that
he was willing to listen to
other opinions on the tax
plan.
Among rhe compromise
options on the table, according to Republican officials, is
reducing the amount by
which the wealthiest would
see their income tax rate
drop.

Man arrested

DAR

Bryan Stew.~rt was cited for
reckless operation, no seat belt,
open container in a n1otor
vehicle, driving under suspension, and driving under the
influence of alcohol.
Stewart was transported to
Athens County. where he was
incarcerated on an unrelated
charge.
In a related charge, Stewart's
wife, Lori Stewart, was issued a
summons to appear in Meigs
County Court for wrongful
entrustment, which stems from
allowing an unlicensed driver
to operate a motor vehicle registered in her name.

Arrests made
POMEROY

-

Several

individuals were arrested and a
complaint was investigated

over the weekend by the Meigs
County Sheriff's Department.
Sheriff Ralph E. Trussell
reported that Gary Priddy and
Sherolyn Butcher were arrested on bench warrants early
Sunday. Priddy is currently
being held in the Meigs County Jail and Butcher was trans~
ported to the regional jail in
Nelsonville.
Both are awaiting their
respective court appearances.
In other n1.:ttters, several indi-

viduals were issued citations on
both Saturday and Sunday.
Cited were Kenneth George
for fictitious tags and no operator's license; Jason Rowe for
left of center and driving under
the influence; and Araka Priddy for left of center and driving
under the influence. All were
summoned to appear in Me.igs
County Court.
Several reports of · mailbox
vandalism were received over
the weekend and are currendy
still under investigation. Anyone with information can call
the sheriff's office at 992-3371.

American Heritage essays
written during a two hour
period under the supervision
of guidance counselors. Both
Whitney and Brenna are
seniors at their respective
schools.
The students and family
members were guests ai the
luncheon.

-TRIVIA
Und1 H1mllton hu an idenli·

cal twin who played a double
for the character of Sarah Connor in 1991's Terminator 2:
J•dgmmt Day.

correction marks a change
li-om the approach used to
win pJssage in the House,

. The Meigs County Commissioners inter:~d to apply to the U.S.O.A.
Rural Housing Service for funding under the U.S.O.A. Rural Housing
Preservation Program. Meigs County is eligible for up .to $75,000.00 for
Housing . Preservation, provided the County meets applicable
requirements. On March 15, 2001, the County held its first public
hearing to inform citizens about the Rural Housing Service Preservation
program, what activities are eligible, and other important requirements .
A second public hearing will be held on March 22, 2001, at 10:00 a.m.
at the Meigs County Commissioners Office, Meigs County Courthouse,
Pomeroy, Ohio to allow citizens to express their views and comments on
the county's proposed Rural Housing Service Housing Pre~ervation
Application.
Written comments will be accepted until 10:00 a.m., March 22, 2001 ,
and may be mailed to the Meigs County Commissioners, Courthouse, ·
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
If a participant will need auxiliary aids (interpreter, Braille or taped
material, asslstlve listening devices, other) due to. a disability, please
contact Gloria Klees, Clerk; prior to March 22, 2001, at (740) 992-2895
in order to ensure that your needs will be accommodated.

where GOP leaders pushed
the largest portion of. the
Bush plan on a nearly partyline vote .

Jeff Thornton, President
Meigs
Commissioners

�'

••

PageAl

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Hanger sets off alarm

CLEVELAND (AP) -The state's plan
to dose its 56 walk-in unemployment
offices has raised concerns from business
and labor leaden who fear the state won't
be able to adequately handle all claims by
telephone.
"When I called (in January),! didn't get
put on hold. I got a busy signal;' Bill Hornung, a 50-year-old engineer from
Willoughby Hills, told The Plain Dealer
for a story Sunday. "It's not even high
unemployment now. What is it going to
be like if we have a major recession?"
Gov. Bob Taft has proposed closing the
offices over the next 15 months as part of
a reorganization expected to save the state
SI0 million.
Concerns have led Taft to appoint a
team to review the plan that will be

Habitat to build house at fair
COLUMBUS (AP) -Visitors to this year's Ohio State Fair

will be able to watch a house being built.
The fair has reached an agreement with the Greater Columbus
Habitat for Humanity to construct a 1,200-square-foot, twostory, wood-frame house on the north end of the fairgrounds . .
The house will be built during the first two weeks of the fair,
which begins Aug. 3, and will be open for tours the last three days, ·
said Susi Havens-Bezaire, resource development chairman of the
local Habitat chapter. .
After the fair ends, the house will be moved to a permanent site
in a nearby residential area, she said.

.implemented by the Ohio Department of
Job and Family Services. The recommendations are due May 1, though some
details could be released as soon as this
week.
The newspaper said internal memos
and calls to the department's seven phone
centen the past two weeks show the
phone system is regularly overwhelmed.
Computer problems in November and
December disconnected many callers and
blocked access for othen.
Union leaders are concerned about
workers not being able to file for benefits
and possibly losing union jobs in the reorganization.
Business leaders are concerned that the
slowing economy will make it harder for
laid-off worken to find jobs. That means

tax.

"It doesn't make sense to give you tax money on one hand to
pay for transportation costs and take it away with the other in the
form of a tax," said Warren Russell, director of the Ohio School
Boards Association.
Efforts are beginning to make some changes that would reimburse schools for cost of state fuel tax.

CINCINNATI (AP) -A man 'Yho claimed to have rescued
. his girlfriend from a fire in her apartment Feb. 15 has been
charged with setting the blaze.
Daniel James Campbell, 34, of Cincinnati, has been charged
with aggravated anon to a person and aggravated arson to prop·erty.
Stacey Porter, 25, sufFered second- and third-degree burns over
the top half of her body in a fire that did an estimated $20,000
damage to the building where she lived.
Cincinnati police say Campbell sprayed lighter fluid on the victim and ignited it, and the fire spread throughout the apartment.

Tift, senators win approval
1

CINCINNATI (AP) -A rm,jority of Ohioans surveyed for a
statewide poll a~p~d of the ,Performa.nce of Gov. Bob Taft and
Sent. GoorpVOinOVtch and Mtke DeWme, the Ohio Poll report- .

od.

'' .

•' .

•' ·

.••-:
•

.

.....
••' .
••••

.

The poll Saturday showed 68 percent of those su~d
apprQYed of Taft's performance, IS percent disapproved and 18
pin:tnt were un\leQidod.
.
.
Por cha, Mnaton, 58 portent approvod ofVoinovich1 porfor·
mance ~ 56 pm:cnr appl!OIIed, of OeWine'1 perfotmance.
miMin percent dbapproved, ofVoinovich't performance and 31
percent were undecided while 10 percent dlsappl!OIIed of
DeWine's performance and 34 percent were undecided.
.
The poll W:Js conducted Feb. 13 through Feb. 25 by the University of Cincinnati's Institute for Policy Research. It was a random telephone survey of811 adulia, and it had a margln of sampling error of plus or mi!l!IS 3 percentage points.

.••••• Hamsten help ·couple conceive
'.
!:
'

r'

CINCINNATI (AP) -A couple who struggled to conceive
• · are expectingth~r first child .in]une- all with the help o(hamster eggs.
.
Kevin and Cheryl Weidenweber used a rare technique offered
at Bethesda Center for Reproductive Health and Fertility. It is the ·

CLEVELAND (AP) - Like many senior citizens; Richard
Page likes being independent and doesn't want to go into a nursing home.
That's why two years ago the 84-year-old started participating
in the Ohio Department ofAging's PASSPORT p~. which
pays to help people live on their own while savirig the state
money on more cosdy nursing home caie.
Page almost got booted from the program last summer when he
waa declared too feeble because he fell three times. It turns out
that he was simply malnourish~d
- eveq though the state had
paid someone to make sure h e - - - - - - - - . -....
.IS
had .three meals a day. Page's famSubscribl today.
COLUMBUS (AP) -Students from a Cincinnati-area school · Uy sayt ho~e care aides weren't
. 992-2/S~
have won a statewide mathematics competition for the fourth alway.~ showmg up.
straight year.
·
·
"These kids are extremely bright, but they also work very hard,"
YOWl
said Oa~ Mi~s, the coach of the Sycamore Junior Hlgh School
tcam.Mlrus will coach the Ohi·o squad at the 17th annual nation1 ' -a! Mathcounts competition in Washington.
ARCHBOLD (AP) - U.S.
Team mcm'tlcrs typically spend two houn a night on practice
El)vironmental
Protection
questions. Mirus said the key is knowing the shortcuts to take.
Apney director Christie Whitman e&amp;Yf the will mab sure oil
drillifll in the Arctic National
· sn
· tts
· ·90-year history, Wildlife
COLUMBUS (Ap) - I'or the fi nt nme
th.
· Refuge doct not harm
· ·
c o11ege wont• b e run by a nun fro m the e•i[fellVli'Onment.
Ohio D onurucan
th d · · · -·-'- to ·
·
·
li
·
c ecmon 11 ... _ go
D onurucan re g.ous ord er.
· r.
rd · h ANWR
·d
· · · w ill announce Mon..A~, tha
k
ala
,orwa
Wit
an
The mstltutlon
t Jac C reso, pres- that · b' 1· b
·
•.
1
'd
fB nar
. Cliffeo11ege m
. toux tty, Iowa,
. will succ eed u- h IS a tg'thcapt ecausc It wont
1 ent o
f th
M
And
M
· h
.. th'
ft 22
appcn wt ou support o
e
ter aEY . re~ at~Slc , rennng ts summer a er ,years as Congress _ then the responsithe Ohio schools prestdent.
'
bili
.·
f th D
. o f a searc h cornnuttee
·
o
ca! p epartmcnt
Calareso was t he ch otce
that co!lSI'dere d E ty
.
. · .
.
.
llVlronment
rotecllon ts to
th
more an 20 candidates for the JOb, none of whom was a nun or make
th t th · d · ·
· Calareso sat·d cornnuttee
·
. his stapnest.
memb ers didn't mention
thsure a atthu one· m a
·
1
d · hi ·
·
way at protects e eiiVIrontus as a ayman . urmg
s mtemew.
·t and preserves t h~~ eiJVIron·
.
·
·
.
Co11 ege offi ctals satd they had knowo for some time that the men
.
d t ha'ttsw
· h at we will
.
.
. .
ment,an
change·was unmment because of a wtdespread shortage of nuns. d
d.
ill d · ·
.
·
o, an we w
o tt VIgorously,~ she said.

Hazel Van Cooney

.

.

Whlbn1n
p•otlctiOn

Laym1n to IIId ODC
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the talk of Morrow County
MOUNT GILEAD (AP) - A discovery
under the floor of the Morrow County Courthouse has people interested in a crime that
occurred more than 100 years ago.
County jail inmates working on a renovation
project unearthed a well-preserved, handwrit-·
ten coroner's inquest from March 25, 1892, a
jug and two fragments of human arm bones.
The items don't appear to be connected. But
since the coroner's report was uncovered two
weeks ago, curious county employees have
been going through death certificates and
newspaper archives to find out more about
. . Alonso Lorenzo "Ren" Gano, the subject of the
inquest.
Gano fatally shot his wife in what was then
the Hotel Fulton and now is the home just outside this city 40 miles north of Columbus
where Sandt;. Lanum and her husband raised
their 12 children.
"It's kind of exciting to hear about this," said
Lanum, 65, who first learned sketchy details of

the murder about 25 years ago.
"I didn't know about it w~en we bought the
house tiom my parents - not that it would
have made any difference;• she said. "I started
finding out after talking' to one of the oldsten
in town, someone who's been gone for years;"
Newspaper reports at the ti'me said Gal\o,
who lived at the hotel, came home drunk and
found his wife, Lillian, with another man. Mter
he failed to choke her to death in her bedroom,
he grabbed a gun and shot her at dole range.
Gano was convicted and was expected to be
hanged, but took a fatal dose of poison on
March 25, 1892, the day he was to be sentenced.
Lanum said locals suspected Gano's sister
took him a lethal potion in a bouquet of flow.
ers.
Coroner C. C. Dunham conducted his investigation the day Gano died.An autopsy revealed
traces of arsenic and mercury· in his stomach
and liver.

..
•

I

LOCAL STOCKS

•·.

..•-·,.

Gamolt-61~

AEP-46~

IW1 Coal- 25~

Rod&lt;y BooiB- 5l.
RDSMII-60

Genetal Elec1rlc - 43!.

Sea!s-40~

OKNLY-11

Akzo - .ol6l.

-

AmTecMlBC- 45

HarteyD--42~
Kn11rt-9~

.·-··- ··

AT&amp;T-Zl\

BMI&lt;One-36
Bob Evans -10.

...

01MlJial- 2\

Kroger- 25
Lands End- 28
Ud.-17
Oek HI F1nlrocial-14'
OVB-25
.

......

Asl'llnllnc.- 41~

BorgWanw- 45~

6'-

01arml'1g Shopoaty Holctng- ~
Facletal MogU - 3!.

..
-~.,,..

Shoney's-n
Wai-MII1- SOl.

BBT-35~

Peoples -17\

Pranier- 8lo

Wendy's-25~

Wol1tlngb1-10

Daiy stock I'SflOI1S 81111he
4 p.m. c:lo6lng ~ of
the previous day's lransacllons, pnMded b&gt;( Sn1lh
Pattnel8 atM-. Inc. of

ae.lpals.

Rockwell- 47~

The Daily Sentinel

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•

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~··

••'

.•.
•

...

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Reader Services
Correction Polley

Our main concem In all ato~es Is
to be accurate. If you know of an
error 111 a story, call the newsroom

a1 (740) 992·2156 .

Newe Departments

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

.
·..
.,•

Pleasant Valley Outpatient ·
Diabetes Self-Management
Education Program

Tho main number Is 992·2156.
Dapanment extentions .are: .

General monoger

Ext. I 2

New a

Ext. 13

or

Ext. 14

Other aervlcea

Ext. 2004
•

Advartlolng

Ext. 3

Circulation

Exl. 4

Claaollled Ado

Ext. 5

To aend e-mail

...

(USPS 213-NO)
Ohio Valley Publllhlng Ca.
Published avery afternoon, Monday

through Fndly, 111 Couil 'SI.,
Pomeroy,

Ohio.

Second-class

postage paid at Pomeroy.
Mtmbtr: The Associated Press and

the Ohio Newspaper Association.
Po1trrtMt:tr: Send address corrections to Ttle Dally SentineL 111 Court.

St .. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

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dallysentineiOyahoo.com

••
•

rain 70 percent.
Tuesday
night ... Mostly
Rain is likely across the tri'c ounty area tonight with some cloudy with a chance of rain or
snow showers. Low in the
thunderstorms possible.
There will continue to be a lower 30s.
Extended forecast:
chance of rain across the area
Wednesday... A chance of
Tuesday, the National Weather
Service said. Highs will be in flurries in the morning, otherwise partly cloudy. High in the
the 50s.
Sunset will be at 6:35, and lower 40s.
Thursday. .. lncreasing clouds
sunrise on Thesday is at 6:47
\vith
a chance of showen at
a.m.
Weather forecast:
night. Low in the lower 30s
Tonight ... Variable cloudiness and high in the upper 40s.
with a chance of showers. Low
Friday. .. Mostly cloudy with
in the upper 40s. Southwest a chance of showers. Low in
wind 5 to 15 mph. Chance of the upper 30s and high in the
mid 50s.
rain .40 percent.
Saturday. .. Partly cloudy with
Tuesday... Showers
likely.
Morning high in the mid 50s, a chance of showers until midthen temperatures slowly night, then a chance of rain or
falling into the upper 40s. West snow showers. Low in the
wind I 0 to 15 mph. Chance of lower 40s.

" • I

Members of the Pleasant Valley Hospital
Outpatient Diabetes Self-Management Education
Program wlll be conducting a general public
organlzatlo~ meeting to assess Interest In a
diabetes support group. ·

•••••nllllll'lll £7!11£

' ./

USB-Zl

Druanbldonalllldag

(304).675-4340,

• I ~

......

•....

IIPDDrl

Rain likely tonight, Tuesday
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

.. '

1891 slaying once again i.~

MIDDLEPORT - Hazel Van Cooney, 94, passed away on
Saturday, March 10, 2001 at Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis.
She was born on May 30, 1906 in Middleport, daughter of
the late Frank Van Cooney and Nannie Lee Van Cooney. ·
She was a graduate of Middleport High School, and a member of the American Legion and the Meigs County Senior Citizens in Pomeroy. She was a member of the Church of Christ
in Pomeroy. She was formerly employed as a clerk at the Middleport Post Office.
Surviving are a brother and sister-in-law, Clyde and Lelia Van
Cooney of Cottonwood, Arizona; and several nieces and
nephews, including a special niece and her husband, Sharon
and Clifford Saltz of McArthur, and a special nephew, Ralph
Van Cooney of Pomeroy.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by two .
sisters, Edith Mumford and Mary Kauff; and five brothers,:
Albert, Wilbur, Roy, Pearl and Ira Van Cooney.
Services will be held on Tuesday, March 13, 2001 at 11 a.m.
at Fisher-Acree Funeral Home in Middleport, with the Rev.
James Keessee officiating. Burial .will follow at Riverview
Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral home on Monday, March 12,
2001 from 4-8 p.m.

VALLEY WEATHER

math w1 nnen .

lam repeIts

'Ji

Trustees
to meet

Obituaries

..Sloppy' care irks citizens

first ~uccessful procedure of its kind at BetheSda, The Cincinnati
Post reported Saturday
KeviriWeidenweber's sperm was individually injected into the
shells of eggs taken tiom hamsters. The sperm wa1 then taken from
the hamster eggs illld combined with Cheryl Weidenweber's eggs
in a.n in vi~ fertilization proc~dure. ·
_.Kevin Weidemyeber, 29, had undergone radiation and
• chemotherapy nearly 10 years ago to treat a.cancerous tumor. A
semen sample had been preserved before he began chemotherapy·
because doctors anticipated the treatments would leave him with
a low sperm count.

SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange 778 and Star Junior
Grange 878 will hold fun night
and poduck supper Saturday.
The potluck will be at 6:30
p.m. Final plans will be made
for a soup supper on March 23,
4 to 7 p.m.

M•ll . subscriDtlon
lnolde Molgo i:Olinty-

13 Weeks
26 Weeks
52 Weeks .

127.30

$53.82
$105.56 ,,

Ratto outoldo Mtlgo County
13 Weeks

$29.25

28 Weeks
52 Weeks

$58.88
$109.72

•

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Guitar lesson

Breakfast set

TOLEDO (AP) -A former fugitive financier accused of bilking $200 million from insurance companies got his start in his
hometown by luring workers, business executives and retire,:s to
invest thousands of dollars in a local venture, a newspaper reported.
Martin Frankel got the money from Jeep workers, Owens Illinois executives and retirees, The Blade reported Sunday, based on ·
documents in U.S. District Court in Connecticut.
"I had no idea my money wa1 going for that;' said one investor,
Officers of the' Meigs Chapter of the National Honor Society
conducted the recent Induction ceremony for new members Dan Cole. "I was always happy with the returns we were getting."
Prosecutors say Frankel, 46, tapped into his clients' funds when
tapped during an assembly. They are left to right, Derrick Bolin,
he
ran a Toledo venture known as Creative Partners startirig 'in
president; Cara Ash, vice president; Andrew Krawsczyn, secre1990, records state.
tary, and Carrie Lightfoot, treasurer.

DAYTON (AP) - Police are trying to sort out a series of
shootings that left five people, including an !!-month-old baby
wounded. But some witnesses and victims have not been helpful,
police said.
There was a gun battle between people in two cars early Saturday. followed by shots fired into two houses, and another vehicleto-vehicle shooting in the afternoon, police said.
"The scenarios are the same, the locations are similar,:' said Sgt.
Gary White. "Even now, we don't have any motive. We're just not
getting that much cooperation from the people involved."
Police did not release the names of any of the wounded or anyone being questioned. There were no arrests.

Grange meeting

LETART, W.Va. - RosaleeThomu Eubanks, 69, Letart, died
Sunday, March II, 2001 at her residence.
Born April 24, 1931 in Mason, W.Va., daughter of the late
Harold Thomas and Lucy Sayre White, she was a caregivN for
the elderly.
Surviving are a daughter, Sandra K. Satterfield of Letart; a
son, Stanley E. Satterfield of Cheshire; II grandchildren and 13
.great-grandchildren; and three brothers, Richard Thomas of
Illinois, and Delbert Thomas and James Marshall, both of
Akron.
ALFRED - A breakfast
She was also preceded in death by a son, Troy H . Satterfield; will be served at Alfred United
and a brother, Charles Thomas.
Methodist Church on Ohio
Services will be I p.m. Wednesday in Foglesong Funeral 681 on Saturday from 6-11
Home, Mason, with the Rev. Charles Hargraves officiating. a.m. Donations will be acceptBurial will be in Evergreen Cemetery, Letart. Friends may call ed, with proceeds going to the
at the funeral home from 6~8 p.m. Tuesday.
· Noah's Ark Project ministry.

· Suspect's trail began in Ohio

Wounded baby's recovering

The Dally Sentinel • Pii!• A3

LOCAL BRIEFS

Rosalee thomas Eubanks

they will collect benefits longer and cost
busineues more in unemployment taxes.
Unemployed worken are eligible for up
to 26 weeks of benefits.The average duration is about half that time..
"Couple the economic slowdown, and
the changes they are nuking at the ~n­
ters, and tlut may have a devastating efl'~ct
for businesses;• said Scott F-hafer, director of the Ohio Employer Council, a
group representing 3,5q&lt;l companies.
But the state's phone system would be'
improved to handle far more calls, backup
systems would be put in place to guard
a~t computer crashes and a mail cen- .
ter will be opened in northwest Ohio to
handle ma.il claims, said Melissa DeLisio,
deputy director of the office of unemployment compensation.

GRANVILLE (AP)- Residents of this Licking County community are upset by the school board's decision to turn doy.rn a
developer's offer to donate land for new schools. ·
The board says that it needed more land than was offered and
that the plot to be donated isn't yet owned by the people who
proposed the gift.
The site in question is a 90-acre area on the village's east side.
Developen Larke and Joe Recchie said they wanted to develop
senior citizen housing on part of it and give 20 to 25 acres to the
school board.

MARIETTA (AP) - Schools don't pay' sales tax when they
buy items such as books, desks or food.
But when it's time to fill the gas tanks for thousands of buses,
sehools can't get out of paying the state's 22-cent per gallon fuel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Deaths

•

••

Land·donation draws fire.

NHS ·officers

Gas·tax proves costly

Monday, March 12, 2001

Monct.y, ~rda 1::1, ::1001

Jobless plan has state leaders concerned

NELSONVILLE (AP) - A Hocking College student wa~ in
hot water and a lot of his fellow dormitory residents were wet
after he accidentally set ofF the building's sprinkler system.
Nelsonville firefighters said the student had hung a shirt tiom a
sprinkler valve on the ceiling of his room in Summit Hall while
steaming a shirt. They said he set ofF the sprinkler while trying to
remove the clothes hanger.
Firefighter Dean Russell said about 1,500 gallons of water was
released About 100 people had to be evacuated from the -building, and 13 rooms had about 1-1/2 inches of water on the floors.
Damage was estimated at $20,000. No one W2S injured.

·Hero• faces accusation

•••

REEDSVILLE Olive
Township Trustees wiU have a
special meeting, Tuesday, 6:30
p.m. at the township office on
Joppa Road. FEMA 1227
paperwork will be the purpose.

•••

CHESTER Chester
Township Trustees' monthly
meeting Thursday at 7 p.m. at
the town hall. Appropriations
will be approved.

EMS runs
POMEROY - Units of the
Meigs Emergency Service
answered 12 calls for assistance
over the weekend. Units
responded as follows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Saturday, 1:39 p.m., Romine
Road, assisted by Rutland,
Patricia Beary, Holzer Medical
Center;
6:23 p.m., East . Main, Angie

Taxes
fromPageA1
from Democrats, whose help
will be crucial if Bush's plan is
to pass in a Senate that is
evenly split between Republicans and Democrats.
Lott said a trigger would
inevitably undo the tax cuts.
But he suggested an alternative.
"I think that if you put a
waiver in there for the presi- ·
dent or if you had some sort
of a midcourse adjustment
opportunity where you sort
of look at what's happening
and set up a process - buta ·
trigger, which is automatic, it's
sort of like, now you see it,
now you don't," Lott said on
"Fox News Sunday."
He did not elaborate on
how such an adjustment
would work .
The trigger idea was proposed by Sens. Olympia
Snowe, R-Maine, and Evan
Bayh, D-Ind., and several
moderate Republican senators have joined the effort,
including ·Arlen Specter of
Pennsylvania, Lincoln Chafee
of Rhode Island and Susan
Collins of Mai'ne. Among the
Democrats supporting it are
Dianne Feinstein of California and Mary Landrieu of
Louisiana .
An NHC-Wall Street Journal poll released last week
found that 73 percent of
American• would support a
tax cut if tied to surpluses.
Gramm, who sits on · the
Senate Budget and Finance
committees, said a trigger
would risk putting a financial
straitiacket on the country:
But like Lott, he appeared
open to compromise .
"I think we can come up
with a way of giving Congress an expedited consideration of something like a midcourse correction, but we
can't lock the country into a
straitjacket," he told NBC's
"Meet the Press." "It is a
workable, responsibk alternative. I think it's something
we're going to look at, but in
the end the president is going
to get this tax cut."
The talk of a midcoursc

Albert "The Kid' Castiglia, current guitarist for Sandra Hall and
former band member for legendary blues harmonica master,
Junior Wells, took time from his busy touring schedule to give
a special blues guitar lesson to Meigs Band Director Toney
Dingess' guitar class at Meigs High Schoc:&gt;l Friday afternoon.
Castiglia, who was in Pomeroy for a concert at ttie Court
Street Grill, is pictured here instructing Reese Wyatt on the
proper etiquette of blues guitar. (Charlene Hoeflich photo)

Carter, refused treatment;
Sund1y, 3:22 a.m., County
8:53 p.m., Water Street, Ruad9, Steven Shaffer, St.
misted by Syracuse, Robert Joseph Memorial Hospital .
Cunningham, HMC;
RUTLAND
S(lnday, 1:10 a.m., Water
Sunday, II a.m., County
Edge Apartments, Geraldine Road No. 20, PhiUip D. Radford, HMC.
Spencer, HMC;
10:30 a.m., Ohio 692, assistSYRACUSE
ed by Rudand, Joseph Young,
6:49 p.m.,Welch Town , auto
HMC;
fire, Jason Cline owner, no
3:55 p.m., Mulberry, Lisa injuries.
Haggy,HMC;
11:34 p.m., Ohio 143, Reva
Musser, HMC.
POMEROY -A local man
MIDDLEPORT
Sunday, II :40 p.m., Beech was recently arrested for dri- ·
Street, smoke odor, James ving under the influence by
Hollman residence, no injuries. the Meigs County Sheriff's
POMEROY
Department.
Saturday, 4:51 p.m., Rock- · Sheriff Ralph E. Trussell said
springs Rehabilitation Center, that a Pomeroy man was issued
several citations after the
HMC.
department received numerous
REEDSVllLE
complaints of a reckless driver
in the Ball Run/Peach Fork
Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass.,
Area.
said that would not work in
the Senate and that Bush and
his Republican allies must
heal wounds caused by the
House effort. if they expect to
win support.
'
"I think what hap})ened in
from PapAl
the House, in fact, will be
interpreted by many Democ- Keith and Emma Ashley, a
rats in the Senate as almost an senior at Meigs High School.
insult, a slap in the face to a
They
were
presented
real democratic process," plaques by Emma Ashley,
Kerry said on ABC's "This chairman. Whitney was also
Week."
recognized as the county
Senate Democrats, who winner.
generally favor a smaller tax
Students for the good citicut, will . not be ignored, said zenship awards are selected on
Sen. John Edwards, D-N.C. the basis of their activity,
"The president's going to grade point average and
have to deal with us in the
Senate, and I think he recognizes that," he told NBC.
Over the past two weeks,
Bush traveled to nine states to
promote his tax cut and to
pressure those states' Democ~
ratic senators to support it. He
was continuing the effort
Monday in Florida.
. Bush also floated conciliatory language, saying in interviews published Saturday that
he was willing to listen to
other opinions on the tax
plan.
Among rhe compromise
options on the table, according to Republican officials, is
reducing the amount by
which the wealthiest would
see their income tax rate
drop.

Man arrested

DAR

Bryan Stew.~rt was cited for
reckless operation, no seat belt,
open container in a n1otor
vehicle, driving under suspension, and driving under the
influence of alcohol.
Stewart was transported to
Athens County. where he was
incarcerated on an unrelated
charge.
In a related charge, Stewart's
wife, Lori Stewart, was issued a
summons to appear in Meigs
County Court for wrongful
entrustment, which stems from
allowing an unlicensed driver
to operate a motor vehicle registered in her name.

Arrests made
POMEROY

-

Several

individuals were arrested and a
complaint was investigated

over the weekend by the Meigs
County Sheriff's Department.
Sheriff Ralph E. Trussell
reported that Gary Priddy and
Sherolyn Butcher were arrested on bench warrants early
Sunday. Priddy is currently
being held in the Meigs County Jail and Butcher was trans~
ported to the regional jail in
Nelsonville.
Both are awaiting their
respective court appearances.
In other n1.:ttters, several indi-

viduals were issued citations on
both Saturday and Sunday.
Cited were Kenneth George
for fictitious tags and no operator's license; Jason Rowe for
left of center and driving under
the influence; and Araka Priddy for left of center and driving
under the influence. All were
summoned to appear in Me.igs
County Court.
Several reports of · mailbox
vandalism were received over
the weekend and are currendy
still under investigation. Anyone with information can call
the sheriff's office at 992-3371.

American Heritage essays
written during a two hour
period under the supervision
of guidance counselors. Both
Whitney and Brenna are
seniors at their respective
schools.
The students and family
members were guests ai the
luncheon.

