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                  <text>Page B IS • Tt1e Dally Sentinel

Tuetdey, Merth 13, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

SOAR ·EASTERN EAGLES!
ALL THE WAY TO STATE!

Newspaper: Foreign athletes signed to agents
DAYTON (AP) - Sports agents
2nd middlemen 2re'funneling foreign
bosketball playen to Americm high
schools md. colleges, sometimes in
violation of regulations designed to
protec~ 21tl2teur 2thletics, ·~cording
to the Dayton D:Uiy News.
In a story published Sundoy, the
. newspaper soid its year-long ex•mination found:
Several ployen currently on
U.S. college te2ms played professionally overse•s before coming to the
United Stotes. Generally, former pro
pl•yen •re not eligible to ploy in high
school or college.
-As many 25 seven playen signed
contracts with M•arten· van Gent, a
sports age~t hosed in Estonia, before
completing high school in the United States. Though college athletic
rules prohibit agent contracts, several
of those players went on to college
tcanu.
Several European players
acknowledged gradu2ting from high
school in their native countries

before pbying bosk:etbill at U.S. high
schools.
"I would say th2t thell:'s a very,
very serious concern that needs to be
addressed, and . it needs to be
addfl:ssed now," soid Bob !Unaby,
executive director of the federation
representing high school 2thletic
•ssoci2tions in all 50 states.
Ardo Armpalu, who played 2t Wellnon High School 2nd was • fll:Shman
21 Manhill Univenity this seoson,
soid he uw the contracts but insisted
he didn't sign. Ask:ed if von Gent paid
for his trip to the United Stores, he
soid: "I don't know exacdy what he
did. M2ybe he paid for me. I'm not
.

.

sure.

According to page 77 of the
NCAA manual, playen are prohibited from accepting "transporution or
other benefits fiom any penon who
represents any individual in the marketing of his or her athletic ability."
The 6-foot-10 Armpalu, also was
recruited by Ohio State, X2vier 2nd
the University of Dayton.

Marshall co2ch Greg White did not
immediately return a telephon&lt; mess•ge Mondoy.
Jesper ·Parve, who 2ttended Logan
(WVa.) High School mer leaving
Estonia, denied k:nowing •nything
about • contract with vm Gent. But
when shown a copy of a contract his
teamltl2te signed, he said&gt; "That kind
of contract. Yes, I seen one."
Asked who p2id for his pbne ticket to the United S12res, he said,
"What did Ardo say?"
Parve, who played at Logan High
School, also •clrnowledged gnduating from high school in Estonia
before coming to the United Stores.
Asked why he k:ept going to high
school in Logan after completing
school in Estonia, he soid, "I think in
the states you have 13 years of
school. ... That's what they (Logan
school officials) told me."
Pressed about the issue, he changed
his story.
"They (school officials) told me
there is some kind of problem with

Reds worried about Larkin's injury
SARASOTA, Aa. (AP) ·- With less than
three weelts left until opening doy, Cincinnati
Reds manager Bob Boone is worried that
shortstop Barry Larkin may not !lave enough
time to get ready because he is sidelined with
a strained groin muscle.
Larkin is expected to miss at least a week's
worth of exhibition games. For now, that will
delay Boone's planned experiment with trying Larkin out 2s the teom's leadoff hitter. In
the interim, Boone plans to try using Pokey
Reese or Alex Ochoa in the leadoff spot.
Larkin ployed Thursday, Fridoy and Saturday after missing six days with a groin injury.
On Saturdoy, he reaggravated the strained
right groin muscle while sliding during a
split-sqwd gome against Tampa Bay.
"He had a little bit ·of a muscle twinge,"
Reds team doctor Timothy Kremchek said.
The Reds g•ve Larkin a magnetic reso-

Redmen
laomPip81
and seven rebounds in the
tournament entering last
night's game, went on a tear
in the first half, scoring 14 ·
points and h2uling in five
rebounds as the Redmen
struggled to find the right
defensive combination to stop
him.
Woudstra went to the
bench with his second personal at the 9:40 muir of the
first half with Northwestern
leading 29-25. At the time, he
&gt;vas the Red Raiders leading
scorer with seven points.
Even withWoudstra on the
bench, Northwestern didn't
miss a beat, and outscored
Rio Grande 30-17 in his
absence, which bsted 9:20.
He returned to the gome in
the final minute of the first
naif and hit the final basket of
the first 20 minutes to give
the Red Raiders a 59-42
cushion heading to the locker
room.
Rio Grande senior Nathan
Copas, whose performance in
this national tournament certainly · (ock:ed up his spot on
the Division II AU-American
first team, continued his solid
work: with 15 points to le2d
the Redmen in the first half.
Jerry B2dow had six points,
four of which came on offensive putback:s, and Rimdar
Luts added five paints for Rio
Grande.
Center Joe Delmey had
just four points and three
rebounds in the opeoing period.
The Redmen
(29-9)
opened the second h21f with a
flurry on offense •nd cut the
Red Raiden le2d to 65-54
with 17:20 to 'play in the
game. However, Northwestern responded with a. 16-6
run to expand its leod to 8160 \vith 12:30 left in, the
gome~ That outbunt pur the
game out of reach for Rio
Grande as the Redmen played
c2tch-up for the remainder of
the night.
The Red Raide'-s continued their onslaught from - 3point range in the second
half, hitting 6-of-10 shots to
finish
11-for-20 overall.
Northwestern shot 60,6 percent for the gorqe, hitting 17of-28 shots from the field in
the second half.

nance imaging scan to ex.amine the~
· gury.
Larkin, 36, missed 59 starts last ar with
•Jwo finger injuries al)d a sprained ligo ent in
his left 'knee.
·
Boone said he thinks Larkin can get himself ready for the regular season in fou• or
five days. That cou)d include batting practice
and playing in sim\ll.tted games, even if he is
kept out of exhibilion play.
• The manager said he will worry more if
Larkin's injury hasn't significmtly responded
to treatment within twa week:s.
The Reds had good news on mother
front. Left fielder Dmitri Young, who bruised
his right shoulder while trying to m.k:e a
diving catch last week:, should resume pbying
sometime this week:. Kremchek examined
Young and found that the outfielder has full
range of motion md strength in the shoulder.

"That's as good an offensive performmce as I've seen
ill year," Thom35 soid. "We
pbyed Ohio Univemty this ·
year, 2 pretty good te2m out
of the Mid-Americ2n Conference, and they didn't abuse .
us lik:e that. That's the best
offensive team I've seen all
year."
Woudstn finished with 21
points on 8-of-10 shooting
from the field. Ben Gerleman
added ·18. Jacobson threw in
16 points, hitting 8-of-1 0
field goal attempts.
Reinke added 14 andjerod
Hoegh had 11.
Copas led all scorers with
32 points. He hit . 9-of-14
shots from the field and wos
11-for-14 at the foul line, He
also had three 25Sists. ·
Fellow senior Scott Davis
had four points in his final
appearance.
Copos reflected on the two
seniors' contributions to the
program mer the game.
"If there's anything that
came out of me and Scott's
leadership is, hopefully, they
have 't he confidence to get
bock here next year," Cop2s
said.
"I'm sure Scott will be back:
with me, because if they're
b2ck:, I'll be here 35 a fan in
the stonds."
B2rlow W35 the only other
Redmen player in double
digits, finishing with 11 .
Delmey scored nine points
and had five rebounds. Ran-

dar Luts chipped ~n eight
points. Chris Ballenger h•d
six points md a team-high
seven rebounds,
Despite the · loss, ,Thomas
praised ~ club for its accomplishments this season, a year
which · m2ny
observers
referred to 25 one of rebuilding for the Redmen.
"They're a very special
group," Thomas said. "To
think that in the glorious history of Rio Grande b•slretball, a past that includes the
great Bevo Francis teams, to
think that this club exceeded
what ·those clubs did. Some
awful good te•ms have come
through Rio Grande 2nd
none of them have made it to
this point.
"It's been a very special
group, and not just what
they've done on the court, but
it's a special group off the
court, especiilly the chemistry
that developed with this balldub. Even though we would
have loved to get into the
championship game, and I
told them this in the locker
room, there's no way I can be
disapp_o inted with what these
guys have accomplished. It's
been too much fun md too
amazing to have any regret."
Northwestern (28-6) faces
MidAmerica Nazuene in
tonight's national championship game. MidAmerica
N•zarene (30-8) defeatedCornerstone (30-9) 81-61 in
last night's other-semifinal.

m.

that. They told me if somebody
there W2S 13 ye•rs of schoois.w
Former Logan co2ch Tim Murphy,
.now an assist2nt co2ch at nirmont
Sute College, W.V2., soid the school
was unaware Puve h2d graduoted
fiom high school but acknowledged.
"It's a pretty loosey-gqosey situation
over there with their school &lt;ystem."
On May ;!4, 1999, Murphy wrote
to von Gent to let him know th2t
several colleges were interested in
Rait Keerles, the player van Gent
sent to the West Virginia school.
In the fox, which used Logan High
School letterhead, Murphy and
another coach ack:nowiedged receiving V2ll Gent's fox concerning" other
Estonian playen" and 2dded: "Please
keep us informed."
Asked if h~ ever wrote to von
Gent, _Murphy 2t first said, " No."
Told the Dayton Daily News had acopy of the fox, Murphy said, "I may
have. I don't remember doing it, but
I'm not saying I didn't."
Murphy said he spoke to van Gent

on the telephone, but he thought ~
- a coach, not a sports agent.
Ask:ed if • high school coach
should be dealing with von Gent for
players, Murphy soid: "Prob2bly if he
wrote me that letter or faxed me
some stuff, probably I shouldn"t
have" written him bock:.
Van Gent aclmowledged havilig
contracts with all the playe~ he sefat
to the United States, including tbt
two who denied signing, but ~
claimed the contracts .were not voJi&lt;l
bec2use the company th~ sisn!!f
with wos no longer in busin~
NCAA rules, however, say "reg;ardlof its legal enforceability" a con~
is a contract.
~
Attempts to reach vm Gent ~
unsuccessful. There is no teleph~
listing for him in Tallin, Eston!lwhere he work:s.
::=
However, von Gent told the Daj)t
News that his .c.ontracts with play~
were not valid because the comJi"Al
tliey signed with w2s no longer :.IP

business.

Details, A3

WORK AT THE #1 DEALE..-

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CHARLESTON (AP) Marshall will get one more
chance to , succeed with JR.
VanHoose and Tamar Slay.
Marshall, the preseason
favorite to win the MidAmericm Conference championship 'this season, finished
tied for second in the East
Division with Ohio behind
Kent State.
,
The Thundering Herd lost
in the tO\Irnament quarterfinals to Ball State and finished
18-9.
"We ltl2de some strides but
we fell short of my expectations and the team's expectations,'' coach Greg White soid.
"We're all disappointed, but
life goes on.''
Despite the early exit, the
Thundering Herd is optimistic about, having VanHoose, Slay altd tr.insfer Late~
'ce .Williams
back for their
.
sentor seasons.
VanHoose is the 17th Iead-

·in{. scorer in school history
with 1,353 points and is the
seVenth leading rebounder
with 767. The 6.--foot-10 center averaged 16.6 points and
11 '·i rebounds this year.
Slay, a 6-9 guard, averaged
17.3 points per game and has
. 1,;!25 career, points.
Then there's the addition of
transfer Ronald Blackshear
fro4tTemple, who Will be eligible to play next January.
"He's only been with us a
short time, but there's been
workouts where he's just
dominated," White said. "He
can get his own. I've never
seen'anybody shoot the ball os
deep as he can on the college
level."
Black:shear will hove two
yean of eligi.bility at Marshall
with the pQSSibility of a third.
uThe best thing about him
is he's a 22-year-old man,"
White said. "He's not • boy.
We well: fortunate to get him.

He's capable of geuing 20, :0
points a night. He'll open,3t
up inside.''
-:
From this year's team,WhJlt
will lose T~vis Young, C~
nelius Jack:son and Joli.
Burgess 2nd reserves Marquis
Evans and Sean Wuller.
::·
"Young and Jackson ~
cornerstones to wh.t we~
been able to accomplish in ~
MAC," White soid.
'!
Getting the baD to the seal:
en will likely become the j;b
of 6-foot redshirt fres~
Enoch Bunch, 21ong w@t
Monty Wright, Bl•ck:sh~
arid freshnwl recruit Ro~
Dawn.
·:
Bunch was Tennessee's ru&amp;::ner-up for Player of the Ycifr
in 1999-2000.
:!
The 6-2 Dawn avera~
more thm ;!0 points per
'"'.
tb.is season and is a candidl
for Kentuck:y's Pl,tyer of
Year. He can play either ,
point or the shooting gu:1rd:t

.

Eastern· High School
cheer their Eagles to victory Tues-- topped 'symmes Valley 53-51 to advance to Friday's regional ·
day night at the Ohio State Fairgrounds Coliseum.. Eastern final In Columbus. Details, Bl.

Over the l..t aeverel decadea, Amerle~~n women h8w
come a long waj In gaining equal opportunity end
repreaentatlon In the bullln... world. .
Thanks to the aoclal reform llfforta and contributions of
ao many women before them, Amerle~~n women today luiYt
the ·opportunity to:pureue whatever car•r pdl or ln.tyle
they chooae. In, r.-:QIInhion of the countless achievement~
theM women reellze In the Mlneu•world and the AmeriCIIn
family,
otre ng a way to Hlute your favorite Women In
~lllneee.
·

we-

March
29, 2001
c
.

~aUipoU•llail!'

Q:tibunr

~oint ~lra•ant ~rgi•trr

Pomeroy Dally Sentinel

Dorothy Jones

Foundation looks to improve Appatachian quality of life
L

'

Itt TONY M. LocH
!lf'I'ITINEL NEWS STAFF

· Deadline Is March 22, 2001

.

MIDDLEPORT -· Enriching the
quality of life ,in App.Jachian O~io
communities was discussed durmg
the Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce's regular meeting at
Overbrook: Nursing Center.
Leslie !.illy, president and chief
executive officer of the Foundation
Fo~ Appalachian Ohio (FAO) in
Nelsonville, spoke with chamber
memben Tuesday ab_out the FAO's
ability to attract both private and
!1

public contributions, and other
income· for endowment and pro-

grams.
FAO is a regional community
foundation that addresses needs and
opportunities within the 29 counties
of Appalachian Ohio.
Appalachian Ohio includes the 29
counties of the eastern md southern
part of t!J.e sure which have been
desigru~ted by the federal government 25 sister communities to those
throughout the 13 state Appalachian
region.

FAO is a regional
COtllllltHtit}' jOJtlldcltiO.tl
that addresses needs and
opport1mities u&gt;it11in the
29 counties of
Appalachiau Ohio.
Lilly said that the foundation
makes grants for charitable and civic
purposes, provides and promotes
leadership for collaborative and creative regional initiatives, and builds

the capacity of individu.Js and organizations to meet community needs.
"Charitable giving and permanently endowed funds can play a
powerful role in. maximizing the
region's opportunities and ll,linimizing barriers to positive change," said
Lilly.
"The foundation is committed to
working with donors and like-minded partners to help grow the region's
philmthropy from scarcity to abundance;' she added. "The structure we
are creating is a store of permanent

charitable assets and the community
capacity that can help ensure
Appalachian Ohio's prosperity for all
time."
Lilly said the foundation can also
help design grant-making initiatives
that sow, seed and invest in best economic development practices and
that they can. 25Sist area leaders with
the construction of a plan to help
build susuinable futures for their
communities.

PleaH ... Life, AJ

i

Band -·~·~ ·
't' • 1. Sunday ·•n
. entne
... Todais

'

.

·v

:&amp;11 CJ

::..12 PqiP

·.

Bl~

BS

Comjcs

· 1234 Main·Street
AnytPwn,OH
555--4444

That decision is wise, Collins
said, due to the complexities of
the project, and the fact that
many large contractors will also
be bidding on the first phase of
the Lancaster Bypass project.
Bid opening on the LancastBY BRIAN J. REED
er project has been delayed
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
from March 7 to March 20.
MARIETTA - The openNow, both U.S. 33 jobs are
ing ofbids for the first segment scheduled to be sold on the
of construction on the same day.
Ravenswood Connector pro"Since some contractors will
ject ·hos been delayed until next be bidding on both jobs, there
week, while bid openings for are many technicalities to be
the second and third phases of considered;' Collins said. "The
the project have been moved goal of ODOT's Bureau of
up to later this year.
Contract Sales is to obtain the
Bids on the first phase of the best bids possible.
project were to be opened in
"Giving contractors some
Columbus on Wednesday, but additional time to estimate
the Ohio Department ofTrans- costs could rrsult in saving the
portation has delayed the bid state some money," he added. ·
letting until March 20.
The cost of the first phase of
"Members of my suff and I
the _project has been estimated
have been on pins and needles
at $33 million, and will provide
for two years as we've tried to
six miles of new limited access
k:eep this project on schedule
"Super Two" highway - a two
for bid letting," ODOT District
lane road on a four lane right of
10 Deputy Director George
way. The next segment will take
M. Collins said Tuesday. "We
the project from the Ritchie
can wait six more days."
Bridge to the intersection of
Officials at ODOT's central
Ohio 124 and County Road
office in Columbus decided
36 (Pordand).
Tuesday to delay the bid letting
"I know that some people
until next week, after receiving
might be disappointed by the
contractor requests for more
, .........ld,AJ
time to prepare bids.

First phase
will tWW sell
next week

salon

.

.

.i.t:.

Dotty's Sf¥le.

ExCELLENT PAYMENT PLAN

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

volum e 51 , Numbe r 165

March 14, 2001 ·

entine

Melp County's

·s·

0AEAT'BENE1'1'111 (INCWDINO DEMO PROGRAM)

Wednesday

Slay, VanHo~pse will et anothe~,....
chance with Marsha next year ~
·-

Owner &amp;.. Stylist
15years

Wonderful opportunltl• are available In Tom
Peden Country. We are expa~ our facllltlea
and need more ..... people. No experience ..
required, only a willing- to learn, work aa a
tum, and heQ atrono Initiative.

Community news and·notes, AS
The Big Dance begins today, 81

'ftlunct.y
Hlp: 50s; Low: :SOl

. M

Editorials
Qbjtyaries

A3
81.3. 6

Sports

. A3

Weather

Lotteries
OHIO

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For More Information, Call
Dave Harris or Debbie Call

Pick 3: 2-2-5; Pick 4: 4-5-- 1-()
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MIDDLEPORT - -Bend
area residents are invited to
attend a concert by the Big
Bend Community 'Band on
Sunday at 2 p.m. at He.Ith
United Methodist Church
on South Third Avenue.
The band, funded by the
Riverbend Arts Council, was
organized in 1993 with community mw~cians and is currently under the direction of
Roger Williams. This is his
fint year as director.
Williams is band director at
the Ohio Valley Christian
School in Gallipolis and
teaches music at the MidValley Christian School in
Middleport.

'

Tl!,e,Aand will be presenting Ujlh~. conce~t numben at
Sunda · progrom, according
to M · ' Wise, Arts Council
preside ·. She said th•t plans
caD for
band to be a yearround
erforming group
with e basis on concerts
during e SU!'flrner, and ~n
conjunc ,n with community even
Maki
up the b.and are
area resi
ts in a wide age
range
· have played in
bands sam time during their
lifetime afld npw have the
time an4 enthusiasm for
becomin~ part of the
group.

..

,....,'... a.nd, AJ

PRACTICING - Roger Williams directs band members In a practice Monday night In preparation for Sunday's concert. (Charlene Hoe~lch photo)

.•

,

�'

PageA2

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Judge will make mom wait
CANTON (AP) -A mother whose infant was shaken and
injured by a man will not regain custody of the girl or her sibling. for at least three months.
Tammy French, 26, on Tuesday lost a bid to have her four
children returned to her. Stark County Family Court Magistrate Ali Frantz said the goal reffi2ins reuniting French and her
children, but that French needs to tnake more progress on a
parenting and counseling pl.tn.
French's boyfriend, 27-year-old Gerard Hawkins Jr., was sentenced last week to eight years in prison for shaking their then4-month-old daughter Dec. 14. Sania Hawkins suffered brain
and eye injuries. French defended Hawkins at the trial, and she
blamed her daughter's injuries on previous health problems and
a difficult pregnancy.
French's attorney, Seth Arkow, argued that his client was never
suspected of hurting the child. In fact, French was giving blood
to raise money for diapers when the shaking occurred.

Depot nominated for register

Wednesday, March 14, 2001

Wednescl•y, M•rch 14, 2001

COLUMBUS (AP) .- Methodists
promised on Tuesday to mobilize hundreds of churches against plans to allow
gambling on video terminals in racetracks to help fund the state budget.
Senate President Richard Finan,
meanwhile, expressed frustration with
House Speaker Larry Householder's failure to consult him about Householder's
$12.4 billion school-funding pl.tn, which
could require the terminals for new revenue.
He knows my number;~ said Finan, a
c ·incinnati Republican.
More than 260,000 Methodists in
almost 1,300 churches will be asked to
call lawmakers and Gov. Bob Taft to
protest the terminals, said Bishop Bruce
Ough of the West Ohio Conference of
the United Methodist Church.
The Rev. John Edgar of the Columbus South United Methodist District
called the idea of the terminals - a kind
of electronic slot machine- reprehensible.
11

"When this Genenl Assembly establishes public policy that does more harm
than good, it's time for all groups interested in good government, especially the
religious community, to rise up, and say,
'You must not do this. You should not
harm Ohio families and children and say
that the only way to fund our kids' education is on the gambling losses of our
neighbor:5;" Edgar said. "It is bad public
policy."
One proposal would place the temtinhls under the supervision of the Ohio
Lottery, which is required to give all
profits to education. That raises issues
about the constitutionality of using the
money for other state programs, opponents say.

it would take a . constitutional amendment to change the law to allow lottety
profits to be used for any other purpose
than education;· said Taft spokeswoman
Maty Anne Sharkey.
The school-funding plan has nothing
to do with gambling or the Ohio LottetyiHouseholder said.
His plan would cost at least S3 billion
above current spending and more than
$2 billion above Taft's education proposal, which was carved from an already
tight state budget.
The state would fund the plan out of
current reserves, then look for other
sources to fill holes in the state budget,
Householder said. Those sources could
include video terminals, budget cuts or
the pooling of some business and commercial taxes, he said.
The Householder plan has the support of the coalition of sch~ol districts
that sued Ohio ·ove+ its school-funding
plan . The Ohio Supreme Court has
twice ruled the system unconstitutional.

AKRON (AP) -A little red-and-white railroad depot, vin"If you do video lottery terminals, it
tage 1891, has been nominated for inclusion in the National
has to go through the Lottety CommisRegister of Historic Places.
sion,and
all the money that goes through
The Ohio Historical Society announced the nomination
the Lottery Commission goes to
Tuesday of the station in Copley Township.
·
schools," Finan said.
When it was about to be torn down in 1974, the Copley HisTaft's office agreed. "We've taken a
toric'al Society was formed to rescue it. The station's present
look at the issue, and we strongly believe
location is next to tracks now operated by the Wheeling &amp; Lake
Erie Railway.
"Several trains still go by a day," said Andre Martin-Sams, the
Covington is across the Ohio River from Cincinnati.
president of Copley Historical Society. "We stand there and timed this report for. the budget cycle," James McCollum, the
wave and yell at the engineers when we are having a meeting IUC's executive director, said Tuesday.
Acconding to the report, the state gave universities $1.5 bilor a picnic. They think we're crazy."
lion - or 30 percent of the total $5.12 billion operating revenue- from July 1998 through June 1999, compared with
WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen. George Voinovich said Tuesunivenities' infusion of at least $6 billion into the state's econ- day he's alarmed that officials in his s.tate would think 'about
. MARIETTA (AP) - A group cracking down on illegal omy during the same time period.
allowing·exploratoty drilling for natural gas under Lake Erie.
dumping is turning to a digital, full-color, night visiori system
"The potential risks are great and the benefits minimal. It
t&lt;;&gt; catch violators.
doesn't make sense," said Voinovich, a Republican who spent
For the past five years, the solid waste district covering WashCOLUMBUS (AP) - An elementary school principal will eight yean as Ohio's governor.
ington, Noble, Monroe, Morgan, Muskingum and Guernsey
In a letter to his successor, fellow Republican Bob Taft,
counties has used a surveillance system at various sites that lead OhioReads, a statewide tutoring program, Gov. Bob Taft's
Voinovich said, "! am dis=yed that the issue would be disattract illegal dumping. The system, which continuously record- office has announced.
The OhioReads Council on Monday named Scott T. cussed.''
ed activities, has enabled officials to identify and eventually
.Voinovich said he delivered the same message by phone to
Ebbrecht as executive administrator ofTaft's $50 million procharge hundreds of suspects.
The new night vision system will help identify suspects more gram, which provides grants to districts to bring in volunteer Ohio Department of Natunl Resources Director Sam Speck,
reading tuton.
who had told a newspaper he was open to discussion· about
clearly, and it will recond only when motion is detected.
Ebbrecht,
34,
of
Pickerington,
currently
is
the
principal
at
That means officials revieWing the tapes won't have to spend
drilling.
Pointview
Elementary
School
in
suburban
Westerville.
While
countless hours of watching a dead screen. A tape covering a
month of activity will take about 90 minutes to review. The there, he developed the school's OhioReads program and
previous system with four weeks of surveillance required 80 recruited tutors from several businesses .and colleges.
Ebbrecht replaces Holly Harris Bane whq took a position at
hours to review.
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) - Quick thinking by a. good
the University of Akron as special assistant to the provost for
educational outreach. She had been paid $88,000 to lead Samaritan helped residents of a three-story apartment building
escape a fire without injury.
.OhioReads.
Huntington Fire Department officials and residents do not
CLEVELAND (AP) -A man wanted in Al.tbarna for quesknow who placed a ladder under a second-story window of the
tioning in the beating deaths of his girlfriend and her mother
Cabell Apartments building shortly afte~ the fire broke out at
isn't talking to police.
FINDLAY (AP) -Teachers and police officen this week about 9:30 a.m., said Deputy Fire ChiefJim Carver.
Cleveland police withheld the man's name pending any
will
start,cracking down on young people smoking and c.h ewSeven of the building's II apartments were occupied at the
charges. Authorities in Sylacauga, Ala. identified him as Wakillii
1
ing
t~cco.
•
.,.,.,
time of the fire. About 10 residents used the ladder to 'flee d}e
Brown, 25. He was arrested Tuesday after a 25-hour standoff
A state l.tw that takes effect Thursday =kes it illegal for any- burning building, Carver said.
with police in Cleveland.
. Police Chief Martin Flask had assured the man by phone that one under 18 to buy, possess or use cigarettes, cigan, pipe tobacThe cause of the fire, which started in the basement, was not .
co, chewing tobacco, snuff or rolling papers.
he wouldn't be harmed if he gave up.
known. Damage also was not known.
Teens who arc spotted using
Police in Alabama want to question Brown about the deaths
of Dotty Jemison, 45, and her daughter, Cherae Jemison, 25. tobacco could face a $100 fine,
Police found their bodies Sunday night while following up on loss of driving privileges, community service and smokinga lip.

Drilling ban extension sought

. Dump site watch planned

LOCAL BRIEFS
Orientation set mentary School's custodian.
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs
Issued license
County Adult Basic and Lit-

Deaths

Groups mobilize to defeat gambling plan

William Nutter Sr.

. COOLVILLE - William Allan Nutter Sr., 40, Coolville, eracy Education (ABLE)
died Sunday, March 11, 2001 at Camden-Clark Memorial program has set the orientaHospital, Parkersburg, WVa.
tion schedule for March and
He was born July 8, 1960, a son of the late Owen Allen Nut- April. Limited spaces art
ter and Carole Tracewell Nutter McWilliams. He was a self- available in these sessions.
employed logger.
GED tests will take place on
Survi~ing are his wife, Debbie Lynn Johnson Nutter; four April II and June 27.
sons:W1lham Nutter Jr. of Parkersburg, and Anthony, Jesse and
Interested
adults
are
Michael Nutter, all at home; two daughters, Kelly Nutter and encouraged to register by
Hailee Nutter, both at home; a brother, Russell Lee Nutter of calling the Middleport CenLittle Hocking; five sister:5, Brenda Clegg, Cynthia Nutter, Judy ter at 992-5808 or the TupVarner, Sabnna Naylor and Ginger Combs; two grandsons; and pers Plains Center at 667several nieces and nephews.
0441.
Services will be 11 a.m. Thursday in White Funeral Home,
Coolville, with the Rev. Wayne Vogelsong officiating. Burial
Will be m Torch Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral
home from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. today.

Woodland
group

Life

and discussions aimed at
growing, conserving .and
usin g native plants.
from Page AI
Topics at the conference
will include: growing forest
In other matters, chamber and field herbs, conservation
men1ber Maureen . Burns
and restoration, farm develinformed those in attendance
opment and management,
about the Appalachian Herb
using medicinal herbs, marGathering in Rutland June
keting
herbal products and
23-24.
The event is a two day con- . wild-simulated Ginseng.
Several nationally recogference at the United Plant
Savers Botanici!l Sanctuary nized speakers such as Steven
and the Nanonal Center for Foster, Rosemary Gladstar,
the Preservation of Medicinal Christopher Hobbs, and JeaHerbs near Rutland, and will nine Davis will be attending
focus on various wdrkshops the weekend conference.

s-chools watch for tobacco use

Fatalities prompt more patrol

Body found in
tub

Panel likes election law

Rep. Anthony Latell, a Girard Democrat, said groups representing the cou.nty officials should be allowed to make the
appointments. The late addition did not give him time to prepare an amel)dment to the bill, and he promised to bring the
matter up on the House floor. ·
A .key part of the bill is an opinion concerning punch-cand
· : voting, which came under fire in Florida during the pr;esiden; tial election. The bill defines a hole with a chad hanging by two
: or one corners as a vote. If a chad is hanging by three or four
: corner:5, the vote does not count.

HUMANE SOCIEtY
$1.00 BAG SALE
Friday, March 16th
&amp; Sat. March 17th

•

MEIGS COUNTY .

HUMANE SoCIETY
THRIFT SHOP

Report: universities_~:&amp;i~v_:_e_m~o~re_2~N~.z~nd~Ave=.M~ldd~l~eport~
COLUMBUS (AP)
r. Ohio's public universities pour .-+---------------....,..------,
billions into the , stare's econo-

I:.

my annually, but don 't get as
hefty a return in state dollars,
: according to a report ~· consortium of Ohio's public i.mivetsities is to release Wednes~y.
The Inter-University Council, composed of presidents
from the state's 13 public universities and two medical colleges, prepared the economicimpact report just as lawmakers
deliberated over whether to
give higher education more
money in the state's two-year
budget. "lt's no coincidence that we

CiJnd!rJ CrrJtJfion.J
Has Moved From 99 Mill
Street, to 636 Brick
Street, Rutland.
Mon-Sat 10 a.m. to 5 p.m •.
Closed Sunday

(740) 742-2512
~----------------------~

•

••

GUEST SPEAKER - leslie Lilly, president and CEO of the
Foundation for Appalachian Ohio, discusses the organization's
ability to acquire contributions and use them to enrich the
quality of life In Appalachian Ohio communities during Tuesday's meeting of the Meigs Chamber of Commerce. (Tony M.
Leach photo)

from PlgeA1
I ..,

Over the laet 11veral decadea, Amerlcen women have
come a long way In gaining equal opportunity and
repraaentatlon In the bualn... world.
Thanka to the aoclal reform efforta and. ccntrlbutlona of
ao many woman before them, American women today h!lVe
the opportunity to puraue whatever JCareer path or llfeatyle
they choose. In recognition of the countleaa achlevemanta
these woman realize In the buslnaaa world and the Amarlcan
family, we are offering a way to salute your favorite Woman In
Buslnesa.

~arch 29, 2001
&lt;!Pa1Upoli9' 119ail!' m:rtbune
f)otnt f)lea9'ant l\egt~ter

Pomeroy Dally Sentinel
Dor9thy Jones ·
Owner &amp;.. Stylist
,t5years

,_

oo~·sswte

Salon
1234 Main Street
Anytown, OH
,•' 555-4444

APPLE GROVE A
round and square dance will
be held at the Red Barn in
Apple Grove on Friday from
8-1 I p.m. Music' will be provided by the Happy Hollow
Boys.

Ark showing

Band

~

Dance planned

RUTLAND
Ladies
Auxiliary ·of the Rutland
Volunteer Fire Department
will hold a soup supper on
Friday from 4-7 p.m., at the
firehouse.
Bean soup, vegetable soup
and chili will be served,
along with roast beef sandc
wiches, drinks and other
items .

Suspect maintains silence

~~lE~i~~~~~

ATHENS Southeast
Ohio Woodland Interest
Group will hold its monthly
meeting at the Athens
County Extension Office,
280 W Union St., Athens .
Jon Sowash, an Athens
attorney and SEOW!G
member, will talk about conservation easements and legislation concerning farmland
preservation. All forest land
owners are urged to attend.
.

Supper Friday

Quick thinking saves residents

education
classes.School PrinciFindlay High
pal Kathleen Crates said school
officials
will keep a close watch
CINCINNATI (AP) -Police are stepping up patrols along
lntemate 75 north. of Cincinnati. where seven people have on "smoker's corner"- an area
just otT school property where
been killed in five crashes in the past five months.
"We've had (fatalities) there in the past, but not really' like students congregate to smoke. ~Ea~
this .... The whole thing is really kind of strange," said Sgt. Ken
Ward of the State Highway Patrol's Lebanon Post.
In each case, drivers crossed the median into oncoming traffic.
From now until mid-April, the patrol's Lebanon and HamilCOVINGTON, Ky. (AP) - HH-1-+-1
ton posts, in cooperation with the Buder and Warren sheriff's
offices, will increase their presence in the problem area, said Lt. A tenant's ~omplaint about ~:t:t;;t~
water leaking through an apart- 1Michael Black, the Hamilton post's commander.
ment ceiling led to the discovety of a woman's body in an
overflowing bathtub, police said
. COLUMBUS (AP) - A bill that would, place opinions by Tuesday.
Police were awaiting autopsy 1+-HI-+-1
· the Ohio Secretaty of Sta.te into law cleared a House cottimitresults
but believe Lucia Lewin, 1+-HI-+-1
·
, tee on Tuesday. .
The State Government Committee voted 7-5 along party 32, died accidentally, said Jim
: lines to recommend the bill to the full House.· Minority Liles, the city's assistant chief of
. Democrats complained that in an amendment adopted by the police.
The owner of the apartment
committee, legislative leaden would appoint county commissioners and county board of elections officials to a panel study- building found the body Mon- I+H+I
day night, Liles said.
ing how Ohio conducts its elections.

Rehearsals are held on
Mondays at 7 p.m. in the
band room at the high

school. While most of the 16
or so members have their
own instrUJnencs, son1e are
borrowed from the Meigs
Band.
Sunday's concert is free
and the public is invited to
·
attend.

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

The Daily S~nt~nel
Reader Services
Correction Polley
Our main concim In all stories Is
to be accurate. If you know of an
error In a s10ry, call tha newsroom
at (740) 992-2t 56.

Newa Department•
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Department extentions are:

General manager

Ext. 12

NtW11

EICI. 13

or

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Other services
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The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

(USPS 213-IHIO)
Ohio Vallov Pubtlohlng Co.

Published every aftemoon·, Monday

through Friday, 111 Coun St.,

Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Second·CIUa
postage paid at Pomeroy.

MIDDLEPORT - Hobson Christian Fellowship
Church, a ·mile south of
Middleport on Ohio 7, will
host Creationist Bobby
O'Connor, who will present
a 10-foot model of Noah's
Ark on Sunday at I 0 a.m.

Board approves
personnel
TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern Local Board of Education accepted the resignation &lt;;&gt;f William Blaine as a
math teacher at ' Eastern
High School during a special
meeting held last week.
Jacqueline Wolfe · was
approved as a substitute
teacher on an as-needed
basis and Abigail Cauthorn
·. was approved as a substitute
for the remainder of the
2000-01 school year.
The board also accepted
the resignation of 'Ter.esa
Benedum as Eastern Ele-

POMEROY - A marriage license has been issued
in Meigs County Probate
Court to William D. Doczi,
28, and Cindy Marie Knotts,
20, both of Middleport.

deserted from the U.S. Army
was arrested Tuesday in
Racine by local authorities.
According to reports,
David
M.
Bottomley,
Pomeroy, was arrested Tuesday night by Racine Village
Marshal Curtis Jones with
assistance from the Meigs

County Sheriff's Department
and Pomeroy Police Department.
Bottomley is currently
wanted for desertion from
the U.S. Army in Fort Scevert, Ga ., and is being held in
the Meigs County Jail for
extradition to Fort Knox, Ky.

Bid

Those phases of the project
were originally expected to sell
in late '2001 and mid-2002,
respectively.
" ODOT was able to
advance these lettings from
state fiscal years 2003 and
2004, respectively. because they
are being fin anced through a
plan which uses funds generated through the issuance of
bonds," Collins said.
"The yearly debt service
payment on the bonds would

Divorces filed

fromPageA1

POMEROY -An action
for divorce has been flied in
Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Debra
Howard, Long Bottom,
against
Craig Howard,
Pomeroy.
An action for dissolution
of marriage has been filed in
the court by Sandra K.
McDougal and James D.
McDougal, both of Gallipolis.
Divorces have been granted to Jason Smith from Amy
Smith, and to Crystal Dawn
Ridgway from Jeffery Lee
Ridgway.

postponement, but they should
be happy when they hear that
the Central Office has confirmed that the two remaining
connector phases will be
moved forward in the bidding
process," Collins said.
Phase 2 of the connector
project, .estimated at S22 million , from Five Points to
Morning Star, is expected to
sell June 18. Phase\ estimated
at S21 .7 million, ,vi]] complete
the segment from Morning
Star to Portland Road. It IS
expected to sell on Oct. 27 .

Registration
held

Rainy day on Thursday

Plan meeting

EMS runs

CENTRAL QISPATCH

Authorities
hold local man

ter which years the proJects are
let for bids;'' Collins added.
"ODOT's Division of Finance
has concurred that there is
money available to cover the
projects' early lettings."

