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'

I
Community news and notes, AS
NCAA roundup, B1

Hlp: 50s; Low:

Details, A3

•
Meigs County's
Volume

s 1.

entine

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Number 168

House
moves up
front with
new plan

Happy St. Patrick's Day

20 new computers to be given
to.Meigs County library
FROM STAFF REPORTS

OMEROY - A grant from!the Bill
and Melinda Gates Foundat,on will
provide 20 new computers for the
Meigs County District Public
Library system.

~ne.

20 • Sunday, March 18, 2001

-

RIO- REDMEN ON THE RU.N

:PIMM ... HOIIII.AJ

Cirant
computers

t9

,;,.&gt;

50 Cents

rovides
ibrary with

COLUMBUS (AP) The day after Speaker
Larry Householder surprised state government
with the House Republicans' school funding solution, Senate President
Richard Finan gave a vivid
reminder that Ohio has
two other Republican
leaders - himself and Gov.
Bob Taft.
. Finan, quiet since parts of
the plan had b~en leaked to ·
· the media over last weekend and scheduled to meet
with Taft and Householder
discuss the plan Monday,
Was asked on Thesday for a
tesponse after a committee
I_Reeting. He didn't have
:- "Speaker Householder
has still never called me
about it," Finan said.
· Householder acknowledged that he had not spoken with his fellow Republican ·but bl~med that on a
canceled meeting. Asked
who had can celed the
meeting, Householder said,
"It w'asn't me."
'
·. Still later on Tuesday, after
a Senate session, reporters
peppered Finan with questions about the House plan.
They
wli'effiet Finan··
canceled his meeting with
Householder. Finan then
looked around for his
appointment book.
"Well, let's see where my
·book is. It's right here,"
Finan began.
"Capitol exhibit? That's
not him.We had caucus. We
had caucus. I have Senator
Johnson .... I have Capitol
Square . Board. I have a
photo tomorrow. I have arts
luncheon tomorrow. .. .
(Senators)
Armbruster,
Mead," he recited, pointing
to the events 'lind names in
his book.
"Any of those sound like
Larry Householder? Don't
to me."
Finan admitted he had
canceled a meeting with
Householder on nursing
homes, scheduled for this
week - not last week because of a conflict.
The two have since spoken, and Taft told both he
wanted a "leaders-only"
discussion of the issue on
Monday. Taft, also a Republican, was on a South
America trade mission -

March 19, 1001 .

•

Not only are green eggs a good way to celebrate Dr. Seuss' birthday, as a number of local children have done this rnonth, but they're also an interesting way to celebrate St. Patrick's Day. At
the Gingerbread House Pre-School in Middleport, operated by ACCESS to Human Resource Development, the boys and girls sat down to green scrambled eggs, ham, soda bread biscuits, green
peppers and onions, and fresh strawberries to honor the Irish holiday. Middleport's mayor. Sandy
lannarelli, joined the kids for their Friday lunch, and encouraged them to clean their plates. That
was no problem for Bruce Davis, who wanted to make sure he got every last strawberry from the
bowl. (Brian J. Reed photos)

According to Library Director Chris ti Eblin, the
foundation has granted the county $73,000 to be used
for the purchase.
The funds w ill be used to buy five new computers (a
se rver and four work stations) for the Pomeroy Library,
and branches in Middleport, Racine and at Eastern
Elementary.
Each of the county's librar ies offer coml'uter access
to patrons, but Eblin said that the new comp uters will
expand and improve the computer services now available to the public.
Public access, she said, is a condition of the grant,
and all of the machines and programs will be available
to all library patrons.
·
These new ·computers will be equipp ed with a variety of helpful software programs, including word processing packages, educational games and activities· and
business software. Each will also have a printer, and will
· p1"'vi~.._:rq:ess to the World Wide Web.
Library staff members will attend an April training
session 'before the computers arrive.
·
Eblin said she expects that all of the compu ters will
be in place by the end of the summer.

.Unclaimed funds list to appear
Meigs County
accounts total
$129,000
FROM STAFF REPORTS

POMEROY - The Ohio
Department of Commerce will
publish 'its annual lis~ of Meigs
County unchiimed funds owners in The Daily Sentinel on
Tuesday.
"This advertisement will be a
quick and easy way for current
or former Meigs County residents to check their names for
unclaimed funds," said Commerce Director Gary Suhadol-

"The Meigs County list
wilUnclude 111
unclaimed funds
accounts of $50 or more

jor individuals whose
last k11ow11 address was
it1 Meigs County."
David L Moore

ni~.

..
Our n ewspaper adverttsmg ,
campatgn ts one of our most
successful outreach efforts and
· h I d h d' · ·
tt e pe . ~ e tvtston return
~2.9 nullton to more than
28,000 people last fiscal year,"
hi! added.

These accounts consist of
moni es or the right to monies
that have been dormant or forgotten - usually for five years.
Some common examples of
unclaimed funds include dormant checking and savings
accounts, forgotten rene and
utility
depos its, uncashed
checks, undelivered stock certificates, uncashed insu rance
policies, and forgotten retail
layaway deposits,
"The M eigs County list will
include. 111 unclaimed funds
·aunts of
or more for
ace
..
individuals whose last known
address was in Meigs County,"

•so

Ple•se see Funds, A3

NEW COMPUTERS - A grant from the Bill and Melinda
Gates Foundation has provided the Meigs County District
Public Library system with 20 new computers.

Speak out:

Today's

What would you do if one of your classmates told you he was going to bring a gun to school?

Sentinel
1 Sec:tlons - l l Plla-

Calendar
Classifieds

AS
82-4

Comic~

Editorials
Obituaries

Sports
Weather

85
A4
A3
Bl-3-6
A3

Lotteries
Juiltlne DoWler, Mllfll
IIddle School: I would

someone so
lhatlhey can lind out II It's
11'\18. Then, I'd try lo lind
roy friend some help, such
ae a counselor at school.
You can, take things like
that ae a Joke. •
defln~ely tell

Mlaln

G•'""· Melge

Mlcfdle School: I would
tell a teacher, so lhal
nobody would gel hurt. I
would ralhe( tum my
friend In than have other
people get hurl.

Matt Shain, Southern
High School: I would

Immediately inform the
school staff. I think anyone
who would bring a gun to
school must have severe
personal or family problems.

••

Llnduy Smith, Southam
High School: First of all. I
would advise that parson not
to do It because ol the con·
sequences and that there Is
no good reason to bring a
gun to school. I would then
Inform tho p~nclpal of what
the student was planning on
doing .

Bethany Amblrger, South·
am High School: I would

probably tell one of my clooeS1
.friends or my parents. Altar
telling them, I W&lt;&gt;uld then go
and tell tho principia. Hopefully
tho principle or another faculty
member could speak with that
person and prevent a serious

Daniel Thornton, Malg•

Middle School: 1 would
tell the principal or a
teacher. Even if my friend ·
was joking, you have to
take them seriously if
they're talking about guns.

Super lotio: 2·5-1!H4·35-46

Kido!r. 2.()-7-5-7-8

W.VA.
Daily 3: 4·9-9 Daily 4: 5·2.Q-5
0 2{)(1 1 Ohto \f;jl\o:Y Publi1hinll Co.

tragedy from occurring.

,.

OHIO
Pick 3: 8-9-&lt;l; Pick 4: 9-8-(}()

,

�•

PageAl

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Plant willtauain dosed

Monday, March 111, 2001

Mond.y. Mllrch lt. 2001

COLUMBUS (AP) -J'he recent talk more people are saving.
Maureen O'Brien, marketing director
of tuition increases among Ohio's public
universities may be behind the record at the Tuition Trust Authoriry, says pubenrollment in a state program that allows licizing the new savings options that
families to pay their children's college invests tuition money more aggressively
tuition in advance at today's rates.
- but witli more risk - has increased
The Ohio Tuition Trust Authority's enrollment, too.
"It's a double-edged sword With the
College Advantage Savings Plan has
15,171 people enrolled.
costs of college rising. Some will invest,
Since July, enrollment has increased by but some get scared off because it almost
seems like the cost of college is unaf41 percent, its biggest jump in years.
"At the rate we're going, this is going_ fordable no matter what;' O 'Brien said.
to be our' best year ever;' said Judy CunThe new plan, called Variable Investningham, public relations manager at the ment Funds, offers options based on the
authority.
,
child's age and the risk a parent or other
Talk of tuition increases, like the 19 investor is willing to take. The money,
percent increase that Ohio State Univer- which can be deducted directly from
sity wants to implement over the next paychecks, is invested by Putnam Investtwo years, is only pact of the reason why ments, based in Boston. The return flue-

Comair pilots voting on offer

HEBRON, Ky. (AP) - Pilots of the Comair regional commuter airhne on Monday were awaiting the results of voting on
whether to accept the company's contnct offer.
Comair's offer was mailed to the approximately I ,35Q pilots,
who began voting by telephone last Tuesday.
Barring an agreement or presidential intervention, a srrike
· Schools and the West Clermont Schools in neighboring ClerSunbury officials said they were disappointed.
could start as soon as 12:01 a.m. on March 26- effectively shutti&gt;ont County are hoping that $3 million in grants they are using
ting down Comair's main hub at the Cincinnati-Northern Kento create smaller high schools will reduce dropout rates and
tucky International Airport.
increase student achievement.
Union and Comair officials said they would prefer to work out
DAYTON (AP)- A hospital has told 50 nurses accidentally
The grants received last year from the Bill and Melinda Gates
a deal without a strike or outside intervention.
overp~id for overtime \VOrk that they will have to repay the Foundation and the Knowledge Works Foundation are intended
money.
to involve communities in changing high schpols from large,
Chuck Vella, a spokesman for the i.1ayton Heart Hospital, said impersonal facilities to more intimate environments to improve
the money was overpaid because of the complexity o( the hospi- learning opportuni!ies.
TOLEDO (AP) - Iffederal forecasts for continuing low water tal's payroll system. The hospital said the pmblem was discovered
The Cincinnati district received $1.9 .million .from the Gates
levels on Lake Erie are accurate, boaters could find themselves through a payroll review and a supervisor who came forward.
Foundation, established by Microsoft founder Bill Gates and his
spending a chunk of the boating season at the dock.
"The ·n eed to recoup the overpayment is stricdy a matter of wife, Melinda Gates. The West Clermont district received
"It's not looking good for marina operaton' peak season," said
fairness and equity to other employees," the hospital said.
$796,000, which was matched by Corning Precision Lens~
Frank Quinn, a senior hydrologist with the National Oceanic and
"I want everyone to know that we are going to work with the : The districts are sharing $250,000 from KnowledgeWorks, a
Atmospheric Administration's Great Lakes Environmental
nurses who were overpaid on an mdivtdual basiS to ensure that , Cincinnati-based education philanthropy.
Research Laboratory in Ann Arbor, Mich.
they can repay the overpayments without any undue financial ·
While Winter got off to a cold, snowy start in the lower Great burden on them," the hospital's chief executive, Ken Howell,
Lakes, that type of weather didn't endure, Quinn said.
wrote in a memo Friday to employees.
Lake Erie reached a near-normal maximum of 94 percent ice
CLEVELAND (AP) - LTV Corp., operating under bankcoverage in-January, but the ice soon melted, allowing lake evapruptcy court protection, may be ready to shed a less profitable
oration to resume sooner than norn&gt;al.
Clevebnd steel mill, The Pbin Dealer reported Sunday.
CUYAHOGA HEIGHTS (AP) - Metropolitan park .officials
The pbnt on the west bank of the Cuyahoga River has more
are going to try needles instead of bullets to control the groWing than 500 ·employees and makes steel that other companies buy and
deer population, a method suggested by people who oppose the grind into parts or pipes.
COLUMBUS (AP) - School district and union officials are annual shooting of hundreds of deer in the parks.
LTV's more profitable plant on the east bank of the river makes
working on a plan to give teachen bonuses up to $4,000 if stuOfficials will test their pbn by i!1iecting deer captured at Ohio
smooth, clean steel that ends up as car bumpen or appliances and
dents improve test scores .or attendance.
&amp; Erie Canal Reservation with a birth control drug and then
has less competition, the newspaper reported.
Both sides believe the program would be the only one of its releasing them.
Analysa and union leaden said that, With LTV putting togethkind in the nation. Details still are being worked out.
Cleveland Metroparks spokeswoman M. Jane Christyson said
State proficiency testS would not be used as· the benchmark for park officials have been loolclng:for an opportunity to test a fer- er a pbn to revene financial losses, the west bank pbnt and its
structures dating as far back as 1912 could be ripe for a divestiture.
determining students' gains. However, the program would be tility control agent.
geared toward improving learning in the five areas on the tests Metroparks officials said the drug is relatively new and will be
reading, writing, math, science and citizenship.
effective for as long as two yean. -A previous venion of the drug
Teachen would not be the only ones who could receive bont~s­ lasted about three months.
CLEVELAND (AP) - The Cleveland Metroparks Zoo . has
es. Union memben in nonteaching assignments would have to
destroyed some exotic birds to stop the spread of avian tuberculopropose some type of activity that benefia students, such as tutorSIS.
ing or working to increase attendance, the sixth area in which
Stan ,Searles, the zoo's curator of ornithology, said the killing
employees could earn bonuses.
AKRON (AP) -A woman whose death was investigated as a
suspected m'uldei has been buried' for the third time.
·
· starred bst fall. Searles oould not say how many birds were lcilled
because he did not have records at home.
Betty Mosley's fine burial was after her death 14 months ago.
Zoo officials 4st euthanized a bird in Februaty, he said.
The second came in December, when the prosecutor's office
Searles was not sure what caused the TB outbreak. He said the
DELAWARE (AP) -A judge commended a former village exhumed her body so that they could remove a letter from her
zoo
could have acquired a bird with the disease because the illness
official for paying back nearly $18,000 in public funds she had burial vault. They thought the letter might implicate her husband,
does not al\vays show up in screening tests.
stolen, then sentenced her to two years' probation.
Doug Mosley Sr., in her death.
"You'"' a refreshing contrast to many of these kinds of cases,"
Instead, the letter turned out to be a farewell note from her
Judge Henry Shaw Jr. of Delaware County Common Pleas Court adult son. Prosecutors hod her Tallmadge Cemetery grave dug up
said to Carol Weathernun.
friday so that Doug Mosley Jr. could return the letter to th'e cofWeathern1an, 61, pleaded guilty on Jan. 29' to a felony charge of fin.
MEDINA (AP) - A gun maker has memorialized Medina's
theft in office for nuking out extra paychecks to herself while she
history with a limited-edition rifle that has some residents leu
was clerk-treasurer ofSunbury. She could have been sentenced to
than thrilled.
as much aa five yean in prison, but Shaw said he tt:Jolt a number
James McClain, a salesman with lnvestn1ent Arms Inc., admits
offacto11 into consideration, including the restitution and her lack
CINCINNATI (AP) - Officials in the Cincinnati Public he has received a few puzzled looks when visiting Medina Counof a crilninal record.
ty businesses last week to show off the $2,995 firearm,

MASON, W.Va. -Victoria Lambert White, 77, Mason, died
Saturday, March 17, 2001 at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
She was born April 11, 1923 in Harts, W.Va., daughter of the
late John C. and Martha Robinson Lambert, she was a homemaker.
She is survived by her husband, Sidney C. White of Mason; a
daughter and son-in-law, Lois A. and Dale M. Payne of
Glouster; five sisters, Cuba Dempsey, Lona Browning, Mollie
Dalton, Melva Dempsey and Bernice Tomblin, alL of Harts; a
brother, Claude T. Lambert of Harts; a grandson; .land several
nieces and nephews.
She was also preceded in death bjr a brother, Floyd Lambert.
. Services were held at 1 p.m. today, Monday, March 19, 2001
, m Fogelsong Funeral Home, Mason, with the Rev. Billy Zuspan officiating. Burial was in Kirkland Cemetery.Visitation was
held in the funeral home today from 10 a.m. until the rime of

services.

Obituaries

Nurses must repay overtime

Lula Shaffer
POMEROY - Lula Shaffer, 9,1, of Pomeroy, died on Saturday, March 17, 2001 at the extended care unit of Veterans
Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy.
She was born on July 27, 1909 in Pliny, West Virginia, daughter of the late Noah Myers and Sarah Martin Myers.' She was a
homemaker.
Surviving are a niece and her husband, Betty and Bob Pooler of Middleport, and five nephews and their wives, Charlene
and Inez Roy, and Bob and Hazel Roy, all of Racine, Ronnie
arid Faye Myen, and Mike and Margie Myers, both of Caldwell, and R;ay and Grace Myers of Athens.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by two
husbands, Cassa Rose and Bonney Shaffer, her brothers and sisters, Marie, Mary, Jane, Liza, Laurel, Rielly, Ed, John, Jim and
Hetzel; and an adopted sister, Laurel.
Private graveside services will be conducted for the family,
with the Rev. Mark Morrow officiating. Arrangements were
completed by Fishcr-Acree Funeral Home in Middleport.
There will be no calling hours.
·

Forecast concems boaters

LTV may shed plant

Park deer get birth conbol

· Bonus part of incentive plan ·

Zoo: no outbreak of bird TB

Woman buried for third time

Ex-clerk pts probation

·Rille memorializes town history

1\No districts cut class size

· Evangelist says Wife won't
. survive If she leaves his home
,
,
·'

•

DELAWARE "(AP) -An
evangelist whose wife has
been declared incompetent
says she won't survive if she
leaves his home.
"They will put her in a
nursing . home, that'! what
they said," the Rev. Leroy
Jenkins said Saturday at the
home, part of his Heiling
Waters Cathedral compound
north of Columbus. "If she
goes our of this house, she is
going to die:"
Eloise Thomas Jenkins was
declared incompetent Friday
by Franklin County Probate
Judge Lawrence. Belskis, who
selected state Sen. Ben Espy
of Columbus as Mrs. Jenkins'
guardian. The jud~'s ruling
suggested Jenkins might have
taken advantage of his wife,
whose remaining wealth from
a lottery jackpot nine years
ago is estimated at $2 nlillion.
Belskis also asked prosecutors ·to investigate large withdrawals from her bank
accounts.
Jenkins told The Columbus
Dispatch for a story Sunday
that the decision amazed hini.
"Are they going to prosecute me for marrying her?"
he asked. .
1
Jenkins, 6f, had asked for
legal guardianship of his 76year-old wife, as had Mrs.
Jenkins' sister and a Colum•bus lawyer who had served as

Mrs.]ertkins and her
'first husband who have
h'l · ' ·
no ~ t dr~~· won $~. 9
mtllion ut tht Ohro
Super' Lotto in 1992
and split the money.

Jenkins repeatedly said he
does not want his wife's ·
money. He said his ministry is
seen nationwide on satellite
·television and is thriving,
with assets worth several million dollars and no deb(.
· "Our church is doing betguardian for Mrs.Jehkltls' late ter financially than it has
done in yC:ars," he said.
·
husband.
.
·He also said that two
Although the judge said it
wasn't in the woman's best months ago, he turned dowri
interest to remain with Jenk- an offer from a woman who
ins, the minister hopes she told 'him she had bought a
million--dollar mansion in ·
can stay.
"I am going to talk to Espy Ocala, Fla., and wanted to
to see if he will let her stay give it to him. He declined to
here as long as he controls her identify the woman.
money," he said. ''It breaks my · Mrs. Jenkins said she thinks
heart that they can destroy the family dispute over her
her life."
well-being ,is ·t he result of sibMrs. Jenkins has lived with ling greed.
·
the evangelist since Novem"! have two greedy sisters,"
ber, a month before her hus- she sa.id. "They think I am
band, Roy, died Dec. 27. She going to give Leroy a dime
and Jenkins were married 16 and they want a dollar.
days later, on Jan. 12.
"They were . never there
Mrs. Jenkins and her first
when I needed. them. All they
husband, who have. no chilare doing is looking (&lt;ir a
dren, won $6.9 nlillion in the
handout, but now it's about
Ohio Super Lotto in 1992
time for me to take care of
and split the money.
"I don't see why I have to Eloise."
She said she has loved Jenkmove," she said. "But if Leroy
ins
since she literally bumped
tells me to go, I'll go."
Jenkins said his wife has into him on a Columbus
gained 12 1/2 pounds since street after one of his services.
"I kissed him on the cheek
moving in with him.
three
times, saying 'I love
"And they said she was
dying of malnutrition before you. I love you. I lo.Ve you;"
she." came here," he said.
she said.
•II

•

A SPECIAL
SECTION
'
In The
e ~qtnt ~leasant ~egtster

• ~aUtpoHs 11Batlp m:rtbune
• Pomeroy Daily Sentinel

_Advertising Deadline:
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 4, 2001
12:00Noon
.I Insertion Date:
FRIDAY, APRIL 13, 2001
Call
"ave Harris or Debbie Call
D_
• For Mor·e Information

992-2156

Juvenile missin1

.Vktoria White

tuates with the stock market.
Before October, the only savings
option the authority offered was the
tuition credit plan . Now called the
Guaranteed Savings Fund, this plan lets
parents buy tuition credits or "units" that
lock in today'• college prices.
A unit costs S51 and, on average, it
takes I 00 units to pay for tuition for one
year at a public, four-year Ohio university. Mote-expensive schools require
more units and less-expensive schools,
fewer units.
This plan is guaranteed by the state.
Units grow at about -the same rate- 5
percent to 6 percent- that tuition has
increased. Both savings plans can be used
at state, private and out-of-state schools .

House
fromPipA1
and not due back for a week
when
Householder
dropped his pbn on state leaders, who were caught offguard.
.
.
Mary Anne Sharkey, Taft's
1.....r&lt;ommunioations. director, said
the governor learned of the
plan after someone in the
.. speaker's office phoned a top
Taft aide on Sunday night. It
hit the papers Monday morning.
Householder brushed aside
questions about the tinting.
"He introduced his budget
. · and I certainly didn't have any
input on 'his education plan.
. , We just did what the House
had to do," Householder said.
"I think that we have three
very reasonably minded peo: pie who are going to sit and a
; room and talk alitde bit about
: all this."
•
Householder's plan is estimated to spend $3 billion in
new funding over the next
twO yeart, compared With the
; Republicans' S1.3 billion plan
• and Tatt's $800 million solu•• tion. .
•
The events widened a rift in
protocol that has emerged
since the new General Assembly - with Finan and first: year speaker Householder in
: charge - · took over in Janu• ary
,
Even earlier, Republican
: lawmakers had grumbled
; about Tatt's proposal to elimi; nate budgetary mandates the
· d o f sc h ooI. dis•• state tequ•re
•

•

••

Correction Polley

.' .
•'•
•
•

•t

Our main concern in all stories Is
to be accurale. If you know of an
error In 11 story. call 1he newsroom
al (740) 992-2156.

News Departments
The main number Ia 992·21 56.
Department extentton1 are:

Cleaning starts

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Claoollled Ads

Ext. 5

To send ..mall
dallysentiO.IOyahoo.com

Gannett- 59
General Eleclrlc- 40~
GKNLY -10~
Hartey Davidson

37~
Kmart-8.~
Kroger- 23~

Lands End - 25).
Lid. -15'11

OAk Hill Financial 13~

area's

weather will be appropriate
for the arrival of spring this
week , forecasters said.
Dry skies and mild temperatures are expected until
Wednesday, the first day of
spring, the National Weather
Service said.
Highs on Tuesday will be
50-55. Lows on Tu esday night
will be in the 30s.
Sunse t tomght will be at
6:42 , ~ nd sunrise on Tu esday
is at 6:35 a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight ... Mo stly
clear.
Low 30 . to 34. Lig ht east
wind.
Tu esday... Be-coJning
cloudy. H1 gh m th e mid 50s.
EJSt wind 5 to I 0 mph.
Tuesday night ... Cloudy.

Low in the upper 30s.
Extended forecast:
Wednesday... A chance of
rain during the day, otherwise
partly cloudy. High in the mid
50s.
Thursday... Partly cloudy
with a chance of showers.
Low 30 to 35 and high 53 to
58 .
Friday... Mostly
cloudy
with a chance of showers during the day, then a chance 'o f
snow or rain showers during
the night. Low in the mid 30s
and high 42 to 47.
Saturday... Mostly cloudy
with a chan ce of snow o r rain
showers. Low ii1 the lower 30s
and high 40 to 45.
Sunday... M ostly
cloudy
with a cilJn Ct' o f snow or rain
showers. Low nea r 30 and
high 39 t&lt;;&gt; 44 :

.., . m i1lion accounts w o rth
$21 G million . Moore encouraged current and former
Ohio residents to visit the
Department of Commerce's
at
said David L. Moore, superin- website ·
tendent of unclaimed funds.
www. c om . stat~:.oh . us
to
The total value of the check to see if they have
:tccounts to be advertised, un claimed funds waiting to
which include only those be claimed.
accounts turned over to th e
In additioll, individuals can
state within the past year, is write to the Division of
$34,783.54. The adverttsed Unclaimed Funds and pronames will appear in alpha- vide the full name to be
betical order by the owner's researched, along with the
last knmvn city and then in counties in which the person
alphabeti cal order by the may have resided. The diviowner's last name.
sion's address is 77 S. High St.,
Meigs County accounts Columbus, Ohio 43266total $128,995 .16, and the 0545.
largest account listed is the
Individuals may also contact
Herbert Stafford Estate, with their county treasurer's office
a value of $5,085.29.
where advertisements (or pre- ·
Including the accounts vious years and lists of
being advertised, the divisioh accounts under $50 are often
is holding a statewide total of available for review.

Funds

from PageAl

Six firefighters buy fire truck
to ke~p it in community
WOOSTER."(AP) -When
this ciry put its 40-year-old ·
fire truck up for auction, some
firefighters rescued it with
their bid.
Mike Sigg, director of
administration for Wooster,
was pleased. He said the community can look forward to
seeing the 1961 Seagrave Fire
Truck from time to time. But

those times will be ceremonial rather than emergencies.
The pumper truck was a
big-ticket item at Saturday's
26th annual Wooster Rotary
Club Gallery Antique Auction.

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

Rockwell- 42),
Rocky Boots - 4'•
AD Shell - 56,,

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Saara-36~

Shoney's- 1
Wol-Man- 47
Wendy's - 22,,
Worthington- gi,
Dally stock reports are
tho 4 p.m. closing
quotes of the previous

OVB-25
BBT -34l,

Peoples - 17~

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CHESTER • JASON AND NATASHA
RIDENOUR ANNOUNCE THE BIRTH OF
THEIR FIRST CHILD, A DAUGHTER, ABBIE
LYNN, BORN OH JIUIUAAV 14, 2001, AT
"HOlZER
H OSPtTAL,
IN GALUPOUS,
0HID,
SHE WEIGHED 6 POUNDS, 7
OUNCES. AND 20 INCHES LONG •
MATERNAL GRANDPARENTS ARE
SnvE HAMILTON OF COOLYILLE AND
TERE8A KENDALL OF TROY, 0H10.
PATERNAL GRANDPARENTS ARE
ROBERTA R1DENOUR OF POMEROY AND
JOHN AND KAREN RIDENOUR OF

carrier ltNtce Is available.
Ext. 4

EMS runs

tri-cou ntv

Published every afternoon, Monday
through Friday, 111 Court St.,

or

Circulation

TUPPERS PLAINS VFW Post 9053 meets at the
hall in Tuppers Plains at 7 p.m.
on Thursday. There will be a
special drawing.

POMEROY - The Meigs
County Sheriff's Department
investigated two complaints
and arrested two individuals:
• A · Pepsi machine at
Ritchie's Auto Sales was
recendy broken into and an
TUPPERS PLAINS unknown amount of money
Trustees
of the Tuppers Plains
was taken;
Christian Cemetery will begin
• An auto accide~t was invesremoving flowers and other
tigated early Saturday. Jared W.
Smith was eastbound on Ohio grave decorations on April I .
681 when he fell asleep at the Anything to be saved should be
wheel and ran of the right side removed before then. The $25
annual maintenance fee is due
of the road.
The vehicle struck a fence for each grave.
owned by Robert 'Keaton.
There was no injuries and
Smith was cited for failure to
POMEROY- Units of the
control;
• Melissa Stacy was arrested Meigs Emergency Service
and charged with driving answered 10 calls for assistance
under the ilifluence, lett of over the weekend. Units
center and possession of mari- responded as follows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
juana. She is currendy awaiting
Saturday,
11 :33 a.m., South
her court date;
• Roger Thompson was Secord, assisted by Pomeroy,
arrested Friday night for Dorothy Roush; Holzer Med-'
domestic violence. He is cur- ical Center;
3:Q8 p.m.,Valley Belle Road,
rently being held in the Meigs
County Jail pending his court .Ricky Deeter, treated;
4:12p.m. ,Valley Bolle Road,
appearance.
assisted by Racine, Ricky
Deeter, Jackson General Hospital;
9:13 p.m., West Main Street,
LETART- Spring cleanup
assisted
by Pomeroy, Angie
of Letart falls Cemetery will
begin soon. Those \vith grave Conlin, HMC;
Sunday, 8:41 a.n1., Stiversville
blankets and flowers they want
Road,
assisted by Racine as
. to preserve are asked to remove
First Responder, Greg Weddle,
them by March 26.
JGH;
7:07 p.m., Ohio 7, Willie
Jones, Camden-Clark MemorPOMEROY -The annual ial Hospital.
POMEROY
observance of the American
Saturday,
4:10 p.m., State
Legion birthday will be held
by Drew Webstet Post 39, Street, A ira Little, HMC.
· Tuesday, with a 7 p.m. dinner at
REEDSVILLE
the Senior Citizens Center. · Sunday, 3:27 p.m., Coolville
Road, Betty Delong, CCMH.
p.n&gt;.
.
RUTLAND
The Legionnai~ of the Year
will be selected and there will
Saturday, 4:43 p.m., Mulberbe dinner music. Gerald ry Avenue, Lisa Haggy, HMC;
Rought, commander, invites
Sunday, 12:14 p.m., Salem
legion and auxiliary members Street, Ariene Taylor, Pleasant
and their spouses.
Valley Hospital.

USB -21

Ohio Volley Publlohlng Co.

Ext. 14

Ext. 3

VFW meeting

inddents

City Holding - 1oY,
'Federal Mogul - · 3),

(USPS 21 3-HD)

0111y

Advartlolng

MIDDLEPORT Daily
prayer gatherings are being
held in preparation for the
Power Team Ministry, March
28-April I.
. Today from 6:30 to 7 p.m . a
prayer session will be held at
the Rejoicing Life Church in
Middleport, and. Tuesday's
schedule will be 10 to 10:30
a.m. at ·th e Abundant Grace
Church, and from 10:30 to 11
:1 .m. at the Hobson Christian
Fellowship Church both in
Middleport.

Sheriff probes

_

Ext. 13

Other aervlcea

Power Team

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The

LOCAL STOCKS

Niwe

•
••

'

.•

manager

REEDSVILLE
Riverview Garden Club will
meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at
the Reedsville Church of
Christ. The program will
including making Easter favors
a a nuning home.

Party slated

Ext. 12

General

Dry in area until Wednesday

aeanupset

ono-k
One month
Ono yur

•

VALLEY WEATHER

Garden dub

POMEROY - A report of
a missing juvenile is being
investigated
the
by
Meigs
County
Sheriff's
Department.
According to the
sheriff's
deparm1ent,
Tiffany N. Priddy, 17, was
recendy reported as missing by
her parents, Gary and Arika
Priddy of Rudand. Priddy was
last seen. on March 12 along
Main Street in Pomeroy.
Priddy is 5 feet tall, weighs
. 92 pounds and has brown eyes
and hair.
Anyone knowing of Priddy's
whereaboutl can contact the
Meigs County Sherifl's Office
at 740-992-3371.

triers, but did not pay for. The
lawmakers felt they were not
· given credit for the work they
did,
Finan rolled out the Senate
: Republicans' funding plan the
day after Taft introduced his
own in the State of the Sute
spe~ch. A week later, Householder introduced a barebones funding plan, saying he
· .didn't think anyone believed
Taft's or Finan's plans would
meet a Supreme Court ,mandate to fix the way Ohio funds
public schools.
The top-level scene stealing
and one-upmanship is a far
cry from the 1997 school
funding debate, which began
after the Supreme Court's
original ruling that the way
Ohio funds its schools is
unconstitutional.
After some harsh critictsm
·of the court's decision, thenGov. George Voinovich, Finan
and then-Speaker Jo lrnn
Davidson, all . Republicans,
focused on a single plan.1f~at
one failed, but by May 19.98,
the three were able to g~~. a
sales-tax increase before ~t- .
.ers, who ultimately rejected it.
But through the 15 mon~hs
that the issue dominat~d
Statehouse politics, they
worked with one voice, for
the most part.
,
Householder, thanks to
term liniits, became speaker
after just four yean in the
House. Davi(lson waited 1f!.
years and Finan I9 years to · AEP- 44,•
assume control of their cham- Arch Coal ~ 22~
ben. · It may be that House-. . Akzo- 43'1'.
,
21
holder, who passed over ~T=~~:c 3~ '
Davidson's choice to become ,, AT&amp;T- 22'1.
· c h angmg
· th e. rul es.
BankOne-34~
spea ke r, ts
Bob
Evans- 19\
BorgWamer- 42
Champion
- 2'o
'
. Charming
Shops
5,,_

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

The Dally Sentinel • Page A3

LOCAL BRIEFS

Deaths

Record numbers enrolled in prepaid tuition plan

CLEVELAND {AP) -The Ford Motor Co. decided to keep
its Cleveland Casting Pbnt closed into a new work week. The
pbnt, which has about 2,500 employees, is being disinfected after
an outbreak of Legionnaires' disease.
Four Ford worken were diagnosed with the disease and two
have died.
Ford has been cleaning the plant and had hoped to open it alter
the weekend. But Ford spokesman Ed Lewis said Sunday at the
plant that about 500 worken who would have report•d at midnight for their Monday shift were told the plant would not open
then.
"We are making significant progress in our disinfection process,
and we expect to open in the next day or so," Lewis said. "Ford
will return to full production when government health and safety authorities complete their review."