-TRIVIA
Und1 H1mllton hu an idenli·

cal twin who played a double
for the character of Sarah Connor in 1991's Terminator 2:
J•dgmmt Day.

correction marks a change
li-om the approach used to
win pJssage in the House,

. The Meigs County Commissioners inter:~d to apply to the U.S.O.A.
Rural Housing Service for funding under the U.S.O.A. Rural Housing
Preservation Program. Meigs County is eligible for up .to $75,000.00 for
Housing . Preservation, provided the County meets applicable
requirements. On March 15, 2001, the County held its first public
hearing to inform citizens about the Rural Housing Service Preservation
program, what activities are eligible, and other important requirements .
A second public hearing will be held on March 22, 2001, at 10:00 a.m.
at the Meigs County Commissioners Office, Meigs County Courthouse,
Pomeroy, Ohio to allow citizens to express their views and comments on
the county's proposed Rural Housing Service Housing Pre~ervation
Application.
Written comments will be accepted until 10:00 a.m., March 22, 2001 ,
and may be mailed to the Meigs County Commissioners, Courthouse, ·
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
If a participant will need auxiliary aids (interpreter, Braille or taped
material, asslstlve listening devices, other) due to. a disability, please
contact Gloria Klees, Clerk; prior to March 22, 2001, at (740) 992-2895
in order to ensure that your needs will be accommodated.

where GOP leaders pushed
the largest portion of. the
Bush plan on a nearly partyline vote .

Jeff Thornton, President
Meigs
Commissioners

�PageA4

Opinion

The Daily Sentinel

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor
Diane Kay Hill
Controller

Ullm 1o the ~dilor..,., wtli:mnt. ThtJ llttJI•ld IH ku lllfm J(J() wordl. AU ftltcn
are subjtcllo tdilinr and muJi bt 1igrud and intlud1 tuUNu aNlt11kpho~ IIIUIIIMr.
No unsirntd ktkn williH publishtd. Utun .rltoMkl h ln 6ood uu,.,, a4tlrfuift6
issutr, nol ~nmuditiu.
Tltt opinions upnnH in tltt column bllow Qrr lht tOtlltiiiiU ojth• O/d4) Vall•y
l'ublishi111 Co.'s tdilorial botud, unku othtl"ttlilt rwltd.

MondiiJ, M•rch 12,2001

Mom ·discovers.teen sitters are few and far between
DEAR ABBY: I just finished the
letter from the emergency room
nurse regarding the dangers of leaving children home alone. While she
is justified in her reaction, she apparently has no children of her own, or
she wouldn't have made the comment, "How difficult would it be to
find a teon-ager who would be willing to earn a few dollars to be with
Amber · for a few hours after
school?"
I'll tell you how difficult tt ts:
Impossible! As a university instruc~
tor, I am in the fortunate position of
having flexible .part-time hours. Two
years ago, I was offered a full-time
position that I had to turn down.
Why? Because I couldn't find any-

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740.992·21~6 ·Fax: 992·2157

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

·_rh_eo_ai_Ir-_sen_tm_e_I______

MCHMI.y, Mllrch 12, 2001

The Daily Sentinel

Charles W. Govey
Publisher

B
__f the Bend

Page AS

Nono! Guess where I live? Los
Angeles. If! t:(r;\ find one teen-ager
for a few hours a week in this
metropolis of more than 9 million, I
can only inugino how . difficult it
must be for parents who live in
smaller cities. Thankfully, I had a
choice. FRUSTRATED IN ·
L.A.
ADVICE
DEAR FRUSTRATED: Sometimes child-care resources are right
one to care for my daughter two under our noses. Read on:
DEAR ABBY: I am proud to
hours a day, three days a week.
work
at my local YMCA in Tucson,
I sent letters to every high-school
counselor, community college and Ariz.
My advice to the mother who
university
child
development
department in my area. I offered $8 leaves her 10-year-old daughter
per hour, well above minimum home alone after school - and to
wage. Guess how many replies I got? any other parent with a similar prob-

Abigail

Van

Buren ·

!em is to contact the local
YMCA. The YMCA is the largest
child-care provider in the :United
States. We have formed collaborations with schools and churches
nationwide to provide child care for
any parent who needs it. We offer
financial assistance for those who
can't afford it, and we are virtually
overywhere in the world.
The YMCA provides proactive
programs for kids at risk - swim.
ming lessons, sports programs, exercise classes, teen leadership, Youth
and Government, Black Achievers,
etc. While the YMCA began for
Christian men (Young Men's Christian Association), we offer programs
for men, women, and boys and girls

of all ages. We are nondenominational and welcome everyone. Our
programs are based on teaching
honesty, caring, respect and responsibility. We build strong kids, strong
families and strong communitios.
Thank you, Abby, for letting me
pass on the word. - . KAT
HAFLER, TUCSON
DEAR KAT: Thank you for
reminding me about the wonderful
services the YMCA (and YWCA)
provides. It is celebrating its 150th
birthday this year. There are 2,372
YMCAs throughout the United
States and facilities in 120 countries.
Readers, to locate the nearest Y, call
1-888-.333-9622, or visit the Web
site at \VWw.ymca .net.

NATIONAL VIEWS

LOCAL EVENTS

Intrusion

The Community Calendar Is
published aa a fi'H servlca
to non-profit groupe wtahlng
to announce mfttlnga and
special evant•. The calendar
Ia not designed to promote
aalet or fund·ralnra of any
type. Items ere printed only
•• spece permits and cannot
be guerantead to be printed
a 1peclllc number of days.

Questions surround police
use if high-tech gear ·
, • The Evansville (Ind.) Courier &amp; Press, on lliglz-tecll
to try to _figure
:Out what was going on in the home of Danny L. Kyllo. The
instrument can detect infrared radiation, which is to say that it
'can pick up on unusual heat. The agents were thus able to figure out that Kyllo was prdbably using lots oflight bulbs to help
;grow marijuana. They were then able to obtain a search war~ant: they found marijuana, and they arrested Kyllo.
·: The case is now in the U.S. Supreme Court, where the justices will decide if agents standing outside a home and looking
~nside by means of such a device·is equivalent to the unconstitu\ional practice of an unreasonable search. If common sense is .
a guide, it is.
: In a case such as this one, which involves high.tech instru)nents the tountty's founders never imagined, it obviously is
'crucial to focus on the principle incorporated in the constitutional language that they crafted. They had to have understood
that unfettered searches by police could in fact result in bringing large numbers of criminals to justice. Their concern clearly was something else: to protect the dignity of the person from
governmental intrusiveness and make homes as nearly inviolable under law as reasonableness would permit - even at the
risk of some cr.iminals escaping detection.
• Herald-Bulletin, Bloomington, Ind., on strong parenting:
When it comF.s to influencing the liyes of teen-agers, don't
expect teachers, government leaders or coaches to inake the
· difference.
·
The buck stops with parents.
A new survey by the Columbia University-based National
Center on Drug Addiction and Substance Abuse shows just
how much parental involvement means in the lives of teenagers.
.
The survey found that the children of parents who didn't
play a "hands-on" role were four times more likely to abuse
drugs and alcohol and get hooked on cigarettes.
By "hands-on" we're not talking about parents meting out
phy~ical puQishment, we're talking about being involved in
daily contact and commitment to raising a child.
·
Indeed, strong parenting, with firm rules and active involvement, seemed to neutralize harmful outside influences, such as
peer pressure, offensive music and easily available drugs.
So· instead of worrying so much about rap music lyrics, perhaps our society should focus on educating and supporting parents, for it is they who play the decisive .role.

'intmsiow Drug agents used a thermal imager

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

I Today is Monday, March 12,the 71st day of2001.There are 294
days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On March 12, 1933, President Franklin D. Roosevelt delivered
the first of his radio "fireside chats," telling Americans what was
being done to deal with the nation's economic crisis.
On this date:
• In 1664, New Jersey became a British colony as IGng Charles
11 gtanted land in the New World to his brother James, the Duke
ofYork.
· In 1912,Juliette Gordon Low fOunded the Girl Guides, which
later became the Girl Scouts of America.
·: In 1925, Chinese revolutionary leader Sun Yat-sen died.
: In 1930, Indian political and spiritual leader Mohmdas K.
Gandhi began a 200-mile march to protest a British tax on salt.
In 1938, German troops entered Austria.
In 1939, Pope Pi11s XII was formally crowned in ceremonies at
the Vq.tican.
. In 1947, President Truman established what became known as
l:he "Truman Doctrine" to help Greece and Turkey resist Coniinunism.
In 1951, "Dennis the Menace:' created by cartoonist Hank
· Ketcham, made its syndicated debut in 16 newspapers.
In 1969, Paul McCartney married Linda Eastman in London.
In 1999, Hungary, Poland and the Czech Republic joined
NATO.
; Ten years ago: Secretary of State James A. Baker met with Israeli
Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir and a Palestinian delegation as he
continued a fact-finding mission. Gen. H. Norman Schwarzkopf,
tile victorious commander of allied forces in the GulfWar, visited Kuwait.
· :Five years ago: Republican Bob Dole swept the seven "Super
Thesday" primaries, gaining a virtual lock on the GOP presidential nomination.
Today's Birthdays: Former astronaut Wally Schirra is 78. Playwright Edward Albee is 73. Former Arlanta Mayor Andrew Young
is 69. Broadcast journalist Lloyd Dobyns is 65. Singer AI Jarreau is
61. Actress-singer Liza MinneUi is 55. Singer-songwriter Jantes
Taylor is 53. Rock singer-musiCian Bill Payne (Little Feat) is 52.
Actor Jon Provost ("Lassie") is 51. Actor Jerry Levine is 44. Rock
musician Steve Harris (Iron Maiden) is 44.

HENTOFF'S VIEW

Supreme Court takes to rewriting Constitution
This evasion of the Constitution is In 1788, Alexander Hamilton, writing .
in
George Orwell's term ~ sheer
in "The Federalist Papers," tried to allay
"newspeak." Rehnquist declared that
the fears of the newly independent
there
"is only "minimal evidence .of
Americans that the Supreme Court unconstitutional discrimination in
created in the Constitution the year
· employment" by the states under the
before- would not dominate the other
Americans With Disabilities Act.
two branches of g{,vernment.
In a dissent marked by the precision of
"The judiciary,'' Hamilton promised,
its
evidence, Justice Stephen · Breyer
"will always be the least dangerous to
.pointed out that "Congress compiled a
the political rights of the Constitution.
vast legislative record documenting
... The judiciary has no influence over
COLUMNIST
'massive society-wide discrimination'
the sword or the purse" to get its judgagainst persons with disabilities?' There
ments executed. "It can merely judge."
But 17 4 years later, Alexander Bickel, decision for the Court, claims that were 13 Congressional hearings, and a
a widely respected constitutional schol- somehow the court has rewritten the special task force created by Congress
ar, noted that "the 'least dangerous 11th Amendment in its previous deci- that "held hearings in every state, attendbranch of the American goverrunent' is sions. This goes beyo~ "judicial ed by more than 30,000 peoeie, iA~lu~
the most exttaordina(ily powerful court activism" to contempt of th~ Constitu- ing thousands who li~d expeti~nc~11 /lis.
crimination first-hand."
of law the world has ever known."
tlon.
.
.
,
.
~
With regaid. to employment, justice
.On Feb. 21, the Rehnquist Court·
· Similarly, this Supreme 1Court - in
Breyer
continued, "Congress found that ·
in Board ofTrustees of the University of declaring the individual states immune
Alabama v. Garrett - underlined the from lawsuits by their employees under 'two-thirds of all disabled Americans
between the ages.of 16 and 64 were not
accuracy of Bickel's point. By a 5-4 vote, the Americans With Disabilities Act the Supreme Court ruled that individual has also decided to eviscerate the 14th working at all; even though a large
· employees of any of the states cannot sue Amendment's guarantee that no individ- majority wanted to, and were able, to
their own state for damages when they ual state can "deny to any person within work productively." And Congress found
have been discriminated against under its jurisdiction the equal protection of that this discrimination flowed from
the provisions of the Americans With the laws." That amendment also gives "purposeful unequal treatment."
In a letter to The New York Times,
Disabilities Act - signed into law in Congress the power to enforce that
Joel Levy, chief executive of the Nation1990 with enthusiasm by then-President guarantee.
George Bush.
As former Solicitor General Walter al Institute for People with Disabilities,
This deCision mocks those justices Dellinger told Nina Totenberg on pointed out that the current Supreme
who claim to adhere to the "original National · Public Radio, the 14th Court - violating the separation of
intent" of the Constitution ,
Amendment gave Congre~ :·for the first powers - "could ultimately affect critiThe 11th Amendment to the Bill of time, the power to protect the rights of cal measures like the Fair Housing Act,
Rights says clearly that "The judicial individual citizens against their own special education measures and the ,
power of the United States shall not be state governments. The .i 4th Amend- rights of people with disabilities to live
co.nstrued to extend to any suit in law or ment only mentions one institution .of in non-institutional .settings." Many
more civil rights laws are in jeopardy.
equity, commenced , or prosecuted government - and that is Congress."
Said Hamilton in "The Federalist
against one of the United States by CitBut for individual states, to be held in
Papers,"
"The supposed danger of judiizens 'o f anothe~ State, or by Citizens or violation of the 14th Amendment Subjects of any Foreign State."
declared the innovative thief Justice cial encroachments on the legislative
You can translate that into Gaelic, or Rehnquist - those of its employees authority is in reality a phantom." He
read it upside down, but the 11th charging discriminatio'l' under the could not have envisioned Justices
Amendment does not prohibit the Americans With Disabilities Act have to Rehnquist, Scalia, Thomas, O'Connor
·
bringing of lawsuits by citizens against provide a high level of proof that the and Kennedy.
(N~t Henttff is a nationally rmowned
their own states.
state being sued has eng~ged in "a patautlwrity
on the First Amendment.)
But Chief Justice Rehnquist, in his tern of unconstitutional discrimination."

Nat
Hentoff

,,

..

I'

BUSINESS M -IRROR

·Do computer numbers equal foct? Maybe not
BY JOHN CUNNIFF

NEW YORK - Housing sales are
viewed by economists as an indicator of
the economy's good or poor health, so
when a real estate group reported a big
sales decline in January, it deepened an
already gloomy outlook.
And it should have. Homes are catalysts.When people change addresses they
tend also to spend on furniture, appliances, landscaping and various supplementary items. They may renovate, and
maybe even buy a second car.
It explains the consternation that
greeted the Nation;U Association of
Realtors' announcement .of a sudden,
6.6 percent di:op in January sales of
existing homes. It tipped the indicator
arrows toward recession.
That was on February 26. On March
7, the arrows snapped back to a more
neutral position.
We erred, said a Realtor spokesman,
blaming computer software. Instead of a
6.6 percent decline in sales of existing
homes, that sector rose a healthy 3.8 per
cent," adding 480,000 sales to the original estimate!
'
Because
this is a big economy produc,.

ing big numbers, small glitches can
become magnified into popular misinterpretations. But it isn't glitches alone
tbat cause problems. The best numbers
can do it, too.
·:
It has become that ~y, ironically, as
more people with more'mohey react to
government economic numbers that
once col)cerned only a circle of proles-

sionals - academics, economists, eXecu-

sonally adjusted, perhaps imperfectly.
That some are meaningful, some not.
But as reliance on computer-driven
numbers grows, the pros are having their
problems and those problems can cause
economic landslides.
The evidence is played out daily: semiconductor and other industries overesti}llating their markets' growth rates; bad
guidance from Wall Street; corporate
chiefS lowering earnings estimates. made
just a month earlier.
There may be no substit.ute for running an economy by the numbers, b11t a
bit of old fasliioned intuition can occasionally help lessen the impact.
It is difficult, though, and can be
embarrassing to attempt defending
instinct and intuition, while the worst of
decisions can find an alibi and security in
blaming the computer numbers. Ask
weather forecasters.
Numbers in a modern economy,
though off the mark and misinterpreted
to boot, seem chiseled out of the hard
rock of truth.
They dictate.

tiyes,. goverrunent officials.
Now, more people than ever are
directly invested in the economy via
home ownership, stocks, mutual fundS,
401(k)s and other individual retirement
plans, corporate pension plans, credit
cards and the like. They are better educated, too, and the media serves them
more and more information.
The reaction to computer numbers
can be immediate rather than dolayed, as
it once was. And m,agnified, too. And,
unlike the old days when the pros knew
the limitations of numbers, worsened by
imperfect understanding.
It-is not fully understood, for example,
that numbers may be subject not only to
aohn Cunniff is a business analyst for The
errors, but .to incomplete data. That they
Associated
Press.)
are often revised. That they may be sea-

•

RACINE- Meigs County
Republican Party, Monday,
7:30 p.m. at the American
Legion Hallin Racine.
TUPPERS PLAINS- Easlern
Local Board of Education, spe·
cial meeting, 8 p.m., adminis·
trative offices, to discus:; and
act on personnel matters.

POMEROY - Pomeroy OES,
MONDAY
practice for initiation, 6 p.m.
RUTLAND - .Revival services,
Rutland Freewill Baptist
TUESDAY
.
Church, Monday through
. POMEROY - Meigs County
March 17, 7 p.m. Rev. Norman Health Department childhood
Taylor, evangelist, special
immunization clinic, 9--11 a.m.,
singing nightly.
1-3 p.m., 112 E. Memorial
Drive, Pomeroy. Bring shot
MIDDLEPORT - Disabled
records. Child must be accomAmerican Veterans, 28051
panied by parent or legal
State Route 7, below Middle·
guardian.
port, Monday. Dinner 8:30
p.m.; meeting, 7 p.m.
POMEROY _;_Ohio Valley
Crusade for Christ Power
Team meeting, First Southam
.POMEROY - Free evening
· clinic by Meigs County TuberBaptist Church, March 13, 7
culosis Clinic, 4:30 to 6:30
p.m.
p.m. at the Scipio Volunteer
MIDDLEPORT - Membership
Fire Department. Free of
charge for Meigs County resiluncheon, Meigs County
dents or anyone employed
Chamber of Commerce, noon
at Overbrook Center. Speaker
within the county. Skin tests
need to be read on March 14
is Leslie Lilly, CEO of Founda·
from 4:30 lo 5:30 p.m.
lion of Appalachia ol Ohio.

Local literary club hear-s
report on 1he Vineyard'
MIDDLEPORT P,art
Holter rrviewed "The Vineyard" by Barbara Delinsky at
a recent meetin~ of the Middleport Literary Club hdd at
the home of Gay Perrln on
Rocklprin~ Ro;~d.

Holter de1cr!bed the book
as the ~tory of Natalie Seelu!ng, a woman in her 7Q•
who i• socially adept, ~ HIP·
portive family matriarch. and
head of a succes.t\11 wineproducing enterprise in
· Rhode Island. and the stun·
· ning announcement of her
plans to marty a vineyard
employee, Carl Burke, six
months following the death
of her husband, Alexander
after 56 years of marriage.
The story, according to the
revie~r, deals with her chil·
dren's disapproval, her decision to write a memoir
about her life, her love of the
family vineyard, and her role
in building it up, and the sacrifices she has nude for her
family.
Seebring hires Olivia Jones
to help with the memoir

including her meeting with
Burke when she was ·five
years old, the bank collap1e
which bankrupted her formerly wealthy father who
had to sell almolt everything
to make up !lis losses, her
relation1hip with Carl as she
grew up on the farm, of their
parting during World War 11
after wl\ich 1he marries
Ale~eander Seebr!ng.
The reviewer described
the novel as the story of sev.
era! generations . of a family
and their trials and achievements ..Delinsky has written
66 novels and is often on the
best seller list. She is a New
England native and many of
her novels revolve around
events in that area. "The
Vineyard" was published last
year.
.
Members responded to
roll call by naming another
of the author's works which
they had read. Next meeting
will be Feb. 21 at the
Pomeroy Library with Bernice Carpenter as hostess and
Olita Heighton as reviewer.

.·Roush-Rose·engagement
NEW HAVEN - Chasity Machelle Roush of New
·Haven and Chester Brent Rose of Racine announce their
engagement and approaching marriage.
. .
The bride elect is a 1997 graduate of Wahama Htgh
School. She is the daughter of Brenda L. Roush and is the
granddaughter of Bill and Madaline Roush aU of Letart,
West Virginia
·
Her fiance is a 1991 graduate of Southern High School.
He is the son of Maxine Rose and the late Chester Rose of
Racine. He is the grandson of H. Marcus and Dora Weaver
of Letart, W.Va. and the late Mr. and Mrs. Warren Rose.
An informal open church wedding performed by Rev.
Dewayne Stutler, will "take place on Saturday, March 17, at
6:30 p.m. at the Carmel United Methodist Church on
Carmd Road. A reception will follow at the Racine Amer- .
ican Legion Hall in Racine.

Benefit planned .
RUTLAND -A benefit for Chrissy Walker (Bass), who is
cancer and making several trips to James Cancer Center in Columbus, will be held at the Rutland Civic Center on
March 17 from 5-7 p.m. Elvis Presley impersonator Dwight
Icenhower and the Big Bend Cloggers will perform.

1 battling

Health educator targets lead poisoning
POMEROY- Nick Cascarelli, health
educator from toe Southeast Lead Poisoning Prevention Program Regional
Resource Center, reviewed ways to prevent childhood lead poisoning at a recent
Meigs County Consortium meeting held
at the Pomeroy Library
The Meigs County Health Department
Child and F1mily Health Services program coordinated the presentation where
Cascarelli discussed how a simple blood
test can prevent a lifetime spoiled by irreversible damage as a result oflead poiso nmg.
The speaker said that children up to 6
years of age are the most vulnerable to
lead poisoning, especially children who
are between )2 and 36 months of age
because they have a lot of hand to mouth
activity, If there is lead in their homes,
these children are more likely to take it in
than older children, it was noted. Lead
poisoning affects nearly every system in
the body, can cause learning disabilities,
behavioral problems, and at very high
lovels, seizures, coma and even death.
Often lead poisoning occurs without distinctive symptoms, said Cascarelli.
Children in Meigs County continue to
be poisoned by lead in their homes, said
Margie Skidmore, RN, director of nursing. During 2000 the Health Department
has completed 110 lead screens on children under the age of six years of age. Of
the screens completed 8.2% or nine children had elevated lead levels.
·
Seven zip codes in Meigs County are
identified by the Ohio Department of
Health as Universal Screening ar~as for
blood lead levels of all children tmder 36
months. Lead probes are completed the
first Wednesday of each month at the
Health Department during the Child and
Family Health Services Clinic.
Funding for the lead probes is provided
by the Southeast Lead Poisoning Preven-

'

---

AWAJ.

ALL ABOUT LEAD - A program on lead poisoning and how to prevent it was presented by Nick Cascarelli, Southeast Lead Poisoning Prevention Program, Regional
Resource Center, pictured here displaying materials with Norma Torres, Meigs Coun·
ty health commissioner; Amy Boster, Meigs County Family and Children First Council,
intersystems coordinator; and Nancy Broderick, RN, Child and Family Health Services
Well Child Clinic.
tion Program Regional Resource Center, hands often, keep the home clean and free
Skidmore said.
from dust, remove shoes before entering
She recommended that parents have the home, change out of work clothes and:
their child tested for lead and know that shower before coming home if you work
the primary source of lead exposure is with lead at your job, never sand, burn or, ·
through lead-based paint that is peeling, scrape paint unless ynu know it does not
contain lead, test painted surfaces for load,
chipping, chalking, or cracking.
"Contaminated paint can be a hazard encourage healthy eating habits, do not.
when found on surfaces that children can use older, imported · or handmade dishes,
chew or that got a lot of wear-and-tear. avoid hobbies that use lead, keep furniture
These include windows, and wind(lw sills, away from damaged paint, a11d do not use
doors and door frames, stairs, railings, ban- home remedies or cosmetics that contain
isters, porches, and fences, Skidmore said. lead.
Material! on lead pc;llloning prevention· ·
She recommended several simple thing!
which parents can do to prevent child- are available at the Meigs County Health
·
hood lead poisoning - wash children's Department, 992-6626.

If you work for your~elf, report your earnings accurately
IV VALRIA THOMPION
SOCIAL SECURITY MANAGER
If you're self-employed, it's
up to you to make sure you
report your earnings accurately and on time. Otherwise, when it's time to collect
Social Security benefits·, you
may not get all that you are
entitled to receive. Social
Security benefit amounts are
calculated on the amount of
earnings or self-employment
income that is posted on your
record.
You are considered self. employed if you operate a
trade, business or profession,
either by yourself or as a
partner. Self-employed people, unlike individuals . who

work-for an employer, do not have not reported all of your 05-1 0022) or call our toll-·
receive W-21 listing their self-employment income in a free number, 1-800-772earnings. Therefore, · self- particular. year, you may have 1213.
employed people whose net time to make corrections.
earnings are $400 or more in The deadline for reporting
a year must report those self-employment income so
earnings on an IRS Schedule you can get credit for it on
SE along with their regular your Social Security record is
IRS 1040 tax form.
3 years, 3 months and 15 days
Subscribe tOday.
The Social Security tax from the last day of the tax
992-2156
rate for 2000 is 15.3 percent year in which the income
on self-employment net was earned.
earnings up to $76,200. If .
For more information - - - - - - - - - - - your net earnings exceeded
.
i2&amp;0t Sllll of OhiO O.Pir1mll'll Dllnau~ , Co~~nly
$76,200, you continued to 3bout reporttng self-employ- ~..,J:~r.c:·~':oD~rS;:.=~~~~~=n:
MN . IMI•~• ...
pay the Medicare portion of ment income ' check out or ANCECOMPANYoiMinn.._.
..... of fill . . . ~ liD ll.nd" ~ dlolflna ....
·
r
cu,...,t ytM'JahnHat In lhil _. Ill .,.......,..lele buiiMM
t lniUIWlot. 111 A'l•nc:ill CIDtldtlon.,- ~"'..,...
the Social Security tax, 2.9 we bstte, WW\V.SSa.gov, ror a .om•ment
to IMI~~e *n 11 tlllll'lllll on ~r S1 , tM:
f
h
f:
~!.~.~7•.•:so.aoe~J.~7 n1 .443.121.~, ,,.,..,.
percent, on the rest of yo.ur copy o t e actsheet, If You AIMll
=~.........1r111aoeunwn1.11
I''•"' ' U"l'"•~·-~"'"'"
earnings. (The 2001 earnings Are Se lf-Emp 1oyed (Pub ' No ' IOIIntnwd~
\1111:1 .tlllo&amp;d-....... or
JHI. J . LH Co'flngton , U, Dnt:IIW, ~ of
lniiii'III'IOI of 01110.
limit is $80,400.)
If ·you discover that you

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�PageA4

Opinion

The Daily Sentinel

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor
Diane Kay Hill
Controller

Ullm 1o the ~dilor..,., wtli:mnt. ThtJ llttJI•ld IH ku lllfm J(J() wordl. AU ftltcn
are subjtcllo tdilinr and muJi bt 1igrud and intlud1 tuUNu aNlt11kpho~ IIIUIIIMr.
No unsirntd ktkn williH publishtd. Utun .rltoMkl h ln 6ood uu,.,, a4tlrfuift6
issutr, nol ~nmuditiu.
Tltt opinions upnnH in tltt column bllow Qrr lht tOtlltiiiiU ojth• O/d4) Vall•y
l'ublishi111 Co.'s tdilorial botud, unku othtl"ttlilt rwltd.

MondiiJ, M•rch 12,2001

Mom ·discovers.teen sitters are few and far between
DEAR ABBY: I just finished the
letter from the emergency room
nurse regarding the dangers of leaving children home alone. While she
is justified in her reaction, she apparently has no children of her own, or
she wouldn't have made the comment, "How difficult would it be to
find a teon-ager who would be willing to earn a few dollars to be with
Amber · for a few hours after
school?"
I'll tell you how difficult tt ts:
Impossible! As a university instruc~
tor, I am in the fortunate position of
having flexible .part-time hours. Two
years ago, I was offered a full-time
position that I had to turn down.
Why? Because I couldn't find any-

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740.992·21~6 ·Fax: 992·2157

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

·_rh_eo_ai_Ir-_sen_tm_e_I______

MCHMI.y, Mllrch 12, 2001

The Daily Sentinel

Charles W. Govey
Publisher

B
__f the Bend

Page AS

Nono! Guess where I live? Los
Angeles. If! t:(r;\ find one teen-ager
for a few hours a week in this
metropolis of more than 9 million, I
can only inugino how . difficult it
must be for parents who live in
smaller cities. Thankfully, I had a
choice. FRUSTRATED IN ·
L.A.
ADVICE
DEAR FRUSTRATED: Sometimes child-care resources are right
one to care for my daughter two under our noses. Read on:
DEAR ABBY: I am proud to
hours a day, three days a week.
work
at my local YMCA in Tucson,
I sent letters to every high-school
counselor, community college and Ariz.
My advice to the mother who
university
child
development
department in my area. I offered $8 leaves her 10-year-old daughter
per hour, well above minimum home alone after school - and to
wage. Guess how many replies I got? any other parent with a similar prob-

Abigail

Van

Buren ·

!em is to contact the local
YMCA. The YMCA is the largest
child-care provider in the :United
States. We have formed collaborations with schools and churches
nationwide to provide child care for
any parent who needs it. We offer
financial assistance for those who
can't afford it, and we are virtually
overywhere in the world.
The YMCA provides proactive
programs for kids at risk - swim.
ming lessons, sports programs, exercise classes, teen leadership, Youth
and Government, Black Achievers,
etc. While the YMCA began for
Christian men (Young Men's Christian Association), we offer programs
for men, women, and boys and girls

of all ages. We are nondenominational and welcome everyone. Our
programs are based on teaching
honesty, caring, respect and responsibility. We build strong kids, strong
families and strong communitios.
Thank you, Abby, for letting me
pass on the word. - . KAT
HAFLER, TUCSON
DEAR KAT: Thank you for
reminding me about the wonderful
services the YMCA (and YWCA)
provides. It is celebrating its 150th
birthday this year. There are 2,372
YMCAs throughout the United
States and facilities in 120 countries.
Readers, to locate the nearest Y, call
1-888-.333-9622, or visit the Web
site at \VWw.ymca .net.

NATIONAL VIEWS

LOCAL EVENTS

Intrusion

The Community Calendar Is
published aa a fi'H servlca
to non-profit groupe wtahlng
to announce mfttlnga and
special evant•. The calendar
Ia not designed to promote
aalet or fund·ralnra of any
type. Items ere printed only
•• spece permits and cannot
be guerantead to be printed
a 1peclllc number of days.