VALLEY WEATHER

CHARLOTTE, N.C.
Final registration is now
being held for the Ten Star
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
All Star Summer Basketball
Rain will return to the
Camp. Boys, ages 8-19, and tri-county area tonight and
girls, ages 10-19, can apply. continue Thursday and
Past participants include Thursday night, the National
Michael Jordan, Tim Dun- Weather Service said. ·
can, Vince Carter, Grant Hill
The rain will change to or
and Jerry Stackhouse. Camp mix with snow on Friday as
locations
are
located winds shift to northwesterly,
throughout both Canada arid , drawing colder air into the
the U.S.
area.
Evaluation forms are availHighs on Thursday will be
able by calling 568-6801.
in the 50s, with lows in the
40s Thursday night. Temperatures will hold steady or fall
slightly during the day FriMIDDLEPO.RT- Annuday, forec1ters said.
. al meeting for the United
Sunset tonight will be at
Fund for Meigs County will 6:36, and unrise Thursday is
be held on March 29 at 6 at 6:45 a.m.
p.m., at the Riverbend Arts
Weather forecast:
Council.
Tonight ... Increasing
clouds. A chance of rain
showers late. Low in the
upper 30s. South wind 5 to
POMEROY - Units of 15. mph. Chance of rain 30
the Meig. Emergency Ser- percent.
vice answered four calls for
Thursday... OccasionaI
assistance on Tuesday. Units rain showers. High 54 to 58.
responded as follows:
5:22 a.m., Vine Street,
Curtis Jenkins, Holzer Medical Center;
I 0 a.m., Carpenter Road,
"'"M. Williams, HMC;
6:58p.m., Ohio 124, Feran
Barringer, Camden-Clark
Memorial Hospital.
POMEROY
6:38 p.m., Rocksprings,
Matt Stewart, treated.

be essentiaiJy the same no nut-

Southeast wind I 0 to 20
mph. Chance o( rain 90 percent.
Thursday night.. .Mostly
cloudy with a chance of
showers. Low in the mid 40s.
Extended forecast:
Friday... Cloudy with a
chance of showers during
the day, then a chance of
snow showers during the
night. No snow accumulation expected. High in the
upper 40s.
Saturday... Partly cloudy.
Low in the lower 30s and
high in the lower 50s .
Sunday... Partly cloudy. A
chance of showers during
the night. Low in the mid
30s and high in the mid 50s.
Monday... Cloudy with a
chance of showtrs. Low in
the lower 40s and high in the
lower 50s.
Tuesday... Rain likely. Low
in the lower 40s and high in
the mid 50s .

LOCAL STOCKS
AEP- 45''•
Arch Coal - 24 ',J

Akzo- 47'1,.
AmTech/SBC - 45
Ashland Inc. - 40
AT&amp;T -23'1,
Bank One - 34~.
Bob Evans- 20' 1•
BorgWarner - 44
Champion- 2"1.
Charming Shops
s~ll.

City Holding- 9 '~·.
Federal Mogul - 3\
USB- 211,

Gannett- 59 ~~
General Eleclrlc- 42\,
GKNLY- 101,
Harley Davidson
39~·.

Kmart-9
Kroger- 24
Lands End - 27 ~.
Ltd.- 16~
Oak Hill Financial -'
14li
OVB-25
BBT-35
Peoples - t7'Y•
Premier -

6'·

Rockwell-47
Rocky Boots - 5
AD Shell- 58

Sears -

Wendy's """7 _24 /t

Worthington - 9
Daily stock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing
quotes of lhe previous
day's transacHons, provided by Smith Part·
nars at Advest Inc. of
Gallipolis.

RACINE - A local man
who
recently allegedly

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

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tho Ohio Newspaper Association.'
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St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

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PageA2

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Judge will make mom wait
CANTON (AP) -A mother whose infant was shaken and
injured by a man will not regain custody of the girl or her sibling. for at least three months.
Tammy French, 26, on Tuesday lost a bid to have her four
children returned to her. Stark County Family Court Magistrate Ali Frantz said the goal reffi2ins reuniting French and her
children, but that French needs to tnake more progress on a
parenting and counseling pl.tn.
French's boyfriend, 27-year-old Gerard Hawkins Jr., was sentenced last week to eight years in prison for shaking their then4-month-old daughter Dec. 14. Sania Hawkins suffered brain
and eye injuries. French defended Hawkins at the trial, and she
blamed her daughter's injuries on previous health problems and
a difficult pregnancy.
French's attorney, Seth Arkow, argued that his client was never
suspected of hurting the child. In fact, French was giving blood
to raise money for diapers when the shaking occurred.

Depot nominated for register

Wednesday, March 14, 2001

Wednescl•y, M•rch 14, 2001

COLUMBUS (AP) .- Methodists
promised on Tuesday to mobilize hundreds of churches against plans to allow
gambling on video terminals in racetracks to help fund the state budget.
Senate President Richard Finan,
meanwhile, expressed frustration with
House Speaker Larry Householder's failure to consult him about Householder's
$12.4 billion school-funding pl.tn, which
could require the terminals for new revenue.
He knows my number;~ said Finan, a
c ·incinnati Republican.
More than 260,000 Methodists in
almost 1,300 churches will be asked to
call lawmakers and Gov. Bob Taft to
protest the terminals, said Bishop Bruce
Ough of the West Ohio Conference of
the United Methodist Church.
The Rev. John Edgar of the Columbus South United Methodist District
called the idea of the terminals - a kind
of electronic slot machine- reprehensible.
11

"When this Genenl Assembly establishes public policy that does more harm
than good, it's time for all groups interested in good government, especially the
religious community, to rise up, and say,
'You must not do this. You should not
harm Ohio families and children and say
that the only way to fund our kids' education is on the gambling losses of our
neighbor:5;" Edgar said. "It is bad public
policy."
One proposal would place the temtinhls under the supervision of the Ohio
Lottery, which is required to give all
profits to education. That raises issues
about the constitutionality of using the
money for other state programs, opponents say.

it would take a . constitutional amendment to change the law to allow lottety
profits to be used for any other purpose
than education;· said Taft spokeswoman
Maty Anne Sharkey.
The school-funding plan has nothing
to do with gambling or the Ohio LottetyiHouseholder said.
His plan would cost at least S3 billion
above current spending and more than
$2 billion above Taft's education proposal, which was carved from an already
tight state budget.
The state would fund the plan out of
current reserves, then look for other
sources to fill holes in the state budget,
Householder said. Those sources could
include video terminals, budget cuts or
the pooling of some business and commercial taxes, he said.
The Householder plan has the support of the coalition of sch~ol districts
that sued Ohio ·ove+ its school-funding
plan . The Ohio Supreme Court has
twice ruled the system unconstitutional.

AKRON (AP) -A little red-and-white railroad depot, vin"If you do video lottery terminals, it
tage 1891, has been nominated for inclusion in the National
has to go through the Lottety CommisRegister of Historic Places.
sion,and
all the money that goes through
The Ohio Historical Society announced the nomination
the Lottery Commission goes to
Tuesday of the station in Copley Township.
·
schools," Finan said.
When it was about to be torn down in 1974, the Copley HisTaft's office agreed. "We've taken a
toric'al Society was formed to rescue it. The station's present
look at the issue, and we strongly believe
location is next to tracks now operated by the Wheeling &amp; Lake
Erie Railway.
"Several trains still go by a day," said Andre Martin-Sams, the
Covington is across the Ohio River from Cincinnati.
president of Copley Historical Society. "We stand there and timed this report for. the budget cycle," James McCollum, the
wave and yell at the engineers when we are having a meeting IUC's executive director, said Tuesday.
Acconding to the report, the state gave universities $1.5 bilor a picnic. They think we're crazy."
lion - or 30 percent of the total $5.12 billion operating revenue- from July 1998 through June 1999, compared with
WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen. George Voinovich said Tuesunivenities' infusion of at least $6 billion into the state's econ- day he's alarmed that officials in his s.tate would think 'about
. MARIETTA (AP) - A group cracking down on illegal omy during the same time period.
allowing·exploratoty drilling for natural gas under Lake Erie.
dumping is turning to a digital, full-color, night visiori system
"The potential risks are great and the benefits minimal. It
t&lt;;&gt; catch violators.
doesn't make sense," said Voinovich, a Republican who spent
For the past five years, the solid waste district covering WashCOLUMBUS (AP) - An elementary school principal will eight yean as Ohio's governor.
ington, Noble, Monroe, Morgan, Muskingum and Guernsey
In a letter to his successor, fellow Republican Bob Taft,
counties has used a surveillance system at various sites that lead OhioReads, a statewide tutoring program, Gov. Bob Taft's
Voinovich said, "! am dis=yed that the issue would be disattract illegal dumping. The system, which continuously record- office has announced.
The OhioReads Council on Monday named Scott T. cussed.''
ed activities, has enabled officials to identify and eventually
.Voinovich said he delivered the same message by phone to
Ebbrecht as executive administrator ofTaft's $50 million procharge hundreds of suspects.
The new night vision system will help identify suspects more gram, which provides grants to districts to bring in volunteer Ohio Department of Natunl Resources Director Sam Speck,
reading tuton.
who had told a newspaper he was open to discussion· about
clearly, and it will recond only when motion is detected.
Ebbrecht,
34,
of
Pickerington,
currently
is
the
principal
at
That means officials revieWing the tapes won't have to spend
drilling.
Pointview
Elementary
School
in
suburban
Westerville.
While
countless hours of watching a dead screen. A tape covering a
month of activity will take about 90 minutes to review. The there, he developed the school's OhioReads program and
previous system with four weeks of surveillance required 80 recruited tutors from several businesses .and colleges.
Ebbrecht replaces Holly Harris Bane whq took a position at
hours to review.
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) - Quick thinking by a. good
the University of Akron as special assistant to the provost for
educational outreach. She had been paid $88,000 to lead Samaritan helped residents of a three-story apartment building
escape a fire without injury.
.OhioReads.
Huntington Fire Department officials and residents do not
CLEVELAND (AP) -A man wanted in Al.tbarna for quesknow who placed a ladder under a second-story window of the
tioning in the beating deaths of his girlfriend and her mother
Cabell Apartments building shortly afte~ the fire broke out at
isn't talking to police.
FINDLAY (AP) -Teachers and police officen this week about 9:30 a.m., said Deputy Fire ChiefJim Carver.
Cleveland police withheld the man's name pending any
will
start,cracking down on young people smoking and c.h ewSeven of the building's II apartments were occupied at the
charges. Authorities in Sylacauga, Ala. identified him as Wakillii
1
ing
t~cco.
•
.,.,.,
time of the fire. About 10 residents used the ladder to 'flee d}e
Brown, 25. He was arrested Tuesday after a 25-hour standoff
A state l.tw that takes effect Thursday =kes it illegal for any- burning building, Carver said.
with police in Cleveland.
. Police Chief Martin Flask had assured the man by phone that one under 18 to buy, possess or use cigarettes, cigan, pipe tobacThe cause of the fire, which started in the basement, was not .
co, chewing tobacco, snuff or rolling papers.
he wouldn't be harmed if he gave up.
known. Damage also was not known.
Teens who arc spotted using
Police in Alabama want to question Brown about the deaths
of Dotty Jemison, 45, and her daughter, Cherae Jemison, 25. tobacco could face a $100 fine,
Police found their bodies Sunday night while following up on loss of driving privileges, community service and smokinga lip.

Drilling ban extension sought

. Dump site watch planned

LOCAL BRIEFS
Orientation set mentary School's custodian.
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs
Issued license
County Adult Basic and Lit-

Deaths

Groups mobilize to defeat gambling plan

William Nutter Sr.

. COOLVILLE - William Allan Nutter Sr., 40, Coolville, eracy Education (ABLE)
died Sunday, March 11, 2001 at Camden-Clark Memorial program has set the orientaHospital, Parkersburg, WVa.
tion schedule for March and
He was born July 8, 1960, a son of the late Owen Allen Nut- April. Limited spaces art
ter and Carole Tracewell Nutter McWilliams. He was a self- available in these sessions.
employed logger.
GED tests will take place on
Survi~ing are his wife, Debbie Lynn Johnson Nutter; four April II and June 27.
sons:W1lham Nutter Jr. of Parkersburg, and Anthony, Jesse and
Interested
adults
are
Michael Nutter, all at home; two daughters, Kelly Nutter and encouraged to register by
Hailee Nutter, both at home; a brother, Russell Lee Nutter of calling the Middleport CenLittle Hocking; five sister:5, Brenda Clegg, Cynthia Nutter, Judy ter at 992-5808 or the TupVarner, Sabnna Naylor and Ginger Combs; two grandsons; and pers Plains Center at 667several nieces and nephews.
0441.
Services will be 11 a.m. Thursday in White Funeral Home,
Coolville, with the Rev. Wayne Vogelsong officiating. Burial
Will be m Torch Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral
home from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. today.

Woodland
group

Life

and discussions aimed at
growing, conserving .and
usin g native plants.
from Page AI
Topics at the conference
will include: growing forest
In other matters, chamber and field herbs, conservation
men1ber Maureen . Burns
and restoration, farm develinformed those in attendance
opment and management,
about the Appalachian Herb
using medicinal herbs, marGathering in Rutland June
keting
herbal products and
23-24.
The event is a two day con- . wild-simulated Ginseng.
Several nationally recogference at the United Plant
Savers Botanici!l Sanctuary nized speakers such as Steven
and the Nanonal Center for Foster, Rosemary Gladstar,
the Preservation of Medicinal Christopher Hobbs, and JeaHerbs near Rutland, and will nine Davis will be attending
focus on various wdrkshops the weekend conference.

s-chools watch for tobacco use

Fatalities prompt more patrol

Body found in
tub

Panel likes election law

Rep. Anthony Latell, a Girard Democrat, said groups representing the cou.nty officials should be allowed to make the
appointments. The late addition did not give him time to prepare an amel)dment to the bill, and he promised to bring the
matter up on the House floor. ·
A .key part of the bill is an opinion concerning punch-cand
· : voting, which came under fire in Florida during the pr;esiden; tial election. The bill defines a hole with a chad hanging by two
: or one corners as a vote. If a chad is hanging by three or four
: corner:5, the vote does not count.

HUMANE SOCIEtY
$1.00 BAG SALE
Friday, March 16th
&amp; Sat. March 17th

•

MEIGS COUNTY .

HUMANE SoCIETY
THRIFT SHOP

Report: universities_~:&amp;i~v_:_e_m~o~re_2~N~.z~nd~Ave=.M~ldd~l~eport~
COLUMBUS (AP)
r. Ohio's public universities pour .-+---------------....,..------,
billions into the , stare's econo-

I:.

my annually, but don 't get as
hefty a return in state dollars,
: according to a report ~· consortium of Ohio's public i.mivetsities is to release Wednes~y.
The Inter-University Council, composed of presidents
from the state's 13 public universities and two medical colleges, prepared the economicimpact report just as lawmakers
deliberated over whether to
give higher education more
money in the state's two-year
budget. "lt's no coincidence that we

CiJnd!rJ CrrJtJfion.J
Has Moved From 99 Mill
Street, to 636 Brick
Street, Rutland.
Mon-Sat 10 a.m. to 5 p.m •.
Closed Sunday

(740) 742-2512
~----------------------~

•

••

GUEST SPEAKER - leslie Lilly, president and CEO of the
Foundation for Appalachian Ohio, discusses the organization's
ability to acquire contributions and use them to enrich the
quality of life In Appalachian Ohio communities during Tuesday's meeting of the Meigs Chamber of Commerce. (Tony M.
Leach photo)

from PlgeA1
I ..,

Over the laet 11veral decadea, Amerlcen women have
come a long way In gaining equal opportunity and
repraaentatlon In the bualn... world.
Thanka to the aoclal reform efforta and. ccntrlbutlona of
ao many woman before them, American women today h!lVe
the opportunity to puraue whatever JCareer path or llfeatyle
they choose. In recognition of the countleaa achlevemanta
these woman realize In the buslnaaa world and the Amarlcan
family, we are offering a way to salute your favorite Woman In
Buslnesa.

~arch 29, 2001
&lt;!Pa1Upoli9' 119ail!' m:rtbune
f)otnt f)lea9'ant l\egt~ter

Pomeroy Dally Sentinel
Dor9thy Jones ·
Owner &amp;.. Stylist
,t5years

,_

oo~·sswte

Salon
1234 Main Street
Anytown, OH
,•' 555-4444

APPLE GROVE A
round and square dance will
be held at the Red Barn in
Apple Grove on Friday from
8-1 I p.m. Music' will be provided by the Happy Hollow
Boys.

Ark showing

Band

~

Dance planned

RUTLAND
Ladies
Auxiliary ·of the Rutland
Volunteer Fire Department
will hold a soup supper on
Friday from 4-7 p.m., at the
firehouse.
Bean soup, vegetable soup
and chili will be served,
along with roast beef sandc
wiches, drinks and other
items .

Suspect maintains silence

~~lE~i~~~~~

ATHENS Southeast
Ohio Woodland Interest
Group will hold its monthly
meeting at the Athens
County Extension Office,
280 W Union St., Athens .
Jon Sowash, an Athens
attorney and SEOW!G
member, will talk about conservation easements and legislation concerning farmland
preservation. All forest land
owners are urged to attend.
.

Supper Friday

Quick thinking saves residents

education
classes.School PrinciFindlay High
pal Kathleen Crates said school
officials
will keep a close watch
CINCINNATI (AP) -Police are stepping up patrols along
lntemate 75 north. of Cincinnati. where seven people have on "smoker's corner"- an area
just otT school property where
been killed in five crashes in the past five months.
"We've had (fatalities) there in the past, but not really' like students congregate to smoke. ~Ea~
this .... The whole thing is really kind of strange," said Sgt. Ken
Ward of the State Highway Patrol's Lebanon Post.
In each case, drivers crossed the median into oncoming traffic.
From now until mid-April, the patrol's Lebanon and HamilCOVINGTON, Ky. (AP) - HH-1-+-1
ton posts, in cooperation with the Buder and Warren sheriff's
offices, will increase their presence in the problem area, said Lt. A tenant's ~omplaint about ~:t:t;;t~
water leaking through an apart- 1Michael Black, the Hamilton post's commander.
ment ceiling led to the discovety of a woman's body in an
overflowing bathtub, police said
. COLUMBUS (AP) - A bill that would, place opinions by Tuesday.
Police were awaiting autopsy 1+-HI-+-1
· the Ohio Secretaty of Sta.te into law cleared a House cottimitresults
but believe Lucia Lewin, 1+-HI-+-1
·
, tee on Tuesday. .
The State Government Committee voted 7-5 along party 32, died accidentally, said Jim
: lines to recommend the bill to the full House.· Minority Liles, the city's assistant chief of
. Democrats complained that in an amendment adopted by the police.
The owner of the apartment
committee, legislative leaden would appoint county commissioners and county board of elections officials to a panel study- building found the body Mon- I+H+I
day night, Liles said.
ing how Ohio conducts its elections.

Rehearsals are held on
Mondays at 7 p.m. in the
band room at the high

school. While most of the 16
or so members have their
own instrUJnencs, son1e are
borrowed from the Meigs
Band.
Sunday's concert is free
and the public is invited to
·
attend.

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

The Daily S~nt~nel
Reader Services
Correction Polley
Our main concim In all stories Is
to be accurate. If you know of an
error In a s10ry, call tha newsroom
at (740) 992-2t 56.

Newa Department•
The main number Is 992-2t56.
Department extentions are:

General manager

Ext. 12

NtW11

EICI. 13

or

Ext. 14

Other services
A~ertlolng

Ext. 3

Clryulatlon

Ext. 4

CIIIIHied Ade

To 11enc! a-mall

Ext. 5

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The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

(USPS 213-IHIO)
Ohio Vallov Pubtlohlng Co.

Published every aftemoon·, Monday

through Friday, 111 Coun St.,

Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Second·CIUa
postage paid at Pomeroy.

MIDDLEPORT - Hobson Christian Fellowship
Church, a ·mile south of
Middleport on Ohio 7, will
host Creationist Bobby
O'Connor, who will present
a 10-foot model of Noah's
Ark on Sunday at I 0 a.m.

Board approves
personnel
TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern Local Board of Education accepted the resignation &lt;;&gt;f William Blaine as a
math teacher at ' Eastern
High School during a special
meeting held last week.
Jacqueline Wolfe · was
approved as a substitute
teacher on an as-needed
basis and Abigail Cauthorn
·. was approved as a substitute
for the remainder of the
2000-01 school year.
The board also accepted
the resignation of 'Ter.esa
Benedum as Eastern Ele-

POMEROY - A marriage license has been issued
in Meigs County Probate
Court to William D. Doczi,
28, and Cindy Marie Knotts,
20, both of Middleport.

deserted from the U.S. Army
was arrested Tuesday in
Racine by local authorities.
According to reports,
David
M.
Bottomley,
Pomeroy, was arrested Tuesday night by Racine Village
Marshal Curtis Jones with
assistance from the Meigs

County Sheriff's Department
and Pomeroy Police Department.
Bottomley is currently
wanted for desertion from
the U.S. Army in Fort Scevert, Ga ., and is being held in
the Meigs County Jail for
extradition to Fort Knox, Ky.

Bid

Those phases of the project
were originally expected to sell
in late '2001 and mid-2002,
respectively.
" ODOT was able to
advance these lettings from
state fiscal years 2003 and
2004, respectively. because they
are being fin anced through a
plan which uses funds generated through the issuance of
bonds," Collins said.
"The yearly debt service
payment on the bonds would

Divorces filed

fromPageA1

POMEROY -An action
for divorce has been flied in
Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Debra
Howard, Long Bottom,
against
Craig Howard,
Pomeroy.
An action for dissolution
of marriage has been filed in
the court by Sandra K.
McDougal and James D.
McDougal, both of Gallipolis.
Divorces have been granted to Jason Smith from Amy
Smith, and to Crystal Dawn
Ridgway from Jeffery Lee
Ridgway.

postponement, but they should
be happy when they hear that
the Central Office has confirmed that the two remaining
connector phases will be
moved forward in the bidding
process," Collins said.
Phase 2 of the connector
project, .estimated at S22 million , from Five Points to
Morning Star, is expected to
sell June 18. Phase\ estimated
at S21 .7 million, ,vi]] complete
the segment from Morning
Star to Portland Road. It IS
expected to sell on Oct. 27 .

Registration
held

Rainy day on Thursday

Plan meeting

EMS runs

CENTRAL QISPATCH

Authorities
hold local man

ter which years the proJects are
let for bids;'' Collins added.
"ODOT's Division of Finance
has concurred that there is
money available to cover the
projects' early lettings."

VALLEY WEATHER

CHARLOTTE, N.C.
Final registration is now
being held for the Ten Star
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
All Star Summer Basketball
Rain will return to the
Camp. Boys, ages 8-19, and tri-county area tonight and
girls, ages 10-19, can apply. continue Thursday and
Past participants include Thursday night, the National
Michael Jordan, Tim Dun- Weather Service said. ·
can, Vince Carter, Grant Hill
The rain will change to or
and Jerry Stackhouse. Camp mix with snow on Friday as
locations
are
located winds shift to northwesterly,
throughout both Canada arid , drawing colder air into the
the U.S.
area.
Evaluation forms are availHighs on Thursday will be
able by calling 568-6801.
in the 50s, with lows in the
40s Thursday night. Temperatures will hold steady or fall
slightly during the day FriMIDDLEPO.RT- Annuday, forec1ters said.
. al meeting for the United
Sunset tonight will be at
Fund for Meigs County will 6:36, and unrise Thursday is
be held on March 29 at 6 at 6:45 a.m.
p.m., at the Riverbend Arts
Weather forecast:
Council.
Tonight ... Increasing
clouds. A chance of rain
showers late. Low in the
upper 30s. South wind 5 to
POMEROY - Units of 15. mph. Chance of rain 30
the Meig. Emergency Ser- percent.
vice answered four calls for
Thursday... OccasionaI
assistance on Tuesday. Units rain showers. High 54 to 58.
responded as follows:
5:22 a.m., Vine Street,
Curtis Jenkins, Holzer Medical Center;
I 0 a.m., Carpenter Road,
"'"M. Williams, HMC;
6:58p.m., Ohio 124, Feran
Barringer, Camden-Clark
Memorial Hospital.
POMEROY
6:38 p.m., Rocksprings,
Matt Stewart, treated.

be essentiaiJy the same no nut-

Southeast wind I 0 to 20
mph. Chance o( rain 90 percent.
Thursday night.. .Mostly
cloudy with a chance of
showers. Low in the mid 40s.
Extended forecast:
Friday... Cloudy with a
chance of showers during
the day, then a chance of
snow showers during the
night. No snow accumulation expected. High in the
upper 40s.
Saturday... Partly cloudy.
Low in the lower 30s and
high in the lower 50s .
Sunday... Partly cloudy. A
chance of showers during
the night. Low in the mid
30s and high in the mid 50s.
Monday... Cloudy with a
chance of showtrs. Low in
the lower 40s and high in the
lower 50s.
Tuesday... Rain likely. Low
in the lower 40s and high in
the mid 50s .

LOCAL STOCKS
AEP- 45''•
Arch Coal - 24 ',J

Akzo- 47'1,.
AmTech/SBC - 45
Ashland Inc. - 40
AT&amp;T -23'1,
Bank One - 34~.
Bob Evans- 20' 1•
BorgWarner - 44
Champion- 2"1.
Charming Shops
s~ll.

City Holding- 9 '~·.
Federal Mogul - 3\
USB- 211,

Gannett- 59 ~~
General Eleclrlc- 42\,
GKNLY- 101,
Harley Davidson
39~·.

Kmart-9
Kroger- 24
Lands End - 27 ~.
Ltd.- 16~
Oak Hill Financial -'
14li
OVB-25
BBT-35
Peoples - t7'Y•
Premier -

6'·

Rockwell-47
Rocky Boots - 5
AD Shell- 58

Sears -

Wendy's """7 _24 /t

Worthington - 9
Daily stock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing
quotes of lhe previous
day's transacHons, provided by Smith Part·
nars at Advest Inc. of
Gallipolis.

RACINE - A local man
who
recently allegedly

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

Member: The Associated Press and
tho Ohio Newspaper Association.'
Poatmaeter: Send address correc·
tlons to The Cally Sentinel, 111 Court
St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

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Mall subsalptJon
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Deadline is March 22, 2001
For More Information, Call
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./ FREE DELIVERY

�Opinion

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

So FaRf

DEAR ABBY: I read your column daily and have found the questions concerning when to talk to
children ~~out sex very interesting.
I feel Its up to the children to
bring up the subject first. If you have
made them comfortable talking to
you, they will expect their questions
to lie answered honestly.
ADVICE .
I was working in the kitchen one
day when my daughter, age 8, broadsided me with, "Mommy, how old do her and thought the exchange was
I have to be before I can have sex?" ' over when she asked if, when her
I took a deep breath and told her daddy and I were dating, did I ever
not until she found a man she really tell him no? Here I copped out and
loved and wanted to be her baby's told her that was something she
daddy, because when you have sex needed to ask her daddy.
you could get pregnant and have a
My husband was outside and
baby.
unaware of what was laking place in
She responded matter~of-factly, the kitchen, so he was unprepared
"You could always use the pill." I told when his 8-year-old . daughter
her there were other ways, and she approached him and pointedly asked
said, "You could just say no," I praised if, when he was dating Mommy, did

O J

_J;iiii--1

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

Abigail
Van
Buren

J

'I

'

Diane Kay Hill
Controller
wnm

IA'"n 10 lhe ~diJor an wtkorru. They sho~ld IH k11t1Nn 3()() words. AU
ll1'f 1wbjftt to tdilllll GtullfUUI N slfntd 11nli incbult IJIJIJrtu 11nd ttltphoM l'lllmbrr.

No IINtifiUd ktun wiU IH pllbWhtd. Lllttn 1hollld N in good 1/Uit, addrtlling
lurus, ~~~U,wnolt41ilifs.
Tltt opi11Wns uprtsHd In tht colw.niHiow anlht COIIWUIII oftiu Ohio Vollllty
Pulllishi"f Co.'s tdilorW botlrd, unk11 othu..,.,is. noted.

OUR VIEW

•

•

H1stonc
•

Rio Grande basketball takes
another step fonvard
The University of Rio Grande men's basketball team may
not have made it to the NAIA di\~sion championship game last
night, but did take a step farther by entering the semifinals for
the first time.
That may not count for a lot with some folks, but given Rio
Grande's rich history in basketball, it's another milestone.
For that, the team and Coach Earl Thomas deserve our tip of
the hat for pro~ng hard work and dedication can take a team
past the regular season and in contention for a national crown.
Rio Grande previously went to the NAIA nationals in 1985,
1987, 1991 and 1994, making it to either the first or second
rounds before another team eliminated the Redmen from
competition.
Starting last Thursday, this season's Rio Grande team progressed past the second round to the final four before Northwestern of Iowa halted the Redmen's path Monday night.
Getting there is the result of increased regular season competition that sharpened veterans' skills and forged players of the
future out of beginners.
By the time the Redmen battled their way into the postseason, they were a team ready for the next leveL Just ask the three
teams Rio Grande sent packing from Point Lookout, Mo., over
the weekend.
Local support played a role in pushing the team along the
path. It's heartening to find out a busload of citizens and basketball fans made their way to the last game.
Sadly, the same can't be said for national media attention.
NCAA and pro basketball commands the lion's share of coverage, but NAIA involves a lot of small colleges with teams that
deserve more than a score. The· excitement of play found on
this level is every bit as enthralling as their bigger school counterparts.
NAJA and its schools, such as Rio Grande, work hard for
respect. They deserve it, particularly after hearing about some
of the championship play.
.
This year's Redmen will take the distinction of making it to
the semifinal round. It's nothing to be dismissed lightly.
We say, there's always next year. Who knows? Maybe next
year; the Redmen .will take the next step for the tide shot.
Congratulations, Redmen. You did the tri-counry region
proud.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Wednesday, March 14, the 73rd day of 2001. There are
292 days left in the year.
·
Today's Highlight in History:
On March 14, 1951, during the Korean War, forces from the
United Nations recaptured SeouL
On this date:
In 1743, the first recorded town meeting in America was held,
at Faneuil Hall in Boston.
In 1794, Eli Whitney received a patFrit for his cotton gin, an
inVention that revolutionized America's cotton industry.
In 1900, Congress ratified the Gold Standard Act.
In 1923, President Warren G. Harding became the first chief
executive to file an income tax report.
In 1939, the republic of Czechoslovakia was dissolved, opening
the way for Nazi occupatian.
In 1943, Aaron Copland's orchestral work "Fanfare for the
Common Man" premiered in New York, with George Szell con•
ducting.
In 1964, a jury in Dallas found Jack Ruby guilty of murdering
Lee Harvey Oswald, the accused assassin of President Kennedy.
In 1965, Israel's cabinet formally approved establislunent of
diplomatic relations with West Germany.
In 1967, the body of President John F. Kennedy was moved
from a temporary grave to a permanent memorial site at Arlington National Cemetery.
In 1980, a Polish airliner crashed while making an emergency
landing near Warsaw. killing all 87 people aboard, including 22
members of a US. amateur boxing team.
Ten years ago: Speakers at a Los Angeles Police Commission
hearing demanded the ouster of ChiefDaryl F. Gates in the wake
of the videotaped police beating of motorist Rodney King. A
British court reversed the con~ctions of the "Birmingham Six;'
who had spent 16 years in prison for an Irish Republican Army
bombing, and oidered them released.
Five years ago: During a ~sit to Israel, President Bill Clinton
pledged $ t 00 million to the fight ag')inst terrorism. Steve Forbes
dropped his quest for the Republican pr~sidential nomination.
One year ago: Republican George W. Bush and Democrat AI
Gore clinched their presidential nominations in a sweep of
Southern primaries.
Today's Birthdays: Cartoonist Hank Ketcham ("Dennis the
Menace") is 81. Former astronaut Frank Borman is 73. Singer
Phil Phillips is 70. Actor Michael Caine is 68. Composer-conductor Quincy Jones i.s 68. · .,.

the Bend

SOCIETY
NEWS &amp; NOTES

she ever say no to ha~ng sex? He and
I are on the same page when it
comes to parenting. Without hesitating he answered, "Yes, repeatedly."
She said OK and walked away, dis-

responding to children's questions in blue suitcases that say "Going to
an age-appropriate way. It reminds Grandma's" and spend the weekend
me of a story I heard years ago: A with us. I have had as many as seven
young mother was asked by ·her 7- stay overnight at one time. In the
year-old son, "Mommy, where did I morning, I ask what they want for
cussion over.
bre.kfast. They all want something
come from?"
My daughter did wait for the man
The mother had prepared herself different: waflles, pancakes, biscuits
she truly loved to come along. They well in advance for that question and and gravy, eggs, bacon and toast.
now have two beautiful sons.
was ready with the answers, in all Guess what? I fix it all.
I'm relating this story so that their anatomical detaiL When she finI live for the times when they ~sit.
young parents will know the impor- ished her lecture, her son replied, I always have five ·days to get my
tance of listening to their children "Oh. My friend Jimmy said he came house back in order. I do laundry,
and answering their questions hon- from St. Louis:'
clean and make beds until Friday estly.This holds true throughout their
DEAR ABBY: I am a 79-year- when they come back again. I l0ve it!
lives. You may not always like what old grandmother of 17 and greatGRANDMA
SUSIE,
you hear, but if you have always been grandmother of eight. I am writing SHAWNEE, OKLA.
willing to listen, they will continue about the grandma letters you printDEAR GRANDMA SUSIE:
HAPPY ed in your column. I was shocked at Some people may say you are giving
to talk to you. GRANNY IN WALDO, FLA;
how some of them talk ·about their up your life for your grandchildren.
DEAR HAPPY GRANNY: ··rerrible" grandchildren. I love all my The truth is, you are receivin g love
Thanks for a letter that's sure to pro- grandchildren and great-grandchil- and making precious metnories for
mote discussion among people of all dren.
the children with whom you are
ages. It addresses the importance of
They. come with their pink and sharing your tife.

No one is immune from investment scams

PERKINS' VIEW

4·H nub'ition conference set

Most people think they can protect
themselves from investment scams. How-

Don't blame guns for tragic ·event at Santee

POMEROY- Meigs 4-H members, ad~sors and parents
are invited to attend a 4-H Foods and Nutrition Conference
March 31 from 10 a.m. to 2:15p.m., at the Ohio University
ip Chi)licothe.
Registration will get under way at 9:30 a.m.
Sessions on basic nutrition, table setting, measuring, menu
planning and cost per semng aie designated for beginning
members. Keeping food safe during judging and preparing for
internew judging are classes specified for the intermediate
member. A seminar on nutrition, menu planning and cost per
sernng. is being offered to both intermediate and advanced
If!embers.
Older members are also given the opportunity to learn
about fitness and taking projects to the next step of state fair
judging. AdVisors can attend any of these sessions as well as one
on club meetings and acti~ties. Classes on winning demonstrations, calcium, Glo-Germ and a Nutrition Bowl are open
to all participants.
Lunch will be p~ded. Door prizes will be given at the end
of the day.
The cost for the conference is $4 for members and $5 for
adults.
Registrations should be sent to OSU Extension-South District, P.O. Box 958, 17 Standpipe Road, Jackson, OH 45640,
Attention: Rhonda Wildman, by March 23.
If there are questions, call the Meigs County Extension
Office at 740-992-6696 or the South District Office at 740286-2177.

e\rer, no one is· immune because con artists

'

~olence through saturation exposure to'
Andy Williams spent his Wednesday
~olence-laden ~deo games - such as
afternoon in a San Diego County courtthose
at Dave &amp; Busters - and movies
room. The 15-year-old was charged with
u
and tele~sion and music.
gunning down two of his classmates at
Before the average American child fine'
Santana High School and wounding 13
ishes
elementary school, he or she will'
others..
view 100,000 acts of ~olence on televi~'
"Why?" asked the teachers who taught
sion,
including 8,000 murders.
''
him, the police who arrested him, the
Then, when they become old enougn'
prosecutors who charged him, and the
. to go to the movies by themselves, they
media horde that covered him.
are exposed to even more ~olence. lriJeff Cody spent his Wednesd3y evening
COLUMNIST
fact, the Federal Trade Commission•.
at Dave &amp; Busters, a national "food and
issued a report la&lt;t year finding thar
entertainment" chain that just opened a ·
mo~e studios "routinely undercut their'
San Diego location. It's 'quite popular
with vjrtual-reality and video game
If only there were not so many guns in own rating restrictions by targeting \theY
junkies.
this country. If only guns were not so eas- marketing (o6 violent films ... to young
So 11~year-old Jeff spent a matter of ily acquired by kids. If only gun-owning audiences."
The music industry is no· •·different.
hours with ersatz weaponry in his hands, parents kept their weapons locked up. If
gunning down human targets on really only there were more gun-control laws. When kids go to Wherehouse or To~t
cool .video ~es. Like Sega'~ "L.A. · Well, yes, there are a lot of guns in this Records, they see in-store promotions Machin.e Gun, m wh1ch the pres1dent of country, somewl)~re between 200 mil- sponsored by record c,ompanies - for
the :]Jruted States IS subJect to an armed lion and 250 million. But Americans have the latest CDs featuring hard core, via:\
assault. And Konami's "Silent Scope;' in been armed to the teeth since the lence-glorifYing lyrics. Record · execs
which the player is transmogrified into a nation's very founding. Yet the · rash of insist they' behave responsibly becau!e'
smper.
underage gun ~olence, particularly on they affix parental warning labels on their
Between ganws, the fifth grader pon- · school campuses, is a fairly recent phe- ~alent product.
But parents don't really know what
dered whether exposure to violent video nomcnon.
their
kids are listening to. And record
games might contribute to school shootYes, there have been national surveys
ings, such as the one up the road at San- suggesting that more than half of middle companies know it. Because parents may
tana High. "Maybe a little," he responded. school and high school students know hear a cleaned-up version · of a certain
artist's music on the radio and feel com~
Meanwhile, the "search for answers" in how and where to purchase a firearm.
But most licensed gun dealers are law- fortable allowing their youngsters to pur-'
the Santana High shootings continues. Is
the boy the product of a dysfunctional abiding business folk, contrary to prevail- chase the artist's CD. But the music store
family? Does he have a history of mental ing myth. If a minor tried to buy gun sells the kid the uncensored CD illness? Is there a substance abuse. prob-. from them or tried to get them to com- unbeknownst to their parents - violenr
.
.
.
lem? Was he tired of being bullied?
mit an obvious felony, they would toss lyrics intact.
Against this backdrop, it is ea&lt;y to
So far, none of these possibilities has him out on his underaged ear.
,
understand
how, according to police, the
panned out.
No, the accused reportedly "borrowed".
His single, divorced dad had not physi- his dad's gun, loc:;ked away in a cabinet. accused shooter .could show no obvious
cally abused him or sexually inolested Apparently, he wa5 determined to get the signs of being distraught, disturbed or
him or anything like that. The ninth weapon, locked ljp or not. And a trigger under great emotional stress after blowc
grader wasn't seeing a shrink, hadn't been lock probably llUld have been no more ing away his classmates.
Violence came as naturally to the teen~
previously diagnosed with any mental of a deterrent. ' .
·
problems. He wasn't drug or alcohol
It's hard to im~ne any new gun con- age shooter as grooving to his Wa!kman;
addled at the time of the shooting. And trol law that wquld have prevented the catching a mo~e, checking out the tube;
·
'
he had no beef with the kids he random- carnage at Santana High. For the prob- or pla~ng a ~deo game.
aoseph Perkins is a columnist for The San
ly shot.
lem is not the gyn; it is America's culture
Di£go Union· Tribune and can be reached ai
So the school-shootings "experts" have of ~olence.
settled on the usual culprit - the gun.
Indeed, America's youth are inured to Joseph.Perkins@UnionTrib.com.)