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

•

CHE STER.
.
H· i·Gnt~NDPAAENTS
r.&gt;:r
.1, ~
,H AMI L.TON AN O THio. LATE EDGAR HAMILJON OF Clo ~ rt HVILd...
M~:~.rF;t.N~t

OHIO, AND ELLA .MAE SANNER OP TROY, OHIO.
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PATiiRNAIL OREAT-GRANDMRENTS ARE BOB AND
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Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Plant willtauain dosed

Monday, March 111, 2001

Mond.y. Mllrch lt. 2001

COLUMBUS (AP) -J'he recent talk more people are saving.
Maureen O'Brien, marketing director
of tuition increases among Ohio's public
universities may be behind the record at the Tuition Trust Authoriry, says pubenrollment in a state program that allows licizing the new savings options that
families to pay their children's college invests tuition money more aggressively
tuition in advance at today's rates.
- but witli more risk - has increased
The Ohio Tuition Trust Authority's enrollment, too.
"It's a double-edged sword With the
College Advantage Savings Plan has
15,171 people enrolled.
costs of college rising. Some will invest,
Since July, enrollment has increased by but some get scared off because it almost
seems like the cost of college is unaf41 percent, its biggest jump in years.
"At the rate we're going, this is going_ fordable no matter what;' O 'Brien said.
to be our' best year ever;' said Judy CunThe new plan, called Variable Investningham, public relations manager at the ment Funds, offers options based on the
authority.
,
child's age and the risk a parent or other
Talk of tuition increases, like the 19 investor is willing to take. The money,
percent increase that Ohio State Univer- which can be deducted directly from
sity wants to implement over the next paychecks, is invested by Putnam Investtwo years, is only pact of the reason why ments, based in Boston. The return flue-

Comair pilots voting on offer

HEBRON, Ky. (AP) - Pilots of the Comair regional commuter airhne on Monday were awaiting the results of voting on
whether to accept the company's contnct offer.
Comair's offer was mailed to the approximately I ,35Q pilots,
who began voting by telephone last Tuesday.
Barring an agreement or presidential intervention, a srrike
· Schools and the West Clermont Schools in neighboring ClerSunbury officials said they were disappointed.
could start as soon as 12:01 a.m. on March 26- effectively shutti&gt;ont County are hoping that $3 million in grants they are using
ting down Comair's main hub at the Cincinnati-Northern Kento create smaller high schools will reduce dropout rates and
tucky International Airport.
increase student achievement.
Union and Comair officials said they would prefer to work out
DAYTON (AP)- A hospital has told 50 nurses accidentally
The grants received last year from the Bill and Melinda Gates
a deal without a strike or outside intervention.
overp~id for overtime \VOrk that they will have to repay the Foundation and the Knowledge Works Foundation are intended
money.
to involve communities in changing high schpols from large,
Chuck Vella, a spokesman for the i.1ayton Heart Hospital, said impersonal facilities to more intimate environments to improve
the money was overpaid because of the complexity o( the hospi- learning opportuni!ies.
TOLEDO (AP) - Iffederal forecasts for continuing low water tal's payroll system. The hospital said the pmblem was discovered
The Cincinnati district received $1.9 .million .from the Gates
levels on Lake Erie are accurate, boaters could find themselves through a payroll review and a supervisor who came forward.
Foundation, established by Microsoft founder Bill Gates and his
spending a chunk of the boating season at the dock.
"The ·n eed to recoup the overpayment is stricdy a matter of wife, Melinda Gates. The West Clermont district received
"It's not looking good for marina operaton' peak season," said
fairness and equity to other employees," the hospital said.
$796,000, which was matched by Corning Precision Lens~
Frank Quinn, a senior hydrologist with the National Oceanic and
"I want everyone to know that we are going to work with the : The districts are sharing $250,000 from KnowledgeWorks, a
Atmospheric Administration's Great Lakes Environmental
nurses who were overpaid on an mdivtdual basiS to ensure that , Cincinnati-based education philanthropy.
Research Laboratory in Ann Arbor, Mich.
they can repay the overpayments without any undue financial ·
While Winter got off to a cold, snowy start in the lower Great burden on them," the hospital's chief executive, Ken Howell,
Lakes, that type of weather didn't endure, Quinn said.
wrote in a memo Friday to employees.
Lake Erie reached a near-normal maximum of 94 percent ice
CLEVELAND (AP) - LTV Corp., operating under bankcoverage in-January, but the ice soon melted, allowing lake evapruptcy court protection, may be ready to shed a less profitable
oration to resume sooner than norn&gt;al.
Clevebnd steel mill, The Pbin Dealer reported Sunday.
CUYAHOGA HEIGHTS (AP) - Metropolitan park .officials
The pbnt on the west bank of the Cuyahoga River has more
are going to try needles instead of bullets to control the groWing than 500 ·employees and makes steel that other companies buy and
deer population, a method suggested by people who oppose the grind into parts or pipes.
COLUMBUS (AP) - School district and union officials are annual shooting of hundreds of deer in the parks.
LTV's more profitable plant on the east bank of the river makes
working on a plan to give teachen bonuses up to $4,000 if stuOfficials will test their pbn by i!1iecting deer captured at Ohio
smooth, clean steel that ends up as car bumpen or appliances and
dents improve test scores .or attendance.
&amp; Erie Canal Reservation with a birth control drug and then
has less competition, the newspaper reported.
Both sides believe the program would be the only one of its releasing them.
Analysa and union leaden said that, With LTV putting togethkind in the nation. Details still are being worked out.
Cleveland Metroparks spokeswoman M. Jane Christyson said
State proficiency testS would not be used as· the benchmark for park officials have been loolclng:for an opportunity to test a fer- er a pbn to revene financial losses, the west bank pbnt and its
structures dating as far back as 1912 could be ripe for a divestiture.
determining students' gains. However, the program would be tility control agent.
geared toward improving learning in the five areas on the tests Metroparks officials said the drug is relatively new and will be
reading, writing, math, science and citizenship.
effective for as long as two yean. -A previous venion of the drug
Teachen would not be the only ones who could receive bont~s­ lasted about three months.
CLEVELAND (AP) - The Cleveland Metroparks Zoo . has
es. Union memben in nonteaching assignments would have to
destroyed some exotic birds to stop the spread of avian tuberculopropose some type of activity that benefia students, such as tutorSIS.
ing or working to increase attendance, the sixth area in which
Stan ,Searles, the zoo's curator of ornithology, said the killing
employees could earn bonuses.
AKRON (AP) -A woman whose death was investigated as a
suspected m'uldei has been buried' for the third time.
·
· starred bst fall. Searles oould not say how many birds were lcilled
because he did not have records at home.
Betty Mosley's fine burial was after her death 14 months ago.
Zoo officials 4st euthanized a bird in Februaty, he said.
The second came in December, when the prosecutor's office
Searles was not sure what caused the TB outbreak. He said the
DELAWARE (AP) -A judge commended a former village exhumed her body so that they could remove a letter from her
zoo
could have acquired a bird with the disease because the illness
official for paying back nearly $18,000 in public funds she had burial vault. They thought the letter might implicate her husband,
does not al\vays show up in screening tests.
stolen, then sentenced her to two years' probation.
Doug Mosley Sr., in her death.
"You'"' a refreshing contrast to many of these kinds of cases,"
Instead, the letter turned out to be a farewell note from her
Judge Henry Shaw Jr. of Delaware County Common Pleas Court adult son. Prosecutors hod her Tallmadge Cemetery grave dug up
said to Carol Weathernun.
friday so that Doug Mosley Jr. could return the letter to th'e cofWeathern1an, 61, pleaded guilty on Jan. 29' to a felony charge of fin.
MEDINA (AP) - A gun maker has memorialized Medina's
theft in office for nuking out extra paychecks to herself while she
history with a limited-edition rifle that has some residents leu
was clerk-treasurer ofSunbury. She could have been sentenced to
than thrilled.
as much aa five yean in prison, but Shaw said he tt:Jolt a number
James McClain, a salesman with lnvestn1ent Arms Inc., admits
offacto11 into consideration, including the restitution and her lack
CINCINNATI (AP) - Officials in the Cincinnati Public he has received a few puzzled looks when visiting Medina Counof a crilninal record.
ty businesses last week to show off the $2,995 firearm,

MASON, W.Va. -Victoria Lambert White, 77, Mason, died
Saturday, March 17, 2001 at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
She was born April 11, 1923 in Harts, W.Va., daughter of the
late John C. and Martha Robinson Lambert, she was a homemaker.
She is survived by her husband, Sidney C. White of Mason; a
daughter and son-in-law, Lois A. and Dale M. Payne of
Glouster; five sisters, Cuba Dempsey, Lona Browning, Mollie
Dalton, Melva Dempsey and Bernice Tomblin, alL of Harts; a
brother, Claude T. Lambert of Harts; a grandson; .land several
nieces and nephews.
She was also preceded in death bjr a brother, Floyd Lambert.
. Services were held at 1 p.m. today, Monday, March 19, 2001
, m Fogelsong Funeral Home, Mason, with the Rev. Billy Zuspan officiating. Burial was in Kirkland Cemetery.Visitation was
held in the funeral home today from 10 a.m. until the rime of

services.

Obituaries

Nurses must repay overtime

Lula Shaffer
POMEROY - Lula Shaffer, 9,1, of Pomeroy, died on Saturday, March 17, 2001 at the extended care unit of Veterans
Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy.
She was born on July 27, 1909 in Pliny, West Virginia, daughter of the late Noah Myers and Sarah Martin Myers.' She was a
homemaker.
Surviving are a niece and her husband, Betty and Bob Pooler of Middleport, and five nephews and their wives, Charlene
and Inez Roy, and Bob and Hazel Roy, all of Racine, Ronnie
arid Faye Myen, and Mike and Margie Myers, both of Caldwell, and R;ay and Grace Myers of Athens.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by two
husbands, Cassa Rose and Bonney Shaffer, her brothers and sisters, Marie, Mary, Jane, Liza, Laurel, Rielly, Ed, John, Jim and
Hetzel; and an adopted sister, Laurel.
Private graveside services will be conducted for the family,
with the Rev. Mark Morrow officiating. Arrangements were
completed by Fishcr-Acree Funeral Home in Middleport.
There will be no calling hours.
·

Forecast concems boaters

LTV may shed plant

Park deer get birth conbol

· Bonus part of incentive plan ·

Zoo: no outbreak of bird TB

Woman buried for third time

Ex-clerk pts probation

·Rille memorializes town history

1\No districts cut class size

· Evangelist says Wife won't
. survive If she leaves his home
,
,
·'

•

DELAWARE "(AP) -An
evangelist whose wife has
been declared incompetent
says she won't survive if she
leaves his home.
"They will put her in a
nursing . home, that'! what
they said," the Rev. Leroy
Jenkins said Saturday at the
home, part of his Heiling
Waters Cathedral compound
north of Columbus. "If she
goes our of this house, she is
going to die:"
Eloise Thomas Jenkins was
declared incompetent Friday
by Franklin County Probate
Judge Lawrence. Belskis, who
selected state Sen. Ben Espy
of Columbus as Mrs. Jenkins'
guardian. The jud~'s ruling
suggested Jenkins might have
taken advantage of his wife,
whose remaining wealth from
a lottery jackpot nine years
ago is estimated at $2 nlillion.
Belskis also asked prosecutors ·to investigate large withdrawals from her bank
accounts.
Jenkins told The Columbus
Dispatch for a story Sunday
that the decision amazed hini.
"Are they going to prosecute me for marrying her?"
he asked. .
1
Jenkins, 6f, had asked for
legal guardianship of his 76year-old wife, as had Mrs.
Jenkins' sister and a Colum•bus lawyer who had served as

Mrs.]ertkins and her
'first husband who have
h'l · ' ·
no ~ t dr~~· won $~. 9
mtllion ut tht Ohro
Super' Lotto in 1992
and split the money.

Jenkins repeatedly said he
does not want his wife's ·
money. He said his ministry is
seen nationwide on satellite
·television and is thriving,
with assets worth several million dollars and no deb(.
· "Our church is doing betguardian for Mrs.Jehkltls' late ter financially than it has
done in yC:ars," he said.
·
husband.
.
·He also said that two
Although the judge said it
wasn't in the woman's best months ago, he turned dowri
interest to remain with Jenk- an offer from a woman who
ins, the minister hopes she told 'him she had bought a
million--dollar mansion in ·
can stay.
"I am going to talk to Espy Ocala, Fla., and wanted to
to see if he will let her stay give it to him. He declined to
here as long as he controls her identify the woman.
money," he said. ''It breaks my · Mrs. Jenkins said she thinks
heart that they can destroy the family dispute over her
her life."
well-being ,is ·t he result of sibMrs. Jenkins has lived with ling greed.
·
the evangelist since Novem"! have two greedy sisters,"
ber, a month before her hus- she sa.id. "They think I am
band, Roy, died Dec. 27. She going to give Leroy a dime
and Jenkins were married 16 and they want a dollar.
days later, on Jan. 12.
"They were . never there
Mrs. Jenkins and her first
when I needed. them. All they
husband, who have. no chilare doing is looking (&lt;ir a
dren, won $6.9 nlillion in the
handout, but now it's about
Ohio Super Lotto in 1992
time for me to take care of
and split the money.
"I don't see why I have to Eloise."
She said she has loved Jenkmove," she said. "But if Leroy
ins
since she literally bumped
tells me to go, I'll go."
Jenkins said his wife has into him on a Columbus
gained 12 1/2 pounds since street after one of his services.
"I kissed him on the cheek
moving in with him.
three
times, saying 'I love
"And they said she was
dying of malnutrition before you. I love you. I lo.Ve you;"
she." came here," he said.
she said.
•II

•

A SPECIAL
SECTION
'
In The
e ~qtnt ~leasant ~egtster

• ~aUtpoHs 11Batlp m:rtbune
• Pomeroy Daily Sentinel

_Advertising Deadline:
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 4, 2001
12:00Noon
.I Insertion Date:
FRIDAY, APRIL 13, 2001
Call
"ave Harris or Debbie Call
D_
• For Mor·e Information

992-2156

Juvenile missin1

.Vktoria White

tuates with the stock market.
Before October, the only savings
option the authority offered was the
tuition credit plan . Now called the
Guaranteed Savings Fund, this plan lets
parents buy tuition credits or "units" that
lock in today'• college prices.
A unit costs S51 and, on average, it
takes I 00 units to pay for tuition for one
year at a public, four-year Ohio university. Mote-expensive schools require
more units and less-expensive schools,
fewer units.
This plan is guaranteed by the state.
Units grow at about -the same rate- 5
percent to 6 percent- that tuition has
increased. Both savings plans can be used
at state, private and out-of-state schools .

House
fromPipA1
and not due back for a week
when
Householder
dropped his pbn on state leaders, who were caught offguard.
.
.
Mary Anne Sharkey, Taft's
1.....r&lt;ommunioations. director, said
the governor learned of the
plan after someone in the
.. speaker's office phoned a top
Taft aide on Sunday night. It
hit the papers Monday morning.
Householder brushed aside
questions about the tinting.
"He introduced his budget
. · and I certainly didn't have any
input on 'his education plan.
. , We just did what the House
had to do," Householder said.
"I think that we have three
very reasonably minded peo: pie who are going to sit and a
; room and talk alitde bit about
: all this."
•
Householder's plan is estimated to spend $3 billion in
new funding over the next
twO yeart, compared With the
; Republicans' S1.3 billion plan
• and Tatt's $800 million solu•• tion. .
•
The events widened a rift in
protocol that has emerged
since the new General Assembly - with Finan and first: year speaker Householder in
: charge - · took over in Janu• ary
,
Even earlier, Republican
: lawmakers had grumbled
; about Tatt's proposal to elimi; nate budgetary mandates the
· d o f sc h ooI. dis•• state tequ•re
•

•

••

Correction Polley

.' .
•'•
•
•

•t

Our main concern in all stories Is
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al (740) 992-2156.

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area's

weather will be appropriate
for the arrival of spring this
week , forecasters said.
Dry skies and mild temperatures are expected until
Wednesday, the first day of
spring, the National Weather
Service said.
Highs on Tuesday will be
50-55. Lows on Tu esday night
will be in the 30s.
Sunse t tomght will be at
6:42 , ~ nd sunrise on Tu esday
is at 6:35 a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight ... Mo stly
clear.
Low 30 . to 34. Lig ht east
wind.
Tu esday... Be-coJning
cloudy. H1 gh m th e mid 50s.
EJSt wind 5 to I 0 mph.
Tuesday night ... Cloudy.

Low in the upper 30s.
Extended forecast:
Wednesday... A chance of
rain during the day, otherwise
partly cloudy. High in the mid
50s.
Thursday... Partly cloudy
with a chance of showers.
Low 30 to 35 and high 53 to
58 .
Friday... Mostly
cloudy
with a chance of showers during the day, then a chance 'o f
snow or rain showers during
the night. Low in the mid 30s
and high 42 to 47.
Saturday... Mostly cloudy
with a chan ce of snow o r rain
showers. Low ii1 the lower 30s
and high 40 to 45.
Sunday... M ostly
cloudy
with a cilJn Ct' o f snow or rain
showers. Low nea r 30 and
high 39 t&lt;;&gt; 44 :

.., . m i1lion accounts w o rth
$21 G million . Moore encouraged current and former
Ohio residents to visit the
Department of Commerce's
at
said David L. Moore, superin- website ·
tendent of unclaimed funds.
www. c om . stat~:.oh . us
to
The total value of the check to see if they have
:tccounts to be advertised, un claimed funds waiting to
which include only those be claimed.
accounts turned over to th e
In additioll, individuals can
state within the past year, is write to the Division of
$34,783.54. The adverttsed Unclaimed Funds and pronames will appear in alpha- vide the full name to be
betical order by the owner's researched, along with the
last knmvn city and then in counties in which the person
alphabeti cal order by the may have resided. The diviowner's last name.
sion's address is 77 S. High St.,
Meigs County accounts Columbus, Ohio 43266total $128,995 .16, and the 0545.
largest account listed is the
Individuals may also contact
Herbert Stafford Estate, with their county treasurer's office
a value of $5,085.29.
where advertisements (or pre- ·
Including the accounts vious years and lists of
being advertised, the divisioh accounts under $50 are often
is holding a statewide total of available for review.

Funds

from PageAl

Six firefighters buy fire truck
to ke~p it in community
WOOSTER."(AP) -When
this ciry put its 40-year-old ·
fire truck up for auction, some
firefighters rescued it with
their bid.
Mike Sigg, director of
administration for Wooster,
was pleased. He said the community can look forward to
seeing the 1961 Seagrave Fire
Truck from time to time. But

those times will be ceremonial rather than emergencies.
The pumper truck was a
big-ticket item at Saturday's
26th annual Wooster Rotary
Club Gallery Antique Auction.

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

Rockwell- 42),
Rocky Boots - 4'•
AD Shell - 56,,

.

Saara-36~

Shoney's- 1
Wol-Man- 47
Wendy's - 22,,
Worthington- gi,
Dally stock reports are
tho 4 p.m. closing
quotes of the previous

OVB-25
BBT -34l,

Peoples - 17~

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CHESTER • JASON AND NATASHA
RIDENOUR ANNOUNCE THE BIRTH OF
THEIR FIRST CHILD, A DAUGHTER, ABBIE
LYNN, BORN OH JIUIUAAV 14, 2001, AT
"HOlZER
H OSPtTAL,
IN GALUPOUS,
0HID,
SHE WEIGHED 6 POUNDS, 7
OUNCES. AND 20 INCHES LONG •
MATERNAL GRANDPARENTS ARE
SnvE HAMILTON OF COOLYILLE AND
TERE8A KENDALL OF TROY, 0H10.
PATERNAL GRANDPARENTS ARE
ROBERTA R1DENOUR OF POMEROY AND
JOHN AND KAREN RIDENOUR OF

carrier ltNtce Is available.
Ext. 4

EMS runs

tri-cou ntv

Published every afternoon, Monday
through Friday, 111 Court St.,

or

Circulation

TUPPERS PLAINS VFW Post 9053 meets at the
hall in Tuppers Plains at 7 p.m.
on Thursday. There will be a
special drawing.

POMEROY - The Meigs
County Sheriff's Department
investigated two complaints
and arrested two individuals:
• A · Pepsi machine at
Ritchie's Auto Sales was
recendy broken into and an
TUPPERS PLAINS unknown amount of money
Trustees
of the Tuppers Plains
was taken;
Christian Cemetery will begin
• An auto accide~t was invesremoving flowers and other
tigated early Saturday. Jared W.
Smith was eastbound on Ohio grave decorations on April I .
681 when he fell asleep at the Anything to be saved should be
wheel and ran of the right side removed before then. The $25
annual maintenance fee is due
of the road.
The vehicle struck a fence for each grave.
owned by Robert 'Keaton.
There was no injuries and
Smith was cited for failure to
POMEROY- Units of the
control;
• Melissa Stacy was arrested Meigs Emergency Service
and charged with driving answered 10 calls for assistance
under the ilifluence, lett of over the weekend. Units
center and possession of mari- responded as follows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
juana. She is currendy awaiting
Saturday,
11 :33 a.m., South
her court date;
• Roger Thompson was Secord, assisted by Pomeroy,
arrested Friday night for Dorothy Roush; Holzer Med-'
domestic violence. He is cur- ical Center;
3:Q8 p.m.,Valley Belle Road,
rently being held in the Meigs
County Jail pending his court .Ricky Deeter, treated;
4:12p.m. ,Valley Bolle Road,
appearance.
assisted by Racine, Ricky
Deeter, Jackson General Hospital;
9:13 p.m., West Main Street,
LETART- Spring cleanup
assisted
by Pomeroy, Angie
of Letart falls Cemetery will
begin soon. Those \vith grave Conlin, HMC;
Sunday, 8:41 a.n1., Stiversville
blankets and flowers they want
Road,
assisted by Racine as
. to preserve are asked to remove
First Responder, Greg Weddle,
them by March 26.
JGH;
7:07 p.m., Ohio 7, Willie
Jones, Camden-Clark MemorPOMEROY -The annual ial Hospital.
POMEROY
observance of the American
Saturday,
4:10 p.m., State
Legion birthday will be held
by Drew Webstet Post 39, Street, A ira Little, HMC.
· Tuesday, with a 7 p.m. dinner at
REEDSVILLE
the Senior Citizens Center. · Sunday, 3:27 p.m., Coolville
Road, Betty Delong, CCMH.
p.n&gt;.
.
RUTLAND
The Legionnai~ of the Year
will be selected and there will
Saturday, 4:43 p.m., Mulberbe dinner music. Gerald ry Avenue, Lisa Haggy, HMC;
Rought, commander, invites
Sunday, 12:14 p.m., Salem
legion and auxiliary members Street, Ariene Taylor, Pleasant
and their spouses.
Valley Hospital.

USB -21

Ohio Volley Publlohlng Co.

Ext. 14

Ext. 3

VFW meeting

inddents

City Holding - 1oY,
'Federal Mogul - · 3),

(USPS 21 3-HD)

0111y

Advartlolng

MIDDLEPORT Daily
prayer gatherings are being
held in preparation for the
Power Team Ministry, March
28-April I.
. Today from 6:30 to 7 p.m . a
prayer session will be held at
the Rejoicing Life Church in
Middleport, and. Tuesday's
schedule will be 10 to 10:30
a.m. at ·th e Abundant Grace
Church, and from 10:30 to 11
:1 .m. at the Hobson Christian
Fellowship Church both in
Middleport.

Sheriff probes

_

Ext. 13

Other aervlcea

Power Team

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The

LOCAL STOCKS

Niwe

•
••

'

.•

manager

REEDSVILLE
Riverview Garden Club will
meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at
the Reedsville Church of
Christ. The program will
including making Easter favors
a a nuning home.

Party slated

Ext. 12

General

Dry in area until Wednesday

aeanupset

ono-k
One month
Ono yur

•

VALLEY WEATHER

Garden dub

POMEROY - A report of
a missing juvenile is being
investigated
the
by
Meigs
County
Sheriff's
Department.
According to the
sheriff's
deparm1ent,
Tiffany N. Priddy, 17, was
recendy reported as missing by
her parents, Gary and Arika
Priddy of Rudand. Priddy was
last seen. on March 12 along
Main Street in Pomeroy.
Priddy is 5 feet tall, weighs
. 92 pounds and has brown eyes
and hair.
Anyone knowing of Priddy's
whereaboutl can contact the
Meigs County Sherifl's Office
at 740-992-3371.

triers, but did not pay for. The
lawmakers felt they were not
· given credit for the work they
did,
Finan rolled out the Senate
: Republicans' funding plan the
day after Taft introduced his
own in the State of the Sute
spe~ch. A week later, Householder introduced a barebones funding plan, saying he
· .didn't think anyone believed
Taft's or Finan's plans would
meet a Supreme Court ,mandate to fix the way Ohio funds
public schools.
The top-level scene stealing
and one-upmanship is a far
cry from the 1997 school
funding debate, which began
after the Supreme Court's
original ruling that the way
Ohio funds its schools is
unconstitutional.
After some harsh critictsm
·of the court's decision, thenGov. George Voinovich, Finan
and then-Speaker Jo lrnn
Davidson, all . Republicans,
focused on a single plan.1f~at
one failed, but by May 19.98,
the three were able to g~~. a
sales-tax increase before ~t- .
.ers, who ultimately rejected it.
But through the 15 mon~hs
that the issue dominat~d
Statehouse politics, they
worked with one voice, for
the most part.
,
Householder, thanks to
term liniits, became speaker
after just four yean in the
House. Davi(lson waited 1f!.
years and Finan I9 years to · AEP- 44,•
assume control of their cham- Arch Coal ~ 22~
ben. · It may be that House-. . Akzo- 43'1'.
,
21
holder, who passed over ~T=~~:c 3~ '
Davidson's choice to become ,, AT&amp;T- 22'1.
· c h angmg
· th e. rul es.
BankOne-34~
spea ke r, ts
Bob
Evans- 19\
BorgWamer- 42
Champion
- 2'o
'
. Charming
Shops
5,,_

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

The Dally Sentinel • Page A3

LOCAL BRIEFS

Deaths

Record numbers enrolled in prepaid tuition plan

CLEVELAND {AP) -The Ford Motor Co. decided to keep
its Cleveland Casting Pbnt closed into a new work week. The
pbnt, which has about 2,500 employees, is being disinfected after
an outbreak of Legionnaires' disease.
Four Ford worken were diagnosed with the disease and two
have died.
Ford has been cleaning the plant and had hoped to open it alter
the weekend. But Ford spokesman Ed Lewis said Sunday at the
plant that about 500 worken who would have report•d at midnight for their Monday shift were told the plant would not open
then.
"We are making significant progress in our disinfection process,
and we expect to open in the next day or so," Lewis said. "Ford
will return to full production when government health and safety authorities complete their review."

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

•

CHE STER.
.
H· i·Gnt~NDPAAENTS
r.&gt;:r
.1, ~
,H AMI L.TON AN O THio. LATE EDGAR HAMILJON OF Clo ~ rt HVILd...
M~:~.rF;t.N~t

OHIO, AND ELLA .MAE SANNER OP TROY, OHIO.
..
•
PATiiRNAIL OREAT-GRANDMRENTS ARE BOB AND
. . MARILYNN TAUIIELL AND PAUUNI RIDENOUR AND THE LATE . .
~ BUEL RIDENOUR, ALL OP CHESTER. '
~

~

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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Chari- HOiftlch
Gen•ral Manager

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

"

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

I.AitMr to 1M ~dilrw tUe wtlc&lt;HtU. TINy slttnlld H WfltluJn 300 word~.

,tU ltntm

an ndJfrct tD &lt;ldhinr and"'"'' IH sirMtl •IWilnellltU MJ/wu end &amp;eWJ,Ihotlt n!Uftbtr.
No IIMifrwd ktlfn wiU brt publbhtd. Lflltn sholll4 IH in pod IMit, MMn11U.,

iwus, I'UH pu~~JMiiriu
Tlu Ol'iniotll upnsttd in thf rolMm11 IH/Qw tw tlu t:tHUtniMI fl/lht OltW V.U.)'
P11blishinr Co. 'r ttlhorlal board, ,.,.,.,. otlterwiu Mltd.

..

.'

NATIONAL VIEWS

··.

Wakeup

majority in the Senate, agreement on controversial issues was
hard to come by in a hamstrun g political arena. ...
·
Closer to home that likely m,eans a delay in funding, and
starting constru ction on an $18.5 million higher education
center for Yakima Valley Community College. Another quake
casualty could be a $25 million building to house the music
program on the campus of Central Washington University in
Ellensburg.
Reasonable people realize that damage repair has to take priority over new projects. And as long as the local projecls are
only delayed, not eliminated since the case for them has been
made, we have to do our part. ...
Extraordinary events call for extraordinary responses, but let
them at least be in the spirit of bipartisan reason and commitment to doing what's best for the public's interests. The public,
in turn, must be ready to offer understanding and support as we
put the state back together ....
• The Kansas City Star, 011 Cheney's healt!J: Vice President
Dick Cheney's latest round of heatt trouble, together with his
aides' latest round of trouble explaining what happened, underscores the need for Cheney to provide the public with a fuller
and more accurate report on his health history and current
medical condition.
The evasions and stonewalling on this subject have gone on
since last year's campaign. Aides are happy to provide trivial
information - woeful tales of how Cheney is skipping sweets,
for example - and positive general assessments of his health.
The vice president has not released his full medical records,
creating the distinct impression that his problems are more serious than he and his aides have indicated....
This issue has assumed more and more importance as it has
become clear how central the vice president's role has become
in the new admipistration, including heavier responsibilities on
Capitol Hill than most vice presidents have faceq.
Cheney is entitled to some degree of medical privacy in certain areas. He owes the public a far better picture of his health
history and current medical condition than he has so far been
willing to provide.

TODAY IN HISTORY

believing that sex should be reserved
for marriage. I also was not crazy
about the idea of marriage and commitment, and spent many years avoiding both. Because of this, I remained a
virgin until I was 29. At that time, I
mer '·'Wayne;' and decided it was time
to give up my virginity.
I am very fond ofWayne. I love his
intellect and his personality. I love to
talk to him and feel very comfortable
with him. The problem is this: After
the novelty wore off, I concluded that
sex is highly overrated. I have to pretend in order to get it over with.
Wayne is lousy in bed and has gained
so much weight in the last few years
that I find him physically unattractive.
Meanwhile, all he talks about IS marriage, and it scares the daylights out of.
me.

'

KILPATRICK'S VIEW

Ann
Landers
ADVICE
I don't want to end our relationship,
but I am not interested in marrying
Wayne. However, if I told him, I fear
he would go to pieces. He has madd a
lot of sacrifices for me (even though I
never asked him to), and I feel guilty
not wanting to sleep with him anymore. Please help m e. - Just
Friends in New Hampshire
Dear Just Friends: The hon orable
thing to do is to level with Wayne and

·r

"

know, I did not have any involvement;
you know, and I'm just very disappoint-'
',
ed. ...
"Oh. you know, as I have said in the,
past, there were.many. many people who,
spoke to me or, you know, asked me to
pass on information .... Wit.h respect to
Mr. Cunningham, I know that. he .is, you
know, a fine lawyer and a fine man ..."
Getting back to her brother: "He was
a frequent guest at the White House, you
COLUMNIST
know ... Well, you know, I h ear so many,
rumors all the time that, you know, I.
pretty good case ... Britain and the Unit- really, you know, vague rumors don 'b
ed States have got a special relationship." mean anything ·to me anymore." Again,
HAVE, sir! Just "have." The "got," sir, is on the matter of her brother's involve-,
rnent: "I was heartbro~en and. jhqok~P,
redundant. ' ·
by
it and, yo u know, immediately saiq
What about the budge!) The president
· had a promise 'to voice. '.'We 'lfC going to this. You know, this is a tercihle misjudgslow the rate of growth of the budget ment and the money had to be returned ..
down." Mr. Bush was so pleased with You know, this is a very sad matter to m~
·
that syntax he repeated• himself: "We'll personally."
To sum up: "Well, you know, I'm very
be slowing the rate of growth of the
budget down." At least he doesn't pro- dis.appointed about what's gone on fo(
pose to .slow the rate of growth of the the last weeks .... I have gotten up every .
day and worked as hard as I can to be the
budget up.
The rigors of the ' campaign trail best senator I can be. And that's what I
should have prepared the country for the · intend to do.You know, I'm here to meet
president's pratfalls. At one point he with my staffs about our legislative ageninformed us that "more and more of our da .... So I have my hands full being a
imports come from overseas." He offered senator, learning the ropes, you know,
a solution to the country's economic •working with my colleagues. And I'm
woes that is simple and straightforward: having a really good time doing it, but of
"We ought to make the pie higher." A course I'm disappointed and saddened
that, you know, these matters are up."
noble aspiration.
'
So spoke Hillary, speaking the speech
While the president was. having his
of La-La Land. Granunarwise, her sentroubles, Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton
tences were better than Bush's, you
was having hers. She called a press conknow, but him and her would make a
ference to disclaim ~ny role in the rash
great team. You know.
of pardons. "You know, it came as a surllrise to me." Had she spoken to her husOames j Kilpatrick is a columni!l for .Uni·
band about his acts of clemency? "You versa/ Press Syndicate.)

BUSINESS MIRROR

Challenges awa# Americas economic recovery·
BY JoHN CUNNIFF

NEW YORK - So why, you might
ask, are so many investors relying on a
one-half point cut in interest rates and a
measly $1.6 trillion tax cut spread over
10 years to bail them out of the great
market collapse?
It might rake a lot more than that,
because something like $4 trillion has
disappeared from investor pocketbooks,
and not in five years or 10, but in just the
one year since the stock market began its
lamentable descent.
Ask the question and inevitably you
are told it will raise confidence, and that
might be tru e. But it will hardly lift it to
the irrationally exuberant levels that created those easy tril!ions. Billions at best.
Investor ·confidence alone jsn't likely
to reunite the love affair with stocks.
Distrust has been sown, and when it
enters any relationship, things are seldom
the same. There won't be any irrational
exuberance for a while.
For one thing, millions of Baby
Boomers were known to have taken
what they felt was their last shot at
becoming wealthy. Now, chagrined,
older and nearer retirement, they're not
likely to take such risks again. More likely, their confidence
be expressed in
slow, steady· increments,

will

..