Questions surround police
use if high-tech gear ·
, • The Evansville (Ind.) Courier &amp; Press, on lliglz-tecll
to try to _figure
:Out what was going on in the home of Danny L. Kyllo. The
instrument can detect infrared radiation, which is to say that it
'can pick up on unusual heat. The agents were thus able to figure out that Kyllo was prdbably using lots oflight bulbs to help
;grow marijuana. They were then able to obtain a search war~ant: they found marijuana, and they arrested Kyllo.
·: The case is now in the U.S. Supreme Court, where the justices will decide if agents standing outside a home and looking
~nside by means of such a device·is equivalent to the unconstitu\ional practice of an unreasonable search. If common sense is .
a guide, it is.
: In a case such as this one, which involves high.tech instru)nents the tountty's founders never imagined, it obviously is
'crucial to focus on the principle incorporated in the constitutional language that they crafted. They had to have understood
that unfettered searches by police could in fact result in bringing large numbers of criminals to justice. Their concern clearly was something else: to protect the dignity of the person from
governmental intrusiveness and make homes as nearly inviolable under law as reasonableness would permit - even at the
risk of some cr.iminals escaping detection.
• Herald-Bulletin, Bloomington, Ind., on strong parenting:
When it comF.s to influencing the liyes of teen-agers, don't
expect teachers, government leaders or coaches to inake the
· difference.
·
The buck stops with parents.
A new survey by the Columbia University-based National
Center on Drug Addiction and Substance Abuse shows just
how much parental involvement means in the lives of teenagers.
.
The survey found that the children of parents who didn't
play a "hands-on" role were four times more likely to abuse
drugs and alcohol and get hooked on cigarettes.
By "hands-on" we're not talking about parents meting out
phy~ical puQishment, we're talking about being involved in
daily contact and commitment to raising a child.
·
Indeed, strong parenting, with firm rules and active involvement, seemed to neutralize harmful outside influences, such as
peer pressure, offensive music and easily available drugs.
So· instead of worrying so much about rap music lyrics, perhaps our society should focus on educating and supporting parents, for it is they who play the decisive .role.

'intmsiow Drug agents used a thermal imager

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

I Today is Monday, March 12,the 71st day of2001.There are 294
days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On March 12, 1933, President Franklin D. Roosevelt delivered
the first of his radio "fireside chats," telling Americans what was
being done to deal with the nation's economic crisis.
On this date:
• In 1664, New Jersey became a British colony as IGng Charles
11 gtanted land in the New World to his brother James, the Duke
ofYork.
· In 1912,Juliette Gordon Low fOunded the Girl Guides, which
later became the Girl Scouts of America.
·: In 1925, Chinese revolutionary leader Sun Yat-sen died.
: In 1930, Indian political and spiritual leader Mohmdas K.
Gandhi began a 200-mile march to protest a British tax on salt.
In 1938, German troops entered Austria.
In 1939, Pope Pi11s XII was formally crowned in ceremonies at
the Vq.tican.
. In 1947, President Truman established what became known as
l:he "Truman Doctrine" to help Greece and Turkey resist Coniinunism.
In 1951, "Dennis the Menace:' created by cartoonist Hank
· Ketcham, made its syndicated debut in 16 newspapers.
In 1969, Paul McCartney married Linda Eastman in London.
In 1999, Hungary, Poland and the Czech Republic joined
NATO.
; Ten years ago: Secretary of State James A. Baker met with Israeli
Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir and a Palestinian delegation as he
continued a fact-finding mission. Gen. H. Norman Schwarzkopf,
tile victorious commander of allied forces in the GulfWar, visited Kuwait.
· :Five years ago: Republican Bob Dole swept the seven "Super
Thesday" primaries, gaining a virtual lock on the GOP presidential nomination.
Today's Birthdays: Former astronaut Wally Schirra is 78. Playwright Edward Albee is 73. Former Arlanta Mayor Andrew Young
is 69. Broadcast journalist Lloyd Dobyns is 65. Singer AI Jarreau is
61. Actress-singer Liza MinneUi is 55. Singer-songwriter Jantes
Taylor is 53. Rock singer-musiCian Bill Payne (Little Feat) is 52.
Actor Jon Provost ("Lassie") is 51. Actor Jerry Levine is 44. Rock
musician Steve Harris (Iron Maiden) is 44.

HENTOFF'S VIEW

Supreme Court takes to rewriting Constitution
This evasion of the Constitution is In 1788, Alexander Hamilton, writing .
in
George Orwell's term ~ sheer
in "The Federalist Papers," tried to allay
"newspeak." Rehnquist declared that
the fears of the newly independent
there
"is only "minimal evidence .of
Americans that the Supreme Court unconstitutional discrimination in
created in the Constitution the year
· employment" by the states under the
before- would not dominate the other
Americans With Disabilities Act.
two branches of g{,vernment.
In a dissent marked by the precision of
"The judiciary,'' Hamilton promised,
its
evidence, Justice Stephen · Breyer
"will always be the least dangerous to
.pointed out that "Congress compiled a
the political rights of the Constitution.
vast legislative record documenting
... The judiciary has no influence over
COLUMNIST
'massive society-wide discrimination'
the sword or the purse" to get its judgagainst persons with disabilities?' There
ments executed. "It can merely judge."
But 17 4 years later, Alexander Bickel, decision for the Court, claims that were 13 Congressional hearings, and a
a widely respected constitutional schol- somehow the court has rewritten the special task force created by Congress
ar, noted that "the 'least dangerous 11th Amendment in its previous deci- that "held hearings in every state, attendbranch of the American goverrunent' is sions. This goes beyo~ "judicial ed by more than 30,000 peoeie, iA~lu~
the most exttaordina(ily powerful court activism" to contempt of th~ Constitu- ing thousands who li~d expeti~nc~11 /lis.
crimination first-hand."
of law the world has ever known."
tlon.
.
.
,
.
~
With regaid. to employment, justice
.On Feb. 21, the Rehnquist Court·
· Similarly, this Supreme 1Court - in
Breyer
continued, "Congress found that ·
in Board ofTrustees of the University of declaring the individual states immune
Alabama v. Garrett - underlined the from lawsuits by their employees under 'two-thirds of all disabled Americans
between the ages.of 16 and 64 were not
accuracy of Bickel's point. By a 5-4 vote, the Americans With Disabilities Act the Supreme Court ruled that individual has also decided to eviscerate the 14th working at all; even though a large
· employees of any of the states cannot sue Amendment's guarantee that no individ- majority wanted to, and were able, to
their own state for damages when they ual state can "deny to any person within work productively." And Congress found
have been discriminated against under its jurisdiction the equal protection of that this discrimination flowed from
the provisions of the Americans With the laws." That amendment also gives "purposeful unequal treatment."
In a letter to The New York Times,
Disabilities Act - signed into law in Congress the power to enforce that
Joel Levy, chief executive of the Nation1990 with enthusiasm by then-President guarantee.
George Bush.
As former Solicitor General Walter al Institute for People with Disabilities,
This deCision mocks those justices Dellinger told Nina Totenberg on pointed out that the current Supreme
who claim to adhere to the "original National · Public Radio, the 14th Court - violating the separation of
intent" of the Constitution ,
Amendment gave Congre~ :·for the first powers - "could ultimately affect critiThe 11th Amendment to the Bill of time, the power to protect the rights of cal measures like the Fair Housing Act,
Rights says clearly that "The judicial individual citizens against their own special education measures and the ,
power of the United States shall not be state governments. The .i 4th Amend- rights of people with disabilities to live
co.nstrued to extend to any suit in law or ment only mentions one institution .of in non-institutional .settings." Many
more civil rights laws are in jeopardy.
equity, commenced , or prosecuted government - and that is Congress."
Said Hamilton in "The Federalist
against one of the United States by CitBut for individual states, to be held in
Papers,"
"The supposed danger of judiizens 'o f anothe~ State, or by Citizens or violation of the 14th Amendment Subjects of any Foreign State."
declared the innovative thief Justice cial encroachments on the legislative
You can translate that into Gaelic, or Rehnquist - those of its employees authority is in reality a phantom." He
read it upside down, but the 11th charging discriminatio'l' under the could not have envisioned Justices
Amendment does not prohibit the Americans With Disabilities Act have to Rehnquist, Scalia, Thomas, O'Connor
·
bringing of lawsuits by citizens against provide a high level of proof that the and Kennedy.
(N~t Henttff is a nationally rmowned
their own states.
state being sued has eng~ged in "a patautlwrity
on the First Amendment.)
But Chief Justice Rehnquist, in his tern of unconstitutional discrimination."

Nat
Hentoff

,,

..

I'

BUSINESS M -IRROR

·Do computer numbers equal foct? Maybe not
BY JOHN CUNNIFF

NEW YORK - Housing sales are
viewed by economists as an indicator of
the economy's good or poor health, so
when a real estate group reported a big
sales decline in January, it deepened an
already gloomy outlook.
And it should have. Homes are catalysts.When people change addresses they
tend also to spend on furniture, appliances, landscaping and various supplementary items. They may renovate, and
maybe even buy a second car.
It explains the consternation that
greeted the Nation;U Association of
Realtors' announcement .of a sudden,
6.6 percent di:op in January sales of
existing homes. It tipped the indicator
arrows toward recession.
That was on February 26. On March
7, the arrows snapped back to a more
neutral position.
We erred, said a Realtor spokesman,
blaming computer software. Instead of a
6.6 percent decline in sales of existing
homes, that sector rose a healthy 3.8 per
cent," adding 480,000 sales to the original estimate!
'
Because
this is a big economy produc,.

ing big numbers, small glitches can
become magnified into popular misinterpretations. But it isn't glitches alone
tbat cause problems. The best numbers
can do it, too.
·:
It has become that ~y, ironically, as
more people with more'mohey react to
government economic numbers that
once col)cerned only a circle of proles-

sionals - academics, economists, eXecu-

sonally adjusted, perhaps imperfectly.
That some are meaningful, some not.
But as reliance on computer-driven
numbers grows, the pros are having their
problems and those problems can cause
economic landslides.
The evidence is played out daily: semiconductor and other industries overesti}llating their markets' growth rates; bad
guidance from Wall Street; corporate
chiefS lowering earnings estimates. made
just a month earlier.
There may be no substit.ute for running an economy by the numbers, b11t a
bit of old fasliioned intuition can occasionally help lessen the impact.
It is difficult, though, and can be
embarrassing to attempt defending
instinct and intuition, while the worst of
decisions can find an alibi and security in
blaming the computer numbers. Ask
weather forecasters.
Numbers in a modern economy,
though off the mark and misinterpreted
to boot, seem chiseled out of the hard
rock of truth.
They dictate.

tiyes,. goverrunent officials.
Now, more people than ever are
directly invested in the economy via
home ownership, stocks, mutual fundS,
401(k)s and other individual retirement
plans, corporate pension plans, credit
cards and the like. They are better educated, too, and the media serves them
more and more information.
The reaction to computer numbers
can be immediate rather than dolayed, as
it once was. And m,agnified, too. And,
unlike the old days when the pros knew
the limitations of numbers, worsened by
imperfect understanding.
It-is not fully understood, for example,
that numbers may be subject not only to
aohn Cunniff is a business analyst for The
errors, but .to incomplete data. That they
Associated
Press.)
are often revised. That they may be sea-

•

RACINE- Meigs County
Republican Party, Monday,
7:30 p.m. at the American
Legion Hallin Racine.
TUPPERS PLAINS- Easlern
Local Board of Education, spe·
cial meeting, 8 p.m., adminis·
trative offices, to discus:; and
act on personnel matters.

POMEROY - Pomeroy OES,
MONDAY
practice for initiation, 6 p.m.
RUTLAND - .Revival services,
Rutland Freewill Baptist
TUESDAY
.
Church, Monday through
. POMEROY - Meigs County
March 17, 7 p.m. Rev. Norman Health Department childhood
Taylor, evangelist, special
immunization clinic, 9--11 a.m.,
singing nightly.
1-3 p.m., 112 E. Memorial
Drive, Pomeroy. Bring shot
MIDDLEPORT - Disabled
records. Child must be accomAmerican Veterans, 28051
panied by parent or legal
State Route 7, below Middle·
guardian.
port, Monday. Dinner 8:30
p.m.; meeting, 7 p.m.
POMEROY _;_Ohio Valley
Crusade for Christ Power
Team meeting, First Southam
.POMEROY - Free evening
· clinic by Meigs County TuberBaptist Church, March 13, 7
culosis Clinic, 4:30 to 6:30
p.m.
p.m. at the Scipio Volunteer
MIDDLEPORT - Membership
Fire Department. Free of
charge for Meigs County resiluncheon, Meigs County
dents or anyone employed
Chamber of Commerce, noon
at Overbrook Center. Speaker
within the county. Skin tests
need to be read on March 14
is Leslie Lilly, CEO of Founda·
from 4:30 lo 5:30 p.m.
lion of Appalachia ol Ohio.

Local literary club hear-s
report on 1he Vineyard'
MIDDLEPORT P,art
Holter rrviewed "The Vineyard" by Barbara Delinsky at
a recent meetin~ of the Middleport Literary Club hdd at
the home of Gay Perrln on
Rocklprin~ Ro;~d.

Holter de1cr!bed the book
as the ~tory of Natalie Seelu!ng, a woman in her 7Q•
who i• socially adept, ~ HIP·
portive family matriarch. and
head of a succes.t\11 wineproducing enterprise in
· Rhode Island. and the stun·
· ning announcement of her
plans to marty a vineyard
employee, Carl Burke, six
months following the death
of her husband, Alexander
after 56 years of marriage.
The story, according to the
revie~r, deals with her chil·
dren's disapproval, her decision to write a memoir
about her life, her love of the
family vineyard, and her role
in building it up, and the sacrifices she has nude for her
family.
Seebring hires Olivia Jones
to help with the memoir

including her meeting with
Burke when she was ·five
years old, the bank collap1e
which bankrupted her formerly wealthy father who
had to sell almolt everything
to make up !lis losses, her
relation1hip with Carl as she
grew up on the farm, of their
parting during World War 11
after wl\ich 1he marries
Ale~eander Seebr!ng.
The reviewer described
the novel as the story of sev.
era! generations . of a family
and their trials and achievements ..Delinsky has written
66 novels and is often on the
best seller list. She is a New
England native and many of
her novels revolve around
events in that area. "The
Vineyard" was published last
year.
.
Members responded to
roll call by naming another
of the author's works which
they had read. Next meeting
will be Feb. 21 at the
Pomeroy Library with Bernice Carpenter as hostess and
Olita Heighton as reviewer.

.·Roush-Rose·engagement
NEW HAVEN - Chasity Machelle Roush of New
·Haven and Chester Brent Rose of Racine announce their
engagement and approaching marriage.
. .
The bride elect is a 1997 graduate of Wahama Htgh
School. She is the daughter of Brenda L. Roush and is the
granddaughter of Bill and Madaline Roush aU of Letart,
West Virginia
·
Her fiance is a 1991 graduate of Southern High School.
He is the son of Maxine Rose and the late Chester Rose of
Racine. He is the grandson of H. Marcus and Dora Weaver
of Letart, W.Va. and the late Mr. and Mrs. Warren Rose.
An informal open church wedding performed by Rev.
Dewayne Stutler, will "take place on Saturday, March 17, at
6:30 p.m. at the Carmel United Methodist Church on
Carmd Road. A reception will follow at the Racine Amer- .
ican Legion Hall in Racine.

Benefit planned .
RUTLAND -A benefit for Chrissy Walker (Bass), who is
cancer and making several trips to James Cancer Center in Columbus, will be held at the Rutland Civic Center on
March 17 from 5-7 p.m. Elvis Presley impersonator Dwight
Icenhower and the Big Bend Cloggers will perform.

1 battling

Health educator targets lead poisoning
POMEROY- Nick Cascarelli, health
educator from toe Southeast Lead Poisoning Prevention Program Regional
Resource Center, reviewed ways to prevent childhood lead poisoning at a recent
Meigs County Consortium meeting held
at the Pomeroy Library
The Meigs County Health Department
Child and F1mily Health Services program coordinated the presentation where
Cascarelli discussed how a simple blood
test can prevent a lifetime spoiled by irreversible damage as a result oflead poiso nmg.
The speaker said that children up to 6
years of age are the most vulnerable to
lead poisoning, especially children who
are between )2 and 36 months of age
because they have a lot of hand to mouth
activity, If there is lead in their homes,
these children are more likely to take it in
than older children, it was noted. Lead
poisoning affects nearly every system in
the body, can cause learning disabilities,
behavioral problems, and at very high
lovels, seizures, coma and even death.
Often lead poisoning occurs without distinctive symptoms, said Cascarelli.
Children in Meigs County continue to
be poisoned by lead in their homes, said
Margie Skidmore, RN, director of nursing. During 2000 the Health Department
has completed 110 lead screens on children under the age of six years of age. Of
the screens completed 8.2% or nine children had elevated lead levels.
·
Seven zip codes in Meigs County are
identified by the Ohio Department of
Health as Universal Screening ar~as for
blood lead levels of all children tmder 36
months. Lead probes are completed the
first Wednesday of each month at the
Health Department during the Child and
Family Health Services Clinic.
Funding for the lead probes is provided
by the Southeast Lead Poisoning Preven-

'

---

AWAJ.

ALL ABOUT LEAD - A program on lead poisoning and how to prevent it was presented by Nick Cascarelli, Southeast Lead Poisoning Prevention Program, Regional
Resource Center, pictured here displaying materials with Norma Torres, Meigs Coun·
ty health commissioner; Amy Boster, Meigs County Family and Children First Council,
intersystems coordinator; and Nancy Broderick, RN, Child and Family Health Services
Well Child Clinic.
tion Program Regional Resource Center, hands often, keep the home clean and free
Skidmore said.
from dust, remove shoes before entering
She recommended that parents have the home, change out of work clothes and:
their child tested for lead and know that shower before coming home if you work
the primary source of lead exposure is with lead at your job, never sand, burn or, ·
through lead-based paint that is peeling, scrape paint unless ynu know it does not
contain lead, test painted surfaces for load,
chipping, chalking, or cracking.
"Contaminated paint can be a hazard encourage healthy eating habits, do not.
when found on surfaces that children can use older, imported · or handmade dishes,
chew or that got a lot of wear-and-tear. avoid hobbies that use lead, keep furniture
These include windows, and wind(lw sills, away from damaged paint, a11d do not use
doors and door frames, stairs, railings, ban- home remedies or cosmetics that contain
isters, porches, and fences, Skidmore said. lead.
Material! on lead pc;llloning prevention· ·
She recommended several simple thing!
which parents can do to prevent child- are available at the Meigs County Health
·
hood lead poisoning - wash children's Department, 992-6626.

If you work for your~elf, report your earnings accurately
IV VALRIA THOMPION
SOCIAL SECURITY MANAGER
If you're self-employed, it's
up to you to make sure you
report your earnings accurately and on time. Otherwise, when it's time to collect
Social Security benefits·, you
may not get all that you are
entitled to receive. Social
Security benefit amounts are
calculated on the amount of
earnings or self-employment
income that is posted on your
record.
You are considered self. employed if you operate a
trade, business or profession,
either by yourself or as a
partner. Self-employed people, unlike individuals . who

work-for an employer, do not have not reported all of your 05-1 0022) or call our toll-·
receive W-21 listing their self-employment income in a free number, 1-800-772earnings. Therefore, · self- particular. year, you may have 1213.
employed people whose net time to make corrections.
earnings are $400 or more in The deadline for reporting
a year must report those self-employment income so
earnings on an IRS Schedule you can get credit for it on
SE along with their regular your Social Security record is
IRS 1040 tax form.
3 years, 3 months and 15 days
Subscribe tOday.
The Social Security tax from the last day of the tax
992-2156
rate for 2000 is 15.3 percent year in which the income
on self-employment net was earned.
earnings up to $76,200. If .
For more information - - - - - - - - - - - your net earnings exceeded
.
i2&amp;0t Sllll of OhiO O.Pir1mll'll Dllnau~ , Co~~nly
$76,200, you continued to 3bout reporttng self-employ- ~..,J:~r.c:·~':oD~rS;:.=~~~~~=n:
MN . IMI•~• ...
pay the Medicare portion of ment income ' check out or ANCECOMPANYoiMinn.._.
..... of fill . . . ~ liD ll.nd" ~ dlolflna ....
·
r
cu,...,t ytM'JahnHat In lhil _. Ill .,.......,..lele buiiMM
t lniUIWlot. 111 A'l•nc:ill CIDtldtlon.,- ~"'..,...
the Social Security tax, 2.9 we bstte, WW\V.SSa.gov, ror a .om•ment
to IMI~~e *n 11 tlllll'lllll on ~r S1 , tM:
f
h
f:
~!.~.~7•.•:so.aoe~J.~7 n1 .443.121.~, ,,.,..,.
percent, on the rest of yo.ur copy o t e actsheet, If You AIMll
=~.........1r111aoeunwn1.11
I''•"' ' U"l'"•~·-~"'"'"
earnings. (The 2001 earnings Are Se lf-Emp 1oyed (Pub ' No ' IOIIntnwd~
\1111:1 .tlllo&amp;d-....... or
JHI. J . LH Co'flngton , U, Dnt:IIW, ~ of
lniiii'III'IOI of 01110.
limit is $80,400.)
If ·you discover that you

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Peden Country. We are expanding our facllltlea
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·.

�Monday, Merch 12, 2001 .

Pomaroy, Middleport, Ohio ·

Page A6 • The Dally Sentinel

•

The Daily Sentinel

Inside:
NCAA tourney brackets, Page B6

Page Bl
Monday. Mllrch 11,1801

•

MONDAY's

n

·HIGHLIGHTS
UConn.Duke

*10th

*''c PS

IN
IV
STATEI

women's top
·seeds
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) Defending champion Connecticut and Tennessee were
seeded No. 1 in the NCAA
women's basketball tournament.

The other No. 1 seeds in
the &lt;:.4-team field went to
·Notre Dame and Duke,
which edged Georgia for the
final spot. The difference
came down ·to performance
in conference play.

WVU receives
NIT bid
2000-2001 Eastern Eagles-

NEW YORK (AP) -The
Big East, which sent five
teams to the NCAA tournament, had six more selected
for the NIT.
Connecticut (19-11), Villanova (18-12), West Virginia
(17-11), Seton Hall (16-14),
Miami (16-12) and Pittsburgh
(18-13) are among the 32team field that begins play at
campus sites on Tuesday.

.

Brandon Werry, Nathan Grubb, Jason Kimes, Brad Brannon, Josh Kehl, and Garrett Karr
· Back Row - Chris Lyons, Alex Simpson, Joe Brown, Matt Simpson, Brent Buckley,
Chad Nelson, 'and Jeremy Shanks
.

'

GOO·D LUCI&lt; IN T:HE
"Sweet 16" Re ional Tournament
'

. MAC looks for
title game

.

at STATE FAIR ROUNDS COLISEUM

venue

TUESDAY MARCH 13TH' 8 PM
EASTERN VS SYMMES VALLEY

Firfats Frida Mar

Riden

\\'es11
t~ttllsfrllt.1ittll
State Route 7 e Pomeroy

·Chester

985-3307

BAU

MBER

StRte248
Chester 985-3301

Ewing
Funeral
Pomeroy

992-6466

RIDENOUR
SUPPLY

Route 248, Chester, OH

Hartwell
House (

DowNING CHILes
MuLLEN MussER
INsuRANCE

GOOD LUCK. EAGI.EI!
Lamar f/Sblrlq
aad ·

QUALITY
FURNITURE PLUS

100 E. Main Street ·

Pomeroy

Tupp,ars Plains
740-667-7388

992-7696

'

7~

Fisher/Acr~e SHOE PLAC

·Funeral Home
Middleport

-.3308

Ad

992'- 5141
992-$444

Brogan·
_
Insurance.

Kenneth McCullouQh, R. Ph.
Charles Rlffte, R. Ph.
112 East Main Street ·

. Pomeroy, Ohio ·

992-3381

992-2121

CROW'S

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&amp; Supply
Co;·

FAMILY
RESTAURANT

(Fa I

-t

Best
RACINE
949-2210

Pomeroy 992-5432

FACULTY &amp;
STUDENTS
OF
EASTERN HIGH
SCHOOL

6th · 7:30., ·. . . . ..

,

' '

'

SYRACUSE
992..:.6533
~t:A'

The
Dally
Sentinel
.
..
Crow~Crow
Attorneys at l.avv
11 0 W. Second Street
Pnn,.Artlu 992-6059
•I

More Local News...
More Local Folks.
111 Court Street
Pomeroy 992-2155

,

t

t

p

·==-,.nk

Pomeroy
992-2136

8

Gallipolis

446-2265

· Tuppers Plalns-

985-3161

RIGGS
Financial Services
39452StRt7
Tuppers Plains
985;.3594

TOLEDO, Ohio' (AP)
·Mid-American Conference
officials are searching for a
peFp1anent home for the
.league's' football tide game.
: . NIAC .co~ssione~ Rick
' ~h~t ' !~' e*fj~cted·,,td . meet
:with the league's presidents in
:tile next month, and either
tell them he has found a
home for the championship
game, or most likely that he
recommends it be awarded to
the league's divisional winners
on an alternating basis, starting with the West winner this
.year.
The first four MAC championship games were played
in Huntington, W. Va., and
each game was one by the
host school, East Division
champion Marshall University.
"It i~ our general intention
to mOve the MAC championship game to a good, neutral site at the earliest opportunity," Chryst said. "We are a
54-year-old conference, but
·we are just four years young
in terms of our expansion and
the addition of a football
championship game. When .
we took this on, we were.
basically starting with a blank
piece of paper."
The top candidate to land
the MAC championship
,game on a permanent basis is
·Canton's Fawcett Stadium,
The Blade . reported for a
weekend story.
· That stadium seats 22,301
:with standing room for
another 1,250. But its stateof-the-art locker rooms, press
.pox and television compati'bility, along with the fact
Canton is close enough to the.
:geographic center of the
:sprawling five-state confer.ence, make it the favorite, the
newspaper said.
· Fawcett Stadium, built in
1937-39, underwent a $4.3
:million renovation in 1997
:when AstroTurf with a
:friendly rubber base and iop:of-the-line lighting towers
were added, along with a new
'graphic-display scoreboard
and sound S}'1tem.
. "It has all of the trappings;•
:Chryst said.
: Also, the NFL spent
:5365,000 more at Fawcett in
1998 to upgrade the lights
,again to meet the needs of
'ABC's primetime broadcast of
:the
. NFL's
. Hall of Fame game.

If

BY ANDREW CARTER
OVP SPORTS EDITOR

·

ATHENS - A different
night, a different Eastern
senior steps up big for the
team.
On Saturday. it was Chad
Nelson's turn to give the
Eagles a big lift by scorihg 21
points to lead Eastern to a 63- ·
48 win over Portsmouth Clay
in the Division IV district
championship game.
The win propels the Eagles
into the regional semifinals
against Symmes Valley, which
was a 58-55 winner over
Manchester in the other district final Saturday at the
Convo.
"When we relax and just go
out and play, we do a lot better;• Nelson said. "For this
team, I think we can go a
long way and do something."
The Eagles and Vikings will
square off Tuesday at the
Ohio State Fairgrounds Coliseu·m in Columbus. Game
time is set for 8 p.m. ,_:
Worthington Christian will
face Mansfield St. Peter's in
the other regional semifinal
Thesday at the Coliseum,
beginning at 6:15 p.in.
Eastern (20-3) rolled over
Clay in the first quarter;
I
outscoring the Panthers 17-8
as Nelson scored -sjx and
Chris Lyons added five for the
Eagles, who looked as if they
might run Clay righ~ out the
back door of the Convo.
However, the Panthers (176) enjoyed a measure of success against ·the Eagles in the
second and third quarters, in
~Nhich they outscored Eastern
31-26 to pull to within four
. points heaQing intq the fittal ·
' period. ,Travis Klem9;' keyed
the comeback ·· for the Pan- EASY DEUCE- Eastern's Chad Nelson (34) breaks away .for two of his garne-hlgh 21
,
.I
points late In Saturday's district title game win over Portsmouth-clay. (Dan Polcyn)
Plun- 111..-; 114
'

Harvick
·wins first
Winston
Cup race
HAMPTON, Ga. (AP) Dale Earnhardt's thrillingly
narrow win over Bobby
Labonte in last year's Cracker
Barrel 500 was considered the
greatest finish in Atlanta
, Motor Speedway history.
It held that distinction for
about a year.
Rooki e Kevin Harvick,
who took over Earnhardt's
ride after the seven-time
Winston Cup champ was
killed in the Daytona 500,
took the lead with a threewide pass with five laps left.
He held off a charging jeff
Gordon by inches on Sunday
to win the 325- lap race.
Harvick's margin of victory
was · 0.006 seconds, even
smaller than Earnhardt's 0.010
from last year.
"All I have to say is this one
is for Dale," said Harvick, 25,
the top-finishing rookie in all
three of his starts. "We just
bided our time. I think somebody was watching over us."
The win and subsequent
celebration sent most of the
125,000 fans into a frenzy.
Harvick took a victory lap
with his hand out the window, holding up three fingers
in honor of the No. 3 made
famous by Earnhardt.
"I don ,t even know how to
put it into words," said Harvick, who drove a white No.
29 while NASCAR observes
a one-year moratorium on
the No.3. It was the same car
Earnhardt drove to second

Please- NASCAR. BJ

•

SeniOr leadership key to Eastern's run
BY BUTCH COOPER
OVP SPORTS STAFF

ATHENS -When you talk about
senior leadership in .basketball, you
look at the things they do on the
court.
This year's crop of seniors at Eastern fits that mold.
"We've always had the philosophy
that you're only going' to go as far as
your seniors take you;• said Eastern
head coach Howie Caldwell. "We
lean very, very hard on your seniors.
We expect them to set the tone and
so forth."
;
The district tournament at the
Convo was an excellent example.
In
the
semifinals
against

Portsmouth East Wednesday, senior championship Saturday.
cen.ter Matt Simpson scored 25
Senior Chad Nelson scored 21
points and pulled away Tartan " points as Eastern soared to a 63-48
defenders to allow teammates to win. The season Nelson has had this
make big plays down the stretch.. .
season is made more impressive con"If you watch (Simpson) on the sidering he never started last year.
floor, you would never believe he's
"(Nelson) knew that he probably
kind of a quiet boy;• said Caldwell. should be a starter," said Caldwell.
"The way he plays on the floor, he's "He never questioned it for a second.
not quiet whatsoever. He is such a He's probably our inspirational
role model for 'our younger,.kids: leader. He does things off-the-wall
Always the last one to leave the gym. that keeps us lose and stuff. But once
Shoots continuously and works hard he gets out on the floor, he's ready to·
play."
in the weight room.
The Eagles won 55-47,
Meanwhile, Joe Brown, a fm1r year
then came Clay, another squad starter at Eastern who had nine points
from Portsmouth, in the district and 12 rebounds against East, scored

-l

BY ANDREW CARTER
OVP SPORTS EDITOR

· Pl••n-llo,H
j

·"

Please -

Seniors. BJ

Schedules a factor
•
picks
1n

Rio moves
on to NAIA.
Final Four
POINT LOOKOUT, Mo.
- More top seeds fell by the
wa}'1ide Saturday at the N,t&gt;IA
Division II national todl&gt;nament and the University uf
Rio Grande felled one of
them.
)
· The Redmen (29-8) blew
out No.3 seed Marian 83 62
to earn a spot in the Pinal
Four, which is set for tonight
at the College of Ozarks. •
Rio Grande senior Nathan
Copas, who carried the Rc~­
men to victory in the tournament opener last Thurs~y.
turned in another dominating
performance with 25 points.
Copas lllt 7-of-15 field goal
attempts and was 8-for-9 at
the foul line.
,
Sophomores Chris Ballenger and Randar Luts

16 against Clay.
"All summer long, (Brown's) always
in the gym and plays AAU all the
time," said Caldwell. "The thing
about it is, he's a tremendous role
model for the younger kids."
Then there's senior Josh Kehl, a
starter who doesn't average a lot of
points on the floor, but gets the job
with his play in other aspects of the
game.
"I can't say enough about Josh
Kehl," ·said Caldwell. "He doesn't
score very many points, but when he
was a junior he played on our JV

DELANEY FOR TWO- The University of Rio Grande's big man

Joe Delaney reaches for the basket In Saturday's win. over
Marian. Rio advances to the NAIA Division II semi-finals on
Monday versus Northwestern(lowa). (Bryan Long)

INDIAN APOUS (AP) kept out of the field, and
- NCAA selection com- Georgetown was seeded
mittee chairman Mike No. 10 in the West Region
Tranghese had no trouble after entering the week
explaining why many bub- ranked No. 18.
ble teams didn't make the
" I can tell you GeorgeNCAA tournament's 65- town got seeded as low as
team field.
they did because of their
Their schedules simply non-conference schedule,"
weren't strong enough.
Tranghese said. "! . think
And Tranghese issued a what got Georgetown over
warning to all schools that the hump was that they
hope to qualify for future went to Notre Dame late
tournaments: play better in .the year and won. I
opponents whenever pos- think they had to win that
. sible.
game, and, I think, they \
"This committee and, I . knew it."
:
guarantee you, future, comOther teams, however, .
m.ittees will put more were rewarded for playing
emphasis on non-confer- · strong schedules. The most
ence schedules," Tranghese notable was Georgia,
said Sunday·night, after the which became the fifth
pairings were unveiled.
team, and first since VilTranghese
repeatedly lanova in 1991, to be choreiterated the point.
sen as an at-large team
He cited weak non-con- with 14 losses.They are the
ference sched!lles as the 11th team, and first since
reason teams such as.AlabaPIIIH - NCAA. IJ
ma and Richmond were

�Monday, Merch 12, 2001 .