Joseph
PerKins

Service lfOUpl meet It URG
·' POMEROY - Meigs Alpha Omicron Chapter of Delta
~ppa Gamma mcmbcn met with memben of Beta Alpha,
Delt,a Eplilon and Beta 'II.u at the Uniwrsity of Rio Grande
for a combined meeting rccendy.
.
., Beta Alpha wu the host chapter, The group e!lioyed "Heaven and Earth, mulic and lyrics of Rogen and f.:!ammerstein,
presented by singer Ed Roark and pianist Edle .Roll. "Oh,
What a Beautiful Morning", "Some enchanted Evening" and
"Sound of Music" were among the songs featured. The group
joined Roark in singing the finale song, "Edelweiss:•
Grace preceding the buffet dinner was giyen by the host
chapter. Tables were decorated with plana which were given
in a drawing to members. Favors were candies and angel pins.
Pam Toon presided at the business meeting of Alpha Omicron with Nellie Parker, secretary, reading the minutes of the
last meeting. Next meeting wa5 aruiounced for.April 25 at St.
Peter and Paul in Wellston. Founder's Day will be featured and
necrology report will be given.
..
Attending from Meigs County were Lee Lee, Paula Whitt,
Matjory Fetty, Gay Perrin, Rosalie Story and Nellie Parker.
'

.I

human body. When I started out, my · • Dance with a woman half your age.
body was a dictatorship. Initially my
• Cheer for the Toronto Maple LeafS.
s~omach was the Grand Pooh-bah, but it
• Join a fitness club.
was eventually overthrown by . anotl;ter
• Watch any TV show produced by .
dictator during puberty. That led to the Dick Clark.
·
Reign of Terror, which ended at some
• Answer the phone at dinnertime. ·
point during the wedding ceremony.
·
Life's a game
'
Atld noW I find, with the educational · When the first of my two sons was
side effect of time and experience, my ·oorn, I used to sit him in his stroller out
body has W:rned into a democracy. When in the' backyard while a budc;ly and I
I think that I'd like to play ·tennis, I first would have a game of catch. When he
consult m\r:arms and legs and back,.trying started walking, I'd get him out there and
to g_et a c:Onsensus. If the proposal passes at roll the ball along the ground· to
A
all, it's usually in an amended form, which year later, I'd be.throwing it undethmd
means I watch tennis on telMsion.
him, and a year after that, I switched t~
· With me, the majority rules. And if overhand, but still throwing as gently as
there's some kind of sexual initiative sug- could. After a couple of more years, h~
gesced, Jt 'often passes the Lower House was in a baseball league, and I coul4
but is then overturned by the older and throw the ball to him as hard as I wanted;
wiser Senate.
A few )'1:31'5 after that, I noticed he start{
I hope I'm m optimilt
ed ;!asing off on how hard he was throw;
These days, optimists have fallen on ing me the ball. Last year he startei
hard times. It seems that if you feel good throwing it underhand to me.·This sum.
about the future, you are either an idiot or mer I figure I'll be sitt.ing in my s[!Olle~
uninfOrmed, or, in the worst case, ari watching him and his brother have 1
uninformed idiot. So the best way for game of catch.
: '
1
optimists to avoid the scorn of society is
Quote of the Day: "Always remembef
to hide their aflliction. Here is a list of you're unique, just like ewryone else." ..o.
things you should never do because they Red Green
tell the world that you are too hopeful:
(Red Grew i5 the star ~"The Red Gretf
• Buy a car made in a communist Show," a television series seen in the Unirt~
country.
States on PBS)
•• 1

hun.

POMEROY - Pomeroy Youth
League !llgnupil, Thurlday·and Fri·
day, Pomeroy Elementary School.
5 to 7:30 p.m.
POMEROY - Rock Springs Ba!ler

Haalth Club, Thursday, 1 p.m.,
home ol Barbara Fry.

FRIDAY
HARRISONVILLE - Hantsonvllle
1 Lodgl411, F&amp;A.M. annuallnapec·
lion, Friday, 8:30 dinner followed
: by degree work at 7:30 p.m. All
' masttr masons Invited.
•

~ ~TUADAY

SALEM CENTER - star Grange

1, '

The Community Clltndlr le .
publlehed •• • frM ,.,Ice to

·-

non-profit groupe wlehlng to
announce mHtlngelllld epeclal
The

calendar 11 not detllgnld to

prarnoll 111M or funckalterl of
any type. Heme . . prlnllld only
ae apace permlta and C:llllnot be

guwan!Md to be printed a epeclflc number of daye,

Mutual Fund

For
Investors.

To find out more about Nationwide:$ family of Mutual Funds- Call
·me... Stop by.. ,- ft's your choice!

For more lntonnaUon, Including charges and expen1111s, please consult a
proepectus. proajlectUiel can be obtained trom your NaUon- Agent
or bywrttlng to Nationwide Advisory Satvlces, Inc., P.O. box 1492.
ColumbuS, OH 43216-14112. Pleue road the proopec!Ua
carefully belorelnvtsllng any fll0n8y.

Hotlonwii:N II On Your SW

prey

on people's emotions of fear and
greed.
Never invest money based upon highpressure_sales pitches. Some callers may ask
you to act now before the opportunity is
gone. This is done so you won't have time
to think about your decision. They are
afraid that after careful thought, you may
change your mind .
To better understand the investment, ask
for written information and read it carefully. If callers say there is no time to provide
it, hang up. Since they won't furnish the literature, they must not be legitimate.
Realize that even if you receive supplemental information, you need to scrutinize
it closely. Have a trusted banker, broker or
accountant give their opinions about the
investment agreement before signing.
Be wary· of "free gifts" you may have
won. The acceptance form may actually be
a purchase agreement. Never sign any doc-

Becky
Baer

ernment securities.

TIME OUT FOR TIPS

Be suspicious. Find out how your money
is going to be spent. Identify the sales fees
or broker's commissions. Never give your
credit card number or financial information to any strangers unless you initiated
the call. Don't be afraid to ask questions.
If it sounds too good to be true, it probably is.
For peace of mind, check securities
investments by calling the Ohio Division
of Securities at 1-800-788-1 194 before
agreeing to the investment. Verify futures
investments through the National Futures
Association's Disciplinary Information
Access Line at 1-800-676-4NFA.
Don't become a ~ctim of fraud. Take
precautions to keep your money.
(Becky Baer i5 a Meigs County exlitlsion

ument where there are blank spaces.
When receiving a phone solicitation,
keep in mind the caller is a salesman, even
though they may be a financial planner,
broker or counselor. There ultimate goal is
to sell you an investment so they can make
money Of course, not all people who sell
investments are crooked, but realize they
may not have your best interests at heart.
Watch out for callers who say they will
pick up the investment money at your
home. This is not only done to keep you
from thinking about your decision, but it
will also prevent them from breaking mail
agent at the Ohio State University Exlitlsion.)
fraud laws.

vauuhanlnvlta You To coma And
Dick&amp;
01 lhasa Extra
Taka
In
AI
··FRIDAY··IITURDAY
•

Superlar•ole Tnlm

IDidiDIIPI

Ba nas

9°umtt4

25° lb.

Fresh Frolllur Bakerv

Eckrlcll

Glazed

or
181Z.Pill.

$1990oz.

. . . .111101

conaue
Cheese
·gc
g

24oz.

AblriiVII

g

s249casa
Dill Sliced

ile am,
99° lb.

407 Pearl Street
Middleport, Ohio

!

--

HARTFORD, W.Va.- Songtest,
Church of Chriatln Christian
Union, featuring Tho Riffles. Faith
Believers, Calvin Minnis, New LHo,
The Schoonovars and Bennie
Simpkins. 7 p.m. Love offering lo
benefit Bond Area Gospel Jubilee.

---__,~~

J

,

778 and Star Junior Grange 878,
SatUrday fun right 1111&lt;1 potluck
IIIJpper. PoUuck at 6:30 p.m.

THURSDAY
CHESTER - Cheater Township
TNIIMI, monthly nieaHng, Thursday, 7 p.m. town hal. Appropria·
ttone to ba approved . .

Men have more dangerous things .to gaze upon
For as long as I can remember; there've
been men's magazines. You know what
.I'm talking about: Playboy, Penthouse,
that kind of thing. Now. I'm not here to
pass judgment one way or the other, but
I'm sure many wives don't appreciate
their husbands looking at these kinds of
publications. Comparison shopping doesn't belong in the bedroom.
But I think there are more dangerous
things to look at than men's rnagazi nes. A
lot of men my .age have replaced sexy
publications with monthly magatines
offering used rrucks .and boats and RVs,
(or.example. Complete with pictures.
This has got to be much scarier than
seeing your husband browsing through
Playboy. When he looks at pictures in a
men's magazine, there's no chance h,e's
going to bring any of those home.
To.{8lltarian to egalitarian
They used to teach us in history dass ·
that the type of government a country
has is directly related to the age of the
country and the level of education of its
citizens. The . implication was that you
may start out as a dictatorship, and that
can be a good thing, but through experience and teaching, democracy evolves
naturally.
I think this same theory applies to the

You should invest only in· the investments you understand. Know their potential risks and rewards. Remember that no
investment is risk-free, other than savinS$
in insured financial institutions and gov-

LOCAL EVENTS

RED GREEN'S VIEW

BY RED GREEN

Page AS

Parents willing to listen will have children willing-to talk

~fORM$IOil

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

_Th_e

WeclnesdiiJ. M8rch 14, 2001_

Wf4aT Po VouTtlitll&lt;
oF PReSiPfm' &amp;uSH'S

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992·2156 ·Fax: 992·2157

Charles W. Govey
Publisher

o_a~_·Iy_se_ntm_ei_ _~-=B=.y

PageA4.

_,

___
,,

~----~~~~------'-1----------c

---- ~-

•.

�Opinion

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

So FaRf

DEAR ABBY: I read your column daily and have found the questions concerning when to talk to
children ~~out sex very interesting.
I feel Its up to the children to
bring up the subject first. If you have
made them comfortable talking to
you, they will expect their questions
to lie answered honestly.
ADVICE .
I was working in the kitchen one
day when my daughter, age 8, broadsided me with, "Mommy, how old do her and thought the exchange was
I have to be before I can have sex?" ' over when she asked if, when her
I took a deep breath and told her daddy and I were dating, did I ever
not until she found a man she really tell him no? Here I copped out and
loved and wanted to be her baby's told her that was something she
daddy, because when you have sex needed to ask her daddy.
you could get pregnant and have a
My husband was outside and
baby.
unaware of what was laking place in
She responded matter~of-factly, the kitchen, so he was unprepared
"You could always use the pill." I told when his 8-year-old . daughter
her there were other ways, and she approached him and pointedly asked
said, "You could just say no," I praised if, when he was dating Mommy, did

O J

_J;iiii--1

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

Abigail
Van
Buren

J

'I

'

Diane Kay Hill
Controller
wnm

IA'"n 10 lhe ~diJor an wtkorru. They sho~ld IH k11t1Nn 3()() words. AU
ll1'f 1wbjftt to tdilllll GtullfUUI N slfntd 11nli incbult IJIJIJrtu 11nd ttltphoM l'lllmbrr.

No IINtifiUd ktun wiU IH pllbWhtd. Lllttn 1hollld N in good 1/Uit, addrtlling
lurus, ~~~U,wnolt41ilifs.
Tltt opi11Wns uprtsHd In tht colw.niHiow anlht COIIWUIII oftiu Ohio Vollllty
Pulllishi"f Co.'s tdilorW botlrd, unk11 othu..,.,is. noted.

OUR VIEW

•

•

H1stonc
•

Rio Grande basketball takes
another step fonvard
The University of Rio Grande men's basketball team may
not have made it to the NAIA di\~sion championship game last
night, but did take a step farther by entering the semifinals for
the first time.
That may not count for a lot with some folks, but given Rio
Grande's rich history in basketball, it's another milestone.
For that, the team and Coach Earl Thomas deserve our tip of
the hat for pro~ng hard work and dedication can take a team
past the regular season and in contention for a national crown.
Rio Grande previously went to the NAIA nationals in 1985,
1987, 1991 and 1994, making it to either the first or second
rounds before another team eliminated the Redmen from
competition.
Starting last Thursday, this season's Rio Grande team progressed past the second round to the final four before Northwestern of Iowa halted the Redmen's path Monday night.
Getting there is the result of increased regular season competition that sharpened veterans' skills and forged players of the
future out of beginners.
By the time the Redmen battled their way into the postseason, they were a team ready for the next leveL Just ask the three
teams Rio Grande sent packing from Point Lookout, Mo., over
the weekend.
Local support played a role in pushing the team along the
path. It's heartening to find out a busload of citizens and basketball fans made their way to the last game.
Sadly, the same can't be said for national media attention.
NCAA and pro basketball commands the lion's share of coverage, but NAIA involves a lot of small colleges with teams that
deserve more than a score. The· excitement of play found on
this level is every bit as enthralling as their bigger school counterparts.
NAJA and its schools, such as Rio Grande, work hard for
respect. They deserve it, particularly after hearing about some
of the championship play.
.
This year's Redmen will take the distinction of making it to
the semifinal round. It's nothing to be dismissed lightly.
We say, there's always next year. Who knows? Maybe next
year; the Redmen .will take the next step for the tide shot.
Congratulations, Redmen. You did the tri-counry region
proud.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Wednesday, March 14, the 73rd day of 2001. There are
292 days left in the year.
·
Today's Highlight in History:
On March 14, 1951, during the Korean War, forces from the
United Nations recaptured SeouL
On this date:
In 1743, the first recorded town meeting in America was held,
at Faneuil Hall in Boston.
In 1794, Eli Whitney received a patFrit for his cotton gin, an
inVention that revolutionized America's cotton industry.
In 1900, Congress ratified the Gold Standard Act.
In 1923, President Warren G. Harding became the first chief
executive to file an income tax report.
In 1939, the republic of Czechoslovakia was dissolved, opening
the way for Nazi occupatian.
In 1943, Aaron Copland's orchestral work "Fanfare for the
Common Man" premiered in New York, with George Szell con•
ducting.
In 1964, a jury in Dallas found Jack Ruby guilty of murdering
Lee Harvey Oswald, the accused assassin of President Kennedy.
In 1965, Israel's cabinet formally approved establislunent of
diplomatic relations with West Germany.
In 1967, the body of President John F. Kennedy was moved
from a temporary grave to a permanent memorial site at Arlington National Cemetery.
In 1980, a Polish airliner crashed while making an emergency
landing near Warsaw. killing all 87 people aboard, including 22
members of a US. amateur boxing team.
Ten years ago: Speakers at a Los Angeles Police Commission
hearing demanded the ouster of ChiefDaryl F. Gates in the wake
of the videotaped police beating of motorist Rodney King. A
British court reversed the con~ctions of the "Birmingham Six;'
who had spent 16 years in prison for an Irish Republican Army
bombing, and oidered them released.
Five years ago: During a ~sit to Israel, President Bill Clinton
pledged $ t 00 million to the fight ag')inst terrorism. Steve Forbes
dropped his quest for the Republican pr~sidential nomination.
One year ago: Republican George W. Bush and Democrat AI
Gore clinched their presidential nominations in a sweep of
Southern primaries.
Today's Birthdays: Cartoonist Hank Ketcham ("Dennis the
Menace") is 81. Former astronaut Frank Borman is 73. Singer
Phil Phillips is 70. Actor Michael Caine is 68. Composer-conductor Quincy Jones i.s 68. · .,.

the Bend

SOCIETY
NEWS &amp; NOTES

she ever say no to ha~ng sex? He and
I are on the same page when it
comes to parenting. Without hesitating he answered, "Yes, repeatedly."
She said OK and walked away, dis-

responding to children's questions in blue suitcases that say "Going to
an age-appropriate way. It reminds Grandma's" and spend the weekend
me of a story I heard years ago: A with us. I have had as many as seven
young mother was asked by ·her 7- stay overnight at one time. In the
year-old son, "Mommy, where did I morning, I ask what they want for
cussion over.
bre.kfast. They all want something
come from?"
My daughter did wait for the man
The mother had prepared herself different: waflles, pancakes, biscuits
she truly loved to come along. They well in advance for that question and and gravy, eggs, bacon and toast.
now have two beautiful sons.
was ready with the answers, in all Guess what? I fix it all.
I'm relating this story so that their anatomical detaiL When she finI live for the times when they ~sit.
young parents will know the impor- ished her lecture, her son replied, I always have five ·days to get my
tance of listening to their children "Oh. My friend Jimmy said he came house back in order. I do laundry,
and answering their questions hon- from St. Louis:'
clean and make beds until Friday estly.This holds true throughout their
DEAR ABBY: I am a 79-year- when they come back again. I l0ve it!
lives. You may not always like what old grandmother of 17 and greatGRANDMA
SUSIE,
you hear, but if you have always been grandmother of eight. I am writing SHAWNEE, OKLA.
willing to listen, they will continue about the grandma letters you printDEAR GRANDMA SUSIE:
HAPPY ed in your column. I was shocked at Some people may say you are giving
to talk to you. GRANNY IN WALDO, FLA;
how some of them talk ·about their up your life for your grandchildren.
DEAR HAPPY GRANNY: ··rerrible" grandchildren. I love all my The truth is, you are receivin g love
Thanks for a letter that's sure to pro- grandchildren and great-grandchil- and making precious metnories for
mote discussion among people of all dren.
the children with whom you are
ages. It addresses the importance of
They. come with their pink and sharing your tife.

No one is immune from investment scams

PERKINS' VIEW

4·H nub'ition conference set

Most people think they can protect
themselves from investment scams. How-

Don't blame guns for tragic ·event at Santee

POMEROY- Meigs 4-H members, ad~sors and parents
are invited to attend a 4-H Foods and Nutrition Conference
March 31 from 10 a.m. to 2:15p.m., at the Ohio University
ip Chi)licothe.
Registration will get under way at 9:30 a.m.
Sessions on basic nutrition, table setting, measuring, menu
planning and cost per semng aie designated for beginning
members. Keeping food safe during judging and preparing for
internew judging are classes specified for the intermediate
member. A seminar on nutrition, menu planning and cost per
sernng. is being offered to both intermediate and advanced
If!embers.
Older members are also given the opportunity to learn
about fitness and taking projects to the next step of state fair
judging. AdVisors can attend any of these sessions as well as one
on club meetings and acti~ties. Classes on winning demonstrations, calcium, Glo-Germ and a Nutrition Bowl are open
to all participants.
Lunch will be p~ded. Door prizes will be given at the end
of the day.
The cost for the conference is $4 for members and $5 for
adults.
Registrations should be sent to OSU Extension-South District, P.O. Box 958, 17 Standpipe Road, Jackson, OH 45640,
Attention: Rhonda Wildman, by March 23.
If there are questions, call the Meigs County Extension
Office at 740-992-6696 or the South District Office at 740286-2177.

e\rer, no one is· immune because con artists

'

~olence through saturation exposure to'
Andy Williams spent his Wednesday
~olence-laden ~deo games - such as
afternoon in a San Diego County courtthose
at Dave &amp; Busters - and movies
room. The 15-year-old was charged with
u
and tele~sion and music.
gunning down two of his classmates at
Before the average American child fine'
Santana High School and wounding 13
ishes
elementary school, he or she will'
others..
view 100,000 acts of ~olence on televi~'
"Why?" asked the teachers who taught
sion,
including 8,000 murders.
''
him, the police who arrested him, the
Then, when they become old enougn'
prosecutors who charged him, and the
. to go to the movies by themselves, they
media horde that covered him.
are exposed to even more ~olence. lriJeff Cody spent his Wednesd3y evening
COLUMNIST
fact, the Federal Trade Commission•.
at Dave &amp; Busters, a national "food and
issued a report la&lt;t year finding thar
entertainment" chain that just opened a ·
mo~e studios "routinely undercut their'
San Diego location. It's 'quite popular
with vjrtual-reality and video game
If only there were not so many guns in own rating restrictions by targeting \theY
junkies.
this country. If only guns were not so eas- marketing (o6 violent films ... to young
So 11~year-old Jeff spent a matter of ily acquired by kids. If only gun-owning audiences."
The music industry is no· •·different.
hours with ersatz weaponry in his hands, parents kept their weapons locked up. If
gunning down human targets on really only there were more gun-control laws. When kids go to Wherehouse or To~t
cool .video ~es. Like Sega'~ "L.A. · Well, yes, there are a lot of guns in this Records, they see in-store promotions Machin.e Gun, m wh1ch the pres1dent of country, somewl)~re between 200 mil- sponsored by record c,ompanies - for
the :]Jruted States IS subJect to an armed lion and 250 million. But Americans have the latest CDs featuring hard core, via:\
assault. And Konami's "Silent Scope;' in been armed to the teeth since the lence-glorifYing lyrics. Record · execs
which the player is transmogrified into a nation's very founding. Yet the · rash of insist they' behave responsibly becau!e'
smper.
underage gun ~olence, particularly on they affix parental warning labels on their
Between ganws, the fifth grader pon- · school campuses, is a fairly recent phe- ~alent product.
But parents don't really know what
dered whether exposure to violent video nomcnon.
their
kids are listening to. And record
games might contribute to school shootYes, there have been national surveys
ings, such as the one up the road at San- suggesting that more than half of middle companies know it. Because parents may
tana High. "Maybe a little," he responded. school and high school students know hear a cleaned-up version · of a certain
artist's music on the radio and feel com~
Meanwhile, the "search for answers" in how and where to purchase a firearm.
But most licensed gun dealers are law- fortable allowing their youngsters to pur-'
the Santana High shootings continues. Is
the boy the product of a dysfunctional abiding business folk, contrary to prevail- chase the artist's CD. But the music store
family? Does he have a history of mental ing myth. If a minor tried to buy gun sells the kid the uncensored CD illness? Is there a substance abuse. prob-. from them or tried to get them to com- unbeknownst to their parents - violenr
.
.
.
lem? Was he tired of being bullied?
mit an obvious felony, they would toss lyrics intact.
Against this backdrop, it is ea&lt;y to
So far, none of these possibilities has him out on his underaged ear.
,
understand
how, according to police, the
panned out.
No, the accused reportedly "borrowed".
His single, divorced dad had not physi- his dad's gun, loc:;ked away in a cabinet. accused shooter .could show no obvious
cally abused him or sexually inolested Apparently, he wa5 determined to get the signs of being distraught, disturbed or
him or anything like that. The ninth weapon, locked ljp or not. And a trigger under great emotional stress after blowc
grader wasn't seeing a shrink, hadn't been lock probably llUld have been no more ing away his classmates.
Violence came as naturally to the teen~
previously diagnosed with any mental of a deterrent. ' .
·
problems. He wasn't drug or alcohol
It's hard to im~ne any new gun con- age shooter as grooving to his Wa!kman;
addled at the time of the shooting. And trol law that wquld have prevented the catching a mo~e, checking out the tube;
·
'
he had no beef with the kids he random- carnage at Santana High. For the prob- or pla~ng a ~deo game.
aoseph Perkins is a columnist for The San
ly shot.
lem is not the gyn; it is America's culture
Di£go Union· Tribune and can be reached ai
So the school-shootings "experts" have of ~olence.
settled on the usual culprit - the gun.
Indeed, America's youth are inured to Joseph.Perkins@UnionTrib.com.)

Joseph
PerKins

Service lfOUpl meet It URG
·' POMEROY - Meigs Alpha Omicron Chapter of Delta
~ppa Gamma mcmbcn met with memben of Beta Alpha,
Delt,a Eplilon and Beta 'II.u at the Uniwrsity of Rio Grande
for a combined meeting rccendy.
.
., Beta Alpha wu the host chapter, The group e!lioyed "Heaven and Earth, mulic and lyrics of Rogen and f.:!ammerstein,
presented by singer Ed Roark and pianist Edle .Roll. "Oh,
What a Beautiful Morning", "Some enchanted Evening" and
"Sound of Music" were among the songs featured. The group
joined Roark in singing the finale song, "Edelweiss:•
Grace preceding the buffet dinner was giyen by the host
chapter. Tables were decorated with plana which were given
in a drawing to members. Favors were candies and angel pins.
Pam Toon presided at the business meeting of Alpha Omicron with Nellie Parker, secretary, reading the minutes of the
last meeting. Next meeting wa5 aruiounced for.April 25 at St.
Peter and Paul in Wellston. Founder's Day will be featured and
necrology report will be given.
..
Attending from Meigs County were Lee Lee, Paula Whitt,
Matjory Fetty, Gay Perrin, Rosalie Story and Nellie Parker.
'

.I

human body. When I started out, my · • Dance with a woman half your age.
body was a dictatorship. Initially my
• Cheer for the Toronto Maple LeafS.
s~omach was the Grand Pooh-bah, but it
• Join a fitness club.
was eventually overthrown by . anotl;ter
• Watch any TV show produced by .
dictator during puberty. That led to the Dick Clark.
·
Reign of Terror, which ended at some
• Answer the phone at dinnertime. ·
point during the wedding ceremony.
·
Life's a game
'
Atld noW I find, with the educational · When the first of my two sons was
side effect of time and experience, my ·oorn, I used to sit him in his stroller out
body has W:rned into a democracy. When in the' backyard while a budc;ly and I
I think that I'd like to play ·tennis, I first would have a game of catch. When he
consult m\r:arms and legs and back,.trying started walking, I'd get him out there and
to g_et a c:Onsensus. If the proposal passes at roll the ball along the ground· to
A
all, it's usually in an amended form, which year later, I'd be.throwing it undethmd
means I watch tennis on telMsion.
him, and a year after that, I switched t~
· With me, the majority rules. And if overhand, but still throwing as gently as
there's some kind of sexual initiative sug- could. After a couple of more years, h~
gesced, Jt 'often passes the Lower House was in a baseball league, and I coul4
but is then overturned by the older and throw the ball to him as hard as I wanted;
wiser Senate.
A few )'1:31'5 after that, I noticed he start{
I hope I'm m optimilt
ed ;!asing off on how hard he was throw;
These days, optimists have fallen on ing me the ball. Last year he startei
hard times. It seems that if you feel good throwing it underhand to me.·This sum.
about the future, you are either an idiot or mer I figure I'll be sitt.ing in my s[!Olle~
uninfOrmed, or, in the worst case, ari watching him and his brother have 1
uninformed idiot. So the best way for game of catch.
: '
1
optimists to avoid the scorn of society is
Quote of the Day: "Always remembef
to hide their aflliction. Here is a list of you're unique, just like ewryone else." ..o.
things you should never do because they Red Green
tell the world that you are too hopeful:
(Red Grew i5 the star ~"The Red Gretf
• Buy a car made in a communist Show," a television series seen in the Unirt~
country.
States on PBS)
•• 1

hun.

POMEROY - Pomeroy Youth
League !llgnupil, Thurlday·and Fri·
day, Pomeroy Elementary School.
5 to 7:30 p.m.
POMEROY - Rock Springs Ba!ler

Haalth Club, Thursday, 1 p.m.,
home ol Barbara Fry.

FRIDAY
HARRISONVILLE - Hantsonvllle
1 Lodgl411, F&amp;A.M. annuallnapec·
lion, Friday, 8:30 dinner followed
: by degree work at 7:30 p.m. All
' masttr masons Invited.
•

~ ~TUADAY

SALEM CENTER - star Grange

1, '

The Community Clltndlr le .
publlehed •• • frM ,.,Ice to

·-

non-profit groupe wlehlng to
announce mHtlngelllld epeclal
The

calendar 11 not detllgnld to

prarnoll 111M or funckalterl of
any type. Heme . . prlnllld only
ae apace permlta and C:llllnot be

guwan!Md to be printed a epeclflc number of daye,

Mutual Fund

For
Investors.

To find out more about Nationwide:$ family of Mutual Funds- Call
·me... Stop by.. ,- ft's your choice!

For more lntonnaUon, Including charges and expen1111s, please consult a
proepectus. proajlectUiel can be obtained trom your NaUon- Agent
or bywrttlng to Nationwide Advisory Satvlces, Inc., P.O. box 1492.
ColumbuS, OH 43216-14112. Pleue road the proopec!Ua
carefully belorelnvtsllng any fll0n8y.

Hotlonwii:N II On Your SW

prey

on people's emotions of fear and
greed.
Never invest money based upon highpressure_sales pitches. Some callers may ask
you to act now before the opportunity is
gone. This is done so you won't have time
to think about your decision. They are
afraid that after careful thought, you may
change your mind .
To better understand the investment, ask
for written information and read it carefully. If callers say there is no time to provide
it, hang up. Since they won't furnish the literature, they must not be legitimate.
Realize that even if you receive supplemental information, you need to scrutinize
it closely. Have a trusted banker, broker or
accountant give their opinions about the
investment agreement before signing.
Be wary· of "free gifts" you may have
won. The acceptance form may actually be
a purchase agreement. Never sign any doc-

Becky
Baer

ernment securities.

TIME OUT FOR TIPS

Be suspicious. Find out how your money
is going to be spent. Identify the sales fees
or broker's commissions. Never give your
credit card number or financial information to any strangers unless you initiated
the call. Don't be afraid to ask questions.
If it sounds too good to be true, it probably is.
For peace of mind, check securities
investments by calling the Ohio Division
of Securities at 1-800-788-1 194 before
agreeing to the investment. Verify futures
investments through the National Futures
Association's Disciplinary Information
Access Line at 1-800-676-4NFA.
Don't become a ~ctim of fraud. Take
precautions to keep your money.
(Becky Baer i5 a Meigs County exlitlsion

ument where there are blank spaces.
When receiving a phone solicitation,
keep in mind the caller is a salesman, even
though they may be a financial planner,
broker or counselor. There ultimate goal is
to sell you an investment so they can make
money Of course, not all people who sell
investments are crooked, but realize they
may not have your best interests at heart.
Watch out for callers who say they will
pick up the investment money at your
home. This is not only done to keep you
from thinking about your decision, but it
will also prevent them from breaking mail
agent at the Ohio State University Exlitlsion.)
fraud laws.

vauuhanlnvlta You To coma And
Dick&amp;
01 lhasa Extra
Taka
In
AI
··FRIDAY··IITURDAY
•

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IDidiDIIPI

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25° lb.

Fresh Frolllur Bakerv

Eckrlcll

Glazed

or
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conaue
Cheese
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g

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ile am,
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!

--

HARTFORD, W.Va.- Songtest,
Church of Chriatln Christian
Union, featuring Tho Riffles. Faith
Believers, Calvin Minnis, New LHo,
The Schoonovars and Bennie
Simpkins. 7 p.m. Love offering lo
benefit Bond Area Gospel Jubilee.

---__,~~

J

,

778 and Star Junior Grange 878,
SatUrday fun right 1111&lt;1 potluck
IIIJpper. PoUuck at 6:30 p.m.

THURSDAY
CHESTER - Cheater Township
TNIIMI, monthly nieaHng, Thursday, 7 p.m. town hal. Appropria·
ttone to ba approved . .

Men have more dangerous things .to gaze upon
For as long as I can remember; there've
been men's magazines. You know what
.I'm talking about: Playboy, Penthouse,
that kind of thing. Now. I'm not here to
pass judgment one way or the other, but
I'm sure many wives don't appreciate
their husbands looking at these kinds of
publications. Comparison shopping doesn't belong in the bedroom.
But I think there are more dangerous
things to look at than men's rnagazi nes. A
lot of men my .age have replaced sexy
publications with monthly magatines
offering used rrucks .and boats and RVs,
(or.example. Complete with pictures.
This has got to be much scarier than
seeing your husband browsing through
Playboy. When he looks at pictures in a
men's magazine, there's no chance h,e's
going to bring any of those home.
To.{8lltarian to egalitarian
They used to teach us in history dass ·
that the type of government a country
has is directly related to the age of the
country and the level of education of its
citizens. The . implication was that you
may start out as a dictatorship, and that
can be a good thing, but through experience and teaching, democracy evolves
naturally.
I think this same theory applies to the

You should invest only in· the investments you understand. Know their potential risks and rewards. Remember that no
investment is risk-free, other than savinS$
in insured financial institutions and gov-

LOCAL EVENTS

RED GREEN'S VIEW

BY RED GREEN

Page AS

Parents willing to listen will have children willing-to talk

~fORM$IOil

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

_Th_e

WeclnesdiiJ. M8rch 14, 2001_

Wf4aT Po VouTtlitll&lt;
oF PReSiPfm' &amp;uSH'S

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992·2156 ·Fax: 992·2157

Charles W. Govey
Publisher

o_a~_·Iy_se_ntm_ei_ _~-=B=.y

PageA4.

_,

___
,,

~----~~~~------'-1----------c

---- ~-

•.

�•
•

-

,.

r

•

Page A&amp;

Nation • World

The Daily Sentinel

a-tty bill u11de1 goes change
:WASHINGTON (AP)- Senate supporters of a plan to boost
fatth-basc:d groups are set to introduce legislation, but they're
leaVJ~g out the core of President Bush's program - illowing
n:ligto~ groups to compete for government money without
divorcmg themselves from religion.
The decision comes amid mounting criticism from Christian
conservaav~, civil libertarians and religious groups that already
pro111de soaal services.
Sens. Rick Santorum, R-Pa., and Joseph Lieberman, D-Conn.,
wd Tuesday they would introduce a bill next week implementmg one of the most popular aspects of the Bush plan, which is
illowmg tax filers who don't itemize to claim a deduction for
contributions to charity. An independent analysis estimates this
could produce an extr.l $14 billion in charitable giving each year.
The bill also would offer a tax break for banks that allow so_cilled individual development accounts, which match the money
saved by poor people. And it would limit liability for corporations
thal make in-kind contributions, as Bush has proposed.

U.S. expands import ban

Wednesday. MM:h 14. 2001

WASHINGTON (AP) - Questions
about the bombing range accident in
Kuwait that killed six people are focusing
on whether blame rests with the Navy
pilot who dropped the bombs or the air
controller on the ground who was
responsible for directing the strike, or
both , defense officials say.
.
The pilot, ;m experienced squadron
commander, had received the go-ahead
from a U.S. forward air controller who
then called out "abort, abort" in a belated
attempt to wave off the misplaced strike.
U.S. officials speaking Tuesday on condition of anonymity said the controUer
told the pilot as he approached, "Cleared,
hot," which is an unambiguous instruction to release the bombs. Seconds later,
apparently realizing a mistake had been
made, the controller called, ''abort, abort,"

WASHINGTON (AP) -The United State's expanded a ban
on tmports of livestock and fresh meat to all 15 members of the
European Union after a case of foot-and-mouth disease was
found on a farm in France.
The ban, which also applies to unpasteurized dairy products,
would have the biggest impact on imports of pork from the
Netherlands and Denmark. Imports of beef from the European
Umon already were banned because of mad cow disease.
"We want to make sure we're taking the approp~iate steps to
make sure it doesn't cross the ocean by means of our ports or
travelers," said USDA spokesman Kevin Herglotz, adding that "if
foot-and-mouth disease were to enter the United States, the cost
is in the billions."
WASHINGTON (AP) Th~ United States suspended all meat and animal importS from A third of high sch~ol stuBntam on Feb. 21 and ordered stepped-up checks' of travelers dents say they can thmk of a
arriving from the United Kingdom. Airline passengers who have 'Classmate who. may be trou- .
visited the British countryside are required to have their shoes . bled enough to stage a vio- ,
disinfected if they appear soiled.
lent attack at school, though
,
students' fears ·have declined
slighdy since just after the
April
1999 attack
at
WAS~INGTON (AP) -. Coca-Cola Co. says it will change Columbine High School,
the way It markets soft drmks at schoob. The company's action says a new· poll.
comes. m the face of threats of broader government regulation
The ABC News poll
and scientific eVJdence that its products can lead to health prob- taken for "Good Morning
!ems. ·
America" said about a third
The Atlanta-based ~oft d~ink ~aker said Wednesday that it will of stude,nts think such an
beg1n loa~g healthier drmks mto vending machines alongside attack is at least somewhat
sodas, covermg up grant logos and advocating nonexclusive deals likely at their school and
between bottlers and school districts.
about a third say their school
T he announ_ce~ent comes a month after the Agriculture · •
Department cnacJZed schoob that raise money by selling sodas ISn t doing enough to peed
ks
vent violence there. Four in
an snac _on campus, saying they were sending mixed messages lO , girls felt their school was
about nutnaon. The department asked Congress for authority to
regulate what foods and beverages can be sold in schoob.
not doing enough while just
Coke said it will provide a larger variety of healthful drinks in · over a fourth of boys felt that
machines, urge local bo!tlers to let scoools limit the sale of soft way.
drinks at .!un~h, ask bottlers to stop reqUiring exclusive "pouring
"Somewhat'. fewer high '
contracts wtth schools and put "noncommercial ! slgnage" on schoolj stud~nts think t'ere 's
sc~ool ~nding p13chi~es.
.·
,
a likelihood . of an attack,''
1
'
• ,·&gt;I
'
·'
'" ,.
said • AaG ", News , ppl!ing ..

but it was too late.
It was not clear whether the conuoUer
was among those killed.
The U.S. Central Command, which is
responsible for American military operations in the Persian Gulf area, appointed a
three-star general to lead an investigation.
Rear Adm. Craig Quigley, the chief
Pentagon spokesman, said Tuesday he did
not know in detail the sequence of events
that led to the f.otal accident Monday
everung at the Udairi training range in
northern Kuwait.
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld
expressed sympathy for the families of the
victims and pledged to find out how the
accident happened. It marked the third
calamicy for the Navy in recent months.
FoUowing the terrorist bombing of the
USS Cole that killed 17 sailors in Octo-

her, the attack submarine USS
Greeneville accidenrally sank a Japanes~
fishing boat off Hawaii on Peb. 9, killing
nine Japanese.
Quigley said a Navy F/ A-18C Hotnet, launched from the deck of the aircraft
carrier USS Harry S. Truman in the Persian Gulf as part of a multinational exercise dubbed "Desert Spring," dropp&lt;:d
two or three 500-pound bombs on an
observation post that was used by forwatd
atr controllers.

'
Five Americans at the observation pott
and one New Zealand army major we~
killed, he said. Three other people we~
seriously injured, one evacuated to a US.
military hospital in Germany. The other
two were in Kuwaiti medical facilities ana
will be taken to Germany when they are
able to traveL
'

'·

Coke shifting school sales

Poll·• Bush mag"ntains suppo

"r
' t

Wednesday. Mllrch 14. 2001

WEDNESDAY's

HIGHLIGHTS
Judge orde1 s
autopsy photo
resolution
DAYTONA BEAC.H , Fla.
(AP) Dale Earnhardt's
widow and Orlando Sentinel
lawyers were ordered to meet
to try to resolve their dispute
over autopsy photos of the
NASCAR great. ·
The judge's order came as a
Florida Senate committee .
unanimously approved a bill
that would restrict the public's
access to autopsy photos.
The bill still needs approval
from the Senate Government
. Oversight and Productivity
Committee before it can
come to the full Senate for a
vote. A House companion bill
hasn't had a hearing yet.
.The measure had been
sought by Dale Earnhart's
widow in her effott to keep a
ney."~paper , from seeing pic- .
tures , of the NASCAR dri•
ving great.