U.S. consumer confidence, no matter turn in better shape than such nerds.
how its recovers; isn't likely to impress ·Their equity intact, they ·can now refiforeign investors. Their nerves frayed in nance their mortgages at lower rates,
foreign financial wars, they can't be painlessly reducing their monthly ·payblamed if they call their money home to menrs and hastening the day when they
watch over it.
can burn the mortgage and use the funds
Institutions such as !llUtual funds aren't for retirement.
likely to act with the same abandon,
Contrast their position with that o'f
bordering · on '' recklessness, that they their neighbors who borrowed ~n their
exhibited over the past few years. Not, swollen home equity to invest in stocks,
~
th e mt1rru
· · 'datmg
·
that is, if they want to continue handling lost 1·t , and now 1ace
people's pensions.
prospect of monthly payments into and
No matter what the Federal Reserve
beyond retirement.
does, it shouldn't surprise anyone to see
small investo;t! biding their time, disdainThe challenge to the latter hci~holds
inS risk, wall!ltg for proof before acting, is but a small example of what n¥aY fac'~
and then seeking jus- the entire co.nsumer sector and itl confirather than .~cting
tification.
dence, and in fact th~ whole economy.
America's ! households have also
You just ~on't lose $4 trilliop one year
relearned some basics, one being that · and risk everything in an a~;tempt to
there are uses for their money other than make It back the next. Maybe it can be
investing in .stocks and spending what's accomplished in a few years, but maybe
left over. '!;hey can, for example, reduce, not until a new and fearless generation
their home mortgages. ·
takes over.
During the bull market, that idea was
A tax cut and help from th e Federal
trampled. Those who dutifully kept pay- Reserve might bring some color back to
ing down the mortgage were viewed as the economy and maybe the securities
squares. Didn't they know it was silly tO markets. But while the assistance might
tie up funds if1 a house when that idle seem substantial, it seems pale against the
money could be tripled and quadrupled challenge.
.
transferring it to their broker?
a~hn Cunniff Is a business analyst for 1'/re
simply
Nobody has emerged from the down- AssDtiated Prm.) .
· ·

bf

.

be held on April 21 at Albany Grange Hall
beginning at 2 p.m. Ail five degrees will be
exemplified. There will be a potluck supper.
The Meigs County Grange banquet has been
POMEROY - A meeting will be held on set for April 27.
Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the Pomeroy Public
Library to discuss plans for a class reuriion for
the Meigs High School Class of 1979.
Anyone interested in helping to plan and
host the event is requested to attend. Those
POMEROY - The Meigs County Health
who have questions, or wish to help but are
.unable to attend the meeting, may contact Department will · host a Maximizing Office
Based Immunizations Program (MOB[)
Jamie Johnson at 1-740-992-3033.
Efforts are being made to get up-to-date training in the conference room at the
addresses on classmates so that information Pomeroy Library March 29.
The 2 to 4 p.m. session will be conducted
on the planned reunion can be mailed.
Name, address, telephone number and e-mail by Lynn Smith, RN, of the Ohio University
address should be sent to the Reunion Plan- College of Osteopathic Medicine Communining Committee, c/o Jamie Johnson, 35751 ty Service Programs.
The MOB! continuing education program
Wolfpen Rd., Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769; or ewill
provide ~urrent and practical childhood
mailed to mhsl979reunion@hotma.il.com
immunization inforntati.on. Course content
includes immunization recommendations
and new vaccine information, childhood
immunization sch~dule, missed opportunities
and common misconceptions, immunization
RACINE -A program on the causes and tracking, and childhood immunization initiastudy of earthquakes was presented by Emma tive.
According to Margie Skidmore, RN, direcAsl)ley,le~turer, at a recent meeting of Racine
tor of nursing at the health department, the
Grange.
Ashley talked about the recent earthquake training will focus on increasing awareness of
in Oregon, previous earthquakes in the Unit- the need to vaccinate children at an early age.
ed States including Ohio, and earthquake Children need 80 percenl of their vaccinations in the first 2 years of life to protect them
!inJmranc:e which is available.
Mary Virginia Easterday conducted the against disease, disability, and even death, said
annual baking contest. In pineapple cookies, Skidmore.
first place went to Easterday, second to Keith
There have been mimy innovations in
Ashley, and third to Geraldine Cross. The immunizations since the first vaccination was
winner of the youth baking contest in choco- administered by Dr. Edward jenner 200 yean
ago, ' and more continue to be made, she
late coconut bars was Whitney Ashley,
As for community service, members were noted. These innovations help to reduce the
asked to bring in their pop tabs, eye glasses, number of vaccine-preventable diseases, disand soup labels at the next meeting to send in abilities, and death.
to the Ohio State Grange. A discussion of the
Nationwide vaccination is at an all-time
high and diseases are at an all-time low,
new rules on the ABC quilts was reviewed.
[n legislative affairs, members were cau- according to Skidmore.
Vaccine preventable diseases have been
tioned to watch for any proposals being considered for Ohio's changes in the school reduced by more tha11 99 percent since the
funding, One prominent proposal was a min- introduction of vaccines. Infant immunizaimum real estate tax, which is likely to mean tion is a simple and inexpensive way to promuch high property taxes in poorer, rural tect children from 10 potentially deadly
infecr;ious diseases . For every dollar spent on
areas like Meigs County.
The Ohio State Grange legislative confer- immunizations as much as $29 .00 can be
ence was held Saturday night· at Friendly saved in direct or indirect medical costs,
Hills Campground near Zanesville. Featured explained the nurse.
legislator was U.S. Rep. Ted Strickland.
She said that in Meigs County the childRecent actions of the Bush administration hood immunization rate is 68 percent for
regarding the privacy of medical records was children 24 months of age and under. The
discussed Though the administration is sup- rate of immunization here has increased by
porting some privacy, the degree of privacy is eight percent in the past 2 years but the rate
in question as businesses are obtaining their still falls below the national objective of a 90
worker's medical records and using the infor- percent immuni2ation rate for children in this
mation to determi~e continued employment, age group.
The Immunization Action Plan at the
it was reported.
Under youth activities, the Meigs County Meigs County Health Department has a ·
Grange youth met Sunday at Golden Corral childhood immunization clinic every Tuesday
in Gallipolis for their annual meeting. Mid- and provides immunizations to children free
Atlantic Youth Conference will be April 20- of charge.
Pediatricians, family practtttoners, nursing
22 at Ocean City, N .J. A youth gathering will
be [jeld at Pleasantville Grange Hall on professionals, and allied health professionals
are encouraged t0 attend the free MOB!
March 24.
The Ohio State Grange acknowledged the training. Continued Nursing Education and
.donation"to deaf activities of Racine Grange. Continued Medical Educati.on units. are ·
'In community service, the Women's Activities being offered.
r
To register for ..the conference, contact
.c;ommittee sppnsored a student at the local
Sim at the Meigs County Health
Courtney
high school for an FFA student.
.
.
Announce was a regional degree day will Department, 992-6626.

Immunization training
to be offered

Sidewalk grammarians score one over leadership ·~
When Bill Clinton was campaigning
for the presidency in 1992, he made an
urgent appeal to voters. "Give AI Gore
and I a chance," he pleaded. We sidewalk
grammarians popped him a good one.
Oxfqrd graduates should know the difference betWeen "I" and "me."
Fair is fair. At his press conference on
Feb. 22, President Bush committed acts
of grammaticide that demand a nonpartisan pop. Our leader was asked.about his
upcoming visit with England's Prime
Minister Tony Blair. "Laura and I are
looking forward to having a private dinner with he and Mrs. Blair Friday night."
Aaargh! Mr. Bush· ought to know better. HIM, sir! Yem m:re looking forward
to 'having dinner with HIM and Mrs.
Blair. Gracious!
The gentleman demonstrated his mastery of the spaghetti sent ence in
responding to a question about tax
reduction. He said:
"First of all, I think given the choice
between · increasing the baselines of the
budget, the extent to which it had been
increased in the past, and passing rponey
back to the people, I think Mr.
Greenspan - not to pu't words in his
mouth- but it seems like - why don't
I just put some words in his mouth? it seems like what he said in his testimony is he'd rather see tax relief rather than
Increasing the size of the budget beyond
the needs of the country."
Mr. Bush has an affection for "have
got." He told the press, " I've got too
much to do ... I think I've got the Congress' attention ... We've got to do a better job of working with the Colombian
government ... I've got a good relationship with President Fox ... I've got a

Monday. March 11. 2001

Dear Ann Landers: My husband
tell him how you feel . He may not "betraying" his confidence.
It makes me sad that my father can- and I recently spent the night at my
want to settle for being 'just friends;'
but this is a risk you must take. After not enjoy his life. All of us are affected in-laws' home. The next morning, my
time passes and you see what's out by his depression, even though he mother-in-law informed my husband
there, Wayne might look a lot better believes he is hiding it well . Please, that she heard us making love during
Ann, remind the physicians in your the night. She said it was improper ro
to you.
Dear Ann Landers: My 76-year- reading audience who treat elderly do that in someone else's home and
old father has been chronically patients to be on the lookout for the "noise" ruined the night's sleep for
depressed much of his life. However, depression, and to ask about it as part her and her husband.
Ann, I thought we were being verY
he is so stigmatized by the "D" word of their routine checkup. Depressed
that he has lived without treatment all people can mask their symptoms, and discreet and quiet. If there is such an
these years.
bringing up the subject may open the etiquette rule, I will apologize to my
Last fall, he finally confided in my door for those who are too embar· in-laws and never do this again. Please
mother that he was miserable and said rassed to do it themselves. - Daugh- tell me who is .right. - In the Mood
at the Wrong Time
he would discuss it with his doctor. ter in San Antonio
Dear
Daughter:
Please
don
't
Dear [n the Mood : No need to
Of course, he did no such thing. He
says It's up to the doctor to pick up on depend on the doctor to "pick up" . revisit the subj ect, but by all means,
his dep ression and ask about it. I have signs of your Dad's depression, Call refrain from making love at yo ur in begged my mother to call his doctor your father's physician, and tell him laws' home in the future. It seems to
before his next appoint'm enr and what you've observed so he can pro- me that knowing you have a listen ing
mention the depression, but she says ceed to help the dear man. Time is audien ce wou ld make the experience
Dad wou ld never forgive her for important.rGet moving.
awkward at best.

MHS Class of 1979
plans reunion .

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Monday, March 19, the 78th day of2001.There are
287 days left in the year. This is the date the swallows traditionally return to the San Juan Capistrano Mission in California.
Today's Highlight in History:
On March 19, 1920, the U.S. Senate rejected, for a second
time, the Treaty ofVersailles by a vote of 49-35, falling short of
the two-thirds majority needed for approval.
On this date:
In 1859, the opera "Faust" by Charles Gounod premiered in
Paris.
In 1917, the Supreme Court upheld the eight-hour work day
for railroads.
In 1918; Congress approve!l daylight-saving time.
In 1931, Nevada legalized gambling.
In .1941, Jim1.lly Dorsey and Orchestra recorded "Green
Eyes" and "Maria Elena" for Decca Records.
In 1945, about 800 people were killed as Kamikaze planes
attacked the U.S. carrier Franklin off Japan,. but. the ·ship was
saved.
In 1945, Adolf Hitler issued. his so-called " Nero Decree,"
ordering the destru ction ·of German facilities that could fall
into Allied hands.
·
In 1951, Herman Wouk's war novel "The Caine Mutiny" was
published.
In 1976, Buckingham , Palace announced the separation of
Princess Margaret and her husband, the Earl of Snowdon, after
16 years of marriage.
In 1979, the U.S. House of R epresentatives began televising
its day-to-cby business.
Ten years ago: The Labor Department reported that con·sum er prices, benefiting from a big monthly decline in gasoline
prices, had edged upward only two-tenths of a percentage
point the previous month.
Five years ago: Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole wrapped
up the Republican presidential nom ination with solid primary
victories in four Midwes ter n. states.

Dear Ann Landers: I grew up

SO .CIETY NEWS &amp; NOTES

Disaster reliif necessat] but
don )t forget pressing projects
• Yakima Herald-Republic in Washington, of! post-quake
budget flegotiatiofls: Maybe we can just call it a magnitude-6.8
wake-up call.
Before the devastating earthquake rattled the NorthweSl, our
state Legislature• wasn't exactly being noted for blinding speed
and accomplishment in the current legislative session. Hampered by a 49-49 tie in the House and a one-vote Democratic

the Bend .

VU&gt;man doesn't want to marry boJfriend, but doesn't want to ·end it, either

Z'l

...

Charles w. Govey
Publisher

_The_o_any_se~nt_inel....;..__----=8=-y

Page AS

Radne Granae leams
about earthquakes

The thester

.Kitchen

LOCAL HAPPENINGS
MONDAY
ATHENS- Southaasl Ohio
Woodland lnteresl Group, 7 p.m.
Alhens County Exlension office .
280 W. Union Slreet, Alhens.
MIDDLEPORT - Altar workers
for the Power Team, Ash Street
Church, Monday at 7 p.m.

MIDDLEPORT - Ladias lor the
Lord, women's Bible study, 9
a.m. Tuesday. All denominations
welcome.

McCook Circle, Ladies ol the
Grand Army of the Republic,
7:15p.m., Tuesday, annex of
Hope Baptisl Church.

POMEROY- Terrific Tuesday
at God's NET, 3 to 5:30p.m.
Free meal , games and craHs lor
youth .

MIDDLEPORT - Revival
through Sunday. Wesleyan Bi ble
Holiness Church. Rev. Mark
Hunter, evangelist. Services

nighlly, 7:30p.m.; Sundayser·
vices, 9:30 a.rn. and 7:30p.m.

MIDDLEPORT- Brooks-Grant
RACINE - Racine Village
Camp, Sons of Union Veterans
Council 7 p.m. Monday, ·
recessed meeting, at the munici· ol the Civil War, 7:15 p.m Tues· The Community Calendar is
. published as a free service to
pal building.
·day, annex of Hope Baptist
non-profit groups wishing to
Church.
announce meetlnRB and spe·
POMEROY- Pomeroy Alumni
clal events.
MIDDLEPORT - Major David
Association, Monday, 7 p.m: at
the home of Yvonne Young.
POMEROY- Meigs County
Right to Life, 7:30 Monday at lhe
Pomeroy Library.
POMEROY- Musical Monday
al God's NET, 3 to 5:30 p.m.
Free meal, games and guitar
lesson lor youth.
LETART- Letart Township
Trustees, Monday, 5 p.m. at the
office building.
POMEROY- Pomeroy Chapter
186, Order of the Eastern Star,
7:30p.m. Monday al the hall.
Potluck dinner at 6:30 p.m.
TUESDAY
POMEROY- Women's Auxil·
;ary, Veterans Memorial Hospi·
tal, 1:30 ·p.m., conference room.

We want your photos!
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guidelines for submissions:
.
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and have good contrast. Negatives also are accepted; however,
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ever, please include a print along wrth the negative.
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and have good contrast.
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saved as high-resolution , high-quality JPEG files.
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unique sizes, which do not translate well to newspaper columns.
Advantlx-type negatives are not accepted.

Over the laet 11veral decadll, American women have
come a long way In gaining equal opportunity and
repreeentatlon In the bualneea world.
.
Thankl to the aoclal reform effort• and contribution• of
so many women before them, American women today have
the opportunity to puraue whatever career path or lifestyle
they choose. In recognition of the countless achievements
theae women realize In the buslneaa world and the American
family, we are offering a way to aaluta your favorite Woman In
Business. ·
·

March 29, 2001
~allipolts 1\ailp m:rtbune
~oint ~Ieasant l\egtster

Pomeroy Daily Sentinel

Dorothy jones
Owner &amp;. Stylist
15 years

Dotty's Si)'le

Salon
1234 Main Street
Anytown,OH
555-4444

Deadline Is March 22, 2001
For Mor.e Information, Call
Dave Harris or Debbl.e Call

992-2156

�Opinion

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

prw-1419fiiiiii.((IIGll1 9 WIIWIIIIO

PageA4 Mo..ay, Mllrch 11,10014

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Chari- HOiftlch
Gen•ral Manager

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

"

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

I.AitMr to 1M ~dilrw tUe wtlc&lt;HtU. TINy slttnlld H WfltluJn 300 word~.

,tU ltntm

an ndJfrct tD &lt;ldhinr and"'"'' IH sirMtl •IWilnellltU MJ/wu end &amp;eWJ,Ihotlt n!Uftbtr.
No IIMifrwd ktlfn wiU brt publbhtd. Lflltn sholll4 IH in pod IMit, MMn11U.,

iwus, I'UH pu~~JMiiriu
Tlu Ol'iniotll upnsttd in thf rolMm11 IH/Qw tw tlu t:tHUtniMI fl/lht OltW V.U.)'
P11blishinr Co. 'r ttlhorlal board, ,.,.,.,. otlterwiu Mltd.

..

.'

NATIONAL VIEWS

··.

Wakeup

majority in the Senate, agreement on controversial issues was
hard to come by in a hamstrun g political arena. ...
·
Closer to home that likely m,eans a delay in funding, and
starting constru ction on an $18.5 million higher education
center for Yakima Valley Community College. Another quake
casualty could be a $25 million building to house the music
program on the campus of Central Washington University in
Ellensburg.
Reasonable people realize that damage repair has to take priority over new projects. And as long as the local projecls are
only delayed, not eliminated since the case for them has been
made, we have to do our part. ...
Extraordinary events call for extraordinary responses, but let
them at least be in the spirit of bipartisan reason and commitment to doing what's best for the public's interests. The public,
in turn, must be ready to offer understanding and support as we
put the state back together ....
• The Kansas City Star, 011 Cheney's healt!J: Vice President
Dick Cheney's latest round of heatt trouble, together with his
aides' latest round of trouble explaining what happened, underscores the need for Cheney to provide the public with a fuller
and more accurate report on his health history and current
medical condition.
The evasions and stonewalling on this subject have gone on
since last year's campaign. Aides are happy to provide trivial
information - woeful tales of how Cheney is skipping sweets,
for example - and positive general assessments of his health.
The vice president has not released his full medical records,
creating the distinct impression that his problems are more serious than he and his aides have indicated....
This issue has assumed more and more importance as it has
become clear how central the vice president's role has become
in the new admipistration, including heavier responsibilities on
Capitol Hill than most vice presidents have faceq.
Cheney is entitled to some degree of medical privacy in certain areas. He owes the public a far better picture of his health
history and current medical condition than he has so far been
willing to provide.

TODAY IN HISTORY

believing that sex should be reserved
for marriage. I also was not crazy
about the idea of marriage and commitment, and spent many years avoiding both. Because of this, I remained a
virgin until I was 29. At that time, I
mer '·'Wayne;' and decided it was time
to give up my virginity.
I am very fond ofWayne. I love his
intellect and his personality. I love to
talk to him and feel very comfortable
with him. The problem is this: After
the novelty wore off, I concluded that
sex is highly overrated. I have to pretend in order to get it over with.
Wayne is lousy in bed and has gained
so much weight in the last few years
that I find him physically unattractive.
Meanwhile, all he talks about IS marriage, and it scares the daylights out of.
me.

'

KILPATRICK'S VIEW

Ann
Landers
ADVICE
I don't want to end our relationship,
but I am not interested in marrying
Wayne. However, if I told him, I fear
he would go to pieces. He has madd a
lot of sacrifices for me (even though I
never asked him to), and I feel guilty
not wanting to sleep with him anymore. Please help m e. - Just
Friends in New Hampshire
Dear Just Friends: The hon orable
thing to do is to level with Wayne and

·r

"

know, I did not have any involvement;
you know, and I'm just very disappoint-'
',
ed. ...
"Oh. you know, as I have said in the,
past, there were.many. many people who,
spoke to me or, you know, asked me to
pass on information .... Wit.h respect to
Mr. Cunningham, I know that. he .is, you
know, a fine lawyer and a fine man ..."
Getting back to her brother: "He was
a frequent guest at the White House, you
COLUMNIST
know ... Well, you know, I h ear so many,
rumors all the time that, you know, I.
pretty good case ... Britain and the Unit- really, you know, vague rumors don 'b
ed States have got a special relationship." mean anything ·to me anymore." Again,
HAVE, sir! Just "have." The "got," sir, is on the matter of her brother's involve-,
rnent: "I was heartbro~en and. jhqok~P,
redundant. ' ·
by
it and, yo u know, immediately saiq
What about the budge!) The president
· had a promise 'to voice. '.'We 'lfC going to this. You know, this is a tercihle misjudgslow the rate of growth of the budget ment and the money had to be returned ..
down." Mr. Bush was so pleased with You know, this is a very sad matter to m~
·
that syntax he repeated• himself: "We'll personally."
To sum up: "Well, you know, I'm very
be slowing the rate of growth of the
budget down." At least he doesn't pro- dis.appointed about what's gone on fo(
pose to .slow the rate of growth of the the last weeks .... I have gotten up every .
day and worked as hard as I can to be the
budget up.
The rigors of the ' campaign trail best senator I can be. And that's what I
should have prepared the country for the · intend to do.You know, I'm here to meet
president's pratfalls. At one point he with my staffs about our legislative ageninformed us that "more and more of our da .... So I have my hands full being a
imports come from overseas." He offered senator, learning the ropes, you know,
a solution to the country's economic •working with my colleagues. And I'm
woes that is simple and straightforward: having a really good time doing it, but of
"We ought to make the pie higher." A course I'm disappointed and saddened
that, you know, these matters are up."
noble aspiration.
'
So spoke Hillary, speaking the speech
While the president was. having his
of La-La Land. Granunarwise, her sentroubles, Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton
tences were better than Bush's, you
was having hers. She called a press conknow, but him and her would make a
ference to disclaim ~ny role in the rash
great team. You know.
of pardons. "You know, it came as a surllrise to me." Had she spoken to her husOames j Kilpatrick is a columni!l for .Uni·
band about his acts of clemency? "You versa/ Press Syndicate.)

BUSINESS MIRROR

Challenges awa# Americas economic recovery·
BY JoHN CUNNIFF

NEW YORK - So why, you might
ask, are so many investors relying on a
one-half point cut in interest rates and a
measly $1.6 trillion tax cut spread over
10 years to bail them out of the great
market collapse?
It might rake a lot more than that,
because something like $4 trillion has
disappeared from investor pocketbooks,
and not in five years or 10, but in just the
one year since the stock market began its
lamentable descent.
Ask the question and inevitably you
are told it will raise confidence, and that
might be tru e. But it will hardly lift it to
the irrationally exuberant levels that created those easy tril!ions. Billions at best.
Investor ·confidence alone jsn't likely
to reunite the love affair with stocks.
Distrust has been sown, and when it
enters any relationship, things are seldom
the same. There won't be any irrational
exuberance for a while.
For one thing, millions of Baby
Boomers were known to have taken
what they felt was their last shot at
becoming wealthy. Now, chagrined,
older and nearer retirement, they're not
likely to take such risks again. More likely, their confidence
be expressed in
slow, steady· increments,

will

..

U.S. consumer confidence, no matter turn in better shape than such nerds.
how its recovers; isn't likely to impress ·Their equity intact, they ·can now refiforeign investors. Their nerves frayed in nance their mortgages at lower rates,
foreign financial wars, they can't be painlessly reducing their monthly ·payblamed if they call their money home to menrs and hastening the day when they
watch over it.
can burn the mortgage and use the funds
Institutions such as !llUtual funds aren't for retirement.
likely to act with the same abandon,
Contrast their position with that o'f
bordering · on '' recklessness, that they their neighbors who borrowed ~n their
exhibited over the past few years. Not, swollen home equity to invest in stocks,
~
th e mt1rru
· · 'datmg
·
that is, if they want to continue handling lost 1·t , and now 1ace
people's pensions.
prospect of monthly payments into and
No matter what the Federal Reserve
beyond retirement.
does, it shouldn't surprise anyone to see
small investo;t! biding their time, disdainThe challenge to the latter hci~holds
inS risk, wall!ltg for proof before acting, is but a small example of what n¥aY fac'~
and then seeking jus- the entire co.nsumer sector and itl confirather than .~cting
tification.
dence, and in fact th~ whole economy.
America's ! households have also
You just ~on't lose $4 trilliop one year
relearned some basics, one being that · and risk everything in an a~;tempt to
there are uses for their money other than make It back the next. Maybe it can be
investing in .stocks and spending what's accomplished in a few years, but maybe
left over. '!;hey can, for example, reduce, not until a new and fearless generation
their home mortgages. ·
takes over.
During the bull market, that idea was
A tax cut and help from th e Federal
trampled. Those who dutifully kept pay- Reserve might bring some color back to
ing down the mortgage were viewed as the economy and maybe the securities
squares. Didn't they know it was silly tO markets. But while the assistance might
tie up funds if1 a house when that idle seem substantial, it seems pale against the
money could be tripled and quadrupled challenge.
.
transferring it to their broker?
a~hn Cunniff Is a business analyst for 1'/re
simply
Nobody has emerged from the down- AssDtiated Prm.) .
· ·

bf

.

be held on April 21 at Albany Grange Hall
beginning at 2 p.m. Ail five degrees will be
exemplified. There will be a potluck supper.
The Meigs County Grange banquet has been
POMEROY - A meeting will be held on set for April 27.
Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the Pomeroy Public
Library to discuss plans for a class reuriion for
the Meigs High School Class of 1979.
Anyone interested in helping to plan and
host the event is requested to attend. Those
POMEROY - The Meigs County Health
who have questions, or wish to help but are
.unable to attend the meeting, may contact Department will · host a Maximizing Office
Based Immunizations Program (MOB[)
Jamie Johnson at 1-740-992-3033.
Efforts are being made to get up-to-date training in the conference room at the
addresses on classmates so that information Pomeroy Library March 29.
The 2 to 4 p.m. session will be conducted
on the planned reunion can be mailed.
Name, address, telephone number and e-mail by Lynn Smith, RN, of the Ohio University
address should be sent to the Reunion Plan- College of Osteopathic Medicine Communining Committee, c/o Jamie Johnson, 35751 ty Service Programs.
The MOB! continuing education program
Wolfpen Rd., Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769; or ewill
provide ~urrent and practical childhood
mailed to mhsl979reunion@hotma.il.com
immunization inforntati.on. Course content
includes immunization recommendations
and new vaccine information, childhood
immunization sch~dule, missed opportunities
and common misconceptions, immunization
RACINE -A program on the causes and tracking, and childhood immunization initiastudy of earthquakes was presented by Emma tive.
According to Margie Skidmore, RN, direcAsl)ley,le~turer, at a recent meeting of Racine
tor of nursing at the health department, the
Grange.
Ashley talked about the recent earthquake training will focus on increasing awareness of
in Oregon, previous earthquakes in the Unit- the need to vaccinate children at an early age.
ed States including Ohio, and earthquake Children need 80 percenl of their vaccinations in the first 2 years of life to protect them
!inJmranc:e which is available.
Mary Virginia Easterday conducted the against disease, disability, and even death, said
annual baking contest. In pineapple cookies, Skidmore.
first place went to Easterday, second to Keith
There have been mimy innovations in
Ashley, and third to Geraldine Cross. The immunizations since the first vaccination was
winner of the youth baking contest in choco- administered by Dr. Edward jenner 200 yean
ago, ' and more continue to be made, she
late coconut bars was Whitney Ashley,
As for community service, members were noted. These innovations help to reduce the
asked to bring in their pop tabs, eye glasses, number of vaccine-preventable diseases, disand soup labels at the next meeting to send in abilities, and death.
to the Ohio State Grange. A discussion of the
Nationwide vaccination is at an all-time
high and diseases are at an all-time low,
new rules on the ABC quilts was reviewed.
[n legislative affairs, members were cau- according to Skidmore.
Vaccine preventable diseases have been
tioned to watch for any proposals being considered for Ohio's changes in the school reduced by more tha11 99 percent since the
funding, One prominent proposal was a min- introduction of vaccines. Infant immunizaimum real estate tax, which is likely to mean tion is a simple and inexpensive way to promuch high property taxes in poorer, rural tect children from 10 potentially deadly
infecr;ious diseases . For every dollar spent on
areas like Meigs County.
The Ohio State Grange legislative confer- immunizations as much as $29 .00 can be
ence was held Saturday night· at Friendly saved in direct or indirect medical costs,
Hills Campground near Zanesville. Featured explained the nurse.
legislator was U.S. Rep. Ted Strickland.
She said that in Meigs County the childRecent actions of the Bush administration hood immunization rate is 68 percent for
regarding the privacy of medical records was children 24 months of age and under. The
discussed Though the administration is sup- rate of immunization here has increased by
porting some privacy, the degree of privacy is eight percent in the past 2 years but the rate
in question as businesses are obtaining their still falls below the national objective of a 90
worker's medical records and using the infor- percent immuni2ation rate for children in this
mation to determi~e continued employment, age group.
The Immunization Action Plan at the
it was reported.
Under youth activities, the Meigs County Meigs County Health Department has a ·
Grange youth met Sunday at Golden Corral childhood immunization clinic every Tuesday
in Gallipolis for their annual meeting. Mid- and provides immunizations to children free
Atlantic Youth Conference will be April 20- of charge.
Pediatricians, family practtttoners, nursing
22 at Ocean City, N .J. A youth gathering will
be [jeld at Pleasantville Grange Hall on professionals, and allied health professionals
are encouraged t0 attend the free MOB!
March 24.
The Ohio State Grange acknowledged the training. Continued Nursing Education and
.donation"to deaf activities of Racine Grange. Continued Medical Educati.on units. are ·
'In community service, the Women's Activities being offered.
r
To register for ..the conference, contact
.c;ommittee sppnsored a student at the local
Sim at the Meigs County Health
Courtney
high school for an FFA student.
.
.
Announce was a regional degree day will Department, 992-6626.

Immunization training
to be offered

Sidewalk grammarians score one over leadership ·~
When Bill Clinton was campaigning
for the presidency in 1992, he made an
urgent appeal to voters. "Give AI Gore
and I a chance," he pleaded. We sidewalk
grammarians popped him a good one.
Oxfqrd graduates should know the difference betWeen "I" and "me."
Fair is fair. At his press conference on
Feb. 22, President Bush committed acts
of grammaticide that demand a nonpartisan pop. Our leader was asked.about his
upcoming visit with England's Prime
Minister Tony Blair. "Laura and I are
looking forward to having a private dinner with he and Mrs. Blair Friday night."
Aaargh! Mr. Bush· ought to know better. HIM, sir! Yem m:re looking forward
to 'having dinner with HIM and Mrs.
Blair. Gracious!
The gentleman demonstrated his mastery of the spaghetti sent ence in
responding to a question about tax
reduction. He said:
"First of all, I think given the choice
between · increasing the baselines of the
budget, the extent to which it had been
increased in the past, and passing rponey
back to the people, I think Mr.
Greenspan - not to pu't words in his
mouth- but it seems like - why don't
I just put some words in his mouth? it seems like what he said in his testimony is he'd rather see tax relief rather than
Increasing the size of the budget beyond
the needs of the country."
Mr. Bush has an affection for "have
got." He told the press, " I've got too
much to do ... I think I've got the Congress' attention ... We've got to do a better job of working with the Colombian
government ... I've got a good relationship with President Fox ... I've got a

Monday. March 11. 2001

Dear Ann Landers: My husband
tell him how you feel . He may not "betraying" his confidence.
It makes me sad that my father can- and I recently spent the night at my
want to settle for being 'just friends;'
but this is a risk you must take. After not enjoy his life. All of us are affected in-laws' home. The next morning, my
time passes and you see what's out by his depression, even though he mother-in-law informed my husband
there, Wayne might look a lot better believes he is hiding it well . Please, that she heard us making love during
Ann, remind the physicians in your the night. She said it was improper ro
to you.
Dear Ann Landers: My 76-year- reading audience who treat elderly do that in someone else's home and
old father has been chronically patients to be on the lookout for the "noise" ruined the night's sleep for
depressed much of his life. However, depression, and to ask about it as part her and her husband.
Ann, I thought we were being verY
he is so stigmatized by the "D" word of their routine checkup. Depressed
that he has lived without treatment all people can mask their symptoms, and discreet and quiet. If there is such an
these years.
bringing up the subject may open the etiquette rule, I will apologize to my
Last fall, he finally confided in my door for those who are too embar· in-laws and never do this again. Please
mother that he was miserable and said rassed to do it themselves. - Daugh- tell me who is .right. - In the Mood
at the Wrong Time
he would discuss it with his doctor. ter in San Antonio
Dear
Daughter:
Please
don
't
Dear [n the Mood : No need to
Of course, he did no such thing. He
says It's up to the doctor to pick up on depend on the doctor to "pick up" . revisit the subj ect, but by all means,
his dep ression and ask about it. I have signs of your Dad's depression, Call refrain from making love at yo ur in begged my mother to call his doctor your father's physician, and tell him laws' home in the future. It seems to
before his next appoint'm enr and what you've observed so he can pro- me that knowing you have a listen ing
mention the depression, but she says ceed to help the dear man. Time is audien ce wou ld make the experience
Dad wou ld never forgive her for important.rGet moving.
awkward at best.

MHS Class of 1979
plans reunion .

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Monday, March 19, the 78th day of2001.There are
287 days left in the year. This is the date the swallows traditionally return to the San Juan Capistrano Mission in California.
Today's Highlight in History:
On March 19, 1920, the U.S. Senate rejected, for a second
time, the Treaty ofVersailles by a vote of 49-35, falling short of
the two-thirds majority needed for approval.
On this date:
In 1859, the opera "Faust" by Charles Gounod premiered in
Paris.
In 1917, the Supreme Court upheld the eight-hour work day
for railroads.
In 1918; Congress approve!l daylight-saving time.
In 1931, Nevada legalized gambling.
In .1941, Jim1.lly Dorsey and Orchestra recorded "Green
Eyes" and "Maria Elena" for Decca Records.
In 1945, about 800 people were killed as Kamikaze planes
attacked the U.S. carrier Franklin off Japan,. but. the ·ship was
saved.
In 1945, Adolf Hitler issued. his so-called " Nero Decree,"
ordering the destru ction ·of German facilities that could fall
into Allied hands.
·
In 1951, Herman Wouk's war novel "The Caine Mutiny" was
published.
In 1976, Buckingham , Palace announced the separation of
Princess Margaret and her husband, the Earl of Snowdon, after
16 years of marriage.
In 1979, the U.S. House of R epresentatives began televising
its day-to-cby business.
Ten years ago: The Labor Department reported that con·sum er prices, benefiting from a big monthly decline in gasoline
prices, had edged upward only two-tenths of a percentage
point the previous month.
Five years ago: Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole wrapped
up the Republican presidential nom ination with solid primary
victories in four Midwes ter n. states.

Dear Ann Landers: I grew up

SO .CIETY NEWS &amp; NOTES

Disaster reliif necessat] but
don )t forget pressing projects
• Yakima Herald-Republic in Washington, of! post-quake
budget flegotiatiofls: Maybe we can just call it a magnitude-6.8
wake-up call.
Before the devastating earthquake rattled the NorthweSl, our
state Legislature• wasn't exactly being noted for blinding speed
and accomplishment in the current legislative session. Hampered by a 49-49 tie in the House and a one-vote Democratic

the Bend .