Pomaroy, Middleport, Ohio ·

Page A6 • The Dally Sentinel

•

The Daily Sentinel

Inside:
NCAA tourney brackets, Page B6

Page Bl
Monday. Mllrch 11,1801

•

MONDAY's

n

·HIGHLIGHTS
UConn.Duke

*10th

*''c PS

IN
IV
STATEI

women's top
·seeds
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) Defending champion Connecticut and Tennessee were
seeded No. 1 in the NCAA
women's basketball tournament.

The other No. 1 seeds in
the &lt;:.4-team field went to
·Notre Dame and Duke,
which edged Georgia for the
final spot. The difference
came down ·to performance
in conference play.

WVU receives
NIT bid
2000-2001 Eastern Eagles-

NEW YORK (AP) -The
Big East, which sent five
teams to the NCAA tournament, had six more selected
for the NIT.
Connecticut (19-11), Villanova (18-12), West Virginia
(17-11), Seton Hall (16-14),
Miami (16-12) and Pittsburgh
(18-13) are among the 32team field that begins play at
campus sites on Tuesday.

.

Brandon Werry, Nathan Grubb, Jason Kimes, Brad Brannon, Josh Kehl, and Garrett Karr
· Back Row - Chris Lyons, Alex Simpson, Joe Brown, Matt Simpson, Brent Buckley,
Chad Nelson, 'and Jeremy Shanks
.

'

GOO·D LUCI&lt; IN T:HE
"Sweet 16" Re ional Tournament
'

. MAC looks for
title game

.

at STATE FAIR ROUNDS COLISEUM

venue

TUESDAY MARCH 13TH' 8 PM
EASTERN VS SYMMES VALLEY

Firfats Frida Mar

Riden

\\'es11
t~ttllsfrllt.1ittll
State Route 7 e Pomeroy

·Chester

985-3307

BAU

MBER

StRte248
Chester 985-3301

Ewing
Funeral
Pomeroy

992-6466

RIDENOUR
SUPPLY

Route 248, Chester, OH

Hartwell
House (

DowNING CHILes
MuLLEN MussER
INsuRANCE

GOOD LUCK. EAGI.EI!
Lamar f/Sblrlq
aad ·

QUALITY
FURNITURE PLUS

100 E. Main Street ·

Pomeroy

Tupp,ars Plains
740-667-7388

992-7696

'

7~

Fisher/Acr~e SHOE PLAC

·Funeral Home
Middleport

-.3308

Ad

992'- 5141
992-$444

Brogan·
_
Insurance.

Kenneth McCullouQh, R. Ph.
Charles Rlffte, R. Ph.
112 East Main Street ·

. Pomeroy, Ohio ·

992-3381

992-2121

CROW'S

lburBank,fn~...

&amp; Supply
Co;·

FAMILY
RESTAURANT

(Fa I

-t

Best
RACINE
949-2210

Pomeroy 992-5432

FACULTY &amp;
STUDENTS
OF
EASTERN HIGH
SCHOOL

6th · 7:30., ·. . . . ..

,

' '

'

SYRACUSE
992..:.6533
~t:A'

The
Dally
Sentinel
.
..
Crow~Crow
Attorneys at l.avv
11 0 W. Second Street
Pnn,.Artlu 992-6059
•I

More Local News...
More Local Folks.
111 Court Street
Pomeroy 992-2155

,

t

t

p

·==-,.nk

Pomeroy
992-2136

8

Gallipolis

446-2265

· Tuppers Plalns-

985-3161

RIGGS
Financial Services
39452StRt7
Tuppers Plains
985;.3594

TOLEDO, Ohio' (AP)
·Mid-American Conference
officials are searching for a
peFp1anent home for the
.league's' football tide game.
: . NIAC .co~ssione~ Rick
' ~h~t ' !~' e*fj~cted·,,td . meet
:with the league's presidents in
:tile next month, and either
tell them he has found a
home for the championship
game, or most likely that he
recommends it be awarded to
the league's divisional winners
on an alternating basis, starting with the West winner this
.year.
The first four MAC championship games were played
in Huntington, W. Va., and
each game was one by the
host school, East Division
champion Marshall University.
"It i~ our general intention
to mOve the MAC championship game to a good, neutral site at the earliest opportunity," Chryst said. "We are a
54-year-old conference, but
·we are just four years young
in terms of our expansion and
the addition of a football
championship game. When .
we took this on, we were.
basically starting with a blank
piece of paper."
The top candidate to land
the MAC championship
,game on a permanent basis is
·Canton's Fawcett Stadium,
The Blade . reported for a
weekend story.
· That stadium seats 22,301
:with standing room for
another 1,250. But its stateof-the-art locker rooms, press
.pox and television compati'bility, along with the fact
Canton is close enough to the.
:geographic center of the
:sprawling five-state confer.ence, make it the favorite, the
newspaper said.
· Fawcett Stadium, built in
1937-39, underwent a $4.3
:million renovation in 1997
:when AstroTurf with a
:friendly rubber base and iop:of-the-line lighting towers
were added, along with a new
'graphic-display scoreboard
and sound S}'1tem.
. "It has all of the trappings;•
:Chryst said.
: Also, the NFL spent
:5365,000 more at Fawcett in
1998 to upgrade the lights
,again to meet the needs of
'ABC's primetime broadcast of
:the
. NFL's
. Hall of Fame game.

If

BY ANDREW CARTER
OVP SPORTS EDITOR

·

ATHENS - A different
night, a different Eastern
senior steps up big for the
team.
On Saturday. it was Chad
Nelson's turn to give the
Eagles a big lift by scorihg 21
points to lead Eastern to a 63- ·
48 win over Portsmouth Clay
in the Division IV district
championship game.
The win propels the Eagles
into the regional semifinals
against Symmes Valley, which
was a 58-55 winner over
Manchester in the other district final Saturday at the
Convo.
"When we relax and just go
out and play, we do a lot better;• Nelson said. "For this
team, I think we can go a
long way and do something."
The Eagles and Vikings will
square off Tuesday at the
Ohio State Fairgrounds Coliseu·m in Columbus. Game
time is set for 8 p.m. ,_:
Worthington Christian will
face Mansfield St. Peter's in
the other regional semifinal
Thesday at the Coliseum,
beginning at 6:15 p.in.
Eastern (20-3) rolled over
Clay in the first quarter;
I
outscoring the Panthers 17-8
as Nelson scored -sjx and
Chris Lyons added five for the
Eagles, who looked as if they
might run Clay righ~ out the
back door of the Convo.
However, the Panthers (176) enjoyed a measure of success against ·the Eagles in the
second and third quarters, in
~Nhich they outscored Eastern
31-26 to pull to within four
. points heaQing intq the fittal ·
' period. ,Travis Klem9;' keyed
the comeback ·· for the Pan- EASY DEUCE- Eastern's Chad Nelson (34) breaks away .for two of his garne-hlgh 21
,
.I
points late In Saturday's district title game win over Portsmouth-clay. (Dan Polcyn)
Plun- 111..-; 114
'

Harvick
·wins first
Winston
Cup race
HAMPTON, Ga. (AP) Dale Earnhardt's thrillingly
narrow win over Bobby
Labonte in last year's Cracker
Barrel 500 was considered the
greatest finish in Atlanta
, Motor Speedway history.
It held that distinction for
about a year.
Rooki e Kevin Harvick,
who took over Earnhardt's
ride after the seven-time
Winston Cup champ was
killed in the Daytona 500,
took the lead with a threewide pass with five laps left.
He held off a charging jeff
Gordon by inches on Sunday
to win the 325- lap race.
Harvick's margin of victory
was · 0.006 seconds, even
smaller than Earnhardt's 0.010
from last year.
"All I have to say is this one
is for Dale," said Harvick, 25,
the top-finishing rookie in all
three of his starts. "We just
bided our time. I think somebody was watching over us."
The win and subsequent
celebration sent most of the
125,000 fans into a frenzy.
Harvick took a victory lap
with his hand out the window, holding up three fingers
in honor of the No. 3 made
famous by Earnhardt.
"I don ,t even know how to
put it into words," said Harvick, who drove a white No.
29 while NASCAR observes
a one-year moratorium on
the No.3. It was the same car
Earnhardt drove to second

Please- NASCAR. BJ

•

SeniOr leadership key to Eastern's run
BY BUTCH COOPER
OVP SPORTS STAFF

ATHENS -When you talk about
senior leadership in .basketball, you
look at the things they do on the
court.
This year's crop of seniors at Eastern fits that mold.
"We've always had the philosophy
that you're only going' to go as far as
your seniors take you;• said Eastern
head coach Howie Caldwell. "We
lean very, very hard on your seniors.
We expect them to set the tone and
so forth."
;
The district tournament at the
Convo was an excellent example.
In
the
semifinals
against

Portsmouth East Wednesday, senior championship Saturday.
cen.ter Matt Simpson scored 25
Senior Chad Nelson scored 21
points and pulled away Tartan " points as Eastern soared to a 63-48
defenders to allow teammates to win. The season Nelson has had this
make big plays down the stretch.. .
season is made more impressive con"If you watch (Simpson) on the sidering he never started last year.
floor, you would never believe he's
"(Nelson) knew that he probably
kind of a quiet boy;• said Caldwell. should be a starter," said Caldwell.
"The way he plays on the floor, he's "He never questioned it for a second.
not quiet whatsoever. He is such a He's probably our inspirational
role model for 'our younger,.kids: leader. He does things off-the-wall
Always the last one to leave the gym. that keeps us lose and stuff. But once
Shoots continuously and works hard he gets out on the floor, he's ready to·
play."
in the weight room.
The Eagles won 55-47,
Meanwhile, Joe Brown, a fm1r year
then came Clay, another squad starter at Eastern who had nine points
from Portsmouth, in the district and 12 rebounds against East, scored

-l

BY ANDREW CARTER
OVP SPORTS EDITOR

· Pl••n-llo,H
j

·"

Please -

Seniors. BJ

Schedules a factor
•
picks
1n

Rio moves
on to NAIA.
Final Four
POINT LOOKOUT, Mo.
- More top seeds fell by the
wa}'1ide Saturday at the N,t&gt;IA
Division II national todl&gt;nament and the University uf
Rio Grande felled one of
them.
)
· The Redmen (29-8) blew
out No.3 seed Marian 83 62
to earn a spot in the Pinal
Four, which is set for tonight
at the College of Ozarks. •
Rio Grande senior Nathan
Copas, who carried the Rc~­
men to victory in the tournament opener last Thurs~y.
turned in another dominating
performance with 25 points.
Copas lllt 7-of-15 field goal
attempts and was 8-for-9 at
the foul line.
,
Sophomores Chris Ballenger and Randar Luts

16 against Clay.
"All summer long, (Brown's) always
in the gym and plays AAU all the
time," said Caldwell. "The thing
about it is, he's a tremendous role
model for the younger kids."
Then there's senior Josh Kehl, a
starter who doesn't average a lot of
points on the floor, but gets the job
with his play in other aspects of the
game.
"I can't say enough about Josh
Kehl," ·said Caldwell. "He doesn't
score very many points, but when he
was a junior he played on our JV

DELANEY FOR TWO- The University of Rio Grande's big man

Joe Delaney reaches for the basket In Saturday's win. over
Marian. Rio advances to the NAIA Division II semi-finals on
Monday versus Northwestern(lowa). (Bryan Long)

INDIAN APOUS (AP) kept out of the field, and
- NCAA selection com- Georgetown was seeded
mittee chairman Mike No. 10 in the West Region
Tranghese had no trouble after entering the week
explaining why many bub- ranked No. 18.
ble teams didn't make the
" I can tell you GeorgeNCAA tournament's 65- town got seeded as low as
team field.
they did because of their
Their schedules simply non-conference schedule,"
weren't strong enough.
Tranghese said. "! . think
And Tranghese issued a what got Georgetown over
warning to all schools that the hump was that they
hope to qualify for future went to Notre Dame late
tournaments: play better in .the year and won. I
opponents whenever pos- think they had to win that
. sible.
game, and, I think, they \
"This committee and, I . knew it."
:
guarantee you, future, comOther teams, however, .
m.ittees will put more were rewarded for playing
emphasis on non-confer- · strong schedules. The most
ence schedules," Tranghese notable was Georgia,
said Sunday·night, after the which became the fifth
pairings were unveiled.
team, and first since VilTranghese
repeatedly lanova in 1991, to be choreiterated the point.
sen as an at-large team
He cited weak non-con- with 14 losses.They are the
ference sched!lles as the 11th team, and first since
reason teams such as.AlabaPIIIH - NCAA. IJ
ma and Richmond were

�Monday, March 12, 2001

_ Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

• Monday, March 12, 2001

Ohio

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hree bed oom wo batt1 master
bath wth garden ub heat pump
app ox 3 yea s old new water
hea e ga bage d sposal three
ce ng tans 200 amp se v ce
other recent upda es exce ant
cond t on mus be moved
$ 5 000 7&lt;10 742 2405

T a ., Fo Rent Behind The
Cant na 2 Bedroom 5250 No
Pels 1740)992 6387

Large Colaee lon or Antique Podl:
et Watches Good Cond tlon 422
2nd Avo phone 1740)446-1615

Two Bed oom $27.!§/ Month Plus
Oeposl G een School D et let
(7&lt;10)387~32

540 Mlscellaneoua
Merchandise

Two Betlroom Mostly Furn st1ed
In Count y $300 Month S200
Oepos Plus Ut ties {740)258
6202

16 Foot Utility Tra l&amp;r L ke New

tandem Axle S875 (740)378
2853

430 Farma for Rent

ALL STEEL BU LD NGS New up
to 50% off P t eng neered w th
plana. 40~&lt;60x10 was $16 500 now
$11890 SOKI OOK 4 woo $35 900
now St 7 990 eo .. 2!x 4 was
sst
now $34990 1 eoo 246
9640

Tobacco quota wanted to lease
pease ca 1937 373-4644 can ca
collect afte 8 30pm

1878 14x70 traler 3 Bed oom t
1 2 Balh 1 Acre m 1 CoVered
Deck And Pa o B dwe Area
Very God Cond ton sae
Mull 811 To Apprec 111
740)245 7322 A&amp;\ Fo K m Or
1?40)448-4324 Alk tOr Me k

for Rent
14x80 E ootrlo Htlt AC 2 lad
room WID &amp;tovo Roflronooo nc
Poll Rallroncoo 1300/mo
(!40)2111-111«

1119 8un1h no Troller t4x71 3
btd ooma I Bolito Hill Pump
Now Carptt In L1v ng Aoom &amp;
K Ienon Cllhtdrll Co lingo Cov
orod Perch Alrtody Itt Up On
~onlod Lol Cen Be Moved
1:104)118-1118

14110 I lldroom 1 lith t400/
n!O I4Qg Dtpctll 1 \'tar Con
lrool ~lnonelal Mel Jlllrtanl 1111
oronooe No 1'111 (740):111-a!l

1HI
1 lllh

I bear110m I!'Ob 1 homo tar rant
nc Ptll 140 Ht Ull

lohull I l•tO 3 lod 110m
lntrp Heme 121 100
KlnUIQI Mob I HOmt IIIII
(!40)44t 1111

BEAUT.,UL APARTIIINTI AT
IUDQET PRICES AT JACK
ION IITATII 52 WillWOOd
0 VI !rom $29? lo $383 Wolk o
shop &amp; mov 11 Oa I 740 us
2568 Equa Hous ng Opponun ly

EZPETRX COM Save up to SO%
on All pet mad cat on• 1nt1 aupo
pllaa lnclud ng Heartga d lnte
cepto F on ne mo e FREE
SHIPPING 0 dt onl nt www Ez
pe~x com 800:844 1427

RrtwQOd For Sa a (7&lt;10)3869827 1740)388-!284

Furnlahod 2 &amp; 3 Room Apart
ments C ean No Pets No Smok
lng Refe encea 4 Oepoa I Re
qu red
Ullllt 11 Furn lhld
(740)448-1519
Fu nlahtd

Eff cltnr:; 2 Roomo
All Ulllllos
Pad
DOVIn&amp; arlo 919 2nd Avo f2HI/
mo (740)446-3945
Fu n shed Two (Sma I) Btdrooml
Prete To Rent To Out Of
Town Worker Uti t 11 Included
$400 mo Plus Capos t (740)367

Independent Herba fe 0 ltrlbutor
Ca For P oduet Or Oppo tun ty
(7&lt;10)441 1912

0611

G ac ous vif1g 1 and 2 bed oom
apartmen s at V age Manor and
Aiverslde Apartments n M ddlt
port F om $278 $348 Call 740
992 5064 Equal Hous ng Oppo
tun ties

MOBILE HOME OWNERS
Huge tnvent01y b scount P Ices
On v nyl Sk t ng Doors Wind
ow1 Anchors Water Heate 1
P umblng &amp; E act ca Pa ts Fu
nacea &amp; Heat Pumps Bennetts
Mobile Home Supp y 740 446
!M18 wwworvb cam/bennett

Modern 1 Bed oom Apanment
Phone (7&lt;10)44&amp;-0390
Now Taking App cat ons 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Ape tments
nc udes Wate
Sewago T aoh $350 Mo 740
446-0006

New &amp; Ustd Electr c And Gas
Fu naces For Sa e Call For Slz
es
lnsta auon
Ava lable
(740)446-6308 1 800-291-(!098
New 200 Amp Square D 20
Space Ins de Pane Box $125
(304)273 3 5

One Bedroom Apar ment On 1st
A\lenue Gall po s Wash&amp; Dry
e Hook up $270 mo Plus De
posll WI t Paid (740 448-4043

NEW AND USED STEEL Sleal
Beams P PI Rebar For Concrete
Anglo Channa! Fill Bar Site
G aUng Fo D aln&amp; D v&amp;ways &amp;
Wolkwaya L&amp;L Scrap Molala
17&lt;10)446-7300

Ta a Townhouse Apertmen s
Ve y Spacious 2 Btdrooms 2
FIOO s CA 1 I 12 Balh Fu ly Ca
peted Adu t Pool &amp; Baby Poo
Pat o S arl $365 Mo No Pets
Lease Plus Security Oa~osh Fie
qulred Days 740 4•8 3481
Evenings 740 387 0502 1•0
446-010

NEW BRAND NAME COMPUT
ERS Almost everyone approved
wllh $0 down Low monthly pay
ments t-80Ht7 34780&lt;1 330

l'Nin RlvorTowers now accepting
appl~a Ions lo 1 BR
HUD sul&gt;o d zed apt fqr tkllrly
and d sa~ed EOH (304)8758879

Prom Drou S zo 2 Baby B uo
With Corset Top &amp; Ball Gown
Bottom Boughl In Apr I 2000 AI
Brittany&amp; Paid $400 Wll Soli FOI
$275 Fo Mo e Information Cal
(304)875 681 s

460 Space lor Rent
Downtown Second Avenue Near
Courthouse And C ty Build ng
N ce y Decorated A/C 3 Rooms
Bu d ng By llstll 449 2nd Ave
(740)446-9539

Prom gowns 7 wo e to out ot
state prom jun or 5 9 l)r cts
neg 740-985 3820

S 00 Eac!l (740)256-&lt;!463
AKC Reg atered Mele Bu Dog
Sold While Beaut lu $1000 F m
(304)576-2999
AKC Regis a ed Maltese
Monlh (740)448-0857

t3

POLICE M
Sf HONDA
19 9% FOR
1 800 941

CARS FROM $29/MO ImpoundS/
epos Fee SO down 24 mos
0199% Fo s ng 800 3 9
3323 1&lt;2156
CARS FROM $500 Po eo m
pounds &amp; ax se zu ea Honda&amp;
Chevys Fo ds &amp; moe Fo s
"gs ca nowl t 800 1 9 300
eKt A010

983 Chevy S lve ado 11

s En

g nt Oua Ext1aust Auto 1, Long
Whaal Base S 800 (30•)578
2753

989 F 250 302 5 speed ong
bed tool box newe w dt ack
tras 132k $4300 740-742 6200
995 GMC Sonoma 88 ooo
MIll AM FM Caaaatte 5
Speed $3200 OBO (740)256
S945

810 Farm Equipment
8 N Fo d Tractor Has Bun At
alo td Gardne a Dream $2!§00
(304)875 3824
John Dee e Model 338 Ba e
Wlro T 1 F 1 d Roady $2500
(304)875 5724

LOI For Rent With App oved Ap
plication At K&amp;K Mob e Home
Pa k (304)675 3000 Leave Mes

Tappan HI Ell clancy 90% Gas
Furnaces 0 Fu naces 2 Seer
Heat Pump &amp; Air Condit on ng
System• Free 8 Vear War anty
Bennetts Healing &amp; Cooling 1
800 872 59&amp;7 www orvb com/ben

saga

non

SAVEl SAVEl SAVEl Heal
Pumpo L P &amp; Natu a~ Gao Fu
•
nacea n You con t can ua Wt
••
..,. Both Looo (740)44S S308 &amp;
1 1100-29 I .0098

Houtehold
Goode

510

3 Plaeo LMng Room SUllo And A
7 Pta&lt;:• D nlng Room Su 1 Good
Cond don (740)&lt;148-0531
"PP anc11
Recondlt oned
Waahe • Dryert Rangel Rtfrl
g ato 1 Up To 10 Daya Guar
anllld Wo Stll Now Ml)'tlg Ap
planctt F tnch C tv t.taytag
740-448 7795
For 8&amp;11 R1cond Uoned waeh
ere dryeu and retrloarato"
Thompocne Appuenoo 3407
Jackacn Avanuo (:104)11111111
Moirlltrael 'urnltu,.
(104)t!8-t411
ltl Man llrHI l'olnt ~11111n1
New 6 Ultd ~"'nltu,.
Ntw ~1101 Llv naroom lu 111
1311 luy •• I 'lllda

a

ltlf Dolroll ng ~tlrlgtrllor
Wtshtr I Dryer ~nllqUI D lhll
(!40JUH172

Sowmlll $3 79S Now Super Lum
bormall 2000 largar eopaellltl
more opllona Manufacturer of
~awm1111 edger• and ek dde 1
NORWOOD INDUSTRIES 252
Sonwtll D vo aunalo NY 14225
FREE Info motion I BOO 571
t383 ext:

aoo-u

Acres St

Waterline Spoo ol 314 200 PSf
Ill 85 Ptr t 00 I 200 PSI
137 00 PI tOO All Bran Com
p-Ion Fllllngo In Stocfl
~ON IYANI INTI~P~IIII
J - Ohio I -837 8521

fnlm Pap B4

Atlanta It took an extra lap
afterwards to get the emotion
a! part out of the wa)( And then
pulling mto vtctory lane and
see all those guys who have
supported me through proba
bly one of the hardest ames of
thetr lives and the hardest sttu
atlon of my life
After Harvtck zoomed past
Jerry Nadeau and Dale Jarrett
to take the lead on lap 320
Gordon took second and
steadily moved closer Gordon s
only attempt at a pass came m
Turn 4 of the final lap when he
pulled under HarVJck s car
heading to the checkered flag
The cars touched slightly as

Uaad LIt Truck Fo ko $25 $75
Po Stl 3 PI H eh L Its W lh
Va lous Fork Lengths $200
Each (740)379-2757

830

NCAA

ooo 1304)937 3435

Llveetock

For aa a 13 year old qua ltr
horae geld ng been shown 4 H a
h s lilt trophy w nne knows ....,.
ryth ng asking $1500 740 378
8170

Palomino Slafflan
Flog AOHA 11111
15 3' H H Woold Champloo lmprooslvl Blood! ne WN Wea1orn
P elllJ'e Halter Ba rels StandIng Slud Fea $250 (304)675
6440

from Plge 11
994 Chevy Ast o Van t Owne
70 000 m l&amp;s H gh Roof Loaded
1740)44~ 123
1997 Chevy S lve ado El&lt;ttnded
Clb 41t4 Powt Locks Wlndowa
3 d Doo

Tow Package 36K
Mlaa $18200(740)446-4175

998 Red Jeep Grande Cherolcee
Laredo
Quadlrack ()loan Ins tie Out 50 000 Ml as Books
$9&amp;85
Askng
$17500
(304)875-3868

v-e

Quality B ack Angus Bulls f 000
1200 Lbs Cumm ngs Angus
Fa ms Southside 1304)875 6248
Reg 1tered Black Angus Yea 1ng
Bu a $900 &amp; Up Reg ste ed
Black Angua Vear ngs He er
$700 Blood nes n Bar Ex T av
e e Wtdeap aad New Trend Fu
Rita Back Will De ve 1304)372
2389

640

Hey &amp; Grain

740

Ear co n fo sale $2 50 bushel
7&lt;10 985 3347

1996 Yahama Wove ne 4x4
New vamp a T es Just Rebu t
New B akes Powe K (7401446&lt;1025

Good MIKad Hay For Sa e Dela
no Jackson Farm (304)875 743
(7&lt;10)446-1 104

2000 Honda Fo oman 450ES
4x4 Unde 200 M es Perfect
Gond on $4700 Cell 1740)256
6891

Hay Fo Sale 45 Round Ba es
And 250 Square Ba es Ca
1740)448 0115 or (740)446
7843 Mer 6 Ofll)m
Hay fOr Sa e Round Ba es 1000
Baas $10 00 $20 00 Square
Balao $2 00 2 25 1304)552 3274
Days (304)675-11120 Evenings
Squa e bales ot good m xed hay
nevo WOI $1 35 740 985 35t0

Hay &amp; Br ght W e T e Straw Vear
Round Del ve y &amp; Vo ume D s
count Ava tabla He I ag&amp; Fa m
1304)675 5724

Tobacco P an a Orde Now To
Guarantee Ea~y Sprlng Planl nga
Inc ease A olmen a Mean Ex a
Plan 1 Thank You Fo You Bual
nesa Call Danny Dewhu st
Leave Message {304)895 3740
Or (304)995-3789

TRANSPORTATION

710 Autos for Sale
$0 DOWN CARSI POLICE IM
POUNDS REPOS HONDA S
CHEVY S JEEPS LOW AS S29
MO S 019 9% FOR LISTINGS
CALL 1 800 45 f OOSO OKl C
91112

750 Boat• &amp; Motors
for Sale

760

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessorlee

Budget Priced Tranemlealont
All Types Access To Ova
1o ooo T ansmlss ons T ansfe
Cases 740 24!§ 5677 Ce 339
3765

790

810

•

Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncond ona 11&amp;1 me gua al'l ee
Loca ete encea fu nlshed Es
lab shod 1975 Cs 24 Hro 1740)
446 0870 1 800 267 OS78 Rog
e s Waterproof ng
C&amp;C Oen1 a Home Mall;'
tneneo Pe nllng v nyl 1 ding
ca pentry doo 1 wndowa baths
mob 11 home epa and mo e For
1•• 111 milt cal Cho 740 992
8323
L vlng1ton 1 Ba~tmtf1t Water
Prooflng 1 au btltmtnt epaln
done I et til matu I tetlmt
guaranttt 1~Y 1 on Job ellpt I
fnCI (30i)995 3887

ttl I Dodge Stullh AT Tw n

T\lrbo SOOHP AWD H gh M

t1

Sha p Solow Book VI ut 8111
OlilfiJvar 17400 17&lt;10)441 Ot3S
1flit Ford Probe good eond I on
2 2 te automat c wth P onttr
am/fm C 0 p aytr $2500 740
9115 3110