Michigan fires
Ellerbee

/o

0

Northwestern State tallies
win in first NCAA play-in
DAYTON, Ohio (AP) - Northwestern
State's athletic director walked from one end
of the court to the other, pointed his disposable camera at the scoreboards and clicked off
frames for posterity.
The final score still twinkled in white
lights: Demons 71, Eagles 67, 00.0 to go.
The Louisiana school known as the backdrop for the movie "Steel Magnolias" had a
little piece of NCAA tournament history to
take back to Natchitoches, Northwestern
State's 71-67 victory over Winthrop in a
novel play-in game Tuesday night gave the

Demons a distinction and a challenge.
By winning the game that no one wanted
to play, they got to try for the upset that no
one has ever puUed off. The Demons (19-12)
get a fuU-Oedged tournament game Friday
against mighty !Uinois, a No. 1 seed.
A 16th seed has never beaten a top seed in
the 16 years of the current tournament format. Teams with Northwestern State's seed
have tried 64 times and failed 64 times.
"That's in the back of our heads," guard
Michael Byars-Dawson said. "Hey, things
.

Please sH NCAA, BJ

THE MADNESS BEGINS - Winthrop's Marcus Stewart (center) tries to protect the ball in Tuesday's tourney opener. (AP)

lhen ftlere were eight
Eastern win
sets match for q
trip to States

Ohioan
••• En is
joins the
Browns

BY lurCH CooPER
OVP SPORTS STAFF

COLUMBUS - There
were moments Tuesday
night that looked as if
Symmes Valley would just
run away with a win.
The inside physical play
ofJustin Myers seemed just ·
too much for Eastern to
overcome.
But overcome the Eagle$
did as Eastern defeated the
Vikings, 53-51, in the
Division IV, Region 15
semifinal at the Ohio State
Fairgrounds Coliseum.
Eastern will meet Wor-

ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP)
- Brain Ellerbe y.'ill not
return as Michigan's basket.bill coach after being asked to
resign by the school's athletic
director.
Ellerbe just finished his
fourth year as coach of the
Wolverines. Athletic director
,Bill Martin said he did not see
sufficient improvement in a
program that was once among
the S£Ort's elite. '.
'· I
·
,\.;"
'1"'1. • ,.;." "-· .1.
l:Mi""'· ......-"'--h.J.Il..tll •h;. .. "'"''gton~.,...·n.~~
,
c~,~gan~li)o.?; ,.,,. "'(~ '~''!""~ • -:; fe!!~oi'laf .title •ijtida'y, wifh
season and . 4!--10 ,m the ·~•g
: .7:3b start timl. ~
'
'len, closinl; the year with an
The Warriors defeate'd'
-82-80 ~oss to Penn State in
St. Peter's of Mansfield, 61the B1g Ten . tournament.
56 ~ the first semifinal
Ellerbe was 62~60 during his
game Tuesday.
stay at Michigan.
"They've got a very fine
club, a very nice club," ·
Eastern head coach Howie
Caldwell said ofWorching-'
ton Christian. "You don't~
make it to the regiona!1..
finals without a good cl~b.\'1!
· NEW YORK (AP)
I think our kids look to
Could Michael Jordan's next
big acquisition for the Washthat challenge."
On Tuesday, Eastern had .
ington Wizards be - Michael
'
: Jordan?
·
to fight back from
two
Citing a source identified
double-digits deficits.
· It took a third quarter
only as being "very close to
Jordan;' Sports Illustrated
rally for tile Eaglet to get
back into the gam~ and put
aolumnist
Rick · Reilly
repor~ed in this week's edition .
QOIINQ UP - Eastern's Matt Simpson fires the shot while Symmes Valley center Justin
the former NBA great is "90
lllu•-IEiafd,H
Myers looks on In Tuesday's regional semi-final win by the Eagles. (Dan Polcyn)
percent committed" to making a comeback next season
with· the Wizards.

0 ff

.Lor~
p ce

director Gary Langer. "But
· nearly
a third see some risk.

WASHINGTON (AP) -" More than half of Americans generally approve of the JOb President Bush is doing and agree with
his plans for the budget surplus, says a new poll.
That su~port tends to slip away, however, when they're asked
~ore specific quesaons on his_ proposal_s, from the fairness of his
tax ~ut to the_ a~proval of drilling fo.r oil and gas in the Arctic to
~e tdea of glVlng government money to less mainstream relig10us groups, acc~tding to the CBS-New York Times poll.
The poll highlights pubhc optmon trends that were evident
th~ugh much of the preStde~aal campaign_ - Americans tend
to like Bush becc7r ~n they like some of his policies.
For example, stx m 10 approve of the job Bush is doing and
almo t that
th
f hi
s " many say ey approve o s plans for the surplus:

There's still a significant level
· of concern."
The poll of 500 high
school students . was taken
Thursday through Sunday
and has an error margin of
4.5 percentage points ..
The levels of anxiety have
dropped slighdy since a similar poll in April 1999 after
the attack at Columbine
H' h S h 1
tg
c oo near Denver
when two students killed 12
classmates, a teacher and
themselves. In a poll taken
soon after that, four in to
FORT PIERCE, Fla. (AP) - Two 12-year-old girb were
·students felt an attack was at
charged with trying to drown a classmate who refused to lend
least somewhat likely at their
her swim mask and flippers.
The uniden~ed girls fac~ attempted murder and robbery school. That number has
charges; St. Luc1e County police said. One was arrested Tuesday dropped to three in 10.
Earlier this month, two
and the other :was arrested the previous evening.
.
Witnesses s:ud Rebecca Nicole Maines, 12, was swimming in a ,students were · killed and II ·
lake near her home M?nday afternoon when the two girb asked other students and rwo adults
~er for the mask and flipp~rs. ~en Maines refused, they jumped wounded· by a 15-year-old
freshman who had been bulm th~ water, grabbed Matnes gear and began beating her.
;M,:unes told po~ce the girls shoved her head underwater. A lied at a school in southern
Witness~ ~osea Rivers, 16, ;umped in, separated the girls" and California.
puUed M:unes ouc of the water.
Two years ago, just over
half of students . said their
school was doing enough to
~II
tcy to prevent violence and
NEW'{ORK (AP) -The prosecutor in Sean "Puffy" Combs' now almost two-thirds say
~apons and bribery trial said he didn't call Jennifer Lopez as a . the · schools are doing
~mess because he feared the rap mogul's ex-girlfriend would enough.
.
color her testimony in Combs' favor.
About a third of students
Assistant Distri~t Attorney Matthew Bogdanos, in closing argu- have heard a student threaten
men~ Tuesday, wd Combs' acquaintances and employees called to kill someone. nuc most of
as Witnesses .had offered nothing but "lies."
·
the students, just over seven ·.
Dunng his nearly six-hour summation, Bogdanos repeatedly
in 10, who heard a classmate ·
challenged the veracity of Combs' testimony in his own defense
threaten to kill someone did
last' weeL
·
·
not take it seriously and dip
The prosecutor said the evidence showed Combs and rapper
not turn them in.
Jamaal "Shyne" ~a~row both puUed handguns and opened fire on
Just over half said they
Dec. 2~, I 999, lnstde a .packed Manharcan nightclub after a bar
have had a class · or special
patron msulted Combs.
program in their school on·
the subject of school violence.
MICHIGAN CITY, Ind. (AP) -to 41-year-old man convict- . "The poll suggests that
~~- of_ killing a minister at a highway 'rest stop was executed by schools h:ive · moved to
address security concerns
uyecaon early WedneSllay morning.
·
Before he died, Gerald Bivins pleaded for forgiveneu for hiri1- and have in some cases been
self and those who put him to death. .
successful in lessening stu~
"I wish to apologize to the victim's family for the pain chat I've dent concerns," Langer said,
c~used them and for the pain that I've taused my family and imt added that the high
fnends, and I ask for their forgiveness. And I ask that those that number in the poll who have
do this co me be forgiven," he said.
·
never had a class or program
Bivins was condemned for killing the Rev. William Radcliffe on school violence "might
during a robbery at a ~st stop along Interstate 65 north of Indi- have identifi.ed a.n area of
anapolis in I 991.
possible improvement."

·Proseador won't

Page 81

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'

who may
stage attack

'

Today's &amp;oreboard, Page B6

Controller cleared mistaken attack by Navy.pilot:

·Most students
know othe1·s

I

The Daily Sentinel

Jordan to the
Wizards?

Olajuwon will
miss rest of
season
HOUSTON (AP)
Hakeem Olajuwon, who led
the Houston Rockets to a
pair of NBA tides over a I 7year career and became the
league's all-time shot blocker,
if suffering from a blood condidon that may end his stellar
career with the team.
The Rockets said that Ola;juwon lias a blood problem in
; a vein in his lower left leg and
: will require . medication that
: will keep him off the court
· tor three to six months.

acbess

...

'

contacts Toledo
•

coach

•

TOLEDO, Ohio (AP)
: Rhode Island officials have
• contacted Toledo coach Stan
: Joplin about replacing basket: ball coach Jerry DeGregorio,
: The .Iliade reported Thesday.
· Joplin has an 86-58 record
in five seasons at lbledo.
He led the Rockets to their
: first 20-win season in 20 years
: and 1111 NIT appearance this
: season.
·

.
~

~

Ivi

'
......-..-~-·---

--···'----··........~---~
..•
'

••
'

I

'

BY JIM O'CONNEU
AI' BASKETBALL WRITER

Each member ofThe Associated Press
All-America team ·earned a piece of
history with his selection.
Duke's Shane Battier and Jason
Williams were the top vote-getters
when the team was announced Thesday,
becoming the eighth set ·of teammates
chosen for the first team.
North Carolina's Josep\1 Forte. •was
next in the voting. Forte and the two
Blue Devils · became just the second
threesome from one conference to
make the fi~t team.
Notre Dame's Troy Murphy was the

44th player to repeat as an All-Americim, while Casey Jacobsen was Stanford's first first-team selection.
Battier, the only senior on the AllAmerica team, was one vote shy of
being a unanimous selection by the
national media panel. The 6-foot-8 forward was on 70 first-team baUots and
had 353 points in the 5-3-1 voting ~ys­
tem.
The national defensive player the last
rwo seasons, Battier ave1aged 19.5
points and 6.8 rebounds ; in leading
Duke, which was No. 1 in the final regular-season poll for the third straight
season, joining UCLA from 1971-73 .as

the only teams to do that.
Battier, a second-team AU-America
last season, and Williams, a 6-2 sophomore who averaged 20.8 points, 6.2
assists and 1.9 steals, are the first teammates selected for the first team since
1997-98. Both Raef LaFrentz and Paul
Pierce of Kans:is and Mike Bibby and
Miles Simon of Arizona did it that season.
"As nice as it is to get the attention
individually, it makes it even better that
I can share AU-America status with one
of my teammates," Battier said. "Hope-

Please SH BUtler, 13

Please -

Enls. BJ

'

Rhode Island

Minister's slayer executed

Battier, Murphy named All-Americans

CLEVELAND (AP) Curtis Enis is getting a chance
to start his footbaU career over
- not far from where it
began.
Enis, a running back who
failed to live up to expectations during three disappointing seasons with the Chicago
Bears, on Tuesday signed a
one-year contract with the
Cleveland Browns.
''I'm elated," said Enis, a
former Associated Press Mr.
FootbaU while in high schooL
"This is where it aU started.
It's a great feeling, and I can't
wait · co .come back and get
things going:This is alii could
hope for. It's like a childhood
dream coming true."
Enis, the fifth overall pick in
the 1998 draft, signed an
incentive-laden deal that his
agent, Joel Segal, said could
escalate to $1.5 miUion.
Browns coach Butch Davis
has been shopping for . an
every-down running back
during free agency. The team
is banking on Enis turning his
career around in a new environment.
The signing is nearly riskfree for the Browns, who
think Enis can jump-start his
career in the way Tyrone
Wheatley did after he signed
with the Oakland Raiders.
"It's a nice fit," said Segal,
who also represents Wheatley.
The Browns, whose interest
in Cincinnati free agent. running back Corey Dillon
appars to have cooled, could
be focusing on next month's
NFL draft to ·find a feature
back.
The Browns also agreed to
terms Monday with unrestricted free agent defensive
tackle Mark Smith, who
played the past four Seasons "
with the Arizona Cardinals.
The 6-foot-4, 294-pound
Smith had 33 tackles and
three sacks last season. He had
nine sacks in 1998 to help
lead Arizona to a playoff
berth.
Enis, ,who starred at Mississinawa Valley High School

Defense a.signature of Jack Wilson's game
I

.

.

BRADENTON, Fla. (AP) · games )las newly elected HaU
- Jack .Wilson still hasn't ofFamer ·Bill Mazeroski's sigbeen picked as the Pittsburgh nature written neady across
Pirates' everyday shortstop, yet the bottom, a visible reminder
he already has his own auto- to Wilson of the importance
graphed glove.
of defense.
. Only it isn't his signature:
Defense, after all, got MazeFew players have ever " roski into the Hall of Fame. It
taken the field wearing a could get Wilson into the
glove autographed by anoth- Pirates' lineup.
er, but Wilson could be an
"He's the best defensive
exception.
, second baseman of all time so,
The glove he ·will use in to me, it's a blessed glove,"

·-- ____...

,- ~· - ~ · ~---.- --

.
Wilson said Tuesday. "You
can't get any better than that.
It's going to be my lucky
charm."
; When spring training started, Wilson seemed to need
more than a little luck to
make the lineup. Pat Meares
was the incumbent shortstop,
and Warren Morris returned
at second. There didn't seem
to be an opening, even for a
good minor league hitter who

.

.

.

is an even better fielder.
middle infield defense a year
"I never expected to get a ago, when Meares and Morris
shot," said Wilson, who has combined for 35 errors.
never played ab~ve Double- · Enter Wilson, who played
A. "I wasn't worried about for McClendon in the Calimaking the team because I fornia and Arizona fall leagues
never expected to make the the last two years and joined
team."
the Pirates when they traded
However, manager Lloyd left-bander Jason Christiansen
McClendon changed that by to Cardinals last summer.
proclaiming every job in the
It wasn't a surprise when
infi~ld open. He emphasized .
he was unhappy with the
Plelse - WIIHn. M

�•
•

-

,.

r

•

Page A&amp;

Nation • World

The Daily Sentinel

a-tty bill u11de1 goes change
:WASHINGTON (AP)- Senate supporters of a plan to boost
fatth-basc:d groups are set to introduce legislation, but they're
leaVJ~g out the core of President Bush's program - illowing
n:ligto~ groups to compete for government money without
divorcmg themselves from religion.
The decision comes amid mounting criticism from Christian
conservaav~, civil libertarians and religious groups that already
pro111de soaal services.
Sens. Rick Santorum, R-Pa., and Joseph Lieberman, D-Conn.,
wd Tuesday they would introduce a bill next week implementmg one of the most popular aspects of the Bush plan, which is
illowmg tax filers who don't itemize to claim a deduction for
contributions to charity. An independent analysis estimates this
could produce an extr.l $14 billion in charitable giving each year.
The bill also would offer a tax break for banks that allow so_cilled individual development accounts, which match the money
saved by poor people. And it would limit liability for corporations
thal make in-kind contributions, as Bush has proposed.

U.S. expands import ban

Wednesday. MM:h 14. 2001

WASHINGTON (AP) - Questions
about the bombing range accident in
Kuwait that killed six people are focusing
on whether blame rests with the Navy
pilot who dropped the bombs or the air
controller on the ground who was
responsible for directing the strike, or
both , defense officials say.
.
The pilot, ;m experienced squadron
commander, had received the go-ahead
from a U.S. forward air controller who
then called out "abort, abort" in a belated
attempt to wave off the misplaced strike.
U.S. officials speaking Tuesday on condition of anonymity said the controUer
told the pilot as he approached, "Cleared,
hot," which is an unambiguous instruction to release the bombs. Seconds later,
apparently realizing a mistake had been
made, the controller called, ''abort, abort,"

WASHINGTON (AP) -The United State's expanded a ban
on tmports of livestock and fresh meat to all 15 members of the
European Union after a case of foot-and-mouth disease was
found on a farm in France.
The ban, which also applies to unpasteurized dairy products,
would have the biggest impact on imports of pork from the
Netherlands and Denmark. Imports of beef from the European
Umon already were banned because of mad cow disease.
"We want to make sure we're taking the approp~iate steps to
make sure it doesn't cross the ocean by means of our ports or
travelers," said USDA spokesman Kevin Herglotz, adding that "if
foot-and-mouth disease were to enter the United States, the cost
is in the billions."
WASHINGTON (AP) Th~ United States suspended all meat and animal importS from A third of high sch~ol stuBntam on Feb. 21 and ordered stepped-up checks' of travelers dents say they can thmk of a
arriving from the United Kingdom. Airline passengers who have 'Classmate who. may be trou- .
visited the British countryside are required to have their shoes . bled enough to stage a vio- ,
disinfected if they appear soiled.
lent attack at school, though
,
students' fears ·have declined
slighdy since just after the
April
1999 attack
at
WAS~INGTON (AP) -. Coca-Cola Co. says it will change Columbine High School,
the way It markets soft drmks at schoob. The company's action says a new· poll.
comes. m the face of threats of broader government regulation
The ABC News poll
and scientific eVJdence that its products can lead to health prob- taken for "Good Morning
!ems. ·
America" said about a third
The Atlanta-based ~oft d~ink ~aker said Wednesday that it will of stude,nts think such an
beg1n loa~g healthier drmks mto vending machines alongside attack is at least somewhat
sodas, covermg up grant logos and advocating nonexclusive deals likely at their school and
between bottlers and school districts.
about a third say their school
T he announ_ce~ent comes a month after the Agriculture · •
Department cnacJZed schoob that raise money by selling sodas ISn t doing enough to peed
ks
vent violence there. Four in
an snac _on campus, saying they were sending mixed messages lO , girls felt their school was
about nutnaon. The department asked Congress for authority to
regulate what foods and beverages can be sold in schoob.
not doing enough while just
Coke said it will provide a larger variety of healthful drinks in · over a fourth of boys felt that
machines, urge local bo!tlers to let scoools limit the sale of soft way.
drinks at .!un~h, ask bottlers to stop reqUiring exclusive "pouring
"Somewhat'. fewer high '
contracts wtth schools and put "noncommercial ! slgnage" on schoolj stud~nts think t'ere 's
sc~ool ~nding p13chi~es.
.·
,
a likelihood . of an attack,''
1
'
• ,·&gt;I
'
·'
'" ,.
said • AaG ", News , ppl!ing ..

but it was too late.
It was not clear whether the conuoUer
was among those killed.
The U.S. Central Command, which is
responsible for American military operations in the Persian Gulf area, appointed a
three-star general to lead an investigation.
Rear Adm. Craig Quigley, the chief
Pentagon spokesman, said Tuesday he did
not know in detail the sequence of events
that led to the f.otal accident Monday
everung at the Udairi training range in
northern Kuwait.
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld
expressed sympathy for the families of the
victims and pledged to find out how the
accident happened. It marked the third
calamicy for the Navy in recent months.
FoUowing the terrorist bombing of the
USS Cole that killed 17 sailors in Octo-

her, the attack submarine USS
Greeneville accidenrally sank a Japanes~
fishing boat off Hawaii on Peb. 9, killing
nine Japanese.
Quigley said a Navy F/ A-18C Hotnet, launched from the deck of the aircraft
carrier USS Harry S. Truman in the Persian Gulf as part of a multinational exercise dubbed "Desert Spring," dropp&lt;:d
two or three 500-pound bombs on an
observation post that was used by forwatd
atr controllers.

'
Five Americans at the observation pott
and one New Zealand army major we~
killed, he said. Three other people we~
seriously injured, one evacuated to a US.
military hospital in Germany. The other
two were in Kuwaiti medical facilities ana
will be taken to Germany when they are
able to traveL
'

'·

Coke shifting school sales

Poll·• Bush mag"ntains suppo

"r
' t

Wednesday. Mllrch 14. 2001

WEDNESDAY's

HIGHLIGHTS
Judge orde1 s
autopsy photo
resolution
DAYTONA BEAC.H , Fla.
(AP) Dale Earnhardt's
widow and Orlando Sentinel
lawyers were ordered to meet
to try to resolve their dispute
over autopsy photos of the
NASCAR great. ·
The judge's order came as a
Florida Senate committee .
unanimously approved a bill
that would restrict the public's
access to autopsy photos.
The bill still needs approval
from the Senate Government
. Oversight and Productivity
Committee before it can
come to the full Senate for a
vote. A House companion bill
hasn't had a hearing yet.
.The measure had been
sought by Dale Earnhart's
widow in her effott to keep a
ney."~paper , from seeing pic- .
tures , of the NASCAR dri•
ving great.

Michigan fires
Ellerbee

/o

0

Northwestern State tallies
win in first NCAA play-in
DAYTON, Ohio (AP) - Northwestern
State's athletic director walked from one end
of the court to the other, pointed his disposable camera at the scoreboards and clicked off
frames for posterity.
The final score still twinkled in white
lights: Demons 71, Eagles 67, 00.0 to go.
The Louisiana school known as the backdrop for the movie "Steel Magnolias" had a
little piece of NCAA tournament history to
take back to Natchitoches, Northwestern
State's 71-67 victory over Winthrop in a
novel play-in game Tuesday night gave the

Demons a distinction and a challenge.
By winning the game that no one wanted
to play, they got to try for the upset that no
one has ever puUed off. The Demons (19-12)
get a fuU-Oedged tournament game Friday
against mighty !Uinois, a No. 1 seed.
A 16th seed has never beaten a top seed in
the 16 years of the current tournament format. Teams with Northwestern State's seed
have tried 64 times and failed 64 times.
"That's in the back of our heads," guard
Michael Byars-Dawson said. "Hey, things
.

Please sH NCAA, BJ

THE MADNESS BEGINS - Winthrop's Marcus Stewart (center) tries to protect the ball in Tuesday's tourney opener. (AP)

lhen ftlere were eight
Eastern win
sets match for q
trip to States

Ohioan
••• En is
joins the
Browns

BY lurCH CooPER
OVP SPORTS STAFF

COLUMBUS - There
were moments Tuesday
night that looked as if
Symmes Valley would just
run away with a win.
The inside physical play
ofJustin Myers seemed just ·
too much for Eastern to
overcome.
But overcome the Eagle$
did as Eastern defeated the
Vikings, 53-51, in the
Division IV, Region 15
semifinal at the Ohio State
Fairgrounds Coliseum.
Eastern will meet Wor-

ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP)
- Brain Ellerbe y.'ill not
return as Michigan's basket.bill coach after being asked to
resign by the school's athletic
director.
Ellerbe just finished his
fourth year as coach of the
Wolverines. Athletic director
,Bill Martin said he did not see
sufficient improvement in a
program that was once among
the S£Ort's elite. '.
'· I
·
,\.;"
'1"'1. • ,.;." "-· .1.
l:Mi""'· ......-"'--h.J.Il..tll •h;. .. "'"''gton~.,...·n.~~
,
c~,~gan~li)o.?; ,.,,. "'(~ '~''!""~ • -:; fe!!~oi'laf .title •ijtida'y, wifh
season and . 4!--10 ,m the ·~•g
: .7:3b start timl. ~
'
'len, closinl; the year with an
The Warriors defeate'd'
-82-80 ~oss to Penn State in
St. Peter's of Mansfield, 61the B1g Ten . tournament.
56 ~ the first semifinal
Ellerbe was 62~60 during his
game Tuesday.
stay at Michigan.
"They've got a very fine
club, a very nice club," ·
Eastern head coach Howie
Caldwell said ofWorching-'
ton Christian. "You don't~
make it to the regiona!1..
finals without a good cl~b.\'1!
· NEW YORK (AP)
I think our kids look to
Could Michael Jordan's next
big acquisition for the Washthat challenge."
On Tuesday, Eastern had .
ington Wizards be - Michael
'
: Jordan?
·
to fight back from
two
Citing a source identified
double-digits deficits.
· It took a third quarter
only as being "very close to
Jordan;' Sports Illustrated
rally for tile Eaglet to get
back into the gam~ and put
aolumnist
Rick · Reilly
repor~ed in this week's edition .
QOIINQ UP - Eastern's Matt Simpson fires the shot while Symmes Valley center Justin
the former NBA great is "90
lllu•-IEiafd,H
Myers looks on In Tuesday's regional semi-final win by the Eagles. (Dan Polcyn)
percent committed" to making a comeback next season
with· the Wizards.

0 ff

.Lor~
p ce

director Gary Langer. "But
· nearly
a third see some risk.

WASHINGTON (AP) -" More than half of Americans generally approve of the JOb President Bush is doing and agree with
his plans for the budget surplus, says a new poll.
That su~port tends to slip away, however, when they're asked
~ore specific quesaons on his_ proposal_s, from the fairness of his
tax ~ut to the_ a~proval of drilling fo.r oil and gas in the Arctic to
~e tdea of glVlng government money to less mainstream relig10us groups, acc~tding to the CBS-New York Times poll.
The poll highlights pubhc optmon trends that were evident
th~ugh much of the preStde~aal campaign_ - Americans tend
to like Bush becc7r ~n they like some of his policies.
For example, stx m 10 approve of the job Bush is doing and
almo t that
th
f hi
s " many say ey approve o s plans for the surplus:

There's still a significant level
· of concern."
The poll of 500 high
school students . was taken
Thursday through Sunday
and has an error margin of
4.5 percentage points ..
The levels of anxiety have
dropped slighdy since a similar poll in April 1999 after
the attack at Columbine
H' h S h 1
tg
c oo near Denver
when two students killed 12
classmates, a teacher and
themselves. In a poll taken
soon after that, four in to
FORT PIERCE, Fla. (AP) - Two 12-year-old girb were
·students felt an attack was at
charged with trying to drown a classmate who refused to lend
least somewhat likely at their
her swim mask and flippers.
The uniden~ed girls fac~ attempted murder and robbery school. That number has
charges; St. Luc1e County police said. One was arrested Tuesday dropped to three in 10.
Earlier this month, two
and the other :was arrested the previous evening.
.
Witnesses s:ud Rebecca Nicole Maines, 12, was swimming in a ,students were · killed and II ·
lake near her home M?nday afternoon when the two girb asked other students and rwo adults
~er for the mask and flipp~rs. ~en Maines refused, they jumped wounded· by a 15-year-old
freshman who had been bulm th~ water, grabbed Matnes gear and began beating her.
;M,:unes told po~ce the girls shoved her head underwater. A lied at a school in southern
Witness~ ~osea Rivers, 16, ;umped in, separated the girls" and California.
puUed M:unes ouc of the water.
Two years ago, just over
half of students . said their
school was doing enough to
~II
tcy to prevent violence and
NEW'{ORK (AP) -The prosecutor in Sean "Puffy" Combs' now almost two-thirds say
~apons and bribery trial said he didn't call Jennifer Lopez as a . the · schools are doing
~mess because he feared the rap mogul's ex-girlfriend would enough.
.
color her testimony in Combs' favor.
About a third of students
Assistant Distri~t Attorney Matthew Bogdanos, in closing argu- have heard a student threaten
men~ Tuesday, wd Combs' acquaintances and employees called to kill someone. nuc most of
as Witnesses .had offered nothing but "lies."
·
the students, just over seven ·.
Dunng his nearly six-hour summation, Bogdanos repeatedly
in 10, who heard a classmate ·
challenged the veracity of Combs' testimony in his own defense
threaten to kill someone did
last' weeL
·
·
not take it seriously and dip
The prosecutor said the evidence showed Combs and rapper
not turn them in.
Jamaal "Shyne" ~a~row both puUed handguns and opened fire on
Just over half said they
Dec. 2~, I 999, lnstde a .packed Manharcan nightclub after a bar
have had a class · or special
patron msulted Combs.
program in their school on·
the subject of school violence.
MICHIGAN CITY, Ind. (AP) -to 41-year-old man convict- . "The poll suggests that
~~- of_ killing a minister at a highway 'rest stop was executed by schools h:ive · moved to
address security concerns
uyecaon early WedneSllay morning.
·
Before he died, Gerald Bivins pleaded for forgiveneu for hiri1- and have in some cases been
self and those who put him to death. .
successful in lessening stu~
"I wish to apologize to the victim's family for the pain chat I've dent concerns," Langer said,
c~used them and for the pain that I've taused my family and imt added that the high
fnends, and I ask for their forgiveness. And I ask that those that number in the poll who have
do this co me be forgiven," he said.
·
never had a class or program
Bivins was condemned for killing the Rev. William Radcliffe on school violence "might
during a robbery at a ~st stop along Interstate 65 north of Indi- have identifi.ed a.n area of
anapolis in I 991.
possible improvement."

·Proseador won't

Page 81

.

'

who may
stage attack

'

Today's &amp;oreboard, Page B6

Controller cleared mistaken attack by Navy.pilot:

·Most students
know othe1·s

I

The Daily Sentinel

Jordan to the
Wizards?

Olajuwon will
miss rest of
season
HOUSTON (AP)
Hakeem Olajuwon, who led
the Houston Rockets to a
pair of NBA tides over a I 7year career and became the
league's all-time shot blocker,
if suffering from a blood condidon that may end his stellar
career with the team.
The Rockets said that Ola;juwon lias a blood problem in
; a vein in his lower left leg and
: will require . medication that
: will keep him off the court
· tor three to six months.

acbess

...

'

contacts Toledo
•

coach

•

TOLEDO, Ohio (AP)
: Rhode Island officials have
• contacted Toledo coach Stan
: Joplin about replacing basket: ball coach Jerry DeGregorio,
: The .Iliade reported Thesday.
· Joplin has an 86-58 record
in five seasons at lbledo.
He led the Rockets to their
: first 20-win season in 20 years
: and 1111 NIT appearance this
: season.
·

.
~

~

Ivi

'
......-..-~-·---

--···'----··........~---~
..•
'

••
'

I

'

BY JIM O'CONNEU
AI' BASKETBALL WRITER

Each member ofThe Associated Press
All-America team ·earned a piece of
history with his selection.
Duke's Shane Battier and Jason
Williams were the top vote-getters
when the team was announced Thesday,
becoming the eighth set ·of teammates
chosen for the first team.
North Carolina's Josep\1 Forte. •was
next in the voting. Forte and the two
Blue Devils · became just the second
threesome from one conference to
make the fi~t team.
Notre Dame's Troy Murphy was the

44th player to repeat as an All-Americim, while Casey Jacobsen was Stanford's first first-team selection.
Battier, the only senior on the AllAmerica team, was one vote shy of
being a unanimous selection by the
national media panel. The 6-foot-8 forward was on 70 first-team baUots and
had 353 points in the 5-3-1 voting ~ys­
tem.
The national defensive player the last
rwo seasons, Battier ave1aged 19.5
points and 6.8 rebounds ; in leading
Duke, which was No. 1 in the final regular-season poll for the third straight
season, joining UCLA from 1971-73 .as

the only teams to do that.
Battier, a second-team AU-America
last season, and Williams, a 6-2 sophomore who averaged 20.8 points, 6.2
assists and 1.9 steals, are the first teammates selected for the first team since
1997-98. Both Raef LaFrentz and Paul
Pierce of Kans:is and Mike Bibby and
Miles Simon of Arizona did it that season.
"As nice as it is to get the attention
individually, it makes it even better that
I can share AU-America status with one
of my teammates," Battier said. "Hope-

Please SH BUtler, 13

Please -

Enls. BJ

'

Rhode Island

Minister's slayer executed

Battier, Murphy named All-Americans

CLEVELAND (AP) Curtis Enis is getting a chance
to start his footbaU career over
- not far from where it
began.
Enis, a running back who
failed to live up to expectations during three disappointing seasons with the Chicago
Bears, on Tuesday signed a
one-year contract with the
Cleveland Browns.
''I'm elated," said Enis, a
former Associated Press Mr.
FootbaU while in high schooL
"This is where it aU started.
It's a great feeling, and I can't
wait · co .come back and get
things going:This is alii could
hope for. It's like a childhood
dream coming true."
Enis, the fifth overall pick in
the 1998 draft, signed an
incentive-laden deal that his
agent, Joel Segal, said could
escalate to $1.5 miUion.
Browns coach Butch Davis
has been shopping for . an
every-down running back
during free agency. The team
is banking on Enis turning his
career around in a new environment.
The signing is nearly riskfree for the Browns, who
think Enis can jump-start his
career in the way Tyrone
Wheatley did after he signed
with the Oakland Raiders.
"It's a nice fit," said Segal,
who also represents Wheatley.
The Browns, whose interest
in Cincinnati free agent. running back Corey Dillon
appars to have cooled, could
be focusing on next month's
NFL draft to ·find a feature
back.
The Browns also agreed to
terms Monday with unrestricted free agent defensive
tackle Mark Smith, who
played the past four Seasons "
with the Arizona Cardinals.
The 6-foot-4, 294-pound
Smith had 33 tackles and
three sacks last season. He had
nine sacks in 1998 to help
lead Arizona to a playoff
berth.
Enis, ,who starred at Mississinawa Valley High School

Defense a.signature of Jack Wilson's game
I

.

.

BRADENTON, Fla. (AP) · games )las newly elected HaU
- Jack .Wilson still hasn't ofFamer ·Bill Mazeroski's sigbeen picked as the Pittsburgh nature written neady across
Pirates' everyday shortstop, yet the bottom, a visible reminder
he already has his own auto- to Wilson of the importance
graphed glove.
of defense.
. Only it isn't his signature:
Defense, after all, got MazeFew players have ever " roski into the Hall of Fame. It
taken the field wearing a could get Wilson into the
glove autographed by anoth- Pirates' lineup.
er, but Wilson could be an
"He's the best defensive
exception.
, second baseman of all time so,
The glove he ·will use in to me, it's a blessed glove,"

·-- ____...

,- ~· - ~ · ~---.- --

.
Wilson said Tuesday. "You
can't get any better than that.
It's going to be my lucky
charm."
; When spring training started, Wilson seemed to need
more than a little luck to
make the lineup. Pat Meares
was the incumbent shortstop,
and Warren Morris returned
at second. There didn't seem
to be an opening, even for a
good minor league hitter who

.

.

.

is an even better fielder.
middle infield defense a year
"I never expected to get a ago, when Meares and Morris
shot," said Wilson, who has combined for 35 errors.
never played ab~ve Double- · Enter Wilson, who played
A. "I wasn't worried about for McClendon in the Calimaking the team because I fornia and Arizona fall leagues
never expected to make the the last two years and joined
team."
the Pirates when they traded
However, manager Lloyd left-bander Jason Christiansen
McClendon changed that by to Cardinals last summer.
proclaiming every job in the
It wasn't a surprise when
infi~ld open. He emphasized .
he was unhappy with the
Plelse - WIIHn. M

�Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page B 2 • Tht Dally Sentinel

Wldnasday, March 14, 2001

&amp;111

HOUiehold

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1 00 p m the day befor1
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AEGISJER QEAQLINE,

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Qua ty c oth ng and househo d
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110

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Jackson Pika Su ta 312 Ga lpo

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p ck up app cation at oca on &amp;
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OUT OF DEBTI Aeduce monthly
paymen s Pay one b month
EASY o ge s ar ed F nanc a
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800 B41 9757

eMI

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www deb ccs org {Non Prof )

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BAO CREDIT BANKRUPTCY
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Pease ca l us to lee t 866613

m MHO'II

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80&lt;l-429 3680 ext J 365
POSTAL JOBS to $18 35 hr
WILDLIFE JOBS to $21 80/hr In
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350 Lots &amp; Acreage
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Acres
Home
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Ranta Property 3 lo s Nlett 3BR
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ness (740)446-7473

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Ad water &amp; sewer set up 740

742 2803

In Country $300 Month $200
Deposit Plus Utlllioa (740)2566202

pfeoao

can 937 373 4844 con eafl

col~ alter 8 30pm.