VU&gt;man doesn't want to marry boJfriend, but doesn't want to ·end it, either

Z'l

...

Charles w. Govey
Publisher

_The_o_any_se~nt_inel....;..__----=8=-y

Page AS

Radne Granae leams
about earthquakes

The thester

.Kitchen

LOCAL HAPPENINGS
MONDAY
ATHENS- Southaasl Ohio
Woodland lnteresl Group, 7 p.m.
Alhens County Exlension office .
280 W. Union Slreet, Alhens.
MIDDLEPORT - Altar workers
for the Power Team, Ash Street
Church, Monday at 7 p.m.

MIDDLEPORT - Ladias lor the
Lord, women's Bible study, 9
a.m. Tuesday. All denominations
welcome.

McCook Circle, Ladies ol the
Grand Army of the Republic,
7:15p.m., Tuesday, annex of
Hope Baptisl Church.

POMEROY- Terrific Tuesday
at God's NET, 3 to 5:30p.m.
Free meal , games and craHs lor
youth .

MIDDLEPORT - Revival
through Sunday. Wesleyan Bi ble
Holiness Church. Rev. Mark
Hunter, evangelist. Services

nighlly, 7:30p.m.; Sundayser·
vices, 9:30 a.rn. and 7:30p.m.

MIDDLEPORT- Brooks-Grant
RACINE - Racine Village
Camp, Sons of Union Veterans
Council 7 p.m. Monday, ·
recessed meeting, at the munici· ol the Civil War, 7:15 p.m Tues· The Community Calendar is
. published as a free service to
pal building.
·day, annex of Hope Baptist
non-profit groups wishing to
Church.
announce meetlnRB and spe·
POMEROY- Pomeroy Alumni
clal events.
MIDDLEPORT - Major David
Association, Monday, 7 p.m: at
the home of Yvonne Young.
POMEROY- Meigs County
Right to Life, 7:30 Monday at lhe
Pomeroy Library.
POMEROY- Musical Monday
al God's NET, 3 to 5:30 p.m.
Free meal, games and guitar
lesson lor youth.
LETART- Letart Township
Trustees, Monday, 5 p.m. at the
office building.
POMEROY- Pomeroy Chapter
186, Order of the Eastern Star,
7:30p.m. Monday al the hall.
Potluck dinner at 6:30 p.m.
TUESDAY
POMEROY- Women's Auxil·
;ary, Veterans Memorial Hospi·
tal, 1:30 ·p.m., conference room.

We want your photos!
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guidelines for submissions:
.
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ever, please include a print along wrth the negative.
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and have good contrast.
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let size and no larger than 8 x 10.
• Polarlod-type photos are discouraged since they do not reproduce well on newsprint.
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saved as high-resolution , high-quality JPEG files.
• Advantix.type photographs are discouraged due to their
unique sizes, which do not translate well to newspaper columns.
Advantlx-type negatives are not accepted.

Over the laet 11veral decadll, American women have
come a long way In gaining equal opportunity and
repreeentatlon In the bualneea world.
.
Thankl to the aoclal reform effort• and contribution• of
so many women before them, American women today have
the opportunity to puraue whatever career path or lifestyle
they choose. In recognition of the countless achievements
theae women realize In the buslneaa world and the American
family, we are offering a way to aaluta your favorite Woman In
Business. ·
·

March 29, 2001
~allipolts 1\ailp m:rtbune
~oint ~Ieasant l\egtster

Pomeroy Daily Sentinel

Dorothy jones
Owner &amp;. Stylist
15 years

Dotty's Si)'le

Salon
1234 Main Street
Anytown,OH
555-4444

Deadline Is March 22, 2001
For Mor.e Information, Call
Dave Harris or Debbl.e Call

992-2156

�The Daily Sentinel

Nation • World

McCain eyes bill's success
WASHINGTON (AP)- Sen. John McCatn sees a 60 percent chance that Congress will pass a major overhaul of campaign finance laws this year. Other senator&gt; are reluctant to
prcdiCI.
"I'm optimtstic that the Democrats and more Republicans
will recognize that this change is badly needed," McCa1n, RAriz., said Monday. He said on Cl3S' "The Early Show" that
he has been heartened by statements by Senate Minority
Leader Tom Daschlc, D-S.D., "about Democrats and their
con1n1itmcnt tO camp:1ign finance reform."
With debate opening Monday, the question was whether
McCain could attract enough of his fellow Republicans to
the effort.
McCain said that while a majority of senators appear ro
favor further limits on camp::~ign contribtHions, he fears
opporicnts will offer amendmen 'ts "that on the face look pretty good and yet are sort of like poison pills" that would kill
the bill he is sponsoring with Sen. R.ussell Feingold, D-Wis.

Loan attraded FBI's scrutiny

WASHINGTON (A P) - A Justice Department study of
violent crime among different ra ces shows an alarmingly high
rate of viole~ce against American Indians, while crime
against other groups has fallen.
IndiatlS we re twice as likely to be. victims of violent crime
than blacks, whites or Asians. Indian women were victimized
by their partners more th an twice as often as black women
but the inciclents were reported less often than am ong blacks,
according to the study, released Sunday by the Justice Department's Bureau of Justice Stati.stics.
.
The study, which lo oked at statistics for rap e, sexual assault,
robbery, aggravated assault and simple assault, showed that
crime against blacks, whites and Hispa ni cs fell significantly
. during the study period - 1993 through 1998.

Rivals agree to merger
NEW YORK (AP) - AmeriSource Health Corp. and
Bergen 13runswig Cor p., two of the nation's largest dru g distributors, art: t::}pected to announ ce J $2.4 billi on merger
agrct:men t on Monday.
The deal, approved by both boards , wi ll create a drug-distribution giant with nearly $35 billion in annual revenue,
delivering phar maceuticals and supplie s to businesses such as
drug stores, hospita ls ·and health-maintenance organizations,
The Wall Street Journal repo rted Monday.
AmeriSource will o\vn about .51 percent of the combined
entity, to be named Am eri Source-Bergen. Bergen shareholders will receive 0.37 of a share for each share of the Orange,
Calif., company they ow n, while Am eriSource shareholders
will rec eive one share.
AmeriS ourcc's 4 p.m. Friday co mposite trading price on
the New York Stock Exchange was $48.48. Bergen's trading
price was $15.94.

Derailment kills 1, injures 96
NODAWAY, Iowa (AP) - Investigators combing a ·shred-.
ded, '3,000-foot track lined with twiste d rail cars planned to

Mond•y. ,.rch 11. 2001

,Inside:
Today~

The Daily Sentinel

Scoreboard, Page B6

Mamas and Papas singer John Phillips die at 65
lOS ANGELES ~AP)- Songwriter
J~hn Phillips, who penned "California
Dreamin "' and other hits of the 1960s
as co-founder of the pop-folk quartet
the Mamas and the Papas , has died of
heart failu re. He was 65.
Phillips , who helped organize the
seminal Monterey Pop Festival .a nd
wrote for legendary groups including
the Grateful Dead and the Beach Boys,
died Sunday morning at the University
of California, Los Angeles Medical
Center, a spokesman for the hospita l
said.
" His perso nality is going to be so re"
ly missed ," said Harvey Goldberg, a
longtime friend and producer. "His
music is going to be sorel y missed."
Phillips was the princtpal so ngwr,iter

for the Mamas and the Papas, writing
such favorites as " I Saw Her Again Last
Night" and "Creeque Alley." In I 966,
the band won a Grammy for best contemporary group perform•nce for the
single " Monday Monday."
As one of the organizers of 1967's
Monterey Pop Festival, Phillips also
helped introduce Jimi Hendrix and
·The Who to American audiences.
" He had a sweet voice, and he played
gui tar beautifully, and he'd play a song,
just acousticall y, and they'd be hits,"
Beach Boys singe r Bruce Johnston sa id
Sunday.
The Mamas and the Papas broke new
ground by h avin g \Vomen and men in
one group at a time w he n mOst pop
bands were all -male or all-female.

WASH INGTON (AP)- A maJt&gt;r polittcal donor arranged
and guaranteed aS I 00,000 lo,l ll that help&lt;ei Sen. RobertTorricclli hit it big in the stot"k nurkt~t aud first attracted FB I :\naly7e track samp les to see if the broken rails may have
int~r~st in the New Jersey DL·mocrJc·s po liri . .:al and personn l
ca used .Hl Amtrak cras h that killed a Colora do woman and
finances six years ago.
.
injured 96 .other people.
Prosecutors o pl'ned a prL·linunary inquiry into wht·thcr tht."
The co ndu ctor of the Californ ia Zephyr told investigators
lo&lt;1n arrangement was an illegal gift and \vhethcr Torri cdli Sunday. he was driving 17 mph below the posted speed of 69
provi&lt;kd favors to the donor in cxclunge. They interviewed mph on a straightaway stretc h of tra ck in southwest Iowa Satthe lawmaker in 1995 under oath. wlling him his rights urday whe n he felt a threatening tug.
before asking questions, hw enforcement offi cials and lawyers
"He app lied the brakes with an emerge ncy application and
told The Associated Press.
brought the train to a stop. However, at the sa me time the
Bu t prosec utors turned down FB I requests for subpoenas, tratn was derailing behind him,' '· Ted Turpin , head of the
gave Torricelli tin1e to voluntari ly turn over all his financial National Transportation Safety Board investigation , said at a
do cuments and eventually ended the inquiry. One prosecutor news confe ren ce Sunday.
·
told To rri celli t he U.S. attorney's office was "going out of our
The derailment left a zigzagging trail of silver cars along a
way" to keep the investiga tion quie.r "to protect your int er- mu ddy embankm ent and was expected to indefinitely close
est," d.o cuments show.
the track. Some 210 people were on board, traveling from
At the time, Torricelli was a H ouse membe.r p re pari ng to Chicago to Emeryville, Calif., when they were slammed into
run for the Senate.
the side of the train cars shortly before midmght.

Violent crime up for Indians

Page A&amp;

Ex-deputy held a.fter shootout

Page 81
Mond.y.

Phillips' second wife, Michelle Phillips,
and another female vocalist, Cass
Elliott, teamed with Phillips and
Denny Doherty.
The group 's catchy folk-pop sound
was a blend of the upbeat pop that prevailed in the mid- I 960s and the folk
music approach that gained popularity
toward the end of the decade.
The Mamas and the Papas disbanded
in 1968 followin g John and Michelle
Phillips' divorce. Phillips briefly
reformed the band in 1982 with original member Denny Doherty, daughter
Mackenzie an d · Elaine "Spanky "
McFarlane. The foursome toured playing oldies and new Phillips or igina ls.

A grand jury returned the one-co unt indictment Friday
against David Sidney Hi sey, Assistant Di strict Attorney Mo
Ib rahim said .
·
Hisey, 52, has been in j ai l si nce ea rly September, when th e
bodies of his parents, 85-year-old Sunnye Hisey and 91-yearold H ollis Hisey, were discovered at their home. A medical
examiner ruled each was strangled.
Hisey was indicted in bctober on a charge of theft involving a check for $3,400 drawn on his parents' account the
same day their bodies were found.

Confliding studies hamper study
NEW YORK (AP) - Voting sounds so simple.
One person, ·o ne vote. The candidate with the most votes
wins. For ·president, the Electoral College balances out states
big and small.
The tangled reality became apparent in last fall's overtime
election. A few people - enough to sway a close race invariably make mistakes and spoil their votes. The problem
is, some machines seem to encourage more errors than others.
The answer, clearly, is to find machines that confuse the
fewest voter~. But that isn't so simple, as state legislatures and
Congress are learning in their search for a more trustworthy
electio n system.
It's hard to pick one voting system over another because littie analysis of voting technology exists, and the reports that
are available often conflict.

ELLENWOOD, Ga. (AP) - A former sheriff's deputy,
whose lawyer called him the "main suspec.t" in the murder of
the sheriff-el ect, was· involved in a shootout with men he said
·
we re trying to silence him.
·Patrick Cuffy, 35, was in police custody but had not been
charged Sunday night.
Neighbors said they saw Cuf!Y and several men exchanging .
gunfire outside his home early Sunday morning. The men
then pulled a wounded man into a reef truck parked outside
the1 house.
'1 was talking with my friend, Damia Hewitt, o utside my
house wh en three different vehicles fired at us," 'Cuffy told
WAGA-TV: " Hewitt was shot in both legs, but I believe the r-''~
·were tryin g to get me."
TETOVO, Macedonia (AP) - The Macedonian army sent
four tanks rolling into the country's second-largest ciry Mondo,y, signaling .the. military w~s ready, t,o engage ethnic, Alban- ,
SPACE .CEI'JT,ER, Houston (AP) - The first crew of the ian rebels fighting for greater rights. NATO, under increasing
international' s·pa.te-. station is On its way back to Earth.
pressure to intervene, sent troops to the border with Kosovo
The three- man crew - .Commander Bill Shepherd and to cut off rebel sup_ely lines.
Russian COSlllOI{auts Yuri Gidzenko and Sergei Kriklilev ' The tanks entered Tetovo' shortly before noon, accompaleft space station Alpha late Sunday night aboard space shut- ni ed by an armored personnel carrier and two military
tle Discovery. They and the shuttle crew are scheduled· to trucks, one filled with government soldiers. They arrived as
return to Earth early Wednesday.
clashes decreased in intensity after a night of bombandments .
Shepherd, a 51-year-old Navy captain, and · his Russian
Maceoonian police and army units were bringing in
crewmates sp ent 4 1/2 months on Alpha, transforming it infantry reinforcements, including armored vehicles, field
fronl a spartan, three-room o utpost to a sophi sti cated fourartillery pieces and howitzers, the independent Yugoslav radio
room ·complex capa ble of scientific research.
station B92 reported. It said the rebe ls tried to raid Tetovo ·
" We hold you in admiration as we · prepare to bring .you
center Monday morning but suffered heavy casualties and
home," Discove ry Command er James Wetherbee said of
Alpha's first crew. "This has been an arduous duty for you. retreated back into the hills . The report could not immediThis ship was not built in a safe harbor, it was built on the ately be confirmed.
Reflecting growing international concern that the stability
high ~eas."
of th e entire region was at stake, NATO Secretary-General
Lord Robertson said Monday that the international force in
Kosovo was moving more troops to the border with Macedonia
to cut off the supply lines to insurgents who have
GALVESTON, Texas (AP) - An · unemployed shrimper
who liye d with the bodies of his dead parents for months has attacked government forces there. He declined to say how
been charged with murder.
many troops would be deployed.

Army rolls into city

ShuHie returns Wednesday

Man lived with dead parents

#I Great OPPortunit~ To Tell Your Business Stor~
#2 Great OPPortunit~ To Hiehlieht Your Business· AccomPlishments
#3 Great OPPortunit~ to SPotliaht Your EmPloYees
#4 Great OPPortunit~ To Generate New Business
#Sit APPears In The GalliPolis Dail~ Tribune. Point Pleasant Reeister. And The Dail~ Sentinel

MONDAY's

HIGHLIGHTS

Tuesday
ROCK SPRINGS -The
annual Meigs High School
winter sports banquet will be
held this Tuesday in the
school's cafeteria beginning at
6:30p.m.

11ger back on
traCk at Bay Hill

'

RIO GRANDE - District 13's
finest will meet tonight in the annual
all-star games at the University of Rio
Grande. The Division I-II all-stars will
play against the Division III-IV allstars with the girls game beginning at
6 p.m. and the boys game starting at 8
p.m. Tickets are 54 each.
M eigs County players named to this
year's all-star teams include Eastern
seniors M att Simpson, the Division IV
player of the year year, Joe Brown,
Chad Nelson and junior C hris Lyons;
Southern seniors Garret Kiser. Chad
Hubband, Jeremy Fisher and Jonathan
Evans; and Meigs senior J.P. Staats,

who will play for the Division 1- 11 all stars.
Simpson, Drown and Kiser were
first team selections. Staats, Nelson
and Hubbard were named to the second team. Fisher, Lyohs and Evans
received special mention .
Alvin Carp enter of Symmes Valley
was voted Division IV coach of the
year.
Wade Martin of Athens was the
Division I- ll MVP, while Warren's
Blane Maddox was .named coac h of
the year.
Chesapeake swep t top honors in
Division Ill, with senior Anthony
Delimpo witming player of the year

and Norm Persin earning coach of
the year honors. ·
Eastern senior Amber Baker was
tabbed Division IV player of the year
and will represent the Eagles along
with fellow seniors Danielle Spencer
and Julie Bailey. Other Eastern players
named to the Distict 13 all -star team
·include juniors Staci Watson, Sara
M~nsfield· and Whitney Karr.
Meigs sen iors Amher Vining and
Shannon Price, Southern se ni or Kati
Cummings and Tornado sophomores
ll rigette Barnes, Amy Lee and Rachel
Chapm an were also recobmized by the
district coaches this year.
Baker, Spencer, Cummings and

' ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) Erratic with his driver to the
very end, Tiger Woods recovered with two brilliant shots
that set up bindies, including a
15-footer on the final hole to
beat hard-charging Phil
Mickelson by one stroke and
win the Bay Hill Invitational.
Woods closed with a 3under 69 and became only
the second player to repeat as
Bay Hill champion. More
importantly, it was his first
victory of the year in seven
tournaments, the longest he
ever has gone without winning to start a season.
· Mickelson had a 6-under
66, making back-to-back
birdies to take the lead from
Woods and then hanging . on
with a 60-yard pitch shot to
within a couple of inches to
save par on the 18th hole.

keep
rolling
•

1n N
•

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

PHOENIX (AP) - Annika Sorenstam, hj;r birdie
toucli in ' hidin~ moot of the
way, beat Se Ri Pak with a
string of pars - and a strong
finish - to win her secpnd
straight tournament by two .
shots over the relentless Korean.
Pak, who began the round
three shots behind, shot 5under-par 67 to Sorenstam's
68 in the LPGA Standard
Register.
But Sorenstam opened such
a big lead on Friday - when
she became the first woman
to shoot 59 in a tournament
- that she was able to prevail
down the stretch.

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. (AP)
:_ Aller being igoored by .
teams all spring, career steals
· leader Rickey Henderson was
on the verge of signing a
-!llinor league contract with
. :the San Diego Padres.
Henderson, 42, the career
.stolen base leader, needs 86
' hits to reach 3,000 and is closing on a couple of majo~
league career records.
· Henderson, who is three
. walks short of breaking Babe
Ruth's career recond of 2,062
'
· and needs to score 68 rimes to
"top Ty Cobb's record 2,245
runs, said he's willing to come
pff the bench for the Padres
' and is not demanding a longterm contract.

.Reels make cuts ·
to roster
SARASOTA, Fla. (AP)
:The
Cincinnati
Reds
. trimmed their roster to 34
players by demoting shortstop
Cookie Dawkins and first
baseman D. T. Cromer to the
:club's' minor;league system.
Dawkins was optioned. to
·Double-A Chattanooga and
Cromer reassigned to TripleA Louisville on Sunday.
The Reds' roster now has
14 pitchers, four catchers, 10
: infielders. and six outfielders.

'

Watson were . first team selections.
llarnes was a second team honoree.
Mansfield, Karr, Lee, Bailey and
Chapman all received special mentio.n .
Eastern head coac h Paul Brannon .
was voted Division IV girls coach of
the year.
In the Division 1-11 voting, Beth
Howe of Jackson was named district
MVP,
whi le
Jackson's
Tony
DeStephen was voted coach of' the
year.
Alexander's Josie Carr was named
player of the yea r in Division III,
while Oak Hill head coach Doug
Hale was voted top coach.

Underdogs

Sorenstam wins
at PhoeniX

·Henderson
signs with
·Padres

It, 2001

District 13 all-stars play tonight at Rio
FROM OVP STAFF REPORTS

Meigs sports
banquet set for

~rch

UONS ROAR- Penn State's Gyasi Cline-Heard plays to the crowd in the waning moments
of the Nittany Lions win ·over North Carolina in the South regional Sunday. (AP)

Favorites rule at
OHSAA toyrney
COLUMBUS (AP) -.
Alison Bales was swatting
shots, Cincinnati M cNichol as was diving for joy.
Pat Diulus won another
championship and Jackson
Center's defense was dominant.
All in all, Saturday's
championship games at the
26th annual girls state basketball tournament went
according to plan . The
favorites won, but not
without having to put up a
fight .
Bales, Beavercreek's 6foot-5 center, blocked two
shots down the stretch as
the top-ranked Battling
Beavers (28-0) won the
Division I championship
game 42-35 over Dayton
Chaminade-Julienn~ .

She got her first block
with a minute remaining,
stopping Megan DuffY on a
drive that could have cut
Beavercreek's lead to five.
With Beavercreek ahead
38-33 seconds later, Bales
cam~ up big ~gain, blocking a shot by Jenny Beane.
She only scored six pointl,

but Beavercreek coach Ed
Z ink didn't mind.
. "They took her out of
our offense, but defensively
she made big blocks late in
the game when they're trying to score quickly," Zink
said. "She doesn't need the
ball to be an impact player."
Th'e Battling Beavers and
the Lady Eagles (25-3) both
tied the state record for 3pointers in a Division I title
game with eight.
Beavercreek was just 11of-3 I from the floor, but hit
8-of-17 3-pointers. Chaminade-Julienne shot 13- of30, going 8-for-20 · on 3s.
The team's 16 combined 3pointers set a championship
game record for most 3s
made by both teams.
·
Emily Williams scored I 4
points and made 4-of-5 3pointers for Beavercreek.
Duffy, a junior who
already has committed to
play for Notre Dame, led
Chamina&lt;!e-Julienne with
15 points, making 3-of-1 I
3s. Brandie Hoskins scored

PIRH IM OHSAA. Be

A month ago, North Carolina was ranked No. I, riding an
18-game winning streak and
looking like a fair b et to make
the Final Four for the seco nd
straight year.
.
Then it all fell apart for the
Tar Heels.
UNC , seeded second in the
South, completed a stunning
collapse by losing to No. 7
Penn State 82-7 4 Sunday in
New Orleans in the second
round of the NCAA tournament.
"It stings pretty good. The
fitulicy of i t - it hurts," firstyear coach Matt Doherty said.
"Any team that's ranked No. I
at some point in the year has a
chan ce to do special things.
Things just didn't click for us
at the end." ·
The team that beat North
Caroli na in the national se mifinals a year ago, Florida, also
was eliminated Sunday on the
same court. The .No. 3 Gators
were beaten by No. II Templ e
75-54.
Penn State, in the round of
16 for ·the fir.;r tim e si nce
1955, plays Temple in Atlanta
on Friday.
Top-seeded Michigan · St.1te,
whic h defeated Florida in the
2000 NCAA title game, and
No. 12 Gonzaga also advanced

in the South.
In Mem phis, Tenn ., Mi chi gan State bea t No. 9 Fresno
State 81-65, while Gonzaga
topped N o. 13 Indiana State
85-68 to get to the regional
semifinals for th e third year in
a row.
The Midwest held to form
Sunday. with the top four
seeds - Illino is, Arizona , Mi ssissippi and Kansas - headin g
to San Antonio for Friday's
regional semifinals.
In New Orleans, Titus
lvbry, Jo e Crispin and Gyasi
Cline-Heard combined for 61
point&lt; for Penn State, which
was outshot '47 percent to 44
percent and outnebounded
44-33. But th e Nittany Li ons
had half as many turnovers as
the Tar Heels.
UNC has made 27 straight
NCAA tourney appearances,
won three national championships and produced such
sta rs as Michael Jordan, Jam es
Worthy and Vince Carter:
Pen n State, by contrast, has
mad e just three NCAA
appearances in the past 35
years.
" It was a frustratin g _game,"
Doherty said. "They had 28
points off turn overs and that
hurt. I don't know if I'll ever

Plea1e see NCAA. 83

Jarrett wins at Darlington
DARLINGTON, S.C. (AP)
- You can't keep a good pit
creW down, even after Dale
Jarrett's team messed up as big
as it did early on at th e Carolina Dodge Dealers 400.
Jarrett started second, then
fell off to 31st by lap 60 when
th e cre\v failed to properly
attach two lugnuts to his left
front tire. But in the race's
most critical moment Sunday,
it was Jarrett's pit crew that
came through to .get him out
in front of Steve Park with 16
laps left and on th e way to victory.
"I got to hand it to them .
They did a great job getting u1
out front, and that's the only
way we were going to b~at
Steve Park," Jarrett said as he
won this event for the thind
time in five seasons. ult was a
long race and I knew these
guys were good."
Jarrett's win, the 25th of his
NASCAR career, came a
month after Dale Earnhardt's
fatal Crash at the Daytona 500.
There were good and bad
memories ofThe Intimidator
everywhere at one of his
favorite tracks.
Jarrett cruised Darlington
Raceway with hi s arm
extended, three fin gers to the

sky, in what's become each
winn er's tribute to Earnhardt
- whose car number was 3.
Jarrett said that Earnhardt
"helped me get into vi ctory
lane today with what he
taught me about this pla ce."
But it was a frightening
reminder of Earnhardt's dea th
so close to th e end that
brought flashback s of the accident and anxiety for all who
watched . Earnhandt's former
teammate, Mike Skinner,
crashed with Terry Labonte
and spun to the center of the
track, his car in flame s.
Skinner wore a head and
neck restraint . system developed by his team . He climbed
our amid the fire and was not
seriomly hurt. Earnhandt did
not wear such a restraint when
he died of a head injury Feb.
18.
N ASCAR stopped the race
for almost 11 minutes to clean
up the mess from Skinner's
crash.
"I thought we were finally
going to get us a top-1 0 here
at Darlington. It's a tough
break," Skinner said.
Labonte also gave the
thumbs up sign coming back
from the infield care center.
Earnhardt's driver, Park , led

for 164 of 293 laps. l3ut Park
could not move back up front
after losing the lead in the pits
to Jarre tt, who only led the
final 16 laps.
·
When the pit crew got a
second chan ce, Jarrett's crew
chief, Todd Parrott, said they
made it happen with a 14.2second stop on lap 279 .to nose
their driver in front of Park.
Parrott also \\las trying to
make so mething happen , calling on the sam e force he said
car owne r Richard Childress
cited a week ago as Earnhardt's rep lacem ent driver,
young Kevin Harvick, outlasted Jeff Gordon to win the
Cracker Barrel 500.
"I looked up in th e sky and
said the same prayer," Parrott
said.
Park said he probably .
wouldn't have been beaten if
noc fo r so me stray metal o n
the frontstretch that ca use a
caution.
.
"I tell you, I ~ould have had
a better shot of holding Garrett) off than catching him,''
Park said. "It's hard to pass
here, especiall y in such a short
period of time."
Jeremy Mayfield was thind

PIRH- NASCAI. Bl

�The Daily Sentinel

Nation • World

McCain eyes bill's success
WASHINGTON (AP)- Sen. John McCatn sees a 60 percent chance that Congress will pass a major overhaul of campaign finance laws this year. Other senator&gt; are reluctant to
prcdiCI.
"I'm optimtstic that the Democrats and more Republicans
will recognize that this change is badly needed," McCa1n, RAriz., said Monday. He said on Cl3S' "The Early Show" that
he has been heartened by statements by Senate Minority
Leader Tom Daschlc, D-S.D., "about Democrats and their
con1n1itmcnt tO camp:1ign finance reform."
With debate opening Monday, the question was whether
McCain could attract enough of his fellow Republicans to
the effort.
McCain said that while a majority of senators appear ro
favor further limits on camp::~ign contribtHions, he fears
opporicnts will offer amendmen 'ts "that on the face look pretty good and yet are sort of like poison pills" that would kill
the bill he is sponsoring with Sen. R.ussell Feingold, D-Wis.

Loan attraded FBI's scrutiny

WASHINGTON (A P) - A Justice Department study of
violent crime among different ra ces shows an alarmingly high
rate of viole~ce against American Indians, while crime
against other groups has fallen.
IndiatlS we re twice as likely to be. victims of violent crime
than blacks, whites or Asians. Indian women were victimized
by their partners more th an twice as often as black women
but the inciclents were reported less often than am ong blacks,
according to the study, released Sunday by the Justice Department's Bureau of Justice Stati.stics.
.
The study, which lo oked at statistics for rap e, sexual assault,
robbery, aggravated assault and simple assault, showed that
crime against blacks, whites and Hispa ni cs fell significantly
. during the study period - 1993 through 1998.

Rivals agree to merger
NEW YORK (AP) - AmeriSource Health Corp. and
Bergen 13runswig Cor p., two of the nation's largest dru g distributors, art: t::}pected to announ ce J $2.4 billi on merger
agrct:men t on Monday.
The deal, approved by both boards , wi ll create a drug-distribution giant with nearly $35 billion in annual revenue,
delivering phar maceuticals and supplie s to businesses such as
drug stores, hospita ls ·and health-maintenance organizations,
The Wall Street Journal repo rted Monday.
AmeriSource will o\vn about .51 percent of the combined
entity, to be named Am eri Source-Bergen. Bergen shareholders will receive 0.37 of a share for each share of the Orange,
Calif., company they ow n, while Am eriSource shareholders
will rec eive one share.
AmeriS ourcc's 4 p.m. Friday co mposite trading price on
the New York Stock Exchange was $48.48. Bergen's trading
price was $15.94.

Derailment kills 1, injures 96
NODAWAY, Iowa (AP) - Investigators combing a ·shred-.
ded, '3,000-foot track lined with twiste d rail cars planned to

Mond•y. ,.rch 11. 2001

,Inside:
Today~

The Daily Sentinel

Scoreboard, Page B6

Mamas and Papas singer John Phillips die at 65
lOS ANGELES ~AP)- Songwriter
J~hn Phillips, who penned "California
Dreamin "' and other hits of the 1960s
as co-founder of the pop-folk quartet
the Mamas and the Papas , has died of
heart failu re. He was 65.
Phillips , who helped organize the
seminal Monterey Pop Festival .a nd
wrote for legendary groups including
the Grateful Dead and the Beach Boys,
died Sunday morning at the University
of California, Los Angeles Medical
Center, a spokesman for the hospita l
said.
" His perso nality is going to be so re"
ly missed ," said Harvey Goldberg, a
longtime friend and producer. "His
music is going to be sorel y missed."
Phillips was the princtpal so ngwr,iter

for the Mamas and the Papas, writing
such favorites as " I Saw Her Again Last
Night" and "Creeque Alley." In I 966,
the band won a Grammy for best contemporary group perform•nce for the
single " Monday Monday."
As one of the organizers of 1967's
Monterey Pop Festival, Phillips also
helped introduce Jimi Hendrix and
·The Who to American audiences.
" He had a sweet voice, and he played
gui tar beautifully, and he'd play a song,
just acousticall y, and they'd be hits,"
Beach Boys singe r Bruce Johnston sa id
Sunday.
The Mamas and the Papas broke new
ground by h avin g \Vomen and men in
one group at a time w he n mOst pop
bands were all -male or all-female.

WASH INGTON (AP)- A maJt&gt;r polittcal donor arranged
and guaranteed aS I 00,000 lo,l ll that help&lt;ei Sen. RobertTorricclli hit it big in the stot"k nurkt~t aud first attracted FB I :\naly7e track samp les to see if the broken rails may have
int~r~st in the New Jersey DL·mocrJc·s po liri . .:al and personn l
ca used .Hl Amtrak cras h that killed a Colora do woman and
finances six years ago.
.
injured 96 .other people.
Prosecutors o pl'ned a prL·linunary inquiry into wht·thcr tht."
The co ndu ctor of the Californ ia Zephyr told investigators
lo&lt;1n arrangement was an illegal gift and \vhethcr Torri cdli Sunday. he was driving 17 mph below the posted speed of 69
provi&lt;kd favors to the donor in cxclunge. They interviewed mph on a straightaway stretc h of tra ck in southwest Iowa Satthe lawmaker in 1995 under oath. wlling him his rights urday whe n he felt a threatening tug.
before asking questions, hw enforcement offi cials and lawyers
"He app lied the brakes with an emerge ncy application and
told The Associated Press.
brought the train to a stop. However, at the sa me time the
Bu t prosec utors turned down FB I requests for subpoenas, tratn was derailing behind him,' '· Ted Turpin , head of the
gave Torricelli tin1e to voluntari ly turn over all his financial National Transportation Safety Board investigation , said at a
do cuments and eventually ended the inquiry. One prosecutor news confe ren ce Sunday.
·
told To rri celli t he U.S. attorney's office was "going out of our
The derailment left a zigzagging trail of silver cars along a
way" to keep the investiga tion quie.r "to protect your int er- mu ddy embankm ent and was expected to indefinitely close
est," d.o cuments show.
the track. Some 210 people were on board, traveling from
At the time, Torricelli was a H ouse membe.r p re pari ng to Chicago to Emeryville, Calif., when they were slammed into
run for the Senate.
the side of the train cars shortly before midmght.

Violent crime up for Indians

Page A&amp;

Ex-deputy held a.fter shootout

Page 81
Mond.y.

Phillips' second wife, Michelle Phillips,
and another female vocalist, Cass
Elliott, teamed with Phillips and
Denny Doherty.
The group 's catchy folk-pop sound
was a blend of the upbeat pop that prevailed in the mid- I 960s and the folk
music approach that gained popularity
toward the end of the decade.
The Mamas and the Papas disbanded
in 1968 followin g John and Michelle
Phillips' divorce. Phillips briefly
reformed the band in 1982 with original member Denny Doherty, daughter
Mackenzie an d · Elaine "Spanky "
McFarlane. The foursome toured playing oldies and new Phillips or igina ls.

A grand jury returned the one-co unt indictment Friday
against David Sidney Hi sey, Assistant Di strict Attorney Mo
Ib rahim said .
·
Hisey, 52, has been in j ai l si nce ea rly September, when th e
bodies of his parents, 85-year-old Sunnye Hisey and 91-yearold H ollis Hisey, were discovered at their home. A medical
examiner ruled each was strangled.
Hisey was indicted in bctober on a charge of theft involving a check for $3,400 drawn on his parents' account the
same day their bodies were found.