840 Electrical and
Relrlgeratlon

When we looked at Georthey were 16 14 and 9-7 m
the No 1 conference m the
coun1111 Tranghese s:nd They
played the toughest non con
ference schesiule m the coun
try and we J usc thought 1t
would be unf:ur not to take that
mto account
The Bulldog.; were seeded
e1ghth m the East Reg~on set
tmg up a first round game
ag:unst another bubble team
rewarded for tts strong RPI
ranking Missoun
But Georgta coach Jtm Har
rJck thought htS Bulldog.;
deserved the btd
Harnck and Lefty Dnesell of
Georgta State JOmed Edd1e
Sutton as men who have taken
four schools to the tourna
tnent
Not every teams entnes or seeding.; - were deter
tnlned by non conference
schedules though
Three of the four top seeds
- Stanford m the West Duke
m the East and lllinots tn the
were expected
Mtdwest g~a

1888 Oodgo In op d ES Condy

Llwn Mowe

Appll Aid Ltllhlr LOidld Ba
tow lack VI ue Baat Otter Ova
$7000 (740)441 0135

guess I find out lately how soli
I really am
Hamck and the rest of the
wmner
field spent n ost of the early
The wm for Harv ck last gomg traihng Gordon who led
years Busch Sertes R ookie of !?2 of the first 142 laps until
the Year was the soonest ever he ran out of gas He lost a lap
m a Wmston Cup race co mng when he coasted to the p ts
m only htS th rd attempt
and he didn t regam the lost
Nadeau held on for th rd ground until a lap 275 cautton
desptte a spm on the second for Matt Kenseth s spm
lap followed by pole Sttter Jar
Nadeau one of Gordon s
rett and Terry Labonte
teammates was leading at the
For Childress the vtctory ttme and he slowed abruptly
capped a heart wrenchmg on the track to let Gordon by
three weeks Stnce Earnhardt
and back mto the lead lap
hJS longttme dnver and frtend
FUc~y Fludd Johnny Ben
lost hts life m the final lap of son K\m Schrader M1ke Skin
the Daytona 500
ner and Kurt Busch rounded
I Just kept pra)'lng there at out the top 10 There were
the end praymg for Dale to etght cautions dunng the race
help us and he did Childress most for mmor tnC!dents
sa1d I m speechless I didn t
think I was very emoaonal I
Stanford (28 2) also was a No
I seed last year while Duke
(29-4) IS a top seed for the
fourth straight year
Michigan State (24 4) got
the fourth No 1 seed m the
South
Regton
because
Tranghese Satd North Carolina
went 4-4 m 1ts last etght games
But little of what transptred
was a surpnse
North Carolina slipped to a
No 2 spot after losmg 79 53 m
the ACC title game Sunda)(
and was JOtned by fast firushers
Kentucky and Anzona plus
Iowa State as second seeds
Thirty five of the 65 NCAA
btds went to team&lt; fro n the stX
strongest confere 1ces and the
BtgTen matched the ecord for
most b1ds from one confere 1ce
seven
Only five at large btds did
not c01ne from the top s x co 1
ferences Those berths vmt to
C11C1 natJ of Co fe1e Ke
USA Cretghton of the M!S
soun Valle)' Fresno State of the
Western Athlettc a 1d St
Josephs and Xavter of the
Atlanac 10
Twenty one teams w1th at
least 20 wtns did not 1 ake the
field mclud ng Cahforma
lrvme which won 25 games
explanation
Tranghese s
agam came down to the num

hers but was not recetved well
Sutton 1s m the field agam
wtth Oltlahoma State (20-9) a
senamental chotce for many
fans after pla)'lng the final
month of the season followtng
a plane crash that killed I 0
people mcluding two players
Wtth Lou1sville failing to
make the field tn Denny
Crum s final season Anzona s
Lute Olson takes over as the
acave coach wtth the most
appearances at 23 Olson s run
of 17 m a row 1s also the longest
current streak wuh Temples
John Chaney and Kansas Roy
Williams second each at 12
The longest current streak to
end was Gene Keady of Pur
due who had been 1 etght
stratght tournaments
Pnnceton made the field
under first year coach John
Tho 1 pson III who s now 19
appearances behtnd his father
John who restgned at George
town m 1999
Duke plays Thursday t
Greensboro N C agamst No
16 Monmouth
lllinms (24 7) meets the w 1
ner of an operung tpund game
Tuesday
mght
between
Wmthrop and Northwestern
State

the perfect

Totui'WilS
PAAI'U TO ltrJ.P US ON
&lt;U WAY Ol MAYit
SENT An.owr.a TO IIW
IIAICII'Il.N &lt;U DAY
PrJnAPS YOU SPOKf. Tnt

Job

Dally
Senti net
Class1f1eds

992·2156

DAY
Pr.IIIAPS YOU stNT A
LOVU.Y CAlD Ol SAT
QIJltn.Y IN AcnAa Ol
OlD SbMr.TniNC Uf.aM.
TO &amp;nOW THAT YOU
CAW1. WnAtt\U YOU
010 TO nw CON&amp;aL
&lt;U nr.AlTS M. oW.

\UY TIIANKN.
WHAlt\U Til. PART,
Aur.aM. TnANICI TO

nr. ooar. smr or
0\waQQK Coou

ICl Tnt txCVTIONdl.
CARt Gl\tN TO &lt;U

LOvr.D ONt.

MAY Coo Mla tACit
o~orvou

&lt;PAPPY ) SMnn r.utLY

Full and part time pooltlono avalloble
Compllte trolnlng provided with lfextble llouro
Full limo polltlono ollor benent package which
Include• M•dlcei/Dentll/401 K/Pd V1011tlona.

MAYit YOU \Wf. NOT
T10t. IWT JUST

mOUGIIT or us TltAT

EARN$$$
NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED
Earn up to $15/hour

KlNDr.ST WORD AS AHY
l'llUlD OOllD SAY Ol

rnt BuuAMIN nAI•t"'lN

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Aopa rod New a Aobu l In SIOOk
Co IRon Evohl I IC0-537 8525

a me m school hmory Its real
ly been done sa1d Stmpson I
think. we all know what we
have to do We re exetted but
we know we have to come m
the next practice and work
hard and get to the next level
Eastern will meet Symmes
Valley Tuesday at Columbus
It feels really aw~ome
satd Brown In my four years
of varstty I ve watched several
around here go like Tnmble
and Waterfonl two years ago
Now tt s out turn so hopeful
ly we ll do the TVC well and
out area pretty well
I think tt will help ~ ur
commuruty out satd Nelson
It thmk tt will help the TVC
out and our team I think (the
distnct champwnsh p) was a
real btg wm for us It got us
over the edge There s no pres
sure on us fron1 here on out

Your LINK to

PunAPS YOU SAID A

Campere &amp;
Motor Homes

SERVICES

Texas m 1997 to be ptcked

as an at large wtth JUSt 16 wtns

83

Card of Thankl

a

SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY
Cia m Danlld? WI ll)tCIIIII In
appula ond Htt lngo FREE
CONSULTATION
BENfFIT
TEAM SERVICES NC TOLL
FRfi1HH:Je-1052
STEEL IUILOINGSII 3 only ""''
til Ux:SO 2)o!lxt20 Mull llatll
doll ulllng It lnvo coil t 100
oiU 7130' 34

fii'INII Pap Bl

NH415 0 acb ne Less Than 200

RESIDENTIAL HOllE OWNERS

5384

v

"KC Reg stared lab Pupp es

OARS $29 MONTH!
POUNDS &amp; AEPO
CHEVY 24 MO S 0
LIST NGS CALL
8777e• C9814

&amp; Bath

All AflplleMtalnc uded Mual It
Moved
II
nttrollad 01
(!40)4&lt;1t-1m

14111 ljorrlo

OIRECTV I aa lnatallatlon $200
eaoh back 800-263-2640

Fo tnt one bedroom fu n shed
apartment In M ddloporl call 7'0
992 5231

Atklna

1111

COMPUTERS WE F NANCE
CELL COMPUTERS! Even w th
101 lhan portoct cradll 1 BOO
4779018 Code AC11 wwwomc
tolutlona com

Chroty s Fam y L v ng 33140
Now L ma Ad Rutland Ohio 740.
742 7403 Apa tmont homo and
tra e anta 1 Commercial ltOrl
fronta ava able ror leaae Vacan
cetnow

QUlin 1111 4 ~1101 lldroom lu
111 With Pram• Qood Condlllon
~riel 1400 (74D)UI-IUO Alllr
lpm

111 000 Two lodroom Two lalh

Ita acreen TV Tekt on 1m111
monthly paymontt Good crld
II required Phone 1 100 711
IU7

Apartmonl S37S + Coposll
(304)273 3115

MERCHANDISE

ooo 420 Mobile Homaa

German Sheppard Pups
Blood! nes Large B eed
(304 675-5724

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

·~

Two bed oom one anti 1 2 ba h
house to rent lt1 Pome oy full
baument with ga age k tchen
aPJ~IIat1ces W 0 hOokup no pets
rent d tcount ava lab e $42!
month + utll 1111 refe encaa and
dopo11t 740 992 5S02

4KC Chaco ate Lab 3 Montt1a
Fema e Shota &amp; Wo med $ 1e
(740)256-6$14

AUTOS FROM I!OQ 00
Po &lt;tlmpoundl 6 Aepoa
Toyolat Chivy a Jeeps
Pilall Ca o lstlngs
I 800-451.0500 EKI C9817

2 Apartmenu For Rent lt1 Rio
Walk ng D stance To
Colloga A I Ull 1111 Pold
(740)245-SIOO

NASCAR

they approached the fimsh lme
and NASCAR needed a few
seconds to declare H arvtck the

e 28 MPG 51 ooo
m lu aatlng payoll 1•0 9ol9
222

550

Amena 18 Cub c Foot Refr g
1 etor $150 Sears Ext clae B ke
$!§0 McCullough 8 Ct1a n Saw
$ 00
(740)446 797
0
(740)44&amp;-0232

a ande

team You talk about some
body who worked and dedt
cated himself to making htm
self mto a basketball player
He s JUSt a truly remarkable
kid
Its a lot ofhat'd work chats
patd off satd Kehl of wmrung
the distrtct tide We ve got a
ways to go yet It the first step
pmg stone or second steppmg
stone That where we want to
be
Joe Brown perhaps did
more off the court to help the
Eagles as he played a b1g role
m getang CaldweU to take
over the retgns at Eastern three
years ago
Eastern Htgh Schooltrught

v

op ons

WHITE 8 METAL DETECTOR 8
Ron A JOn 588 Wataon Road
B dwell Ohio OSSI&lt; 1740)446

soo

Apartment•
for Rent

4 Bedroom House In Alo G ande
1740)245-5858

Plot Program A&amp;nte s Needed
304 738 7295

Whitt All td Angelo Wtdd ng
DraM S z• 10 Exqi.Ue tt Sw.t
h. . rt NtC~ nt W th S IIVfl
Long T aln T ara W th Attached
Vo I Coat ISOO Soli S250
1304)875 3257

Antiques

Buy o se I R ve Ina 4ntlquea
1124 Eut Man on SA 124 E Pomeroy 740 992 2526 or 7.40 992
1539 Russ Moore owner

Small twO bed oom mob le home
ru nlshed $275 per man h $275
depos t no pets call 740 992
2808

440

Sporting
Goode

Seniors

have the only coach that was
recrutted by ~ player satd
Caldwell Every mght Joe
Brown would call me when I
restgned down at Racme
(Southern) He would call
every mght Coach what do
you think' You commg out or
notl He even went to the
board meeting the rught that I
was hired Joe and my father
are probably the two maJor
reasons that I m at Eastern
High School nght now
He s turned the whole pro
gram around added Brown
We ve had talent here for
many years and he s tur 1ed us
around wnh disctpline He s
really a dtSctphnar an He s
taught us really well about bas
ketball and life
Now the Eagles move on to
regtonal play
I m exctted Its the first

199S Fo dTe d LX loaded oil

Golf C ubs Spnng C ean ng Sale
nd an C eek Go f Range Ping
Calloway Taylo Made Cobra
17&lt;10)245-S741

Tra11er
Fo
Rent
Below Ga po s Locks On State
Aoulo 7 Soulh 17&lt;10)44HMI19

HOUH

Afte 8 OOpm

3 Bedroom 1 Bath Hou11 Wash
e &amp; Coyer New Co pot $500/
month Plus Deposit No Pets 1
M I&amp; Up Route 2 At G anwood
1304)576 9991 Or (304)875-0127

WORK FROM HOME G ow ng

lnte national Company expand
ng Ea n $1000 $7000/mon h
PT FT Call now -888 899 0901
www eambucksl omhome com

look ng To Buy A New Home?
Don I Have Land? We Doll! Hurry
Dn~ 10 LOIS
304 736-7295

710 Autoa lor Sale

MerchandiM

4338

520

knowingly accept
act'lertlaemenlsfor rail utate
wnlch II In violation of the
llw Our l'lldlrs 1 ,. hereby

gogao t 100-335-!m '" aaa

t oi00·2Dli 2123

lor Rent

1 and 2 bed oom apartment• fu
n shtc:l and unfurn lhed 11cu lty
depoall rtqu td no pt f 740
992~ 8

Th 1 -.paper will not

ooo

...lght

1111 WIIKLYI Mlkl Monoy
HI Plntl ,lOP t AtOI VI Qovorn
monl ~olunds ~rot Dote 1 (24
hrs ) I 100 44f.4UII~ 1700

ACCIII TO A COMPUTI~1
Put I IO 1"0 kl 121/hr 171 h 'T
,T Pllll nlq tOO 111 1041 lXI
101 WWWIIIIomtbiiCOm

210

All r11l- -~ s ng In

to advert!M

FINANCIAL

230

liS CJO. S?IOMv PT/FT
MoiiOnltr
1.....220-fttS

1101 WIIKLY GUARANTIED
WORK NG W TH THE GOV
ERNMENT FROM HOME PART
TIME NO EXPERIENCE RE
OUIAED 1 BOD 741 5715 EXT
XtOt

ltl! U WIIKLY ,rOCIII ng
HUO"HA Morlgago ~tlunae No
lxpor once ~aqulrod ,or
lntorm11 on 011! t 100 sot 11:11
..1 1300

Wll Powerwaat1 Hous&amp;s Trailer&amp;
And All a Contact Ron At
1740)H8 0151 o 339 0950 If
No Answe leave Message

EARN $1200 $6800 monlh pa u
fu
me Wo k f om home Ex
pand ng company needs t1e pi
Free n o ma on 414 )290 6900
www hom&amp;bus ness sys
ems com

Wanted To Bu~: Used Mob Ia
Home Cal 7-40-446.()175 Or 3Q4.
875 5965

Halp Wanted

Fac o y Goof 32x80 $10 000 0 s
count on y $1000 00 Down De
ve y and se up paid by Fac ory
I 800-691&lt;!777

Lot mode clea ance save up to
$8 825 with any t1ome check us
out we e dealing Co es Mob e
Homes US 80 East Athens Oh

Mus See Beau fu 3 Bedroom 2
Balh CA FA W F fOP ace 2
Lo s New Roo Ae lgerato
Stove ow a ge 2 Ca Garage
B g Va d La ge Room&amp; Lots Of
E1&lt; as Reloca ng Out 01 State
$67 ooo Call 304)773 5454 or
1304)773-539l

FINALLY A LEG T MATE HOME
BUSINESS Become a h ghly pad
ega o m~~d ca t ansc be cod
e or b ar n as little as 10
weeks F nanc ng ~tva abe med
ec oom 1 877 335 4072

t 10

wdel Only $29 900 00
211x52 F ee De very &amp; Set
I 888 928 9896

Dou~e

Brookv ew Subdivision 01 Cente
na y 2 e Acres Lots Now Avail
ab a Ca
(740)446 0059 For
Information

St1ear Fan asv Bar Needs Dane
ers No Expe lence Necessa y
W I Tan
(304)76~ 7828
(304)273-0520 Uk lo Bllh

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

1998 i 6x80 Mobile Home V nyl
Sid ng $h ngjed Roof Cen "'' A r
Cathtd al Ceiling Th ough Out
Threa B&amp;d oom 2 Ful Baths
Must Move
Ca AI e !§pm
(7&lt;10)446-8308

Llml ed Or No C edit? Govern
ment Bank F nanca On 'J At Qak
wood In Barboursv a WV 304
738 3409

FREE SEARCH
www SINGLES com

www 4datematct1maktr ne
V at u1 on lint to find pe feet
mate or ca 1 888 915 326e
900 329 4838 $2 99 mn

NEED AN EARLY PAYDAY?? Up
o 5500 Instant 'J by pt1one 1
877 EAALYPAY 1st ADVANCE
FREE L~ m;ooos

343 DRIVERS NEEDED No OK
pe once needtdl Quick COL
a n ng p og am ava able Ea n
$36 000 + st Yea 5 STAR 1
800 448 6669 Exptrenetd d v
e s hold ng Class A ca 8[)():958
2353

420 Mobile Homu

for Sale

CREDIT PROBLEMS? CALL THE
CRED T EXPERTS LICENSED
BONDED CORRECT/REMOVE
BAD CREDIT BANKRUPTCY
LAWSU TS JUDGMENTS AAA
RAT NG 1 988 811 0902

EARN VO\JA COLLEGE DEGREE
QUICKLY bache o s Maste s
Docto a e by cor espondence
based upon p o educal on and
sho t s udy cou se Fo FREE n
fo mat on book e pnone CAM
BA DGE STATE UNIVERS TV 1
800 964-9316

Yard Saln ond Wontld
To Do Ado Must Bl Paid
In Advonc:e

320 Mobile Home•

Professional
Service•

230

Schools
ln•tructlon

Meytao Kenmore Washers
$85 00 Each Whl lpool Ken
I1"'IO'tt Orye 1 $50 Each AI Wh II
No Sunday Calli (7&lt;10~-

540 Mlecellaneoua

Sentinel •

CALL TODA'l

~efamll~
Simon Junior Jones
would like to send
spedal tbankl to the
Pomeroy Emei'Jency
Squad and Rev Keith

START TOMORROW!

1-888-974-JOBS
Civic Dlwlopmont Group/Millennium Teleaorvlcoe

110 Help Wanted

Rader for his
coneollna words Also
to the Thunday
Ladles Club, friend•
and nelpbon who
belptd In IIIJ' way
durlna the death of
our lond one with
food, cards and

concern
Your thoupttulnnl

and klndnesa will
always be
remembered
Simon Junior Jones

t:IDdUaa_l

Pleasant Valley Hospital
Pl1111nt Vlllty Nuralng and Rthabllltltlon
Center currently hll opanlnge for LPN'•
Twelve hour ahlfll Competitive 111ary baud
on markot Excellent banlfltl
Contact Human RIIOUrCII at
Pleuant Vallay Hoapltal
2520 V1ll1y Drive
Pt Pl1111nt, WV 25550
Or FAX to

�Monday, March 12, 2001

_ Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

• Monday, March 12, 2001

Ohio

•

The

•

•

•
•
•

5~0

HOUIIholcl
Gooda

GOOD UllD A,LlANCII
Wtlhlrt d yert ef IQt atora
ri"Dtl SkiQOI Appl ancu 71
.. VIne Slreat Call J•o •48 7398
• l-111-815.()128

•
,

150

AliP.....,..I
Annou.....,.n~

OlvMwoy Loot &amp; Found

TRIBUNE DEAQUNE
2 00 p m the doy beforo
the ad 1110 run Sunday &amp;
Monday ICIRion 2 00 p m
Friday

WORK FAQI.1 HOME
$!SOO-$t!OO pe mo Prr
S2000-S8000 permo Frr
No expe 18rtee needed
Tra ning pr~ldld
1-fl00o680 9488

SENTINEL Q§ADLINE

1 00 p m the day beloro
thledlotorun
Sunday &amp; Monday edition
1 00 p m Friday

REGISTER QEADUNE,
2 daya beloro the ad Ia to
run by 4 30 p m Salllrday
&amp; Monday ldltlon 4 30
Thurlday
Deadllneo oubject to
chlngo due to holldaya

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Partonala

005

Drvorca $1 !!0
Bankrup r:; $19S
Adop lon $225
Not do-l yourMW k
CALL I 800 2S3 0503 lor FREE
ntorma on Bank uptcy n/a n TN
KY

Applications are now bt ng ac
cepted tor London Poo Manage
Resumes can be subm tted to the
clekatll ageHa o ma ng
them to P:O Box 266 Sy acusa
Oh o 4!779 Dead na sAp I a
2001
ASSEMBLY AT HOME II C al s
Toys Jewe y Wood Sew ng
Typ ng G ea Pay CALL t 800
795-0380 EK 201 24hr8)
AllllnHon
WOt1c From Home
S ,200. $5 000/mo
-877 582 I 054

BLACKSTONE
PARALEGAL
STUDIES Homo Study Ap
provetl Affordable comprehan
a ve egal t aln ng a nee 1880
FREE Cato og 800 826 9226
wr t ~0 BOK 701449 Colas TX
75370 NA o ht p www b ackato
neawcom

Lq.oklng f'or ,.omenct Or. Juet
A Frl1111d? 1 IIOQ.32f.8220 E1t
1252 $2 99 Pe m nutt Mull Bo
18 Yta s 0 d Sa v u 1619)645
6434
-To 'rou Th nShoppa
9 West Stimson Athens
740-592 642
Qua ly clo hlng and household
Items $ t 00 bag sale every
Thursdav Monday thru Sa urday
9 oo-e oo

CAREER OPPORTUNITY Esrn
en ncomt Euy c a mt
p octnlng Fulltra n ng Home
PC roqu od Cal Pnyalc an
Healthca e Dave opmenta o I
I H I -800 772 5933 tKI 2070
e~&lt;ce

a

Coo Spot now h lng fu&amp;l deak
cash era dt he I' &amp; cooka P ck
up app cat ons at Cool Spot At
!!0 &amp; 7 Coohl le Ohio
DATA ENTRY
$45 000/yr poltnUal
Need S.lf 1 artera who rtQu re no
ouporvlolon
Full Tra n ng Set Own Hou &amp;
Compute w modem requ red Ca
Toll Frtl 9 888 S23 4417 SKI

Free M JCed Breed Pupp es
(304)695 3255
Dr vera
STUDENT DRIVERS
WANTEDIII
No Expe lance Necessary
NoCoot-nanng fOua ttdl
38K 42K 1stVearl
CALL t-8Q0.833.1484

Free o good t1ome rna e back
m x pup 8 wks old 740 992
02 9
Wanted

Good Hom&amp; Fo 8
Month Old Malt Beag e
1304)895-3647

LOST
Sma I Black Cocker
Spaniel lt1 The VIc n ty Ot Left
Fo k Road Ch ds Pet Rewa d
Ca I (740)441-!1814

70

YardSale

80

Auction
and Flea Market

OPTOMETR C TECHNICIAN po
at on ava lablt to person ntt
u ed In aulat ng pa Ients wth
eye ca e needs In a p og esslve
p \Ia a p act ca n A hens E~&lt;
pe lance des ed but not necea
sary Th a poalion olft s be nella
starting ·~ ary commenaura 1
wth qua 1cauons App ox mattly
35 hou 1 PI wtek nc ud ng
acme evenings and Saturdays
Room to carte advancement It
Interested und cove etta anti
t~ume o The Dalty Stnt ntl P:O
So&lt; 729-114 Pomeroy
45769

on

OWN A COMPUTER? Put l o
work $25 $75 hour Fee Dllala
W tra n www 911 success com

CLA MS PROCESSOR
P aetas claims from home $20
$40 hr polfntal Fu t tin ng
Computer w modem equlred
CALL NOW 888 e65 SI 97 oxl
642

664

F ee To Good Home W h Room
To Run Beau u Wh te Ge man
St1ephe d Go den Ret eve M x
2 Years 0 d Nauta ed Male
Fr end y nte gent (740)2"'5
5 6 Afle 6pm

MERCHANDISER Pa I T mo
Me chand se Needed To Mer
chaf1d at Magaz nts And Oa a
Collect on In Pomt oy Ga ! polls
A ea 1 Day pe Week (Mandavi
$7 25 t1ou + $29M le Please
Call 800 279 3767 Volea Me
box f8818
NEEDED 47 Poople 10 lose 30 bs
by May tsl Band Now Just
Patented
lost 23 lbs in
monlhl
800 570 9628 CA
www bat m41ole com

Avon Last T me Chance Tp Sta t
Up"'" Con 17&lt;10)446-3358

30 Announcement•

TURNEP DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless we Wlnl
1 688 582 3345

Own A Compular?
PutltToWo k
$25 $7S/h PT/FT
I 888 88S 432S
www b-hap com
Pa~Time

If you Have A Big Haart You May
Want To Jon ou Team Of Car ng
People Who want To Make A
0 ftarence In WOrk ng W th Peo
plo Wnh Dlsao hies. \l&gt;u Ca ng
An IUdO WI 8a A PIUI When
'rllu Apply Fo Ona Of Our o raet
Suppon Slaff Positions Don t
Mil OUt 011 Tho NllClltalnlng
Clall Apply Today n 1'trson
At 8204 Ca lo Drr.t p Cal
17&lt;10)446-1814 Ana Ask lor Aolltrta Or Mary An Equal Oppo
un ty Employe
Pa~ Time LPNS
A Lead ng Prov de To nd vidu
as W h Menta Rata dation And
Davalopment D aab Ilea s LOOk
ng Fo Pa I me LPNS ngal po
Is Benef s Inc ude Pa d Tra nlng Health lnsu ance TuttOn Ae
mbursament And Paid Vaca
Ions If You 'w'foutd l ka To Jo n
Our Team To help lndlvldua s
Achieve The Fu est Po en al
Contact Do othv Ha pe A
(740)446-1814 An Equa Oppo
un 1y Employe

EARN $25 000 TO $50 000 YA
Mad ca nsu ance Bill ng Need
ed mm&amp;d ate v Home compute
needed FREE lnte net 1 800
29 -4893 Dop • 109

Posta Job&amp; $48 323 00 y Now
h ng No axpe ence p11 d I an
ng g ea beneflls ca I 7 days
800 429 3680 ... J 365

EARN TO $500 PER WEEK PT
FT Sa \1 ca new and es ab shed
Fu er B ush cus ome s n ocal
area No door to doo equ red
FREE sta e supp es ava able
Ca nd Ds flOO 892 2997

POSTAL JOBS lo SiS 35 hr
WILDL FE JOBS o $21 80/hr n
c udes Bane! ts No Exper a nee
Necessa y For Appljcat on and
Exam nfo cat 1 800 992 7054
x208 M F 8 3Q..5 OOpm

Government Joba 111 00
$33 00 pe hou potentea Pa d
1i aln ng Fu I Benet ts For mo e
nfo mat on ca 1 888 674 9150

e• 3234

Gov t Jobs Now 11 n up To
$~~ 659 + Benefit&amp; Posta &amp; W
d It No Ellptrlence Sun F
9am tOpm EST 1 986 241 4221
EKI S23e 1 Como 111 Served

GROW NG BUSINESS NEEDS
HELP Wo k lrom home Ma I o
dtr E Comma ct $522• week PT
SIOOO $4000 wk 800 921 8538
FT www d eam2bfree com

H CUBE EXPRESS
Home Evary Waektnd More
NO E~ll Cout
NO Touch

URGENTLY NEEDED plasma
dono s ea n $45 to $60 for 2 Of' 3
hours week y Ca 1 Sera Tee 740
592 665
WORK FORM HOME Ea n
$I 500 f)fl IO $5000
f t monlh CALL TODAY 600
895 02 9 or www wo kf omho
me247com
WORK FROM HOME

140

llualnan
Training

this - p e r s aubject lo
lhl Federal Fllr Hauling Ac1
of t
wlllclt
IlleGal

Mus SeUI18x80
Make 2 Payments &amp; Move In!
1 eoo 69 6777

eee

mak" n

any prerwo.nce

llmltllllon or dlectfmirwtlon
balld an rooe colo&lt; ..tfglon
HX lamll'-1 Statui or notloMI
or!Qin or any mention to

Bualne11
Opportunity

New 4 It w de $499 down on Y
$199 pe mon call now 1 800
691&lt;!777

:Uno:;=:-=

GET YOUR FORTUNE IN MO
TION Earn $100 $500/dal y P us
Bonuses! No Hypel No Confu
s on No expe lance naceua 'I
we t an Not MLM Aflordab a
cos Tol faa 1 877 890-8321

7S% Crop/Hook a..ot Bonet 11
Accaotinll Oldlr Model Ttuokt

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH NG CO
ecommends that you do bual
neu w h peop t you know and
NOT to sand mon1y though the
ma I un you have nv11tlgated I·
hto!ftfng

Informed that al &lt;tiOVIIngt
n thlo - . - r
are available on an equal
opponunlty bull

adw~IHd

1.11.•••••••••

A+ M &amp; M MARS NESTLE Eo
tab ahtd vend no Route wm se
by 3 26 Under $9K m nlmum n
vestment •qu td Exc• en
Mon h v P oft Poten al F nance
Ava ab t Good C td 1
(688)
270 2168
Absolute but? Do your ta n
$2 000 a week? Work 4 8 hl'ltwk
estock ng t1o local toy outt No
11 ling Co t 800 3SO 7993 24
hrs /7days
ATTENTION
BASKETBALL
FANS Fret NCAA NBA Down
oads nlo mat on Vou Need To
W n www DataScanSpo ts com &lt;
http lwww OataScanSporta com&gt;
EARN $500 o $900 pe weak n
you bathrobe &amp; s ppe s G eat
oppo un tv to secu e your futu e
Low nvestmen 1 800 272 0193
awO some a n ngs com
Ellfn $90 000 YEARLY opa r ng
N'OT eplac ng Long c acks fn
Wlndsh e d&amp; F et v dto 800
826 8523 us Canada www glass
mechan x com
F YOU MUST WORK WORK
AT HOME Bu ld you own sue
cessfu bus ness Ma I o de E
Comma ee $ ooo $7000 PT FT
F ee nfo ma on www FocusOn
F eedOm com BD0-736 2334
F YOU MUST WORK WORK
AT HOME Build your own sue
cessfu bus ness Ma I orde E
Comma ce $ 000 $7000 PT FT
Fee no ma on www FocusOn
F eedom com 80D-736 2334

REAL ESTATE

New
Fleetwood
t Sx80
$19 999 00 3 Bedroom 2 Balh 1
977 777 4 70
New F 11 wood three bed oom
lwo bath $955 down $199 58
monlh ea 17&lt;10 992 2167

310 Hom11 for Sale
SO DOWN HOMESI GOV T 6
BANK FORECLOSURES LOW
OR NO MONEY DOWN OK
CREDIT FOR L STINGSI CALL
I 800-338 0020 axt 9811
$73 000 3 Bedroom t 112 Balh
wood Ftoort Gat F rep act
Garage 1 47 Ac as Muat See
17&lt;10)368-9 51

330 Farma for Balli'
86 Aero Farm For Sa 1 By Ownor
WI h 1500 Sq Fael 3 Bedroom I
t 2 Balh Homo W th Oak Tr m
And Largo Kllehtn Hll A Largo
Ga age And Barn With 40• Till
able Aerts E~&lt;ctl ent Locat on
Naao R 0 Qrando Alk ng
I 29 900 (740)380 0259 Evan
ngs

340 Bullneaa and
Bulldlnga

1n4 Cheftnut By Owna BuMt n

1997 3 Btd oom Tal&lt; Abatement
T 2o13 sse 500
1740)44e
291'

oo

a

2 Story ek Appro&lt; matoly 3400
Squa e Fee 1 1 2 Ac es Full
Basement Beau ful V ew Of A v
er Was $98 500 Reduced To
$89 500 By Appo ntment Only
17&lt;10)25H172

FORECLOSED GOV T HOMESI
$0 OR LOW DOWN TAX
REPO S &amp; BANKRUPTCIES OK
CREDIT FOR LISTING CALL I
800 501 777eK1 98 3

Chu ch Building with Parsonage
fo sale oca ed n Po nt Pleasan
Good Nelghbo hood Atducod
$65 000 (304)S75-1618

350 Loti &amp; Acreage
1a 9 Acres Located On F lendly
A dge Road
Crown C ty
(740)388-0684 (740)388-9336
23 Acras W tt1 Beautiful Lake
v ew S tea $50 ooo 18 Aeroa
W h La ge Lake Mobile Home
W h Add On $79 500 Ga I a
County On Blacktop Road
(740)386-8678
80 Ac ea In Mason County City
Watt Natural Sp lng C eek
Runn ng Th ough A ready T m
be ed Re8dy For Sp lng 0 earns
To Come True
$50 000
(304)697-5927

HICUIIIX~III

Homo lvary WHUnd More
Nola1t COurNO'I1X/oh to ghl
!I'll Drop/HI!Ck;:: l11111f It
ACOIIIIIna Oillt
TIUCkl
t IC0-111!1 2113

'"II

LOOI Home Halllh Agonoy H ring
lui T mo Or Ptrt Tlml ,CA I
CNA 1 No llpl lance NIOII
llfY WI
Til n Hllllh In
ouranct
IU Th d Avt
1140)441 1371

N ce Br ck House 2 090 Square
Feel 3 Bedrooms 2 2 Batt1s
SUnken Llv ng Room Large Bu
In K chen 0 nne a Den 2 Ca
ga age A Esc c S 20000 2
M es From Ho ze s 740)446
6737
WOMEN S ANSWER TO VIA
GRA Ob Gyn c ea ed Pa entad
Huge comm ss ons Sa as Reps
Wanted lnves ment Requ red 1
888 205.0288

110

lchocla
lnatructlon

IL~CKITONI
PAIIALIQAL
STUDIIf Comprohena vo afford
lbll n~m• etudy 1g11 Ira n ng
• no• fltO preo Cala og 100
wmo ~o
x 7DI44P
Dallll T~ 113!0 NA or http II
www bllck1tone aw com

u•.an

..