Apartmanta
lor Rent

360

Real Estate
Wanted

1 Bed oom K !chen Bath Living
Room Dining Area Po ttr Oh o

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2 Aparlmenta Fo Rent In Flo
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Ch tslys Family L vlng, 33140
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Apptlcllfon dltdl nt April!

wealthy fam Ill unloading m II ana
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donorl. oom $45 10 110 lor 2 or 3
houro -kly CaH Sara Toe 7•0
ltHII1

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til Lu8 ANGILIB CAL"OA
NIA11110

WOA~ ~OAM
II 000 p~ to 18000

II NEED A LOAN? 'lly dabl oon101 dlt onl Qui payment! up to
80'11 lamt Uy IPPIOVIII I 177
1t..llll

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Gracious lvlng 1 and 2 bedroom
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992 5084 Equal Housing Oppo
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a

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Fo Sate David White T anslt
$225 Homelite Concrete Saw
Horizontal Shaft Engine $100

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"tttwood

~~p~ QOIII H•IO II 0 000
oo~nt only 11000 oo Down

Dll
De
1vtrv. and tttup paid by '•oiOry
I IQO.It1 ..777

Mezada B2500 2WD 4Cyl nda
5Spead Sport Whoa s AM FM
CD T II C ufso A C 25 ooo
M eo Clean Tuck $10 500
1304)675 6158
1989 F 250 302 5 speed long
bed ool bolt newe w de 1 ack

8 N Fo d T ac o Has Been Ae
stored Ga dners 0 eam $.2!500

1res 32k $4300 740 742 8200

(304)875 3824

1989 H gh Top Conve a on van
a I power ea al TVNCR low ng
package ow m es good condl

lion $5795 740 742 6200
NH415 0 seD ne Lass Than 200
Acres $11 ooo (3041837 3435
Used Lilt Truck ForkS $25 $75
Par Sat 3 P HI ch Lll s With
Va lous

Fo k leng hs

$200

Each (740)379 2757

Livestock

630

One 7 yea old Qua ter Mara and
one 3 year old Pa nt Geld ng and
2 Sadd es and some tack

(740)256--6663

t994 Chevy Ast o Van 1 Owner

70 000 mles High Rool Load ad
{740)446-1231
t994 Fo d F 3!50 Powe st

1997 Chevy S ve ado Extended
Cab 4x4 Power Locks W ndows
3rd Doo Tow Package 35K

Mles $ 8 200 (740)448--4175
La edo V 8 Quadt ack C ean In
side Out 50 ooo Miles Booka

153 H H Wo d Champion m
p essiw B ood ne NIN West8fn
P easu e Hal e Barrels Sland-

$18685
Asking
(304)675 3688

Sl7 500

ng Sud Fea $250 (304)875
8440

Regs e ad Black Angus Year ing

Buf s $900 &amp; Up Rag ste ad
Black Angus Yea ngs Heifer
$700 8 oodl nes In Ba Ex Trav
e e w despread New Trend Fu

R ta Back Will De ver (304)372
2389

640

Hay &amp; Grain

Good M xed Hay For Sa e Dela

no Jacl&lt;son Form (304)675 1743
(740)446-1 04

Ast a Conve slon Van 1994 Teal
Blue Auto Air PW PL PM AM
FM Cassette T t Wheel Cru se
Looks And Runs Great Ask ng

$7300 (304)562 27B7

740

Motorcycles

1996 Yahama Wolve lne 4x4
New Vamp e T es Just P:ebu
New B akes Power ~ t (740)448-

4025
1999 250 Honda Recon 4
Whee e
For Sa e $2300

(304)773 6 85

Pano 0 740.446-4525

Independent Herballfe Distributor
Cal For P oduct Or Opportun tv

1740)441 1962

Sea

$35 Baby

Mon o With TV $45 (740)448
JET
AERATION MOTORS

Repa ed New &amp; Aebu In Stock
Ca Ron Evans 1 800.537 9528

1999 Honda CR250 Eltcelent
Hay Fo Sa e 45 Round Bales
And 250 Square Ba es Ca

1740 446 0' 15
7843 After 6 oopm

0

(740)446

Hay to Sale Round Ba es 1000

Sa es $10 00 $20 00 Squa e
Ba es $2 oo 2 25 (304)552 3274
Days (304)675-4920 Even ngs

New &amp; Used Eleot c And Gas
Furnaces Fo Sale Cat Fo Siz
es
nstalla1 on
Available

(740)446-8308 1 800 291 0098
NEW AND USED STEEL Staal
Beams P pe Rebar For Concrete
Ang e Channel Fla Bar Steel
G ating For Ora ns 0 veways &amp;
Walkways l&amp;l Sc ap Metals

(740)446-7300
White A Ired Ange o Wedding
Dress Size 10 Exqu s te Swee
heart Neck! ne W th S eaves
Long Tra n Tara With Attached

Vall Cost $600
(304)875 3267

Soft $250

Sa e Call

(740)446-7643
Tobacco P ants 0 de Now To
Gua antee Ear y Sp ng Plantings
nc ease A otmants Mean Ext a
Plants Thank Vou For You Bus
ness Cal Danny Dewhu st
Leave Menage (304)895 3740

Or (304)895-3789

71 0 Autos for Sale
$0 DOWN CARS! POL CE fM
POUNDS &amp; REPOSI HONDA S
CHEVY S JEEPS LOW AS $29
MO S 019 9 ~ FOR L ST NGS
CALL 1 800 451 0050 e• C
9812
1991 Chevy Cava er Z24 V8

199 Fo d P obe good condition

Auto Parts &amp;
AccBasoriBs

Cases 740 245 5677 Ce f 339
3785

790

I ltdroom Moblt Homt

uoo

~:~1~1v ~1ftr1not 17401011·

I IJII In Qllnwood ~IIIII y ,ur
nlthtd Ntw Cupet ~ridge
Stove I to llg Yl d IUOimo
(304)571 ltt1 0 (30.)170.0127

,., 11 1 Jlltoondlllo"u wuh
111 drytrt anf rtlrlgtratort
Thomptont Appll•~•• U01
JloMon Avtnua (304117... , .
Naw A"d U11d ,urnllurt ltort
ltlow Holldty Inn KtniUII WI
tat Grave Mon~mtntt And
I'IHI

m
E

R

m Umon C11y w.u one of the nations top
runrung backs when the Bears drafted h1m
after his JUmor year at Penn State
But he was a tr:unmg camp holdout as a
rookie because of a contract dispute wtth Bears
management and reported late Ems averaged
3 7 yards per carry and made one start durmg
that season before suffermg a torn left knee
ligament m November
In iiiS second season Ems rushed for 916
yards m 12 starts But he wasn t the breakaway

c

Sawmfl U 71&amp; New Supar Lum
bermola 2000 1rgor eapeollfoo

1188 Oodgo nlropld ES Candy
Apple Rod. Luthor Loaded Bo
low Book Voluo But Ollor Ovor
$7000 (740)441 0135

Battier
from Page 81

H

Hopefully we can both contmue to per
form well as we enter the NCAA tourna

ment

n
n

Forte a 6 4 sophomore was chosen co play
er of the year m the Adantt c Coast Conference
with Battler He averaged 21 6 pomrs 6 0
rebounds 3 6 asSists and 2 0 steals for the Tar
Heels who fimshed ped for the ACC regular
season t1tle w1th Duke North Carohna lost to
the Blue Devlls m the tournament champ1
onsh1p game
Three players from one conference were
first team selection; 1n 1995 96 when the B1g
East had R.ay Allen of Connecticut Allen lver
son of Georgetown and Kerry Kittles of Villanova
Wilhams and Forte both rece1ved 61 first
tealn votes With Willia1ns getting 335 pomts
while Forte had 332
Knowmg 1t s only the second time three
players m one league have made the ream
shows people what a great league the ACC 1S
Forte sa1d It 1s mcredible that of all the
schools m the country that play ball three All
Amencans play only 10 mmures apart It was
fun competmg ag:unst them this year
Murph}\ a 6 10 JUmor who averaged 22 0
pomts and 9 2 rebounds m leading the F1ghtmg lmh to the1r first NCAA tournament smce
1990 had 55 first team votes and 312 pmnts

I

s
E

.,

IS

the first repeat selecoo st ce LaFrentz m

Its a tremendo ts honor to be named a first
team All Amen can for the second consecuave
year Murphy sa td It s a spec1ai feel ng thiS
year because of all tho succe&gt;S v.e have had as a
team and that we were able to accomphsh our
goal of reachmg the NCAA tournament
Jacobsen the thud sophomore on the first
team rc ce1ved 35 ti rst tea 11 votes and 259
pomts He averaged 18 0 pomts and 4 0
rebounds shoormg 47 percent fro 11 3 pomt
range as the Cardmal won the Pac 10 Confer
ence Stanford fimshed as the only DtviSlon I
team With less than four losses
Jacobsen 1S the first Stanford player chosen
for the first team s nee the AP started selecung
an All Amenca team n 1948
He came to Stanford v.1th h1gh expecta
tlons from everybody and he has met all the
challenges Cardinal coach Mtke Montgomery
satd He has expanded hiS game and m less
than two seasons at Stanford he has established
hnnself as one of the best players to wear a Cardinal uniform
Iowa State seruor Jamaal Tmsley led the sec
ond team and was JOtned by JUmors M1chael
Bradley of Villanova and Tayshaun Pnnce of
Ken tuck}\ and sophomores Troy Bell of Boston
College and Jason Richardson M1ch1gan State
The third team was semor Charhe Bell of
M1ehigan State JUmors M1chaelWnght of An
zona Udoms Hasiem of Aonda and Kirk Haston of Indiana and sophomore Frank W11liams
of Illinms

c
l
ft

I can t beheve he shot 1t that h1gh satd
Northwestern State center D or FIScher who
scored 10 pomts and blocked mne shots I
/
guess he knew I was a good shot blocker
B1
The closmg nunures were the best though a
happen m the NCAA tournament We ve b1g part of the crowd of 6 813 got up and left
made history already by playmg thiS game Why before the drama unfolded Josh Hancock who
cant we make more hiStory&gt;
won two games this season With last nunute
G1ven the way thmgs had gone m the last baskets hit a 3 pomter from the nght corner
three days the Demons weren t fazed by what Wlth 1 00 to play to put the Demons 111 control
comes next
WIJ1throp made 11 of Its 20 3 pomt attempts
The Southland Conference champwns had but Tywan Harns had one roll off the nm and
to board a bus durmg a thunderstorm at 5 30 another partially blocked by FIScher m the final
a m on Monday JUSt to get to Dayton They ate rrunute
breakfast sandwtches while ram pelted the wm
The NCAA s first play m game m 10 years at
least had a good ending even though CBS TV
dows wound up standmg m line to order a fast
food lunch at the atrport because of a fl1ght home of the tourname 1t was showmg Judg
delay and went nght to pracace when they got mg Amy mstead
I hold no 1ll wtll coward tho NCAA for this
to Uruversu:y of Dayton Arena for thetr work
game and I would 1 r rmnd conung back
out
They still hadn t seen any tape ofWmthrop Wmthrop coach Gregg Ma shall sa1d Tf they
(18 13) the B1g South champton That wasn t start the season and say Wo tid you hke to play
such a disadvantage - the Eagles hadn t been m the play 111 game I m conung back
The Demons are 1 t gomg home They have
able to learn much about the n e1ther
two d!ys to propare fo a challe 1ge far greater
When they took the court Tuesday m a half.
empty arena sandwtehed between Martial than the r ph) u
G1ven all that had happened n the last few
Law and a monster truck show on TNN the
play m teams looked I ke they hadn t slept or days theu confuston was understandable So
was thetr gumptwn
practtced much
When we got here we weren t used to all
The low pomt of a ragged first half came
the
lights Byars Dawson sa1d We wercn t
when Wmthrop s Marcus Stewart put way too
much oomph on a JUmp shot from the top of even used to flymg We didn t want to come
the key The ball flew over the backboard and here for JUSt one game We wanted to stay for
the weekend
j.slamn1ed off the shot clock
Stewart dropped h!S head and hiS coach mer
in th1s tournament anythmg can happen
Who
knows)
Cifully called a timeout

NCAA

from Page

s
s
I

f

I
f
D

94 Dutchman Camper 3 I W lh
Expando Room Evsryth ng Ready
To Go Camp ng Ron Sheets

(740)441 9531

SERVICES

810

Home
Improvements

When 1t comes to selling your car,
nothing goes the distance like the
Classifiedsl Get the show on the road

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncond t ana I fatima guarantee
Loca efe ences ru nlshed Es

tab ahl&lt;l1975 Ca 24 Hra (740)
446 0870 1 800 287 0576 Rog
ora watorproottng
C&amp;C Qentrll Homt Ml n
tenence Pa nt ng v nv aid ng
carpentry dOOf'l wlndowa blltha
mob! 1 home rtpa r and mo • For

us

Guess who's
421

110 Help Wanted

Love Brenda
4 Angel

tree 111 mote 01 Chet 740 982
1!323
L v ng1ton s Baument Wa1tr
P oonng a b1umen1 repalrl
done fret eat matts lllttlmt
guaran n 14yrl on job axpt I

onoo 1304)895 3887
18818 Grind Am GT •el re11on

ably laolo y warranty 740 992
2358

840 Electrlcaland
Refrigeration

EARN $$$
NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED
~ull ond part limo poaltlono avolloblt
Completatralntns provided lvllh flulblo houro

Earn up to $15/hour

84 AuOI 5000 5 CyllnOar 5
5Pitd 4 Door Runs G oat seso
A 10

88

Aud

(740)441 1083

For

Parts

Pleasant Valley Hospital
Pl1111nt Valley Nurelng and Rehabilitation
Ctntar currantly h11 op1nlng1 for LPN'•
Twtlve hour ahlftt Competitive aalary band
on markat Excellant bentfltt

~ull

time poaltlona o!ler bonallt paokogo which
lnctudoa Modtoai/Oon11V401 K/Pd Vaootlona

CALL TODAY
Wlltrllnl Spacial 3 4 200 PSI
$21 95 PI 00
200 PSI
$37 00 Par 100 All Brau Com
proosion Fllftngs In Stoek
RON IVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson Ohio 1 100 537 9528

He

1997 98

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

2 2 tt automat c with Plontt

omllm CID p ayor $2500 740
985 3510
•

aawmflle odgars ond oklddtrl
NO~WOOD lNDUST~IES 252
Sonwllf Orlvt eulflfo NY 14225
FREE fnforma11on 1 800 &amp;71
1353 Ext :zoo.U

Motor and

Budget Priced Trenaml"lona
A I Types Access To Over
10 ooo Transm sslons T anster

C use Runs Good

UYII IAVII IAYII Hlt1
Pumpt L P 4 Noturat Gil Fur
n1011 II You Don I Co f Ul WI
Both Lon (740)448 6308 l
1 100-lltl-oote

mort opt on• M1n1Jf1cturer or

flom,...B1

back he was m college and averaged JUSt 3 2
yards per carry
Last season the Bears asked htm to put on
more we1ght and he came to ~amp we1ghmg
245 pounds Ch1cago then moved h1m to full
back where he gamed 84 yards on 36 carnes
Ems satd he won t dwell on why thmgs did
n t work out w1th the Bears
I d rather concentrate on what 1t s gomg to
take to get rhmgs straight and make things
nght he satd
Ems was m Cleveland for a VISit last week
and satd he was Impressed w1th DavJS and the
Browns orgamzat:Jon
Its so classy he satd

TRAN SPORTATION

1991 Dodge Staaflh AIT Twin
Turtlo 300HP AWD High Milas
Shl p Be OW BOOk Value Best
OfterOVO $7400 (740)441-QI35

"'"

750 Boats &amp; Motors
lor Sale

760
Tobacco Plants Fo

Tappan HI Ellleleney 90% Gaa

100-172 5te7 www orvb com/bon

Condit on $4700 Cal (740)256
689

Tre a $450 (740)379-2706

$2500
Day (740)441 1199
Evon ng (740)256-8430

Furna(:es 01 Fu nac11 12 Ster

2000 Honda Fo eman 450ES
4x4 Under 200 M as Perlect

One Man Bass Boa

REBIOENTIAL HOME OWNERS

Hut Pump &amp; Air Cond lion ng
Syltomt Frn 8 Yea Wa ranty

Cond 1on Ask ng $3500 (740)
441 1690

Squa e bale&amp; of good m 11ed hay
never wet $135 740 985 3510

MOBILE HOME OWNERS
HUge Inventory C scount Prices
On V ny Skirt ng Doors W nd
ows Ancho s Water Heate s
Plumbing &amp; Etectr ca Parts Fu
naces &amp; Heat Pumps Bannatts
Mobile Home Supp y 740 446
9416 www Of'o'b comlbenneH

Enis

gour
used

o~e

4•4 69000 mea $12 500 Good
Condit on (740)386 8958 even
ngs (740)388 9053 days

1998 Red Jaop G all(lo Cherokee

Palomino Slltlton
Rig AQHA 19911

Sell

D

2001 Pontle Grona Am GT
LOIOtd 1400 Millo Grey 4 Ooor
(304)882 2356

011 now 1 IOMtHm

NIW
I 4170 I II ffl 00
1 ltdroom 1 ltlh 1 117 m

610 Farm Equipment

Grubbs P ana Tuning &amp; Repairs
P oblams? Need TUned? Call The

NIW doublt Wldl I llr I bl
-

79K Automatic Loaded

730 Vans &amp; 4 WOe

0 RECTV free lnsta at on $200

Btnntttl Helling &amp; Cool1ng, 1

10Mf1 ..m

4110

""

County area have dogl 740

New 1t It wlft 1411 ,., mon
onlY 1110 '" mon oall now 1

QONIOLIDATI IILLIILOANI

Avtr.,.e rite Ortt hour IIPIIfOYII
Qa I J':C C I IOIIIree I 100-101

Month 3 Btdroom 1 Both Frame

Wonted to rant 1alor tot l.!olge

Houu ror rtntln Rutland oall
74().7q.aee1

CAIH LOANI IIOOG 11000
Contolldlt on to 1100 ooo 11111
NO Ortfll Crtdlt Corda MOll
011111 1.IQO.iltlo1111 . . . .

0 AQ l'rom II IIQO.IIII 0001 I'll

Gal po s 752 3rd Avenue $300

klndo Night&gt; (740)448.e814

till oo down onlv 1111 ptr

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Auto A

HOUII 011 Heat No Petl We ...

HHm

Seby Bod Ca Soot High C~a
Strol tr Sw ng 1304)675-2801

er Hook up $270/mo Plus Ce

1978 4x70 tra le 3 Bed oom 1
112 Bath 1 Ac e m I Covered
Deck And Patio Bldwe Area

Ntw 14 It wldtl411 down on1v
I Ill. Pit mo~ 1111 now 1 100

AUTOS FROM $500 00
Po lcllmpoull(ls &amp; Roposf
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Please Cal lor Lslings
1 BOo-451.0500 Ext. C981 1

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(304)875 1100 ask tor Ke th

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Mal\11 ,avrnfnll6 Move lnl
,..00...1 1'1'17

www np etaans com

cash bar:k 800 263-2840

Courthouse And C ty Bu 10 ng
Ncey D"o alod I\IC 3 flooma
Bu ld ng By tsell 448 2nd Avo
(740)44&amp;-95311

$ FREE CASH NOWS f om

FREE Co or Cotalog
Cal Today! 800 642 1310

posit Water Pakl (740)4&lt;46-4043
Afte 8 OOpm

RENTA LS

BOO 248

9840

ac oage &lt;all 740.797 9303 740
992 9132

3 Bedrooms 1 112 Bath house In
Point P easant
In Town

Bath D n ng Room &amp; Largo Living
Room 61C24 Porch Undorplmtng
2 AC 1 fncludoO
58000
(740)742-4119

$5 500 now S34 990

0805

(304)576 9991 Or (304)875-0127

(7 40)245 7322 Ask For Kim Or
(740)446 4324 Ask lor Marte

now $17 990 8011125x14 was

One Bedroom Apartment on 1st

14x76 Oakwood mob e norne. ·1
180011 3 Btdroom 2 Seth at 1908
h ee bed oom two bath master
Smokey Ad $5251 mo (740)446ba h w th garden tiA) tteat pump
9487
appro• 3 years old new watt
heate ga bage disposal th ee
ce ling tans 200 amp ae v ce
3 Bed oom 1 Bath House Wash
other ecenl updates &amp;lee lent e &amp; Orye Now Ca pet $5001
condl on
must be moved
month P us Depaalt No Pels 1
$15000 7407422405
Mile Up Route 2 At G anwood

App eclat&amp;

S9 990 50xiOOx14 was $35 900

COMPUTERS WE FINANCE
DELL COMPUTERS! Even with

(740)445-IS19

1996 Toyota T100 Extended Cab
4x4

s 5 900 (740)446-2510

to eo% offl P e eng nee ed w th
pana 40lC60X10 was$ 6500 now

1657

Furnished 2 &amp; 3 Room Apart
men s Clean No Pets No Smok
lng References &amp; Oepos t Ra
QUired
Utillt es Furn shed

(304)578 2999

Good W h Chid en 304)773
5825

E11cellent Sarv ce
Flex ble Finane ng Ava able
Home /Commercia Un ts

shop &amp; movies Cal 740 4.t6

AKC Aeglste ed Male Bull Dog

So d Wh te Beaut fu $1000 F rm

Whaal Basa $ 800 304)576
2753

Pug 1 Yea 0 d House Broken

ALL STEEL BUILDINGS New up

Rea estate wanted I am forced
out of my house fo highway m
p ovement Look ng to o d farm
house In Meigs County w th

1

To

sepa ate (740):339-34119

720 Second Avenue 1 Bedroom
Upata rs Apa tment $300 +De
post Water Sewer T ash Pad

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK
SON ESTATES 52 Westwood
0 ve I om $297 to $383 Wa k to

$100 Each (740)258--8483

1983 Chevy S lve ado V 8 En
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Toa Off Shovels Sh ngto Loade

AMAZINGLY LOW PRICES
WOLFF TANNING BEDS
Buy FaCIDry D eet

(740)441 521B (Cay) (740)446
0101 (EIIOn ngs)

AKC Reg ste ed l.ab Puppies

Full Size Truck Rack. Oewalt m
tr11aw 1/2 HP Pa nl Sp aye Saw
A I Skllsawa A $2 500 o p ice

Infant Car

t 4x70 Southern D earn free Ot

See

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Generator 5HP E ec r c A
Camp Delta Sawbuck Scallo d
ng A r Hose Extion Cords Roof
Jacka ladders Ladde JackiS

1740)245-5100

d scount on first ITIOntha rent

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2nd Ave phona (740)446- 6 s

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Po Ice fm

pounds &amp; u se zu es Hondas
Chevvs Fords &amp; ma e Fo lis
ngs cal now 1 800 719 3001
ext AOtO

La ge Colleclion of Antique Poe~
et Watches Good Cond ton 422

~8

410 Houses lor Rent

Must

019 9% For fist ng I BOO 319

dopooll oqufrad no pats 740
992 2218

1978 Norris 14x70 2 Beoroom 1

230

epos Fee so downf 24 mos

1 and 2 bedroom apartments tur
nlshed and unfurn al'1td 1tcur tv

Now Tak ng App cat ona 38
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apa lments Includes Water
Sewage Trash $3501Mo 740

320 Mobile Homes
lor Sale
ve r I oa Setup only $9995 I
888 928 3426

(740)387-DII32

13 Acres W th Beaut fu Lake

V ow Silas $50 ooo 18
WI h Large Lake Mobile
With Add On $79 500
County On Bfa,ktop
(740)388-8878

3BR Reposl Fo eclosu es lee
4% down lor list ngs Payment

WORK FROM HOME
Earn
$500 $7000 month PT FT Full

n\2 nat anal Company expand
n.t Earn $1000 $7000 month

Soil $13 900 080 (740)379-9238
Evenings

Chu ch Bu d ng w lh Parsonage
fo sale located n Po nt Pleasant
Good Ne ghbo hood Reduced

Workshop 23 Rid ng A ngs

Two Bedroom $275 Month Plus
Capos t G ean School 0 st lei

440

hree bed oom

SO DOWN HOMES GOV T &amp;
BANK FORECLOSURES LOW
OR NO MONEY DOWN OK
CREDIT! FOR LISTINGS CALL
1 800-338-()()20 ... 981
1 112 Story 3 Bedroom Home 2
Battis g eat Room w pathedra
Ce I ng Loft Fu Basement At
tached 2 Car ga age Ba n/

Pats (740)992-6387

New Fleetwood

310 Homes lor Sale

888 205.0288

T a n ng
Free Information
www anainurd eams com

CARS FROM $29 MO mpounas/

Tral er For Rent Behind The
Can na 2 Bedroom $250 No

Tobacco quota wanted to tilt

340

EARN $500 to $900 per waok n
you bathrobe &amp; a ppe s Great
oppo tunlty o secure you futu e
Low nvestment
800 272 0193
awCsomearnlngs com

8777 lXI C 9814

lor $3000 &amp; $120 lot rent 614
B76 661

NIW
FIOIIWOOd
18M80
1191199 00 3 Btdroorn 2 Bath 1
177m-4170

Fleduced 1981 Sunshine S ng e
w de 15x80 Three Bed oom 2
Full Baths Washer &amp; D ye Must

GET YOUR FORTUNE IN MO
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salflng Call 1 800 350 7893 24
hrs.I70ays

CARS $29 MONTH! POLICE M
POUNDS &amp; REPO S HONDA
CHEVY 24 MO S 0 9 9% FOR
L STINGS CALL I 800 94

Mob te home In Mlnersv 111 two
bedroom $300 + depoa t Of se

430 Farm• lor Rent

II)( familial 1t11U1 or n1t1ona

p,.,...,.,

$2 000 a week? Work 4 6 hrs lwk

Gteat S700 080 Cat 740)4468936

Homos US 50 E•\ Alhona On

two both $955 down $199 56
month '" 1740 992-2167

$500

Pont ac Grand Am 121K Runs

Two Bedroom Mostly Fu n shed

'lny prwloreooo

origin, or any Intention 10
make any oucn
f mllatfon or dltcrlmfnotlon

earn

Co s ca

s ca H gh M es
GOOd Cona lion $ 000 OBD 69

deposit no pets call 7~0 992

F na Cays Natlonw de Inventory

Auto Runs

91 Chevy Co

(740)448--B308

0750005

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?

Bualneaa
Opportunity

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Chevy

CARS FROM $500

FINANCIAL

(686)

88

2808

FREE

1

GOOd $500 13041895-3739

NEED AN EARLY PAYDAY?? Up

tfmlilllon or dltcrlmlnolton
biOtd on rooo - r rolgfon

Ava lab e Gooo Orad 1
270 2168

88 Beretta 4 Cy ~

(740)446-3 99

Ca hedra Cell ng Though Out
Th ee Bed oom 2 Fu Baths
Call Aile Spm
Must Move

to $500 nstanlly by phone 1
877 EAALYPAY IS ADVANCE

No Answer Leave Me&amp;aage

A+ M &amp; M MARS/NESTLE Es
tabllshed Vend ng Route WI se
by 3 26 Unde $9K m n mum in
vestment requl ed E)CCI lent
Month y P oflt Potent a Finance

4336

e Home Vinyl
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Elect 1e ca {304)675-2058 (304)
675 3927

998 Chevy Tahoe 4 000

3323112 56

(74b)448 0 51 o 339 0850 II

a commends thai you do busl
ness w th peop e you know and
NOT to send money through lhe
mall untl you have nve&amp;t oated
the offerir.g

Bdwall Oh o 45614 (740)44B

1996 16.SO Mob

1997 Fee wood Home 14~~:70 3
Bed oom 2 Balh Cen ra A

2221

turn shed 1275 per month S275

W I Powerwalh Houses Tralllfl
And FIV a Contact Flon At

210

Ron A son 588 Watson Road

(140 )446 9682

Lot modar c:lea ance save up to
$8 625 w th any home check us
out we e dealing Co e a Moll e

PTJFT Ca nowf 1 888 699 0901
www earnbucksl omhome com

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WHITE S METAL DETECTOR S

Kanuaga Mol:flle Home Sales

736 3409

The Village of M ddlepon s now
accepung appllcallon for the po
s ton of Poo and Park Manage
for Summer 2001 Applicants
must have bas c fe&amp;8\llng ce lifi
cat on Rae eatlon management
eJCpt lance helpful Send resumes

140

2 Seth

h $0 down Low monthly pay
men s 1 800-6 7 3476 ext 330

IN

miles uk ng payoff 740 949

Sma I two bedroom moble hOrne

, 888-582 3345

WORK FROM HOME! Grow ng

Ill monthlll OALL TODAY 1 100
ne 0111 or www workrromho
mta47aom

SChult l6)(80 3 Bed oom

NEW BAANC NAME COMPUT
ERS A mas eve yone app oved

1996 Fo d TB d L~ loaded oil
opltons v 6 28 MPG 51 000

8861 24 hrs

No Fee Uness WeWn

Exam Info call I 800 992 7054
x208 MF 8 30-5 OOpm

HCMI lorn

199!5

540 Miacellaneoua
Merchandlll

owna S22 000 (740)446-8748

New&amp;UsedFu n ue
New 2 P ece Liv ng oom Suites
$399 Buy Sel hda

for Sale

L legua ds (Must Be Certified}
Concess on Wo ke s And Ad
miss on Worke s At Ga po s
Mun c pal Pool Appl cat ons May
Be p eked up At The Ga pol s
Parks And Recreat on Office Lo
calt:d In The Mun cpa Bu ding
518 Stcond Avenue aa llpota

OPTOMETRIC TECHN C AN po

Or vera BIG MONEY NO EX

Pine Posts Wanted $1 30 To
S2 30 Fo More nlo matlon C811

BRIDGE STATE UNIVERS TY I
BOO 964 83 8

CONSOLIDATE YOUR

Accep ng 0 de MOde ] ucks
, 600 200-28~3

OH45640

38K 42K 1st Year

M T S Con Shop 151 Se,ono
Avonuo Gallipolis 74D-44ti-2842

75% 0 opiHook G eat Bene! ts

Needed Experienced c ew to
Selling and Finish ng Sectional
Hous ng Send Pr clng nfo mat on
and expe lance to Southern
Homes PO Box 629 Jackson

CALL 1-et)H33-4484

Abso uta Top Dollar U S SIIVe
Gold Co ns Proofaets Diamonds.,
Gold R ngs
U S Currency

NO Touch

month I 1 BOO 570 9628 CA
www bs fm4iofe eom

864

773-5785 0 304 773-5447

Coas

by May 1st B and New Just
Patented I ost 23 lbs n 1

Tol F eo 9 888 S23 4417 aMI

R ck Pea son Aucllon Company
full t me auctioneer c;;~mple e
auct on
sa v ce
Licensed
•66 Oh o &amp; West VI gin a 304

NO Eas

NEEDED 47 People to looe 30 1&gt;6

•

•;•
an

Home Eve y Weekend Mo e

Call 1 800 279 3787 Vofca Ma
box 118818

Need Se I sta e s who require no
supBf\11&amp; on
Full Tra n ng Set Own Hours
Compute w mOdem required CtU

~

Oocto ate by co :espondence
based upon p o educaUon and
sho 1 study cou se FOf' FREE n
format on book e phone CAM

s

$7 2!5 hour + S 291M le Please

DATA ENTRY
545 000/y potential

Auction
and Flea Market

EARN YOUR COLLEGE DEGREE
QUICKLY bache o s Maste s

180 Wantad To Do

A ea 1 Day per Week (Monday)

Available n Our C eultatton/

~

80

PARALEGAL

STUD ES Comp ehens ve aHo d
able home s udy ega ra n ng
s nee 1890 Fee Ca a og 800
826 9226 W e ~0 80&lt; 70 44g
Oaf as TX 75370 NA 0 h tp
www bfacf(stonelaw com

Medical Tronoertptton And Med

Gallipolis
&amp; Vicinity

•!

BLACKSTONE

320 Moblla Homes

Profe11ional
-Service•

;230

ca Insurance COding lnstructo 1

CAREER OPPORTUNITY
net
V sll us on ne to t nd pe eel
mate o ca 1 888 9 .5 3266 1

Schools
lnatructlon

10 OOam Monday lh u Salurooy

nelawcom

www 4datematchma~e

ee com

150

Ohio OOI&lt;IIInt ~Apr! 12 2001

45831 Apar1menl403

mat on
1738

FI www dream2b

Ieight

male Ova 50 Years For Walka
And Fr endsh p Rep y To !553
2nd Avenue Galllpo s Ohio

Have run mee ng aug ble alng5ta
n your a ea Call fo mort lntor

SIOOO $4000 wk 800 921 6538

Addressers Wan ad mmed a ely
No Expa ence Necessary Wo k

Avon Last Time Ct1anca To S a t

TON GHTI

HELP Wok f om home Ma I or
de E Comma ce S522+1Week PT

HICUBE EXPRESS

S1 :ZOO. S5 000 mo
, 877 582 1054

DATING

Pa c;l
mo e
9t50

GROWING BUS NESS NEEDS

800 448 6669 Exper anced dr v
ers hOld ng Class A ca aoo 958
2353

KY

START

00

S36 000 + st Yea 5 STAR 1

nformallon Bankruptcy nla In TN

Gent eman Seek ng Wh • Fe

Government Jobs $11
$33 oo pe hOu polentea
li a ning Full Bene I s Fo
nlo rna on cal
888 674
ext 3234

penance needed Ou ck COL
Ira n ng p ogram ava able Earn

AI Home Co (405)447-7

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Help Wantld

110

WORK FROM HOME
S500-S1500 po mo PIT
S2000 $8000 pe mo FIT

TRIBUNE DEAQUNE

2 00 p m the dty befor1
tho ed II to run Sunday I
Mondty edition 2 00 p m
Frtday

Help Wented.

110

The Dally Sentinel • Pac11 B 3

Middleport, Ohio

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE

ClASSIFIEDSI

START TOMORROW!

1·888·974-JOBS
Civic

Tel•••rvlcea

Contact Human R11ourc11 II
Pleaaant Valley Hoapltal
2520 Valley Drive
Pt Pltaeant, WV 25550
Or FAX to
AA/EOE
I

�Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page B 2 • Tht Dally Sentinel

Wldnasday, March 14, 2001

&amp;111

HOUiehold

Gooda
IIOOD UIED APPLIANCE&amp;
W11hera d yen ef gera ors
tangea Skaggs Appt aneta 76
V nt Strte t Call 740 446 7398

1 888-818 0128

AnnouftCIIMI'It

01\'Mwoy Loat I Found
Yon! SIMo ond Wonted
To Do Ado Mull Be Pold
lnAdvlnce

SENDNI!L QEADUNE

1 00 p m the day befor1
tho td Ia to run
Sunday &amp; Monday edition
1 oo p m Fridoy
AEGISJER QEAQLINE,

2 doya bllorothl ad Ia to
nm by 4 30 p m Saturdoy
&amp; Mondoy edition 4 30
Thurlday
"Dooodllnoa oub)ocl to
chongo duo to holldoyo•

F nd out why more and more dr v
ers a e JOining he wlnnmg eqlon

a flatbed leam of Tandem Trans
pot Cop Ca todayfo dealst

No e~nence needed

Tra ning prov~ed
800-680-9468

800-551 9057 Ex 140

3 4 Subst 1u es Ch ldren s VII
lage HS 0 p oma 0 GED Must
Be 18 Yea s 0 d Et:per ence
With P eschool Ch ld en P e
fe red Send Resume To Person
ne Superv sor R ve Va ey COS
605 911'1 St eel Hunting on WV

25701 0 Fax To (304 523-2678
343 DRIVERS NEEDED No e•

005
Personals
D I'OfCe $ 50
Senkruptcy $195
Adoption $225
Not&lt;»n )'OUI&amp;fH k~
CALL I BOO 263 0503 for FREE

ANYONE CAN DO tTl SZ51$751
HRIPTIFT Work II homo 1 800
374-8481
www Th nkBigDo Iars com

ASSEMBLY AT HOMEII Cra ts
Toys Jewe ry Wood Sew ng
Typ ng G eat Pey CALL I BOO
795-0380 Ext20 (24h s)
Attention
Work From Home

800 ROMANCE ext

Up Froo Col (740)448-3358

900 329 4638 $299m n

30 Announcamanta
New To YouTh ft Shoppe
9 West S mson Athens

740 592 1842
Qua ty c oth ng and househo d
ems $1 00 bag sa e eve y
Thursday Monday h u Saturday

9 oo-6 00

Giveaway

40

F ee To Good Home With Room
To Run Beaut fu Wh t German
Shepherd/ Go den Retriever Mix
2 Years Old Neute ed Ma e

Fr ancjy In alllgent (740)245
5116 Afte 6pm

Two Spayed Female Dogs One
3 Year Old Black Span e Mix
One 2 Year 0 d Brown Lab M x
Both With Houses
Phone

(740)446-7025 Afto Bpm

60

Lost and Found

Lost lema e black &amp; wh te Aus
tra ian shepherd brown eyes no

ta lriell(lfy See&lt;:h Street Pome
a; v ctn ty 740-992 3354

70

Yard Sale

BLACKSTONE
PARALEGAL
STUDIES Homo Study Ap
p oved Alfo dab e eoml)rehen
s \18 ega Ira ning since 1890

FREE Ca afog BOO B26 9226
w lie ~o eo• 701449 oanu TX
75370 NA or hnp I www blacks to

Marketing Department
A e you looking lo e hJ II me

pos tlon thai offers opportunity ro
advancement? Do you enjoy
wo k ng w h youth? Do you enjoy
sa es? Do you enjoy being crea
tlve? 0o you have clepondable
ransportatiOn? t so. you cou d
be lhe pe SCin we are lOoking to

;...