Confliding studies hamper study
NEW YORK (AP) - Voting sounds so simple.
One person, ·o ne vote. The candidate with the most votes
wins. For ·president, the Electoral College balances out states
big and small.
The tangled reality became apparent in last fall's overtime
election. A few people - enough to sway a close race invariably make mistakes and spoil their votes. The problem
is, some machines seem to encourage more errors than others.
The answer, clearly, is to find machines that confuse the
fewest voter~. But that isn't so simple, as state legislatures and
Congress are learning in their search for a more trustworthy
electio n system.
It's hard to pick one voting system over another because littie analysis of voting technology exists, and the reports that
are available often conflict.

ELLENWOOD, Ga. (AP) - A former sheriff's deputy,
whose lawyer called him the "main suspec.t" in the murder of
the sheriff-el ect, was· involved in a shootout with men he said
·
we re trying to silence him.
·Patrick Cuffy, 35, was in police custody but had not been
charged Sunday night.
Neighbors said they saw Cuf!Y and several men exchanging .
gunfire outside his home early Sunday morning. The men
then pulled a wounded man into a reef truck parked outside
the1 house.
'1 was talking with my friend, Damia Hewitt, o utside my
house wh en three different vehicles fired at us," 'Cuffy told
WAGA-TV: " Hewitt was shot in both legs, but I believe the r-''~
·were tryin g to get me."
TETOVO, Macedonia (AP) - The Macedonian army sent
four tanks rolling into the country's second-largest ciry Mondo,y, signaling .the. military w~s ready, t,o engage ethnic, Alban- ,
SPACE .CEI'JT,ER, Houston (AP) - The first crew of the ian rebels fighting for greater rights. NATO, under increasing
international' s·pa.te-. station is On its way back to Earth.
pressure to intervene, sent troops to the border with Kosovo
The three- man crew - .Commander Bill Shepherd and to cut off rebel sup_ely lines.
Russian COSlllOI{auts Yuri Gidzenko and Sergei Kriklilev ' The tanks entered Tetovo' shortly before noon, accompaleft space station Alpha late Sunday night aboard space shut- ni ed by an armored personnel carrier and two military
tle Discovery. They and the shuttle crew are scheduled· to trucks, one filled with government soldiers. They arrived as
return to Earth early Wednesday.
clashes decreased in intensity after a night of bombandments .
Shepherd, a 51-year-old Navy captain, and · his Russian
Maceoonian police and army units were bringing in
crewmates sp ent 4 1/2 months on Alpha, transforming it infantry reinforcements, including armored vehicles, field
fronl a spartan, three-room o utpost to a sophi sti cated fourartillery pieces and howitzers, the independent Yugoslav radio
room ·complex capa ble of scientific research.
station B92 reported. It said the rebe ls tried to raid Tetovo ·
" We hold you in admiration as we · prepare to bring .you
center Monday morning but suffered heavy casualties and
home," Discove ry Command er James Wetherbee said of
Alpha's first crew. "This has been an arduous duty for you. retreated back into the hills . The report could not immediThis ship was not built in a safe harbor, it was built on the ately be confirmed.
Reflecting growing international concern that the stability
high ~eas."
of th e entire region was at stake, NATO Secretary-General
Lord Robertson said Monday that the international force in
Kosovo was moving more troops to the border with Macedonia
to cut off the supply lines to insurgents who have
GALVESTON, Texas (AP) - An · unemployed shrimper
who liye d with the bodies of his dead parents for months has attacked government forces there. He declined to say how
been charged with murder.
many troops would be deployed.

Army rolls into city

ShuHie returns Wednesday

Man lived with dead parents

#I Great OPPortunit~ To Tell Your Business Stor~
#2 Great OPPortunit~ To Hiehlieht Your Business· AccomPlishments
#3 Great OPPortunit~ to SPotliaht Your EmPloYees
#4 Great OPPortunit~ To Generate New Business
#Sit APPears In The GalliPolis Dail~ Tribune. Point Pleasant Reeister. And The Dail~ Sentinel

MONDAY's

HIGHLIGHTS

Tuesday
ROCK SPRINGS -The
annual Meigs High School
winter sports banquet will be
held this Tuesday in the
school's cafeteria beginning at
6:30p.m.

11ger back on
traCk at Bay Hill

'

RIO GRANDE - District 13's
finest will meet tonight in the annual
all-star games at the University of Rio
Grande. The Division I-II all-stars will
play against the Division III-IV allstars with the girls game beginning at
6 p.m. and the boys game starting at 8
p.m. Tickets are 54 each.
M eigs County players named to this
year's all-star teams include Eastern
seniors M att Simpson, the Division IV
player of the year year, Joe Brown,
Chad Nelson and junior C hris Lyons;
Southern seniors Garret Kiser. Chad
Hubband, Jeremy Fisher and Jonathan
Evans; and Meigs senior J.P. Staats,

who will play for the Division 1- 11 all stars.
Simpson, Drown and Kiser were
first team selections. Staats, Nelson
and Hubbard were named to the second team. Fisher, Lyohs and Evans
received special mention .
Alvin Carp enter of Symmes Valley
was voted Division IV coach of the
year.
Wade Martin of Athens was the
Division I- ll MVP, while Warren's
Blane Maddox was .named coac h of
the year.
Chesapeake swep t top honors in
Division Ill, with senior Anthony
Delimpo witming player of the year

and Norm Persin earning coach of
the year honors. ·
Eastern senior Amber Baker was
tabbed Division IV player of the year
and will represent the Eagles along
with fellow seniors Danielle Spencer
and Julie Bailey. Other Eastern players
named to the Distict 13 all -star team
·include juniors Staci Watson, Sara
M~nsfield· and Whitney Karr.
Meigs sen iors Amher Vining and
Shannon Price, Southern se ni or Kati
Cummings and Tornado sophomores
ll rigette Barnes, Amy Lee and Rachel
Chapm an were also recobmized by the
district coaches this year.
Baker, Spencer, Cummings and

' ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) Erratic with his driver to the
very end, Tiger Woods recovered with two brilliant shots
that set up bindies, including a
15-footer on the final hole to
beat hard-charging Phil
Mickelson by one stroke and
win the Bay Hill Invitational.
Woods closed with a 3under 69 and became only
the second player to repeat as
Bay Hill champion. More
importantly, it was his first
victory of the year in seven
tournaments, the longest he
ever has gone without winning to start a season.
· Mickelson had a 6-under
66, making back-to-back
birdies to take the lead from
Woods and then hanging . on
with a 60-yard pitch shot to
within a couple of inches to
save par on the 18th hole.

keep
rolling
•

1n N
•

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

PHOENIX (AP) - Annika Sorenstam, hj;r birdie
toucli in ' hidin~ moot of the
way, beat Se Ri Pak with a
string of pars - and a strong
finish - to win her secpnd
straight tournament by two .
shots over the relentless Korean.
Pak, who began the round
three shots behind, shot 5under-par 67 to Sorenstam's
68 in the LPGA Standard
Register.
But Sorenstam opened such
a big lead on Friday - when
she became the first woman
to shoot 59 in a tournament
- that she was able to prevail
down the stretch.

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. (AP)
:_ Aller being igoored by .
teams all spring, career steals
· leader Rickey Henderson was
on the verge of signing a
-!llinor league contract with
. :the San Diego Padres.
Henderson, 42, the career
.stolen base leader, needs 86
' hits to reach 3,000 and is closing on a couple of majo~
league career records.
· Henderson, who is three
. walks short of breaking Babe
Ruth's career recond of 2,062
'
· and needs to score 68 rimes to
"top Ty Cobb's record 2,245
runs, said he's willing to come
pff the bench for the Padres
' and is not demanding a longterm contract.

.Reels make cuts ·
to roster
SARASOTA, Fla. (AP)
:The
Cincinnati
Reds
. trimmed their roster to 34
players by demoting shortstop
Cookie Dawkins and first
baseman D. T. Cromer to the
:club's' minor;league system.
Dawkins was optioned. to
·Double-A Chattanooga and
Cromer reassigned to TripleA Louisville on Sunday.
The Reds' roster now has
14 pitchers, four catchers, 10
: infielders. and six outfielders.

'

Watson were . first team selections.
llarnes was a second team honoree.
Mansfield, Karr, Lee, Bailey and
Chapman all received special mentio.n .
Eastern head coac h Paul Brannon .
was voted Division IV girls coach of
the year.
In the Division 1-11 voting, Beth
Howe of Jackson was named district
MVP,
whi le
Jackson's
Tony
DeStephen was voted coach of' the
year.
Alexander's Josie Carr was named
player of the yea r in Division III,
while Oak Hill head coach Doug
Hale was voted top coach.

Underdogs

Sorenstam wins
at PhoeniX

·Henderson
signs with
·Padres

It, 2001

District 13 all-stars play tonight at Rio
FROM OVP STAFF REPORTS

Meigs sports
banquet set for

~rch

UONS ROAR- Penn State's Gyasi Cline-Heard plays to the crowd in the waning moments
of the Nittany Lions win ·over North Carolina in the South regional Sunday. (AP)

Favorites rule at
OHSAA toyrney
COLUMBUS (AP) -.
Alison Bales was swatting
shots, Cincinnati M cNichol as was diving for joy.
Pat Diulus won another
championship and Jackson
Center's defense was dominant.
All in all, Saturday's
championship games at the
26th annual girls state basketball tournament went
according to plan . The
favorites won, but not
without having to put up a
fight .
Bales, Beavercreek's 6foot-5 center, blocked two
shots down the stretch as
the top-ranked Battling
Beavers (28-0) won the
Division I championship
game 42-35 over Dayton
Chaminade-Julienn~ .

She got her first block
with a minute remaining,
stopping Megan DuffY on a
drive that could have cut
Beavercreek's lead to five.
With Beavercreek ahead
38-33 seconds later, Bales
cam~ up big ~gain, blocking a shot by Jenny Beane.
She only scored six pointl,

but Beavercreek coach Ed
Z ink didn't mind.
. "They took her out of
our offense, but defensively
she made big blocks late in
the game when they're trying to score quickly," Zink
said. "She doesn't need the
ball to be an impact player."
Th'e Battling Beavers and
the Lady Eagles (25-3) both
tied the state record for 3pointers in a Division I title
game with eight.
Beavercreek was just 11of-3 I from the floor, but hit
8-of-17 3-pointers. Chaminade-Julienne shot 13- of30, going 8-for-20 · on 3s.
The team's 16 combined 3pointers set a championship
game record for most 3s
made by both teams.
·
Emily Williams scored I 4
points and made 4-of-5 3pointers for Beavercreek.
Duffy, a junior who
already has committed to
play for Notre Dame, led
Chamina&lt;!e-Julienne with
15 points, making 3-of-1 I
3s. Brandie Hoskins scored

PIRH IM OHSAA. Be

A month ago, North Carolina was ranked No. I, riding an
18-game winning streak and
looking like a fair b et to make
the Final Four for the seco nd
straight year.
.
Then it all fell apart for the
Tar Heels.
UNC , seeded second in the
South, completed a stunning
collapse by losing to No. 7
Penn State 82-7 4 Sunday in
New Orleans in the second
round of the NCAA tournament.
"It stings pretty good. The
fitulicy of i t - it hurts," firstyear coach Matt Doherty said.
"Any team that's ranked No. I
at some point in the year has a
chan ce to do special things.
Things just didn't click for us
at the end." ·
The team that beat North
Caroli na in the national se mifinals a year ago, Florida, also
was eliminated Sunday on the
same court. The .No. 3 Gators
were beaten by No. II Templ e
75-54.
Penn State, in the round of
16 for ·the fir.;r tim e si nce
1955, plays Temple in Atlanta
on Friday.
Top-seeded Michigan · St.1te,
whic h defeated Florida in the
2000 NCAA title game, and
No. 12 Gonzaga also advanced

in the South.
In Mem phis, Tenn ., Mi chi gan State bea t No. 9 Fresno
State 81-65, while Gonzaga
topped N o. 13 Indiana State
85-68 to get to the regional
semifinals for th e third year in
a row.
The Midwest held to form
Sunday. with the top four
seeds - Illino is, Arizona , Mi ssissippi and Kansas - headin g
to San Antonio for Friday's
regional semifinals.
In New Orleans, Titus
lvbry, Jo e Crispin and Gyasi
Cline-Heard combined for 61
point&lt; for Penn State, which
was outshot '47 percent to 44
percent and outnebounded
44-33. But th e Nittany Li ons
had half as many turnovers as
the Tar Heels.
UNC has made 27 straight
NCAA tourney appearances,
won three national championships and produced such
sta rs as Michael Jordan, Jam es
Worthy and Vince Carter:
Pen n State, by contrast, has
mad e just three NCAA
appearances in the past 35
years.
" It was a frustratin g _game,"
Doherty said. "They had 28
points off turn overs and that
hurt. I don't know if I'll ever

Plea1e see NCAA. 83

Jarrett wins at Darlington
DARLINGTON, S.C. (AP)
- You can't keep a good pit
creW down, even after Dale
Jarrett's team messed up as big
as it did early on at th e Carolina Dodge Dealers 400.
Jarrett started second, then
fell off to 31st by lap 60 when
th e cre\v failed to properly
attach two lugnuts to his left
front tire. But in the race's
most critical moment Sunday,
it was Jarrett's pit crew that
came through to .get him out
in front of Steve Park with 16
laps left and on th e way to victory.
"I got to hand it to them .
They did a great job getting u1
out front, and that's the only
way we were going to b~at
Steve Park," Jarrett said as he
won this event for the thind
time in five seasons. ult was a
long race and I knew these
guys were good."
Jarrett's win, the 25th of his
NASCAR career, came a
month after Dale Earnhardt's
fatal Crash at the Daytona 500.
There were good and bad
memories ofThe Intimidator
everywhere at one of his
favorite tracks.
Jarrett cruised Darlington
Raceway with hi s arm
extended, three fin gers to the

sky, in what's become each
winn er's tribute to Earnhardt
- whose car number was 3.
Jarrett said that Earnhardt
"helped me get into vi ctory
lane today with what he
taught me about this pla ce."
But it was a frightening
reminder of Earnhardt's dea th
so close to th e end that
brought flashback s of the accident and anxiety for all who
watched . Earnhandt's former
teammate, Mike Skinner,
crashed with Terry Labonte
and spun to the center of the
track, his car in flame s.
Skinner wore a head and
neck restraint . system developed by his team . He climbed
our amid the fire and was not
seriomly hurt. Earnhandt did
not wear such a restraint when
he died of a head injury Feb.
18.
N ASCAR stopped the race
for almost 11 minutes to clean
up the mess from Skinner's
crash.
"I thought we were finally
going to get us a top-1 0 here
at Darlington. It's a tough
break," Skinner said.
Labonte also gave the
thumbs up sign coming back
from the infield care center.
Earnhardt's driver, Park , led

for 164 of 293 laps. l3ut Park
could not move back up front
after losing the lead in the pits
to Jarre tt, who only led the
final 16 laps.
·
When the pit crew got a
second chan ce, Jarrett's crew
chief, Todd Parrott, said they
made it happen with a 14.2second stop on lap 279 .to nose
their driver in front of Park.
Parrott also \\las trying to
make so mething happen , calling on the sam e force he said
car owne r Richard Childress
cited a week ago as Earnhardt's rep lacem ent driver,
young Kevin Harvick, outlasted Jeff Gordon to win the
Cracker Barrel 500.
"I looked up in th e sky and
said the same prayer," Parrott
said.
Park said he probably .
wouldn't have been beaten if
noc fo r so me stray metal o n
the frontstretch that ca use a
caution.
.
"I tell you, I ~ould have had
a better shot of holding Garrett) off than catching him,''
Park said. "It's hard to pass
here, especiall y in such a short
period of time."
Jeremy Mayfield was thind

PIRH- NASCAI. Bl

�Pqe B2 • The Dally Sentinel

::
••
•••
~

~
..

~

••

Monchty, March 18, 2001
Apartments
lor Rent

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

540 Mlacellan110111
MercNindiM

560

·=
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Penn State 82
North Carohna 74
Ivory and Cr spm each
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and 10 rebu nds

Temple 75 Flor1da 54
Qut 1cy Wadley had 24
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Ten pi (?3 l ?)
Flonda s
pomt
total
1 arche d tl
lo \est n co cl
B11ly D&lt; t o a 1 s five y s t
tl school The Gato s (?4 7)
shot 01 ly 18 for 50 overall
tel dmg H for ?9 ot 3
pot te s
M1chtgan St 81
Fresno St 65
The Spartans (26 4) h d
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M1chtgan Stat I cld the
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Gonzaga 85

Ind1ana State 68
Casey Calvary scored 24
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Matt Renn s 3 po nter for
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miSSed 13 of tts first 14 3
pomt attempts

Kansas 87 Syracuse 58
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pomts and a career best 15
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6) ended thetr three year sec
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cuse (25 9) had tts fewest
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K nsas 56

MtsSLsstppl 59
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Mtsms pp!S 5 foot 5 Jason
Harmu p li ed p a td h t a
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v nd ng do vn a d J st 46
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Rah n Lockhart led Ole
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Troy Murphy a two ume
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tl e second half for Notre
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Ar1zona 73 Butler 52
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m SIX years Butler (24 8)
went scoreless for nearly
seven tlllnutes dur ng the sec
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Factory Goof 32ll80 Sl o 000 o s
count any $100000 Down De
livery and Htup pa d by Factqry
800-891 8777

Lot model c aa ance save up 1o
$8 625 wth any home che~ us
out we e dea ng Co e s Mob le
Homes US 50 East Athens Oh
Must StU 8x80
Make 2 PaYmen s &amp; Move n
1-800-69 .fJ777

New 14ft wldl $499 down on)
$199 pa mon call now 1 800
69Hl777
New 6 ft wlda $499 pa mon
on y $270 pe mon ca I now
800-691 8777

New F eetwood 14x70 S 6 999 00
3 Bed oom 2 Ba h 1 877 777
4170

P o P ogram Renters Needed
304 738 7295

420 Mobile Homaa
for Rent
2 Bed oom 1 1 2
E ect c n Po ter
Pay
Deposit &amp;
1740)388-9162

New
Fleetwood
6JC80
$19,99900 3 Bedroom 2 Bath 1
977 m 4170

NEED AN EARLY PAYDAY?? Up
to 5500 nstant y by phone 1
877 EARLYPAY L c• 750005 t st
ADVANCE FREE

ONLY Uti 00 DOWN and
S 99 58 a month moves you n o
a New 3 bed oom 2 bath home
Ca for de a s 740-385 4367

No Fees Service Cha gea n
Need or Financial .-,ss s ance?
P ease Cal Us To Free 1 866
613 8881 241v

Reduced 19~1 Sunsh ne S ng e
w de 6x80 Tl'l ee Bed oom 2
Ful Ba ha Washe &amp; Drye Must
So $ 3 900 090 {740)379 9238
Evenings

TURNiO DOWN DN
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSt?
No Fee Unesswewn
1-888 582 3345

Uti ty B Is Getting Molt Of Your
Paychockl Ca {740)446 3093
Fo Your New Home Today

REAL ESTATE

Campers l
Motor Homes

790

IIWIIJ&lt; 1111

lu1lnH1
Opportunity

Crob Crook rood P 01 roduood
13 Aor11 Modo n 3 Bedroom a
Bolht Complllo K IOhtn taml y
Aoom W lh ~lreploot Poroh a
Ca_r, Gorogo a Mobile Homot
(Aontod) l•lra Nlol Property Ca
lomo...CIII AH ty (304) 17S.0030
(3G4)4175o:M31
Houu tor lilt 4 lodroomt 2
lllht a 125 Ao 11 I740)US

ltD

9480

s

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
washe s d vera ef lge a o s
ranges Skaggs Appl ance&amp; 76
V ne St ee Cal 740 446 7398
1-888 818-0128
Metch ng Couctl And Cha $150
Anel La ·ge Wooden ~ock ng
Cha r $25 Good Cond on
(304)675 4 37

New And Used Fu n tu e Sto e
Below Holiday fnn Kanauga We
Se Gave Monuments And
Vase&amp;

3 Bed oom 2 Bath No Pets
ns de 0 Outside (740)44e
7322

520

Beaut fu River View Idea Fo 1
0 2 Pooplo Rotorenoaa Oapos 1
No Pets Fos ar Tra er Pa k 74()441 018

GoH C ubt Sp~ng Cleaning Stle
lnd en C ttk Golf Aange Ping
Calloway Taylo Made Cob a
(7.4Q)245-S747

91 S 0 Ex ended Cab v 6 5
speed a
uns &amp; ooks good
$2150 740 742 2760

Farm Houae BHuUfu y Ramo dId 2963 Squa e Feet 7 Acre•
Pond In g ound Poo Severa
Ba ns Ga age Ffu t TrHI c ou
To Hozor S2t5ooo (740)4484230

340 Buslne11 and
lulldlnga

3110 Loti

2 Apa tments Fo Aent lrt A o
Grande Waking D 1tance To
Co ege AI Ul ltltl Pad !0%
discount on fl 1t monlhl rent
(7401245-5100
720 Second A.-enue 1 B1droom
Up1t1 • Apanm.nt 1300 +De
poet Water Sewt Trash Ptld
(740)44t-&amp;ate ID•vl (740)440
Ot 01 {Evon ngo)

Tappan H Err c ency 900J. Gas
Fu naces 0 Fu nacas 2 See
Heat Pump &amp; A Cond on ng
Sys ems F ee 8 Yea Wa anty
Bennet s Heat ng &amp; Coo ng 1
800 872 5967 www orvb comfllen
neH

760

SAVEl SAVEl SAVE Hea
Pumps l P &amp; Na u al Gas Fu
naces
You Don I Ca Us We
Bo h Lose (740 446 6308 &amp;
1 800-29 00911

?..~~

March 16 1999

TRANSPORT Ill ION

$0 DOWN CARSI POLICE IM
POUNDS &amp; REPOS HONDA S
CHEVY S JEEPS LOW AS $29/
MD 24 MO S 0 9 9'4 FOA
L ST NGS CALL 800 451 0050
1M C98 2

m (740)4:111-'t" s

540 Mlscellaneou•
Merchandlae
NO Crottt OK HUD VA
FHA COl tor atlngl
t ICI0-1101 1771' El&lt;LIItl
1988 Pont ao T ane Am $3500
(304)875-2421

1o I Aorot Looated On fr ondly
A d~t Road/ Crbwn
ly
(740t:tll-oH4 7oi0)31H330

c

,Co rent ont btelroom fu n stlaCI
opo tmonl In Mlddlepo t col 740
992 1!231

•

COMPUTERS WE F NANCE
DELL DOMPUTERSI Evon with
1111 ttlan perflcl Clrtd 1 1 100
•77-tO 1 CoCII ACta www omc
IOlutlono com

AKC Rog ttorod Ub Pupp 11
I tOO Each (7401255-1413
CKC Ch hUihUI Pupplll Ado
abltl Black AnCI Tan ~~ aed
With Love StU 00 Etch Puppy
Comn W th A Froo Doggy Bid
Fotd And Woto Bowl And A
WilkO Supply Of Dog Food I
(740)387 7884

810

Home
Improvement•

BASEMENT
WATERPROOF NG
l)nconcl ona e me gua an ee
Loca ere ences u n shed Es
ab shed 975 ca 24 H s 740)
446 0870 1 aoo 287 0576 Rog
e sWae p oofing

1988 Chevy Co 1 ca v a au
toma lc: PW S400 down 1100
month l992 Geo Storm a apttd
amlfm ca•sent $400 clown 1100
mon h ca 740 388 9893 or 740
742 7428 Buy he I pay hoI

THE LORD WAS HIS
SHEPHERD BRUCE
DO
NOT WANT
GOD LIE BRUCE
DOWN N GREEN
PASTURES AND NOW
LEADS HIM BESIDE
THE ST LL WATERS
HE RESTORETH
BRUCE S SOUL AND
NOW HE WALKS
DOWN THE PATHS OF
RIGHTEOUSNESS FOR
HIS
NAME 6 SAKE
AND WITH BRUCE
GOD WALKED
THROUGH THE
VALLEY OF THE
SHADOW OF DEATH
BUT BRUCE FEARED
NO EV L
BRUCE OFTEN SAD
FOR THOU ART WITH
ME AND MY GOD
WILL
COMFORT ME
GOO HAS PREPAREST
A TABLE FOR ALL OF
US AND AS 1GO TO
BE WITH MY LORD I
LEAVE MY PRAYERS
OF ALL I VE LEFT
BEHIND SO NOW I
AM DWELLING IN THE
HOUSE OF THE LORD
FOREVER

l v ngs on s Basemen Wate
P oo1!ng a basemen epa s
done ee est rna es
e me

gua an ee 4y son job
ance (304 895 3887

e~pe

840 Electrical and
Refrigeration

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

Bruce E.
Caldwell

Auto Parts l
Accessories

Budgel Priced T ansm 11lons
A Types Access To Ove
0 000 T ansm ss or.s Tans e
Cases 740 245 5677 Ce 339
3765

In Memory

Sawm $3 795 New Supe l.um
bermata 2000 Ia ge capac es
mo e op on&amp; Manufac u e of
sawml s edge a and sk dde s
NORWOOD INDUSTR ES 252
Sonwl D ve Bufla 0 NV 4225
FREE nforma on 1 sao 578
1383 EXT 200 U

Llrgo Colllctlon ol Ant quo Poc:lt
11 Wotchoo Good Coodh on 422

a Acruge

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

SERVICES

C&amp;C Gene a Home Man
enence Pa nt ng v ny s d ng
ca pen y doo s w ndows ba hs
mob e home repa and mo e Fo
ee est rna e ca Che 740 992
6323

Sporting
Gooclo

ALL STEEL BUILDINGS 8mll
Dlpolt wll hCkl Up to 80% OF~
40•71 50•10 50•120 80•150
Boot Olio I Doug 1 (8001 778
1107

e wood
s4

1986 Toyo a 4x4 5sp 740 992
24133

710 Autot for Sale

2nc1 A"

a

RESIDENTIAL HOME OWNERS

Apartments
for Rant

and 2 bedroom apa tmente lu
nlahed and unru n shed sacur ry
depoa equ ed nope s 740
992 22t9

New 5x10 1 u ty

1oo g ut o awn mowe
wt'IHflrt 5525 7-40..992 72 5

Pa 1J tuppti" de ve ed to your'
doo Ch s an C own En e tan
men Home Bus ness Oppo un ty
888 655 0607 Phone 606 437
9511 E ma nasm h C won com
wWN 1aoopa ryconsultan com/
38788 Nancy Sm th t38788

House
li a•e
For
Rent
Balow Ga I po s Locks On Sfa e
Rou • 7 South (740)441-otlt9

440

2000 Honda Fo eman 450ES
4x4 Unde 200 M es Perfect
Cond on $4700 Ca 740 256689

s

995
0 $4395 1994
0
$3495 1992 lum na $ 495 993
Cava e $ 695 1986 o ds sa
S995 985 Mon e Ca o $2795
COOK MOTORS (740 446.0103

10 DOWN HOMES

$0 DOWN HOMES GOV T &amp;
BANK FORECLOSURES LOW
OR NO MONEY DOWN OK
CREDIT FOR LISTINGS CALL
1 800-338-0020"" 9811

2 Story Brtclt Approx mote y 3400
Squort Foot t 1 2 Ac 11 Fu
Banmenl ltautltu Wtw Of A v
" Wll 111 sao Rtduood To
Ill &amp;00 By Appolnlmtnl Only
(7ol0)11-172

1995 Chevy Monte Ca o Z3~
Leathe Cd Loaded 740 245

Used Kenmore Washer &amp; 0 yer
Good Cond t on Wo ks Good
$300 PI~ (740)448- 062

31 0 Homes for Sale

Oualty houu c:lean ngt The
B11t Bondtd Profe11lonal Re
ob o ct I ovonlngo (740)256
1131 or S8171f 2412 omal
dOubltdeouraklnot com

Fo Sa e Recond toned waah
e s d yers and ef ge ato a
Thompsons App ance 3-407
Jackson Avenue {304)875-7388

New &amp; Uaecl Fumi1LWe
New 2 P ICI L vtng oom Su tes
$399 ~ Sal Trade

2 bedroom furnlahed o unlu
nlahld t a If nlllt to Wal Mart n
Masort central a flnanc al and
pe sonal relt ences aqu ad r10
pe ' 740 992 3961

NEW AND USED STEEL Steel
Beams P pe Reba Fo Cone e e
Ang e Channa F at Ba Stee
Gral ng Fo D a ns 0 veways &amp;
Wa kways L&amp;L Sc ap Meta s
(740)446-7300
NEW BRAND NAME COM PUT
ERS Amos eve yone app oved
w th SO down Low mon hly pay
ments11 8()().817 3476 ex 3lO

~Jackson-

ly Mus Haw

with papers

•nd No 2 Kentucky vs No 6
USC The West games m
Anahetm C•hf on Thursda)\
are No 1 Stanford vs No 5
Cmcmnat1 and No 3 I'll ory
land vs No 10 Georgetown

age G tal Bus ness Loca on
535 mo P us Depo&amp; I No Pe I
(304)875 1724

Horneworkers Needed
$835 weekly procesa ng maM
Easy! No experience needed
Cal 800-490-9450 24 hra

A Pos ion Ava table For WI C
0 recto Thla I A FuM Year Pol tlon Salary Ronga IS S t 00.
$15 00 per Hou Ballad On Qua
f~tk&gt;n And Experience Work
Schedule M F 8-4 30
Malor Atii)ODI~l!Wg Rtspon'btl For Completing The Grant
Appl~tlon And Othor F ICI Rl!qu raments For The Jackson
County Women nfant And Children (WIC) Program Re1pons ble
Fo Supervl~n OF W C C n c
Peraonnel MUll Montlo As
slgnod CaaaiOad Vendo Ac ""
ties WIC Cl~~ Operations And
Pet1o mWtC certifications Ae
spoos ble For Commurllca ion
And Coord nation Of The WIC
Program Activities Wnh Local
And State Agencies Must Have
Exce lent Ora And W tten Communlcattons Sklls Some li'aWJI

Imix collt (I apaytd)
hllllootltd Dal!latlon Ill

Fou Bu a Spaces Mound H
Cerna e y Owned By Ra hbu n
Faml y Phone (740)446-3565

Arto BOOpm

Rental Pr()J:Ie ty 3 Lots NICe 3BR
Houses On Each Co ne Lot 50
Vaca n l.o In M dd e Co ne 01
Rand &amp; Pe ch Street Kanagua
Oh o Owne Mus Se I Due To
ness (740)446-7473

Gtntat

21.obs 1•1

$30000 ttllces$22000
Oanv lie 5 Wooded Ac es
$13 500 Au and 9 Acres $8!00
Ca

I

I tnlx Cock" $palltl
I Box" lllx

SR68 5Aces S 2500 7Ac
es wth Pole Bam $23 500 Or 6
Ac as S a 000 Carr Ad 6 Ac es

F nanc ng With Slight Property
Markup

H CUBE EXPRESS
Home Ewry Weekend Morll
NO Ealt Coati NO TOuch
t e ght
75% Droo/HOoll Great aanettto
ACC8tlting 0 de Mode I
800-200 2823

New To YouTh ft SP'Ioppe
9 Wilt St rnson Athens
740-592 842
Qua lly elothlng and hO\.IIIhold
ttma $1 oo bag aalt eve y
Thuraday Monday thru Satu day

Fee to good home ma e puppy
2 male cats ca to de a s 740
992 0219

to actve111ae arrt preference

3 STEEL BU LDINGS 24x30
W85 $7 900 &amp;Ill $3 -400 .. 0K48
was $10900 sell $!200 50•120
was $2 900 se S 1 900 Neve
Put Up Can DelVer Tom 1 (800)
392 7803

BRUNER LAND
[7•0)441 1412
GaiMe Co Ke Rd 8 Ac es
12 000 Or 5 Acres With Pond
$25 000 RIO Grande Soon~
P Iva e e Acres Wlt1'1 Pond
$25 000 Or 3 Acree At Doallend 127 000 Cheshire N~
Large Fa mt'IOUII on 47 Ac es
169 ooo aAcreo St 3 500 Or 20
Ac es $ 9 500 Cay TownShiP
3 Acres W th Stream • Ba n
S33 000 Tycoon Lake 1a Acres
$ 2000
Me 911 Co Tuppe P a ns

Help wanltd In adult group home
day and night al'l ft c:a 740 092
5023

30 Announcement•

4 mos Oobe man Husky pups
malu t a ue Heale croaa tema e
spayed you or the pound 740
742 3 ••

tho Fodoral Far Hou~ng M.
or 1868 which makes It legal

WORK FROM HOME
mo Plr
mo Fir
No eKPfl 18nce needed
1i a rnng provided
800-680 9468

net
VII I Ul on ma to I nd pi ftcl
mote or calli 888 915 3288
9Q0.~-4e38 $2 99 mn

Giveaway

All ruJ estate adveft sing n
lhts newspaper Is subteet to

$500$1500 pe
$2000 $9000 pe

www 4dalematchmakl

40

EARN TO $938 WEEKLVI Top tO
Compan e&amp; Olle Assembl ng En
velope P ocess ng Mo e F ee
B ochu e Send S amped Enve
ope Today Keys one Bo• 95
OH Jopl n Mo 64802

ACCESS TO A COMPUTER?
Put I to WO k $25 h 575/hr FT
PT FREE no 800 87 80~5 e•
601 wwwlahomebzcom

A NEW CAREeR EJCam nlo ma
ton to Posta Jobs G ea Pay
Banal s 1 888 728 9083 x170
7am-7pm CST

watch the tape You can t
turn the baU over 22 umes
and expect to wm the game
Temple meanwh1le used ltS
trademark matchup zone
defense to shut down Flort
da s up tempo shooter; and
shut off passmg lanes Wuh stx
mmutes left the Gator; had
managed only 13 baskets and
had comnutted 11 turnovers
In the Mtdwest No 3 Mts
mstppt edged Notre Dame
59 56 tn Kamas Ctt)C Mo to
get past the second ro d for
the first tunc
scho I I to
'"'" but the otl er th
g me
were lopstdt d Ole M ss ext
faces secon 1 seeded Ar z m
wh ch beat Butler 73 S?
I Dayton Oh No 1 llh
lOts beat Charlotte 79 61 t
set up a gam agams No 4
Kansas wh ch d feared Syra
cuse 87 58
In Saturdays acto Duke
Kentucky UCLA nd So th
ern Cahforma made t to the
ro nd of 16 n tl e East \ htl
Stanford Maryb td C11C n
nau and George to'
the West
Four team s fron th I c 10
(Stanford Ar zona U( LA
USC) made the final 16 The
Btg Ten has three roprescnta
ttves (Mtchtgan State JUmots
Penn State) and no other
conterence has more than two
teams left m the field
On Thursday m Ph lade!
phta the East matchups are
No 1 Duke vs No 4 UCLA

EARN $25 000 TO $50 000 y
Mtd ca nau ance B lng Need
ed lmmedlate yl Home Computer
Needed FREE n e net
800
291 4883 OepU 09

company needs Suoe vso s and
Ass slant&amp; Tan ng Ftet book e
cal 1 877 367 9592 o v s
www simp eOOmework com
&lt;hnp 1www s mplehOmework com&gt;

343 DRIVERS NEEDED No ex
pe ence needed Ou ck COl.
tra n ng p og am ava abe Ea n
$38 000 + tst yu 5 STAR t
800 -448 68&amp;9 Expe enced d lv
e shod ng ClaSS A cal 1 BOO
958 2351

...... ..., 81

HOURS ll-5 M-F

S1~00 a month PT $4500 S7200
FT WORK N HOME rt e na ona

3 4 Sub II utes Ch d ens V
age HS D p oma 0 GEO Must
Be 8 Yea s 0 d Expe ence
w th P eschoo Ch den P e
ferred Send Resume To Pe son
I'll Superv so Rive Va ey CDS
605 9 h St eet Hun ngfon wv
25701 CX FaJC To (304)523-2678

NCAA

GALLIA COUNTY
DOG SHELTER

110

AIIPoraoMI

Pet1 lor Slla

Adopt A
Pet

Furn thtd 2 1 3 Aobm Apart
tntnt1 Clean No ,... No SmoK
Ina Reference• &amp; Deposit Ra
QUl tel
Ul I tl Fu n lhtcl
(7410)448-1519

The Dally Sentinel • Page 83

1994 Fo d F 350 Powe s roke
4x4 69 000 m lea S 2 500 Good
Cond on (740)388 8956 even
ngs (740)388 90~3 days

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE

CLASSIFI!E!DSI
110 Help Wanted

99&amp; Kawasak HIOO Vu can
bough new n 99 3000 m les ke
new $5500 140 742 2780

WANTED COMMUNITY SKILLS INSTRUCTOR
needed tn Me gs County Hou s 1Opm Frl thru Sam
Mon seep ove equtred Dut es tnclude teach ng
commun ty and personal sk Is to an 1nd1v1dual wth
menta reta dat on Requ rements Htgh school
d ploma /GED va d dnver s hcense three years
good dr v1ng expenence and adequale automobile
Insurance coverage Starting salary $6 00/hr
Send resume to Buckeye Community Services
P 0 Box 604 Jackson OH 45640 Deadline for
applicants 3/29/01 Equal Opportunity Employer

In Memory

EARN $$$
NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED
Ful end part time pollllon• avalleblt
Comp ote t a nlng provided with fllxlbll houri

Earn up to $15/hour
Ful time polltlona off1r btntflt package which
lncludoo Modlooi/Donlll/401 K/Pd Vooollono
CALL TODA~ START TOMORROW!