Rental Prope ty 3 Lo &amp; Nice 3BA
Houses On Eact1 Corne Lot 50
Vacant Lo n M ddle Co ne Or
Rand &amp; Pe ch S eel Kanagua
Ohio Owne Mus Sal Due To II
ness 1740)448-7473

WORK FROM HOMEI Earn
$500 57000 mon h PT FT Full
T a n ng
F ee Info mat on
www ana nurd eams com

Professional
Service•

$ FREE CASH NOWS I om
wea hy tam I as unload ng ml ons
ot ctola s o hap mnmlze ther
texes w te lmmed ate'/ W NO
FALLS 30 0 W LSHIRE BLVD
198 LOS ANGELES CAL FOR
NIA 92210
S$ NEED A LOAN? Try deb eon
.,o dat on Cut payment• up to
"80'1. Same day app ova 1 an
fl89-8188
$SS NEED CASH?? WE pay
cast1 io ema n ng paymenta on
Property Soldl Mo tgegoll Annu
t til Settlement• lmmed a •
Quolea
Nobody baatl our p c
11 Natlona Cont act Buyer•
(800) 4fl0.073t txl 101 www na
UonalcontriClt&gt;Uylrs com

CASH LOANS 12000 15000
Conoo dat on 10 saoo
lad/
No Crtdll C od t Cordi Mort
CONSOL DATI IILLI/LOANI
0 AC l'lom tUOO It II 000 IIlio
Avtr1111 rail One hour ltiiiiOYI
0111 I':C 0 I lo lru I tOll tOI
113!1
CONIOLIDATI YOU~ WAY
OUT OP PIITI ~ldUGI monthly
paymanll Ply on1 bl 111•nlh
IAIY 10 Dlltlartld Plnano II
, oadom Cn lollln Counoo lnaJ
100 141 trl!
111
OQ"il
www tltbiCCs
(Non ~rofill

ora

Len

Mob le home n Minersville two
bed oom $300 + depol or se
to $3000 &amp; St20 lol ronl 8 4
876 681

530

360

Raal Estate
Wanted

Real estate wan ad am fo cad
ou of my house to h gt1way m
~ ovement Looking for old ta m
t1ouse n Meigs Coun y w th
acreage call 740 797 9303 740.
992 9 32

RENTALS

410 Houaes for Rent
3 B&amp;d ooms Foreclosed
HOmea From $199/Mo 4% Down
30 Yea s at 8 S% APR Fo List
ngs 800-319-3323 Ext 1709
t

:j20 Mobile Homes
for Sale

3 Bedrooms t 1/2 Ba h house n
Po nt P easant
In Town
1304)875 1700 ask lo KB lh

14x7B Oakwood mob e home
hree bed oom wo batt1 master
bath wth garden ub heat pump
app ox 3 yea s old new water
hea e ga bage d sposal three
ce ng tans 200 amp se v ce
other recent upda es exce ant
cond t on mus be moved
$ 5 000 7&lt;10 742 2405

T a ., Fo Rent Behind The
Cant na 2 Bedroom 5250 No
Pels 1740)992 6387

Large Colaee lon or Antique Podl:
et Watches Good Cond tlon 422
2nd Avo phone 1740)446-1615

Two Bed oom $27.!§/ Month Plus
Oeposl G een School D et let
(7&lt;10)387~32

540 Mlscellaneoua
Merchandise

Two Betlroom Mostly Furn st1ed
In Count y $300 Month S200
Oepos Plus Ut ties {740)258
6202

16 Foot Utility Tra l&amp;r L ke New

tandem Axle S875 (740)378
2853

430 Farma for Rent

ALL STEEL BU LD NGS New up
to 50% off P t eng neered w th
plana. 40~&lt;60x10 was $16 500 now
$11890 SOKI OOK 4 woo $35 900
now St 7 990 eo .. 2!x 4 was
sst
now $34990 1 eoo 246
9640

Tobacco quota wanted to lease
pease ca 1937 373-4644 can ca
collect afte 8 30pm

1878 14x70 traler 3 Bed oom t
1 2 Balh 1 Acre m 1 CoVered
Deck And Pa o B dwe Area
Very God Cond ton sae
Mull 811 To Apprec 111
740)245 7322 A&amp;\ Fo K m Or
1?40)448-4324 Alk tOr Me k

for Rent
14x80 E ootrlo Htlt AC 2 lad
room WID &amp;tovo Roflronooo nc
Poll Rallroncoo 1300/mo
(!40)2111-111«

1119 8un1h no Troller t4x71 3
btd ooma I Bolito Hill Pump
Now Carptt In L1v ng Aoom &amp;
K Ienon Cllhtdrll Co lingo Cov
orod Perch Alrtody Itt Up On
~onlod Lol Cen Be Moved
1:104)118-1118

14110 I lldroom 1 lith t400/
n!O I4Qg Dtpctll 1 \'tar Con
lrool ~lnonelal Mel Jlllrtanl 1111
oronooe No 1'111 (740):111-a!l

1HI
1 lllh

I bear110m I!'Ob 1 homo tar rant
nc Ptll 140 Ht Ull

lohull I l•tO 3 lod 110m
lntrp Heme 121 100
KlnUIQI Mob I HOmt IIIII
(!40)44t 1111

BEAUT.,UL APARTIIINTI AT
IUDQET PRICES AT JACK
ION IITATII 52 WillWOOd
0 VI !rom $29? lo $383 Wolk o
shop &amp; mov 11 Oa I 740 us
2568 Equa Hous ng Opponun ly

EZPETRX COM Save up to SO%
on All pet mad cat on• 1nt1 aupo
pllaa lnclud ng Heartga d lnte
cepto F on ne mo e FREE
SHIPPING 0 dt onl nt www Ez
pe~x com 800:844 1427

RrtwQOd For Sa a (7&lt;10)3869827 1740)388-!284

Furnlahod 2 &amp; 3 Room Apart
ments C ean No Pets No Smok
lng Refe encea 4 Oepoa I Re
qu red
Ullllt 11 Furn lhld
(740)448-1519
Fu nlahtd

Eff cltnr:; 2 Roomo
All Ulllllos
Pad
DOVIn&amp; arlo 919 2nd Avo f2HI/
mo (740)446-3945
Fu n shed Two (Sma I) Btdrooml
Prete To Rent To Out Of
Town Worker Uti t 11 Included
$400 mo Plus Capos t (740)367

Independent Herba fe 0 ltrlbutor
Ca For P oduet Or Oppo tun ty
(7&lt;10)441 1912

0611

G ac ous vif1g 1 and 2 bed oom
apartmen s at V age Manor and
Aiverslde Apartments n M ddlt
port F om $278 $348 Call 740
992 5064 Equal Hous ng Oppo
tun ties

MOBILE HOME OWNERS
Huge tnvent01y b scount P Ices
On v nyl Sk t ng Doors Wind
ow1 Anchors Water Heate 1
P umblng &amp; E act ca Pa ts Fu
nacea &amp; Heat Pumps Bennetts
Mobile Home Supp y 740 446
!M18 wwworvb cam/bennett

Modern 1 Bed oom Apanment
Phone (7&lt;10)44&amp;-0390
Now Taking App cat ons 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Ape tments
nc udes Wate
Sewago T aoh $350 Mo 740
446-0006

New &amp; Ustd Electr c And Gas
Fu naces For Sa e Call For Slz
es
lnsta auon
Ava lable
(740)446-6308 1 800-291-(!098
New 200 Amp Square D 20
Space Ins de Pane Box $125
(304)273 3 5

One Bedroom Apar ment On 1st
A\lenue Gall po s Wash&amp; Dry
e Hook up $270 mo Plus De
posll WI t Paid (740 448-4043

NEW AND USED STEEL Sleal
Beams P PI Rebar For Concrete
Anglo Channa! Fill Bar Site
G aUng Fo D aln&amp; D v&amp;ways &amp;
Wolkwaya L&amp;L Scrap Molala
17&lt;10)446-7300

Ta a Townhouse Apertmen s
Ve y Spacious 2 Btdrooms 2
FIOO s CA 1 I 12 Balh Fu ly Ca
peted Adu t Pool &amp; Baby Poo
Pat o S arl $365 Mo No Pets
Lease Plus Security Oa~osh Fie
qulred Days 740 4•8 3481
Evenings 740 387 0502 1•0
446-010

NEW BRAND NAME COMPUT
ERS Almost everyone approved
wllh $0 down Low monthly pay
ments t-80Ht7 34780&lt;1 330

l'Nin RlvorTowers now accepting
appl~a Ions lo 1 BR
HUD sul&gt;o d zed apt fqr tkllrly
and d sa~ed EOH (304)8758879

Prom Drou S zo 2 Baby B uo
With Corset Top &amp; Ball Gown
Bottom Boughl In Apr I 2000 AI
Brittany&amp; Paid $400 Wll Soli FOI
$275 Fo Mo e Information Cal
(304)875 681 s

460 Space lor Rent
Downtown Second Avenue Near
Courthouse And C ty Build ng
N ce y Decorated A/C 3 Rooms
Bu d ng By llstll 449 2nd Ave
(740)446-9539

Prom gowns 7 wo e to out ot
state prom jun or 5 9 l)r cts
neg 740-985 3820

S 00 Eac!l (740)256-&lt;!463
AKC Reg atered Mele Bu Dog
Sold While Beaut lu $1000 F m
(304)576-2999
AKC Regis a ed Maltese
Monlh (740)448-0857

t3

POLICE M
Sf HONDA
19 9% FOR
1 800 941

CARS FROM $29/MO ImpoundS/
epos Fee SO down 24 mos
0199% Fo s ng 800 3 9
3323 1&lt;2156
CARS FROM $500 Po eo m
pounds &amp; ax se zu ea Honda&amp;
Chevys Fo ds &amp; moe Fo s
"gs ca nowl t 800 1 9 300
eKt A010

983 Chevy S lve ado 11

s En

g nt Oua Ext1aust Auto 1, Long
Whaal Base S 800 (30•)578
2753

989 F 250 302 5 speed ong
bed tool box newe w dt ack
tras 132k $4300 740-742 6200
995 GMC Sonoma 88 ooo
MIll AM FM Caaaatte 5
Speed $3200 OBO (740)256
S945

810 Farm Equipment
8 N Fo d Tractor Has Bun At
alo td Gardne a Dream $2!§00
(304)875 3824
John Dee e Model 338 Ba e
Wlro T 1 F 1 d Roady $2500
(304)875 5724

LOI For Rent With App oved Ap
plication At K&amp;K Mob e Home
Pa k (304)675 3000 Leave Mes

Tappan HI Ell clancy 90% Gas
Furnaces 0 Fu naces 2 Seer
Heat Pump &amp; Air Condit on ng
System• Free 8 Vear War anty
Bennetts Healing &amp; Cooling 1
800 872 59&amp;7 www orvb com/ben

saga

non

SAVEl SAVEl SAVEl Heal
Pumpo L P &amp; Natu a~ Gao Fu
•
nacea n You con t can ua Wt
••
..,. Both Looo (740)44S S308 &amp;
1 1100-29 I .0098

Houtehold
Goode

510

3 Plaeo LMng Room SUllo And A
7 Pta&lt;:• D nlng Room Su 1 Good
Cond don (740)&lt;148-0531
"PP anc11
Recondlt oned
Waahe • Dryert Rangel Rtfrl
g ato 1 Up To 10 Daya Guar
anllld Wo Stll Now Ml)'tlg Ap
planctt F tnch C tv t.taytag
740-448 7795
For 8&amp;11 R1cond Uoned waeh
ere dryeu and retrloarato"
Thompocne Appuenoo 3407
Jackacn Avanuo (:104)11111111
Moirlltrael 'urnltu,.
(104)t!8-t411
ltl Man llrHI l'olnt ~11111n1
New 6 Ultd ~"'nltu,.
Ntw ~1101 Llv naroom lu 111
1311 luy •• I 'lllda

a

ltlf Dolroll ng ~tlrlgtrllor
Wtshtr I Dryer ~nllqUI D lhll
(!40JUH172

Sowmlll $3 79S Now Super Lum
bormall 2000 largar eopaellltl
more opllona Manufacturer of
~awm1111 edger• and ek dde 1
NORWOOD INDUSTRIES 252
Sonwtll D vo aunalo NY 14225
FREE Info motion I BOO 571
t383 ext:

aoo-u

Acres St

Waterline Spoo ol 314 200 PSf
Ill 85 Ptr t 00 I 200 PSI
137 00 PI tOO All Bran Com
p-Ion Fllllngo In Stocfl
~ON IYANI INTI~P~IIII
J - Ohio I -837 8521

fnlm Pap B4

Atlanta It took an extra lap
afterwards to get the emotion
a! part out of the wa)( And then
pulling mto vtctory lane and
see all those guys who have
supported me through proba
bly one of the hardest ames of
thetr lives and the hardest sttu
atlon of my life
After Harvtck zoomed past
Jerry Nadeau and Dale Jarrett
to take the lead on lap 320
Gordon took second and
steadily moved closer Gordon s
only attempt at a pass came m
Turn 4 of the final lap when he
pulled under HarVJck s car
heading to the checkered flag
The cars touched slightly as

Uaad LIt Truck Fo ko $25 $75
Po Stl 3 PI H eh L Its W lh
Va lous Fork Lengths $200
Each (740)379-2757

830

NCAA

ooo 1304)937 3435

Llveetock

For aa a 13 year old qua ltr
horae geld ng been shown 4 H a
h s lilt trophy w nne knows ....,.
ryth ng asking $1500 740 378
8170

Palomino Slafflan
Flog AOHA 11111
15 3' H H Woold Champloo lmprooslvl Blood! ne WN Wea1orn
P elllJ'e Halter Ba rels StandIng Slud Fea $250 (304)675
6440

from Plge 11
994 Chevy Ast o Van t Owne
70 000 m l&amp;s H gh Roof Loaded
1740)44~ 123
1997 Chevy S lve ado El&lt;ttnded
Clb 41t4 Powt Locks Wlndowa
3 d Doo

Tow Package 36K
Mlaa $18200(740)446-4175

998 Red Jeep Grande Cherolcee
Laredo
Quadlrack ()loan Ins tie Out 50 000 Ml as Books
$9&amp;85
Askng
$17500
(304)875-3868

v-e

Quality B ack Angus Bulls f 000
1200 Lbs Cumm ngs Angus
Fa ms Southside 1304)875 6248
Reg 1tered Black Angus Yea 1ng
Bu a $900 &amp; Up Reg ste ed
Black Angua Vear ngs He er
$700 Blood nes n Bar Ex T av
e e Wtdeap aad New Trend Fu
Rita Back Will De ve 1304)372
2389

640

Hey &amp; Grain

740

Ear co n fo sale $2 50 bushel
7&lt;10 985 3347

1996 Yahama Wove ne 4x4
New vamp a T es Just Rebu t
New B akes Powe K (7401446&lt;1025

Good MIKad Hay For Sa e Dela
no Jackson Farm (304)875 743
(7&lt;10)446-1 104

2000 Honda Fo oman 450ES
4x4 Unde 200 M es Perfect
Gond on $4700 Cell 1740)256
6891

Hay Fo Sale 45 Round Ba es
And 250 Square Ba es Ca
1740)448 0115 or (740)446
7843 Mer 6 Ofll)m
Hay fOr Sa e Round Ba es 1000
Baas $10 00 $20 00 Square
Balao $2 00 2 25 1304)552 3274
Days (304)675-11120 Evenings
Squa e bales ot good m xed hay
nevo WOI $1 35 740 985 35t0

Hay &amp; Br ght W e T e Straw Vear
Round Del ve y &amp; Vo ume D s
count Ava tabla He I ag&amp; Fa m
1304)675 5724

Tobacco P an a Orde Now To
Guarantee Ea~y Sprlng Planl nga
Inc ease A olmen a Mean Ex a
Plan 1 Thank You Fo You Bual
nesa Call Danny Dewhu st
Leave Message {304)895 3740
Or (304)995-3789

TRANSPORTATION

710 Autos for Sale
$0 DOWN CARSI POLICE IM
POUNDS REPOS HONDA S
CHEVY S JEEPS LOW AS S29
MO S 019 9% FOR LISTINGS
CALL 1 800 45 f OOSO OKl C
91112

750 Boat• &amp; Motors
for Sale

760

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessorlee

Budget Priced Tranemlealont
All Types Access To Ova
1o ooo T ansmlss ons T ansfe
Cases 740 24!§ 5677 Ce 339
3765

790

810

•

Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncond ona 11&amp;1 me gua al'l ee
Loca ete encea fu nlshed Es
lab shod 1975 Cs 24 Hro 1740)
446 0870 1 800 267 OS78 Rog
e s Waterproof ng
C&amp;C Oen1 a Home Mall;'
tneneo Pe nllng v nyl 1 ding
ca pentry doo 1 wndowa baths
mob 11 home epa and mo e For
1•• 111 milt cal Cho 740 992
8323
L vlng1ton 1 Ba~tmtf1t Water
Prooflng 1 au btltmtnt epaln
done I et til matu I tetlmt
guaranttt 1~Y 1 on Job ellpt I
fnCI (30i)995 3887

ttl I Dodge Stullh AT Tw n

T\lrbo SOOHP AWD H gh M

t1

Sha p Solow Book VI ut 8111
OlilfiJvar 17400 17&lt;10)441 Ot3S
1flit Ford Probe good eond I on
2 2 te automat c wth P onttr
am/fm C 0 p aytr $2500 740
9115 3110

840 Electrical and
Relrlgeratlon

When we looked at Georthey were 16 14 and 9-7 m
the No 1 conference m the
coun1111 Tranghese s:nd They
played the toughest non con
ference schesiule m the coun
try and we J usc thought 1t
would be unf:ur not to take that
mto account
The Bulldog.; were seeded
e1ghth m the East Reg~on set
tmg up a first round game
ag:unst another bubble team
rewarded for tts strong RPI
ranking Missoun
But Georgta coach Jtm Har
rJck thought htS Bulldog.;
deserved the btd
Harnck and Lefty Dnesell of
Georgta State JOmed Edd1e
Sutton as men who have taken
four schools to the tourna
tnent
Not every teams entnes or seeding.; - were deter
tnlned by non conference
schedules though
Three of the four top seeds
- Stanford m the West Duke
m the East and lllinots tn the
were expected
Mtdwest g~a

1888 Oodgo In op d ES Condy

Llwn Mowe

Appll Aid Ltllhlr LOidld Ba
tow lack VI ue Baat Otter Ova
$7000 (740)441 0135

guess I find out lately how soli
I really am
Hamck and the rest of the
wmner
field spent n ost of the early
The wm for Harv ck last gomg traihng Gordon who led
years Busch Sertes R ookie of !?2 of the first 142 laps until
the Year was the soonest ever he ran out of gas He lost a lap
m a Wmston Cup race co mng when he coasted to the p ts
m only htS th rd attempt
and he didn t regam the lost
Nadeau held on for th rd ground until a lap 275 cautton
desptte a spm on the second for Matt Kenseth s spm
lap followed by pole Sttter Jar
Nadeau one of Gordon s
rett and Terry Labonte
teammates was leading at the
For Childress the vtctory ttme and he slowed abruptly
capped a heart wrenchmg on the track to let Gordon by
three weeks Stnce Earnhardt
and back mto the lead lap
hJS longttme dnver and frtend
FUc~y Fludd Johnny Ben
lost hts life m the final lap of son K\m Schrader M1ke Skin
the Daytona 500
ner and Kurt Busch rounded
I Just kept pra)'lng there at out the top 10 There were
the end praymg for Dale to etght cautions dunng the race
help us and he did Childress most for mmor tnC!dents
sa1d I m speechless I didn t
think I was very emoaonal I
Stanford (28 2) also was a No
I seed last year while Duke
(29-4) IS a top seed for the
fourth straight year
Michigan State (24 4) got
the fourth No 1 seed m the
South
Regton
because
Tranghese Satd North Carolina
went 4-4 m 1ts last etght games
But little of what transptred
was a surpnse
North Carolina slipped to a
No 2 spot after losmg 79 53 m
the ACC title game Sunda)(
and was JOtned by fast firushers
Kentucky and Anzona plus
Iowa State as second seeds
Thirty five of the 65 NCAA
btds went to team&lt; fro n the stX
strongest confere 1ces and the
BtgTen matched the ecord for
most b1ds from one confere 1ce
seven
Only five at large btds did
not c01ne from the top s x co 1
ferences Those berths vmt to
C11C1 natJ of Co fe1e Ke
USA Cretghton of the M!S
soun Valle)' Fresno State of the
Western Athlettc a 1d St
Josephs and Xavter of the
Atlanac 10
Twenty one teams w1th at
least 20 wtns did not 1 ake the
field mclud ng Cahforma
lrvme which won 25 games
explanation
Tranghese s
agam came down to the num

hers but was not recetved well
Sutton 1s m the field agam
wtth Oltlahoma State (20-9) a
senamental chotce for many
fans after pla)'lng the final
month of the season followtng
a plane crash that killed I 0
people mcluding two players
Wtth Lou1sville failing to
make the field tn Denny
Crum s final season Anzona s
Lute Olson takes over as the
acave coach wtth the most
appearances at 23 Olson s run
of 17 m a row 1s also the longest
current streak wuh Temples
John Chaney and Kansas Roy
Williams second each at 12
The longest current streak to
end was Gene Keady of Pur
due who had been 1 etght
stratght tournaments
Pnnceton made the field
under first year coach John
Tho 1 pson III who s now 19
appearances behtnd his father
John who restgned at George
town m 1999
Duke plays Thursday t
Greensboro N C agamst No
16 Monmouth
lllinms (24 7) meets the w 1
ner of an operung tpund game
Tuesday
mght
between
Wmthrop and Northwestern
State

the perfect

Totui'WilS
PAAI'U TO ltrJ.P US ON
&lt;U WAY Ol MAYit
SENT An.owr.a TO IIW
IIAICII'Il.N &lt;U DAY
PrJnAPS YOU SPOKf. Tnt

Job

Dally
Senti net
Class1f1eds

992·2156

DAY
Pr.IIIAPS YOU stNT A
LOVU.Y CAlD Ol SAT
QIJltn.Y IN AcnAa Ol
OlD SbMr.TniNC Uf.aM.
TO &amp;nOW THAT YOU
CAW1. WnAtt\U YOU
010 TO nw CON&amp;aL
&lt;U nr.AlTS M. oW.

\UY TIIANKN.
WHAlt\U Til. PART,
Aur.aM. TnANICI TO

nr. ooar. smr or
0\waQQK Coou

ICl Tnt txCVTIONdl.
CARt Gl\tN TO &lt;U

LOvr.D ONt.

MAY Coo Mla tACit
o~orvou

&lt;PAPPY ) SMnn r.utLY

Full and part time pooltlono avalloble
Compllte trolnlng provided with lfextble llouro
Full limo polltlono ollor benent package which
Include• M•dlcei/Dentll/401 K/Pd V1011tlona.