=

i

Posfl~n ofltrs

a 1company
benet Iaine udlng hea lh and I fa

nsu anoe 410K plan paid ho
days and vacation pan
For n ervlaw conslde at10n
send your resume wirh a brief
cover lener teling us wl'ri vou are
he person we are ookirtg tor to

(740)441-D660

Small used p ckup uuck 740
992 2529 &amp; leave number to call
o 132 Butternut Pomeroy

PAUL BARKER
Cl,..llllon lllroctor
Ohio V.lloy Pullilohlng
121 THIRO AVENUE
GAWPOLIS OH 45831

CAREER OPPORTUNITY! Earn
excellent Income Easy c a ms
processing Fu I t a n r)Q Home
PC equ ed Ca Physician &amp;
Healthca e Developments to

188 I BOO n2 5933 all 2070
CLAIMS PROCESSOR!
P ocess c a ms tram home $20
$40 h po en al Full t a n ng
Compu er w modem reQu ed

CALL NOW! I 688 565 5197 "'t
642

U 000 WEEKLY! Milling 400
b ochurtll Sit tfactlon Gua

lnlltdl POIIIgl &amp; Supplfll p o
v dtdl

Ruth

St f Addrtlltd

Stamped Envelope GICO DEPT
5 Bax 1431 ANT OCH TN
370 11 t.a 111M lmmtdililly.
1101 WIIKLY QUA~ANTIId
WO~~ING WITH THI GOV
I~NMENT FJIIOM HOMI ~AJIIl
TIMI NO IX'IJIIIINCI Jill
QUIJIIID 1 100 741 1711 IXT
X101

AVON! All Artatl To luy or lei
Shirley Spoora 304 875 1'21

Empoyer
Pari T ma

MERCHANDISE~

Merchlnd ter Needed To Mer
chand se Magaz n•• And Oa a
Collec1 on In Pome oy Gall polis

sltlon avallab e for pe son nter
eated n a5s sting patients w th
eye care needs In a pr9Q eulve
prlvatt p act ce n Athens Ex
pe tence desired but not neces
sary Th 1 poa tlop oHera benetits
starting sala y commensurate
with qualiflcallonsrAPPfOXImate y
35 hou s per week nclud ng
some even ngs and Saturdays
Ro()m tor ca Mr advancement If
nterested send cover letter and

resume ID The Dally sent no~ ~0
Box 729 94 Pomeroy Oh 45769
OWN A COMPUTER? Put It to
work $25-$75/hour F •• llo1a Is
WI tran www911success.com

Own AComputer?
Put no wortct
$25- $7Mir PTIFT
Hl88-e65 4:325
Part Time

iii'Qu Have ABig Hoan '1bu May
Want To Join our Tum 01 Caring
People Who Wanllo Make A
Dtfltrenoo In WOrking W h Peo
p~ With Olsal&gt;lllllos You Car ng
AHIIutlo Wll Be APus When
You AllPil' Fo 01'0 01 Our Dreot
SuPI"'n Stall Poeillons Oon 1
Mfsa Out On Tilt Next Training
Class Apply Tad&amp;\' n Paraon
AI 8204 Carla DriYa 0 Cal
(740)446-&lt;1814 And Ask lor Roborll Or Mary An Equal Oppor
1\Jnity Employer
Part Time LPN S
A Lead ng P ovtder To nd vidual&amp; W th Men a Retardation And

Dnvers

llevolopment Dlsab lllas Is Look
fng For Pan 1me LPN a n ga ipoo
lis Bonelts Include Pa~ Tra n

STUOENT DRIVERS
WANTEDIII
No Experience Necessary!
No Cos Train ng I Qual f edt

lng Hea h tnsu ance Tuition Re-

PERIENCE Let us ran you n au
qu ck C ass A COL p ogram JOb
p acemen Tu tlon assistance
ava able Call 1 877 855 8424
Exper anced Dr ve s call 1 800

lmburoement And Pakl vaca:
1ona II You Woofd l keTo Join
Our Teem To help Individuals
Aehleve Tha r Fu test f'olantiaf
Contact Dorothy Harpe M
(740)446-4814 An Equa Oppor
tun ty Employer

260.0294 AC-Q219

Physlclan 8 Off ce Nelda Fu 1 time
S Ray Technician P ease Drop
Resume A 3009 Jackson Ave

Dr ve s PAM Tansport No ex
per ence needed 2 Week COL

Pont Pleasant

wv 25550

ng $34 000 yr pus Full

Postal Jobs $4B 323 00 yr Now

benefits 6 Pad Tra n ng Or vers

hir ng No exper ence paid train
lng greal benet ts call 7 days

Tral~

based n Mdwest 1 877 230
3002 Sunoay Bam 4pm Monday
7am-6pm Tue Fri 7am-4pm

u

tams com

EARN $25 000 TO $50 000/YR
Med ca Insurance B fling Need
ed Immediate yl Home compute
needed FREE lnte net 1 800

291-4883 Copt • 109
EARN TO $500 PER WEEK PTI

FTI Strvlct new and 11tablllh~
Fuller 8 Uth CUitOmtrl In OCII
1r11 No door to door required

FREE IIIMor oupp •• ova fob 1
Coli 11'4 Dill 100-lta 2M7
IMAM INI'OIIMATION lor 1'01111
Jobs I1Uhlhr llnlltiiPon
lion 1 lfl 721 1013 x1101 11m
7pmCIT
PI NALLY A LIQITIMATI HOM I
IUIINIIII ilftllf!lt 1 highly !llid
ltgl or mtdloall'lntoriDtr ood
tr Of bllltr n II lltllt II I0
Wll~l ,nlf'41ng IYiilblt mtd

llg llllm I

AOCIII TO A COM,UTIJIIt
,ulll lo war~ 110/llr 110/hr ,TI
,T 'l'llllnlo 100 171 10&lt;11 111
101 www lliO!MbiiiCIII

ty

www b-hapl com

www home business sys

Help Wanted

lis OH 4!5631 Gallpo s Caree
Colege Is An Equal Opportun

Number

Free nlormaton(414)2906900

110

(Evon ngs) Submll Reeume To
Gal pofla Ca eor College 1175
Jackson Pika Su ta 312 Ga lpo

(740)3B8 8331 Laave Name &amp;

full t me war~ t om home Ex
pand ng company needs he pi

'

McClure 1 Aeatau ant now hiring
al 3 Jocations tu or pa t t me
p ck up app cation at oca on &amp;
b lng back between 8 30am &amp;

Class A COL D ive Wanted 2
Yea s OTA Exper ence Cal

EARN $1200 $6800 month pa

EMP LOYMENT
SERVI CES

B&amp;B Couns rue on Roo ng
d ng &amp; Cone ete tnter o &amp;
Ex e or Pa nt ng A Phases Of
Home Aepa s For A F ee
Es mate
Ca
304 675 7738
Alter 5 pm

WAY

OUT OF DEBTI Aeduce monthly
paymen s Pay one b month
EASY o ge s ar ed F nanc a
Freedom Christian Counse ng

800 B41 9757

eMI

CC3

www deb ccs org {Non Prof )

CRED T PROBLEMS? CALL THE
CREDIT EXPERTS LICENSED
BONDED CORRECT REMOVE
BAO CREDIT BANKRUPTCY
LAWSU TS JUDGMENTS AAA
RATING 888-8 .Q902
In Need ol Finane a Ass stance?
Pease ca l us to lee t 866613

m MHO'II

Ltl'lll Mtlmw HHIIh A;tm)l H n!Jg
lull Tlmt Or ~art Trma ,CA 1
CNA I No llptrltnat NIHI
urv Will Train Mil th In
turanot Ill Third Avt
(740l«t · lm

80&lt;l-429 3680 ext J 365
POSTAL JOBS to $18 35 hr
WILDLIFE JOBS to $21 80/hr In
eludes Benef ts No Experience
Necessa y For App cation and

L~

Reduct cn1(304)736-3409
L mited Or No C edit? Gove n
ment Bank Finance Only At Oak
wood In Ba bou S'J e wv 304

AI raol- -lllng n

1hlt -~~ IUbiiCIIO

1o-

Ftdoral Far Houalng Ad
or 1811 wntc:n mlkn ~ Illegal
lho

Thlt rwwlptpli' w I no1

Bonuses! No Hype I No Confu
s on I No exper enca necessary

knowingly .ooept
...,...,.,. for rea

WI I tra n Not MLM Af1ordabfo
coat Tol f 00 1 677 891Hi321
INOTICEI
OH 0 VALLEY PUBLISHING CO

-In

estocklng hot local toy rou • No

ATTENTION
BASKETBALL
FANS F ee NCAAINBA Down
loads Information You Need To
W n www OataScanSports com &lt;

hiiP;Iwww DaiOScanSporiS eorn&gt;

"'*'

wltlch II In 111o1111on of the
low Our-.- hereby

1-llllllllctwelllnge
1hlt neoo popor
are avaHable on an equal
oppor1Unlly basis

1..________. .
REAL ESTATE

Ea n 190 000 YEARLY epaf ng
NOT ap ac ng Long cracks in
W ndshlelds F ee v deo 800

826-8523 US/Canada www g ass
mechan x com

IF YOU MUST WORK WORK
AT HOME Bu ld you own sue
cessful business Mall order E

Comme co $1000 $7000 PT FT
Free info mat on www FocuaOn

Fru&lt;lom eom 800-736 2334
IF YOU MUST WORK WORK
AT HOME! Bu d you own sue
cesatul business Ma order E

Comme ca $1000 $7000 PTIFT
Free nfo mat on www FocusOn

FreedOm com 800-736 2334

M&amp;M MARS Estab shed outes
available M nlmum Investment
$4800 Annual po enlla ea n ngs

over $90K 1 BOO B39 6991 24
hrs
MEDICAL B LLING Un m ad n
come po ent a No expe lence
necessary Fee Information &amp;
co ROM lnves men from $2495
F nanc ng available (800) 322
1139 EXT 050 www bus ness
sa tup cern
Prob em Credit?? No Problem
ncome Is Un m ted CaJI Today

, 888 287-4589

WOMEN S ANSWER TO VA
GRA Ob Gyn c eated Pa en ed
Huge commissions Sa es Reps
Wanted Investment Requl ed 1

Lovely Ru a Setting Near New
Haven
WVa
Must
See

(740)256-1271

3 Bedroom Large Fam ly Room
Attached Ga age On Gruesar
Lane
In
Camp
Con ey

(304)675-42 6
FORECLOSED GOV THOMES!
SO OR LOW DOWN TAX
REPO S &amp; BANKRUPTC ES OK
CREOITf FOR LIST NGI CALL 1
80Q-501 1777txt 9813

Ut ty B s GeHing Most 01 Your
Paycheck! Call (740)448 3093
Fo You New Home Today

330 Farms for Sale
68 Acre Fa m Fo Salt By Owne

w th 1500 Sq Foot 3 Btdroom 1
1 2 Ba h Home With Oak Tim
And La ge K tchen Has A La ge
Garage And Ba n W th 40+ T II
able Acres Excellent Location
Near R o Grande
Ask ng

$129 900 (740)380-D259 Even
ngs

Business and
Buildings

$65 000 (304)675 1618

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
1o 9 Acres Located On F iendly

A dga Road Crown City
(740)388-0864(740)386-9338
Acres
Home
Gal Ia
Road

80 Acres In Mason County City
Water Natu al Spring Creek
Running Through A ready T m
be ed Ready For Spr ng Creams

To Como True
(304)897 5927

$50 000

Brookview Subdtv slon Of Cente
nary 2 5 Acres Lots Now Ava

able Call (740)448 OOS9 For
Into rna ion

HOMES FAOM $199 30/Mo

Look ng To Buy A New Home?

Don 1 Have Land? We Do I Hurry
Only 10 Lots Ltfi 304738-7295

Ootalls 1 800-719-3001 xll85

Must Stoll Seeutlul 3 Sedroom 2
Bath CA FR W Fireplace 2
Lots New Roof Relr ge ator
Stove OW a ge 2 Ca Ga age
B g Yard Large Rooms Lots Of
Extras Relocating Out 01 State

$67 000 Ca f (304)773 5454 or
(304)773-5391
Ranta Property 3 lo s Nlett 3BR
Houses On Each Co ner Lot 50
Vacant J,.ot In M ddle Corne Of

Rand &amp; Par&lt;h Street Kanagua
Oh o owner Mull Self Oue To 11
ness (740)446-7473

Two acre ot ro sate off New Lima
Ad water &amp; sewer set up 740

742 2803

In Country $300 Month $200
Deposit Plus Utlllioa (740)2566202

pfeoao

can 937 373 4844 con eafl

col~ alter 8 30pm.

Apartmanta
lor Rent

360

Real Estate
Wanted

1 Bed oom K !chen Bath Living
Room Dining Area Po ttr Oh o

$275 Pfua DIPOIII (740)3877015
2 Aparlmenta Fo Rent In Flo
G ande Walking 0 stance To

Col ego AI Ulfllllos Paid 10%

2~8

Equal Housing Opportunlly

Ch tslys Family L vlng, 33140
New L ma Ad Rutland OhiO 740.
742 7403 Apa tment l'lome and
traile entals Commerc a store
fronts available fo ease Vaean

clunow

Prole..lonal
Services

to tho V ago ol Middleport 237
Race St M~ilporl Ohio 45780
Apptlcllfon dltdl nt April!

wealthy fam Ill unloading m II ana
of dollara to tt.lp m n m ze their

URGENTLY NEEDID pluma
donorl. oom $45 10 110 lor 2 or 3
houro -kly CaH Sara Toe 7•0
ltHII1

IIIII Wrllo lmmed lilly WINO
FALLS~ 3010 WIL&amp;HI~E BLVD
til Lu8 ANGILIB CAL"OA
NIA11110

WOA~ ~OAM
II 000 p~ to 18000

II NEED A LOAN? 'lly dabl oon101 dlt onl Qui payment! up to
80'11 lamt Uy IPPIOVIII I 177
1t..llll

Ga I pol o A oa $3751 mo plus
depos t Utllll 11 Included Refer

enc:as Requkes (740)245-6555
Gracious lvlng 1 and 2 bedroom
apa tments at V age Mano and
Rivers dt Apa tments In Middle

port F om $278 1348 ca 740
992 5084 Equal Housing Oppo
tun lites

Ill NIIC OAIHH WI PIV
onh lor r~mt n n; ~tym1n11 on
,rO!IIriY lollll MOr1QI,III Anniil
tiUI lttlllmtnttr mmtd 111
0110111111 NOIIOOY 111111 o~r prlt
u • Nit onal O'ontrul •~v•r•

Modtrn 1 Bedroom Apartment

PhOnt (74'0)448--Q390

Nice 2 Bedroom Reference &amp;

Oopooh No Poll (304)875 5162

a

Bedrooms

Avenue Ga lpo Ia Washer/ Dry

Tara Townt'IOuse Apartments
\It y Spacious 2 Bedrooms 2

Forecloltd

Homes From $199/1&gt;10 4% Oown
30 V.ars at 8 5% APR For Lst
lngs. 800-31 N323 EXt 1709

Ffoora CA 1 1/2 Bath Fully C,r
paled Adu t Pool &amp; Baby Poo
Patio Start 1385 Mo No Pets
Lease Plua Security Depoe 1 Re
qu rod Oays 740 446 3481
Evenings 740 367 0502 740
448-oiOI
1'w n RMirTowera now _,.,g
appllcltiorttlor 1 BR
HUD IUblk11ztd opt. lor~

af'4 d llbltd EOH (304)8758879

460 Space for Rent
Oown own Second Avenue Near

4 Bedroom House In Rio G ande

Lot For Rent With Approved Ap

Very God Condll on $25 000

Four Room House

(740)245-5856
52 Olive

Street phone (740)446-3945

plication At K&amp;K Mob le Home

Pe k (304)875 3000 Leave Mas
sage

~:~~~~

WWWIII

~llot ~roor•m ~enllra

(304)7»1. .

91)2 2747

Big acretn TV Take on amall
monthly p1ymenta Good cred
II r•qulrad Phone 1 800 718

'••s than pe teet c ed tl 1 eoo
477 9016 Code AC11 www orne
solutions com

Ml l!r' II MH&gt;I',I

Notded

110

HouHhold
GOOcla

~!lot ' r V Jlltnltrl Nttdtd

110o1731

A 1 Yur Olf K1nmo11 Waeh1r
Hll 7 Oyoltt ,,1~ 1141 Will

,.111111100

410 Mo!»llt Hom••
for fttnt

"'m (1o!O)m 1111

I ~ilot Living ~oom lultl Al!f A
' , " ' D nln~:ro ault o011d
Otndlllon 1'40
II

1

EZPETRX COM Sa110 up to 50',
on ALL pet medications and sup
plies nclud ng Heartgard In e
cepto F on I ne tnore II FREE
SHIPPING 0 der on ne www Ez

petRx com 1 800-844 1427
Fo Sate David White T anslt
$225 Homelite Concrete Saw
Horizontal Shaft Engine $100

(740)37&amp;-24 0

"tttwood

~~p~ QOIII H•IO II 0 000
oo~nt only 11000 oo Down

Dll
De
1vtrv. and tttup paid by '•oiOry
I IQO.It1 ..777

Mezada B2500 2WD 4Cyl nda
5Spead Sport Whoa s AM FM
CD T II C ufso A C 25 ooo
M eo Clean Tuck $10 500
1304)675 6158
1989 F 250 302 5 speed long
bed ool bolt newe w de 1 ack

8 N Fo d T ac o Has Been Ae
stored Ga dners 0 eam $.2!500

1res 32k $4300 740 742 8200

(304)875 3824

1989 H gh Top Conve a on van
a I power ea al TVNCR low ng
package ow m es good condl

lion $5795 740 742 6200
NH415 0 seD ne Lass Than 200
Acres $11 ooo (3041837 3435
Used Lilt Truck ForkS $25 $75
Par Sat 3 P HI ch Lll s With
Va lous

Fo k leng hs

$200

Each (740)379 2757

Livestock

630

One 7 yea old Qua ter Mara and
one 3 year old Pa nt Geld ng and
2 Sadd es and some tack

(740)256--6663

t994 Chevy Ast o Van 1 Owner

70 000 mles High Rool Load ad
{740)446-1231
t994 Fo d F 3!50 Powe st

1997 Chevy S ve ado Extended
Cab 4x4 Power Locks W ndows
3rd Doo Tow Package 35K

Mles $ 8 200 (740)448--4175
La edo V 8 Quadt ack C ean In
side Out 50 ooo Miles Booka

153 H H Wo d Champion m
p essiw B ood ne NIN West8fn
P easu e Hal e Barrels Sland-

$18685
Asking
(304)675 3688

Sl7 500

ng Sud Fea $250 (304)875
8440

Regs e ad Black Angus Year ing

Buf s $900 &amp; Up Rag ste ad
Black Angus Yea ngs Heifer
$700 8 oodl nes In Ba Ex Trav
e e w despread New Trend Fu

R ta Back Will De ver (304)372
2389

640

Hay &amp; Grain

Good M xed Hay For Sa e Dela

no Jacl&lt;son Form (304)675 1743
(740)446-1 04

Ast a Conve slon Van 1994 Teal
Blue Auto Air PW PL PM AM
FM Cassette T t Wheel Cru se
Looks And Runs Great Ask ng

$7300 (304)562 27B7

740

Motorcycles

1996 Yahama Wolve lne 4x4
New Vamp e T es Just P:ebu
New B akes Power ~ t (740)448-

4025
1999 250 Honda Recon 4
Whee e
For Sa e $2300

(304)773 6 85

Pano 0 740.446-4525

Independent Herballfe Distributor
Cal For P oduct Or Opportun tv

1740)441 1962

Sea

$35 Baby

Mon o With TV $45 (740)448
JET
AERATION MOTORS

Repa ed New &amp; Aebu In Stock
Ca Ron Evans 1 800.537 9528

1999 Honda CR250 Eltcelent
Hay Fo Sa e 45 Round Bales
And 250 Square Ba es Ca

1740 446 0' 15
7843 After 6 oopm

0

(740)446

Hay to Sale Round Ba es 1000

Sa es $10 00 $20 00 Squa e
Ba es $2 oo 2 25 (304)552 3274
Days (304)675-4920 Even ngs

New &amp; Used Eleot c And Gas
Furnaces Fo Sale Cat Fo Siz
es
nstalla1 on
Available

(740)446-8308 1 800 291 0098
NEW AND USED STEEL Staal
Beams P pe Rebar For Concrete
Ang e Channel Fla Bar Steel
G ating For Ora ns 0 veways &amp;
Walkways l&amp;l Sc ap Metals

(740)446-7300
White A Ired Ange o Wedding
Dress Size 10 Exqu s te Swee
heart Neck! ne W th S eaves
Long Tra n Tara With Attached

Vall Cost $600
(304)875 3267

Soft $250

Sa e Call

(740)446-7643
Tobacco P ants 0 de Now To
Gua antee Ear y Sp ng Plantings
nc ease A otmants Mean Ext a
Plants Thank Vou For You Bus
ness Cal Danny Dewhu st
Leave Menage (304)895 3740

Or (304)895-3789

71 0 Autos for Sale
$0 DOWN CARS! POL CE fM
POUNDS &amp; REPOSI HONDA S
CHEVY S JEEPS LOW AS $29
MO S 019 9 ~ FOR L ST NGS
CALL 1 800 451 0050 e• C
9812
1991 Chevy Cava er Z24 V8

199 Fo d P obe good condition

Auto Parts &amp;
AccBasoriBs

Cases 740 245 5677 Ce f 339
3785

790

I ltdroom Moblt Homt

uoo

~:~1~1v ~1ftr1not 17401011·

I IJII In Qllnwood ~IIIII y ,ur
nlthtd Ntw Cupet ~ridge
Stove I to llg Yl d IUOimo
(304)571 ltt1 0 (30.)170.0127

,., 11 1 Jlltoondlllo"u wuh
111 drytrt anf rtlrlgtratort
Thomptont Appll•~•• U01
JloMon Avtnua (304117... , .
Naw A"d U11d ,urnllurt ltort
ltlow Holldty Inn KtniUII WI
tat Grave Mon~mtntt And
I'IHI

m
E

R

m Umon C11y w.u one of the nations top
runrung backs when the Bears drafted h1m
after his JUmor year at Penn State
But he was a tr:unmg camp holdout as a
rookie because of a contract dispute wtth Bears
management and reported late Ems averaged
3 7 yards per carry and made one start durmg
that season before suffermg a torn left knee
ligament m November
In iiiS second season Ems rushed for 916
yards m 12 starts But he wasn t the breakaway

c

Sawmfl U 71&amp; New Supar Lum
bermola 2000 1rgor eapeollfoo

1188 Oodgo nlropld ES Candy
Apple Rod. Luthor Loaded Bo
low Book Voluo But Ollor Ovor
$7000 (740)441 0135

Battier
from Page 81

H

Hopefully we can both contmue to per
form well as we enter the NCAA tourna

ment

n
n

Forte a 6 4 sophomore was chosen co play
er of the year m the Adantt c Coast Conference
with Battler He averaged 21 6 pomrs 6 0
rebounds 3 6 asSists and 2 0 steals for the Tar
Heels who fimshed ped for the ACC regular
season t1tle w1th Duke North Carohna lost to
the Blue Devlls m the tournament champ1
onsh1p game
Three players from one conference were
first team selection; 1n 1995 96 when the B1g
East had R.ay Allen of Connecticut Allen lver
son of Georgetown and Kerry Kittles of Villanova
Wilhams and Forte both rece1ved 61 first
tealn votes With Willia1ns getting 335 pomts
while Forte had 332
Knowmg 1t s only the second time three
players m one league have made the ream
shows people what a great league the ACC 1S
Forte sa1d It 1s mcredible that of all the
schools m the country that play ball three All
Amencans play only 10 mmures apart It was
fun competmg ag:unst them this year
Murph}\ a 6 10 JUmor who averaged 22 0
pomts and 9 2 rebounds m leading the F1ghtmg lmh to the1r first NCAA tournament smce
1990 had 55 first team votes and 312 pmnts

I

s
E

.,

IS

the first repeat selecoo st ce LaFrentz m

Its a tremendo ts honor to be named a first
team All Amen can for the second consecuave
year Murphy sa td It s a spec1ai feel ng thiS
year because of all tho succe&gt;S v.e have had as a
team and that we were able to accomphsh our
goal of reachmg the NCAA tournament
Jacobsen the thud sophomore on the first
team rc ce1ved 35 ti rst tea 11 votes and 259
pomts He averaged 18 0 pomts and 4 0
rebounds shoormg 47 percent fro 11 3 pomt
range as the Cardmal won the Pac 10 Confer
ence Stanford fimshed as the only DtviSlon I
team With less than four losses
Jacobsen 1S the first Stanford player chosen
for the first team s nee the AP started selecung
an All Amenca team n 1948
He came to Stanford v.1th h1gh expecta
tlons from everybody and he has met all the
challenges Cardinal coach Mtke Montgomery
satd He has expanded hiS game and m less
than two seasons at Stanford he has established
hnnself as one of the best players to wear a Cardinal uniform
Iowa State seruor Jamaal Tmsley led the sec
ond team and was JOtned by JUmors M1chael
Bradley of Villanova and Tayshaun Pnnce of
Ken tuck}\ and sophomores Troy Bell of Boston
College and Jason Richardson M1ch1gan State
The third team was semor Charhe Bell of
M1ehigan State JUmors M1chaelWnght of An
zona Udoms Hasiem of Aonda and Kirk Haston of Indiana and sophomore Frank W11liams
of Illinms

c
l
ft

I can t beheve he shot 1t that h1gh satd
Northwestern State center D or FIScher who
scored 10 pomts and blocked mne shots I
/
guess he knew I was a good shot blocker
B1
The closmg nunures were the best though a
happen m the NCAA tournament We ve b1g part of the crowd of 6 813 got up and left
made history already by playmg thiS game Why before the drama unfolded Josh Hancock who
cant we make more hiStory&gt;
won two games this season With last nunute
G1ven the way thmgs had gone m the last baskets hit a 3 pomter from the nght corner
three days the Demons weren t fazed by what Wlth 1 00 to play to put the Demons 111 control
comes next
WIJ1throp made 11 of Its 20 3 pomt attempts
The Southland Conference champwns had but Tywan Harns had one roll off the nm and
to board a bus durmg a thunderstorm at 5 30 another partially blocked by FIScher m the final
a m on Monday JUSt to get to Dayton They ate rrunute
breakfast sandwtches while ram pelted the wm
The NCAA s first play m game m 10 years at
least had a good ending even though CBS TV
dows wound up standmg m line to order a fast
food lunch at the atrport because of a fl1ght home of the tourname 1t was showmg Judg
delay and went nght to pracace when they got mg Amy mstead
I hold no 1ll wtll coward tho NCAA for this
to Uruversu:y of Dayton Arena for thetr work
game and I would 1 r rmnd conung back
out
They still hadn t seen any tape ofWmthrop Wmthrop coach Gregg Ma shall sa1d Tf they
(18 13) the B1g South champton That wasn t start the season and say Wo tid you hke to play
such a disadvantage - the Eagles hadn t been m the play 111 game I m conung back
The Demons are 1 t gomg home They have
able to learn much about the n e1ther
two d!ys to propare fo a challe 1ge far greater
When they took the court Tuesday m a half.
empty arena sandwtehed between Martial than the r ph) u
G1ven all that had happened n the last few
Law and a monster truck show on TNN the
play m teams looked I ke they hadn t slept or days theu confuston was understandable So
was thetr gumptwn
practtced much
When we got here we weren t used to all
The low pomt of a ragged first half came
the
lights Byars Dawson sa1d We wercn t
when Wmthrop s Marcus Stewart put way too
much oomph on a JUmp shot from the top of even used to flymg We didn t want to come
the key The ball flew over the backboard and here for JUSt one game We wanted to stay for
the weekend
j.slamn1ed off the shot clock
Stewart dropped h!S head and hiS coach mer
in th1s tournament anythmg can happen
Who
knows)
Cifully called a timeout

NCAA

from Page

s
s
I

f

I
f
D

94 Dutchman Camper 3 I W lh
Expando Room Evsryth ng Ready
To Go Camp ng Ron Sheets

(740)441 9531

SERVICES

810

Home
Improvements

When 1t comes to selling your car,
nothing goes the distance like the
Classifiedsl Get the show on the road

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncond t ana I fatima guarantee
Loca efe ences ru nlshed Es

tab ahl&lt;l1975 Ca 24 Hra (740)
446 0870 1 800 287 0576 Rog
ora watorproottng
C&amp;C Qentrll Homt Ml n
tenence Pa nt ng v nv aid ng
carpentry dOOf'l wlndowa blltha
mob! 1 home rtpa r and mo • For

us

Guess who's
421

110 Help Wanted

Love Brenda
4 Angel

tree 111 mote 01 Chet 740 982
1!323
L v ng1ton s Baument Wa1tr
P oonng a b1umen1 repalrl
done fret eat matts lllttlmt
guaran n 14yrl on job axpt I

onoo 1304)895 3887
18818 Grind Am GT •el re11on

ably laolo y warranty 740 992
2358

840 Electrlcaland
Refrigeration

EARN $$$
NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED
~ull ond part limo poaltlono avolloblt
Completatralntns provided lvllh flulblo houro

Earn up to $15/hour

84 AuOI 5000 5 CyllnOar 5
5Pitd 4 Door Runs G oat seso
A 10

88

Aud

(740)441 1083

For

Parts

Pleasant Valley Hospital
Pl1111nt Valley Nurelng and Rehabilitation
Ctntar currantly h11 op1nlng1 for LPN'•
Twtlve hour ahlftt Competitive aalary band
on markat Excellant bentfltt

~ull

time poaltlona o!ler bonallt paokogo which
lnctudoa Modtoai/Oon11V401 K/Pd Vaootlona

CALL TODAY
Wlltrllnl Spacial 3 4 200 PSI
$21 95 PI 00
200 PSI
$37 00 Par 100 All Brau Com
proosion Fllftngs In Stoek
RON IVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson Ohio 1 100 537 9528

He

1997 98

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

2 2 tt automat c with Plontt

omllm CID p ayor $2500 740
985 3510
•

aawmflle odgars ond oklddtrl
NO~WOOD lNDUST~IES 252
Sonwllf Orlvt eulflfo NY 14225
FREE fnforma11on 1 800 &amp;71
1353 Ext :zoo.U

Motor and

Budget Priced Trenaml"lona
A I Types Access To Over
10 ooo Transm sslons T anster

C use Runs Good

UYII IAVII IAYII Hlt1
Pumpt L P 4 Noturat Gil Fur
n1011 II You Don I Co f Ul WI
Both Lon (740)448 6308 l
1 100-lltl-oote

mort opt on• M1n1Jf1cturer or

flom,...B1

back he was m college and averaged JUSt 3 2
yards per carry
Last season the Bears asked htm to put on
more we1ght and he came to ~amp we1ghmg
245 pounds Ch1cago then moved h1m to full
back where he gamed 84 yards on 36 carnes
Ems satd he won t dwell on why thmgs did
n t work out w1th the Bears
I d rather concentrate on what 1t s gomg to
take to get rhmgs straight and make things
nght he satd
Ems was m Cleveland for a VISit last week
and satd he was Impressed w1th DavJS and the
Browns orgamzat:Jon
Its so classy he satd

TRAN SPORTATION

1991 Dodge Staaflh AIT Twin
Turtlo 300HP AWD High Milas
Shl p Be OW BOOk Value Best
OfterOVO $7400 (740)441-QI35

"'"

750 Boats &amp; Motors
lor Sale

760
Tobacco Plants Fo

Tappan HI Ellleleney 90% Gaa

100-172 5te7 www orvb com/bon

Condit on $4700 Cal (740)256
689

Tre a $450 (740)379-2706

$2500
Day (740)441 1199
Evon ng (740)256-8430

Furna(:es 01 Fu nac11 12 Ster

2000 Honda Fo eman 450ES
4x4 Under 200 M as Perlect

One Man Bass Boa

REBIOENTIAL HOME OWNERS

Hut Pump &amp; Air Cond lion ng
Syltomt Frn 8 Yea Wa ranty

Cond 1on Ask ng $3500 (740)
441 1690

Squa e bale&amp; of good m 11ed hay
never wet $135 740 985 3510

MOBILE HOME OWNERS
HUge Inventory C scount Prices
On V ny Skirt ng Doors W nd
ows Ancho s Water Heate s
Plumbing &amp; Etectr ca Parts Fu
naces &amp; Heat Pumps Bannatts
Mobile Home Supp y 740 446
9416 www Of'o'b comlbenneH

Enis

gour
used

o~e

4•4 69000 mea $12 500 Good
Condit on (740)386 8958 even
ngs (740)388 9053 days

1998 Red Jaop G all(lo Cherokee

Palomino Slltlton
Rig AQHA 19911

Sell

D

2001 Pontle Grona Am GT
LOIOtd 1400 Millo Grey 4 Ooor
(304)882 2356

011 now 1 IOMtHm

NIW
I 4170 I II ffl 00
1 ltdroom 1 ltlh 1 117 m

610 Farm Equipment

Grubbs P ana Tuning &amp; Repairs
P oblams? Need TUned? Call The

NIW doublt Wldl I llr I bl
-

79K Automatic Loaded

730 Vans &amp; 4 WOe

0 RECTV free lnsta at on $200

Btnntttl Helling &amp; Cool1ng, 1

10Mf1 ..m

4110

""

County area have dogl 740

New 1t It wlft 1411 ,., mon
onlY 1110 '" mon oall now 1

QONIOLIDATI IILLIILOANI

Avtr.,.e rite Ortt hour IIPIIfOYII
Qa I J':C C I IOIIIree I 100-101

Month 3 Btdroom 1 Both Frame

Wonted to rant 1alor tot l.!olge

Houu ror rtntln Rutland oall
74().7q.aee1

CAIH LOANI IIOOG 11000
Contolldlt on to 1100 ooo 11111
NO Ortfll Crtdlt Corda MOll
011111 1.IQO.iltlo1111 . . . .

0 AQ l'rom II IIQO.IIII 0001 I'll

Gal po s 752 3rd Avenue $300

klndo Night&gt; (740)448.e814

till oo down onlv 1111 ptr

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Auto A

HOUII 011 Heat No Petl We ...

HHm

Seby Bod Ca Soot High C~a
Strol tr Sw ng 1304)675-2801

er Hook up $270/mo Plus Ce

1978 4x70 tra le 3 Bed oom 1
112 Bath 1 Ac e m I Covered
Deck And Patio Bldwe Area

Ntw 14 It wldtl411 down on1v
I Ill. Pit mo~ 1111 now 1 100

AUTOS FROM $500 00
Po lcllmpoull(ls &amp; Roposf
Ta;otaa Chev\' s Jeep sf
Please Cal lor Lslings
1 BOo-451.0500 Ext. C981 1

S200 B lgga &amp; St allen 5HP

(304)875 1100 ask tor Ke th

Mull ltQ 11•10
Mal\11 ,avrnfnll6 Move lnl
,..00...1 1'1'17

www np etaans com

cash bar:k 800 263-2840

Courthouse And C ty Bu 10 ng
Ncey D"o alod I\IC 3 flooma
Bu ld ng By tsell 448 2nd Avo
(740)44&amp;-95311

$ FREE CASH NOWS f om

FREE Co or Cotalog
Cal Today! 800 642 1310

posit Water Pakl (740)4&lt;46-4043
Afte 8 OOpm

RENTA LS

BOO 248

9840

ac oage &lt;all 740.797 9303 740
992 9132

3 Bedrooms 1 112 Bath house In
Point P easant
In Town

Bath D n ng Room &amp; Largo Living
Room 61C24 Porch Undorplmtng
2 AC 1 fncludoO
58000
(740)742-4119

$5 500 now S34 990

0805

(304)576 9991 Or (304)875-0127

(7 40)245 7322 Ask For Kim Or
(740)446 4324 Ask lor Marte

now $17 990 8011125x14 was

One Bedroom Apartment on 1st

14x76 Oakwood mob e norne. ·1
180011 3 Btdroom 2 Seth at 1908
h ee bed oom two bath master
Smokey Ad $5251 mo (740)446ba h w th garden tiA) tteat pump
9487
appro• 3 years old new watt
heate ga bage disposal th ee
ce ling tans 200 amp ae v ce
3 Bed oom 1 Bath House Wash
other ecenl updates &amp;lee lent e &amp; Orye Now Ca pet $5001
condl on
must be moved
month P us Depaalt No Pels 1
$15000 7407422405
Mile Up Route 2 At G anwood

App eclat&amp;

S9 990 50xiOOx14 was $35 900

COMPUTERS WE FINANCE
DELL COMPUTERS! Even with

(740)445-IS19

1996 Toyota T100 Extended Cab
4x4

s 5 900 (740)446-2510

to eo% offl P e eng nee ed w th
pana 40lC60X10 was$ 6500 now

1657

Furnished 2 &amp; 3 Room Apart
men s Clean No Pets No Smok
lng References &amp; Oepos t Ra
QUired
Utillt es Furn shed

(304)578 2999

Good W h Chid en 304)773
5825

E11cellent Sarv ce
Flex ble Finane ng Ava able
Home /Commercia Un ts

shop &amp; movies Cal 740 4.t6

AKC Aeglste ed Male Bull Dog

So d Wh te Beaut fu $1000 F rm

Whaal Basa $ 800 304)576
2753

Pug 1 Yea 0 d House Broken

ALL STEEL BUILDINGS New up

Rea estate wanted I am forced
out of my house fo highway m
p ovement Look ng to o d farm
house In Meigs County w th

1

To

sepa ate (740):339-34119

720 Second Avenue 1 Bedroom
Upata rs Apa tment $300 +De
post Water Sewer T ash Pad

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK
SON ESTATES 52 Westwood
0 ve I om $297 to $383 Wa k to

$100 Each (740)258--8483

1983 Chevy S lve ado V 8 En
g ne Oual Exhaust Au o long

Toa Off Shovels Sh ngto Loade

AMAZINGLY LOW PRICES
WOLFF TANNING BEDS
Buy FaCIDry D eet

(740)441 521B (Cay) (740)446
0101 (EIIOn ngs)

AKC Reg ste ed l.ab Puppies

Full Size Truck Rack. Oewalt m
tr11aw 1/2 HP Pa nl Sp aye Saw
A I Skllsawa A $2 500 o p ice

Infant Car

t 4x70 Southern D earn free Ot

See

14 Oua Axe T a fer 5000 Wa
Generator 5HP E ec r c A
Camp Delta Sawbuck Scallo d
ng A r Hose Extion Cords Roof
Jacka ladders Ladde JackiS

1740)245-5100

d scount on first ITIOntha rent

720 Trucks for Sale

2nd Ave phona (740)446- 6 s

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Po Ice fm

pounds &amp; u se zu es Hondas
Chevvs Fords &amp; ma e Fo lis
ngs cal now 1 800 719 3001
ext AOtO

La ge Colleclion of Antique Poe~
et Watches Good Cond ton 422

~8

410 Houses lor Rent

Must

019 9% For fist ng I BOO 319

dopooll oqufrad no pats 740
992 2218

1978 Norris 14x70 2 Beoroom 1

230

epos Fee so downf 24 mos

1 and 2 bedroom apartments tur
nlshed and unfurn al'1td 1tcur tv

Now Tak ng App cat ona 38
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apa lments Includes Water
Sewage Trash $3501Mo 740

320 Mobile Homes
lor Sale
ve r I oa Setup only $9995 I
888 928 3426

(740)387-DII32

13 Acres W th Beaut fu Lake

V ow Silas $50 ooo 18
WI h Large Lake Mobile
With Add On $79 500
County On Bfa,ktop
(740)388-8878

3BR Reposl Fo eclosu es lee
4% down lor list ngs Payment

WORK FROM HOME
Earn
$500 $7000 month PT FT Full

n\2 nat anal Company expand
n.t Earn $1000 $7000 month

Soil $13 900 080 (740)379-9238
Evenings

Chu ch Bu d ng w lh Parsonage
fo sale located n Po nt Pleasant
Good Ne ghbo hood Reduced

Workshop 23 Rid ng A ngs

Two Bedroom $275 Month Plus
Capos t G ean School 0 st lei

440

hree bed oom

SO DOWN HOMES GOV T &amp;
BANK FORECLOSURES LOW
OR NO MONEY DOWN OK
CREDIT! FOR LISTINGS CALL
1 800-338-()()20 ... 981
1 112 Story 3 Bedroom Home 2
Battis g eat Room w pathedra
Ce I ng Loft Fu Basement At
tached 2 Car ga age Ba n/

Pats (740)992-6387

New Fleetwood

310 Homes lor Sale

888 205.0288

T a n ng
Free Information
www anainurd eams com

CARS FROM $29 MO mpounas/

Tral er For Rent Behind The
Can na 2 Bedroom $250 No

Tobacco quota wanted to tilt

340

EARN $500 to $900 per waok n
you bathrobe &amp; a ppe s Great
oppo tunlty o secure you futu e
Low nvestment
800 272 0193
awCsomearnlngs com

8777 lXI C 9814

lor $3000 &amp; $120 lot rent 614
B76 661

NIW
FIOIIWOOd
18M80
1191199 00 3 Btdroorn 2 Bath 1
177m-4170

Fleduced 1981 Sunshine S ng e
w de 15x80 Three Bed oom 2
Full Baths Washer &amp; D ye Must

GET YOUR FORTUNE IN MO
TfON Earn $ 00 $500 da fy Pus

salflng Call 1 800 350 7893 24
hrs.I70ays

CARS $29 MONTH! POLICE M
POUNDS &amp; REPO S HONDA
CHEVY 24 MO S 0 9 9% FOR
L STINGS CALL I 800 94

Mob te home In Mlnersv 111 two
bedroom $300 + depoa t Of se

430 Farm• lor Rent

II)( familial 1t11U1 or n1t1ona

p,.,...,.,

$2 000 a week? Work 4 6 hrs lwk

Gteat S700 080 Cat 740)4468936

Homos US 50 E•\ Alhona On

two both $955 down $199 56
month '" 1740 992-2167

$500

Pont ac Grand Am 121K Runs

Two Bedroom Mostly Fu n shed

'lny prwloreooo

origin, or any Intention 10
make any oucn
f mllatfon or dltcrlmfnotlon

earn

Co s ca

s ca H gh M es
GOOd Cona lion $ 000 OBD 69

deposit no pets call 7~0 992

F na Cays Natlonw de Inventory

Auto Runs

91 Chevy Co

(740)448--B308

0750005

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?