1-888·974-JOBS
Clvlo Dtvelapmen1 Oroup/Mifltnnlum Tele11rv1an

MANAGEMENT
He Is JUSt away beyond
that lead to
heaven s golden I e
II
I J II
lhe h11ls

Established local company looklnQio fillS
entry-level manaQement positions
Associates deQree or manaQement
cxpcnence Solid people skills DrQanlzatlonal
nd scl f motivation are a must
S23-$30k to start
Banents and 40 I K pion available

1-888-974-JOBS
Ask for Mr McCovey
Civic Devttlopmont Group/Millennium toltHrvlcot

•

�Pqe B2 • The Dally Sentinel

::
••
•••
~

~
..

~

••

Monchty, March 18, 2001
Apartments
lor Rent

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

540 Mlacellan110111
MercNindiM

560

·=
Announcomon~

Q.,_woy Loot• found
Ylrd lnd W.ntld
To Do Ado Mulllo Pold
lnAdYonce

mlayNE QfAQL!NE
2 00 p m till dey bllono
lhlld lolo run Sunday •
Monday ldlllon 2 00 p m
Frldoy
SENTINEL DEAQUNE
1 00 p m tho dlly bllono
lhold loto run
Sundoy • Mondoy ldlllon
1 00 p m Frldoy
REGISTER oeAQUNE.
2 dllylblforo tlllld 11 to
run by 4 30 p m Sotur&lt;tay
6 Mondoy ld~lon- 4 30
Thureday
"DoodllnM oub)ICito
chlngo duo to holldoyo"

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Personals

005

0 vorce $150
Bankn4)cy$195
Adoption $225
NOI dO-lt :fOUI'Self k
CALL 1 800 263 0503 lo FREE
ntlrmatlon Bank up cy nla n TN
KY

FREE SEARCHI
www SINGLES com
Gent eman Seek ng Wh e Fe
ma e Ova 50 Vea s For wa ks
And Friendsh p Rep y To 553

2nd Avenue Ga lpo 1 Oh o
45631 Apartment 403

LIVE GIRLSI I
NOWII
900 226 1940
EXT 9789
399 pe mn
Must De 1Byrs

START DATING TONIGHTI
Have tun mee ng tlg b4e s ng ••
In you eta Calfo moe nor
mat on
800 ROMANCE ex
738

IIATIENTION
ntartllllanal . _ Expanong
Worl&lt; From Holnl 0&lt; Of!lct
SS00.$8000/mo PTIFT
MaH Ordornn omet
Paid Tralnlnglllacatlonl
CaM 1-W;-228-0317
www CashOnTheTable CQITI
IBI your own bOaal
from hOme Up o $500 $8000/MO
PIT FIT 800 6 0-0705
www CashNowAndForeYI oom

ABSOLUTELY FREE INFO
nteme Uws Wan td
$20DO-S5000 mo
www e-commb z ne

Attent on
Wor1o: From Home
$1,200 S5 000/mo
1-877 582 054

9~00

Avon t.as T me Chance To Start
Up Free Call (7401446 3358
CAREER OPPORTUNITY
Available In Ou C rcultatlonl
Mar,!(e~Jng Depa menl
Are you looking fo I tuH I me
pos lon that offllrs opponun tv kl
advancement? Do you enjoy
work wl h youth? Do you enjC1,'
sales? Do you enjoy be ng crea
tlve? Do you have dePendlll&gt;le
transpo tatlon? If so you could
be he person we are lOOk no for!
Posl11on otters aH company
benefl&amp;a nc ud health and life
naurance 41 OK p an pa d hoi
days and vacatiOn plan
Fo n e!Vlew consideration
send your taum1 wl1h a b tar
COYII ttter tel~ng us 'Ntrf you a e
rhe pe aon we are ""*'ng lor to
PAUL BARKER
Clrcutotlon DINCtar
Ohio Volley Pullllthln;
826 THIRD AVENUE
GALLIPOUS OH 41131

no

no

Galllpolle
l VIcinity
lndoo and Outdoor Sale Ma ch
16 719th AlsoTat oneua
v le P keto Sale {740)446- 887

Pomeroy
Middleport
l VIcinity

80

Auction
and Flea Market

Anglt s Fleamarket open F day
Satu day and Sunday Spacu
ava able Fo more nfo mat on
ca 740-742 1408

CAREER OPPORTUNITY! Ea n
nee! ent nco me Easy c a ms
p oceas ng Fu I t an ng Home
PC IQU td Ca Phy&amp; c an &amp;
Mea thea e Developments toll
free 800.772 5933 ... 2070
CHOOSE YOUR OWN HOURS
Vou own hOme based business
maIo de nte ne
$1 500
$7 200+ mo. PT FT F ee nlorma
tlonl 414 290 B526 www Its your

blz.com
CLAMS PROCESSOR I Procell
Cte mo F om Homo $20 $40 H
Poltntta Full T a nlng COmputer
w Modem equ ed CALL: NOW!
1-811-585-S t 97 ut 842
Class A COL D ver Wanted 2
Ytl 1 OTR Expe ence Cal
(740)398 8331 Loava Name &amp;

NL&lt;r&gt;ber
Cool Spot now h r ng tue desk
cashle a de he p &amp; cooks Pick
up app caUona at Coo Spot At
!50 &amp; 7 Coolvtle Oh o
Abso Uti Top Dolla u S s v1
Go d Co ns Proofaets, D amonds
God A ngs
US Cu ency
M T S Coin Shop 151 Second
~-ue Ga pous 740-446-2842

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

110

Help Wantad

12 000 W!EKLYI Moiling 400
b ochu .. , Sat &amp;faction Gua
anteed Poa age &amp; Suppl es pro-v dtd Rush Se f Add esaed
Stamped Envo opel G CO DEPT
! Bpx 143~ ANTIOCH TN
370 1 438 Sa mmedatey

ISOI WEEKLY GUARANTEED
WORKING W TH THE GOV
ERNMENT FROM HOME PART
TIME NO EXPEl! ENCE R!
QU RED I 100 741 57te EXT
XtOt

DATA ENTRY
$45 000/yr potant a
Need &amp;elf 1tanera whO raqu e no
superv 1 on Ful T a n ng Set
Own Hours Compule w modem
requ reel Ca To F ee 1 888
523-#17 ut 884

Now h rtg fo d Ivers at Com no a
P zza n Pome oy Stop In for an
II'P ~lion or caN 740-992 2124
OR VERS Cannon EKprtsl
Lease P og am 83e: m Owner
Ope ato 83t: m company dr v
e s sta 1ng up o 34e m w In
c eases to 391: m Pay a sea
www cannonexp t6S com Ca fo
Dlta s 800-845-9390

Orivt I 14 City COL lrtln ng NO
EXPERIENCE •:Ilk tol yoor of'uN
beneflta •Mid 01 ~01 K LlteUmt
ob J*Cimtnt Tull on rtlmburH
mon t quo flod Call t-Ill 145
850a

ttll WIIICLYI Mokt Money

Htlp ng l'topll RICINt ~Mrn­
mtnt Rotunat Prot Dtttlt 1a4
hrt) I ICIO-UU121111 S100

Ul7 IS WEEKLY P oooulng
HUD/PHA Mort;aQI AofUtlllt No
E•por ~not Aoqufrod ~o FAEE
lnlormellon Coli t 100 501 1132
ut 1300

mltallon or dfscrim nation
buod '"' roca cc1o&lt; religion
HX 1aml6ia status o national
origin "' any ntentlon to
make any aucn prefaranca
limitation or dlsa1minatlon
This .-spepe wi not

Needed Someone To L ve n And
G \It Ass stance To E de y Lady
n Exchange Fo Room &amp; Boa d
Leave A Message

knowing~

advertisements lor real estate
which It n vlolat on or t11e
law Our readers a e hereby
lnfonned that all dwetlngs
advertlsed In th 1 ntWipape
ara ava able on an equal
opportunity balls

740 256

6810
Own A Computer?
Put

accept

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$25 $75&lt;&gt; PT FT
1 888 885 4325
www b-hapl com

310 Homes for Sale

F NALLY A LEG T MATE HOME
BUS NESS Ba00&lt;00 a highly paid
ega o med cal ansc lber cod
er o b e In as ltle as 0
weeks Ananc ng 1\18 able
med tee com 1 an 335-4072

POSTAL JOBS to St 8 35 h
WILOL FE JOBS to $21 60 hr n

c udes Bene s No Expe lence
Necessa y Fo App cat on and
EKam nfo ca I 800 992 7054
•208 M F 8 30 5 OOpm

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$0 OR LOW DOWN TAX
REPO S &amp; BANKRUPTC ES OK
CRED T FOR L ST NG CALL
800-501 1m ext 9813

Look ng To Buy A Ntw HDma?
Don t Have Land? We Do Hu ry
Only 0 l.o s Left ~ 736-7295

Dr vore ~A M Trlntpon No ••
perltnot nlldlcl, Wlllt CDI.
lralnlng 134 000/yr yeo plue tull
btntlrt• &amp; paid training, Orlvert
btttd In M dwttl 1 ·177 230
S002 lundly ltm 4pm Mondoy
7om-lf)nt Tut Frt 7orn-4pm

a

Oakwood Apanments
ween Town &amp; Ho u
Bad oom
Stove Rtfr gmto Fu n shed No
Ptll D1po1l S~GO Plua Ut Uaa
Cell (740)441-31129 Alto 7pm
One Bed oom Apartment On 1st
Avenue Gal pol s W11h1r Dry
• Hook tJP $270/mo P ua Oa
poll Weto Pod (740)448-4043
Tara Townhouse Apartments
Vt y Spao out 2 Bed ooma 2
F oors CA
12 Sa h Fu y Ca
peteel Adu 1 Poot &amp; Baby Poo
Patio Sta $385 Mo No Pels
Leaea Plus Secu I y Oapoa Ae
qu ed Oaya 740 448 3481
Even ngs 740 367 0602 740
448-0 0
Tw n R verTowe s now accep ng
app oc:atk&gt;ns fort BR
HUO sliis d zed apt o elde y
and d sa~Od EOH (304)675
8879

RENTALS

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

460 Space for Rent
Downtown Second Avenue Near
Cou thouse And C y Bu ldlng
N ce y Deco aled AJC 3 Rooms
Bu ld ng By stl 448 2nd Ava
(7401445-9539

2 Bed oom W th A tached ga

3 Bedroom 1 Bath House Wash
&amp; Dryer New Carpet S450
montl\ P us $200 Depoa t No
Pets t MleUpRouo2AtGon
wood
(304)578 9991
Or
(304)675 0127

a

NEED HEl.PI ntlcl peop I o
help me expand ma I o de e
comme et bus n111 locally na
t ona y and nternat ona v wh e
working from home Excenenl n
come po ent all FREE nfo madon
www 1road2aucces&amp; com 1 888
7 7 8271

76 14x70 Bayv ew (w Den} New

Since 97 C A Wate Haate
Fu naca With Fronl Po ch Shed
&amp; Wood Fence
l.o a Of
Remade ng Mus See $8 000
(304)815-3008

JOB POSTING

WI.C Director
v nton COm-

MER CHANDI SE

510

Houeehold
Goods

2 Bed oom In Count v S ove
Aa ge ato C A Wa e T ash
Paid No Pets $350 Depos t
{7401388-837

mun ty ActiOn Inc Curren ly Has

230

FREE CASH NOW$ 1om
wea thy fam es unload ng m on6
of data 6 o hep mnmze their
taxes W e lmmed ate y W NO
FALLS 30 0 W LSHIRE BLVD
188 LOS ANGELES CALIFOR
WANTED
Expe enced E ec
1 lc1an Muet Have Refe ences
va el 0 ver's l cense Tools All d
T anspo at on Good Wages
Local Wo k Appl ca ons Ava I
able At Chr s ans Const uct on
1403 Easle f' Avt1nue Ga I po s
Ohio 4!5e 4 Form 8 5

Bualnaas

Training
Tmnaportatton PreviOus
v aory Expe IInce And Know
edge Of P ana a nfant And
ChHd Nut nton Praforrod Coll1lut
ar s~no Requl ed Know ac1go ot
Network ng E•cel Ano Word A
Pus

Submll Resume W th Cove Let
te To Cheryl Thiessen Executive
Dlrecto Ma To JVCA 1&lt;333
Sta I RoUII 327 We s on Ohio
45892 An Agency App ~tkln
MUll 8a Comploted P lor To In
ervtew A Job Oeacrlptlon Is
Available ey cau ng (7401:ltl43722 Ext 1912 Oea&lt;ll"" Fo App~lng s Mach 30 2001 Or untH
Posllon s F led JVCAI s An
Equal Oppo unity Emp oye I Provider ol StNices. Aux Nary Aida
And servas Are Ava able
Upon Request To lndMduats
With Df8abll ties Oh o Relay
1 800-750-0750

Gllllpolla C1reer Colleg•
Ca eers Close To Home)

Call TOday 740 446 4367
800.2 t&lt;1-0452
Reg f90.0~ 274B

150

Schools

Instruction
BLACKSTONE
PARALEGAL
STUD ES Home S udy app oved
Affo clab'e comp ehens ve ega
tra n ng s nee 1890 FREE Cala
lOg 800.826 9228 w e P.O BOll
70 449 Callas TX 75370 NA o
http 1www blacks onelaw com
BLACKSTONE
PARALEGAL
STUDIES Comp ehena ve affOJd
•ble Home S udy lega t a n ng
s nee 1890 F ae catalog eoo
826 9228 P 0 Bo• 701449 Da
las TX 75370 o h tp www black
stoneawcom
GED
Get your HS equ valency d ploma
w h ou easy home s udy cou se
1 600.589 2163 ext 31 o

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EARN UPTO $10 00 AN HOUA

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[Guora- Satery)
Men and Women Needed To Do
Te epnone Operator Work Fo
RADIO STATION PROMOTIONS
Homemake wo k wh re
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DAY AND EVENING SHIFT
AVAILABLE
FULL AND PARHIME
OPENINGS
NO EXPERIENCE NEEDEDTRAIN NG PROGRAM
COLLEGE &amp; H S STUDENTS
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App~ In Plraon At
303Monsrao
Pen Plootont,WV
Tulodly lllrch-

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I 0011\11 Until I t1o.rn ONLY
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Overbrook Ctnltr now hat PI t
t mt POl t ant IVIItblt for AN I
one! LPN t Owrbrook Center lilt
mtny oar ng ttaff mtmbtfl and 1
1 bllutHu focllty Wo "" ta your
lo tlop tnd oomp ott tn oppllco
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OWN A COMPUTER! Put 1 to
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Pd lor by Gulla County

FREE G ant Money &amp; Gove n
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FORMAT ON 1 800 242 0363

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ext 40090

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3 15 lbs week y Gua an ••d con
tro cavngs fee gea Bun a
qu ck y On y $ 9 95 COOS
Phonechlcks C edt Cads 1
800 258-&lt;1989

I

FARM SUPPLI ES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

G VE THE BEAUTY ol over twon
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your t ends fam y you II f V~
us Ohtt;l /www o egondahha com

JET
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Rtpa red New &amp; A'bu n S ock
Ca Ron Evana 800-1537 9528
MOilLE HOME OWNERS

SOUTH
Penn State 82
North Carohna 74
Ivory and Cr spm each
scored 21 as Penn State (21
) 1) became the first team to
beat North Carolina thts sea
son whtle bomg outshot
Juhus Peppers led the Tar
Heels (26 7) wtth 21 po nts
and 10 rebu nds

Temple 75 Flor1da 54
Qut 1cy Wadley had 24
pomts and 10 rebounds fo
Ten pi (?3 l ?)
Flonda s
pomt
total
1 arche d tl
lo \est n co cl
B11ly D&lt; t o a 1 s five y s t
tl school The Gato s (?4 7)
shot 01 ly 18 for 50 overall
tel dmg H for ?9 ot 3
pot te s
M1chtgan St 81
Fresno St 65
The Spartans (26 4) h d
c:tght player~ score s x or ore
pomts a d n ovod nto the
'OUnd of 16 for the fourth
consecuttve year C) tg Dt ke
for the longest current streak
M1chtgan Stat I cld the
13 til logs (?6 7) 17 po nts
belo thetr seaso a er ge
Gonzaga 85

Ind1ana State 68
Casey Calvary scored 24
pomts and Dan D ckau added
20 mak ng all 12 of h s free
throws for Gonzaga (26 6)
Matt Renn s 3 po nter for
lnd1ana State (22 12) tted the
game at 60 With under etght

Huge nven ory D scount P ces
On Vlny Sk t ng Doo s w nd
ows Ancho a Wate Hea e s
Ptumbng &amp; E 9C ca Pa S Fu
nacas &amp; Heat Pumps Bennet s
Mob e Home Supp y 740 446
94 8 www orvb com/bennett

mmutes left but Dtckau
answered wtth a JUmper and
two free throws to put Gon
zaga ahead to stay

MIDWEST
nlmo11 79 Charlotte 61
The F ghtmg lllim (26 7)
won a second round game for
the first ume smce 1989 the
only other time they had a
No 1 seed Charlotte (22 11)
miSSed 13 of tts first 14 3
pomt attempts

Kansas 87 Syracuse 58
Drew Gooden had 17
pomts and a career best 15
rebounds as the Jayhawks (26
6) ended thetr three year sec
ond round losmg shde Syra
cuse (25 9) had tts fewest
bounds of the season 23 to
K nsas 56

MtsSLsstppl 59
Notre Dame 56
Mtsms pp!S 5 foot 5 Jason
Harmu p li ed p a td h t a
3 potnt v th the sl ot dock
v nd ng do vn a d J st 46
seconds left to end Notre
Dames first NCAA appear
nee m 11 years
Rah n Lockhart led Ole
Mtss (27 7) Vlth 24 pomts
Troy Murphy a two ume
All Amencan forward had 17
po nts but was J tst 1 of 7 1n
tl e second half for Notre
Dame (20 10)

Ar1zona 73 Butler 52
The Wildcats (25 7) won
for the 17th ttme m 19 games
and advanced to the regtonal
se mfinals for th~ fourth ume
m SIX years Butler (24 8)
went scoreless for nearly
seven tlllnutes dur ng the sec
ond half

M~torcycles

740

Room House 52 ~ ve
S1&lt;H phone (7.40)446-:11145
Fou

House Fo Ren 1789 Add son
P ke 5500/mo Plus Uti ties $500
Secu ty Oepos 1 F ee Gas Ref
trance Requ re No Pa s
1740)384-0063

Nl~900t0

SS NEEO A LOAN? T y Deb
Conso dation Cut Payments Up
To 60% Same Cay App oval 1
877 769 8188

SSS NEED CASH?? WE pay
cash fo ema nlng payments on
P ope ty Soldl Mortgagos Annul
I es Se Uementsl lmmed a e
Quo es Nobody buts our p IC
ea Nat onal Coni act 8uye a
1800) 490.073 sxl tOt wwwna
llonalcontractbuyera com
CASH LOANS $2000 $5000
Con so dal on o $200 000 Bad/
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gages Fo n o ma on 1 BOO
33&amp;7612 ext 3622
CONSOLIDATE YOUR WAY
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EASY to get started F nanc a
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800 841 9757
sxt
CC3
www deb ccs org (Non Pro t)
CREDIT PROBLEMS? CALL THE
CREDIT eXPERTS LICENSED
B01'.fOEO CORRECT REMOVE
BAD CREDIT BANKRUPTCY
LAWSUITS JUDGMENTS AAA
RATING t -888-811 0902

Appliances
Recondlt onad
Washtrl D yera Aangea Aaf I
g a1ors Up To 90 Day.s Gua
anteadl Wt Sell New Maytag Ap
p lances F ench City Maytag
740-446-77115

Factory Goof 32ll80 Sl o 000 o s
count any $100000 Down De
livery and Htup pa d by Factqry
800-891 8777

Lot model c aa ance save up 1o
$8 625 wth any home che~ us
out we e dea ng Co e s Mob le
Homes US 50 East Athens Oh
Must StU 8x80
Make 2 PaYmen s &amp; Move n
1-800-69 .fJ777

New 14ft wldl $499 down on)
$199 pa mon call now 1 800
69Hl777
New 6 ft wlda $499 pa mon
on y $270 pe mon ca I now
800-691 8777

New F eetwood 14x70 S 6 999 00
3 Bed oom 2 Ba h 1 877 777
4170

P o P ogram Renters Needed
304 738 7295

420 Mobile Homaa
for Rent
2 Bed oom 1 1 2
E ect c n Po ter
Pay
Deposit &amp;
1740)388-9162

New
Fleetwood
6JC80
$19,99900 3 Bedroom 2 Bath 1
977 m 4170

NEED AN EARLY PAYDAY?? Up
to 5500 nstant y by phone 1
877 EARLYPAY L c• 750005 t st
ADVANCE FREE

ONLY Uti 00 DOWN and
S 99 58 a month moves you n o
a New 3 bed oom 2 bath home
Ca for de a s 740-385 4367

No Fees Service Cha gea n
Need or Financial .-,ss s ance?
P ease Cal Us To Free 1 866
613 8881 241v

Reduced 19~1 Sunsh ne S ng e
w de 6x80 Tl'l ee Bed oom 2
Ful Ba ha Washe &amp; Drye Must
So $ 3 900 090 {740)379 9238
Evenings

TURNiO DOWN DN
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSt?
No Fee Unesswewn
1-888 582 3345

Uti ty B Is Getting Molt Of Your
Paychockl Ca {740)446 3093
Fo Your New Home Today

REAL ESTATE

Campers l
Motor Homes

790

IIWIIJ&lt; 1111

lu1lnH1
Opportunity

Crob Crook rood P 01 roduood
13 Aor11 Modo n 3 Bedroom a
Bolht Complllo K IOhtn taml y
Aoom W lh ~lreploot Poroh a
Ca_r, Gorogo a Mobile Homot
(Aontod) l•lra Nlol Property Ca
lomo...CIII AH ty (304) 17S.0030
(3G4)4175o:M31
Houu tor lilt 4 lodroomt 2
lllht a 125 Ao 11 I740)US

ltD

9480

s

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
washe s d vera ef lge a o s
ranges Skaggs Appl ance&amp; 76
V ne St ee Cal 740 446 7398
1-888 818-0128
Metch ng Couctl And Cha $150
Anel La ·ge Wooden ~ock ng
Cha r $25 Good Cond on
(304)675 4 37

New And Used Fu n tu e Sto e
Below Holiday fnn Kanauga We
Se Gave Monuments And
Vase&amp;

3 Bed oom 2 Bath No Pets
ns de 0 Outside (740)44e
7322

520

Beaut fu River View Idea Fo 1
0 2 Pooplo Rotorenoaa Oapos 1
No Pets Fos ar Tra er Pa k 74()441 018

GoH C ubt Sp~ng Cleaning Stle
lnd en C ttk Golf Aange Ping
Calloway Taylo Made Cob a
(7.4Q)245-S747

91 S 0 Ex ended Cab v 6 5
speed a
uns &amp; ooks good
$2150 740 742 2760

Farm Houae BHuUfu y Ramo dId 2963 Squa e Feet 7 Acre•
Pond In g ound Poo Severa
Ba ns Ga age Ffu t TrHI c ou
To Hozor S2t5ooo (740)4484230

340 Buslne11 and
lulldlnga

3110 Loti

2 Apa tments Fo Aent lrt A o
Grande Waking D 1tance To
Co ege AI Ul ltltl Pad !0%
discount on fl 1t monlhl rent
(7401245-5100
720 Second A.-enue 1 B1droom
Up1t1 • Apanm.nt 1300 +De
poet Water Sewt Trash Ptld
(740)44t-&amp;ate ID•vl (740)440
Ot 01 {Evon ngo)

Tappan H Err c ency 900J. Gas
Fu naces 0 Fu nacas 2 See
Heat Pump &amp; A Cond on ng
Sys ems F ee 8 Yea Wa anty
Bennet s Heat ng &amp; Coo ng 1
800 872 5967 www orvb comfllen
neH

760

SAVEl SAVEl SAVE Hea
Pumps l P &amp; Na u al Gas Fu
naces
You Don I Ca Us We
Bo h Lose (740 446 6308 &amp;
1 800-29 00911

?..~~

March 16 1999

TRANSPORT Ill ION

$0 DOWN CARSI POLICE IM
POUNDS &amp; REPOS HONDA S
CHEVY S JEEPS LOW AS $29/
MD 24 MO S 0 9 9'4 FOA
L ST NGS CALL 800 451 0050
1M C98 2

m (740)4:111-'t" s

540 Mlscellaneou•
Merchandlae
NO Crottt OK HUD VA
FHA COl tor atlngl
t ICI0-1101 1771' El&lt;LIItl
1988 Pont ao T ane Am $3500
(304)875-2421

1o I Aorot Looated On fr ondly
A d~t Road/ Crbwn
ly
(740t:tll-oH4 7oi0)31H330

c

,Co rent ont btelroom fu n stlaCI
opo tmonl In Mlddlepo t col 740
992 1!231

•

COMPUTERS WE F NANCE
DELL DOMPUTERSI Evon with
1111 ttlan perflcl Clrtd 1 1 100
•77-tO 1 CoCII ACta www omc
IOlutlono com

AKC Rog ttorod Ub Pupp 11
I tOO Each (7401255-1413
CKC Ch hUihUI Pupplll Ado
abltl Black AnCI Tan ~~ aed
With Love StU 00 Etch Puppy
Comn W th A Froo Doggy Bid
Fotd And Woto Bowl And A
WilkO Supply Of Dog Food I
(740)387 7884

810

Home
Improvement•

BASEMENT
WATERPROOF NG
l)nconcl ona e me gua an ee
Loca ere ences u n shed Es
ab shed 975 ca 24 H s 740)
446 0870 1 aoo 287 0576 Rog
e sWae p oofing

1988 Chevy Co 1 ca v a au
toma lc: PW S400 down 1100
month l992 Geo Storm a apttd
amlfm ca•sent $400 clown 1100
mon h ca 740 388 9893 or 740
742 7428 Buy he I pay hoI

THE LORD WAS HIS
SHEPHERD BRUCE
DO
NOT WANT
GOD LIE BRUCE
DOWN N GREEN
PASTURES AND NOW
LEADS HIM BESIDE
THE ST LL WATERS
HE RESTORETH
BRUCE S SOUL AND
NOW HE WALKS
DOWN THE PATHS OF
RIGHTEOUSNESS FOR
HIS
NAME 6 SAKE
AND WITH BRUCE
GOD WALKED
THROUGH THE
VALLEY OF THE
SHADOW OF DEATH
BUT BRUCE FEARED
NO EV L
BRUCE OFTEN SAD
FOR THOU ART WITH
ME AND MY GOD
WILL
COMFORT ME
GOO HAS PREPAREST
A TABLE FOR ALL OF
US AND AS 1GO TO
BE WITH MY LORD I
LEAVE MY PRAYERS
OF ALL I VE LEFT
BEHIND SO NOW I
AM DWELLING IN THE
HOUSE OF THE LORD
FOREVER

l v ngs on s Basemen Wate
P oo1!ng a basemen epa s
done ee est rna es
e me

gua an ee 4y son job
ance (304 895 3887

e~pe

840 Electrical and
Refrigeration

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

Bruce E.
Caldwell

Auto Parts l
Accessories

Budgel Priced T ansm 11lons
A Types Access To Ove
0 000 T ansm ss or.s Tans e
Cases 740 245 5677 Ce 339
3765

In Memory

Sawm $3 795 New Supe l.um
bermata 2000 Ia ge capac es
mo e op on&amp; Manufac u e of
sawml s edge a and sk dde s
NORWOOD INDUSTR ES 252
Sonwl D ve Bufla 0 NV 4225
FREE nforma on 1 sao 578
1383 EXT 200 U

Llrgo Colllctlon ol Ant quo Poc:lt
11 Wotchoo Good Coodh on 422

a Acruge

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

SERVICES

C&amp;C Gene a Home Man
enence Pa nt ng v ny s d ng
ca pen y doo s w ndows ba hs
mob e home repa and mo e Fo
ee est rna e ca Che 740 992
6323

Sporting
Gooclo

ALL STEEL BUILDINGS 8mll
Dlpolt wll hCkl Up to 80% OF~
40•71 50•10 50•120 80•150
Boot Olio I Doug 1 (8001 778
1107

e wood
s4

1986 Toyo a 4x4 5sp 740 992
24133

710 Autot for Sale

2nc1 A"

a

RESIDENTIAL HOME OWNERS

Apartments
for Rant

and 2 bedroom apa tmente lu
nlahed and unru n shed sacur ry
depoa equ ed nope s 740
992 22t9

New 5x10 1 u ty

1oo g ut o awn mowe
wt'IHflrt 5525 7-40..992 72 5

Pa 1J tuppti" de ve ed to your'
doo Ch s an C own En e tan
men Home Bus ness Oppo un ty
888 655 0607 Phone 606 437
9511 E ma nasm h C won com
wWN 1aoopa ryconsultan com/
38788 Nancy Sm th t38788

House
li a•e
For
Rent
Balow Ga I po s Locks On Sfa e
Rou • 7 South (740)441-otlt9

440

2000 Honda Fo eman 450ES
4x4 Unde 200 M es Perfect
Cond on $4700 Ca 740 256689

s

995
0 $4395 1994
0
$3495 1992 lum na $ 495 993
Cava e $ 695 1986 o ds sa
S995 985 Mon e Ca o $2795
COOK MOTORS (740 446.0103

10 DOWN HOMES

$0 DOWN HOMES GOV T &amp;
BANK FORECLOSURES LOW
OR NO MONEY DOWN OK
CREDIT FOR LISTINGS CALL
1 800-338-0020"" 9811

2 Story Brtclt Approx mote y 3400
Squort Foot t 1 2 Ac 11 Fu
Banmenl ltautltu Wtw Of A v
" Wll 111 sao Rtduood To
Ill &amp;00 By Appolnlmtnl Only
(7ol0)11-172

1995 Chevy Monte Ca o Z3~
Leathe Cd Loaded 740 245

Used Kenmore Washer &amp; 0 yer
Good Cond t on Wo ks Good
$300 PI~ (740)448- 062

31 0 Homes for Sale

Oualty houu c:lean ngt The
B11t Bondtd Profe11lonal Re
ob o ct I ovonlngo (740)256
1131 or S8171f 2412 omal
dOubltdeouraklnot com

Fo Sa e Recond toned waah
e s d yers and ef ge ato a
Thompsons App ance 3-407
Jackson Avenue {304)875-7388

New &amp; Uaecl Fumi1LWe
New 2 P ICI L vtng oom Su tes
$399 ~ Sal Trade

2 bedroom furnlahed o unlu
nlahld t a If nlllt to Wal Mart n
Masort central a flnanc al and
pe sonal relt ences aqu ad r10
pe ' 740 992 3961

NEW AND USED STEEL Steel
Beams P pe Reba Fo Cone e e
Ang e Channa F at Ba Stee
Gral ng Fo D a ns 0 veways &amp;
Wa kways L&amp;L Sc ap Meta s
(740)446-7300
NEW BRAND NAME COM PUT
ERS Amos eve yone app oved
w th SO down Low mon hly pay
ments11 8()().817 3476 ex 3lO

~Jackson-

ly Mus Haw

with papers

•nd No 2 Kentucky vs No 6
USC The West games m
Anahetm C•hf on Thursda)\
are No 1 Stanford vs No 5
Cmcmnat1 and No 3 I'll ory
land vs No 10 Georgetown

age G tal Bus ness Loca on
535 mo P us Depo&amp; I No Pe I
(304)875 1724

Horneworkers Needed
$835 weekly procesa ng maM
Easy! No experience needed
Cal 800-490-9450 24 hra