MAYit YOU \Wf. NOT
T10t. IWT JUST

mOUGIIT or us TltAT

EARN$$$
NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED
Earn up to $15/hour

KlNDr.ST WORD AS AHY
l'llUlD OOllD SAY Ol

rnt BuuAMIN nAI•t"'lN

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Aopa rod New a Aobu l In SIOOk
Co IRon Evohl I IC0-537 8525

a me m school hmory Its real
ly been done sa1d Stmpson I
think. we all know what we
have to do We re exetted but
we know we have to come m
the next practice and work
hard and get to the next level
Eastern will meet Symmes
Valley Tuesday at Columbus
It feels really aw~ome
satd Brown In my four years
of varstty I ve watched several
around here go like Tnmble
and Waterfonl two years ago
Now tt s out turn so hopeful
ly we ll do the TVC well and
out area pretty well
I think tt will help ~ ur
commuruty out satd Nelson
It thmk tt will help the TVC
out and our team I think (the
distnct champwnsh p) was a
real btg wm for us It got us
over the edge There s no pres
sure on us fron1 here on out

Your LINK to

PunAPS YOU SAID A

Campere &amp;
Motor Homes

SERVICES

Texas m 1997 to be ptcked

as an at large wtth JUSt 16 wtns

83

Card of Thankl

a

SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY
Cia m Danlld? WI ll)tCIIIII In
appula ond Htt lngo FREE
CONSULTATION
BENfFIT
TEAM SERVICES NC TOLL
FRfi1HH:Je-1052
STEEL IUILOINGSII 3 only ""''
til Ux:SO 2)o!lxt20 Mull llatll
doll ulllng It lnvo coil t 100
oiU 7130' 34

fii'INII Pap Bl

NH415 0 acb ne Less Than 200

RESIDENTIAL HOllE OWNERS

5384

v

"KC Reg stared lab Pupp es

OARS $29 MONTH!
POUNDS &amp; AEPO
CHEVY 24 MO S 0
LIST NGS CALL
8777e• C9814

&amp; Bath

All AflplleMtalnc uded Mual It
Moved
II
nttrollad 01
(!40)4&lt;1t-1m

14111 ljorrlo

OIRECTV I aa lnatallatlon $200
eaoh back 800-263-2640

Fo tnt one bedroom fu n shed
apartment In M ddloporl call 7'0
992 5231

Atklna

1111

COMPUTERS WE F NANCE
CELL COMPUTERS! Even w th
101 lhan portoct cradll 1 BOO
4779018 Code AC11 wwwomc
tolutlona com

Chroty s Fam y L v ng 33140
Now L ma Ad Rutland Ohio 740.
742 7403 Apa tmont homo and
tra e anta 1 Commercial ltOrl
fronta ava able ror leaae Vacan
cetnow

QUlin 1111 4 ~1101 lldroom lu
111 With Pram• Qood Condlllon
~riel 1400 (74D)UI-IUO Alllr
lpm

111 000 Two lodroom Two lalh

Ita acreen TV Tekt on 1m111
monthly paymontt Good crld
II required Phone 1 100 711
IU7

Apartmonl S37S + Coposll
(304)273 3115

MERCHANDISE

ooo 420 Mobile Homaa

German Sheppard Pups
Blood! nes Large B eed
(304 675-5724

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

·~

Two bed oom one anti 1 2 ba h
house to rent lt1 Pome oy full
baument with ga age k tchen
aPJ~IIat1ces W 0 hOokup no pets
rent d tcount ava lab e $42!
month + utll 1111 refe encaa and
dopo11t 740 992 5S02

4KC Chaco ate Lab 3 Montt1a
Fema e Shota &amp; Wo med $ 1e
(740)256-6$14

AUTOS FROM I!OQ 00
Po &lt;tlmpoundl 6 Aepoa
Toyolat Chivy a Jeeps
Pilall Ca o lstlngs
I 800-451.0500 EKI C9817

2 Apartmenu For Rent lt1 Rio
Walk ng D stance To
Colloga A I Ull 1111 Pold
(740)245-SIOO

NASCAR

they approached the fimsh lme
and NASCAR needed a few
seconds to declare H arvtck the

e 28 MPG 51 ooo
m lu aatlng payoll 1•0 9ol9
222

550

Amena 18 Cub c Foot Refr g
1 etor $150 Sears Ext clae B ke
$!§0 McCullough 8 Ct1a n Saw
$ 00
(740)446 797
0
(740)44&amp;-0232

a ande

team You talk about some
body who worked and dedt
cated himself to making htm
self mto a basketball player
He s JUSt a truly remarkable
kid
Its a lot ofhat'd work chats
patd off satd Kehl of wmrung
the distrtct tide We ve got a
ways to go yet It the first step
pmg stone or second steppmg
stone That where we want to
be
Joe Brown perhaps did
more off the court to help the
Eagles as he played a b1g role
m getang CaldweU to take
over the retgns at Eastern three
years ago
Eastern Htgh Schooltrught

v

op ons

WHITE 8 METAL DETECTOR 8
Ron A JOn 588 Wataon Road
B dwell Ohio OSSI&lt; 1740)446

soo

Apartment•
for Rent

4 Bedroom House In Alo G ande
1740)245-5858

Plot Program A&amp;nte s Needed
304 738 7295

Whitt All td Angelo Wtdd ng
DraM S z• 10 Exqi.Ue tt Sw.t
h. . rt NtC~ nt W th S IIVfl
Long T aln T ara W th Attached
Vo I Coat ISOO Soli S250
1304)875 3257

Antiques

Buy o se I R ve Ina 4ntlquea
1124 Eut Man on SA 124 E Pomeroy 740 992 2526 or 7.40 992
1539 Russ Moore owner

Small twO bed oom mob le home
ru nlshed $275 per man h $275
depos t no pets call 740 992
2808

440

Sporting
Goode

Seniors

have the only coach that was
recrutted by ~ player satd
Caldwell Every mght Joe
Brown would call me when I
restgned down at Racme
(Southern) He would call
every mght Coach what do
you think' You commg out or
notl He even went to the
board meeting the rught that I
was hired Joe and my father
are probably the two maJor
reasons that I m at Eastern
High School nght now
He s turned the whole pro
gram around added Brown
We ve had talent here for
many years and he s tur 1ed us
around wnh disctpline He s
really a dtSctphnar an He s
taught us really well about bas
ketball and life
Now the Eagles move on to
regtonal play
I m exctted Its the first

199S Fo dTe d LX loaded oil

Golf C ubs Spnng C ean ng Sale
nd an C eek Go f Range Ping
Calloway Taylo Made Cobra
17&lt;10)245-S741

Tra11er
Fo
Rent
Below Ga po s Locks On State
Aoulo 7 Soulh 17&lt;10)44HMI19

HOUH

Afte 8 OOpm

3 Bedroom 1 Bath Hou11 Wash
e &amp; Coyer New Co pot $500/
month Plus Deposit No Pets 1
M I&amp; Up Route 2 At G anwood
1304)576 9991 Or (304)875-0127

WORK FROM HOME G ow ng

lnte national Company expand
ng Ea n $1000 $7000/mon h
PT FT Call now -888 899 0901
www eambucksl omhome com

look ng To Buy A New Home?
Don I Have Land? We Doll! Hurry
Dn~ 10 LOIS
304 736-7295

710 Autoa lor Sale

MerchandiM

4338

520

knowingly accept
act'lertlaemenlsfor rail utate
wnlch II In violation of the
llw Our l'lldlrs 1 ,. hereby

gogao t 100-335-!m '" aaa

t oi00·2Dli 2123

lor Rent

1 and 2 bed oom apartment• fu
n shtc:l and unfurn lhed 11cu lty
depoall rtqu td no pt f 740
992~ 8

Th 1 -.paper will not

ooo

...lght

1111 WIIKLYI Mlkl Monoy
HI Plntl ,lOP t AtOI VI Qovorn
monl ~olunds ~rot Dote 1 (24
hrs ) I 100 44f.4UII~ 1700

ACCIII TO A COMPUTI~1
Put I IO 1"0 kl 121/hr 171 h 'T
,T Pllll nlq tOO 111 1041 lXI
101 WWWIIIIomtbiiCOm

210

All r11l- -~ s ng In

to advert!M

FINANCIAL

230

liS CJO. S?IOMv PT/FT
MoiiOnltr
1.....220-fttS

1101 WIIKLY GUARANTIED
WORK NG W TH THE GOV
ERNMENT FROM HOME PART
TIME NO EXPERIENCE RE
OUIAED 1 BOD 741 5715 EXT
XtOt

ltl! U WIIKLY ,rOCIII ng
HUO"HA Morlgago ~tlunae No
lxpor once ~aqulrod ,or
lntorm11 on 011! t 100 sot 11:11
..1 1300

Wll Powerwaat1 Hous&amp;s Trailer&amp;
And All a Contact Ron At
1740)H8 0151 o 339 0950 If
No Answe leave Message

EARN $1200 $6800 monlh pa u
fu
me Wo k f om home Ex
pand ng company needs t1e pi
Free n o ma on 414 )290 6900
www hom&amp;bus ness sys
ems com

Wanted To Bu~: Used Mob Ia
Home Cal 7-40-446.()175 Or 3Q4.
875 5965

Halp Wanted

Fac o y Goof 32x80 $10 000 0 s
count on y $1000 00 Down De
ve y and se up paid by Fac ory
I 800-691&lt;!777

Lot mode clea ance save up to
$8 825 with any t1ome check us
out we e dealing Co es Mob e
Homes US 80 East Athens Oh

Mus See Beau fu 3 Bedroom 2
Balh CA FA W F fOP ace 2
Lo s New Roo Ae lgerato
Stove ow a ge 2 Ca Garage
B g Va d La ge Room&amp; Lots Of
E1&lt; as Reloca ng Out 01 State
$67 ooo Call 304)773 5454 or
1304)773-539l

FINALLY A LEG T MATE HOME
BUSINESS Become a h ghly pad
ega o m~~d ca t ansc be cod
e or b ar n as little as 10
weeks F nanc ng ~tva abe med
ec oom 1 877 335 4072

t 10

wdel Only $29 900 00
211x52 F ee De very &amp; Set
I 888 928 9896

Dou~e

Brookv ew Subdivision 01 Cente
na y 2 e Acres Lots Now Avail
ab a Ca
(740)446 0059 For
Information

St1ear Fan asv Bar Needs Dane
ers No Expe lence Necessa y
W I Tan
(304)76~ 7828
(304)273-0520 Uk lo Bllh

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

1998 i 6x80 Mobile Home V nyl
Sid ng $h ngjed Roof Cen "'' A r
Cathtd al Ceiling Th ough Out
Threa B&amp;d oom 2 Ful Baths
Must Move
Ca AI e !§pm
(7&lt;10)446-8308

Llml ed Or No C edit? Govern
ment Bank F nanca On 'J At Qak
wood In Barboursv a WV 304
738 3409

FREE SEARCH
www SINGLES com

www 4datematct1maktr ne
V at u1 on lint to find pe feet
mate or ca 1 888 915 326e
900 329 4838 $2 99 mn

NEED AN EARLY PAYDAY?? Up
o 5500 Instant 'J by pt1one 1
877 EAALYPAY 1st ADVANCE
FREE L~ m;ooos

343 DRIVERS NEEDED No OK
pe once needtdl Quick COL
a n ng p og am ava able Ea n
$36 000 + st Yea 5 STAR 1
800 448 6669 Exptrenetd d v
e s hold ng Class A ca 8[)():958
2353

420 Mobile Homu

for Sale

CREDIT PROBLEMS? CALL THE
CRED T EXPERTS LICENSED
BONDED CORRECT/REMOVE
BAD CREDIT BANKRUPTCY
LAWSU TS JUDGMENTS AAA
RAT NG 1 988 811 0902

EARN VO\JA COLLEGE DEGREE
QUICKLY bache o s Maste s
Docto a e by cor espondence
based upon p o educal on and
sho t s udy cou se Fo FREE n
fo mat on book e pnone CAM
BA DGE STATE UNIVERS TV 1
800 964-9316

Yard Saln ond Wontld
To Do Ado Must Bl Paid
In Advonc:e

320 Mobile Home•

Professional
Service•

230

Schools
ln•tructlon

Meytao Kenmore Washers
$85 00 Each Whl lpool Ken
I1"'IO'tt Orye 1 $50 Each AI Wh II
No Sunday Calli (7&lt;10~-

540 Mlecellaneoua

Sentinel •

CALL TODA'l

~efamll~
Simon Junior Jones
would like to send
spedal tbankl to the
Pomeroy Emei'Jency
Squad and Rev Keith

START TOMORROW!

1-888-974-JOBS
Civic Dlwlopmont Group/Millennium Teleaorvlcoe

110 Help Wanted

Rader for his
coneollna words Also
to the Thunday
Ladles Club, friend•
and nelpbon who
belptd In IIIJ' way
durlna the death of
our lond one with
food, cards and

concern
Your thoupttulnnl

and klndnesa will
always be
remembered
Simon Junior Jones

t:IDdUaa_l

Pleasant Valley Hospital
Pl1111nt Vlllty Nuralng and Rthabllltltlon
Center currently hll opanlnge for LPN'•
Twelve hour ahlfll Competitive 111ary baud
on markot Excellent banlfltl
Contact Human RIIOUrCII at
Pleuant Vallay Hoapltal
2520 V1ll1y Drive
Pt Pl1111nt, WV 25550
Or FAX to

�Monday, March 12, 2001
Monday, March 12, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page B4 • The Dally Sentinel

The Dally Sentlrial • Page BS

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

ALLEYOOP

NEA Crouword Puzzle
PHILLIP

ACROSS

ALDER

1 llodel
UUI'In-

SaYre
Truckins

P/B
CONTRACTORS, INC.

ROIERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

RICino, Ohio 45771

•New Homte

740.985-3948

• GII'IIIH

CONCRETf/BLOCK/BRICK

• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compel'l
FREE ESTIMATES

·• Footen, Walls, Steps
• Flot Work,
Replacemeats, • Walks

and DrlvH • Steacll
Crete Free Estimate!
Sorvln1 Ohio and W. V.

BAUM LUMBER CO.
46384 St. At. Z48 Chaster, Ohio
(740) 98!1-3301

•Hauling •Umootono
oQnovol• Sind •TopiOII
•Fill Dirt •llulch

740-992-1671

WVII03171l

WHY DRIVE ANYWHERE ELS ?
SHADE RIVER AG. SI!RVICE
"Ahead In Hrvlce"
-11.6" l'rtleln Uwstocklconle Ftld SUS/100

UNDA'S
PAINTING

Lionel, MTH, K-Line,
Athearn, Atlas, Bachmann
&amp; Accessories
0, HO, &amp; N Gua~e
Estes Rockets

root

13 Std8Uve
14Forcelul

- .........·6 Q J I I

••

•Attlt
• A. . . . ' 4

,,.

·• Q

•AKJJatlll

laova Message
Alter 6pm

740-985-4180

Wetl
Pall
Pau

Bring In your repair work
we'll get you going for
spring

Rocky R. Hupp. Jlgcnt

Box 189
M1ddleport. Oh1o ~5 760
Local 843·5284
Medicare Supplement; Life i.nsurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; e:lllege,
Retirement,
Emergency Funds; Mortgage;
Major Medical • Nursing Home

Every Spring Tune-Up
get a FREE Blade Sharpening.

New equipment tmlvlng d•IIY

lftl

,

. .

PANCAKE SUPPER
Racine United Methodist
Church 4-7 pm
Thurs. March 15

...

,__....

....

"I• he •llowecl • piM oll.,..nhy
lor • pirldng tlcllll?"

Eagles
from Page Bl
thers with 13 points in the middle
two periods.
Eastern rose to the occasion in the
fourth quarter as junior Garrett Karr
scored eight points and Nelson added
six to put the game away. The Eagles
outscored Clay 20-9 in the period.
Eas(ern took the air out of the ball in
the latter stages of the fourth, working
their delay game to near perfection and
forcing Clay to foul in an attempt to
get back into the game.
"I think one of the most. important
keys to the game was that ,we didn't
.come out scared tonight," said head
coach Howie Caldwell. "I thought we
came out very; very nervous· against
Portsmouth East. Tonight, we didn't do

that. We came out with the tempo that
we had played in earlier games.
"In the third quarter, I've got to be
honest with you, I don't know what
happened," Caldwell said. "We weren't
very focused. But then in the fourth
quarter, hey, we got after it again. For
rwo weeks, we worked exclusively on
making people go man-to-man against
so we could run our delay game, and I
thought it worked very well, with the
exception of one turnover."

In addition to Nelson's big night, fellow senior Joe Brown contributed 16
points and eight rebounds, along with
three steals, two blocked shots and two
assists. Brown said the win was especially sweet for the club.
"A lot of hard work has paid off,
finally;• he said. "We're going to take it
to the next level and play in the Sweet
16., I've seen a lot teams from around
here go before, and now it's our turn."
Lyons finished with nine points and
Karr and Matt Simpson had eight
points each. Ka rr had five rebounds,
three assists and three steals. Simpson
had six rebounds.
Kiemor led Clay with IS points and
nine rebounds. Jake Qavis had 13

P.

Clay

Eastem

8

15

16

17 16 10

9

20

All Makts 'lhlctor &amp;

992-2975

Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Case-IHParts
Dealen

ELITE MECHANICAL CONTRACTORS

Phone (740)5'93-ti671
Athens, Ohio

·

A&amp;D Auto Upholstery-'llus, Inc.
Rutland, Ohio Truck seals, car seats, headliner~ truck larps,
convertible &amp; vinyl tops, Four lheeler seats,
motorcycle seats, boat covers, l;arpets, etc,

Mon-Frl 8:30 - 5:00
Over 40 yra experience
(7 40) 742-BBfH!;

JONES'

• Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump &amp;rinding

1-888-521..()91 ~·
'

3-poln1 goals- Clay 510a•ls 3, HuH, Largo), Eas1em 1 (LyonS). Rebounds- Clay 30 (Kielmar 9), Eastem 32 (Brown 8). Assists-:- Clay 1, Eastern 9 (Karr 3).
Steals - Clay 3, Eastern 6 {Karr 3, Brown 3).
Turnovers- Clay 18, Eastern 4.

• Buckat Truck

CONCRETE
CONNECTION

(Factory Outlet)
All vertical blind• are
made lo order al onr
location
UPTO 70% OFF ·
• Vertieala • Wood
• Miau • Ere ·

Squondero

Aportmont

dweller,

11 "Famoua• 31 Solfl Dr1in
cookloAlaq
..37 Hotklly
12 Daunt.
tulllx
18 Dlkolt
35 Nearly
lndiln
40 Soci'IIH
21 Mullllt.
41 Al'lb

olton

DOWN
1 Vagrant
2 - - ermo
{angry)

3 ~loorfng

.22 U"- aomo

pltcl
Nolllgon
4 1tNIO chall
movie
champion
33 Authority
Mlkholl 34 Breathing
5 Ear
org1na
comb.
35 Febrlc UHd
orm)

voaet

clothing

42 T111tch
polm

{IIWI)

45 Forarm

23 Scullle
24 P11111
25

l

C3

~ormor't

Looked at
47 Aldo (obbr.)
48

41 Hard

6 Llttat
food llah
7 l.o., In lull
27 Till'
drop
35 Serve aoup 8 Un~ a! light 29 Pile ot
9 Opposite ol · com37 "ThoFalcon"
WSW
buatlbilo
38

Breathes
out

10 Wilking
IIICk

30

r.-~~~~-

Sn•"-•

bono

place?
26 Howalltn

u • theatar

drinker

50 "Brooklyn• :
end

52

Egyptian
goddoiS

Uncloa

{pool.)

53 Clllttr

r~~T.r~~

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lule Campoe

C.itbrily Cipher cryplogramo oro Cf&amp;lled lrom quota11ona bV fomout
pooplo, paot ond proNn1. Eoch - r In 1hl cipher 111n&lt;11 for 1n0111tr.

Today'&amp; clue: R equ1ls C ·

'T

RMLAIB'D

SO HOC

VOATGHO

ZWNNOSOI.

COWAAK

PMTSP

U!&lt;OGAB
(PCWBI

DM

TD

T'U
IMLVD

l

WIKDZTSP.'

TS
OAWU

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FTSSGC)

RWNCTWDT
YGSSTBGC
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'I lhlnk you win when you are
nominated. 'rho real is luck.' - Benicia Del Taro, on winning a
Golden Globe.

••-·:-

Howardl.
Wrltesel

Additions, Garages,

Roofing - Home
Ma!ntenanci(Julters-Down
Spout

44087 Wlppl• Road

OFF! ,..

this

992-2772

&amp;91-5011

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

Olljl'llllae, old l'1ldlo

Call Chuck

304-882·2220

·-'

"""~~
High&amp; Dry

420 W. Main St.
'
Pomeroy1 OH 45769 • '
(acroaa from Pizza Hut) ·

281170 lllllh•n Road
Rl~no, Ohio ·
45771

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohw

740-949-2217

74();992-5232
l'ilma.

(7 40).992-1 ~il~l
Full service aufo cent~r

•..,.•. .AWR
·Cellular

Self-Storage

Slzea 5' x 10'
to 10'x 30'
' Houra
7:00 AM • 8:00 PM

Thesday, March 13, 200 I
Chances are in the year ahead
you'll finally shed the notion that
fortuitous things can happen for ·
others but not for you. You're the
one who everybody will be ending up envying.
PISCES· (Feb. 20-March 20)
It's time to let go of an intrinsic
desire' you've been sheltering
which: . in reality. you know its
possibilities for fulfillment are
long gone. Get on with your life
with something else. Tryin1 lo
patch up a broken romance? The
Astro-Oraph Matchmaker can
help you understand what to do lo
make the relationship work. Mail
$2, 7~ to Matchmaker, clo this
newspaper, P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hill Slallon, New York, NY

Marathon Service Center

'

:

.

I'' r I

8

I· I . I I .I I I

(

I

'Your .·
'Birthday.

I

l-800·272-6179

, Hlll't Self
'

I MONDAY

Call Us Firat Or We &amp;oth.Loiel

Ask FOr Mike Hindle

I 14 1 '15 1
I
1
e

"We Can Help"l!

·- Now Renflng
A~ JMINI-STORAGE
99H396
992·2272

I

n' t win it marked
D Wy N 1
~
South with the spade ·
"Have you ever noticed," the
ace. So, West should _ .
_ _ .
'
fellow mused, "that people may
~.follow us blindly? They may be
have switched to a dia- ·
mond. A heart trick
H UQN E C
wrong but we still- •.• -.them."
could wait, but a dia- l--r~....;..r:l6:......,1r.,l..;.....,.l--f G) Complete tho .chuckle quoted
mond loser might disby fllline In the miMing words
appear on. dummy's
you d...lcp fr- slop No.3 below.
hearts. (And, yes, East
PR1NT NUMBERED LETTERS IN 11 11 11 ,.
might have overtaken :;;;::~IH~E~S~E;S~Q:;UA~R~E;;S;;:;:;;;~I=;:
1:1~*~=~:::
with the spade king at UNSCIAM8LE .. BOVE LETIEIS
Irick one!)
.
10 GET ANSWU
·
. . . . • • _
Two players, Chris
SCUM LETS ANSWIU
Dixon and Marc
Smith, bid and played
Empire - Nylon - Mauve - Peruse - OUR MEANS
identically to make six
I'm always trying to live as extravagantly as my neigh- ·
clubs doubled. Neither
bors. The only ttouble is, we are all living beyond OUR
made the English
MEANS .
team, though.

c:!:====l .

SPECW. FINANCE DllPARTMENI'
Bankruptcy? C,edlt Problems?

sp~ce

WANTED

SARCASM DOES NOT
&amp;ECOME 't'OV, MA'AM

Mercury

for $1-00 ·
per month.

Middleport

WloiV DON'T 't'OU COME
AND WATCH VS ?

Pomeroy

t19:-1405

-A dvertise
.. in

155 N2nd

1·

AFTER SCiolOOL TODA'1'...

LINCOLN

~·

J&amp;L

0

.NOW!

Tire.Barn

F/li fltlmaftl

FREE ESTIMATES!

DoubleHu"Q
Replacement
Windows
Welded Frome &amp;
Sash0-101 United
Inches
51119.00 Installed

YES, MP:AM .. OUR &amp;A5E6ALL
TEAM IS PLA'&lt;ING ITS FIRST
6AME OF TilE SEMON RI61-IT

lnd

S un s et Home
Co 11 s t ru ct 1o 11
New Homes, Room

L POllAN------

I

•bla '""' •Tia. .llllllfllln
•lrlkiWIIII

We Can Maire Your
Dream A Realiryl
740· 742·3411

446-4995

away East's ace,
1411o4 .,, ClAY
returned to dummy by
Rearrange '""" al 1h•
trumping a spade, dislour Krambltd worda IN·
· d'
d law to form lour olmple wordo.
card e d h IS tamon
queen on the heart
A RMA uT
queen, and claimed. 1-..:..r-l...;.;...l,.:.:...:,l;..-;:.,1.;.1....12::--1
What inference did _ _ . _ . _ •
West miss? If East had :::=.:;:~~~=~-1
theaceandkingofl KURQI
spades or only the ace, 1--r~-~.--.,1;...3...,1--1
he would have won _ _ _ .
_ .
trick one. That he did- L-.L..-L""""L--'-...1

' IJA.S.H
IT

•l*&amp;H

Polo Buildings,
Siding, Pecks,
J(jtchens, Drywall &amp;
·
More

14411ir4 AYI. c.... .

month.

.

~IL.L!:t7
.

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

740-742-8015 or
1-877-353-7022

BLIND SPOT

$50 per

TI\0\ti-I"'WLt. f'

PEN:'!

youR

The CRAFTY.

space for

WIU..rou..! ~

IN

992-3203

Eagks

'l'€01'lL

.

t&gt;ESIC?

or

In this

1-\~,1\fJ..It&gt;

ON 'lOUR

Fret Eatlmatn

Advertise

p.,wu~t&gt;

ME 'I'OU
WP.1TING

25 yen expertance

MORE LOCAL SPORTS. YOUR LOCAL TEAMS.

II'\

l't.OI'l.€. P€'.~1-1 TO YOU,

taw
Defy
B10kbonu

Fronch

comtdiln
Jlmmy28 Open 1
brooch
32 Kill

What does it mean
if you open with six of
a suit?
it
Traditionally,
guarantees 12 tricks
and announces that
you are missing either ·
the ace or king of
trumps , Partner is
expected to raise with
either top trump. Yet
that bid has a very low
frequency. So, many
players treat the opening as a speculation,
hoping to buy a suitable dummy.
This deal occurred
during the English trials for this · year's
European Champi~
onship. South opened
six clubs. After East
doubled, West passed;
though there was a
case for running to six
diamonds
because
South might have had,
for example, 12 clubs.
West led the spade
queen. With no legitimate play for the contract, South set an
effective trap. When
East played a discouraging spade four,
South
smoothly
dropped the six, hiding
the two. Thinking partner was encouraging,
and without giving the
matler proper consideration, West contmued with another
spade.
·h
D ec Iarer won Wit
his ace, played a club

provll)
Lolt end

:~ed~=~i~~~:·:~ -=-,:~:~~~:~::~~,~s=-@~-\\~4\l-=~lA-::-. ---~~"E~~~~s-·-:o-

63

63.

iOU ~OULOT~I\ OOWI'\ f&gt;..
Bl\ f&gt;..NI)
00 '&lt;QUIZ.

"~ lfo\1'\E.O\~iE, ~ IZ.\SE::

"'

46

2·3 2, Robbie Hun 2 O.&lt;J 5, Brandon Sml1h 1o-o 2. Joey

THE BORN LOSER
rt-IOW 1-\U\~Tf.\\~:\rl~'T~ ~I 0\\C.E', oot-I'T YOU ~\Nl'..~ r00 r L()()(. u !(£, /'-. *1-':r HI~

Tree Service

Patloa, Sldewalkl.

EASTERN EAGLES
2001 SOUTHEAST DISTRICT
DIVISION IV CHAMPS

'' .

l-3M-675-7SZ4
1-300-150-9077
Resldenlill Commercial New Co~on
Se1oo Senke Jdltallotion
Spociallzial In Sheet Molal Dattwot-k
"Tnno" Solos &amp; Sorrice For
Gllllo, Muon, and Meip Countie~
Li&lt;enled and l...nd
WV 005176

QuaHty Drlvtwaya,

Hammond 0 0·0 o. Andy Holsinger 1 0·0 2, Travis
Klemor 7 1·1 15, Andrew Larg&amp; 4 0·0 9, Jake Davis 5
0.0 13, Josh Melshon 0 0·0 0. Totals 20 3-4 48.
Eastern (20·3) - Josh Kehl 0 1·2 1, Garrett Karr 2
4·4 8, Chris Lyons 4 0·0 9, Joe Brown 6 4-6 18, Alex '
Simpson 0 0·0 0, Brad Bowman 0 0-0 o, Jason Kimes
0 0-Q 0, Brent Buckley 0 0·0 0, Matt Simpson 3 2·5 81
Chad Nelson 9 3-4 21, Brandon Werry o 0-0 o, Nathan
Grubb 0 o-o 0, Jeremy Shanks 0 0·0 0. Totals 24 14-21

,FRANK &amp; EARNEST

750 East State Street

Portsmouth Clay (17·6)- Jimmy Harness 0 O·O o,

Subscribe today.
992-2156

'

Salee &amp; Service
204 Condor St
Pomeroy

Caleb Payne a 0.0 0, Nick Payne 0 0·0 0, Jeff Dudull o

Marauders
Tornadoes .

~

THII OUIII.JT\I Ul'l! CClWHNY'

TELL YORE AUNT LOWEEZ.Y -I SAYS TO SAIRY --THEN
.SAIRY SAYS TO ME-- SAYS l

.....,.~

DIPOYIU
PIRft

points. Andrew Large scored nine
points and grabbed five rebounds for
1000 St. Rt. 7 South
the Panthers.
Despite reaching the 20-win plateau
already this season, Caldwell believes
that his club still hasn't reached its full
potential yet.·
YOUNG'S
"If we had peaked, we wouldn't have
CARPENTER
let tings like that happen in the third
SERVICE
quarter (against Clay);' Caldwell said. "I
• Room Addhlono •
think that if we were peaking that
Romoctoung
· would never happen. Now, I .think the · •NIWO.~e
• Eloclrlco1 &amp;Plumbing
fourth quarter and the first quarter we
•
Roallng &amp; Guttora
played exceptionally well.
• Vlnrt Siding • Pointing
"Are we still looking for a game like
• Polio and Porch we had against Chesapeake or maybe a
Frae Estimates
V. C. YOUNG Ill
Trimble (in the regular season finale)?
992,6215
Yes, and I think we'll get that, I really
Pom.oy, Ohio •
do. Hopefully, it'll be the next game."
The next game comes against a
Symmes Valley S&lt;juad that was forced to
BISSELL
hold off a scrappy Manchester side 58BUILDERS INC.
55 Saturday. Justin Myers scored 26
Now HomH • VInyl
points for the Vikings and Drew Hunt
Sldlog • New Garoaa
added 21 in the win.
• Replace11ent
Manchester's Joey Darnell led all
Wlhdowa•Room
scorers with 27 points.
Addlllono • Roall11
The Eagles and Vikings share several
COMM!ICJAL and RESIDBITW.
common opponents, including SouthFR£E ESTIMATES
ern , South Gallia, Ironton St. Joe,
740-992-7599
Portsmouth East and Clay.
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)
Eastern went 6-0 against that competition, while Symmes Valley was 8-3
against the same slate of teams. The
Vikings split their season series with
Portsmouth East and Clay, were 2-1
against Southern and swept South Gallia and Ironton St. Joe.
Southutt Dlslrlcl Final
At Ohio Unlv•r•Hr Convocation Centtr
Ellttem 63, Porttmouth Clly 48

BARNEY

Sea Manning, Wayne or Jim
or a REAL DEAL on a new lawn traCtor,
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t J t I I J

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45 Notollbor or
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Before 6p.m.

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'

ARIES (March 21·April 19)
lt'110ad to be focused on a aoal,
bul don'!~ 10 ta11e1ed today that
you have no thouaht for those
who are helplna you. Be aure to
acknowledae their Input and
expren oome aratliude.
·
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
There's only one person you
ahould count on, and that ·Ia your·
self. If you upect otherR to do for

Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479
·'

you
you should being doing
for yourself, you're going to be
sorely disappointed today.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Harboring a grudge is always a
major mistake, and 1oday you
could prove 1hat to be true by
shunning the very person who can
help you out of a mess you've
gouen yourself in1o. It's your
loss.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
The only thing holding you back
from success today is continuing
to interpnt things darkly and
foreseeing trouble where none
e~i!ts. Tum thst mood around.
LI!O (July 23·Aua. 22) If your
focus today is narrowed on only
one objective, you mlaht not see
all the bulls-eye! you could hll
th1t are around you. Open your
mind to peripheral taraeta.
VIROO (Aua. 23·Sept, 22) Be
careful today not to divide your
attention to the point that you
befuddle you.r mind. It'• okay to
hove a lot on your plate, but dlaeot
one morsel al a time.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct, 23)
You're able to dlnlnauloh
between doln1 thlnaa the hard
way and doina thlnaa lhe euy
(

·way, yet today you may knowingly make everything tough on
yourself because of a closed mind.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Don't stew over not being able to
finalize a matter today that you
want to get out of the way. Concenlrate on what .you can do so

that you'll at least get something
done.
SAGITIARIU~ (Nov. 23-Dec . .
21) If you tum your'life in1o a military installotion where no one

around you is allowed to think for
him or herself. your harsh commands and rules will hamper creativi1y from contributors.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) You can marshal your nega·
tlve thought• 10 vanqui•h failures
and replace. them with positive
thouahiN to achieve victories.
1oduy. The mind i• a remarkable
mechanism that will perform
ell her.
AQUARIU~ !l11n. 20·fcb. 19)
The rea10n you may not be able
to Jellnto a poaltlon today to capllallze on your opportunities Is
bectuse you mlaht refuse to
believe they exl1t, even thouJh
lhcy're In front of your face.

-I,

-

�Monday, March 12, 2001
Monday, March 12, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page B4 • The Dally Sentinel

The Dally Sentlrial • Page BS

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

ALLEYOOP

NEA Crouword Puzzle
PHILLIP

ACROSS

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WHY DRIVE ANYWHERE ELS ?
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••

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• A. . . . ' 4

,,.

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laova Message
Alter 6pm

740-985-4180

Wetl
Pall
Pau

Bring In your repair work
we'll get you going for
spring

Rocky R. Hupp. Jlgcnt

Box 189
M1ddleport. Oh1o ~5 760
Local 843·5284
Medicare Supplement; Life i.nsurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; e:lllege,
Retirement,
Emergency Funds; Mortgage;
Major Medical • Nursing Home

Every Spring Tune-Up
get a FREE Blade Sharpening.