Bualneaa
Opportunity

Absolu e best? Oo you

Chevy

CARS FROM $500

FINANCIAL

(686)

88

2808

FREE

1

GOOd $500 13041895-3739

NEED AN EARLY PAYDAY?? Up

tfmlilllon or dltcrlmlnolton
biOtd on rooo - r rolgfon

Ava lab e Gooo Orad 1
270 2168

88 Beretta 4 Cy ~

(740)446-3 99

Ca hedra Cell ng Though Out
Th ee Bed oom 2 Fu Baths
Call Aile Spm
Must Move

to $500 nstanlly by phone 1
877 EAALYPAY IS ADVANCE

No Answer Leave Me&amp;aage

A+ M &amp; M MARS/NESTLE Es
tabllshed Vend ng Route WI se
by 3 26 Unde $9K m n mum in
vestment requl ed E)CCI lent
Month y P oflt Potent a Finance

4336

e Home Vinyl
S d ng Sh ngltd Root Cen re A

Elect 1e ca {304)675-2058 (304)
675 3927

998 Chevy Tahoe 4 000

3323112 56

(74b)448 0 51 o 339 0850 II

a commends thai you do busl
ness w th peop e you know and
NOT to send money through lhe
mall untl you have nve&amp;t oated
the offerir.g

Bdwall Oh o 45614 (740)44B

1996 16.SO Mob

1997 Fee wood Home 14~~:70 3
Bed oom 2 Balh Cen ra A

2221

turn shed 1275 per month S275

W I Powerwalh Houses Tralllfl
And FIV a Contact Flon At

210

Ron A son 588 Watson Road

(140 )446 9682

Lot modar c:lea ance save up to
$8 625 w th any home check us
out we e dealing Co e a Moll e

PTJFT Ca nowf 1 888 699 0901
www earnbucksl omhome com

lueln"'
Training

Sharp Home $21 500

WHITE S METAL DETECTOR S

Kanuaga Mol:flle Home Sales

736 3409

The Village of M ddlepon s now
accepung appllcallon for the po
s ton of Poo and Park Manage
for Summer 2001 Applicants
must have bas c fe&amp;8\llng ce lifi
cat on Rae eatlon management
eJCpt lance helpful Send resumes

140

2 Seth

h $0 down Low monthly pay
men s 1 800-6 7 3476 ext 330

IN

miles uk ng payoff 740 949

Sma I two bedroom moble hOrne

, 888-582 3345

WORK FROM HOME! Grow ng

Ill monthlll OALL TODAY 1 100
ne 0111 or www workrromho
mta47aom

SChult l6)(80 3 Bed oom

NEW BAANC NAME COMPUT
ERS A mas eve yone app oved

1996 Fo d TB d L~ loaded oil
opltons v 6 28 MPG 51 000

8861 24 hrs

No Fee Uness WeWn

Exam Info call I 800 992 7054
x208 MF 8 30-5 OOpm

HCMI lorn

199!5

540 Miacellaneoua
Merchandlll

owna S22 000 (740)446-8748

New&amp;UsedFu n ue
New 2 P ece Liv ng oom Suites
$399 Buy Sel hda

for Sale

L legua ds (Must Be Certified}
Concess on Wo ke s And Ad
miss on Worke s At Ga po s
Mun c pal Pool Appl cat ons May
Be p eked up At The Ga pol s
Parks And Recreat on Office Lo
calt:d In The Mun cpa Bu ding
518 Stcond Avenue aa llpota

OPTOMETRIC TECHN C AN po

Or vera BIG MONEY NO EX

Pine Posts Wanted $1 30 To
S2 30 Fo More nlo matlon C811

BRIDGE STATE UNIVERS TY I
BOO 964 83 8

CONSOLIDATE YOUR

Accep ng 0 de MOde ] ucks
, 600 200-28~3

OH45640

38K 42K 1st Year

M T S Con Shop 151 Se,ono
Avonuo Gallipolis 74D-44ti-2842

75% 0 opiHook G eat Bene! ts

Needed Experienced c ew to
Selling and Finish ng Sectional
Hous ng Send Pr clng nfo mat on
and expe lance to Southern
Homes PO Box 629 Jackson

CALL 1-et)H33-4484

Abso uta Top Dollar U S SIIVe
Gold Co ns Proofaets Diamonds.,
Gold R ngs
U S Currency

NO Touch

month I 1 BOO 570 9628 CA
www bs fm4iofe eom

864

773-5785 0 304 773-5447

Coas

by May 1st B and New Just
Patented I ost 23 lbs n 1

Tol F eo 9 888 S23 4417 aMI

R ck Pea son Aucllon Company
full t me auctioneer c;;~mple e
auct on
sa v ce
Licensed
•66 Oh o &amp; West VI gin a 304

NO Eas

NEEDED 47 People to looe 30 1&gt;6

•

•;•
an

Home Eve y Weekend Mo e

Call 1 800 279 3787 Vofca Ma
box 118818

Need Se I sta e s who require no
supBf\11&amp; on
Full Tra n ng Set Own Hours
Compute w mOdem required CtU

~

Oocto ate by co :espondence
based upon p o educaUon and
sho 1 study cou se FOf' FREE n
format on book e phone CAM

s

$7 2!5 hour + S 291M le Please

DATA ENTRY
545 000/y potential

Auction
and Flea Market

EARN YOUR COLLEGE DEGREE
QUICKLY bache o s Maste s

180 Wantad To Do

A ea 1 Day per Week (Monday)

Available n Our C eultatton/

~

80

PARALEGAL

STUD ES Comp ehens ve aHo d
able home s udy ega ra n ng
s nee 1890 Fee Ca a og 800
826 9226 W e ~0 80&lt; 70 44g
Oaf as TX 75370 NA 0 h tp
www bfacf(stonelaw com

Medical Tronoertptton And Med

Gallipolis
&amp; Vicinity

•!

BLACKSTONE

320 Moblla Homes

Profe11ional
-Service•

;230

ca Insurance COding lnstructo 1

CAREER OPPORTUNITY
net
V sll us on ne to t nd pe eel
mate o ca 1 888 9 .5 3266 1

Schools
lnatructlon

10 OOam Monday lh u Salurooy

nelawcom

www 4datematchma~e

ee com

150

Ohio OOI&lt;IIInt ~Apr! 12 2001

45831 Apar1menl403

mat on
1738

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Ieight

male Ova 50 Years For Walka
And Fr endsh p Rep y To !553
2nd Avenue Galllpo s Ohio

Have run mee ng aug ble alng5ta
n your a ea Call fo mort lntor

SIOOO $4000 wk 800 921 6538

Addressers Wan ad mmed a ely
No Expa ence Necessary Wo k

Avon Last Time Ct1anca To S a t

TON GHTI

HELP Wok f om home Ma I or
de E Comma ce S522+1Week PT

HICUBE EXPRESS

S1 :ZOO. S5 000 mo
, 877 582 1054

DATING

Pa c;l
mo e
9t50

GROWING BUS NESS NEEDS

800 448 6669 Exper anced dr v
ers hOld ng Class A ca aoo 958
2353

KY

START

00

S36 000 + st Yea 5 STAR 1

nformallon Bankruptcy nla In TN

Gent eman Seek ng Wh • Fe

Government Jobs $11
$33 oo pe hOu polentea
li a ning Full Bene I s Fo
nlo rna on cal
888 674
ext 3234

penance needed Ou ck COL
Ira n ng p ogram ava able Earn

AI Home Co (405)447-7

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Help Wantld

110

WORK FROM HOME
S500-S1500 po mo PIT
S2000 $8000 pe mo FIT

TRIBUNE DEAQUNE

2 00 p m the dty befor1
tho ed II to run Sunday I
Mondty edition 2 00 p m
Frtday

Help Wented.

110

The Dally Sentinel • Pac11 B 3

Middleport, Ohio

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE

ClASSIFIEDSI

START TOMORROW!

1·888·974-JOBS
Civic

Tel•••rvlcea

Contact Human R11ourc11 II
Pleaaant Valley Hoapltal
2520 Valley Drive
Pt Pltaeant, WV 25550
Or FAX to
AA/EOE
I

�Wednesday, March 14,

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

hge B 4 • The Dally Sentinel

21)0.1

Wedneaday, March 14, 2001

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

--

~EYOOP

NEA Crouword Puzzle

IIIIDOI
PHILLIP

ACROSS U
1 Abominable 45
7 Hiving a
tiood

ALDER

Sayre
Truckins

P/B
CONTRACTORS, INC.
Recine, Ohio 45771

740-985-3948
CONCRETI/BLO&lt;K/BRICK

.• Foot en, Walls, Steps

• Flat Work,
Rtplactmenu, • Walks
and Drives • Stencil
Crote Froe Estimates
Servlna Ohio and W. V.
WVIIOJI7ll

ROIERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
•Gif'8VH
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop a. Compere
FREE ESTIMATES

74G-992-1671

WHY DAM! ANYWHERE ELSE?
SHADE RIVER AQ. SERVICE
•Afle8d In HI'Yica"
·1U% Pr0111n UVII10ck/llllllt filii 56.25/100
-21" lfiiiiB Mit 0.. FoM S6.7S/SO
-12" W1!1wn pride Ilona J.l $5.60/SO
SI .OO off (DUfiOII mahsMKI purdlase $4.60/SO

BAUM LUMBER CO.
46384 St. Rt. 248 Chester, Ohio
(740) 98!5-3301
•Heullng •UIMIIOnl
-Greve! • Send •Topeoll
•FIH Dlrt •Mulch
·Ba;s

(740)

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

lDylr en.nY.s SS.2S

SHADE RIVER AG. SERVICE
35537 St. Rt. 7 North Pomeroy, Ohio 457111

740-985-3831

Rocky R. Hupp . Agent
Box 189
Middleport. Oh1o 45760
Local 843-5284
Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; College,
Retirement,
Emergency Funds; Mortgage;
Major Medical-' NUrsing Home~

Public Notice
IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO

Public Notice
Leon1rd'e;

,....

...

'

I

lft/

tn1nce

oaeterly elong eeld
road to the ..ctlon
line 5 IHI lOUth of
the eouthweat comer
CASE NO. ~·151 ,of tha lend now
OWRid by K. W.
llel)k One, National
Cottrill; thence nqrth
Aeaoclatlon lka The along the HCtlon line
Firat Nlllonalllllnk of to the piece ol
Chlcego, ee TruiiH
beginning, conllllnlng
By Reeldentlel
20 ,1crea, more or
Funding Corporation,
He Attorney-In-Fact,
Save and axcept
PANCAKE SUPPER
c/o Homecomlnga
the coal In and above
Financial Networtc,
deecrlbed property,
Racine United Methodist
prevlouely conveyed
Church 4-7 pm
Pllllntlff,
to Ohio Power
Company.
Thurs. March 15
Buddy Wayne
Subject to all legal
Eggere,Jr.,llal
eaeemenle and rlghta
Defendant
of record.
Live Music by
SAVE AND
Dwight
Icenhower
Defendanta, Buddy I!XCE~
Wayne Eggere, Jr.
The following
Fri., March 16th 8:30 and Ruth Jeanette deecrlbed real eatata
$5.00 couple $3.00 single
Eggera aka Ruth J . In Melge County,
Bring Drinks
Eggere, whoae laet Ohio, In Salem
Uncle Bob's at Darwin
known addroae 11 Townahlp: Beginning
zvns Senlord Devle et the aouthe ..t
Road, Langovllle, corner of w. D. Goff'a
Ohio 45741 hereby land In Section 18,
notified that the Townlhlp 7, Range
Public Notice
Public Notice
Plelntlff flied a 15, O.C.P.: thence
Complaint
of running welt with WELTMAN,
The 2000 flnenclal
Forocloaure and 1ald Golf'• llna, 13 WEINBERG,
report for Columbia
6
REIB
Other Equlteble Chaine and 8811nka to Co., L.P.A.
'J'o.wnahl p
Ia
Rollo! on December a po1t; thonc• aouth
completed and
20, 2000.
to the road loading By Monette Cope avalleble for public
In c ..e No. OO·CV- from E. C. Ralph'a (10087826)
review at the homo of
151, on prop1rty paet w. H. L.eonard'e;
the
42466
. lor the Mettoxclerk:
deacrlbeclaa follows: thence aealtrly along Attorney
Roed, Albany,
Plelntlfl
Slluatad In the eald roed to the
OH45710.
Townahlp of Salem, eectlon llno 5 f..t '175 S. Third Street,
County of Malga and eouth
of
the Sulte900
Columbus, Ohio (3) 14•2001
Stille of Ohio:
southwest corner of 43215
ttc
Parcel No. 1: the land now owned (614) 228·7272, E x t . l - - - - - - Situated In tho by K. w. Cottrill; 210
Public Notice
Townehlp of Salam, thence north along /drl
County of Melga, end the ..ctlon line to thO
A viewing ol the
State of Ohio: piece of beginning, (2) 7, 14, 21 , 28
· Town,hlp Road 1468
Beginning at the containing 20 acrea,
In Scipio Townahlp
northwoll comll' of 1 more or Ieee. Save (3) 7, 14
will be held at 8:30
47-acre lot deeded by and except tho coal
a . m.,
Thu.raday,
Public Notice
Smith Kent'• helro to In and undar the
March 15, followed
George Maloy, In ebove doecrlbed The VIllage of by a hearing at 10:00
Section 12, Townehlp property, previously Pomeroy will be a.m. at tho regular
7, Range 16, o.c.P.; conveyed to Ohio
accepting aealad blda Commlulonera'
thence runnlngeouth Power Company.
The
th• following meeting .
on uld uctlon line,
Subject to all on
purpoae of the
that
will
be
vahlclll
11 chelna and 18 eeHmanlll and rlghle
viewing and hearing
dlapoaed of.
link a to a ateke ; of way ol record.
le to close .40 mila
1882
Ford
Crown
Bllng the ume VIctoria
thence eaet 5 chtllne
and
that the
and 50 llnka to a real eatete deacrtbecl 1995 Ford Crown remaining
.1 0 milo be
atake; thence north In dead of record In Vlctorle
dedicated
.and
named
18 chaine and so Volume 265, Page All blda muet be "Schick Road."
llnkl to a etake; 627, Melga County received no later then Anyone lntereettd In
thence north 18 D11d Recorda.
Is
19; 2001 at attending
chelna and 18 IInke
Being the aame March
welcome.
12:00
PM
altha
Clerk'a
to Shuler'• linea; real eatate •• Office, 320 E11t Meln Gloria Kloes;Cierk
thence weal 6 chelna deacrlbed In Parcel Streit, Pomll'oy, Qhlo Melga
County
and 50 llnka to the No. 2 of record In 45789.
Commlaalonera
piece of beginning, Volume 287, Page
(3~7, 14,2001
21c
containing 10 acraa, 759, Deed Recorda ol (3) 4, 14, 2 tc
more or leea. Aleo, Malga County, Ohio.
the following parcel
Current deed
of land altuall In recorded on 06/10/77
Sactlon 12, Townllhlp In Volume 267, Page
7, Renge 15, O.C.P., 759.
and beginning at tha
Property commonly
northeall corner ola known u: 29775
trect of land deeded Sanford Davia Road,
by A. L. Maloy and Lengavllle, Ohio
wife Mifflin Herklne; . 45741 . ·
Parcel Number: 13·
thence •••• 8 chelna
and 54 IInke to the 004S8.000.
northwelll corner ofl
Aleo known ae
land owned by Dora 28775 Sanford Davia
w. Sprlea; thence Road, Langavllle,
.eouth 18 chaine end Olllo 45741, and that
19 llnka; thence wsat there remelna due
8 chaine end 34 IInke; and owing $45,598.27
thence north .18 with lntereet el 9.9%
cllalna and 19 IInke per annum from
to the placa ol Merch 1, · 2000 and
beginning,
coata: thet the
contelnlng 17 acrea, Oelendente nemed In
more or Ieee. Aleo, the Complaint may
the lollowlng tract: have an lntereet In
Beginning at th11 .. ld
property;
aouthealll corner ola therefore, Plelntlfl
2-ecre lot daed by damande II be found
Mifflin Harklne to to have a good, valid
Harvey A. Meloy, end aubalatlng lien
· deled September 14, on eald pnml-, for
1101, recorded In the amount owing;
Volume 98, Page 198, thet the Delendante
Melgl County Dlld equity of radamptlon
Recorda, In Section be lorocloHd; thet ell
11, Townehlp 7, the partl.. be
·: ~ .~'i
Renge 15, O.C.P.; required to enawer aa
. .,
thence lOUth to E. C. to their lntereat In
Relph'a lend; thence aeld premleea or ~
wear 12 ohalna and forever barred from
80 llnka to a etone ....rtlng any lnteroll
corner; thence north therein; thet ell Ilene
to the roed; lhance In on ..ld premlaee be
an eellarly dlractlon marahaled end their
along eeld roed to · prlorltl11 determined;
the
placa
of thet ..ld praml- be
beginning,
eold ie upon
contel!'llng 19 ecrea, axeoutlon and the
more or leu, prOGIIde of Hid ule
... and everywhere in between, the
con.talnlng In all 46 be applied according
newspaper is THE place to find the
acree, more or leu.
to law; and for euch
stories that are important io you and .
Parcel No. 2: The other rollef •• 11 jull
following deeorlbld equllllble.
your community.
reel ellate, In Melge
Oelendente flrel
County, Ohio, In hereinabove
Selem Townlhlp: m1ntloned are further
Beginning et the notified that they ere
You'll always be in the know with a
eoutheaat corner ol required to enawer
newspaper
subscription. We've got the
w. D. Goff'e land In 111d Complelnt on or
goods.to keep you informed,
Sactlon 18, Towne hlp before April 11, 2001,
7, Aenge 15, O.C.P.: which lncludu
enlightened and enlrrtained every day.
thence running waet twenty-eight (28)
Call today for a subscription.
with uld Goff'e line, ' deye from the laat
13 chelne end 88 dlte of publication,
llnka to · • poet; or judgll!llnl mey ba
thence 1outh to the render • d
1e
roed teedlng from E. demended therolil.
c. Relph'• . put
I 11 Court Street • 992-2155

From the
Backyard ..

,
I

•

•

'

'

The Dally Sentinel

...

• QI I

Balora 6p.m.
LHYI Message
Aher6pm

• A Q I ol

• K1

740-985-4180

Vul ner~~ble:

Bring In your repair worll
we'll get you going for
qjrlng

992·2975

:BARNEY

Factory Authorized

ELITE !IIECHANICAL CONTRACTORS

:FRANK &amp; EARNEST .

1000 SL Rt. 7 Soutlr
!llf(orrl'llo SlopA1loh~

• Room Addhlo1111 A

Romodtllng

• NewO•r•gn

• Eloctllcal a Plumlllng
• Roollng a Outtore
• VInyl Siding A Pllnllftll
• Pallo and POfCh Dtckl
Free Estimates
V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215
~.Ohio

Rutland, Ohio
Truck seats, car seats, headliners, truck larps,
convertible &amp; vinyl tops, Four wheeler seats,
motorcycle seats, boat covers, carpets, etc.

Mon-FriB:30 • 5:00
· Over 40 yri experience
(740) 742-8888
1•888-521..()916

t..aao-250-9077

Resldealial Commerdal New Conslrue!lion
Sales Senice Installallon
Specialldna In Sbeel M&lt;UI Du&lt;twork
"Tnne' Sales It Senko For
Cllllia, ~ •.and Meip Count!•
L~ aDd IIIIIUI'ed
WV 105116

lOIII'

~

• Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
• Bucket Truek

15 C:Vf.~'t'Tf\IN&lt;:&gt;
:5.'.~ I:&gt;F('.,(.\Oi:.'&lt;,
0\IUT

BISSELL

.

~mce:,

""'

'"""_};\ t SWE.N:. YOUii:.
~ c,tD Wot::'£

WI1\\, 001.

BUILDERS INC.
New Homes • Vinrl
Siding • New Garages

'»-"' !

I

• Replacement

Wledows • Rool!l
· Addltlons • Roonng

COMMIROAL '"" RISIDlHTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

740-992-7599

CONCRETE
CONNECTION

(740) 949·7039
or .

Quality Drlvawaya,
Patios, Sldewalka.
25 yaara axperltnct
Free Estimates
740-742-8015 or ·

(740) 992·3203

1-877-353,-7022

The CRAFTY,

Sunset Home
Cons I ruction

BLIND SPOT
(Factory Outlet)
AU vertical blinda are
made to order at our
location
UPTO 70% OFF
• Verdcalo • Wood
• Mlnla • Etc

1441Wnl AYL G..dl

446-4995
DoubtaHunq

Replacement·
.Windows ·
Welded Frame lr.
Sosh0-101 United
Inches
S199.oq lntlaltecl

site wtnt,

Driveway

a

lana clearing,

Wrltesel

Pole Buildings, '
Siding, Decks,
Kitchens, Drywail &amp;
More
We Can Make Your
Dream A Reality!
740-742-3411
FREE ESTIMATES I

Roofing - Home
MaintenanceGutters-Down
Spout ..
F,.., Eltlllllfll

949-1405
591-5011

J &amp; L SANITATION
Locally owned and operated by
JACK l LINDA PROVENCE
39563 Sumner Road
Pomeray, Ohio 45769

•PROVEN
• DEPENDABLE
0
ST!ADY

140-985-4212
NowRHtilg

Old nlllloa, old radio
tubn, &amp; pertl

A·J MINI-STORAGE
992-6396
992·2272

C1U Chuck

31J4.812·2220
'

11-~~
High&amp; Dry

Self-Storage

Mon-Frl

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

~40)

740-992·5232

9-5:30
Sat 9-1

949-2804

FINANCE DEPARTMENT
Bankruptcy? Credit Problems.?
"We Can Help,l

.

I.':

t-800-271-6179 or 446-9800

-·

l'ol I mo.

Hill'• tell

•••,••.

28870 Blehen ADIIII
AICino, Ohio
45771

740-949-2217
Slzaa 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Houra

7:00AM • 8:00 PM

.

420 W. Main St.
Pomeroy, OH 45169 ·

l'
I

!

Hu9.· .

I
•
'
••

(740)992-l;li:J;II

l'

Full service auto center

''

•

',
I

~

.ALLIB
Cellular

eff Warner Ins.

992-5479

TEAM ..

everything works, but
if West has only the
queen, South must be
put on the ~pot. South
should "guess" correctly, because if East
had the club queen and
West the ace, East
would have .eJtited
with a spade.
Yet what did the
Bridge Baron East do?
It cashed the club ace .
Thank you, partner!

,, 1 H R E T
"
3

I I I' I

I

·

5

·

·

1.
.

·

P L A MC

1 1 16 1

~

',

.

f:

""IJ

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''
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I
I .I

· · .SCIIAM I.ITS ANSWERS
.

Studio • Vault - Yield - Bemuse - LIMIT
Granny believes thai every person is a fool five minutes each day. She also thinks that people shouldn't
·exceed that LIMIT.

or

or

'

••

'

r
!,

'·

.

"Life is very unpredictable,"
. . .
.
_
granny lectured . "That's why," she .
. - - - - - - - - - - - , grinned, "I eat my - - - • • •. G0 L N E 1
first."
.
I
B
A Complolt tho chu&lt;klo Quoled
. . .
. .
V bv lillin11 In tho mllllftll words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

Thursday, March 15. 2001
feared would never happen. The
In '"" year ahead there's a results of the happenings should
chance : that several of your . · brighten your spirits.
endeavOrs will tum out to be
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20)
something quite grand . If need be, There's a strong possibility you
operate in an independent, enter· could be introduced to someone
prising manner to make them loony with whom you'll have un
instanl, dynamiC affinity, if you
happen.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) get out and mingle . Don't be a
Because your career prospects . stay·nt·home.
CANCER (June 2l·luly 22)
look so encouratin~ today, your
This
Is an excellent day to get
financial hopes oo equally 110.
Concentrate your efforts and aoing on a creative project you've
lnlereat on tjlese two likelihoods. been wanting to undertake. You'll
Know where to look for rom1111ce hnve aJ"oo eye for whal IR pleaR·
and tou'il find it. The Aatro- lng an la•tlnJ. ·
Orap Matchmaktr ln111111tl{.
LllO (July 23·Aua. 22) If
rovoal1 which ilantaro romllllt • aomothln~ no anti vc or hnnh
oall~ porfael for you. Mall 52.75
neod ~ to
wltltod, 1tap forward ·
lo Matehmakor, Q/o thla n•w;· tlldny nnd lako ·on tho tnak. You
~r, P.O. llox 1751, Mum?; · Ill
hnvo 1 natural ablllly tn l&gt;o dlplo·
ati(!O, Now York, NY I0 56.
matte about unplaa•antnm with·
ARffiS (Mil'llh 2 1 ·A~rll 19) out bti3 a"tnllvt.
Tho porllln who Ia a alvor I c'n•
VIR 0 (Alii· 2J.I!ept. 22)
to bo lha Qno who' ll and u~ ln1 Thka full advantaao anythlna
a aottor tooay. Nle• thin&amp;• •rmn aooo that mlaht hacpon far you
to 1ho1o who know hqw to pr mo today. Oan'l mako t o ml1t1ka
thc,~;uml' whh acneroaity.
lhlnklnall wllll&gt;o there tomoiTOw.
1\U US (Apr1120.May 20) A That' a not • alven.
favornble chnnae I' In the offina
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) Just
ladoy concernlna somelhina becauu somethina comes easily
you've either .ecretly wanted or

•'

Marathon Service. Cehier
. .

W~OLE

three tricks: one spade
and two hearts. So, it
needs two club tricks
to defeat the contract .
This means East must
switch to a low club. If
West has thecll!bking,

I I I 1I

'Birthday

Ask For Mike Hindle

(acrotalrom Pizzi

pale

22 Hurt

24 Caught
26 Whera to
44 - ovw
dothl
(eupportod
buHerlly
through a
28 Actor
difficult
Neaaon
lime)
30 Moll
49 Aclroll
praclpHoue
Luplno
6 African land
34 By mouth 50 Hillery
7 Hard
35 Certain
Rodham
volcanic
autg..
Clinton,
olan
8 ~~"Whlt ' l
blogrophy
e.g.
36 Boxing·
52 Arlicle
up,-?"
victory
53 Canvae
9 Unclaimed
abbr.
bed
mall dept

'Your .

Call U. Firat Or We Both Lose!

"Serving Hundreds of Satisfied
Customers For Over 22 't&amp;arsl"

WANTED

Open

TI-IAT SOl.INDS LIKE

HowardL.

Additions, Garages,

155Nlnd
Middleport

Racine
Mower
Clinic

•111111111•1111 FilM Ellll•r
•llriiUOU
•111111111 Wlrl • Ti'nllllallll Rlllra
•lrHIWirl

M'&lt;

New Homes, Room

J&amp;L
992-2772

Pua

I

youR

I RAAAniA Your

PUI

I•

0

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

Call Now To

Pall
PW

PUI

J9..ph
11111111', lor
one
Mother 40 I.e.,
In full
42 Command

1

Tree Service

L----'I!.IIIIII.Wi51!...-..J

I•
J•

10 Merchant 38
11 Commanda
12 Sniffed
11 DICIIprlo, to 39

ALDER
33 -"King"
Cole
How well do com34 Breakfaat
puters play bridge?
lood
37 Steak, e.g.
Recently I tested
40 lffllllted
" Bridge 'Baron I I "
41 -out
(alrolch)
(Great Game Products), wh ich the box
claims to be a fi vetime world computer
bridge
champion.
Well, this suggests .to
me that the other programs must be really
bad.
I have always
thought that programming a computer to
' bid shouldn' t be that
hard, but Bridge Baron
makes mistakes even
in simple situations.
Look at deal number
1334504952. First ,
North passes a 12point hand with a
decent five-card suit CELEBRITY CIPHER
- not my style. Then,
South opens one of a
. by LUIS Campos
Celebrity
Cipher
cryptograms
are created from ~:~uotaUons by famous
minor with only I I
people, past and preaent. Each letter In the cipher stands for another.
points. Again, debat.
Today's clue: F equals Z .
able. North responds
. v u v zxox csoovxw AP
two diamonds, an
minor-suit
"'l inverted
v ·w OX Y J 0 X AP
LX 0,
PIN.D, ~~~ ~1;;1, raise showing a maJtiYOO~ ~'1-..I.JXJI:J mum pass, good diaOXSWN
WVKKXO
LSRX
u~ 11~7&gt; t-\O.T
mond support, and no
BXPOBX
~'(,~N;t(! four-card major. What
LPCX. ' Y·L X 8 P A
should South do now?
CSOBSOXA
PU
YLJGAF,
Pass, of course; what
else? But the program
ALSAHLXO .
totally ignores that
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Reading I~ a means o1thlnklng with
partner is a passed
another person's mind; II forces you to stretch your own." liaiid.
' ·
Charles Scribner Jr.
Against three diaWOlD
monds, I started with
OAMI
three rounds of hearts.
Declarer won with the
r::~-:·mbl:•r!..r~l
queen, drew trumps.
and played a spade to low to lorm lour simple words.
my partner's ace .
What should Eas.t do .
0 TC A M T
1 2
now?
.
The defense has L-...1..
. ..J..-.L.- L
. .....J.i-J

ILVINEY•s COW

All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts

A&amp;DAuto

Eut

.... ....

BY PHILLIP

PAW-- I GOT A
FIR
LOOKIN' AFTER HOW

Sales &amp; Service
204 Condor St.
'Pomeroy

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Neither

Dealer: North
bU.
Wnt Nortll

Nler

21 Iodine
57 Sat of lour
aouroe
23 Actor llllllty
DOWN
240.0
25 Do farming 1 Taatypa
27 Alttodome 2 CaHieman
3 Pierce Willi
playere
aaharp
28Graak
llake
Ialand
31 River leland 4 AlleyS "Gran"
32 Negative
flnlell
word

Count it

DIPOYIII
Plllft

YOUNG'S

20 Robert E. -

s4

Openln&amp; leld: • A

Every Spring Tune-Up.
gat a FREE Blade Sharpanl~.
New equipment arriving dally
See Manning, Wayne or Jim
or a REAL DEAL on a new lawn tractor, .
lawn mover or weed trimmer.

l-304-675·7124

• A !t i l

• Q7I

GRAVELY TRACTOR

· Case·IH Parts
Dealen

..

one

elarl

gold

• A It~
'I t I 12

...

Coulee, for

14 Short jeckat 48 Piau Holol
15 Burl!, like a alrl
balloon
51 ..._
1a Cll11tlecretchlng
17 Aclreae
54 Playground
Girdner
1..ture1
18 "The
55 Pick
Grelleat" 56 Absolute

...
.

• 71 4 11

• AKII

13 imitation

....

w...

·Interior
FREE E$TIMATES

Grwm

45 Sc'-1 ol
-"
47 "Cycle"

(2-.)

• ·14-tl

nil !),.WJT't Ul'l ~

To the Big City

~J

·~

..Take 1he pain out
of paintins· Let m•
do it for you •

T.M. Salt llocb S4.75/SO lb.

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.

Publk Nodcea In New~ a

UNDA'S
PAINTING

ComiiOIIUonlortwo

&gt;

doesn'l mean that it is wrong, as
today's events will prove. It might
liave something to do wilh a
decision you'll have to make with
a lol ofj:&gt;Ositive choices.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Doing your best today could yield
higher dividends than normal. So
whether you're working for yourself or someone else, put forth a
bit more effort than usual.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 2~· Dec .
21) If your ideas are truly better
than others, frle~dR or anoclales
won't mind a bll If you mert
yourAeif and take cha111c of event•
or nellvltloa. Oil to II. ·
CAPRICORN (Doc . 22-Jon.
Ill) lloc nu~o ho~ ' ll in!tlnctlvoly
lllok out for 1 o in1oroa11 of 11th·
OI'A , YllUf poaall&gt;llitiOI for I UCOOU
in your andoavora wUI llo •ubJtnntlally onhaneod today.
AQ\J ARI\JS (Jan. 2(l.Jlcb, 19)
Your hopaM and axpaelallona
whow oxeollont ohanoo1 for fui·
flllmonl loday. Koop your think·
in• optlml, tie , Mnd don'tlet any•
one wllh n ~Ire oullook dumpcn
your enthu"h!Mm.

~

�Wednesday, March 14,

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

hge B 4 • The Dally Sentinel

21)0.1

Wedneaday, March 14, 2001

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

--

~EYOOP

NEA Crouword Puzzle

IIIIDOI
PHILLIP

ACROSS U
1 Abominable 45
7 Hiving a
tiood

ALDER

Sayre
Truckins

P/B
CONTRACTORS, INC.
Recine, Ohio 45771

740-985-3948
CONCRETI/BLO&lt;K/BRICK

.• Foot en, Walls, Steps

• Flat Work,
Rtplactmenu, • Walks
and Drives • Stencil
Crote Froe Estimates
Servlna Ohio and W. V.
WVIIOJI7ll

ROIERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
•Gif'8VH
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop a. Compere
FREE ESTIMATES

74G-992-1671

WHY DAM! ANYWHERE ELSE?
SHADE RIVER AQ. SERVICE
•Afle8d In HI'Yica"
·1U% Pr0111n UVII10ck/llllllt filii 56.25/100
-21" lfiiiiB Mit 0.. FoM S6.7S/SO
-12" W1!1wn pride Ilona J.l $5.60/SO
SI .OO off (DUfiOII mahsMKI purdlase $4.60/SO

BAUM LUMBER CO.
46384 St. Rt. 248 Chester, Ohio
(740) 98!5-3301
•Heullng •UIMIIOnl
-Greve! • Send •Topeoll
•FIH Dlrt •Mulch
·Ba;s

(740)

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

lDylr en.nY.s SS.2S

SHADE RIVER AG. SERVICE
35537 St. Rt. 7 North Pomeroy, Ohio 457111

740-985-3831

Rocky R. Hupp . Agent
Box 189
Middleport. Oh1o 45760
Local 843-5284
Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; College,
Retirement,
Emergency Funds; Mortgage;
Major Medical-' NUrsing Home~

Public Notice
IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO

Public Notice
Leon1rd'e;

,....

...

'

I

lft/

tn1nce

oaeterly elong eeld
road to the ..ctlon
line 5 IHI lOUth of
the eouthweat comer
CASE NO. ~·151 ,of tha lend now
OWRid by K. W.
llel)k One, National
Cottrill; thence nqrth
Aeaoclatlon lka The along the HCtlon line
Firat Nlllonalllllnk of to the piece ol
Chlcego, ee TruiiH
beginning, conllllnlng
By Reeldentlel
20 ,1crea, more or
Funding Corporation,
He Attorney-In-Fact,
Save and axcept
PANCAKE SUPPER
c/o Homecomlnga
the coal In and above
Financial Networtc,
deecrlbed property,
Racine United Methodist
prevlouely conveyed
Church 4-7 pm
Pllllntlff,
to Ohio Power
Company.
Thurs. March 15
Buddy Wayne
Subject to all legal
Eggere,Jr.,llal
eaeemenle and rlghta
Defendant
of record.
Live Music by
SAVE AND
Dwight
Icenhower
Defendanta, Buddy I!XCE~
Wayne Eggere, Jr.
The following
Fri., March 16th 8:30 and Ruth Jeanette deecrlbed real eatata
$5.00 couple $3.00 single
Eggera aka Ruth J . In Melge County,
Bring Drinks
Eggere, whoae laet Ohio, In Salem
Uncle Bob's at Darwin
known addroae 11 Townahlp: Beginning
zvns Senlord Devle et the aouthe ..t
Road, Langovllle, corner of w. D. Goff'a
Ohio 45741 hereby land In Section 18,
notified that the Townlhlp 7, Range
Public Notice
Public Notice
Plelntlff flied a 15, O.C.P.: thence
Complaint
of running welt with WELTMAN,
The 2000 flnenclal
Forocloaure and 1ald Golf'• llna, 13 WEINBERG,
report for Columbia
6
REIB
Other Equlteble Chaine and 8811nka to Co., L.P.A.
'J'o.wnahl p
Ia
Rollo! on December a po1t; thonc• aouth
completed and
20, 2000.
to the road loading By Monette Cope avalleble for public
In c ..e No. OO·CV- from E. C. Ralph'a (10087826)
review at the homo of
151, on prop1rty paet w. H. L.eonard'e;
the
42466
. lor the Mettoxclerk:
deacrlbeclaa follows: thence aealtrly along Attorney
Roed, Albany,
Plelntlfl
Slluatad In the eald roed to the
OH45710.
Townahlp of Salem, eectlon llno 5 f..t '175 S. Third Street,
County of Malga and eouth
of
the Sulte900
Columbus, Ohio (3) 14•2001
Stille of Ohio:
southwest corner of 43215
ttc
Parcel No. 1: the land now owned (614) 228·7272, E x t . l - - - - - - Situated In tho by K. w. Cottrill; 210
Public Notice
Townehlp of Salam, thence north along /drl
County of Melga, end the ..ctlon line to thO
A viewing ol the
State of Ohio: piece of beginning, (2) 7, 14, 21 , 28
· Town,hlp Road 1468
Beginning at the containing 20 acrea,
In Scipio Townahlp
northwoll comll' of 1 more or Ieee. Save (3) 7, 14
will be held at 8:30
47-acre lot deeded by and except tho coal
a . m.,
Thu.raday,
Public Notice
Smith Kent'• helro to In and undar the
March 15, followed
George Maloy, In ebove doecrlbed The VIllage of by a hearing at 10:00
Section 12, Townehlp property, previously Pomeroy will be a.m. at tho regular
7, Range 16, o.c.P.; conveyed to Ohio
accepting aealad blda Commlulonera'
thence runnlngeouth Power Company.
The
th• following meeting .
on uld uctlon line,
Subject to all on
purpoae of the
that
will
be
vahlclll
11 chelna and 18 eeHmanlll and rlghle
viewing and hearing
dlapoaed of.
link a to a ateke ; of way ol record.
le to close .40 mila
1882
Ford
Crown
Bllng the ume VIctoria
thence eaet 5 chtllne
and
that the
and 50 llnka to a real eatete deacrtbecl 1995 Ford Crown remaining
.1 0 milo be
atake; thence north In dead of record In Vlctorle
dedicated
.and
named
18 chaine and so Volume 265, Page All blda muet be "Schick Road."
llnkl to a etake; 627, Melga County received no later then Anyone lntereettd In
thence north 18 D11d Recorda.
Is
19; 2001 at attending
chelna and 18 IInke
Being the aame March
welcome.
12:00
PM
altha
Clerk'a
to Shuler'• linea; real eatate •• Office, 320 E11t Meln Gloria Kloes;Cierk
thence weal 6 chelna deacrlbed In Parcel Streit, Pomll'oy, Qhlo Melga
County
and 50 llnka to the No. 2 of record In 45789.
Commlaalonera
piece of beginning, Volume 287, Page
(3~7, 14,2001
21c
containing 10 acraa, 759, Deed Recorda ol (3) 4, 14, 2 tc
more or leea. Aleo, Malga County, Ohio.
the following parcel
Current deed
of land altuall In recorded on 06/10/77
Sactlon 12, Townllhlp In Volume 267, Page
7, Renge 15, O.C.P., 759.
and beginning at tha
Property commonly
northeall corner ola known u: 29775
trect of land deeded Sanford Davia Road,
by A. L. Maloy and Lengavllle, Ohio
wife Mifflin Herklne; . 45741 . ·
Parcel Number: 13·
thence •••• 8 chelna
and 54 IInke to the 004S8.000.
northwelll corner ofl
Aleo known ae
land owned by Dora 28775 Sanford Davia
w. Sprlea; thence Road, Langavllle,
.eouth 18 chaine end Olllo 45741, and that
19 llnka; thence wsat there remelna due
8 chaine end 34 IInke; and owing $45,598.27
thence north .18 with lntereet el 9.9%
cllalna and 19 IInke per annum from
to the placa ol Merch 1, · 2000 and
beginning,
coata: thet the
contelnlng 17 acrea, Oelendente nemed In
more or Ieee. Aleo, the Complaint may
the lollowlng tract: have an lntereet In
Beginning at th11 .. ld
property;
aouthealll corner ola therefore, Plelntlfl
2-ecre lot daed by damande II be found
Mifflin Harklne to to have a good, valid
Harvey A. Meloy, end aubalatlng lien
· deled September 14, on eald pnml-, for
1101, recorded In the amount owing;
Volume 98, Page 198, thet the Delendante
Melgl County Dlld equity of radamptlon
Recorda, In Section be lorocloHd; thet ell
11, Townehlp 7, the partl.. be
·: ~ .~'i
Renge 15, O.C.P.; required to enawer aa
. .,
thence lOUth to E. C. to their lntereat In
Relph'a lend; thence aeld premleea or ~
wear 12 ohalna and forever barred from
80 llnka to a etone ....rtlng any lnteroll
corner; thence north therein; thet ell Ilene
to the roed; lhance In on ..ld premlaee be
an eellarly dlractlon marahaled end their
along eeld roed to · prlorltl11 determined;
the
placa
of thet ..ld praml- be
beginning,
eold ie upon
contel!'llng 19 ecrea, axeoutlon and the
more or leu, prOGIIde of Hid ule
... and everywhere in between, the
con.talnlng In all 46 be applied according
newspaper is THE place to find the
acree, more or leu.
to law; and for euch
stories that are important io you and .
Parcel No. 2: The other rollef •• 11 jull
following deeorlbld equllllble.
your community.
reel ellate, In Melge
Oelendente flrel
County, Ohio, In hereinabove
Selem Townlhlp: m1ntloned are further
Beginning et the notified that they ere
You'll always be in the know with a
eoutheaat corner ol required to enawer
newspaper
subscription. We've got the
w. D. Goff'e land In 111d Complelnt on or
goods.to keep you informed,
Sactlon 18, Towne hlp before April 11, 2001,
7, Aenge 15, O.C.P.: which lncludu
enlightened and enlrrtained every day.
thence running waet twenty-eight (28)
Call today for a subscription.
with uld Goff'e line, ' deye from the laat
13 chelne end 88 dlte of publication,
llnka to · • poet; or judgll!llnl mey ba
thence 1outh to the render • d
1e
roed teedlng from E. demended therolil.
c. Relph'• . put
I 11 Court Street • 992-2155

From the
Backyard ..