A Pos ion Ava table For WI C
0 recto Thla I A FuM Year Pol tlon Salary Ronga IS S t 00.
$15 00 per Hou Ballad On Qua
f~tk&gt;n And Experience Work
Schedule M F 8-4 30
Malor Atii)ODI~l!Wg Rtspon'btl For Completing The Grant
Appl~tlon And Othor F ICI Rl!qu raments For The Jackson
County Women nfant And Children (WIC) Program Re1pons ble
Fo Supervl~n OF W C C n c
Peraonnel MUll Montlo As
slgnod CaaaiOad Vendo Ac ""
ties WIC Cl~~ Operations And
Pet1o mWtC certifications Ae
spoos ble For Commurllca ion
And Coord nation Of The WIC
Program Activities Wnh Local
And State Agencies Must Have
Exce lent Ora And W tten Communlcattons Sklls Some li'aWJI

Imix collt (I apaytd)
hllllootltd Dal!latlon Ill

Fou Bu a Spaces Mound H
Cerna e y Owned By Ra hbu n
Faml y Phone (740)446-3565

Arto BOOpm

Rental Pr()J:Ie ty 3 Lots NICe 3BR
Houses On Each Co ne Lot 50
Vaca n l.o In M dd e Co ne 01
Rand &amp; Pe ch Street Kanagua
Oh o Owne Mus Se I Due To
ness (740)446-7473

Gtntat

21.obs 1•1

$30000 ttllces$22000
Oanv lie 5 Wooded Ac es
$13 500 Au and 9 Acres $8!00
Ca

I

I tnlx Cock" $palltl
I Box" lllx

SR68 5Aces S 2500 7Ac
es wth Pole Bam $23 500 Or 6
Ac as S a 000 Carr Ad 6 Ac es

F nanc ng With Slight Property
Markup

H CUBE EXPRESS
Home Ewry Weekend Morll
NO Ealt Coati NO TOuch
t e ght
75% Droo/HOoll Great aanettto
ACC8tlting 0 de Mode I
800-200 2823

New To YouTh ft SP'Ioppe
9 Wilt St rnson Athens
740-592 842
Qua lly elothlng and hO\.IIIhold
ttma $1 oo bag aalt eve y
Thuraday Monday thru Satu day

Fee to good home ma e puppy
2 male cats ca to de a s 740
992 0219

to actve111ae arrt preference

3 STEEL BU LDINGS 24x30
W85 $7 900 &amp;Ill $3 -400 .. 0K48
was $10900 sell $!200 50•120
was $2 900 se S 1 900 Neve
Put Up Can DelVer Tom 1 (800)
392 7803

BRUNER LAND
[7•0)441 1412
GaiMe Co Ke Rd 8 Ac es
12 000 Or 5 Acres With Pond
$25 000 RIO Grande Soon~
P Iva e e Acres Wlt1'1 Pond
$25 000 Or 3 Acree At Doallend 127 000 Cheshire N~
Large Fa mt'IOUII on 47 Ac es
169 ooo aAcreo St 3 500 Or 20
Ac es $ 9 500 Cay TownShiP
3 Acres W th Stream • Ba n
S33 000 Tycoon Lake 1a Acres
$ 2000
Me 911 Co Tuppe P a ns

Help wanltd In adult group home
day and night al'l ft c:a 740 092
5023

30 Announcement•

4 mos Oobe man Husky pups
malu t a ue Heale croaa tema e
spayed you or the pound 740
742 3 ••

tho Fodoral Far Hou~ng M.
or 1868 which makes It legal

WORK FROM HOME
mo Plr
mo Fir
No eKPfl 18nce needed
1i a rnng provided
800-680 9468

net
VII I Ul on ma to I nd pi ftcl
mote or calli 888 915 3288
9Q0.~-4e38 $2 99 mn

Giveaway

All ruJ estate adveft sing n
lhts newspaper Is subteet to

$500$1500 pe
$2000 $9000 pe

www 4dalematchmakl

40

EARN TO $938 WEEKLVI Top tO
Compan e&amp; Olle Assembl ng En
velope P ocess ng Mo e F ee
B ochu e Send S amped Enve
ope Today Keys one Bo• 95
OH Jopl n Mo 64802

ACCESS TO A COMPUTER?
Put I to WO k $25 h 575/hr FT
PT FREE no 800 87 80~5 e•
601 wwwlahomebzcom

A NEW CAREeR EJCam nlo ma
ton to Posta Jobs G ea Pay
Banal s 1 888 728 9083 x170
7am-7pm CST

watch the tape You can t
turn the baU over 22 umes
and expect to wm the game
Temple meanwh1le used ltS
trademark matchup zone
defense to shut down Flort
da s up tempo shooter; and
shut off passmg lanes Wuh stx
mmutes left the Gator; had
managed only 13 baskets and
had comnutted 11 turnovers
In the Mtdwest No 3 Mts
mstppt edged Notre Dame
59 56 tn Kamas Ctt)C Mo to
get past the second ro d for
the first tunc
scho I I to
'"'" but the otl er th
g me
were lopstdt d Ole M ss ext
faces secon 1 seeded Ar z m
wh ch beat Butler 73 S?
I Dayton Oh No 1 llh
lOts beat Charlotte 79 61 t
set up a gam agams No 4
Kansas wh ch d feared Syra
cuse 87 58
In Saturdays acto Duke
Kentucky UCLA nd So th
ern Cahforma made t to the
ro nd of 16 n tl e East \ htl
Stanford Maryb td C11C n
nau and George to'
the West
Four team s fron th I c 10
(Stanford Ar zona U( LA
USC) made the final 16 The
Btg Ten has three roprescnta
ttves (Mtchtgan State JUmots
Penn State) and no other
conterence has more than two
teams left m the field
On Thursday m Ph lade!
phta the East matchups are
No 1 Duke vs No 4 UCLA

EARN $25 000 TO $50 000 y
Mtd ca nau ance B lng Need
ed lmmedlate yl Home Computer
Needed FREE n e net
800
291 4883 OepU 09

company needs Suoe vso s and
Ass slant&amp; Tan ng Ftet book e
cal 1 877 367 9592 o v s
www simp eOOmework com
&lt;hnp 1www s mplehOmework com&gt;

343 DRIVERS NEEDED No ex
pe ence needed Ou ck COl.
tra n ng p og am ava abe Ea n
$38 000 + tst yu 5 STAR t
800 -448 68&amp;9 Expe enced d lv
e shod ng ClaSS A cal 1 BOO
958 2351

...... ..., 81

HOURS ll-5 M-F

S1~00 a month PT $4500 S7200
FT WORK N HOME rt e na ona

3 4 Sub II utes Ch d ens V
age HS D p oma 0 GEO Must
Be 8 Yea s 0 d Expe ence
w th P eschoo Ch den P e
ferred Send Resume To Pe son
I'll Superv so Rive Va ey CDS
605 9 h St eet Hun ngfon wv
25701 CX FaJC To (304)523-2678

NCAA

GALLIA COUNTY
DOG SHELTER

110

AIIPoraoMI

Pet1 lor Slla

Adopt A
Pet

Furn thtd 2 1 3 Aobm Apart
tntnt1 Clean No ,... No SmoK
Ina Reference• &amp; Deposit Ra
QUl tel
Ul I tl Fu n lhtcl
(7410)448-1519

The Dally Sentinel • Page 83

1994 Fo d F 350 Powe s roke
4x4 69 000 m lea S 2 500 Good
Cond on (740)388 8956 even
ngs (740)388 90~3 days

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE

CLASSIFI!E!DSI
110 Help Wanted

99&amp; Kawasak HIOO Vu can
bough new n 99 3000 m les ke
new $5500 140 742 2780

WANTED COMMUNITY SKILLS INSTRUCTOR
needed tn Me gs County Hou s 1Opm Frl thru Sam
Mon seep ove equtred Dut es tnclude teach ng
commun ty and personal sk Is to an 1nd1v1dual wth
menta reta dat on Requ rements Htgh school
d ploma /GED va d dnver s hcense three years
good dr v1ng expenence and adequale automobile
Insurance coverage Starting salary $6 00/hr
Send resume to Buckeye Community Services
P 0 Box 604 Jackson OH 45640 Deadline for
applicants 3/29/01 Equal Opportunity Employer

In Memory

EARN $$$
NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED
Ful end part time pollllon• avalleblt
Comp ote t a nlng provided with fllxlbll houri

Earn up to $15/hour
Ful time polltlona off1r btntflt package which
lncludoo Modlooi/Donlll/401 K/Pd Vooollono
CALL TODA~ START TOMORROW!

1-888·974-JOBS
Clvlo Dtvelapmen1 Oroup/Mifltnnlum Tele11rv1an

MANAGEMENT
He Is JUSt away beyond
that lead to
heaven s golden I e
II
I J II
lhe h11ls

Established local company looklnQio fillS
entry-level manaQement positions
Associates deQree or manaQement
cxpcnence Solid people skills DrQanlzatlonal
nd scl f motivation are a must
S23-$30k to start
Banents and 40 I K pion available

1-888-974-JOBS
Ask for Mr McCovey
Civic Devttlopmont Group/Millennium toltHrvlcot

•

�Monday, March 19, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page B4 • The Dally Sentinel

The Dally Sentinel • Page B!&gt;

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Monday, March 19, 2001

, ALLEYOOP

NEA Cro11word Pu%:&amp;le
PII!LLIP .

ACROSS

ALDER

41 Greg

N....,.,••

'o--

SaYre
Truckini!

P/B
COIITIACTOIS, INC.
Roclno, Ohio 45771
740-9115-3948

CONCRETf/BLOCK/BRICI(
• Footen, Walls, Steps •

. F111 Woi-k,
ReplaCfimenu. • Walks

111d Dr!va • Sttndl
Cfttt Frte Estimates

S.rvlna Ohio ond W.V.
WV11031'71Z

7SO East Stale Street Phone {740)593-667

Athens, Ohio

ROBERT BISSEll
CONSTRU&lt;nON
• New Hornet
• G1111gQ
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop 6 COmPirt
FREE ESTIMATES

740-992·1671

TIU·STI&lt;

MOBILE POWER
WASH
Trucks- Tractor TrailersHouses • Mobile Homes
- Decks -DriYeways Equipment Cleaned &amp;
Degreased

Jetr Stelhem
(740) 985-4218
Email:
stelhem@eurekanel.colt

FrHIIIioM1os
Colli· 17~0) 591-0477
Coll2· 740 591·2712

BAUM LUMBER CO.

WHY DRIVE ANYWHERE ELSE?
SHADE RIVER AQ, SERVICE
"Ahead In Ml'llfce"
·11 .6" PriiiW!llwdd/CIIIlo Filii $6.25/1 DO

46384 St. Rt. 248 Chester, Ohio
(740) 98!5-3301

· ·21" Hunt111 Prill Dag Footl $6.75/SO
-1211 Westom ~ hn !.1 SS.60/SO
SI.DO off Coupon mabs nul purthost $4.60/SO
lay11 Crumi!Ms SS.25
T.M. Sah Blocks $4.75/50 lb.
SHADE RIVER AG. SERVICE

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

31837 St. Rt. 7 North

740-985·3831

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.

Advertise
in this space
for $100 per
month

Pomeroy, Ohio 45719

Rocky R Hupp . Agent

Box 189
Middleport. OhiO 45760

"Take the pain out
ofpam1if16· Le1 ""'
do i.tfor you."

1lftlnmtlnlri
n-.
""'OCUWI'I'"

and

All Makel Tra&lt;tor &amp;

Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Case-JH Parts

Public Notice

Dealers
1000 St Rt. 7 South

LEGAL NOTICE
Spring cleanup of
Townohlp
Comllarlea will begin
around the end of
March,
weather
permitting. Anyone
having lloworo or
decoration• they

Coolv#l~,

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
'SERVICE

Wllh to IIYI, II
asked to remove

them prior to March
25.
Tho Oliva Townehlp
Trueteea

are not

. ruponalble
flower•

lor ·
or

decorations lett on
cemetery Iota.
(3) 16,
31C

OH.46723

, ••.,...a

0 It v 1

Adverti~e

your
message

$8.00 column Inch weekdays
$10.00 column inch Sundays

18, 19,2001

EXCAVATING
Hauling • Limestone • Gravel
Sand • Topsoil • Flit Dirt
• Mulch

(7;~;~;~~~0 •

A&amp;D Auto Upholstery- Plus, Inc.

Mon-Frl 8:30.. 5:00

• Patio •nd Porch Decka

Over 40 yrs experience
(740) 742-8888
1-888-521..()916

Pamwoy, Orilo

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
STATE OF OHIO .
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Cotumbua, Ohio
Oftlce of Contract•
L11111 Copy Number:
010170
· UNITPAICI! ·

~

CONTRACT

TRA~~;~Wr~~~g~

dnorlbecl ...........
11tu... In tho Bille ot

Ohio, In tho County
of Molgo end Civil
Townlhfp
ol
BIHibury, and In the
original ourveyad
Townahlp No. 1,
llonge 13, In tho
Ylllogo of Middleport,
the nme being parts
of Lata No. 43 end
44;
Beginning 11 a

a contrtct with
bidder who In Ito
ottero
end bOlt

Da.lly
Sentinel

ay ord·or of tho
Tupporo Plaln'o •
Cheoter Wetar Dlotrlct
Board of Dlroctoro.
(3) 191

Classifieds

992·21

.
••

.

THE BORN LOSER

Tree Service

HE.U.O!

• Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
• Bucket Truck

! FEEL.
50RRY

FOR. YOU.

youR

~--------,

Wl-\f:\55UP!

DoublaHuno
Replacament
Windows
Welded Frome&amp;
Salh0-101 United
lllChll
S199.00 Installed

J&amp;L

Patloe, Sldewalkl.

•IIR&amp;II
•bham Willi • TrUIIIIIIIII Rllln
•11'1111 Willi

Fret EatlfitatM

740-742-8015 or
1.S77-353-7022

• Now Tirol

• U11d Tlrto
Tlrll

Sunset Home
Cons I rue t 1011
New Homes, Room
Additions, Garages,
Pole Buildings,
Siding, Decks,
Kilchens, Drywall &amp;
More
We C•n M•lre Your
Dre•mA Re•lity/
7'10-742·3411
FREE ESTIMATES!

Howordl.
Roofing • Home
MaintenanceGutters· DoWn

'&lt;ES. MAAM. I SAW '(()U AT
OUR 6AME LAST WEEK.,AND
l SAW YOU 6ET INTO THAT
OTHER CAA AND LEAVE ..

I MONDAY

Fret E•llm•IN
2/1

J &amp; L SANITATION
Locally owned and operated by
JACK &amp; UNDA PROVENCE
39563 Sumner Road
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

• PROVEN
• DEPENOABLE
• STEAOY

140-985-4212

Old r•dloo, old r1dto

A·J MINI·STORAGE
992-6396
992-2272
~~~High &amp; Dry

SeH-Storage

Open
Mon·Frl 9-6:30
Sat 9-1

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomer~y, Ohio

~40)

740.m-5232
I'\! I mo.

45n1

740-949·2217
Slzta5' x 10'
' . to10'x30'
Houre
7:00AM • 8:00 PM

'

AlpM

..........

MARCH19I

-....
-n
-

DOWN
1 616144
2 Walk In
water
3 Ynro,ln
Spain
4 RICI
5 J. Edger

21 Acquired

lift'

25

Sometimes you get
lucky at bridge. Of
course, when you do,
your opponents won't
share quite the same
e nthusiasm .
Today's deal was
sent in by Audrey
Wicks, from Irvine,
Calif. She assures me
that she is rarely this
lucky. Look only at the
South hand. As dealer
with neither side vulnerable, you decide to
pass. There are two
more passes, followed
by one no-trump on
your right, which
shows 11 -14 points.
What would you do?
Despite potential
rebid problems, with
I 2 ·points and a decent
five-card suit, that
South hand is worth an
opening bid. Also, I
see no compelling reason to open one notrump rather than one
club with East's hand.
It took 1-udrey a
·while to reca ll that
against a weak notrump she and partner
use Cappelletti : two
clubs is any one-suiter,
two diamonds is the
majors, and two of a
major shows that suit
and either minor.
Audrey didn't want to
bid two hearts, but
because
she had
paused, · advertising
values and potentially
putting partner in a
difficult ethical position, she did overcalL
est prompt IY doubled. North, expecting
Audrey to have hearts
and clubs, passed.
West led a low
spade to his partner's
ace, and East sirangely returned a spade to

jack: two, nine, five.
West continued with
t~e heart four: seven,
kmg, ace. Audrey
played a diamond to
dummy's ace and discarded her two clubs
on the J-10 of spades.
After ruffing, West
still thought declarer
had clubs, so .he led the
heart I 0 to Audrey's
But
now
queen.
Audrey played winning diamonds, holding West to one more
trump trick. The contract was home for
plus 470.

P-1·

21 Darken
32 Brllloh

noble
338....... -

3S Gomllh

lcirlhtl

39 e::!Ytn
-of

partner

24 Hod to
hove

&amp; Sonnet

31PIINgl

41 Mound

work

org.

-gth

food

worker

23 One
42 Pate de
devoted to
tole rollglouo 43 Crahl'

Hoover'I

34 Muocullr

37Prwpared

12 Strip of
37 Engln-'1
wood
comport·
18 SICIII
mont
ogont
38 Slow
21 Overmullcal
whelmod
movement
with llollery 40 - nouo (be22111111
'-lUI)

dec:O&lt;IIId

r.:;'n.

7
8 Abode

45 - colada
4li "Step

25 "F•nando"

(abbr.)
8 Author
.Lovin
10 Singer
Mlnnelll
11 Hold out

21

27
21

30
31

olngoro
Fertilizer
Olotlma
Entrance
Concerning
(2 wdo.)
Fix up .

- -1"
47

49
50
52
53

Cui Into
cubao
Colorado
Indian
Sly
Goof
Guyo

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotatlona by famous
p41&lt;JJM, past and pnNienl. Each letter In the clptler stands tor anoct1er.

Today's clus: P equals C

'BNXV

N

D F YV?

GOA

' JTVGV

xvvc

BOWADV

FL

HZWV

IF

TOGBH

FB
Z L

G B

N L I

MZFLM.'

(PZNPT/HBGZXV

HOGRFRZG)

J NDa
TN KKNG I
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "All good actors work the same way.
They Just stand there on their own two teet and tell the truth.'

•~~~Ja~m~e~s~W~ooo~s~~--~--~~~--~~·~~

'=~~~' S@~g{}lV\-~'f.~S·
:::: ·
l4tto4 ~' cv.v a. POllAN ....,;:....,,.;;,__ __
OR.arrange ,_..ttau o1 •n.
~-

lour ocromblod word• below to form lour ~mple -ds.
I
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. S H E WE C
.
2

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A D I V ~m~''
h,......:;L;....!",.:::...;...:..r--l·::

"I belii!ve," the dad told his
•
daughter, "that most people would
.'-~~~~~==-., rather be saved from their conse,.,
E WE H E
quences than their-----."
Complete tho thuckle quoted
_ _ . .
_
V
by tilling In aha milling word•
you dOYelop from llep No. 3 below.

I I I I

I
I I 15 I I 1

z

•
.•

PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

UNSCIAMilf AIIOVE lETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

111111

SCRAM lETS ANSWEU
Jumble- Tryst - Vis or- Impose- PESSIMIST
An elde rly colleague wears a belt and suspenders
He is a rea l exa mple of a PE SSIMI ST.

'Your ·

'Birthday.

Ask For Mike HiD.dfe ·
Thesday. March 20, 2001
Do nol give up on any dream
you've harbored for the last couple of years. The yield for which
you've been hoping, but thus far
have been denied, could come
into being in the year ahead.
PISCES {Feb. 20-March 20) •
• 1be trends tend to favor you
today, even if you don't have any
plans in the mill. Events will
unfold, and as each one does,
you'll find yourselfcapitalizlng
on it. Trying 1~ patch up a broken
romance? The Aatro-Oroph
Matchmaker can help you understand what to do to make the rela·
tlonship work. Mall $2.75 to
Matchmaker, c/o thit itewtpaper,
P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hill Sta·
tlon, New York; NY 10156.
ARIBS (Man:h 21·Aprll 19) •
• A penon with whom you're
Involved poases101 tome Information that could be extremely
favorable to you. When In the
presence or someone learned
today, ask a lot of questlont and
Iitten well.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) •
• Keep trying to do your best
today with thin&amp;• or isouea that

Marathon Service Center
420 W. Main St.
Pomeroy, OH 45769,.

(acronlrom Pizzi Hut) ·

(740)992~ I
Full service auto center

Hill'• Self
Stor•t• ,

214170 Blahan Rotd
Racine, Ohio

....

DIL

Call V. flrat Or We Both Lote!

"Serving Hundreds of Satisfied
Customers For Over 22 '!f:ars!"

Now Renting

94g.2804

PEANUTS

2/l.71 mo pd

Spout
949·1405.
591·5011

...

57 OWrly

20 ABA

w

TEACHER. LIKE MR,;,.
GODFREY, !oUT ,;,He',;,
BEEN HJ:RE. 50 L.ONEo
'(OU C"'toi'T GoET K I 1)
OF HE I'.'·

Tire.Barn

Wrltesel

11 - -tung

West's
king.
He
swttched to
the heart

• rpz • • • hilt bllllllllr

25 yea11 experience

WANTED

Racine
Mower
Clinic

"R.E , STUCK

HOI&lt;RI~LE

Quality Driveways,

155N2nd
Middleport

992-2772

WIT~ "

CONCRETE
CONNECTION

304-882·2220

•nd to enter

. fl .

Pi&lt;.INCI !'AL
NICHOL,;,,

Call Chuck

to wolve
trregularltlll or
lltlel In the

i~:ZS0-9t77

Residential COmmercial N~ Co,..noctlon
· Sllla Strrice Instillation
Speci1llzilll in Sheet Mdll Ductwtai&lt;
· 'Trant" Solei &amp; Senlce For
GaiUa, Muon, ud Moip Countl•
Llc:onled ond ,,....... ·
WV 105176

HJ:RE "'IU

tubeo, &amp; Plrt•.

Your LINK to
the perfect
Home ...

BOKAY II

.

YOU KNOW,

(3) 18, 28 2TC

In pureuonca of an
Order of Sale dated
Dooember 12, 2000 In
lhl ObOVI•Ontlllld
action, I wiU ollor lor
1111 11 public auction
at the door of the
Court Hou11, In the
City of Pomoroy, In
tho obove·named
county, on April 24,
2001, at 10:00 o'olook
o.m., the following

YORE MAW
A PURTY

New Homes • VInyl
Sldlna • New Gonaes
• Replacement
Windows • Room
. AddWons' Roonn,
CDMIIOC.U lllll1!5111f111At

r-----.....,
The CRAFTY

In compliance with
Sootlon 5715.08 of the.
OhiO RIVIIOd Codo,
lhe Melgo County
Board of ReVIIIOn will
meet on Morch 30,
2001 11 10:00 o.m. In
the Auditor'• office of
the Melg• County
CourlhouHNonoy Park.,
Clmpbell
Melt• County Auditor
(3) 11 lTC

I WAS JEST FIXIN' TO PICK

I GAVE MY MAW SOME
WILDFLOWERS AN' SHE
GAVE ME A QUARTER II

BUILDERS INC.

COUNTIES, OHIO, IN
ACCORDANCE WITH
p LA Ns · AND
SPECifiCATIONS BY
'.
APPLYING FAST DRY BLIND SPOT
PAVEMENT
(Factory 0 Uuel
M }
MARKINGS.
"The dote ett tor All vertleal blindo 1re
completion of thll made to order:1t our
otter work ohall be 11 101
loeadoo
of the forth In the . bidding UP TO 70% OFF
propont. • Pion• and , Vertleab , Wood
opoolll01tlone aro on
1111 In tho Department
• MIDis • Ete
of Tranoportatlon.
144 1Wnl Awt. G.. tls
GORDON PROCTOR · 446-4995

Public Notice

BARNEY

BISSELL

Mailing Ooto:
FREE ESTIMATES
0311212001
Sealed propooala 7!40-992-7599
wilt be accepted lr~m
all pre·qualllled {NO SUNDAY CALLS)
blddero at tho Olttce
of Controcto of the
Ohio Department of
Tran1portatton,
Columbuo, Ohio, until
to:ooo.m.
Wodn01day, April 11,
2001
FOR IMPROVING
SECTIONS ATH-7.0.00
AND VARIOUS, BTATE
ROUTE
7
AND
Call Now To
VARIOUS, IN VARIOUS
VILLAGES, ATHENS, Reaerve Your
GALLIA, HOCKING, (740) 949·7039
MEIGB, MONROE,
or
MORGAN, NOBLE,
VINTON '
AND (740) 992-3203

--

Jewloh
oocellc

.)

17 "Certainly!"

BY PHILLIP ALDER

JOlES' ;

Public Notice

(2 -

Dpuii.DC IMd: a I

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

J-l04-675-78Z4

• A-ng • Olllloro
• VInyl Siding &amp; Pointing
Free Estimates
V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

I"

ELITE MECHANICAL CONTRACTORS

• NewGirqn
• Elootricol &amp; Plumbing

Remodeling

...

UAtf?..

992-2975

Rutland, Ohio
Truck seats, car seats, headliners, truck 1arps,
convertible &amp; vinyl tops, Fdur wheeler seats,
motorcycle seats, boat covers, carpels, etc.

• Room Addltlana a

la.c NHIS

55 "-&lt;:eful
5e Ancient

Gobor

6IQIII

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

Salee a. Service
204 Condor St ·
Pomeroy

HAULING

-..... ...

of two

11 -

¥"' 'tbll Nt&amp;UMr

A~,ve;c..

Twlno"

"'""

•••
''

,

EJSJ Klr&lt;K.IJAS.

51 Sign of 1M

1 5 - 54The-d

'''~"

~OM;...

740-985-41 80

OI.IAUTY

WICK'S

I'"''F 111

14"'*"""

• Q'

Before 6p.m.
leave Message .
Afttr 6 pm

New equipment arriving dally
See Manning, Wayne or Jim
or a REAL DEAL on e new lawn tractor,
lawn mover or weed trimmer.

JJJ

PIBft

·-lltl

13 -Rw WOI1&lt; 41 eum11-.gh
ouddonly

-......

•lttllt

Every Spring Tune-Up
get a FREE Blade Sharpening.

Local 843-5264
Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; College,
Retirement,
Emergency Funds; Mortgage;
Major Medical • Nursing Home

DIPUYIIG

..

•lu

Interior
FREE ESTIMATES

- · 44 Tlerl' org.
' 711oM_45_

-

UNDA'S
PAINTING

orv.

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins~
992-5479 ·
•

.,

could benefit others as well as
yourself. There is something profitable at hand if everyone cares
about the other.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) -Should you tum ·on your chann
today, there aren't too many people who would 1urn down a
request you make of Ihem. How'
ever, you'll instinctively know
how or when to do so. ·
CANCER {June 21-July 22)-You'll work hard today for both
loved ones and associates,
because you' II be cognizant of
their needs, but everyone will be
showing their appreciation in
ways that'll be rne~~~lngful to
you.
LEO {July 23-Aug. 22) ••
Lucky in love, unlucky at cards
rniaht best delcribe you today. Put
your emphuls on romance and
foreao ahuffiina the deck or aam·
bllna for the moment.
VIROO (Aua. 23-Sept. 22) ..
Put forth your beat efforts today,
because condition• that have a
direct effect upon your eomlna
capoclty or financial postdon look
especially encouraalna.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) ••

Your timing could be excellent
today with you being at the right
spot, with the right persons and at
the right time. Someone is sharing
something that could further your
interests.
SCORPIO {Ocl. 24-Nov. 22)-Don't put off until tomorrow any
financial issues that need to be
addressed. You're lucky today
but may not be so in the next couple of days. Timing could be
everything .
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) -- Be a bit assertive if necessary today if you believe it will
help you achiev.e an Important
objective . You're not likely to
overstep the bounds of propriety.
CAPRICORN {Dec. 22-Jan.
19) •. It won 't do any good to be
laid back when it comes to financial issues. It's INe today, that the
early bird gets the wonn, bul a lot
of elbow grease thrown in can
help a lot as well.
·
AQUARIUS {Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
.. DOn't deleaate any asslan·
menta today that require your peraonal touch, no metter how 'talented they ore. No one will do
thin11 in the some manner u you.

�Monday, March 19, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page B4 • The Dally Sentinel

The Dally Sentinel • Page B!&gt;

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Monday, March 19, 2001

, ALLEYOOP

NEA Cro11word Pu%:&amp;le
PII!LLIP .

ACROSS

ALDER

41 Greg

N....,.,••

'o--

SaYre
Truckini!

P/B
COIITIACTOIS, INC.
Roclno, Ohio 45771
740-9115-3948

CONCRETf/BLOCK/BRICI(
• Footen, Walls, Steps •

. F111 Woi-k,
ReplaCfimenu. • Walks

111d Dr!va • Sttndl
Cfttt Frte Estimates

S.rvlna Ohio ond W.V.
WV11031'71Z

7SO East Stale Street Phone {740)593-667

Athens, Ohio

ROBERT BISSEll
CONSTRU&lt;nON
• New Hornet
• G1111gQ
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop 6 COmPirt
FREE ESTIMATES

740-992·1671

TIU·STI&lt;

MOBILE POWER
WASH
Trucks- Tractor TrailersHouses • Mobile Homes
- Decks -DriYeways Equipment Cleaned &amp;
Degreased

Jetr Stelhem
(740) 985-4218
Email:
stelhem@eurekanel.colt

FrHIIIioM1os
Colli· 17~0) 591-0477
Coll2· 740 591·2712

BAUM LUMBER CO.

WHY DRIVE ANYWHERE ELSE?
SHADE RIVER AQ, SERVICE
"Ahead In Ml'llfce"
·11 .6" PriiiW!llwdd/CIIIlo Filii $6.25/1 DO

46384 St. Rt. 248 Chester, Ohio
(740) 98!5-3301

· ·21" Hunt111 Prill Dag Footl $6.75/SO
-1211 Westom ~ hn !.1 SS.60/SO
SI.DO off Coupon mabs nul purthost $4.60/SO
lay11 Crumi!Ms SS.25
T.M. Sah Blocks $4.75/50 lb.
SHADE RIVER AG. SERVICE

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

31837 St. Rt. 7 North

740-985·3831

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.

Advertise
in this space
for $100 per
month

Pomeroy, Ohio 45719

Rocky R Hupp . Agent

Box 189
Middleport. OhiO 45760

"Take the pain out
ofpam1if16· Le1 ""'
do i.tfor you."

1lftlnmtlnlri
n-.
""'OCUWI'I'"

and

All Makel Tra&lt;tor &amp;

Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Case-JH Parts

Public Notice

Dealers
1000 St Rt. 7 South

LEGAL NOTICE
Spring cleanup of
Townohlp
Comllarlea will begin
around the end of
March,
weather
permitting. Anyone
having lloworo or
decoration• they

Coolv#l~,

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
'SERVICE

Wllh to IIYI, II
asked to remove

them prior to March
25.
Tho Oliva Townehlp
Trueteea

are not

. ruponalble
flower•

lor ·
or

decorations lett on
cemetery Iota.
(3) 16,
31C

OH.46723

, ••.,...a

0 It v 1

Adverti~e

your
message

$8.00 column Inch weekdays
$10.00 column inch Sundays

18, 19,2001

EXCAVATING
Hauling • Limestone • Gravel
Sand • Topsoil • Flit Dirt
• Mulch

(7;~;~;~~~0 •

A&amp;D Auto Upholstery- Plus, Inc.

Mon-Frl 8:30.. 5:00

• Patio •nd Porch Decka

Over 40 yrs experience
(740) 742-8888
1-888-521..()916

Pamwoy, Orilo

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
STATE OF OHIO .
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Cotumbua, Ohio
Oftlce of Contract•
L11111 Copy Number:
010170
· UNITPAICI! ·

~

CONTRACT

TRA~~;~Wr~~~g~

dnorlbecl ...........
11tu... In tho Bille ot

Ohio, In tho County
of Molgo end Civil
Townlhfp
ol
BIHibury, and In the
original ourveyad
Townahlp No. 1,
llonge 13, In tho
Ylllogo of Middleport,
the nme being parts
of Lata No. 43 end
44;
Beginning 11 a

a contrtct with
bidder who In Ito
ottero
end bOlt

Da.lly
Sentinel

ay ord·or of tho
Tupporo Plaln'o •
Cheoter Wetar Dlotrlct
Board of Dlroctoro.
(3) 191

Classifieds

992·21

.
••

.

THE BORN LOSER

Tree Service

HE.U.O!

• Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
• Bucket Truck

! FEEL.
50RRY

FOR. YOU.

youR

~--------,

Wl-\f:\55UP!

DoublaHuno
Replacament
Windows
Welded Frome&amp;
Salh0-101 United
lllChll
S199.00 Installed

J&amp;L

Patloe, Sldewalkl.

•IIR&amp;II
•bham Willi • TrUIIIIIIIII Rllln
•11'1111 Willi

Fret EatlfitatM

740-742-8015 or
1.S77-353-7022

• Now Tirol

• U11d Tlrto
Tlrll

Sunset Home
Cons I rue t 1011
New Homes, Room
Additions, Garages,
Pole Buildings,
Siding, Decks,
Kilchens, Drywall &amp;
More
We C•n M•lre Your
Dre•mA Re•lity/
7'10-742·3411
FREE ESTIMATES!

Howordl.
Roofing • Home
MaintenanceGutters· DoWn

'&lt;ES. MAAM. I SAW '(()U AT
OUR 6AME LAST WEEK.,AND
l SAW YOU 6ET INTO THAT
OTHER CAA AND LEAVE ..

I MONDAY

Fret E•llm•IN
2/1

J &amp; L SANITATION
Locally owned and operated by
JACK &amp; UNDA PROVENCE
39563 Sumner Road
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

• PROVEN
• DEPENOABLE
• STEAOY

140-985-4212

Old r•dloo, old r1dto

A·J MINI·STORAGE
992-6396
992-2272
~~~High &amp; Dry

SeH-Storage

Open
Mon·Frl 9-6:30
Sat 9-1

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomer~y, Ohio

~40)

740.m-5232
I'\! I mo.

45n1

740-949·2217
Slzta5' x 10'
' . to10'x30'
Houre
7:00AM • 8:00 PM

'

AlpM

..........