New equipment tmlvlng d•IIY

lftl

,

. .

PANCAKE SUPPER
Racine United Methodist
Church 4-7 pm
Thurs. March 15

...

,__....

....

"I• he •llowecl • piM oll.,..nhy
lor • pirldng tlcllll?"

Eagles
from Page Bl
thers with 13 points in the middle
two periods.
Eastern rose to the occasion in the
fourth quarter as junior Garrett Karr
scored eight points and Nelson added
six to put the game away. The Eagles
outscored Clay 20-9 in the period.
Eas(ern took the air out of the ball in
the latter stages of the fourth, working
their delay game to near perfection and
forcing Clay to foul in an attempt to
get back into the game.
"I think one of the most. important
keys to the game was that ,we didn't
.come out scared tonight," said head
coach Howie Caldwell. "I thought we
came out very; very nervous· against
Portsmouth East. Tonight, we didn't do

that. We came out with the tempo that
we had played in earlier games.
"In the third quarter, I've got to be
honest with you, I don't know what
happened," Caldwell said. "We weren't
very focused. But then in the fourth
quarter, hey, we got after it again. For
rwo weeks, we worked exclusively on
making people go man-to-man against
so we could run our delay game, and I
thought it worked very well, with the
exception of one turnover."

In addition to Nelson's big night, fellow senior Joe Brown contributed 16
points and eight rebounds, along with
three steals, two blocked shots and two
assists. Brown said the win was especially sweet for the club.
"A lot of hard work has paid off,
finally;• he said. "We're going to take it
to the next level and play in the Sweet
16., I've seen a lot teams from around
here go before, and now it's our turn."
Lyons finished with nine points and
Karr and Matt Simpson had eight
points each. Ka rr had five rebounds,
three assists and three steals. Simpson
had six rebounds.
Kiemor led Clay with IS points and
nine rebounds. Jake Qavis had 13

P.

Clay

Eastem

8

15

16

17 16 10

9

20

All Makts 'lhlctor &amp;

992-2975

Equipment Parts
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Phone (740)5'93-ti671
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3-poln1 goals- Clay 510a•ls 3, HuH, Largo), Eas1em 1 (LyonS). Rebounds- Clay 30 (Kielmar 9), Eastem 32 (Brown 8). Assists-:- Clay 1, Eastern 9 (Karr 3).
Steals - Clay 3, Eastern 6 {Karr 3, Brown 3).
Turnovers- Clay 18, Eastern 4.

• Buckat Truck

CONCRETE
CONNECTION

(Factory Outlet)
All vertical blind• are
made lo order al onr
location
UPTO 70% OFF ·
• Vertieala • Wood
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Squondero

Aportmont

dweller,

11 "Famoua• 31 Solfl Dr1in
cookloAlaq
..37 Hotklly
12 Daunt.
tulllx
18 Dlkolt
35 Nearly
lndiln
40 Soci'IIH
21 Mullllt.
41 Al'lb

olton

DOWN
1 Vagrant
2 - - ermo
{angry)

3 ~loorfng

.22 U"- aomo

pltcl
Nolllgon
4 1tNIO chall
movie
champion
33 Authority
Mlkholl 34 Breathing
5 Ear
org1na
comb.
35 Febrlc UHd
orm)

voaet

clothing

42 T111tch
polm

{IIWI)

45 Forarm

23 Scullle
24 P11111
25

l

C3

~ormor't

Looked at
47 Aldo (obbr.)
48

41 Hard

6 Llttat
food llah
7 l.o., In lull
27 Till'
drop
35 Serve aoup 8 Un~ a! light 29 Pile ot
9 Opposite ol · com37 "ThoFalcon"
WSW
buatlbilo
38

Breathes
out

10 Wilking
IIICk

30

r.-~~~~-

Sn•"-•

bono

place?
26 Howalltn

u • theatar

drinker

50 "Brooklyn• :
end

52

Egyptian
goddoiS

Uncloa

{pool.)

53 Clllttr

r~~T.r~~

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lule Campoe

C.itbrily Cipher cryplogramo oro Cf&amp;lled lrom quota11ona bV fomout
pooplo, paot ond proNn1. Eoch - r In 1hl cipher 111n&lt;11 for 1n0111tr.

Today'&amp; clue: R equ1ls C ·

'T

RMLAIB'D

SO HOC

VOATGHO

ZWNNOSOI.

COWAAK

PMTSP

U!&lt;OGAB
(PCWBI

DM

TD

T'U
IMLVD

l

WIKDZTSP.'

TS
OAWU

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FTSSGC)

RWNCTWDT
YGSSTBGC
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'I lhlnk you win when you are
nominated. 'rho real is luck.' - Benicia Del Taro, on winning a
Golden Globe.

••-·:-

Howardl.
Wrltesel

Additions, Garages,

Roofing - Home
Ma!ntenanci(Julters-Down
Spout

44087 Wlppl• Road

OFF! ,..

this

992-2772

&amp;91-5011

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

Olljl'llllae, old l'1ldlo

Call Chuck

304-882·2220

·-'

"""~~
High&amp; Dry

420 W. Main St.
'
Pomeroy1 OH 45769 • '
(acroaa from Pizza Hut) ·

281170 lllllh•n Road
Rl~no, Ohio ·
45771

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohw

740-949-2217

74();992-5232
l'ilma.

(7 40).992-1 ~il~l
Full service aufo cent~r

•..,.•. .AWR
·Cellular

Self-Storage

Slzea 5' x 10'
to 10'x 30'
' Houra
7:00 AM • 8:00 PM

Thesday, March 13, 200 I
Chances are in the year ahead
you'll finally shed the notion that
fortuitous things can happen for ·
others but not for you. You're the
one who everybody will be ending up envying.
PISCES· (Feb. 20-March 20)
It's time to let go of an intrinsic
desire' you've been sheltering
which: . in reality. you know its
possibilities for fulfillment are
long gone. Get on with your life
with something else. Tryin1 lo
patch up a broken romance? The
Astro-Oraph Matchmaker can
help you understand what to do lo
make the relationship work. Mail
$2, 7~ to Matchmaker, clo this
newspaper, P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hill Slallon, New York, NY

Marathon Service Center

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'Your .·
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I 14 1 '15 1
I
1
e

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·- Now Renflng
A~ JMINI-STORAGE
99H396
992·2272

I

n' t win it marked
D Wy N 1
~
South with the spade ·
"Have you ever noticed," the
ace. So, West should _ .
_ _ .
'
fellow mused, "that people may
~.follow us blindly? They may be
have switched to a dia- ·
mond. A heart trick
H UQN E C
wrong but we still- •.• -.them."
could wait, but a dia- l--r~....;..r:l6:......,1r.,l..;.....,.l--f G) Complete tho .chuckle quoted
mond loser might disby fllline In the miMing words
appear on. dummy's
you d...lcp fr- slop No.3 below.
hearts. (And, yes, East
PR1NT NUMBERED LETTERS IN 11 11 11 ,.
might have overtaken :;;;::~IH~E~S~E;S~Q:;UA~R~E;;S;;:;:;;;~I=;:
1:1~*~=~:::
with the spade king at UNSCIAM8LE .. BOVE LETIEIS
Irick one!)
.
10 GET ANSWU
·
. . . . • • _
Two players, Chris
SCUM LETS ANSWIU
Dixon and Marc
Smith, bid and played
Empire - Nylon - Mauve - Peruse - OUR MEANS
identically to make six
I'm always trying to live as extravagantly as my neigh- ·
clubs doubled. Neither
bors. The only ttouble is, we are all living beyond OUR
made the English
MEANS .
team, though.

c:!:====l .

SPECW. FINANCE DllPARTMENI'
Bankruptcy? C,edlt Problems?

sp~ce

WANTED

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for $1-00 ·
per month.

Middleport

WloiV DON'T 't'OU COME
AND WATCH VS ?

Pomeroy

t19:-1405

-A dvertise
.. in

155 N2nd

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AFTER SCiolOOL TODA'1'...

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Replacement
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YES, MP:AM .. OUR &amp;A5E6ALL
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6AME OF TilE SEMON RI61-IT

lnd

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away East's ace,
1411o4 .,, ClAY
returned to dummy by
Rearrange '""" al 1h•
trumping a spade, dislour Krambltd worda IN·
· d'
d law to form lour olmple wordo.
card e d h IS tamon
queen on the heart
A RMA uT
queen, and claimed. 1-..:..r-l...;.;...l,.:.:...:,l;..-;:.,1.;.1....12::--1
What inference did _ _ . _ . _ •
West miss? If East had :::=.:;:~~~=~-1
theaceandkingofl KURQI
spades or only the ace, 1--r~-~.--.,1;...3...,1--1
he would have won _ _ _ .
_ .
trick one. That he did- L-.L..-L""""L--'-...1

' IJA.S.H
IT

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Polo Buildings,
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992-3203

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taw
Defy
B10kbonu

Fronch

comtdiln
Jlmmy28 Open 1
brooch
32 Kill

What does it mean
if you open with six of
a suit?
it
Traditionally,
guarantees 12 tricks
and announces that
you are missing either ·
the ace or king of
trumps , Partner is
expected to raise with
either top trump. Yet
that bid has a very low
frequency. So, many
players treat the opening as a speculation,
hoping to buy a suitable dummy.
This deal occurred
during the English trials for this · year's
European Champi~
onship. South opened
six clubs. After East
doubled, West passed;
though there was a
case for running to six
diamonds
because
South might have had,
for example, 12 clubs.
West led the spade
queen. With no legitimate play for the contract, South set an
effective trap. When
East played a discouraging spade four,
South
smoothly
dropped the six, hiding
the two. Thinking partner was encouraging,
and without giving the
matler proper consideration, West contmued with another
spade.
·h
D ec Iarer won Wit
his ace, played a club

provll)
Lolt end

:~ed~=~i~~~:·:~ -=-,:~:~~~:~::~~,~s=-@~-\\~4\l-=~lA-::-. ---~~"E~~~~s-·-:o-

63

63.

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QuaHty Drlvtwaya,

Hammond 0 0·0 o. Andy Holsinger 1 0·0 2, Travis
Klemor 7 1·1 15, Andrew Larg&amp; 4 0·0 9, Jake Davis 5
0.0 13, Josh Melshon 0 0·0 0. Totals 20 3-4 48.
Eastern (20·3) - Josh Kehl 0 1·2 1, Garrett Karr 2
4·4 8, Chris Lyons 4 0·0 9, Joe Brown 6 4-6 18, Alex '
Simpson 0 0·0 0, Brad Bowman 0 0-0 o, Jason Kimes
0 0-Q 0, Brent Buckley 0 0·0 0, Matt Simpson 3 2·5 81
Chad Nelson 9 3-4 21, Brandon Werry o 0-0 o, Nathan
Grubb 0 o-o 0, Jeremy Shanks 0 0·0 0. Totals 24 14-21

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Portsmouth Clay (17·6)- Jimmy Harness 0 O·O o,

Subscribe today.
992-2156

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204 Condor St
Pomeroy

Caleb Payne a 0.0 0, Nick Payne 0 0·0 0, Jeff Dudull o

Marauders
Tornadoes .

~

THII OUIII.JT\I Ul'l! CClWHNY'

TELL YORE AUNT LOWEEZ.Y -I SAYS TO SAIRY --THEN
.SAIRY SAYS TO ME-- SAYS l

.....,.~

DIPOYIU
PIRft

points. Andrew Large scored nine
points and grabbed five rebounds for
1000 St. Rt. 7 South
the Panthers.
Despite reaching the 20-win plateau
already this season, Caldwell believes
that his club still hasn't reached its full
potential yet.·
YOUNG'S
"If we had peaked, we wouldn't have
CARPENTER
let tings like that happen in the third
SERVICE
quarter (against Clay);' Caldwell said. "I
• Room Addhlono •
think that if we were peaking that
Romoctoung
· would never happen. Now, I .think the · •NIWO.~e
• Eloclrlco1 &amp;Plumbing
fourth quarter and the first quarter we
•
Roallng &amp; Guttora
played exceptionally well.
• Vlnrt Siding • Pointing
"Are we still looking for a game like
• Polio and Porch we had against Chesapeake or maybe a
Frae Estimates
V. C. YOUNG Ill
Trimble (in the regular season finale)?
992,6215
Yes, and I think we'll get that, I really
Pom.oy, Ohio •
do. Hopefully, it'll be the next game."
The next game comes against a
Symmes Valley S&lt;juad that was forced to
BISSELL
hold off a scrappy Manchester side 58BUILDERS INC.
55 Saturday. Justin Myers scored 26
Now HomH • VInyl
points for the Vikings and Drew Hunt
Sldlog • New Garoaa
added 21 in the win.
• Replace11ent
Manchester's Joey Darnell led all
Wlhdowa•Room
scorers with 27 points.
Addlllono • Roall11
The Eagles and Vikings share several
COMM!ICJAL and RESIDBITW.
common opponents, including SouthFR£E ESTIMATES
ern , South Gallia, Ironton St. Joe,
740-992-7599
Portsmouth East and Clay.
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)
Eastern went 6-0 against that competition, while Symmes Valley was 8-3
against the same slate of teams. The
Vikings split their season series with
Portsmouth East and Clay, were 2-1
against Southern and swept South Gallia and Ironton St. Joe.
Southutt Dlslrlcl Final
At Ohio Unlv•r•Hr Convocation Centtr
Ellttem 63, Porttmouth Clly 48

BARNEY

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'

ARIES (March 21·April 19)
lt'110ad to be focused on a aoal,
bul don'!~ 10 ta11e1ed today that
you have no thouaht for those
who are helplna you. Be aure to
acknowledae their Input and
expren oome aratliude.
·
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
There's only one person you
ahould count on, and that ·Ia your·
self. If you upect otherR to do for

Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479
·'

you
you should being doing
for yourself, you're going to be
sorely disappointed today.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Harboring a grudge is always a
major mistake, and 1oday you
could prove 1hat to be true by
shunning the very person who can
help you out of a mess you've
gouen yourself in1o. It's your
loss.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
The only thing holding you back
from success today is continuing
to interpnt things darkly and
foreseeing trouble where none
e~i!ts. Tum thst mood around.
LI!O (July 23·Aua. 22) If your
focus today is narrowed on only
one objective, you mlaht not see
all the bulls-eye! you could hll
th1t are around you. Open your
mind to peripheral taraeta.
VIROO (Aua. 23·Sept, 22) Be
careful today not to divide your
attention to the point that you
befuddle you.r mind. It'• okay to
hove a lot on your plate, but dlaeot
one morsel al a time.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct, 23)
You're able to dlnlnauloh
between doln1 thlnaa the hard
way and doina thlnaa lhe euy
(

·way, yet today you may knowingly make everything tough on
yourself because of a closed mind.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Don't stew over not being able to
finalize a matter today that you
want to get out of the way. Concenlrate on what .you can do so

that you'll at least get something
done.
SAGITIARIU~ (Nov. 23-Dec . .
21) If you tum your'life in1o a military installotion where no one

around you is allowed to think for
him or herself. your harsh commands and rules will hamper creativi1y from contributors.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) You can marshal your nega·
tlve thought• 10 vanqui•h failures
and replace. them with positive
thouahiN to achieve victories.
1oduy. The mind i• a remarkable
mechanism that will perform
ell her.
AQUARIU~ !l11n. 20·fcb. 19)
The rea10n you may not be able
to Jellnto a poaltlon today to capllallze on your opportunities Is
bectuse you mlaht refuse to
believe they exl1t, even thouJh
lhcy're In front of your face.

-I,

-

�Ffflt and second rounds
San Diego• Marcl\15 &amp; 17

Monday, March 12, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page Be • The Dally Sentinel

NCAA men's basketball championshin
Flrst ilhd second rounds
Regionals and semifinals
Anowhud Pond • Anaheim
March 22 &amp; 24

Rio

o_,o,

ReglonaJs andsemlfln.,.
N.C.• March 15&amp; 17
Flrlt Union City • Philadelphia
March 22 &amp; 24
.-----

froln Pip 81

Ienger and Randar Luts
scored 10 points for the Redmen, who now face No. 7
seed Northwestern of Iowa
(27-6) in one of tonight's
semifinals.
The other semifinal features
No. 9 Cornerstone (30-8)
against No. 12 MidAmerica
Nazarene (28-8).
Flrst and second rou!Kls
First and second rounds
Uniondale, N.Y. • March 15 &amp; 17
Rio Grande opened the
Baloe, Idaho • March 15 &amp; 17
game with a 7-0 run and continued the onslaught 'for the
remainder of the half, which
ended with the Redmen
holding a commanding 42-18
lead.
Marian (25-4) rallied in th
second half and cut the deficit
to just nine p'oints with four
minutes left, but Rio Grande
0 -{~-l{_!~~uc_ky_(~2:9) _)
made
good at the foul ~ne to
J !5 Holy Cros~]
put the game away and lock
up the 1 sc hool's first-ever
March 31 a. Aprll2
. Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome
national tournament semifinal
CBS
Minneapolis, Minn.
berth .
The Redmen shot 53 .7
[(iJ'Mi;;t;~;~ Si:-iil~ . percent from the field and hit
·
------ -- -- - ' -{" IAl'b___ -St (-22-:Bi i 19-of-21 free throws, while
c---------)
"' • ama
ho)&lt;fi:ng Marian to 41 percent
from the field.
A1dditionally, the
Rio
Granpe bench played a key
-c--------,!
($1_~~:~-'
~
~-J role outscoring the Marian
-------- . ............ . ...... ! @· G
(24-6) l
subs; 36- 10. The Redmen's
[".. --------------------------"}
_
· ~ onzaga
[
depth also took its toll on
----------·-- ----- - ~-~!~~~~~-Marian defensively.
"W,e knew they were only
going
to play about eight
First
and
second
rouncs
First and second rounds
Mamphla, Tenn • March 16 &amp; 18
Dayton, Ohio • March 16 &amp; 18
kids, and we thought we
could wear them down a little
. " Thomas sa1'd. "'T'
we were
b1t,
f Notre·Dame (19-t l - c
I
obviously good defensively
Xavier ' 21 -7)
----'}
·
throughout the first half and
[_~~~~1) .·
---- -----went on an unbelievable run
in the last four minutes and
they'te just de~d:'
[ Wakefores1(19-10)f}
.
.
Ballenger led the Redmen
(23-7)
Jj._ _
f{___ - ________}}- .
with eight rebounds as Rio
Grande outrebounded Marian, 47-26. Jerry Barlow had
Reglonals and semifinals
Princeton (t6-10)
seven rebounds and Joe MarRegional&amp; and semifinals
Georgia Dome • A~anla
Alamodilme • San Antonio
tin pulled down five.
Flrst anc seoond rounds
Flrst and second rounds
March23&amp;25
March 23 &amp; 25
New
Orleans
•
March
16
&amp;
18
Kaneu City, Mo. • March 16 &amp; 18
Northwestern,
Rio
Grande's
semifinal
opponent,
'Northwestern State (18-12)end Winthrop (18-12) wiH play Tuesday to detennine the 15 seed

East

West

.C j

______ _[ _- - -

- ------,,_

c~~-:__~~-J~:~~R

-

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Midwes·t

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defeated upstart Alberts~n;
88-79, ending Albertson's
school record 12-gaine winning streak.
·
Brandon Woudstra led
Northwestern with 29 points,
Ben Gerleman had 15 points
and Brandon Jacobson added
12.
Mike Hornik led AlbertSon
(26- 11) with 20 points and
Dave Webb had 15.
Cornerstone upset No. t
seed and defending national
champion Embry-Riddle 87"
80 ' to reach tonight's semifi"
nals. Cornerstone's Mark
Zichterman led all scorers
.
with 22 points.
Ryan Rothrock and Harold
Pierson led Embry-Riddle
(32-4) with 18 points each. '
No. 12 seed MidAmerica
Nazarene earned its slot in
the semifinals J:&gt;y defeating
No. 4 seed Oregon Tech, 8169. Dan Fleming netted a
game-high 37 poims to pace
MidAmerica to the stunning
win.
LaMont Swinson led Ore~
gon Tech (32-5) with 25
points.
With
the
tournament
favorites eliminated from
contention, Thomas believes
it's anyone's championship t~
win, but likes his club's
chances.
"It's four · very simila~
teams," he said of the final
four clubs. "And it's going tq
be real interesting to see ho\V
it comes out. I don't know if
we can win it, but I do know
one thing, if somebody's
going to beat us, they're going
to have to bring their A-game
to do it."
Thomas also said he
believes his club's success is a
testament to the ovenll quali-,
ty of play in the American_
Mideast Conference.
"We've had some c~aches
nationwide awaken to the fact
· that the AMC is probably the
best conference in the country,"
Thomas said.
·

LETS GO EASTERN EAGLES!

ALL THE WAY TO STATE!
Meigs County TB annual report, AS
Redmen fall in NAIA tourney, 81

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.-

MIDDLEPORT

lannarelli
breaks tie
over fee hike

trash

rates·

Mayor votes for
waterI sewer

BY TIIIIY M. LIAcll
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

RACINE - An on:linance
zaising rates for garb:lge collec-

R:lcine Village Council's regular meeting.
Council adopted an ordinance that will rai1e the rates
for
collection and made

muse

the rate incttase rettoQCtive to

March 1 for collection purposes. .

According to the ordinance,
residential rates within the vii• limits will noW be 110.50
per month and Sl 1.50 per·
IJlOilth lOr those outlide the
~W.

.

pa • - il ,!inDt"llilctW

55_fml~ l&gt;ag~ fW each

linlit
' 011lin- .
--, will. !:.

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ue.

world' and The New York Times ' ·
called us ~ ... some .of the best
public golf on earth."
Golf Magazine listed THE .
SENA'i'OR course at our new Capitol
Hill location among its top new
courses in the. country and THE
LEGISLATOR course in the top 25
newcbme_rs. And wait until you
see THE JUDGE! ·
So, we hope you'U'understand
when, like aU good golfers, we
like to brag about OUl: scores.
'
Call today to book your
golf
andJ1otel package and get ready
for ldhe of the best' golf trips in
th~ ,world.
·

We love it when people say
nice ~hings about ~·
Golf Digest recently listed
Alabama's Robert Trent Jones Golf
Trail among the top 50 golf
destinations in the world!
And in its current Places to
Play ratings, Golf Digest gave
most of the Trail's courses
4 stars-and some even got 4';,..
Not bad when you consider that
5 stars only go to those once-ina-lifetime courses. And aU of the
Trail's courses got top honors for
service.
Frequent Flyer Magazine listed
Us among its top 10 trips in the

n

...
Go l

the
who

I

·e r s

aren't

Conaol Curbside Service and
to recycle as much maleml as
they can.
Council agrml that inczcas...
ing the :IJ!lC&gt;unt of material
placed out for recycling will
help cut down the cost of the

to

'

mDcuiar- and-/ Refuse is·to be placed at the
turb in Suitable· containers fOr
easy JoQding and to prevent
~and aD bap,1 must be
the lQ/33 gallon size or equivalent
Village residents Carolyn
P&lt;iweJ1 alid Marilyn Taylor met
With .coundJ to report that
they ~ noticed a large
amount of liaer on sidewalks
and in ditches and that they
wouid like to undertake an
"Adopt a Street" project that
would help eradiate litter
thloiJ&amp;hout the village'.
Council approved the pro-

'

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br -a g

about their
scores.

M ·an -1111illo AS
.
'

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HAMPTON COVE

SILVER LAKES

9XMDOR VALLEY

HN•tnll/e

Annlst4rt/Gdltln&amp;

Bir"'i~m

54 HOLES

38 HOLES

!A HOLES

GRAND NATIONAL

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38 MOU~e

,

HIGHLAND 0AKB

MAGNOLIA GROVE

,-

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84 HOLI8 i

Itt IRwl J. REED

ty is a local organization which col. SEN11NEL N~ STAFF
. '
lects funds fo~ a number oflocal charPOMEROY - Th'ti; United Fund ities and public service agencies. ·
The funds are collected primarily
for Me,ig'l C011nty to~ues to collect
contributions for its ~1 campaign, through payroll deductions, but onebut remairu-$7,000 ~. fiom meet- time contributions are also important
ing iu goal.
~- ~
.
to reaching the campaign goal, Doo-Tom Pooley said ~rganization's ley said.
.
lil:asurer, $23,000 has
collected · Among the local agencies receiving
through this year's ca.p.paign. .The United Fund assistance are local boy
fund rais;ing . ~ has 1 been set at scout troopS, God's Neighborhood
130,000. . " ·
.~ . ,
, }'sq.a~ for Teens, Serenity House and
_The Urii~~ Fj1n~ for fi!ei~.~t,JJ:i-;1~'~~;-·M.eigs Homeless Men's Shelt~r.

&amp;en

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Sentinel
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- 12 1111111I

Sports
Wp

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1.800.949.4444

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Lotteries
OHIO
Pidl3: 4-9-0; Pidl4: ()()9.5

Bldz,.e 5:6-17-19-35-37

WVA.

. Dlitt 3: 1-2-2 Dlitt 4: e 468

~----------------~------------------:----' '·
•

· the Meigs County Council on Aging,
the Meigs County Humane Society
and the Community Assault Prevention program.
D~ley said the United Fund u not
aflihated with other fund raising org;anizations, and that all contributioru
remain in the local community.
"It's important that peopk understand that their money stays right hen:
in our community." Dooley said.
"While some of the organizations
which receive funds are based in com-

munities ouiSide of Meigs County, all
of the agencies funded through the
United fund provide services directly
to our rte!gbbOrs."
Administntive casu for the UFMC ·
are extremely low, compared to many
other charitable causes, Dooley said.
Less than 1 percent of the funds collected go toward the operation of the
fund, and goes primarily for postage
and other mailing expenses. ·
M1211 -

Fill tj, Al

,_,

Editorials
Obituaries

,

I

·;·short of

Comics

Alabama'a Robert Trent Joltel GoU 'frall378 .holes of world-class golf on eight sites
I

/ &lt;.••

' •,

calendar
Classifteds

PNmill•

M HOLII

38 HOLEI

CAI"ITOL HILL

Molli/e

',I

·-,Gets-dollatlon

54 HOLES

Ro..»ERT ThEN .. _.
CAMB~IAN RIDGE

Carolyn Roush and lie~ grandson, Tanner Roush, take time to enJoY Monday's warm weather by searching-for fi'hing worms In Roush's front yard In Syracuse. Yesterday's warm
temperatures a'ld SIQIY weather allowed mal)y area residents to get outside and get a
~te of spnng be~~ ~~s ~~cl&lt;!l'Y.. on ~arct~ .~~ qony M. Leach photo).. _ ,. ,..,..

.

ALABAMA'S

GoLF

l:uxlfiii fees.

Cunmtly the village is paying $34 a ton for Iand6ll fees to
dispcN of Jdilse. The cost doa
not include labor, fud and

only ones
love

"'

·In arriving at the 1:11e, council advised that resideniS must
continue ·to use the Litter

village'~

. Public Affairs, met with council memben to discuss questions about the increases, and
to reiterate the BPA's reason•
ing for the proposed increases.
The proposed increases are
the result of a nte study conBY IRwl J. REED
ducted by the vi1bgc 's engiSENTINEL NEWS STAFF
neers, Floyd Browne AssociMIDDLEPORT - Two ates, which was prepared as a
weeks after tabling action on part of the village's upcoming
an ordinance increasing water sewer impmftment project.
and sewer rates, Middleport
Duffield .aid the proposed l
Village Council called on percent increase in water rates
Mayor Sandy Iannarelli to and 29 pen:ent bike in sewer
break a tie vote on the issue at rates will be across-the-board
Monday · evening's regular increases at each 4 percent r:~te
meeting.
increment, and will help t\le
lannarelli voted in favor of vilbgc offiet debt incurred by
the increases, breaking a 3--3 i~ ~Ap~~;Qming sew~:r improvetie, with council memben ment projett, as well as
Sieph~n H'/uchin_s •.fk,~ ~1- increasing costs ill,opention.
\ · er and Bob Rob~n vpling
ViDage public works cus-in favor of the increases, kd tomers are also paying for debt
membeJ:S Cathy Scott, Rae retirement for two projects,
Gwiazdowsky · and Roger said Clerk Bry.m Swann Manley voting against
the 1967 purchase of the sysThe new rates will go into tem by the village fiom a prieffect on May L
vate company, and a 1983
Council tabled a final read- improvement project for
ing on the ordinance at its which funding was acquired,
Feb. 26 meeting, after ques-- but work was never complettions arose over how incre- ed.
mental price increases and
"We've had it easy all these
annual automatic increases years," Iannarelli said, in castwould go into effect and how ing the tie-breaking vote
they would affect customers' increasing rates. "This has to
bills.
be done in order to p~ for
Myron Duffield, president
of the Middleport Board of
M a •-••, ,.u

rncrease

tion was approved during

I.Jt-'IIIIIO'Cip' ,' ldJat;-.tbe

••

•

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 51, Number 164

viibp li'mits.

•

entine

Melp County's

•

March 1:s. 2001

House lawmakers debate
new school-funding plan
BY AIIDIIEw

We'll HIIIIM

fiom the state's 45 most academically successful
districts to arrive at a proposal to spend $5,409
COLUMBUs- House lawmakers proposed per PuPil in fiscal year 2002 and $5,560 in fiscal
a school-funding plan Mon~ that $bowed year 2003. That's far above spending proposals by
· prontise of ending 11 yean_oflitig;ation OYer the Tali « che Senate.
way Ohio funds schoob but also n:quires the
Under current law, the state will provide
state to squeeZe an extra $2.2 billion out of an $4,414 per pupil in &amp;cal }":ar 2002 and $4,538
already tight two---year budget.
in fiscal year 2003.
1be state would spend $12.4 billion on eduIf emcted, the plan could mean the end of
cation over two years, includiilg substantial levy campaigns by schools struggling ro meet
incre'ases in per-pupil funding and special educa- b.uic funding levels, said Rep. Jon Petenon, a
tion, under the plan announced by House Delaw.m: Republican, one of the top GOP lawSpeaker Larry Householder, a Glenford Repub- makm invollled in the plan.
lican.
"That\ what makes this so bold," ~tenon
The plan spends·almost $1 billion more annu- said. "~ lhink this plan puts in place a plan
ally than competing plans by the Sena~ and when: loaldiotii.:IJ won't line to go to the baiGov. Bob Taft.
Mnl? 2111
AI
The plan took the me~ per-pupil spending
f&gt;l' STATEHOUSE CORRESI'ONOENT

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