,
I

•

•

'

'

The Dally Sentinel

...

• QI I

Balora 6p.m.
LHYI Message
Aher6pm

• A Q I ol

• K1

740-985-4180

Vul ner~~ble:

Bring In your repair worll
we'll get you going for
qjrlng

992·2975

:BARNEY

Factory Authorized

ELITE !IIECHANICAL CONTRACTORS

:FRANK &amp; EARNEST .

1000 SL Rt. 7 Soutlr
!llf(orrl'llo SlopA1loh~

• Room Addhlo1111 A

Romodtllng

• NewO•r•gn

• Eloctllcal a Plumlllng
• Roollng a Outtore
• VInyl Siding A Pllnllftll
• Pallo and POfCh Dtckl
Free Estimates
V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215
~.Ohio

Rutland, Ohio
Truck seats, car seats, headliners, truck larps,
convertible &amp; vinyl tops, Four wheeler seats,
motorcycle seats, boat covers, carpets, etc.

Mon-FriB:30 • 5:00
· Over 40 yri experience
(740) 742-8888
1•888-521..()916

t..aao-250-9077

Resldealial Commerdal New Conslrue!lion
Sales Senice Installallon
Specialldna In Sbeel M&lt;UI Du&lt;twork
"Tnne' Sales It Senko For
Cllllia, ~ •.and Meip Count!•
L~ aDd IIIIIUI'ed
WV 105116

lOIII'

~

• Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
• Bucket Truek

15 C:Vf.~'t'Tf\IN&lt;:&gt;
:5.'.~ I:&gt;F('.,(.\Oi:.'&lt;,
0\IUT

BISSELL

.

~mce:,

""'

'"""_};\ t SWE.N:. YOUii:.
~ c,tD Wot::'£

WI1\\, 001.

BUILDERS INC.
New Homes • Vinrl
Siding • New Garages

'»-"' !

I

• Replacement

Wledows • Rool!l
· Addltlons • Roonng

COMMIROAL '"" RISIDlHTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

740-992-7599

CONCRETE
CONNECTION

(740) 949·7039
or .

Quality Drlvawaya,
Patios, Sldewalka.
25 yaara axperltnct
Free Estimates
740-742-8015 or ·

(740) 992·3203

1-877-353,-7022

The CRAFTY,

Sunset Home
Cons I ruction

BLIND SPOT
(Factory Outlet)
AU vertical blinda are
made to order at our
location
UPTO 70% OFF
• Verdcalo • Wood
• Mlnla • Etc

1441Wnl AYL G..dl

446-4995
DoubtaHunq

Replacement·
.Windows ·
Welded Frame lr.
Sosh0-101 United
Inches
S199.oq lntlaltecl

site wtnt,

Driveway

a

lana clearing,

Wrltesel

Pole Buildings, '
Siding, Decks,
Kitchens, Drywail &amp;
More
We Can Make Your
Dream A Reality!
740-742-3411
FREE ESTIMATES I

Roofing - Home
MaintenanceGutters-Down
Spout ..
F,.., Eltlllllfll

949-1405
591-5011

J &amp; L SANITATION
Locally owned and operated by
JACK l LINDA PROVENCE
39563 Sumner Road
Pomeray, Ohio 45769

•PROVEN
• DEPENDABLE
0
ST!ADY

140-985-4212
NowRHtilg

Old nlllloa, old radio
tubn, &amp; pertl

A·J MINI-STORAGE
992-6396
992·2272

C1U Chuck

31J4.812·2220
'

11-~~
High&amp; Dry

Self-Storage

Mon-Frl

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

~40)

740-992·5232

9-5:30
Sat 9-1

949-2804

FINANCE DEPARTMENT
Bankruptcy? Credit Problems.?
"We Can Help,l

.

I.':

t-800-271-6179 or 446-9800

-·

l'ol I mo.

Hill'• tell

•••,••.

28870 Blehen ADIIII
AICino, Ohio
45771

740-949-2217
Slzaa 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Houra

7:00AM • 8:00 PM

.

420 W. Main St.
Pomeroy, OH 45169 ·

l'
I

!

Hu9.· .

I
•
'
••

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TEAM ..

everything works, but
if West has only the
queen, South must be
put on the ~pot. South
should "guess" correctly, because if East
had the club queen and
West the ace, East
would have .eJtited
with a spade.
Yet what did the
Bridge Baron East do?
It cashed the club ace .
Thank you, partner!

,, 1 H R E T
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· · .SCIIAM I.ITS ANSWERS
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Studio • Vault - Yield - Bemuse - LIMIT
Granny believes thai every person is a fool five minutes each day. She also thinks that people shouldn't
·exceed that LIMIT.

or

or

'

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"Life is very unpredictable,"
. . .
.
_
granny lectured . "That's why," she .
. - - - - - - - - - - - , grinned, "I eat my - - - • • •. G0 L N E 1
first."
.
I
B
A Complolt tho chu&lt;klo Quoled
. . .
. .
V bv lillin11 In tho mllllftll words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

Thursday, March 15. 2001
feared would never happen. The
In '"" year ahead there's a results of the happenings should
chance : that several of your . · brighten your spirits.
endeavOrs will tum out to be
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20)
something quite grand . If need be, There's a strong possibility you
operate in an independent, enter· could be introduced to someone
prising manner to make them loony with whom you'll have un
instanl, dynamiC affinity, if you
happen.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) get out and mingle . Don't be a
Because your career prospects . stay·nt·home.
CANCER (June 2l·luly 22)
look so encouratin~ today, your
This
Is an excellent day to get
financial hopes oo equally 110.
Concentrate your efforts and aoing on a creative project you've
lnlereat on tjlese two likelihoods. been wanting to undertake. You'll
Know where to look for rom1111ce hnve aJ"oo eye for whal IR pleaR·
and tou'il find it. The Aatro- lng an la•tlnJ. ·
Orap Matchmaktr ln111111tl{.
LllO (July 23·Aua. 22) If
rovoal1 which ilantaro romllllt • aomothln~ no anti vc or hnnh
oall~ porfael for you. Mall 52.75
neod ~ to
wltltod, 1tap forward ·
lo Matehmakor, Q/o thla n•w;· tlldny nnd lako ·on tho tnak. You
~r, P.O. llox 1751, Mum?; · Ill
hnvo 1 natural ablllly tn l&gt;o dlplo·
ati(!O, Now York, NY I0 56.
matte about unplaa•antnm with·
ARffiS (Mil'llh 2 1 ·A~rll 19) out bti3 a"tnllvt.
Tho porllln who Ia a alvor I c'n•
VIR 0 (Alii· 2J.I!ept. 22)
to bo lha Qno who' ll and u~ ln1 Thka full advantaao anythlna
a aottor tooay. Nle• thin&amp;• •rmn aooo that mlaht hacpon far you
to 1ho1o who know hqw to pr mo today. Oan'l mako t o ml1t1ka
thc,~;uml' whh acneroaity.
lhlnklnall wllll&gt;o there tomoiTOw.
1\U US (Apr1120.May 20) A That' a not • alven.
favornble chnnae I' In the offina
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) Just
ladoy concernlna somelhina becauu somethina comes easily
you've either .ecretly wanted or

•'

Marathon Service. Cehier
. .

W~OLE

three tricks: one spade
and two hearts. So, it
needs two club tricks
to defeat the contract .
This means East must
switch to a low club. If
West has thecll!bking,

I I I 1I

'Birthday

Ask For Mike Hindle

(acrotalrom Pizzi

pale

22 Hurt

24 Caught
26 Whera to
44 - ovw
dothl
(eupportod
buHerlly
through a
28 Actor
difficult
Neaaon
lime)
30 Moll
49 Aclroll
praclpHoue
Luplno
6 African land
34 By mouth 50 Hillery
7 Hard
35 Certain
Rodham
volcanic
autg..
Clinton,
olan
8 ~~"Whlt ' l
blogrophy
e.g.
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up,-?"
victory
53 Canvae
9 Unclaimed
abbr.
bed
mall dept

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10 Merchant 38
11 Commanda
12 Sniffed
11 DICIIprlo, to 39

ALDER
33 -"King"
Cole
How well do com34 Breakfaat
puters play bridge?
lood
37 Steak, e.g.
Recently I tested
40 lffllllted
" Bridge 'Baron I I "
41 -out
(alrolch)
(Great Game Products), wh ich the box
claims to be a fi vetime world computer
bridge
champion.
Well, this suggests .to
me that the other programs must be really
bad.
I have always
thought that programming a computer to
' bid shouldn' t be that
hard, but Bridge Baron
makes mistakes even
in simple situations.
Look at deal number
1334504952. First ,
North passes a 12point hand with a
decent five-card suit CELEBRITY CIPHER
- not my style. Then,
South opens one of a
. by LUIS Campos
Celebrity
Cipher
cryptograms
are created from ~:~uotaUons by famous
minor with only I I
people, past and preaent. Each letter In the cipher stands for another.
points. Again, debat.
Today's clue: F equals Z .
able. North responds
. v u v zxox csoovxw AP
two diamonds, an
minor-suit
"'l inverted
v ·w OX Y J 0 X AP
LX 0,
PIN.D, ~~~ ~1;;1, raise showing a maJtiYOO~ ~'1-..I.JXJI:J mum pass, good diaOXSWN
WVKKXO
LSRX
u~ 11~7&gt; t-\O.T
mond support, and no
BXPOBX
~'(,~N;t(! four-card major. What
LPCX. ' Y·L X 8 P A
should South do now?
CSOBSOXA
PU
YLJGAF,
Pass, of course; what
else? But the program
ALSAHLXO .
totally ignores that
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Reading I~ a means o1thlnklng with
partner is a passed
another person's mind; II forces you to stretch your own." liaiid.
' ·
Charles Scribner Jr.
Against three diaWOlD
monds, I started with
OAMI
three rounds of hearts.
Declarer won with the
r::~-:·mbl:•r!..r~l
queen, drew trumps.
and played a spade to low to lorm lour simple words.
my partner's ace .
What should Eas.t do .
0 TC A M T
1 2
now?
.
The defense has L-...1..
. ..J..-.L.- L
. .....J.i-J

ILVINEY•s COW

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New equipment arriving dally
See Manning, Wayne or Jim
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To the Big City

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MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.

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UNDA'S
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ComiiOIIUonlortwo

&gt;

doesn'l mean that it is wrong, as
today's events will prove. It might
liave something to do wilh a
decision you'll have to make with
a lol ofj:&gt;Ositive choices.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Doing your best today could yield
higher dividends than normal. So
whether you're working for yourself or someone else, put forth a
bit more effort than usual.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 2~· Dec .
21) If your ideas are truly better
than others, frle~dR or anoclales
won't mind a bll If you mert
yourAeif and take cha111c of event•
or nellvltloa. Oil to II. ·
CAPRICORN (Doc . 22-Jon.
Ill) lloc nu~o ho~ ' ll in!tlnctlvoly
lllok out for 1 o in1oroa11 of 11th·
OI'A , YllUf poaall&gt;llitiOI for I UCOOU
in your andoavora wUI llo •ubJtnntlally onhaneod today.
AQ\J ARI\JS (Jan. 2(l.Jlcb, 19)
Your hopaM and axpaelallona
whow oxeollont ohanoo1 for fui·
flllmonl loday. Koop your think·
in• optlml, tie , Mnd don'tlet any•
one wllh n ~Ire oullook dumpcn
your enthu"h!Mm.

~

�•
•

P8Qe B 8 • The Dlilly Sentinel

goals from Karr and Lyons
to tie the game at 24-all.
Karr finished with three 3pointers .
The Vikings
(18-6),
though, took a 29-27 lead
into halftime behind 16 of
Myers game-high 21 points.
"We go into halftime and
they have 29 points and (16)
is by Myers," said Cald'fell.
"We just weren't focused
tonight. We did some things
that we're out of character
for us. We didn't play our
normal game. Now, the positive thing is, we found a
way to win. A lot of clubs
wouldn't have done th~t .
Also for Symmes Valley,
Drew Hunt scored 11 points
and Adam Corn added nine.
SymmesValley also outrebounded the Eagles 39-23
with Myers with nine
boards and Brown with
seven, but the Vikings had
25 turnovers compared to
16 against Eastern.
"I have to give Symmes
Valley a lot of credit," said
Caldwell. "I thought they
played .e xtremely well.
Myers just did a heck o( a
job in the first half."
Next up is a Worthington
Christian team that has been
a basketball power in recent

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

years.
Honestly, I think (we)
may have overlooked this
game just a little bit to the
fact that maybe they we're
going to play a Worthington
Christian," said Caldwell.
"Anytime that we've had a
big game, we've always risen
11
to that occasion. I think it
Easlem
a
18 - 53
will be 32 minutes of a war Symmes V. 15 14 13 g - 51
Eastam (21·3) - Josh Kohl 0 0.0 0,
Friday night."
GarrettKarr40-111,Chl1slyonsS3-615,
For the Eagles, it was their Joe Brown 5 5-8 15, Brent Buckley o 2·2 2,
Simpson 4 0-o 8, Chad Nelson 0 0.0
18th straight win after a 3-3 Matt
0. Total IS 12·17 53.
start.
Symmes Valley (18-6)- J.T. Plereco 1
3, Btld Carpenter 2 1-1 5, Drew Hunt
" You think about it from 0-Q
4 1·211 , Adam Com4 0.() 9, David Owens
the beginning of the year to · 0 0·2 0, Justin Myers 8 5-6 21. T18vtl Wll·
1 0.() 2. Totab 20 7-11 51 .
.
the end of the year right son3-polnt
goals - Eastern 5 (Karr 3,
now and be one game away Lyons 2), SV 4 (Hunt 2, Pierce, Com).
Eaatem 23 (Brown 7), sv 39
from the state tournament, Rebounds(Myers 9). Tumovers - Easlem 16, SV
that's pretcy pleasing," added 25 .
Caldwell.
Boyt Buketball Pairing a
"But, our goal for the last
Aeglanal Semlfln~le
DIVISION I
three years has been to try
At Ohio Stole Folrgrouncto
con..um, Columbue
and make it to the state
Oublln Coffman (22 ·~) vs . Zanesville
tournament and I don 't (19-4),
Wednesday, 7
Cols.· Brookhaven (24-G) vs. Thomas
think we're going to be sat(20·3), Thursday, 7
.
isfied unless we come out Worthington
Champlonahlp: OubUn Coffman·
Zanesville winner vs. Cols. Brookhaven·
and play.
Thomas Worthington wlrlner, Saturday,
u We don't care ·if we win .
7:30
At Xavier Unlvertlty, Cincinnati
The only thing we want to
Cin. Elder (16-6) vs. Spnng. S. (19·5),
do is play well and we didn't Thursday, 6:15
Vandalia Buder (20·4) vs. Cln. Western
play well tonight.
Hills (20·4). Thursday, a
"Hopefully we'll play a lot
Championship: Cin. Elder-Spr1ng. s.
winner vs. Vandalia Butler-Gin. Westem
better the next game."
Hills winner, saturday, 7:30

it away for good.
The Vikings, who only led
b) two at halftime, took a
39-29 lead with 5:30 left in
the third. Eastern fought
back, but still trailed 42-35
at the end of the third.
In the fourth, a 3-point
goal by Garrett Karr made it
a four point affair. It wouldn't be until the 3:35 muk of
the fourth when Eastern
would be able to tie the
game on another 3-pointer,
this time by Chris Lyons.
Lyons. scored 15 points ,
while teammate Joe Brown
also scored IS to lead Eastern (21-3).
"I thought we had a couple of kids that played their .
normal game," said Caldwell. "I thought Chris Lyons
played his normal game and
I thought Joe Brown played
his normal game. The rest of
the kids didn't. Now, are we
going to do something
about that Friday night, yes
we are. Yes, we definitely are.
We may not win the game
on Friday, but you can· take
this to the bank.... we'll be
,ready to play. It won't be
like it was tonight." ·
Also for the Eagles, Karr
scored 11 points, while Matt
Simpson added eight.
The Eagles took their first
lead since the second quarter when another Kur 3pointer broke a 48-all tie
with 2:29left in the game. A
couple of Lyons free throws
helped Eastern hold on to
the win.
"You're kind of disheartened by it," said Caldwell of
his teams come from behind
win. "That's kind of how I
feel right now. I can remember a long time ago, being
an assistant coach and winning the first game at the
state (tournament) and the
group walked in completely
silent. They walked in
tonight and there wasn't a
sound in the locker room.
They weren't pleased with
the way they won against
(Symmes Valley). · They
weren't pleased with the
game, but they were pleased
that they won."
The first big deficit for
Eastern came in the second
quarter when Symmes Valley went up 24-10 with
5:18 left until halftime.
The Eagles went on a 14~ RUNNING THE COURT- Eastern's Garrett Karr looks for a
0 run, including 3-point finisher on the fast break. (Dan Polcyn) ·

Wilson said . "But the main minor leaguer in 1991, but
reason is to play defense. said the transition there has
Defense basta be No. 1."
been easy. He and Wilson
Wilson showed how he seem to have meshed quick81
can play defense Monday, ly, easily adjusting · to each
Wilson started a game or turning a double play by oth'er's way of making and
two the first week of the going deep in the hole to taking throws.
exhibition
season, but take a hit away from Chad
McClendon has kept writ- Curtis ofTexas. Pirates starting his name in the lineup ing pitcher Todd Ritchie
on a regular basis. He also couldn't .remember seeing a
shifted· Meares from short- better double play behind
stop
to second base, him.
although he said Meares will
"That's why I like to talk
get soine starts at short.
to the pitchers, because I
If the season started this· love helping them out,"
week, Wilson almost cer- Wilson said. "I love taking
tainly would be the starter. hits away. It's a lot of fun."
By doing so, he may be
And Morris, third in the NL
rookie of the year balloting taking a job away from
in 1999, probably would be Morris.
Meares hasn't played secback in Triple-A after a disappointing season a year ond base since he was a
ago.
·
.
"I like the way he's handled himself down here,"
McClendon said of the 23year-old Wilson, chosen as
the best defensive shortstop
in the Texas League last season. "I particularly liked the
way he has handled the bat."
A defensive player who
can hit?
Wonderful opportunlt,ee are avellable In Tom
"The thing is, ·I never was
Peden
Country. We ere expanding our facllltlee
a defensive player until two
and need more ealea people. No experience Ia
years ago," said Wilson, who
required, only a wllllngneu to learn, work 11 a
was hitting .348 before
team, and have etrong Initiative.
going
0-for-4 Tuesday
against Houston. "I made a
EXCELLI!NT PAYMI!NT PLAN
lot of errors the first couple
0AEAT BENEI'ITI (INCLUDINO DEMO PAOOAAM)
of years, I was always an
WORK AT THE #1 DI!AL.aASHIP
offensive guy."
He thinks he still can be,
Call To Schldul• An lgtarv!ew;
even if it is his glove that
Tom Paden CQuntry
will get him to Pittsburgh
1-800-822..()417.
344-5847
- and, he hopes, keeps him
•
there.
"I'm not going to hit .300
up here, but I think I can hit
in the .270 to .290 range,"

Wilson
fhNII Pap

I

Wednesday, March 14, 2001

Good Luck to the

~,,!~~~~~~

. AI Unlvertlty of Tollda
· Ashland (19-4) vs . Limo Sr. (18·5),
WedneSday, 1
At Clev.r.nd State University
Cte. St Ignatius (21-2) vs. Stroogsvllle
(20·3). Wednesday, 8
At Unlvorolty ol TolChampionship: Ashland-Urns Sr., win·
ner vs. Cle. St. lgnaUus-S1rongsvllle wkl·
ner, Saturday, 7;30
·
At Unlver11ty of Akron
Mentor (21·3) vs. Slow (19·5),
Woctnesoay. 7
Massillon Jackson (20·3) vs. Cle. Hts.
(17-6), Thuniday, 7
Championship: Montor·Siow vs. Mas·
slllon Jackson-Gie. His. winner, Saturday,
7:30
DIVISION H
AI Wright &amp;tato Unloonlty, DoYton
Cln. Purceii·Marian (16-6) vs. Kettirtng
Aller (21·2), WedneSday, 6:15
Cln. Roger Bacon (1 7-7) vs. Cols. Mil·
llln (11-11), Wednesday, 9

-t
T-

Hlhdalo (23.0), lllu.-y, 7:30
Championohlp: Glrard-Cio. VASJ win·
nor "'· SVSM.J..,moolllllo Hlladale win·
nor. SlltJrday, 3

SOOIIl ,.,_.,. (22·10) at Toledo (21·
10), 7 p.m.

'"""'· llorch 11
Vlrllnll
(17·11) ot Rtcitmo~Mt

(21-1), 7:ICI p.M.

•

At Unlvnlty ol
Chomplonohlp:
Dtlph&lt;&gt;J
DIVISION
IV St. John's
(20-4) va. McCorTb (19-6), Friday, 7:30

Melp County's

•
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,.

•
'

•

-

.

-

-

-

-

-

Hometown Newspaper

-

Ponu~roy,

Ohio

'ill

SENTINEL NEWS STAfF

Rutland Mayor Dick Fetty and
Councilman Martin Andrew met with
board members to propose the annexation with Fetty describing it as a "benefit to both the school board and the
village:'
.
He said that having the new school
in the corporation limits would open

•
up the area for growth, and that it
would also mean that Rudand village
would be able to provide police protection for the school and street lighting in
that area.
Asked by a board member about
what would have to be done to annex
the area, Fetty said the first thing would

be to get the board to agree to it.
"Unless you all agree, then it can't be
done," he said. ·
The mayor said eventually d1e village would like to "go right on down
past the school and pick up more land
to give the village more room for
growth."

the beautification of down- .
town Pomeroy were disr;ussed when the Pomeroy
Merchants Association met
Wednesday at Farmer's

ttUnnrinS.

ChartesRime R. Ph.
PrescrlpUon
992-2955
112 East Main Street
·
Pomeroy, Ohio

/olon- Frt 8am -.9pm
Sal. 8am- 6pm
Sun. I Dam- ,jpm

Ph.

'TIIl9

•

.........
Fill Willie
'I"

,,., ...

RllllrPIIII
.

Brllbt

I True

Lumbar

"Your Pslnt Hesdqusrters" 3rd &amp; VIne Strtlt

••

Gallipolis, Ohio
448-1278

'

Again tliis year flower
pots will be used along the
sidewalk. They . should be
uniform in appeannce, and
once planted watering the
flowers would become the
responsibility of the merchant in front of whose
· store the planter is placed.
· P~sident Terri Haynes
said that according to information·from Danny Brown,
local sportsman, the bass
tournament will be in
Pomeroy on Aug. 2!i. She
laid this year the sponsors
mtidpate attracting 60 to
75 boaters while having
more activities on the parlcing lot while the tourna.1!hent goes on.
· Budweiser will be the
primary sponsor, although
money for the event will be
tolicited from local businetaes. Haynes said a twoday to~ent will proba·
bly be held next year.
The guden tour on June
2-3 was discussed with
Haynes saying so &amp;r tluee
s~enhouses
and nine
homes ·havl! been registered.
Seven! otb,ers are expected
to participate. Cost is $8 and
aluncheon will be avallable.
· A fund-raiser where tickets are told, and the pro-- eeeds split between a winning ticket holder and the
PomeJOY Merchants Association was discussed with
Wright to check in~ getting the ticket$ prmted.
Tickets providing for a
donation to the Merchants
Altociation would be told
at busines~ places.

..,a

:.......... a •••

...

BY TONY M. WC:H
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

OMEROY - Local residents
planning to . burn debris outdoors this spring are urged to
use proper safety precautions
and follow Ohio's out~oor. burning laws.
.
.
.
Ohio Department of Natural Resources
and Ohio Environmental Protection
Agency each enforce a different set of outdoor-burning laws for suburban and rural
landowners. These · law• restrict when,
where and if a landowner can burn leaves
or other debris.
Concerned with the potential for brush
and forest fires, ODNR's Division of
Forestry prohibits outdoor burning in rural
areas between the hours of 6 a.m.· and 6
p.m. during the cypically dry months of
. March, April, May, October and November.
· Enforcement of this law . is primarily in
the ODNR's Division of Forestry's fire
protection area, which includes chilly,
wooded portions of eastern and southeastern Ohio.
"On average; Ohio has about I ,000 forest or brush fires every year, burning an
estimated three to five acres per fire," said
Ron Abraham, chief of the ODNR Division of Forestry.
"In the spring and fall season, woodlands
are especially susceptible to fire. A majoricy
of these wild fires are caused by carelessness
and a failure to follow basic rules of safety,"
, he said.
Ohio EPA, enforcing state and federal
pollution-control laws, regulates outdoor
burning in both restricted and unrestricted
areas. Restricted areas include land within
1,000 feet of a municipalicy and areas within a mile of communities larger than
10,000 people.
In restricted areas, landowners may burn

.

· A cleanup date was set for
April 21 with April 28
being set as the rain date. It
,. _ de&lt;iided''fliJMn should ••
·be •in .the ground befo~
. Mother's Day '(May 13), and
· students from the three high
schools will assist in the
. planting. Adult volunteers
to work with the students
are needed. A quantity of
Bowen are being donated
by Bob's Market at Mason, .
George Wright reported.
Wright said he had met
with Hal Kneen, Meigs
Councy extension agent,
and that the trees which
line Main Street have been
. marked in preparation for

PINH HI Rutland, AJ

to
·bum laws

BY CHAIILINE HOIPUCtt

Bank.

Superintendent
Bill Buckley
brought up the matter of a possible
income tax with Fetty, assuring him
that "taxing everybody who works
there is not an issue:·
Buckley said an income tax would

residents

. POMEROY - Plans for

HOURS

r Pnt~

State urges

:cleanup
slated
.
·in April
SENTINEL NEWS STAfF

Kenneth McCI!IIoi!Qh, R. Ph.

March 15, 2001

Rutland discusses annexation.possibility
POMEROY - A discussion• on
possible annexation of the property on
which the new Mei~ Local Elementtry School will be built into Rutland
Was held at Wednesday night's meeting
(;f the Me~ Local Boaxd of Education .

.•.•

.

Middlepot·t •

BY C!wuHE HOEIUCII

••

-

Vnlmn•· "tl. Numl ..· • .,,,,

..

•

- ·-

--·--

lbursday

entine

a1.

....

Friday's Re~onal

834 E. Main .
Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992-5500

•

,;a

Eastern Eagles in

The OVP Sports Staff

Details, A3

..

Purceii~Marlan· : · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ·

Final

Home Improvement section inside
NIT roundup, 81

~

Hlth: 50s; Low: cos

At C.nton Field Houu

Championship: Cit. Hto. Lullleran E.
•
NBA
(20-4) vs. Strasllurg·F18nklln (21-4), Frl·
Eut.rn COnferlnct
day, 7:30
Atlantic Olvltlon
At Miami Unlveralty. Oxford
"'
W L Pet.
at
Cha1ilplonshlp: Maria Stein Marton
~
Looal (21·3) vs. Tlpp CHy Betjlel(20.4), Fri· x·Pt'lltadWphla 47 16 .746
New VOrl&lt;
38 26 .594 9 1~
day. 7:30
Miami
36 27 .585
10
At Ohio Slate Fairgrounds
Orian&lt;Jo
34 29 .~0
13
Coll11um, Columbua
27 37 .422 20 1f.li
Chomplonohlp: Worthington CMol· Boston
22 44 .333 251/2
lin (21-4) YO. RHCIIYIIIo Eoltom (21-3), Now Jeroey
Washington
15 48 .238
~
Frfcl1y, 7:30
C.ntn~l Dlvltlan
•
WLPctGB
TUtodoy'o R"ulto
39 24 .619
_,
Milwaukee
DIVISION IV
37 27 .578 2
Cle. Hts. Lutheran East 63, E. Can. 59 CharloHe
De~o Sl. John's 50, Holgate 36
Toronto
35 30 .538
I.
Marta Stein Marlon Local 69, Botkins Indiana
27 35 .&lt;35 11 11.'.1
24 39 .381
Iii
46
Detroit
23 40 .365
18
McComb 61, Old Fen 51
Cleveland
20 45 .308
20
Retdovlllo Eootom 53, WIHow Wood Atlanta
II
51 ,177 271/2
Symmta Valley 51
Chicago
Sirasburg-Franktln 58, Mogadore 43
Wettem Cont•rence
•·
Mldwett Dlvltlon
11pp City Belhel67, Covington 57
Worthington CMstlan 61, ·Manslield San Antonio
'44 19 .e9e
_..:
Sl. Pelt'!r's 56
Utah
43 19 .694
112
Dallas
41
23 .641 3 11:!
Minnesota
36 26 .594 6 tit_'
Houston
36 29 .554
8
Denver
31 34 .4.77
14
Vancouver
20 45 .308
:!~
Nttlonallnvltltlon Tournament
Peclllc Dlvlolon
All Tim.. EST '
Sacramento
43 19 .694
Firat Round
LA . Lakers
42 21 .667 I 1/l!
Tuetd8y. March 13
Portland
42 22 .656
2
Alabama 85. Seton Hall 79
Phoenix
37 25 .597
fl
Memphis 71, Utah 62
seanle
33 33 .500
12
Wtdntaday. Mtrch 14
22 44 .3:33
a3
South Carolina (15·14) at Connecticut L.A. Clippers
Golden Stale
16 48 .250
21
(19·11), 7:30p.m.
•
·
N.C.·WIImlngton (19·10) at Doyton )(·Clinched playoff spot
(18·12), 7:30p.m.
.
Tuetdl)''l OlfMI
St. Bonaventura (18-11) at Pittsburgh Milwaukee 101, Toronto 97
Adanta 109, Vancouver 99
(16·13), 7:30p.m.
~
Illinois Stale (21o8) at Purdue (15·14), New Yor1c 98, Cleveland 79
Sacramento 114, Ortando ~08 , OT
7:30 p.m.
Southern Mississippi (22·8) at ~lssls- Houston 127, Indiana 118, 30T
Dallas 122, Now Jersey 98
sippi Stale (16·12), 8 p.m.
Delroll (22·10) at Bradley (19·11), 8 seanle 99, Por11and 90
LA Lakers 112, Boston 107
p.m.
I
Miami (16-12) at Aubum (17·13), 8
Wodnooday'o ao"'"
Detroit at Washington, 7 p.m.
p.m.
UC Irvine (25-4) at Tulsa (21-11) , 8 Ortando at Cleveland, 7:30p.m.
p.m.
Sacramento at Miami, 7:30p.m.
Popperdlne (21·8) at Wyomirg (20·9), Vancouver at Charlotte, 7:30p.m.
Minnesota at Stn Antonio, 8 p.m.
.9 p.m. ·
McNeese State (22·6) at Texas·EI Philadelphia at Chicago, 8:30p.m.
•
Paso (22·8), 9 p.m.
Indiana at Denver, 9 p.m.
'
•
VIllanova (18·12) at Minnesota (17· Phoenix at Pontaf!d, 1o p.m.
Utah at Golden State, 10:30 p.m.
13), 9:30p.m. ,
.
Beytor (19·11) at Now.Mexlco (111-12),
mid.
·
Thul'ldly,. Mooch 15
•

Kettering
Alter winner
Championship:
Cln. vs. Cln. Roger
Bacon-cots. Mlf1Hn winner, Saturday, 7:30
At·Ohio Unlnr~lty, Ath.na
.Cola. E. (14-8) vs .· !lover (18·5),
Wednesday, 8:15
Cambridge (19·4) vs. Ponsmouth (194), Wednesday, 8
Championship: Cots. E.·Oover winner
vs. Cambr1dge-Portsmouth Yt'inner, Satur·
day, 7:30
.
At Bowling a_,. &amp;toto Unllrerllty
WIUord (22·1) "'·Onawa-Glandorf (231), w~eoaay, 7
. ·
At Cl-nd 6loto Unllrerllty
Olmelod Fill (19-4) vs. Tallmadge
(24.0), Wlllnaoday, 6:16
.
AI lawllng- $tato u-..lty
Champlonlll!lp: Otmltad FIIIS•TIII•
madge winner vs. wmaro-Ottawa.Qiandiorf
winner, Saturday, 7:30
At Conlon Civic Contoi
Youngs. Chaney (18·5) vs. Wer·
ranavWie Hts. (22·1), Wednesday, 6:15
Can. S. (19-4) vs. Contend Lakel/lew
(20·3), wednesday, 8
Championship: YoW'lgS. Chanev·War·
ransvllla Hts. winner vs. Can. S..COrttllld
Lakeview winner, Slturday, 7:30
DIVISION Ill
At Ohio Unlnr~lty, Athent
Chaupeoko (23·1) vo. Mooral
Rldtadllo (23.0), Thurodoy, 1:15
Belpre (21 -3) vs. NeWCXlmerstown (18·
6), lllurlldey, 8
.
Cl'lamplonship: Cheaapeake·Mrirr.BI
Ridgedale winner .vs. Belpra-Newoomer·
stown winner, Saturday, 3
At Wright Stitt Unlvtrllty, D•rton'
Middletown Fenwick (19-5) vs. Way·
nesvllle (17·7), Thursday, 8:15
Canal Winchester (19·4) vs. Casstown
Miami E. (22·2), 8
Championship: Middletown FenwiCk·
Waynesville winner vs. Canal Wlncl'les\er·
Casstown Miami E. winner, Sfl,turday, 3
AI Bowtlng Gre.n S1ate Unlverwlty,
Bucvrus Wynlord (19-4) vs. Findlay
Llbeny·Benton (23.0), lllursday, 6:30
Haviland Wayne Trace (22·1) vs.
Obenln (16-7), Thursday, 6:15
Championship: Bucyrus Wynlord-Find·
lay Llberty·Benton wlnoer vs. HavHahcl
Wayne Tra~e-oberttn winner, Saturday, 3
At Clnton Field Houee
.
Gll8rd (17-6) vs. Cle. VASJ (t3·11),
weqnelldey, 7:30
Akr. SVSM (22· 1) vs, Jeromesville

LETS GO EASTERN EAGL I
ALL THE WAY TO STATE!

Makln1room
The home of Dr. Hugh H. Davis on West

Main Street in Pomeroy came tumbling
ciQwn on Wednesday to make way for a
library addition. Pullins Excavation Ct:eWS
were at the site to demolish the house, which
Davis donated .to the library shortly before
his death last year. The property will be used
for
extensive addition to the Mei~
County District Public Library, located next
doo~. ibrary Director Christi Eblin, the
library's board of directors, recendy approved
plans for a 2, 700-square foot addition to the
eXisting library, estimated to cost $500,000.
The new addition and a subsequent renovation project will allow the libr2ry to expand
its computer area and children's library facilities - including an outdoor activicy area and consolidate office space. The addition
will also include major renovations · to the
lower-level conference and meeting rooms.
A construction schedule has not yet been
determined; Eblin said. (Brian J. Reed pho-

an

,.... . -

tos)

O'Neill stresses income tax
cuts as economic stimulus
WASHINGTON (AP)
Meeting with a group of
pivotal Senate moderates
Wednesday, Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill stressed
the importance that President . Uush is giving acrossthe-board income tax cuts as
a tonic for the . flagging
economy.
After meeting with seven
Republican and six Democ.ratic members of the Centrist Coalition, O'Neill told
reporters the group talked
about "everything you can
imagine" involving b,ow to
get President Bush's tax cut
through the Senate, divided
evenly becween the GOP
and Democrats.

"It's great to have this
kind of opportunity to talk
to people of good will who
are working hard to figure
out how we can do som~'
thing that represents the best
interests of the American
people," O'Neill said.
PartiCipants said O'Neill .
was particularly insistent
that the Senate follow the
House lead in passing as
quickly as possible the 10year, $958 billion cut in
marginal income tax rates,
indirectly suggesting that
other parts of Bush's $1.6
trillion plan were of lesser
urgency as an economic
stimulus.

Lawl, A3

Toclay's

Sentinel
Calendar
C!assjfieds

AS
84-6

Edjtorjals

87
A4

Objtuarjes

A3

Comics

Sports
Weather

81-2.5-6
A3

------

Lotteric~

OHIO

Pldt3: 6-7-3; Plck4: ~1-6
•
Lollo: 5-11·30-39&lt;4l-45
Kid&lt;r.~3

W.VA.
Dilly 3: 9-2-9 Deily 4: 5·1.0.0
C 2001 Okio Valley Publi1hing Co.

An electrical safety
program, presented by
AEP representatives
Kathy Mullins and
Robbie Shields, a. k.a.
Louie the Ughtnlng
Bug, was given on
Wednesday to both
preschool and school
aged students of Carleton School In Syracuse. The presentation, "Play It Safe
-Aniund Electricity,"
focused on venous
safety precautions
when dealing with
electricity. FollowlJll
the program, puzzle
books, coloring books,
hand puppets and

hugs were distributed
among the students.
(Tony M. Leach photo)

I,

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