MARCH19I

-....
-n
-

DOWN
1 616144
2 Walk In
water
3 Ynro,ln
Spain
4 RICI
5 J. Edger

21 Acquired

lift'

25

Sometimes you get
lucky at bridge. Of
course, when you do,
your opponents won't
share quite the same
e nthusiasm .
Today's deal was
sent in by Audrey
Wicks, from Irvine,
Calif. She assures me
that she is rarely this
lucky. Look only at the
South hand. As dealer
with neither side vulnerable, you decide to
pass. There are two
more passes, followed
by one no-trump on
your right, which
shows 11 -14 points.
What would you do?
Despite potential
rebid problems, with
I 2 ·points and a decent
five-card suit, that
South hand is worth an
opening bid. Also, I
see no compelling reason to open one notrump rather than one
club with East's hand.
It took 1-udrey a
·while to reca ll that
against a weak notrump she and partner
use Cappelletti : two
clubs is any one-suiter,
two diamonds is the
majors, and two of a
major shows that suit
and either minor.
Audrey didn't want to
bid two hearts, but
because
she had
paused, · advertising
values and potentially
putting partner in a
difficult ethical position, she did overcalL
est prompt IY doubled. North, expecting
Audrey to have hearts
and clubs, passed.
West led a low
spade to his partner's
ace, and East sirangely returned a spade to

jack: two, nine, five.
West continued with
t~e heart four: seven,
kmg, ace. Audrey
played a diamond to
dummy's ace and discarded her two clubs
on the J-10 of spades.
After ruffing, West
still thought declarer
had clubs, so .he led the
heart I 0 to Audrey's
But
now
queen.
Audrey played winning diamonds, holding West to one more
trump trick. The contract was home for
plus 470.

P-1·

21 Darken
32 Brllloh

noble
338....... -

3S Gomllh

lcirlhtl

39 e::!Ytn
-of

partner

24 Hod to
hove

&amp; Sonnet

31PIINgl

41 Mound

work

org.

-gth

food

worker

23 One
42 Pate de
devoted to
tole rollglouo 43 Crahl'

Hoover'I

34 Muocullr

37Prwpared

12 Strip of
37 Engln-'1
wood
comport·
18 SICIII
mont
ogont
38 Slow
21 Overmullcal
whelmod
movement
with llollery 40 - nouo (be22111111
'-lUI)

dec:O&lt;IIId

r.:;'n.

7
8 Abode

45 - colada
4li "Step

25 "F•nando"

(abbr.)
8 Author
.Lovin
10 Singer
Mlnnelll
11 Hold out

21

27
21

30
31

olngoro
Fertilizer
Olotlma
Entrance
Concerning
(2 wdo.)
Fix up .

- -1"
47

49
50
52
53

Cui Into
cubao
Colorado
Indian
Sly
Goof
Guyo

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotatlona by famous
p41&lt;JJM, past and pnNienl. Each letter In the clptler stands tor anoct1er.

Today's clus: P equals C

'BNXV

N

D F YV?

GOA

' JTVGV

xvvc

BOWADV

FL

HZWV

IF

TOGBH

FB
Z L

G B

N L I

MZFLM.'

(PZNPT/HBGZXV

HOGRFRZG)

J NDa
TN KKNG I
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "All good actors work the same way.
They Just stand there on their own two teet and tell the truth.'

•~~~Ja~m~e~s~W~ooo~s~~--~--~~~--~~·~~

'=~~~' S@~g{}lV\-~'f.~S·
:::: ·
l4tto4 ~' cv.v a. POllAN ....,;:....,,.;;,__ __
OR.arrange ,_..ttau o1 •n.
~-

lour ocromblod word• below to form lour ~mple -ds.
I
.
. S H E WE C
.
2

1

I' 1::::·:::·=:-..J
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3

A D I V ~m~''
h,......:;L;....!",.:::...;...:..r--l·::

"I belii!ve," the dad told his
•
daughter, "that most people would
.'-~~~~~==-., rather be saved from their conse,.,
E WE H E
quences than their-----."
Complete tho thuckle quoted
_ _ . .
_
V
by tilling In aha milling word•
you dOYelop from llep No. 3 below.

I I I I

I
I I 15 I I 1

z

•
.•

PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

UNSCIAMilf AIIOVE lETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

111111

SCRAM lETS ANSWEU
Jumble- Tryst - Vis or- Impose- PESSIMIST
An elde rly colleague wears a belt and suspenders
He is a rea l exa mple of a PE SSIMI ST.

'Your ·

'Birthday.

Ask For Mike HiD.dfe ·
Thesday. March 20, 2001
Do nol give up on any dream
you've harbored for the last couple of years. The yield for which
you've been hoping, but thus far
have been denied, could come
into being in the year ahead.
PISCES {Feb. 20-March 20) •
• 1be trends tend to favor you
today, even if you don't have any
plans in the mill. Events will
unfold, and as each one does,
you'll find yourselfcapitalizlng
on it. Trying 1~ patch up a broken
romance? The Aatro-Oroph
Matchmaker can help you understand what to do to make the rela·
tlonship work. Mall $2.75 to
Matchmaker, c/o thit itewtpaper,
P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hill Sta·
tlon, New York; NY 10156.
ARIBS (Man:h 21·Aprll 19) •
• A penon with whom you're
Involved poases101 tome Information that could be extremely
favorable to you. When In the
presence or someone learned
today, ask a lot of questlont and
Iitten well.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) •
• Keep trying to do your best
today with thin&amp;• or isouea that

Marathon Service Center
420 W. Main St.
Pomeroy, OH 45769,.

(acronlrom Pizzi Hut) ·

(740)992~ I
Full service auto center

Hill'• Self
Stor•t• ,

214170 Blahan Rotd
Racine, Ohio

....

DIL

Call V. flrat Or We Both Lote!

"Serving Hundreds of Satisfied
Customers For Over 22 '!f:ars!"

Now Renting

94g.2804

PEANUTS

2/l.71 mo pd

Spout
949·1405.
591·5011

...

57 OWrly

20 ABA

w

TEACHER. LIKE MR,;,.
GODFREY, !oUT ,;,He',;,
BEEN HJ:RE. 50 L.ONEo
'(OU C"'toi'T GoET K I 1)
OF HE I'.'·

Tire.Barn

Wrltesel

11 - -tung

West's
king.
He
swttched to
the heart

• rpz • • • hilt bllllllllr

25 yea11 experience

WANTED

Racine
Mower
Clinic

"R.E , STUCK

HOI&lt;RI~LE

Quality Driveways,

155N2nd
Middleport

992-2772

WIT~ "

CONCRETE
CONNECTION

304-882·2220

•nd to enter

. fl .

Pi&lt;.INCI !'AL
NICHOL,;,,

Call Chuck

to wolve
trregularltlll or
lltlel In the

i~:ZS0-9t77

Residential COmmercial N~ Co,..noctlon
· Sllla Strrice Instillation
Speci1llzilll in Sheet Mdll Ductwtai&lt;
· 'Trant" Solei &amp; Senlce For
GaiUa, Muon, ud Moip Countl•
Llc:onled ond ,,....... ·
WV 105176

HJ:RE "'IU

tubeo, &amp; Plrt•.

Your LINK to
the perfect
Home ...

BOKAY II

.

YOU KNOW,

(3) 18, 28 2TC

In pureuonca of an
Order of Sale dated
Dooember 12, 2000 In
lhl ObOVI•Ontlllld
action, I wiU ollor lor
1111 11 public auction
at the door of the
Court Hou11, In the
City of Pomoroy, In
tho obove·named
county, on April 24,
2001, at 10:00 o'olook
o.m., the following

YORE MAW
A PURTY

New Homes • VInyl
Sldlna • New Gonaes
• Replacement
Windows • Room
. AddWons' Roonn,
CDMIIOC.U lllll1!5111f111At

r-----.....,
The CRAFTY

In compliance with
Sootlon 5715.08 of the.
OhiO RIVIIOd Codo,
lhe Melgo County
Board of ReVIIIOn will
meet on Morch 30,
2001 11 10:00 o.m. In
the Auditor'• office of
the Melg• County
CourlhouHNonoy Park.,
Clmpbell
Melt• County Auditor
(3) 11 lTC

I WAS JEST FIXIN' TO PICK

I GAVE MY MAW SOME
WILDFLOWERS AN' SHE
GAVE ME A QUARTER II

BUILDERS INC.

COUNTIES, OHIO, IN
ACCORDANCE WITH
p LA Ns · AND
SPECifiCATIONS BY
'.
APPLYING FAST DRY BLIND SPOT
PAVEMENT
(Factory 0 Uuel
M }
MARKINGS.
"The dote ett tor All vertleal blindo 1re
completion of thll made to order:1t our
otter work ohall be 11 101
loeadoo
of the forth In the . bidding UP TO 70% OFF
propont. • Pion• and , Vertleab , Wood
opoolll01tlone aro on
1111 In tho Department
• MIDis • Ete
of Tranoportatlon.
144 1Wnl Awt. G.. tls
GORDON PROCTOR · 446-4995

Public Notice

BARNEY

BISSELL

Mailing Ooto:
FREE ESTIMATES
0311212001
Sealed propooala 7!40-992-7599
wilt be accepted lr~m
all pre·qualllled {NO SUNDAY CALLS)
blddero at tho Olttce
of Controcto of the
Ohio Department of
Tran1portatton,
Columbuo, Ohio, until
to:ooo.m.
Wodn01day, April 11,
2001
FOR IMPROVING
SECTIONS ATH-7.0.00
AND VARIOUS, BTATE
ROUTE
7
AND
Call Now To
VARIOUS, IN VARIOUS
VILLAGES, ATHENS, Reaerve Your
GALLIA, HOCKING, (740) 949·7039
MEIGB, MONROE,
or
MORGAN, NOBLE,
VINTON '
AND (740) 992-3203

--

Jewloh
oocellc

.)

17 "Certainly!"

BY PHILLIP ALDER

JOlES' ;

Public Notice

(2 -

Dpuii.DC IMd: a I

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

J-l04-675-78Z4

• A-ng • Olllloro
• VInyl Siding &amp; Pointing
Free Estimates
V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

I"

ELITE MECHANICAL CONTRACTORS

• NewGirqn
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could benefit others as well as
yourself. There is something profitable at hand if everyone cares
about the other.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) -Should you tum ·on your chann
today, there aren't too many people who would 1urn down a
request you make of Ihem. How'
ever, you'll instinctively know
how or when to do so. ·
CANCER {June 21-July 22)-You'll work hard today for both
loved ones and associates,
because you' II be cognizant of
their needs, but everyone will be
showing their appreciation in
ways that'll be rne~~~lngful to
you.
LEO {July 23-Aug. 22) ••
Lucky in love, unlucky at cards
rniaht best delcribe you today. Put
your emphuls on romance and
foreao ahuffiina the deck or aam·
bllna for the moment.
VIROO (Aua. 23-Sept. 22) ..
Put forth your beat efforts today,
because condition• that have a
direct effect upon your eomlna
capoclty or financial postdon look
especially encouraalna.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) ••

Your timing could be excellent
today with you being at the right
spot, with the right persons and at
the right time. Someone is sharing
something that could further your
interests.
SCORPIO {Ocl. 24-Nov. 22)-Don't put off until tomorrow any
financial issues that need to be
addressed. You're lucky today
but may not be so in the next couple of days. Timing could be
everything .
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) -- Be a bit assertive if necessary today if you believe it will
help you achiev.e an Important
objective . You're not likely to
overstep the bounds of propriety.
CAPRICORN {Dec. 22-Jan.
19) •. It won 't do any good to be
laid back when it comes to financial issues. It's INe today, that the
early bird gets the wonn, bul a lot
of elbow grease thrown in can
help a lot as well.
·
AQUARIUS {Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
.. DOn't deleaate any asslan·
menta today that require your peraonal touch, no metter how 'talented they ore. No one will do
thin11 in the some manner u you.

�Monday, March 19, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page B6 • The Dally Sentinel

S·Scoreboard NASCAR
flam Pap
81

fii'IIRound
Frtdoy, Morot~1e

ICOWGE HOOPS I

AI

of Dayton Arena
Dayton, Ohio
Illinois 96, Northwestam Slalt 54
Charlotte 70. Tennessee e3
Kansas 99, Cal Stale Northridge 75
Syracuse 79, Hawaii 69

NCAA Baaketbell Tournament

EAST REGIONA~
Coli. SrookhaV13n {26-()) VS. Cin. Elder
(2Q-6), Fr~ay, 6o00
Cte. Sl. Ignatius (23·2) vs. Massillon
Jackson (22·3), Friday, 9:00
Championship: Saturday, a:30
DIVISION II
Kettering Al!er (23·2) vs. Cols. East (168), Thursday, 6:00
Willard (24·1) vs. Warrensville Hts. (24·

First Round
ThurM!ay, U.rch 15
At Na..au Y•terana Memorial Coli·
Kentucky 72, Holy Cross 68
Iowa 69, Creighton 56
Boston College 66, Soothem Utah 65
SOuthem Calilomla 69, Oklahoma State

Franklin (22 -4), Frtday, 11 .00

San Antonio
Regional Semifinal•
Friday, March 23
Illinois {26-7) vs. Kansas (26·6)
Anzona (25·7) vs. Mississippi (27-71
Regional Champlonahip

At Greensboro Coliseum
Greensboro, N.C.

(23·9), 7:38p.m .
Duke (31·4) vs. UCLA (2 3-8). 25 minutes after previous game

Cle . St. Ignatius 71, Lima Sr. ·57

Champion~t'llp

Saturday, March 24
Semillnat winners

AI University of Akron
Massilton Jackson 45, Stow 32

DIVISION II

SOUTH

At Wright State Unlveralty, Cayton
At Ohio University, Athans
Col. East 47, Cambridge 39
At Bowling Green Stetl Unlver•ity

Willard 63, Tallmadge 59

DIVISION Ill

At BSU ' Pavilion
Bolae, Idaho

REGIONA~

Georgia Stale 50, Wisconsin 49
Maryland 83, George Mason BO
Georgetown 63, Arkansas 61
Hampton 58. Iowa State 57
Second Round
Saturday, March 17
A1 Cox Arena at Aztec Bowl
.

Temple 79, Texas 65 ·
Florida 69, Western Kentucky 56
Perm State 69, Providence 59
North Carolina 70, Princeton 48

Casslown Miami E. 53, Middletown
Fenwick 49
At Bowling Green State Unlvaralty

Second Round
· Sunday, March 18
At The Pyramid
Memphlt, Tenn.

Haviland Wayne Trace 53,. Bucyrus
Wy.nlord 44

Houle

Akron St.V·St.M 71, Cia. VA-SJ 42

Gonzaga 85, Indiana State 68
Michigan State 81, Fresno State ~5
At The Louisiana Superdome
New Orleana

OHSAA Glrla Slate Toumament
At the Schotttnlltln Center,
Columbue
State Flnala
Saturday'• Reautt1

Temple 75, Florida 54
Penn Stale 82, North carolina 74
AI The Georgia Dome

S1anlord (3Q-2) vs. Cincinnati (25·9), 25
minutes afler previous game
Regional Champlonahlp
Salurday, March 24
Semifinal winners

THE

Michigan Slate (26-4) vs. Gonzaga (26·
6)

DIVISION Ill

Brown

37

Penn State (21-11) vs. Temple {23·12)
RegloRa1 Champlonehlp
Sundsy, Mareti 25

DIVISION IV

FINA~

FOUR .

At The Hubert H. Humphrey
Metrodome
Mlnneapolla
Nalionll Semltlnata
Saturday, March 31
Netlonal Champlonehip
Monday, AprU 2

Semifinal winners

Jackson Center 53, Holgate 47

Diego

Anaheim, Calif.
Regional Stmlflnale
Thurtday, March 22 ·
Georgetown (25-7) vs. Maryland (23·
10), 7:55p.m.

Atlanta
Reglonll S~tmlflnall
Friday, March 23

DIVISION I
Beavercreek 42, Cham-Julienne 35
DIVISION II
Cln. McNicholas 52, Canlleld 40

San

Clnclnnatl66, Kent Slate 43
Stanford 90. St. Joseph's 83
At BSU Pavilion
Boftt, Idaho
Maryland 79, Georgia State 60
Georgetown 76, Hampton 57
At Arrowhead Pond

At The Louisiana Superdome
New Orleans

At Ohio University, Alhens
Belpre 51, Morral Ridgedale 44
At Wright Slate Unlvereity, Dayton

from Page 81

Stanford 89, Nonh Carolina-Greensboro 60
Kent State 77, Indiana 73
Cincinnati 84, Brigham Young 59

Indiana Slate 70, Oklahoma 68
Michigan State 69; Alabama State 35
Fresno State 82, Calilomla 70

AI Canton Civic Center ·
Warrensville Hts. 60, Canton S. 50

OHSAA

WEST REGIONAL
First Round
Thursday, March 15 ·
A,t Cox Arena at Aztec Bowl
San Diego
St.- Joseph's 66, Georgia Tech 62

First Round
Friday, March 16
At The Pyramid
Memphll, Tenn.
Gonzaga 86, Virginia 85

Kettering Alter 58, Cin. Roger Bacon 54

MIDWEST REGIONAL

Golfers
the

aren't

only
t

ter Gordon for the lead and
nearly overcoming a five-second margin on Benson before
reuking first during coming
out of the pits on lap 226.
But 'Park couldn't pass his
last test. Jarrett, in the second
pit sull, also was helped by
Gordon's absence at the end
because of engine problems .
"That let us pull out of there
like a dragster," Jarrett said.
Jarrett was e&gt;&lt;tending his
lead when Skinner's accident
a plume of flames
stretched across the track as it
seemed to take the driver forever to emerge - shut the
cars down .
The victory gave Jarrett the
series points lead from Gordon, a five-time Darlington

t h

11· and m:ide 3-of-4 3s, but
she missed ·severa] easy shots
around the basket after making nice moves to get by
Bales.
C in cin nati
McNicholas
players didn't just want to win
their school's first girls state
basketball
championship.
They wanted to be remeni-.
bered for doing it. ·
McNicholas' 52-40 victory
over Canfield in the Division
ll championship wasn't as
interesting as the Rockets'
postgame celebration.
As the final buzzer sounded
the Rockets raced toward
center court and dove head
first into the circle.
· Lynn Oberschmidt scored
15 points - many that killed
Canfi~ld comebacks and
Kendra Hornschemeier had
13 points and five steals for
the Rockets (22-6), playing in
their first state tournament.

Ashley Clark co ntributed
10 points, eight rebounds and
five blocks, while Betsey
Clark added eight points,
·seven rebounds and seven
assists for McNicholas.
, Erin Martin led Canfield
with 19 points, nine rebounds
at1d three steals. She helped
rally the Lady Cardinals (217) from large deficits in both
halves, but Oberschmidt's
clutch shooting and Canfield's
poor offensive execution were
the team's undoing. The Lady
Cardinals shot just 12-for-49
from the floor.
Diulus picked up his second
straight tide as coach of South
Euclid Regina with a 49-37
victory
over
previously
unbeaten Sardinia Eastern
Brown in the Division Ill
championship game.
Diulus, who nqw owns a
7 4-8 record in three seasons
at Regina, also won state tides
at Garfield Heights Trinity in
1990, '94 and '96.
It wouldn't have happened
this time if not for the play of
Siedah Williams, a 6-foot-2

world and The New York Times
We love it when people say
called us "... some of the best
nice things about us.
public golf on 1earth."
Golf Digest recently listed
Golf Magazine listed THE
Alabama's Robert Trent Jones Golf
SENAToR course at our new Capitol
Trail among the top 50 golf ·
Hill location among its top new
destinations in the world!
courses in the country and THE
And in its current Places to
LEGISLATOR course in the top 25
Play ratings, Golf Digest gave
newcomers. And wait until you
most of the Trail's 21 courses
see THE JuDGE!
4 stars-and some even got 4'/&gt;.
So, we hope you'll understand
Not bad when you consider that .
when, like all good golfers, we
5 stars only go to those once-inlike to brag about our scores.
a-lifetime courses. And all of the
Call today to book your golf
Trail's courses got top honors for
and hotel package and get ready
semce.
Frequent Flyer Magazine listed · for one of the best golf trips in
the world.
us among its top 10 trips in the

ei

r

HAMPTON COVE

SILVER LAKES

0XMOOR VALLEY

GRAND N)!.TIONAL

Hu11ttPi.lle

Annid!Jn/G•IIsfhfl

Bir•ilf8lmm

CJ1eliluo/Ao1Nr~

3B HOLEI

!W HOLEI

154 HOLIES

154 HOLES

....

Pra er
waks

50 Cents

POMEROY

New
store
•
womes

Saturday
PowerTeam to
.be presented at
eight schools

ministry

. BY CHARLENE HOEI'UCH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

•

POMEROY - Prayer
walks in preparation for the
Power Team Ministry tQ be
:presented at eight area
:schools next week begins
·Saturday.
At each of the schools
where the Power Team will
be doing . assembly programs, a prayer walk has
.been planned.
· The walks will begin on
:Saturday at 10 a.m. at
:Southern High School;
·followed at noon at Kyger
·creek Middle School; and
the Meigs Middle School
.at 2 p.m.
On Sunday, a walk will
be held at Meigs High
School at 2:30 p.m.; on
Monday at Wahama High
~chool at 7 p.m.; and on
March 30 at 8:15 a.m. at ,
Ravenswood
Middle
Stlruol1•1A!•"'IJV'alk ll'lm has
not yet been announced .
for Point Pleasant High
School.
A spokesman for the
Ohio Valley Crusade for
Christ, sponsors of the
Power Team, said walks will
be held around the buildings, stopping at various
locations to pray for those
who present the program
and those who hear it, that
they might be receptive to
the secular message of
inspiration and motivation
toward academic and personal achievement.
The team consists of
world-class athletes who
are also world-class speakers who perform feats of
strength "to
enthuse, ·
astound, and get the attention of today's young people."
Founded by John Jacobs
more than 20 years ago, the
team takes a positive
approach to confiont the
issues of drugs and ~lcohol
abuse, as well as respect for
authority.
One of the top ranked
public school assembly
programs in America, the
Power Team has been featured on ''Walker, Texas

,._1M Pr_,.r, AS

BY TONY M. LfActt
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

I
daffodils are a sure sign that spring has come. Here, Kali Cunningham, 3-year-old daughter of Shawn
and Leanne Cunningham of Pomeroy, looks cloSely and carefully at a cluster of pretty petals. Today Is officially .
the first day of spring. (Charlene Hoeflich photo)

Video gambling out of legislative plan
COLUMBUS (AP) - Video
gambling is out as a way to help
fix Ohio's school ..-funding· problettr~.

. .

~

,.,.

~··

"l'.--:t'

Ohio's three Republican leaders
hav~ agreed to share other ideas
for a solution as the June 15 deadline set by the Supreme Court
approaches.
. Gov. Bob Taft, Senate President
Richard Finan and House Speaker
Larry Householder met alone in
Taft's office for about one hour
Monday, a week after Householder dropped a proposed $3 billion
increase in education spending on
a surprised state .government.
Besides pledging not to raise
ta"es, the only part of a solution
the three agreed to was to avoid
placing video gambling terminals

"ffi 've agreed to try and
harmonize these plans and
• 1_

·

.

•

week as a possible way to raise the
e"tra money it would have taken
to fund hij plan. Finan also would

.• t;orw:·"'P• .,t~ some/hang ~ ,_ rule; ~t•?I'F.,bl!~ t.ileY· c'-ge&lt;l •
whrch we all can agree
their minds after Taft threatened
upotr."
to veto the idea.
.
Larry Houoeholder

m Ohio's race tracks. Taft, Finan
and Householder agreed to have
their staffs work on a funding
· plan, with the three meeting often
to offer guidance.
The House, which must pass the
education budget before the Senate, will not do so unless all three
leaders have signed off on a single
plan, Householder said.
Householder had mentioned
video gambling at race tracks last

~ongress feels
WASHINGTON (AP) The
improved financial state of Social Security and Medicare has failed to quiet
Bush administration calls for reforms or
Democrats' fears that the surpluses in
the retirement programs might be used
to fund the president's proposed tax
cuts.
If anything, a government report
Monday extending· the solvency of the
two programs has intensified the
debate.
"We have to mah hay while ,the sun ·
shines," said Sen. Chuck Grassley, R7

"The governor has an eraser at
the end of his pencil, and we realize that," Householder said.
"We've agreed to try and harmonize these plans and come up with
something which we all can agree
upon."
Taft said voters would first have
to determine whether they wanted the terminals, which backers
refer to as video lottery terminals
in an attempt m tif the machines
to education. Under state law, all
profits from the Ohio Lottery
must go to schools.

ro

PieaH SH Concarns, AJ

pressure to reform programs

Iowa, backing the president's call for
sweeping overhaul of the programs
despite reportS e"tending · the dates
they'll run out of cash.
"We should build on the progress
we've made," said Senate Minority
Leader Tom Da.schle, D-S.D. "Unfortti·nately, President Bush's budget does the
exact opposite."
The debate continues Tuesday with a
joint House and Senate hearing on the
trustees' report.
SociaJ Security's trust fundli. won't run
out of cash until 2038, a year later than

Receives funding

POMEROY -Concerns over a new liquor
store on Main Street were discussed during Villag.: Council's regular meeting on Monday.
Dee !'Lader of God's Neighborhood Escape
for Teens (Gods N.E.T.), a ministry service that
providL&gt;s progr.nm for Meig; County youth,
voiced her concem about a liquor store locating
near God's N.E.T. youth f'!cility in downtown
Pomeroy.
Rader said th'e State Division of Liquor Control is considering entering into a contract with
Clifford A. Whitley for a liquor agency at IOOW.
Main St., which is several feet away fiom God's
N.E.T., and that a large number of parents and
residents have become concerned about the
liquor store:s proximity to the youth center.
!'Lader asked council if a public hearing could
be held so that interested parties could e"P""'
their concerns over the location of the new
liquor store.
Council approved a motion to request a
. hearing on the advisability of issuing the liquor
permit and that the hearing be held in the county ·seat.
~
'Council listened
Pomeroy resident Dick
Rupc voice a complaint . about a run-down
structure on Wright Srreet.
Rupe presented council with a petition,
signed by more than 14 residents of Wright
Srreet, asking for the destruction of the derelict
building, which, according to the residents, is aro
"eyesore" and "visually unappealing."
After listening to Rupe's complaint, council
decided to hand the matter · over to Villag.:
Administ1'3tor John Anderson for further review
and investigation.
Pomeroy Fire Chief Chris Shank informed
council of a 36-hour fire class that will be ~'lk.ing
place on May 2. The Pomeroy Fire Department
will host the event, which will train new fire-

M~dicare

earlier estimated; the
hospital
trust fund won't be exhausted until
2029, a four-year e"tension from last
year's estimate, said the trustees, who
include three Bush cabinet members.
However, the programs, now running
huge surpluses, face financial trouble
with the pending retirements of the
baby · boom generation - Americans
born between 1946 and 1964.
The president wants Congress to
ensure the programs' financial health by
bringing in private competition.
In particular, Bush wants his long-

term overhaul to ·prevail over cff'ortli to
add a politically popular prescription
drug benefit for all of M edicare's 39
million elderly and disabled recipients
without revamping the underlying program.
Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., a top
Democrat on the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensi·ons committee,
said the currencly flush program can
sustain new drug coverage for all participants this year without "radical changes
to the underlying Medicare program."

Runner-up

Today's ,

Sentinel

The Meigs High School quiz
team was flrst runner-up in the
lYC quiz bowl league with six
wins and one loss to undefeat·
ed Paillersburg South High
School. The local students participated In toumaments at Ripley, W.Va., and Pall&lt;.ersburg
South and In the Bobcat Buzz~n
and lYC. Their overall match
record was 17 wins and 11
losses. Leading scorers for the
season were seated, from lett,
Amber Snowden, 90 correct
answers; Andy Davis, 106; Evan
Shaw, 54; and John Lentes.
Davis was named Meigs representative to the TVC Quiz Bowl
Team. Others on the Meigs
team were, standing, lett to
rtght, Mindy O'Dell, Anthony
Beams, and Ashley Eblin. Jim
Oliphant Is the advisor. (Char·
lene Hoeflich photo)

2 hclla.-. -12 ......
CAMBRIAN RIDGE

GrtenPiUe
3e

HOLES

HIGHLAND OAKS

MAGNOLIA GROVE

CAPITOL HILL

[)qtbt&lt;~

M•lril&lt;

fullviU.

38 HOLES

54 HOLEI

S..

Calendar
Classijieds

HOLEI

comics
Editorials
Obituaries

Alabama's Robert Trent Jones Golf Trall378 holes of world-class golf on eight sites

Spo~s

Weather

"~'"', rljgo!fcom

Hometown Newspaper

Spring at last

ROBERT1REN

1.800.949.4444

March 20, 2001

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 51, Number 169

ALABAMA'S

GOLF

Tuesday

entine

Melp County's

sophomore who scored 17
points and had II rebounds.
Regina, took the lead for
good ea rly in the fourth
'Vhen Stacey Little hit a layup
to make it 35-33 with 7:09 to
play. The Royals defense took
over from there, holding the
Lady Warriors (26-1) scoreless
for the next four minutes.
Regina closed the game on a
16-4 run. ·
Keesha Smith scored 20
points and Christen Halberstadt added 17 points and 12
rebounds as Jackson Center
beat Holgate 53-47 to win
the Division IV state .championship:
The Tigers (27 -1) turned
up the defensive pressure in
the fourth quarter to get the
victory. Holgate (24-3) trailed
by only one point, 37-36.,
after the third.
. Jenny Fruth scored 17 .
points and Vanessa Rothman
added 12 for Holgate. The
Lady Tigers shot just 29 percent (15-of-51) from the
floor, including 20 percent (4of-20) from 3-point range.

brag

scores.

Details, ~·....

begin

ones

w h' o love to
abou

winner whose car was in contentidn for two-thirds of the
race.
Jarrett won $214,612 and
finished with an average
speed of 126.558 mph. He
was 65 points ahead of Marlin
and Benson with Gordon
falling to fourth, 95 in back .
after his 40th-place finish.
Dale Earnhardt Jr. had
hoped to continue his late
father's legacy of success at
Darlington. But he slid along
the wall in turns three and
· four on lap 45 and was never
the kind of factor that his
father always was here. He
finished 34th.
The elder Earnhardt was
second in Darlington victorieS with nine .

a! times, twice passing polesit-

Semifinal winners

Ptllladtlphla
Regional Semlflnela
. Thursday, March 22
Kentucky (24-9) vs. Southern Calilomla

Regional

and Jimmy Spencer fourth
as Fords took three of the top
four spots. The Dodge lntrepids of Sterling Marlin and
John Andretti were ne"t, followed by Johnny Benson ,
Ricky Rudd, Bobby Hamilton and Rusty Wallace.
It ended a bittersweet
month for all connected with
Earnhardt. Park's Dale Earnhardt Inc. teammate, Michael
Wal~rip, won at Daytona. Park
followed that with an emotional victory in Rockingham, N.C., and Harvick won
last week in Hampton, Ga.
Park's power showed sever-

Community news and notes, AS
D-13 stars shine, B1

Wednud~

Hlp: 40s: Low: COS

Sunday, Marct1 25

Duke 94 . Missouri 81
UCLA 75, Utah State 50
At First Union Center

Cols . Brookhaven 68, Dublin Coffman

s. EuClid Regina 49, Sardlnl£1 E.

At The Alamodoma

Kentucky 92. Iowa 79

At Ohio State Fairgrounds
Coliseum, Columbua

At Canton Fltld

Kanaaa City, Mo.
Arizona 73, Butler 52
Mississl~ 59, Notre Dame 56

71

Regional Champion&amp; hip Results
DIVISION I

At University of Toledo

At Kemper Arena

Second Round
Satl.jrday, M1rch 17
At N..tau Coll1eum
Uniondale, N.Y.
Southern California 74 , Boston College

Delphos St. John's (21-4) vs StrB.sburg-

1

Dayton, Ohio
Kansas 87, Syraouse 5B
Illinois 79, Charlotte 61

UCLA 61, Hofstra 48
Duke 95, Monmouth, N.J. 52
Missouri 70. Georgia 68

DIVISION IV

At Xavier University, Cincinnati

At UniYM'Ilty ol Dayton Arena

AI GrHntboro Coliaeum
GrHntboro, N.C.
Utah State 77, Ohio State 6a, OT

DIVISION Ill

Cin. Elde'r 58, Gin. Western Hills 57, OT

Second Round

Sunday, Mlrch 18

5&lt;0

Belpre (23·3) vs. Casstown Miami E.
(24 -2), Thursday, · 11 :00
Haviland wayne Trace (24·1) vs. Ak ron
St. Vincent-St. ~al)' (24-1), Thursday, 2:00
Championship: Saturday, 11 :00

63

Kina. . City, Mo.
Buller 79, Wake Forest 6.'3
Arizona 101. Easlem Illinois 76
Mlsslssfppl72, lona 70
Notre Dame 83, Xavier 71

ltUM

cnamplonshlp: S;uurday, 2:00

T1pp C1ly Bethel (21·4) vs. Reedsville
Eastem (22·3), Friday, 2:00
Championship: Saturday, 5:00

At Ktmper A~•

Unlondale, N. V.

1), Thursday, 9:00

Unlver~ty

•

State Rep. John carey l)lesented Leildlrg Creek COnserwncy District
with a check for $25,000 for a water line extension project on Friday.
carey secured the fundlrf; from 1he Ohio capital ~et approprlatllli1. carey said he allows oommlssloners In each county of his dl~
tr1ct to delemllne how the funds will be spent The LCCD will use the
appropriatlon as approximately two-thirds of the cost of a weter line
extsns1on proJect In S8lem Township, 'lhllch wtn PI'Q'v1de water service
to 12 households on Maloon's R1,111 Road and Ohlo 124. Pictured
with carey, second from left, are County Commissioner Jim Sheets,
Martin Broderick, general11'181lager of LCCD, and Commissioners Jeff
ThOrnton and Mlck Davenport (Brian J. Reed photo)

AS
82-4

85
A4
A3
81.3,6
A3

lotteries
OHIO
Pick 3: 7-7-7; Pick 4:4-9-7-9
Budr.eye 5: 8-16-11H9-35

W.VA.
D~ily

3: 7-1-4 Daily4: 3-8-6-2

0 2001 Ohio Vall~ Pubh5hing Co.

r

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